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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Daily Herald | Secretary of state’s office makes changes amid complaints about appointment system: Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias is opening two walk-in centers for senior drivers today, among other upgrades to meet demand following a major transition to an appointment system for tests and licenses. The walk-in centers at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview and the Evanston Civic Center will operate from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday to Friday. Giannoulias also has added more appointment slots and calibrated a help line to connect people 70 and older to operators.

* Capitol News Illinois | As Illinois Supreme Court Weighs Another Biometric Privacy Lawsuit, Lawmakers Consider Child Data Framework: The Illinois Supreme Court heard oral arguments in a pair of class action suits brought by two suburban nurses, Lucille Mosby and Yana Mazya, who allege their employers violated the state’s Biometric Information Privacy Act, a landmark 2008 law that gives Illinois residents the ability to sue companies that misuse biometric data, such as fingerprints or facial scans.

* Shaw Local | St. Margaret’s CEO blames $7.3 million bank maneuver for hospital closure: court records: St. Margaret’s Health issued statements to an Illinois review board that an unnamed lender had thwarted its efforts to keep the hospital open after the Spring Valley hospital closed in June. That lender was Spring Valley City Bank, according to Sept. 5 federal court filings. In a recent pleading filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, St. Margaret’s President and CEO Tim Muntz said on June 5 the bank “swept nearly $7.3 million” in funds despite a “forbearance agreement” entered about six weeks earlier.

* ISBA | Quick Takes on Illinois Supreme Court Opinions Issued Thursday, September 21, 2023: In MB Financial Bank, N.A. v. Brophy, the Illinois Supreme Court overruled the appellate court’s judgment holding that the City of Joliet owed more than $6 million in back property taxes to the former owner of a property subjected to condemnation proceedings. The unanimous opinion authored by Justice Cunningham, concluded that the plaintiff was not entitled to repayment of property taxes that were paid between the date the condemnation complaint was filed and the date the city took possession of the property because the property owner enjoyed the continued use of the property during that time. In reaching this conclusion, the Illinois Supreme Court overruled long-standing caselaw that the appellate court had relied on to reach a contrary result.

* WTTW | Chicago-Based Research Initiative Wants to Provide Data and Insight Around a Growing Latino Population: The goal is to become a data hub for community groups, policy-makers and others. “We can produce the kind of research that can be used to help identify the needs of not only a growing population, but a diverse population,” said Teresa Córdova, director of the Great Cities Institute with the University of Illinois at Chicago.

* Michael Frerichs | Supporting women in their careers sometimes comes with a big move: Sometimes in marriage, moving comes with the territory. The parent of one spouse gets sick, a job opportunity arises, a fresh start beckons. This summer, I uprooted my life for the woman I love — and it was the right move. […] My work as state treasurer matters to me, to Erica and to others. But if my wife continues to be successful at Kellogg, she could help the company grow, invest and hire more in Illinois. So, too, with all women who contribute to our companies, schools, governments and nonprofits. If my wife and women like her reach their fullest potential, we all do better because of it. Maybe this is doubly important to me because I have a daughter Ella, 14, and I want her to know that her work matters as much as any man’s.

* KHQA | Illinois expands cancer care: Groundbreaking Proton Beam therapy now more accessible: 3 years ago, State Representative Norine Hammond got a call from a constituent who was diagnosed with a brain tumor. The patient’s doctor recommended Proton Beam therapy, but because some insurance companies couldn’t cover the cost, the family had to pay tens of thousands of dollars. According to Representative Hammond, House Bill 2799 requires that a health insurance policy provide coverage for medically necessary proton beam therapy for the treatment of cancer. The bill further provides that the policy shall not apply a higher standard of clinical evidence for the coverage of proton beam therapy than for any other form of radiation therapy treatment.

* WTTW | Chicago Food Pantries Report Stark Increase in Food Insecurity Amid Inflation, Decreased Federal Assistance: Nourishing Hope, formerly known as Lakeview Pantry, says they’re seeing about 76% more families with children coming to their pantry compared to last year. “Our organization provides an equivalent of four million meals a year … I will say for certain that our federal investments have deeply impacted families across the board. When you take away those investments, it really devastates our community,” said Keenya Lambert, chief development officer with Nourishing Hope.

* Lake County News-Sun | American Rescue Plan funds used to stock Lake County food bank shelves; ‘We were really struggling to meet the food needs’: “With inflation, rising food prices and the decrease in government benefits, we were really struggling to meet the food needs without these ARPA funds,” Hebein said. “It has made a huge difference, at a time when we’ve seen record high numbers of neighbors coming to our food pantries and soup kitchens.” The nonprofit distributes food to 200 food pantries and programs in Lake and McHenry counties, as well as serving food banks and kitchens in 13 other Illinois counties.

* NYT | How a Little-Known Group Helped Resurgent Democrats Wield Power: An increasingly prominent player in this liberal push is a little-known group called the States Project, which was founded in 2017 and made a financial splash in state legislative elections last year, pouring $60 million into races in five competitive states: Arizona, Michigan, Maine, Nevada and Pennsylvania. […] The States Project has had a central role. The group, founded six years ago by Adam Pritzker, a businessman and major Democratic donor, and Daniel Squadron, a former New York legislator, has sought to focus its ample resources and attention exclusively on state legislators, trying to fill the void on the left.

* WSPY | DeKalb County Board to reexamine nursing home sale: Last December the County Board approved a plan for Evanston-based Illuminate HC to buy the DeKalb County Rehab and Nursing Center for $8.3 million. In the summer of 2022, a bid by Skokie-based Saba Healthcare was rejected by the board. In April of this year, the county board found out Illuminate HC intended to work with Saba Healthcare once the nursing home sale was finalized. The move sparked anger from the public due to Saba’s average rating of 1.3 stars. Last week Avi Zuckerman, one of the main principals of “DeKalb Health Care Holdings” which is the entity in contract to buy the nursing home, addressed the DeKalb County Board.

* WMBD | City of Peoria and Peoria County using IHDA funds for 2024 demolitions: The city was awarded $712,000 and will demolish approximately 50 homes in the Southside and East Bluff areas. “Anyone who lives in these neighborhoods, lives next to one of these houses can see that it’s an attracted nuisance,” said Joe Dulin, City of Peoria’s Community Development Director. “It attracts crime. It can be a target for arson. So, the more money we have to be able to invest to take these properties down, the better it is for the neighborhood.”

* WBEZ | The Damen Silos — now at the center of demolition drama — have a colorful history: Michael Tadin Jr., co-owner of MAT Asphalt, bought the 23-acre property from the state of Illinois last year, saying he plans to tear down the massive structure. Environmentalists and local Southwest Side residents are concerned about the demolition — and how the property might be used in the future — while the Preservation Chicago group wants the city to consider making the old grain elevator into a landmark.

* Capitol News Illinois | State’s high court opens new interactive learning center: Now open, the learning center is on the second floor of the building, down the hall from the room where the court sits, in space that was once used by the Fourth District Court of Appeals. It was completed at a cost of about $130,000. “We’re very excited about it,” Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis said in an interview. “It tells the story about the Illinois court system from 1818 to today.”

  13 Comments      


Migrants stole my Apes!

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* There are so many legitimate debates to be had about the asylum-seeking migrant issue, but this Anthony Ponce story for Fox 32 is most definitely not one of them. The proprietor of a sketchy-looking poker club using NFT “trading cards” as prizes whines about migrants moving into a building where he also rents is just about the goofiest angle imaginable

Chicago’s newest migrant shelter has opened up in the West Loop, and it’s creating tension between a landlord and tenants.

The bottom floor tenant at a warehouse-style building at 344 N. Ogden is a retail business. The owner tells FOX 32 that the migrants just moved in starting Friday.

Thomas De Boer, president of the recently-opened Chicago Card Club, said the fact that part of the building he just signed a lease for is now being used to house migrants will kill his business, and cost him in the neighborhood of $100,000. […]

De Boer and his partners just opened the Chicago Card Club two months ago, investing more than $100,000 in converting the bottom floor of the building into a card-playing lounge and retail space for merchandise and digital trading cards. […]

“We just heard about the planned migrant shelter about a month ago, so this all happened incredibly quickly. They started construction maybe two and a half weeks ago and the migrants moved in today,” he said. “We already had a successful business that had only been open for a short period of time, but now none of our customers feel comfortable coming back anymore. It’s unsafe. As you saw on day one already, there’s dozens of people hanging around outside. Our customers don’t want to go through that.”

Huh. Let’s not forget that a real casino recently opened up two miles away. Unlike Chicago Card Club, the actual casino doesn’t look like it may be trying to get around state gaming laws with worthless NFTs (click here for an explanation), so maybe that had something to do with their problems

A team of researchers have crunched the numbers to explain why you don’t see people hawking ugly cartoon apes on the internet as much anymore: NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, once vaunted as a revolution in crypto and digital art, are largely worthless.

“Dead NFTs: The Evolving Landscape of the NFT Market” is a new report from dappGambl, a community of experts in finance and blockchain technology. Upon analysis of 73,257 NFT collections, the authors found that 69,795 have a market cap of zero Ether (ETH), the second most-popular cryptocurrency behind Bitcoin. In practical terms, that means 95 percent of NFTs wouldn’t fetch a penny today — a spectacular crash for assets that reached a trading volume of $17 billion amid a frenzied bull market in 2021. The study estimates that some 23 million investors own these tokens of no practical use or value. […]

This, however, would not address perhaps the greatest drawback of NFTs, which became a major controversy as they peaked in popularity: their environmental impact. Non-fungible tokens are minted on the blockchain, a process that requires energy, and bought and sold in marketplaces that run on cryptocurrencies “mined” with computer rigs that have a significant carbon footprint. But minting tokens alone carries a cost. The “Dead NFTs” report observes that the nearly 200,000 NFT collections “with no apparent owners or market share” identified by the study caused carbon emissions equivalent to the annual output from 2,048 houses, or 3,531 cars.

Pretty swank interior there, bro

The company’s website is currently down (gee, I wonder if calling so much attention to this “business” might have been a bit on the stupid side), but click here for an archived copy.

* Also, this is from a Crain’s report on September 7

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration is in talks to convert a loft office building near the Fulton Market District into a migrant shelter as officials hunt for space to house thousands of asylum seekers who have poured into the city over the past year. […]

The Ogden building would be an example of an office property being put to use as a temporary shelter at a time when many office landlords are struggling with weak demand amid the remote work movement. Yet the building is close to the trendy Fulton Market District, a former meatpacking corridor that has established itself as a hotbed of big corporate offices and upscale restaurants and hotels and has largely defied the sluggish office leasing environment.

Chicago has lots of empty office space, so that’s one way of filling ‘em up. And, as others have pointed out, the city was able to move impressively fast on this property, moving people in within just a couple of weeks or so.

* Also according to Crain’s, the city may have had some leverage with the developer

Goodman, who is CEO of Chicago-based Farpoint Development, declined to comment. The developer is in a position to help the Johnson administration with its humanitarian crisis as he works on a series of big projects that involve public-private partnerships. The most notable is the former Michael Reese Hospital site just south of McCormick Place, where he leads a team of developers planning a $3.8 billion mixed-use campus.

  15 Comments      


Springfield hospital system pulls support from crisis pregnancy centers

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Scott Reeder for the Illinois Times

Memorial Health will no longer provide financial or in-kind support to crisis pregnancy centers, which counsel against abortions, Illinois Times has learned.

The health system, which operates hospitals in Springfield, Lincoln, Taylorville, Decatur and Jacksonville, made this decision after the organization’s diversity, equity and inclusion team found that crisis pregnancy centers can “exacerbate health inequities and create barriers to care,” according to a memo obtained by IT.

“These are thought of as deceptive organizations and there’s a lot of ethical concerns with them,” said a person familiar with the internal debate who asked not to be identified.

System spokeswoman Angie Muhs said, “Memorial Health has determined to focus its limited resources on activities and partnerships closely aligned with our mission to improve health and contribute to our ongoing work in health equity.” […]

Ralph Rivera, legislative chair for Illinois Right to Life, said these centers do not engage in deception and are dedicated to providing pregnant women and girls with alternatives to abortion. He added that advice their opponents label as “deceptive” often just involves differences of opinion. […]

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists contends crisis pregnancy centers “represent themselves as legitimate reproductive health care clinics providing care for pregnant people but actually aim to dissuade people from accessing certain types of reproductive health care, including abortion care and even contraceptive options.”

On July 27, Gov. JB Pritzker signed a law banning crisis pregnancy centers from using “misinformation, deceptive practices, or misrepresentation” to interfere with access to abortion services or emergency contraception. Attorney General Kwame Raoul championed the legislation, which would have allowed his office to investigate complaints against crisis pregnancy centers and fine violators up to $50,000.

  12 Comments      


ILGOP wants to stop 2,600 new jobs from being created in a Republican-held House district

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois GOP fundraising email…

Friend,

Have you ever heard of a Chinese company called Gotion, Inc? If you’re concerned about the encroachment of CCP’s influence in our economy, this is a copy you need to know about!

CCP in Illinois

They are a company that builds batteries for electric vehicles, and they just so happen to be building a new manufacturing facility right here in Illinois, and RIGHT NEXT to a military base.

Does that not raise some red flags for you?

The Chinese Communist Party has had complete control over China’s economy and government for over seven decades, and they have been no friend to America.

From trade deficits, stealing our intellectual property, and threatening our allies abroad; the Illinois Republican Party stands firmly against CCP’s influence in our economy, and we are calling on all Illinoisans to vote out the Democrats in power in our state so that we can get this issue under control.

2024 will be a pivotal year, and the CCP would love nothing more than for Illinoisans to maintain the status quo. You can help flip the script with a contribution of any size and help us reach out to voters and put the CCP on notice

>>VOTE RED, KEEP THE REDS OUT >>

Keep in mind that this deal has the goal of creating 2,600 good-paying jobs in a House district represented by a Republican (Jackie Haas). Haas has a far-right primary opponent who is just the type to use this sort of nonsense against her.

Nice job, ILGOP.

* Also, I reached out to the state party to ask which military base is “right next” to the Manteno site. I never heard back, but according to Crain’s, an Illinois National Guard training base is 15 miles away in Kankakee and a US Army Reserve training facility is in Joliet, which is about half an hour away. The horror! “All your base are belong to us!”

More from Crain’s

“If there’s a big military base around here, they’ve been operating secretly, because we’re not aware of them,” [Manteno Mayor Timothy Nugent] said. Even the notion that the Chinese Community Party would select tiny Manteno as its midcontinent spying center is “a bit of a stretch,” Nugent added in a phone interview. “We’re really not interested in (attracting) anyone who’s engaged in espionage. But is Manteno really the center? This is kind of a laid-back, rural community.” […]

Officials in the Pritzker administration, who worked hard to attract the plant as an anchor for the state’s emerging EV industry, have noted that while Gotion is a subsidiary of a Chinese firm that like all companies in that country interacts with its government, the battery operation is headquartered in California, is one of the largest producers of EV batteries worldwide and its biggest shareholder is Volkswagen. […]

Mark Denzler, CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, added that the plant, like a related facility in Michigan, will need to obtain certification from the U.S. Treasury Department that it poses no risk to U.S. national security, something that already has happened with the Michigan plant.

  52 Comments      


What the heck is Durbin up to?

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The day after then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich was arrested

Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) has joined the chorus of Illinois politicians urging scandal-plagued Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D) to resign. Durbin on Wednesday sent a letter to Blagojevich, who was arrested a day earlier and accused by federal authorities of an array of crimes.

* February of 2009

Senator Dick Durbin is asking Senator Roland Burris to resign but he is refusing to do so.

The junior Senator is in Washington D.C. for the first time since allegations surfaced he was untruthful during the impeachment proceedings of former Governor Blagojevich.

* Shortly after a photo was unearthed showing Al Franken making an inappropriate physical joke about a woman before he was a US Senator…


* Right after the 2020 general election

Durbin was the first statewide Democrat to call for Madigan to go as head of the party in an interview on “Chicago Tonight” Wednesday.

“All across our state — and the advertising told the story — we paid a heavy price for the speaker’s chairmanship of the Democratic Party,” Durbin said. “Let’s wait and see what happens in the near term here.”

* Sunday

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) on Sunday declined to call on Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) to resign after his Democratic colleague was indicted on federal corruption and bribery charges.

In an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union” with Dana Bash, Durbin insisted that while the charges were “very serious,” Menendez is entitled to the presumption of innocence and that the decision of whether to resign must be made by Menendez and his constituents.

The feds busted Sen. Menendez red-handed on straight-up bribery charges

As the grand jury charged, between 2018 and 2022, Senator Menendez and his wife engaged in a corrupt relationship with Wael Hana, Jose Uribe, and Fred Daibes – three New Jersey businessmen who collectively paid hundreds of thousands of dollars of bribes, including cash, gold, a Mercedes Benz, and other things of value – in exchange for Senator Menendez agreeing to use his power and influence to protect and enrich those businessmen and to benefit the Government of Egypt. […]

Over $480,000 in cash — much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in clothing, closets, and a safe — was discovered in the home, as well as over $70,000 in cash in NADINE MENENDEZ’s safe deposit box, which was also searched pursuant to a separate search warrant. Some of the envelopes contained the fingerprints and/or DNA of DAIBES or his driver. Other of the envelopes were found inside jackets bearing MENENDEZ’s name and hanging in his closet […]

During this same search, agents also found home furnishings provided by HANA and DAIBES, the luxury vehicle paid for by URIBE parked in the garage, as well as over one hundred thousand dollars’ worth of gold bars in the home, which were provided by either HANA or DAIBES.

[Hat tip: Amdor]

  65 Comments      


Brilliant if true

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* SBNation

Most of the week four NFL odds are out, and the Denver Broncos, a team that just gave up 70 points and 726 total yards of offense, opened up as a 2.5-point favorite to beat the Chicago Bears.

This game is in Chicago, and our partners at DraftKings Sportsbook have the winless Bears as the underdog against the winless Broncos.

I can’t blame them.

The Bears have looked directionless in all three games, with their latest embarrassment coming in K.C. with a 41 to 10 drubbing.

In what has been a recurring theme this year, the loss isn’t the bad part; it is the way they are losing.

Has anyone considered that maybe the team wants to tank in such a thoroughly horrific manner that Chicago legislators will actually be eager to vote for a bill that subsidizes their exit from the city?

OK, I’m kidding. But, sheesh. What a disaster.

Anyway, this is a Chicago Bears open thread.

  59 Comments      


Drivers Sign Up To Drive With Uber As A Flexible Way To Manage Rising Costs

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In a recent survey, nearly 90% of new rideshare drivers cite flexibility and financial need as key factors in their decision to sign up. And over 70% of drivers joined Uber to help fill financial gaps caused by inflation.

Whether it’s to supplement earnings or tackle unexpected expenses, Uber offers a flexible way to achieve financial goals.

Watch and learn how drivers earn what they need to make ends meet.

  Comments Off      


Without a doubt, there will be some problems implementing this new law

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Hannah Meisel’s recent report for Capitol News Illinois included a line that jumped out at me: “Per state law — which hasn’t been updated since 1949 — only counties with 35,000 or more residents are required to set up offices of public defender.”

According to information posted on numerous websites (Illinois Demographics, Wikipedia and World Population Review), 62 out of 102 Illinois counties — a majority — have fewer than 35,000 residents.

Fifty counties have fewer than 25,000 residents. Another 31 have fewer than 15,000, 15 have fewer than 10,000, and seven don’t even have 5,000 residents. For perspective, a single Chicago ward has about 54,000 people. Only 24 counties have at least that many people.

All counties in the state are required by the Illinois Constitution to have sheriffs, county clerks and treasurers. State statutes heap on many more responsibilities, as do local county ordinances.

We’ve long seen advocates calling for school district consolidation and township elimination. But the SAFE-T Act’s implementation last week highlights how the state should probably start a conversation about how dozens of small counties can effectively govern in a modern society.

A recent WBEZ story noted Cass County has “one attorney and one resident judge handling all the criminal cases.” Cass is just northwest of Sangamon County and has a bit more than 13,000 residents.

Meisel’s story profiled a public defender who does part-time work in two counties: Gallatin and Hamilton. The combined population of those two counties is about 13,000, according to her report.

The counties want more money from the state to implement the new law. Public defenders outside of Cook County received $10 million in this fiscal year’s budget, which doesn’t seem like much.

I don’t know what the answer is here, but I do know that local mandates are regularly approved at the Statehouse without taking the population of most Illinois counties into consideration.
Bad things will happen, as they always have

And the lack of resources in Illinois’ plethora of tiny counties is only one problem. There will be other problems with the new SAFE-T Act.

A prosecutor will decide not to ask a judge to keep someone in custody who has been busted for a detainable offense, or a judge will overrule a prosecutor who wants someone detained, or a loophole will be exploited — and that suspect will go out and commit another crime and maybe hurt someone, or worse.

This sort of thing is not new, of course. A small minority, but still a significant number, of people who bailed out of jail have ended up going back after committing more offenses. But that history may easily be lost in the debate as bad things happen under the new law.

Controversy arose on the very first day of the new law when WTTW reported the Cook County state’s attorney’s office decided not to ask for the detention of the very first person given a hearing. The suspect was accused of pepper-spraying four Chicago police officers, sending three of them to the hospital, and is facing four counts of aggravated battery to a police officer.

“This highlights the misplaced priorities of Illinois’ criminal justice system when the prosecutor prioritizes the freedom of a violent offender over the safety of those police officers dedicated to protecting and serving our communities,” Senate Republican Leader John Curran said in response.

Elsewhere, though, prosecutors used the new law to keep people behind bars who likely would have previously walked away.

McLean County State’s Attorney Erika Reynolds has been a staunch critic of the new law, but her office persuaded a judge to keep a man locked up who was accused of possessing a gun as a felon, a consortium of public radio stations reported. The man was arrested before the SAFE-T Act officially took effect, and his public defender wanted him charged under the old statute so he could potentially bond out of custody. The judge disagreed, and the man remained in custody.

Proponents just haven’t focused on how the SAFE-T Act will make it easier in many cases to keep physically dangerous people locked up without bail.

But no mere law can eliminate human error or prevent all unforeseen circumstances. As those cases emerge, we can probably expect legislative fights over whether to expand the list of detainable offenses.

Those battles could wind up being the new version of the old legislative tradition of annually enhancing criminal penalties, which proceeded unabated for decades until more progressive members finally put a stop to it.

Discuss.

  24 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* I hope you all had a relaxing weekend. What’s going on in your part of Illinois this week?…

  37 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

    * Sun-Times | Cook County judges talk about their first week without cash bail. ‘The world is looking at us.’: Despite glitches in other courthouses, the first week of bail reform in Cook County went relatively smoothly. But hearings were slower than usual, marked by extensive arguments from prosecutors and defense attorneys as they tested guidelines under the Pretrial Fairness Act.

    * Crain’s | The Midwest fell behind in the race for EVs. Now, it’s mounting a comeback: Southern states were decades ahead in site readiness, but other factors including market dynamics and business climate also have influenced the auto migration south, Barrott said. It’s become more important for automakers to produce batteries and vehicles nearer to where they sell them, for one. Cheaper labor, as facilities are largely nonunionized, lower energy costs and taxes, faster permitting and the lack of UAW influence are all major bonuses in the South, too.

    * Daily Herald | Bill inspired by July water crisis in Lake County introduced in state House: On Thursday, Syed filed legislation that would require water utilities to notify affected fire departments within two hours of the discovery of an unplanned service disruption, including those as small as a damaged fire hydrant.

    * Crain’s | Gotion’s $2 billion battery plant is a possible front for Chinese spies, Illinois GOP claims: The email pitch, which went out late last week, says the Gotion plant, to be located in a former Kmart warehouse, claims the facility will be located “RIGHT NEXT to a military base.” It adds, “Vote Red. Vote the Reds out,” urging recipients to send a donation and “put the CCP on notice.”

    * Tribune | Use of 14th Amendment to keep Trump off 2024 ballot still under debate in Illinois: Several legal experts say they believe any lawsuit seeking to prevent the Illinois State Board of Elections from placing Trump’s name on the GOP primary ballot or object to his candidacy would be premature prior to the two-day filing period for petitions for presidential candidates on Jan. 5-6.

    * Scott T Holland | To gauge intent and consequence, wade into legislative language: On Tuesday, state Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, issued a release recapping a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing focused on her Senate Bill 1126, which Rezin described as “regulations to protect minors from harmful aspects of social media platforms.” […] the legislative language itself has a few red flags, including one near the top of page two, defining an online service as “likely to be accessed by children” to mean, in part: “the online service, product, or feature is determined, based on competent and reliable evidence regarding audience composition, to be routinely accessed by a significant number of children.”

    * Block Club Chicago | Mayor, All But 2 City Council Members In Line For Raises In January: Johnson’s office did not answer questions about whether he would accept the raise, but he did not submit paperwork declining it, according to records obtained by Block Club. By not opting out of the pay hike, Johnson would receive a raise of about $4,800 next year, which would bring his salary to $221,052. With raises, most members of the City Council — including 12 freshmen alderpeople who took office in May — are set to make $145,974 in 2024.

    * Tribune | Suburban Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi balances Illinois’ more progressive politics as he looks to future: Krishnamoorthi said there’s nothing difficult or contradictory for him about working within the Democratic Party’s new reality. “I think a lot of (progressives) are in the same place I am,” Krishnamoorthi said before rattling off a string of GOP-lead initiatives in Congress he said Democrats of all stripes would oppose.

    * WJBC | Speaker of the Illinois House leads contingent to Israel: The Speaker of the Illinois House led a contingent to Israel this month. State Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield), chairman of the Illinois Legislative Jewish Caucus, says there were about eight House Democrats on the trip. He says it was unforgettable. “The NATAL Trauma and Resiliency Center in Tel Aviv is focused on trauma and recovery of those who have been victims and have been impacted by terrorism. To be able to relate that to some of the trauma challenges that we have in Illinois and the ways in which we provide wraparound services and supports for those who have experienced – particularly gun violence – was very powerful for me.”

    * Tribune | Wheaton College examined its racial history, but absence of hijab-wearing professor, LGBTQ rights questioned: Over the course of the next century and a half, the private evangelical Christian liberal arts college at times held an “underlying mindset of white superiority” as well as “attitudes, beliefs and actions that created an inhospitable and sometimes hostile campus environment” for people of color, according to a 122-page report on Wheaton College’s history of racism and discrimination, which was recently released by a college task force.

    * Tribune | A month after shooting inside Sox Park, a mystery persists: Rumors and hearsay, peddled largely by content aggregators on social media, have done little to quell speculation about the shooting — which, in the nearly 150-year history of Major League Baseball, is believed to be perhaps just the fourth instance of a fan being shot while inside a big league ballpark.

    * SJ-R | Willing to take on the responsibility: Marine vet becomes first Black female firefighter: Jackson came on under former SFD Chief Brandon Blough, who attended the graduation along with other former fire chiefs Bob Bartnick and Allen Reyne. “We’ve been trying to improve our recruitment process and in doing so, with our last couple of classes, we are increasing our minority hiring,” Canny said. “We feel our efforts are paying off, so we hope that trend continues in the future, but again, we’ve got a lot of work ahead.”

    * Tribune | Illinois is running out of volunteer firefighters: ‘It’s going to become very critical, very shortly’: “It’s going to become very critical, very shortly,” said Kevin Schott, an Illinois Firefighters Association board member. “The county and the state are going to need to look at this because the public safety is going to be impacted.” Firefighting organizations and some state lawmakers have tried over the years to address the dearth of volunteers, offering tax breaks and other incentives aimed at buoying department ranks.

    * Sun-Times | Bears defensive coordinator Alan Williams left after ‘inappropriate’ activity, sources confirm: Two sources confirmed ESPN’s Adam Schefter’s report Sunady characterizing former Bears defensive coordinator Alan Williams’ departure being related to “inappropriate” but not illegal activity. Schefter did not give give details other than to say the Bears’ human resources department was involved and the team examined his computer.

    * 247 Sports | Jordan Love’s dismantling of the Bears earns praise from Aaron Rodgers: “I think you just gotta not listen to those expectations outside the facility and outside your own mind,” Rodgers said. “He’s done a great job of that. He’s always had a good head on his shoulders. He put in a lot of great work last year that I think set him up to be confident. I think that’s what I saw in the preseason — he just looked confident.

    * ABC Chicago | Rare pink flamingo sighting on Lake Michigan in Wisconsin draws large crowds: Jerry Lorenz, the state director of research for Audubon Florida, told WISN that he speculates the birds were flying between Cuba and the Yucatan and got diverted by Hurricane Idalia. According to the American Birding Association’s Facebook page, flamingos have shown up in at least 12 states with Wisconsin being the northernmost. This is the first recorded flamingo sighting in Wisconsin.

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Live coverage

Monday, Sep 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Saw these folks last weekend at the Salt Shed. They still have it

Entertaining passers-by

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times | UAW strike spreads to GM, Stellantis parts sites in Bolingbrook, Naperville: Two auto parts distribution sites in the Chicago suburbs are striking Friday, after the president of the United Auto Workers expanded its action against major automakers by walking out of 38 General Motors and Stellantis parts centers in 20 states. Ford was spared additional strikes because the company has met some of the union’s demands during negotiations over the past week, said UAW President Shawn Fain. As a result, Ford’s Chicago operations are not included in the new walkouts.

* Tribune | Blood suppliers warn of potential rationing at hospitals if donors don’t step up: ‘We need it now’: “We don’t ever want to be in a situation where we have to start making a decision on who does and doesn’t get blood,” said Versiti’s area vice president, Amy Smith. “We need it now.” Versiti seeks to have 10,000 units of blood in its inventory. Instead, inventory has dropped to 2,800 units for the nonprofit, which supplies blood to 85 nearby hospitals, including Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Edward-Elmhurst Health and Silver Cross Hospital.

* WCIA | Scherer files bill to give Dennis Lab students their summer back, but at a cost: Dennis Lab students started the school year two weeks late. The two Dennis Lab buildings in Decatur were found to be structurally unsafe this past summer and the district set up modular classrooms for students. But they were not ready by the official start of the school year. Since they started two weeks late, the students are also scheduled to go two weeks longer in this summer.

* Press Release | Governor Pritzker joins U of I System board in roundtable discussion: “Affordability really matters,” Pritzker said. “Scholarship money and financial aid is the most important thing, at least from the General Assembly and the governor, that we can do for you.” U of I System President Tim Killeen said the governor’s participation in the meeting was a reflection of the state government’s extensive commitment to and support of higher education, as well as the role that the system plays in the state’s overall well-being.

* WTTW | Debate Continues Over Plan to Raise Real Estate Taxes on High-Priced Homes to Fight Homelessness in Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson recently announced a new proposal dubbed “Bring Chicago Home,” which would raise about $100 million dollars to fight homelessness by raising taxes on all sales above $1 million, and then an additional hike on sales of more than $1.5 million dollars. The proposal would also slash the transfer tax on real estate that sells below $1 million.

* WCIA | Drug company announces move into Decatur using former Akorn building: Rising Pharmaceuticals, based in New Jersey, announced its move in the community earlier this week. Company officials said they plan to use the former Akorn building to make and package sterile products. Back in February, Akorn announced that it was filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and laying off its hundreds of workers. It sparked outrage from local politicians and prompted a state investigation. […] Rising Pharmaceuticals said the move into Decatur is expected to improve the company’s portfolio and boost the country’s supply chain.

* CBS Chicago | Hundreds turn out in Chicago suburb’s municipal court to pay tickets they didn’t know they had: “At first, I thought it was $50 – and then I had to put my glasses on,” said Elizabeth Watson. Watson quickly saw an extra zero for a total sum of $500 – if she did stand in the line to appear in court.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s hospitality business hasn’t seen this bullish an outlook since 2019: Travel and hospitality in Chicago continue to make a comeback from the depths of the COVID pandemic, when at a point in 2020 hotel occupancies sank to a low of 26%. Travel industry consultant HVS, employing research from STR Inc. as well as its own surveys of hotels and restaurants, recently released its most bullish assessment of the Chicago market since 2019.

* STLPR | Barges are very efficient. Does that make them a good climate alternative for shipping?: It would take more than 1,000 semitrucks to carry the same load as 15 barges and a single tow boat, the standard for this part of the Mississippi River, he said. That’s significant given that the transportation sector accounts for about 28% of the greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. But only about 2% of that sector is ships and boats, Rohde said.

* Block Club | The Voice Of The CTA Hits 25-Year Milestone Of Telling Us Where We Are: The polished voice actor, now 64, drives down to Chicago two or three times a year to record updates to the transit system. Most recently Crooks told Chicagoans about detours due to the Blue Line’s West Side rebuild, laid down sharper recordings for the new 7000-series trains and gave folks a reminder to give up their seats to “people who are pregnant.”

* SJ-R | Sangamon County home prices rose 8.2% in August, with houses listed at a median of $194,800: Sangamon County’s median home was 1,885 square feet, listed at $108 per square foot. The price per square foot of homes for sale is up 4.5% from August 2022.

* SJ-R | A memorial service for trailblazing SIU physician to be held on Saturday: Robinson-McNeese was best known for his work in diversity and inclusion initiatives at SIU, helping to found the Office of Diversity, Multicultural and Minority Affairs, serving as the system’s executive director of diversity initiatives, and for collaborating with Springfield Public Schools District #186 to create the Physician Pipeline Preparatory Program (P4).

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen mayor nixes parade request as strife between village, township mounts: The village of Homer Glen has declined Homer Township’s application to conduct its annual Independence Day parade as political tensions between some local leaders were heightened during meetings this month. Homer Glen Mayor Christina Neitzke-Troike said she felt the parade, which usually takes place in late June in conjunction with HomerFest, has become too political when she and village staff declined the township’s request to use village streets. The application was not voted on by the Village Board.

* Commercial-News | Tilton cannabis dispensary now open; cultivation center construction underway: It had a soft opening Friday and Saturday. An official grand opening will be Saturday for the dispensary and the two other businesses of the 14,500-square feet building. The site also includes Molly’s Joint, cannabis consumption lounge with couches and tables and chairs; and a bar/restaurant area with video gaming machines and an outdoor patio and grass area for bands and food trucks.

* WTTW | Lin-Manuel Miranda Talks Chicago, His PBS Roots and the Return of ‘Hamilton’: Lin-Manuel Miranda made a stop in Chicago to commemorate the official return of “Hamilton.” Arts Correspondent Angel Idowu sat down with Miranda to get his take on why the show’s return to Chicago is so special.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Another supplement to today’s edition (Updated)

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’ve all seen the amusing back and forth over the US Senate’s relaxing of its attire rule. But the Illinois Senate also has a rule

No person is entitled to the floor unless appropriately attired.

It’s generally defined as “business attire.” Men must wear a jacket and tie, for example. Masks are considered to be “attire,” and that’s how they enforced their mandate during the pandemic.

* The Question: Should the Illinois Senate drop its attire rule? Make sure to explain your answer and stick to Illinois, please. Thanks.

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Illinois State Library closed after emailed bomb threat

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois Secretary of State’s office…

At approximately 9:30am, a bomb threat was emailed to the Illinois State Library. Out of an abundance of caution, the library was evacuated, and the building swept for explosive devices. There were none. An all clear was issued by SOS police at approximately 11:30 and employees have returned to work.

…Adding… I’m told there are no suspects as of now. But the incident “will be investigated and the FBI will be notified.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** UPDATED x1 *** Illinois *not* spared from expanded UAW strike

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois has just 5,621 UAW members in the auto industry, according to a recent analysis by Fitch Ratings. All those members work for Ford. The Stellantis plant has been at least temporarily shuttered. From the AP today

Another 5,600 additional workers joined the strike on top of the 13,000 of the 146,000 members that began the strike one week ago.

Ford was spared additional strikes because the company has met some of the union’s demands during negotiations over the past week, said UAW President Shawn Fain.

“We’ve made some real progress at Ford,” Fain said during an online presentation to union members. “We still have serious issues to work through, but we do want to recognize that Ford is showing that they are serious about reaching a deal.”

* Meanwhile, Fitch also looked at the effects of a UAW strike on state budgets

A forecast prepared by the University of Michigan’s Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics (RSQE) estimated roughly $180 million of tax revenue losses for Michigan resulting from a 10-week strike involving all UAW members across OEMs, would be well within the state’s ability to manage without credit deterioration. Assuming the UAW strike remains limited, Fitch anticipates state tax and local income tax revenue losses will be substantially less than the RSQE’s initial forecast. In addition, UAW has $825 million in a strike fund that could pay wages and health benefits for all UAW workers for about 11 weeks, according to the RSQE. [Emphasis added.]

*** UPDATE *** Welp, turns out Illinois wasn’t spared after all. The headline has been changed as a result. From the Illinois AFL-CIO…

Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea and Secretary-Treasurer Pat Devaney Issue Statement on UAW Strike Expansion to Illinois

“Today’s announcement of UAW members striking at parts distribution centers at General Motors and Stellantis in Chicago and Bolingbrook is a significant turning point in the union’s ‘stand-up strike.’

The ‘stand-up strike’ movement is not just about the Big Three automakers – it is about working people standing up to corporate greed.

These fights are rooted in the same struggle that workers all over this country are engaged in—and they are making it clear that it’s time to put an end to an economy that has been rigged against working people for decades.

The Illinois AFL-CIO stands with the UAW every single day until they get the fair contract they so justly deserve.”

* From ABC 7, the impact is pretty small

Among the facilities joining the strike are a GM facility in Bolingbrook and a Stellantis facility in Naperville.

Approximately 5,625 additional workers will join the strike, with about 100 workers at the Bolingbrook facility and 100 at the Naperville facility.

  8 Comments      


Bailey back to his election-denying ways

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Darren Bailey on Nov. 10, 2020

All this fraudulent activity is absolutely disgusting. It’s wrong, it’s—in my opinion—almost the highest form of treason in our country, so we pray that that will be dealt with.

Bloomberg

After the election, Bailey said on social media that he stood with Trump and that he found the idea that he should concede “appalling.”

* After Bailey won the Republican gubernatorial primary with Trump’s help, he moved away from the former POTUS. From an October, 2022 Sun-Times editorial

Here in Illinois, Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey said there is no doubt Biden won the election fair and square.

* Now that he’s running for Congress


It was an honor to sign this hat, especially when you hear the story.
It will be a greater honor to serve with President Trump representing Illinois!
Thank you Paul Fomerly Phil Shifly
#MAGA #baileyforcongress

Posted by Darren Bailey on Friday, September 22, 2023

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Today’s quotable

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Craig Wall at ABC 7

Chicago’s embattled city treasurer spoke publicly Thursday for the first time about allegations of possible illegal and unethical behavior leveled against her. […]

Among the allegations is that [Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin] used her assistant to run personal errands, including grocery shopping and planning her daughter’s birthday party.

“This allegation is absurd,” Conyears-Ervin said.

But Conyears-Ervin repeatedly evaded questions about whether she engaged in such activity.

“According to the allegations, employees were doing personal errands on city’s time. That did not occur,” Conyears-Ervin said.

[Craig Wall: “Did they do personal errands for you on their own time?”]

“Craig, I am going to speak to the allegations, and the allegation spoke to employees doing work for me on city’s time; that did not occur.”

Her response was troubling for the head of the Better Government Association.

“There ought to be a complete separation of one’s public life and private life, and there’s no such thing as asking a favor of somebody who works directly for you, whether it’s on their personal time or on company time,” said David Greising, president of the Better Government Association.

There’s more, so go read the whole thing.

* It would also be nice to know why the Inspector General didn’t do anything about this for years. I reached out to former IG Joe Ferguson several days ago, but have not yet heard back.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s Friday! What’s going on?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

    * NPR Illinois | Drug addiction and the end of cash bail: Illinois this week became the first state to end cash bail. Advocates say it will bring more fairness to the criminal justice system. But allowing drug offenders to leave custody may prevent them from getting the help they need, according to some local officials. In many smaller, rural areas, there are few rehab facilities. “If you want to go to drug rehab, you have to call you get on a waiting list. And sometimes the only chance you get to wants to get them in and the day they’re wanting to go, that may be the time you can’t get them in that day, then they may never go,” Cass County Sheriff Devron Ohrn said.

    * Inside Climate News | Pritzker’s signature climate law has seen slow progress on clean energy, green jobs promises: Today, renewable sources make up only 10.5% of power. That includes not only current projects but also others planned with promises they will soon come online. On the promised new “equitable” jobs in clean energy industries, the state has yet to train or help place even one worker, though training programs are being set up to be in place by next year.

    * WIFR | Trial over Illinois abortion referral law begins in Rockford: Attorneys are arguing the 2016 an amendment to the Illinois Health Care Right of Conscience Act that requires medical and counseling personnel to promote abortion regardless of their ethical or moral views. The act became law seven years ago but it’s not in effect because it’s hung up in court. Lawyers who are trying to stop it say requiring someone to go against their personal and religious beliefs violates the First Amendment of the Constitution

    * Tribune | National Association of Realtors takes additional steps to address alleged workplace issues: A new member task force will work with outside legal counsel, whose attorneys will conduct an independent assessment of company policies and practices and then make recommendations “to improve our procedures, trainings, and systems to prevent inappropriate behavior, encourage reporting of alleged misconduct, and promote an environment of transparency and accountability,” according to Goldberg’s email.

    * Daily Southtown | Indicted Orland Park pastor requests to have case severed from Trump, other defendants: Lee’s legal team, led by Illinois-based lawyer David Shestokas, has similarly filed a severance request and is waiting to hear back, Shestokas confirmed“We are of the opinion that, on a couple of levels, Pastor Lee will be prejudiced by having his trial take place with everybody else,” Shestokas said. Shestokas is working on the case with Georgia-based lawyer David Oles.

    * Chicago Daily Law Bulletin | Illinois Supreme Court disbars 12 attorneys, suspends 11: The Illinois Supreme Court disbarred 12 attorneys and suspended 11, including former ComEd CEO Anne R. Pramaggiore and lobbyist Michael McClain, in lawyer disciplinary orders since its last term.

    * ABC Chicago | Chicago treasurer denies wrongdoing in exclusive interview after IG launches ethics investigation: Conyears-Ervin repeatedly evaded questions about whether she engaged in such activity. “According to the allegations, employees were doing personal errands on city’s time. That did not occur,” Conyears-Ervin said. “Craig, I am going to speak to the allegations, and the allegation spoke to employees doing work for me on city’s time; that did not occur.”

    * WCIA | New dispensary planning for future changes to state’s marijuana law: Constructing a business plan is all about planning for the future, but what if your plans are illegal in the present? The owners of Share. — Springfield’s newest dispensary — don’t think that’s a problem.[…] The owners are already building a drive through window on the building. Drive throughs are not allowed by law now, but lawmakers have already considered the change in the past.

    * WBEZ | ‘A good place:’ Queer youth seek acceptance at state’s first foster home for LGBTQ+ teens: Nationally, about one-third of foster care youth identify as LGBTQ+, and according to researchers, they are at significantly higher risk of experiencing homelessness, physical harm and exchanging sex to meet basic needs. “It’s important that they’re doing this,” said Charles Golbert, a court-appointed lawyer who advocates for children in DCFS custody and a vocal critic of the department. But now, Golbert said, “it needs to be expanded for more than just five beds.”

    * Sun-Times | My fault Sox game not stopped after stadium shooting, interim police superintendent says: Interim Chicago Police Supt. Fred Waller told the Sun-Times the game was allowed to continue without interruption due to “miscommunication” on the protocol for notifying Major League Baseball. That issue has been addressed and won’t happen again, he said.

    * WBEZ | Johnson administration defends contract with private defense firm to prop up migrant ‘base camps’: In a brief interview with WBEZ, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas said the city had limited options as it seeks to move people out of police stations as quickly as possible. “There’s not many companies that have this type of capability of literally standing up prefabricated structures driving 50 foot poles, creating flooring, and then staffing 24/7,” Pacione-Zayas said.

    * Tribune | Cook County chips in to help buy hotels in Evanston and Oak Park for people who are homeless; also approves water bill relief: The board voted to award a $7 million, no-interest, fully forgivable 30-year loan to Connections for the Homeless Inc. so the nonprofit can buy the Margarita Inn in Evanston. It also approved a similar $6.5 million loan to Housing Forward LLC and the Oak Park Residence Corp. for the purchase of the Write Inn in Oak Park.

    * Tribune | Chicago Plan Commission approves Fulton Market apartment tower that will reserve 30% of its units as affordable: The original plan called for reserving 20% of the units as affordable housing to comply with the city’s Affordable Requirements Ordinance, but after a last-minute push by 27th Ward Ald. Walter Burnett, city planners hammered out a new agreement with the developers, boosting that to 30% using tax increment financing dollars from the local TIF district.

    * Sateline | States and cities eye stronger protections for gig workers: Roughly 1 in 6 American adults have engaged in gig work for platforms such as Uber, Lyft and DoorDash, according to a 2021 report by the Pew Research Center. But while those jobs promise flexibility and a low barrier to entry, they often pay less on an hourly basis than the prevailing minimum wage and lack basic protections such as overtime, sick pay and unemployment insurance.

    * Crain’s | Oscar Mayer is renaming its hot dog vehicles, again: Just four months after rebranding as the “Frankmobile,” Oscar Mayer is calling its iconic six-car fleet of hot dog-shaped vehicles the “Wienermobile” once again. “It was a franktastic summer celebrating our 100% Beef Franks with the Frankmobile from coast to coast,” Oscar Mayer Associate Director Kelsey Rice said in a statement. “Though, like many of you, we miss our original icon. Starting this week, we’re welcoming back the Wienermobile.”

    * Sun-Times | Acorns galore: ‘Mast year’ for oak trees means massive seed production across Chicago: An abundance in acorns this fall is the result of a “mast seeding event,” a phenomenon that only happens once every few years, when oak trees produce a much larger amount of acorns than normal.

    * Crain’s | Portillo’s expansion plans just got even more aggressive: Portillo’s is boosting its growth goals by more than half, aiming to open at least 920 restaurants around the country in about 20 years. It’s the first time the Oak Brook-based hot dog and Italian beef chain has updated its growth goals since going public in 2021, when it was targeting 600 restaurants in 25 years. Portillo’s also increased its annual growth target to 12% to 15% annually from 10%.

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Live coverage

Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated)

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* IDES | Jobs Up in Most Metro Areas in August: Over-the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in eleven metropolitan areas, decreased in two and was unchanged in one for the year ending August 2023, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). Over-the-year, the unemployment rate increased in thirteen metropolitan areas and decreased in one.

* WICS | ACLU meets with Springfield Police Department about Pre-Trial Fairness Act: The meeting also gave the police department a chance to explain what new training was involved and how paperwork would be filled out when it comes to citations. […] “People were afraid that the doors to the jail were going to be open and all kinds of violent offenders were going to be released. That’s not the case at all. If a violent offender is arrested we’ll be in contact with the state’s attorney’s office to let them know why we feel the subject needs detained,” Commander Sara Pickford said.

* ABC | Illinois man pleads guilty to trying to burn down planned abortion clinic: Philip J. Buyno of Prophetstown, Illinois, entered the plea Tuesday to a federal charge of attempting to use fire to damage a building used in interstate commerce. Buyno admitted that, on May 20, he brought several containers filled with gasoline with him and used his car to breach the front entrance to a commercial building in Danville to burn it down before it could be used as a reproductive health clinic, prosecutors said.

* Capitol News Illinois | Former Illinois State Police trooper who pleaded guilty in relation to deadly crash postpones hearing: Henry Haupt, a spokesperson for Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, said in an email that the hearing had been postponed until Nov. 1 at Mitchell’s request. Mitchell pleaded guilty to two counts of reckless homicide and two counts of aggravated reckless driving in connection with a crash the day after Thanksgiving in 2007 on Interstate 64 east in St. Clair County. That conviction triggered the revocation of his driver’s license. He has tried five times in the past to have his license reinstated.

* WAND | IDHA grant provides millions in neighborhood revitalization: The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) Board approved $19 million to support affordable housing and community revitalization efforts across Illinois. The grants are being awarded under the Strong Communities Program (SCP), the initiative will provide funding to 68 units of local governments and land bank authorities for the acquisition, maintenance, rehabilitation, and demolition of abandoned residential properties in their communities.

* WSIL | Perry County Steelworkers could go on strike soon if good faith negotiations don’t resume: Eaton’s final offer consisted of a 4 percent increase in wages over the first year and a 3 1/2 percent increase each of the next two years. It was rather appalling to the membership for what they were asking for,” said Dodds.

* WTTW | Chicago Sues Monsanto for Polluting City’s Air, Water, Soil with Toxic Chemicals: “Monsanto knew for decades that its commercial PCB formulations were highly toxic and would inevitably produce precisely the contamination and human health risks that have occurred, perpetuating the environmental abuse and stark inequities so many of Chicago’s neighborhoods have long suffered from,” Johnson said in a statement.

* Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s team will scrap INVEST South/West name, but not its aims: While Johnson’s team is still evaluating the program, they may take “a very different path” toward investing in the South and West sides, and a forthcoming approach won’t be dubbed INVEST South/West, according to Johnson’s Deputy Mayor of Business and Neighborhood Development, Kenya Merritt. […] But Merritt would not say what exactly Johnson’s new approach will look like. When asked what needs to change about the program, Merritt said Johnson wants to see results.

* Crain’s | Chicago-area home prices growing at twice the speed of the nation’s: The median price of homes sold in the nine-county Chicago metro area rose to $339,900 in August, up 9.6% from the same time a year ago, according to data released this morning by Illinois Realtors. Nationally, the median price increased 3.9% to $407,100, according to a separate report from the National Association of Realtors.

* CBS Chicago | No threat found after Chicago area school evacuated over bomb threat: North Shore School District 112 said Red Oak Elementary School was evacuated Thursday morning and students were safely relocated to Sherwood Elementary School, after a call of a bomb threat. Shortly before 10:30 a.m., police and school district officials confirmed a thorough search of the building found no credible threat. The school was set to resume normal operations at 11:30 a.m., with all bus routes running at 11 a.m.

* AP | Biden uses executive power to create a New Deal-style American Climate Corps: In an announcement Wednesday, the White House said the program will employ more than 20,000 young adults who will build trails, plant trees, help install solar panels and do other work to boost conservation and help prevent catastrophic wildfires.

* Tribune | Rupert Murdoch, whose creation of Fox News made him a force in American politics, is stepping down: Rupert Murdoch, the 92-year-old Australian media magnate whose creation of Fox News made him a force in American politics, is stepping down as leader of both Fox’s parent company and his News Corp. media holdings. Fox said Thursday that Murdoch would become chairman emeritus of both companies, effective at board meetings in November. His son, Lachlan, will become News Corp. chairman and continue as chief executive officer of Fox Corp.

* AP | 4 free COVID-19 tests per household will be available Monday — how to get them: Orders can be placed online starting Monday via COVIDtests.gov — and the tests will be delivered for free by the U.S. Postal Service, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

* USA Today | Paying for X? Elon Musk considers charging all users a monthly fee to combat ‘armies of bots’: Musk said X will come out with a “lower-tier pricing” than the existing cost for current X premium subscribers. He did not specify what the pricing could be. “We want it to be a small amount of money,” Musk said. “This is a longer discussion, but in my view, this is actually the only defense against the vast armies of bots.”

* NYT | Mexico Feels Pressure of Relentless Migration From South America: In Mexico, people coming from South America are outpacing those from Central America for the first time since data has been collected. Mexican officials recorded 140,671 migrants from South American countries the first seven months of the year, compared to 102,106 from Central America, with record numbers coming from Venezuela and Ecuador.

* MediaIte | Project Veritas Suspends All Operations Amid Devastating Layoffs and Fundraising Struggles: Six staffers were laid off from the embattled organization this week, sources said, including all remaining journalists and one development associate. One former Project Veritas staffer said just 11 people remain on the non-profit’s payroll, including CEO Hannah Giles. Kiyak wrote in the letter that the group cannot “carry the present staff count any longer” and reminded those being laid off of their nondisclosure agreements.

* Tribune | ‘I’m a little bit of everything’: Margarito Flores opens up in exclusive interview about twins’ rise to top of Chicago drug trade, new law enforcement seminar: Chicago-born Margarito Flores Jr. was around eight years old when his father started taking him and his twin brother Pedro on car rides to Mexico. It was mostly business for his father, a hard-scrapping immigrant making ends meet by hauling drugs across the border.

  4 Comments      


Caption contest!

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The man has moves…


  31 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Dan Ugaste…

On Tuesday, State Representative Dan Ugaste (R-Geneva) introduced a resolution urging a vote in the House of Representatives and Senate on legislation to make the Invest in Kids Program in Illinois permanent. House Resolution 412 urges the General Assembly to take a vote on removing the sunset provision currently in the Invest in Kids Act during the 2023 fall veto session.

“It’s common knowledge that when we invest in children and education, we reap the rewards for generations, and we need to take action when we are falling behind on these key statistics,” said Rep. Ugaste. “Currently, we are last in the nation for state economies with the most racial equality and we need to address and fix this problem. We need to make certain that we are providing equal opportunity for everybody in Illinois and that begins with action in the General Assembly. We need a straight up and down vote, not an amendment to another bill, on this critical issue. This sunset needs to be removed so we can provide more opportunities for education in Illinois.”

Rep. Ugaste referenced a 2023 study from WalletHub of the state economies with the most racial equality, where Illinois was ranked 50th out of 50 states. According to the Illinois State Board of Education, in 2021-2022, student reading proficiency rates were 30% and student math proficiency rates were 26%. Illinois public school enrollment made a nearly 7.5% drop from the 2018-2019 school year.

The Invest in Kids Scholarship Tax Credit Program was enacted in 2017. It offers a 75% income tax credit to individuals and businesses that contribute to qualified Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs). These SGOs then provide scholarships for families meeting income requirements to attend non-public schools and technical academies in Illinois. The Invest in Kids Act is scheduled to be repealed on January 1st, 2025.

Rep. Ugaste is a co-sponsor of two bills to extend the Invest in Kids repeal date or remove it altogether to make the program permanent. Rep. Ugaste is a member of the Opportunity Caucus, which is focused on multiple bills to enact real education reform, among other issues.

* Here’s the House Resolution from Rep. Ugaste

Urges the General Assembly to take a vote on removing the sunset from the Invest in Kids Act during the upcoming Veto Session and make it possible for these students to continue their educations.

* WAND

Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois continues to advertise and sell health plans that fail to meet network adequacy standards in Central Illinois. Local lawmakers are furious that thousands of people still can’t see their Springfield Clinic doctors and specialists.

Eighteen months have gone by and patients are still facing the same issue. The Blue Cross directory continues to show 98 Springfield Clinic providers as in-network when they are not. […]

[Rep. Sue Scherer] has filed a bill to create transparency and harsher penalties for any insurance companies violating network adequacy standards. Her plan could require insurance groups to report any changes to their approved network plans within 15 days. Companies would face a $1,000 each day they fail to submit updated network plans.

House Bill 4126 also states that the agency’s director may prohibit network plans from being used or renewed within a county until the department determines the insurance network is adequate again. Insurers failing to update their network plan directories could face civil penalties of $5,000 per month. Scherer also believes insurance companies should audit their print and online directories for accuracy and make necessary corrections at least once every 90 days. […]

She explained the Pritzker administration and Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch’s Chief of Staff agree that the ghost networks must be stopped as soon as possible. Scherer would like to see her bill moved during veto session this fall rather than shelving the plan for the 2024 spring session.

* WAND

Illinois Senate Republicans are pushing for new regulations to protect minors from harmful consequences of social media addiction. […]

“Repeated research demonstrates how social media platforms are intentionally crafted to foster addiction, promote detrimental habits, and aggravate issues such as anxiety, depression, eating disorders and feelings of inadequacy,” said Sen. Sue Rezin (R-Morris). […]

Although, some are worried the plan could lead to unintended consequences for any business operating on the internet. TechNet, which represents nearly 100 innovative companies, argues that this bill contains vague requirements that provide little or no clarity on compliance with a broad impact.

“The bill does not define what a business or business entity is,” said Tyler Diers, Midwest Executive Director for TechNet. “So, think for a second about all of the websites that are likely to be accessed by a child and then think about how these websites must have the best interest of the child in mind. That would include all major news outlets, the websites of every major sports league, most online magazines and podcast channels.”

* Rep Nabeela Syed filed HB4142

Amends the Genetic Information Privacy Act. Provides that an insurer may not seek information derived from genetic testing for use in connection with a policy of life insurance. Provides that an insurer may consider the results of genetic testing in connection with a policy of life insurance if the individual voluntarily submits the results and the results are favorable to the individual. Amends the Illinois Insurance Code. Provides that an insurer must comply with the provisions of the Genetic Information Privacy Act in connection with the amendment, delivery, issuance, or renewal of a life insurance policy; claims for or denial of coverage under a life insurance policy; or the determination of premiums or rates under a life insurance policy.

* WTTW

A new ordinance introduced to the Chicago City Council by Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd Ward) last Thursday would restrict sales of hemp products. Under Hopkins’ proposal, hemp products, like delta-8, could only be sold in licensed marijuana dispensaries.[…]

State Rep. LaShawn Ford, D-Chicago, is drafting alternate legislation that would create a regulatory structure similar to cannabis. It would limit sales to 21 and over, create rigorous testing and labeling requirements and impose a new tax on hemp products.

Unlike Hopkins’ ordinance, the state legislation would not mandate hemp products be sold in licensed marijuana dispensaries. Ford prefers that the state create a separate hemp permit for businesses who want to sell hemp products, in addition to allowing hemp to be sold in marijuana dispensaries. […]

Ford doesn’t think banning delta-8 makes sense.

“We want to regulate it so it’s safe, clean and revenue can be generated from it. Baffles me that we would want to ban something we can’t get rid of, during a time when we need revenue,” Ford said. “Let’s put this under control of the government so our streets are safe and it’s taxed.”

* Rep. Dave Vella filed HB4143 yesterday

Amends the Unemployment Insurance Act. Provides that an individual shall be ineligible for benefits for a period totaling and not to exceed 2 weeks (rather than an individual shall be ineligible for benefits for any week) with respect to which it is found that his total or partial unemployment is due to a stoppage of work which exists because of a labor dispute at the factory, establishment, or other premises at which he is or was last employed. Provides that, after the 2 week period, the individual will be eligible for benefits.

* HR409

Mourns the passing of former Illinois State Representative and Assistant Minority Leader William B. “Bill” Black of Danville.

  20 Comments      


Bears in disarray

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The full Fields quote is here. Patrick Finley at the Sun-Times

After months spent running an updated version of the Bears’ offense, Justin Fields pushed back against it Wednesday, saying he wanted to play less “robotic” and more like “myself,” starting with the game at the Chiefs on Sunday.

“My goal this week is just to say ‘eff it’ and go out there and play football how I know to play football,” he said. “That includes thinking less and just going out there and playing off of instincts rather than so much, say, info in my head, data in my head. Just literally going out there and playing football. Going back to, ‘It’s a game,’ and that’s it.”

Asked why he was overthinking things, Fields pointed toward the coaching staff.

“You know, could be coaching, I think,” he said. “They are doing their job when they are giving me what to look at, but at the end of the day, I can’t be thinking about that when the game comes. I prepare myself throughout the week, and then when the game comes, it’s time to play free at that point. Thinking less and playing more.”

A player trying to publicly distance himself from the way he’s coached is a line rarely crossed. It was a major development at Halas Hall on a day that had plenty of competition.

Fields then walked it back, but he was right the first time. The coaching is awful. The Bears have ruined countless quarterbacks. It’s been fashionable to express dreams about what could’ve happened if the Bears had taken Patrick Mahomes in the draft, but the Bears probably would’ve ruined him, too.

* Speaking of coaches, here’s Mark Potash at the Sun-Times

After a week of vague details surrounding his absence last week, defensive coordinator Alan Williams suddenly resigned Wednesday, citing health and family reasons. […]

Williams, who was in his second season as defensive coordinator, left the team last week after a 38-20 loss to the Packers on Sept. 10. His absence and the lack of clarity regarding it led to internet and social-media speculation, including a report that Williams’ home and Halas Hall were “raided” as part of an investigation into presumed wrongdoing.

It was enough to compel Williams’ Chicago-based attorney, Andrew M. Stroth, to address the reports and innuendo, saying there “was no raid on Halas Hall” and “no raid on his home.”

“There’s no criminal or any type of action against coach Williams,” Stroth said.

A Bears spokesman said there was no police activity Wednesday or any other day related to Williams.

Still, the circumstances surrounding Williams’ exit remain murky. Most notably, the Bears’ only comment on Williams’ departure was a terse statement in a press release — “Alan Williams submitted his resignation as the team’s defensive coordinator this afternoon” — that lacked well-wishes for Williams and appreciation for his contribution to the organization. The White Sox’ statement about the firing of Rick Hahn and Ken Williams was effusive by comparison.

Attorney Andrew Stroth’s full comment

“Given the false rumors and what seems to be out there on social media, I just want to set the record straight that Coach Williams has some health challenges and some family issues he’s dealing with and he thought it was the right time to take a step back and deal with those issues. He has tremendous respect for the Bears organization and he just though it was the time to handle this health issue and his personal matters.”

* SB Nation’s James Dator

We’re not going to amplify the accounts that started the most disgusting rumors about Williams, but there were several small accounts, with no history of ever breaking news, who suddenly had detailed information about alleged criminal investigations.

These went so far as to allege that former Bears player Charles Tillman, who became an FBI agent prior his retirement from football, was part of the investigating team that raided Williams’ home and the Bears facilities.

If this happened 10 years ago people would look for a verified account to substantiate a piece of news. It wasn’t an infaillible process, and rumors still spread — but there was at least one small safeguard to tell users that someone might not be legitimate.

Now, with verification being tied to an $8 monthly payment it’s become impossible to discern real reporters from any rando with a YouTube channel, which is where these rumors began. This is now compounded with Twitter’s “revenue sharing” model, which incentivizes paid accounts to gain as many interactions as possible in a month in order to get a cash payout. Real or fake, the name of the game is getting as many eyeballs as possible on your tweets — and the best way to do this is breaking news, even if it’s fake.

* Ugh…


* Leaving this here…


  52 Comments      


A little context, please

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This WBBM Radio story is completely devoid of context

McHenry County’s top prosecutor said he witnessed “absurd and incoherent” results in court Monday, as the state ended cash bail in Illinois.

State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally offered two examples of people he would like to have seen put in jail, pending trial, but who instead were freed because judges had no choice.

One involved a 36-year old McHenry man who was charged with criminal damage to property for allegedly trying to break in the door of his ex-girlfriend’s house, Kenneally said. […]

A second example, Kenneally said, was a 23-year-old Cary man arrested for a second time after allegedly driving under the influence. Kenneally said the man should have been detained because he poses a threat to the public.

“There’s other people that I could point to where there’s a legitimate argument to be made that a judge should have discretion to detain these people, but they just no longer have discretion,” the prosecutor said. […]

“The party of unchecked power has succeeded in turning the criminal justice system into a farce,” Kenneally said.

Nobody remembers cash bail? It was the law of the land until the end of this past weekend. But that long history is already being shoved down the memory hole. People were released after posting bond and then quite often committed other crimes. The cash just didn’t matter.

* A quick Google search would find this June story about McHenry County

A man out on bond for attempted murder for allegedly shooting at sheriff’s deputies near Harvard has been arrested for an attack on his wife, court records show.

Randall B. Little, 59, of Harvard, was charged with two counts of domestic battery, both Class A misdemeanors. […]

Little was out on bond in connection with a prior incident where he was charged in April 2022 with armed violence, aggravated intimidation of a peace officer, two counts of felon in possession of a firearm, intimidation, threatening a public official, unlawful use of a weapon, two counts of aggravated assault and unauthorized possession of cannabis sativa plants.

He was later additionally charged with attempted first-degree murder, a Class X felony.

* Here’s one from May

While out on pre-trial bond for three separate pending felony drug cases, a Woodstock woman was arrested and charged with the manufacturing and delivery of fentanyl and cocaine, according to the complaint filed in the McHenry County courthouse and the jail log.

* Last month

A McHenry County man, who is a serial window peeper, has been sentenced to three years in prison for peeping into the homes of multiple women in Woodstock. […]

McHenry County Assistant State’s Attorney Ashur Youash said Hanabarger committed the offense while out on bond in three window peeping cases in McHenry County. […]

Hanabarger is still facing separate McHenry County cases for violating an order of protection, driving under the influence and contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

I could go on, but you get the gist.

  31 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The last time I posted something like this, one of my readers applied and accepted a legislative staff position. So, even though it’s late notice, let’s try it again…

House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch is encouraging jobseekers interested in working in state government to learn about career opportunities with his office at virtual and in-person career fairs being held on Thursday, Sept. 21.

The in-person event will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Room 114 of the State Capitol in Springfield. A virtual event will also be held via Zoom from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. Applicants can register for the in-person event here, and the virtual event here. Attendees can access the same information at either event.

“Every day in the Legislature, we have the chance to change people’s lives for the better. But I truly believe legislators are only as effective as the staff who are doing the work behind them,” Welch said. “That’s why I’m committed to building a team in the Speaker’s Office that looks like Illinois, that fights for Illinois, and that delivers for Illinois. There are exciting times ahead, so if you are looking to make a difference, then the Speaker’s office is looking for you.”

The career fairs offer an opportunity for interested candidates to get more information about a variety of careers with Office of the Speaker, talk with experienced staff, and apply for current openings. Welch’s office is actively recruiting for a number of full-time, part-time, and temporary positions, including:

    • Assistant Legal Counsel to the Speaker
    • Committee Clerk
    • Doorkeeper (temporary)
    • Enrolling and Engrossing Input Operator
    • Human Resources Generalist
    • Leadership Page (full-time and part time)
    • Legislative Coordinator
    • Research & Appropriations Director
    • Research Analyst

Interested applicants can find out more about these positions at the career fairs, at ILHouseDems.com/Employment, or on the office’s LinkedIn page.

To apply prior to the event, please send a resume and cover letter to jobs@hds.ilga.gov.

It’s obviously not going to be easy to recruit a new Research & Appropriations Director because a majority of the staff is trying to form a union.

Anyway…

* The Question: Did you or a family member ever work on legislative staff? Tell us about it.

…Adding… Senate Democratic job openings are here.

  16 Comments      


Trib wrings hands over zombie threat

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Leigh Giangreco at Crain’s has a solid story today on the hunt for revenues to fund the upcoming Chicago budget

The Johnson administration also has nixed the idea of instituting a service tax, at least for the 2024 budget. In 2019, former Mayor Lori Lightfoot floated a tax on professional services like attorneys and accountants as a way to shore up the city’s pension payments, but the measure requires approval from the Illinois General Assembly, which is now entering its fall veto session.

“That’s an idea that has long been mentioned as a potential revenue generator,” Jason Lee, the mayor’s senior adviser, said of the service tax.

The tax could make fiscal sense given that consumer patterns have shifted away from buying goods and toward services, Lee said. He added that the mayor’s office is keeping the tax on its radar.

“It’s unlikely we’ll be able to make any progress legislatively prior to this budget,” he said. “It’s not being currently anticipated as a revenue generator for the (2024) budget.”

The mayor’s office is examining other revenue streams that wouldn’t require a stamp of approval from state lawmakers. Lee did not elaborate on what those potential sources would look like but did note that “efficiencies within government” would play a role in the budget.

Emphasis added for obvious reasons. Notice that nowhere did Giangreco’s story mention a financial transaction tax, which would also require legislative approval. As you have known for months, the governor and the two Democratic legislative leaders flatly oppose a financial transaction tax.

* And that brings us to today’s Tribune editorial

Ed Tilly started as a trader at the Chicago Board Options Exchange in 1987 and worked his way up to chief executive officer. Under his decadelong stewardship, the exchange grew dramatically, and it was having a banner year until Tuesday, when Tilly’s Chicago success story ended abruptly.

Knowledgeable, popular among trading professionals and one of the most recognizable faces of his industry, Tilly resigned under pressure after an internal investigation found he had undisclosed personal relationships with colleagues.

And just like that, Chicago lost one of the anchors keeping a bobbling industry in place. […]

Against this backdrop — a perilous moment for an iconic employer born and bred in Chicago — Mayor Brandon Johnson continues his hunt for deep pockets to pick.

A much-discussed “transaction tax” may prove irresistible to a political neophyte staring at a budget hole and looking ahead to whatever sweetheart deal his pals at the Chicago Teachers Union will be demanding from him soon.

And then it goes on and on about the threat of a transaction tax without mentioning the formidable current and longtime Statehouse opposition, which was reported by the board’s own newspaper. I mean, the editorial didn’t even mention that the state government would have to approve such a tax.

Also, too, wasn’t that kind of an abrupt dismissal by the board of the scandal that led to Tilly’s ouster?

The Chicago-based group said in a statement on Tuesday that the failure by Edward Tilly to disclose the ties “violated Cboe’s policies and stands in stark contrast to the company’s values”.

Seems kind of important.

  18 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  31 Comments      


Live coverage

Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.

  Comments Off      


*** UPDATED x2 *** Pritzker praises Biden for granting employment authorization to Venezuelan migrants who arrived before August

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for a Biden administration fact sheet. Homeland Security press release excerpt

Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro N. Mayorkas today announced the extension and redesignation of Venezuela for Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for 18 months, due to extraordinary and temporary conditions in Venezuela that prevent individuals from safely returning.

After reviewing the country conditions in Venezuela and consulting with interagency partners, Secretary Mayorkas determined that an 18-month TPS extension and redesignation are warranted based on Venezuela’s increased instability and lack of safety due to the enduring humanitarian, security, political, and environmental conditions. This redesignation provides temporary protection from removal, as well as employment authorization for individuals in the United States before July 31, 2023.

“Temporary protected status provides individuals already present in the United States with protection from removal when the conditions in their home country prevent their safe return,” said Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. “That is the situation that Venezuelans who arrived here on or before July 31 of this year find themselves in. We are accordingly granting them the protection that the law provides. However, it is critical that Venezuelans understand that those who have arrived here after July 31, 2023 are not eligible for such protection, and instead will be removed when they are found to not have a legal basis to stay.

Above my pay grade about what’ll happen to anyone who got here starting in August. I’ll update tomorrow.

* Gov. Pritzker…

Governor Pritzker issued the following statement after the announcement that President Biden and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security will expand temporary protections, including work permits, to thousands of recent asylum seekers in Illinois and across the country:

“Since day one of this humanitarian crisis, I have heard one thing from migrant families and their advocates— they want to build better lives and work. I’m very pleased that President Biden has listened to my concerns and those of other governors and political leaders and expanded Temporary Protected Status to migrants from Venezuela, thousands of whom have been sent to Illinois over the last year. Despite traveling thousands of treacherous miles and then being used as political chess pieces by those who should have welcomed and helped them, they are eager to contribute to their new communities and get to work. Reducing wait times for employment approvals and expanding protection status for those coming from Venezuela will get people working and on a path to building a better future for themselves and their families. In Illinois, we’re facing worker shortages in critical industries like hospitality, food processing, health care, and transportation, and these additional workers will help relieve those shortages and the burden they place on employers. My administration will continue to work with the Biden administration and the Department of Homeland Security to address the ongoing influx of asylum seekers with care, compassion, and practicality as this crisis evolves.”

*** UPDATE 1 *** Tribune

Around July 31, there were at least 4,000 Venezuelans counted in the city’s census of migrant shelter population and those still awaiting placement, according to city data, but that does not account for those who exited the shelter system. […]

Those who arrived after July 31 will not be eligible; in Chicago, city records show at least 2,500 new arrivals have come since that date, though not all of them are Venezuelans.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Missed this last night from Mayor Johnson…

“As we reach a critical point in our mission to receive new arrivals and put them on a path to resettlement, the action taken today by President Biden and Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas to expand the Temporary Protected Status to Venezuelan immigrants comes at a welcome time for our city and our country.

“On the heels of a Washington D.C. visit from our Deputy Mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights, Beatriz Ponce de Leon, we applaud this decision to provide thousands of new arrivals to Chicago the opportunity to work, support themselves and their families, and build community. This action demonstrates how intergovernmental coordination across national, state and local governments continues to make our city a safe sanctuary to all people.

“This is also an important step in protecting individuals who seek work without fear of exploitation, wage theft and trafficking. Without legal work authorization, new arrivals seeking employment are at greater risk for mistreatment. But where there are labor shortages in our city, especially in the fields of food processing, clean energy, health care (including nursing and dentistry), transportation and warehousing, it is clear that authorizing new arrivals for work in these sectors would have a significant public benefit – both to our local and regional economies, and to the families and individuals who are new arrivals to our great city.

“My administration will continue seeking ways to partner with City, County and State agencies to garner more resources, improve our capacity, expand our operations and influence policy change at the federal level. We will advocate for all Chicagoans, and look forward to more effective collaboration that yields results and creative pathways to shelter and resettle our growing immigrant, refugee and migrant population.”

  2 Comments      


City quietly awarded migrant tent contract

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration recently moved forward with plans to place new asylum-seekers in massive tent camps around the city, signing a nearly $30 million contract with a private security firm at the center of controversies related to its handling of asylum-seekers elsewhere in the U.S.

GardaWorld Federal Services, and its subsidiary Aegis Defense Services, quietly sealed the one-year deal with the city on Sept. 12. The city contract calls for GardaWorld to provide “emergency logistics management and operation services that will set up shelter … and other necessary services (also called ‘a base camp’ or ‘solution’)” for the new arrivals.”

The company signed a similar $125 million contract with the state of Illinois late last year, though so far very little has been paid out. Earlier this month, Johnson’s team noted the city’s migrant expenditures could reach $302 million by the end of this year when factoring in costs of the new tent encampment sites. […]

The security company, which says on its website it has “responded to all major U.S. natural disasters, declared emergencies, and military conflicts since 2002,” has also drawn criticism for several immigration-related matters. Those dealings encompass projects and proposals in Denver, Texas, Florida and Canada related to migrants — spurring internal concerns from members of Johnson’s own administration two months earlier.

The contract is here. It was awarded on September 12th, which is eight days ago.

* There’s some chatter online about this item in the contract

HVAC will be provided for all structures in proper capacities to cool to approximately 72 degrees Fahrenheit from ambient temperatures of 95 degrees and heat to approximately 70 degrees Fahrenheit from ambient temperatures of 40 degrees.

It doesn’t say what happens when ambient temps fall below zero.

  19 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From today’s Metra board meeting…


All heavy lifts, some more than others.

* AG Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today charged three men who own and operate a dozen Central and Southern Illinois gas stations for allegedly underreporting more than $50 million in sales from 2019 to 2022, which produced more than $4 million in tax liability.

Roger Multani, 29, of Peoria, Illinois, and brothers Surinder (Paul) Singh, 34, and Jitender (Jay) Singh, 33, both of Indianapolis, Indiana, were charged in a Peoria County Circuit Court and Sangamon County Circuit Court with multiple counts of theft, fraud and tax evasion.

“Individuals who underreport sales taxes are stealing from the state and from the residents in their communities who rely on the important programs and services stolen tax revenues are intended to fund,” Raoul said. “I appreciate the continued partnership of the Illinois Department of Revenue as we work together to hold these individuals accountable.”

* IDFPR…

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (“IDFPR”) announced today that Susana Soriano will serve as the next Director of Banking. Appointed by Governor JB Pritzker, Soriano previously served as the Deputy Director of Banking after joining the Department in October 2020. Her appointment is pending confirmation by the Illinois Senate.

“I am proud to announce that I have appointed Susana Soriano as Director of Banking for the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Whether implementing the Community Reinvestment Act or serving small businesses through the Chicago Community Loan Fund, Susana brings both expertise and equity to all that she does—both inside and outside of IDFPR. A seasoned professional and passionate advocate for underserved communities, I have no doubt that Susana is the right person for this post and I congratulate her on this appointment.”

* IHDA…

The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) Board approved $19 million to support affordable housing and community revitalization efforts across Illinois. Awarded under the Strong Communities Program (SCP), the initiative will provide funding to 68 units of local governments and land bank authorities for the acquisition, maintenance, rehabilitation, and demolition of abandoned residential properties in their communities. The program is designed to support local revitalization efforts and attract further investment in communities that may lack the resources needed to tackle vacant, abandoned and deteriorated properties.

* Rep. Ugaste…

On Tuesday, State Representative Dan Ugaste (R-Geneva) joined House Republican colleagues to discuss the negative effects of poor public policy handed down by Democrat leaders and focus on new opportunities to change course in Illinois. He joined State Representatives Jennifer Sanalitro (R-Bloomingdale), Martin McLaughlin (R-Barrington Hills), and Joe Sosnowski (R-Rockford) to invite colleagues to join the Opportunity Caucus and consider their proposed ideas on economic, education, tax, and crime reforms.

“The preamble of the Illinois Constitution says the People of the State of Illinois endeavor to ‘provide opportunity for the fullest development of the individual,’ yet for nearly 24 years, Democrat policies have failed miserably in providing that opportunity for Illinoisans,” said Rep. Ugaste. “With veto session on the horizon, we urge Democrats to consider our ideas, especially ones from our House Reigniting Illinois’ Strong Economy, Truth in Public Safety, and Literacy Improves Future Endeavors working groups to utilize Illinois’ strengths and create a cycle of opportunity that lasts generations.”

Rep. Ugaste referenced a 2023 WalletHub study ranking state economies with the most racial equality, where Illinois was ranked 50th in the nation. He urged Democrat colleagues to consider Republican legislation that has been introduced in the House but has not been moved out of the Rules Committee or subcommittees. This legislation includes workers compensation bills, public safety bills, and permanently installing the Invest in Kids tax credit. The Opportunity Caucus will follow this press conference with a series of op-eds detailing solutions for these important issues in Illinois.

Rep. Ugaste is the Republican spokesperson for the House Judiciary – Civil, Labor & Commerce, and Financial Institutions Committees. He also leads the House Republican Reigniting Illinois’ Strong Economy working group and is a member of the Truth in Public Safety (TIPS) working group.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Tribune | After 2 months, COPA unable to find witnesses in CPD Ogden District migrant sex misconduct investigation, council member says: Kiisha Smith, the chair of the Ogden District Council, said during the police council’s monthly meeting on Tuesday that a COPA representative gave her the update last Friday. “Really, nothing’s changed,” Smith told the 30 or so meeting attendees. “They (COPA) stated that they still haven’t found the complaining asylum-seekers, so they still don’t have names, they say they don’t know where they are. I offered to advise them of where the locations were … like if they didn’t know we would provide the information for them to use in the investigation. They claim they knew, but nobody was speaking up.”

    * Harvard Political Review | Spearheading Progressive Legislation : An Interview with Governor J.B. Pritzker: HPR: This January, you signed the Protect Illinois Communities Act which banned assault rifles and high capacity magazines in the state of Illinois. Yet, there is still a major gun crisis both in your state and across the country. What more needs to be done in order to ensure that both Illinoisans and all Americans are safe from the gun crisis? J.B. Pritzker: Well, let’s start with we should make that national. We should have a national ban on assault weapons. We should have a national ban on switches — that’s something we also banned in Illinois — and high capacity magazines. Switches are what turns your non-automatic weapon into an automatic weapon. So these are things that ought to happen at a federal level. Obviously, the politics of that are more difficult nationally than they are in Illinois. But there’s much more that needs to be done.

    * Tribune | Cook County Board to consider $300,000 settlement for former commissioner’s aide over being fired after raising harassment claims: The decision must still be approved by the full County Board Thursday but if it is OK’d it would cap off off a yearslong saga first brought to light in 2021 when Cook County’s inspector general determined an elected official that sources identified as Sims retaliated against an employee who complained that Sims’ male chief of staff sent her unwanted, sexually explicit texts and touched her inappropriately.

    * Crain’s | Illinois police pension fund plans to start investing in loans and private credit: The Illinois Police Officers’ Pension Investment Fund aims to allocate about $300 million into leveraged loans, moving the money from junk bond index funds, according to a document. The fund’s staff will recommend a manager and the allocation to the board in December, said Kent Custer, chief investment officer for the fund.

    * Crain’s | Proposal to eliminate tipped wage breezes through committee: Originally introduced with a two-year phaseout, Mayor Brandon Johnson and his City Council allies reached a compromise with the Illinois Restaurant Association over the weekend to expand the time restaurants have to pay their employees the city’s full minimum wage to five years.

    * Tribune | O’Hare, Midway rank low in J.D. Power airport survey, as passengers wait on construction and new dining options: Among the challenges Chicago’s airports face in further improving their satisfaction scores could be getting construction started on a key phase of an overhaul of O’Hare, and improving local food and shopping options, said Mike Taylor, managing director of travel, hospitality and retail at J.D. Power. And that could have broader repercussions, as J.D. Power found more satisfied passengers are likely to spend more money at the airport.

    * WTTW | Ride Along With a Task Force Working to Reduce Car Jackings in Chicago: The Cook County Sheriff’s Office estimates up to 1,600 carjackings will be committed this year. In response, a multi-agency effort is in place to try and stop and find carjackers before the vehicle is used to commit other crimes.

    * Block Club Chicago | Old Town Weed Dispensary Rejected By Ald. Brian Hopkins: “While popular opinion is not the only factor I consider when evaluating zoning change requests, the clear survey result combined with the numerous comments received by my office made it apparent that I must deny this zoning change request,” Hopkins said.

    * Crain’s | Lolla funds new pickleball and tennis courts at Grant Park: Sixteen new pickleball courts and six new tennis courts are now open to the public at Grant Park thanks in part to a $500,000 grant from Lollapalooza. The courts were built with funds from Lolla as well as $41,000 raised by the Grant Park Advisory Council, Block Club Chicago reported. The advisory council began to raise money for new courts after hearing complaints that tennis and pickleball players were clashing over the shared spaces.

    * Bloomberg | Home insurance ‘bubble’ closer to popping as climate risks mount: First Street estimates that 39 million U.S. homes are insured at artificially suppressed prices compared with the risk they actually face. Of those, nearly 6.8 million homes are covered by state-backed “insurer of last resort” policies. Until now, state regulations that cap increases in insurance premiums and subsidized insurer-of-last-resort programs have hidden the magnitude of the problem, the report’s authors say. But as the number of disasters and the related damages keep rising, they predict, the insurance market will undergo a major adjustment and rates will surge, popping what the nonprofit calls a climate insurance bubble.

    * Sun-Times | Alan Williams’ status as Bears’ defensive coordinator getting murky: Williams missed last week because of a personal issue. Bears coach Matt Eberflus refused comment to any question about Williams’ status Wednesday, including whether or not he was still the team’s defensive coordinator. “I don’t have any update right now.”

    * SJ-R | ‘A living testament:’ Segregated firehouse to be restored in Springfield: Engine House No. 5, formerly known as the city’s “colored firehouse,” will be restored to its former condition, complete with a façade. “Those firefighters fought fires that were set during the 1908 race riots so it’s historical for the resilience of Black people and the city,” said ACLU president Kenneth Page. A reception will be held at 5 p.m. on Thursday at the firehouse, located at 1310 E. Adams St., to share its history and restoration plan.

    * ABC Chicago | 2 West Nile Virus deaths confirmed in DuPage County: The first death was an Addison resident in their 70s. The second was a West Chicago resident in their 60s. Health officials said they both fell ill in late August. So far in 2023 there have been six human cases of West Nile Virus reported in DuPage County.

    * SJ-R | ‘I feel like I’m coming back home’: Springfield City Council approves new library director: Gwendolyn Harrison started working at Lincoln Library in Springfield as a 16-year-old page. It is where she got her first professional job after earning her master’s degree in library science, working there from 1983 to 1999. On Tuesday, Harrison was unanimously approved by the Springfield City Council as library director.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated)

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Meanwhile… In Opposite Land

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Houston Chronicle

A Texas middle school teacher has been fired after assigning an unapproved illustrated version of Anne Frank’s Diary to her eighth grade reading class. Per a report from KFDM, a spokesperson for Hamshire-Fannett ISD, located south of Beaumont, released a statement confirming the teacher was sent home on Wednesday after reading a passage from Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation in which Frank wrote about male and female genitalia. An investigation into the incident has since ensued.

“As you may be aware, following concerns regarding curricular selections in your student’s reading class, a substitute teacher has been facilitating the class since Wednesday, September 13, 2023,” read a district statement sent to parents obtained by KFDM. “The district is currently in the process of posting to secure a high-quality, full-time teacher as quickly as possible.”

Anne Frank, a Jewish teenager, journaled her experiences as she and her family hid for two years during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. Her diary, which was published in 1947, has been used in schools for decades to educate students on the the Holocaust. While previous versions of Frank’s diary omitted sections in which she wrote about sexuality, the 2018 graphic novel adapted by Ari Folman and illustrated by David Polonsky, remains faithful to the original text. Folman’s parents are Holocaust survivors.

Per KFDM, the district sent an email to parents on Tuesday, calling the content the teacher read to the class “inappropriate,” adding: “The reading of that content will cease immediately. Your student’s teacher will communicate her apologies to you and your students soon, as she has expressed those apologies to us.”

* Moving on to Georgia via the AP

Marc Tyler Nobleman was supposed to talk to kids about the secret co-creator of Batman, with the aim of inspiring young students in suburban Atlanta’s Forsyth County to research and write.

Then the school district told him he had to cut a key point from his presentation — that the artist he helped rescue from obscurity had a gay son. Rather than acquiesce, he canceled the last of his talks.

“We’re long past the point where we should be policing people talking about who they love,” Nobleman said in a telephone interview. “And that’s what I’m hoping will happen in this community.”

State laws restricting talk of sexual orientation and gender identity in schools have proliferated in recent years, but the clash with Nobleman shows schools may be limiting such discussions even in states like Georgia that haven’t officially banned them. Some proponents of broader laws giving parents more control over schools argue they extend to discussion of sex and gender even if the statutes don’t explicitly cover them.

* The Hill

A Florida judge has denied a motion to temporarily block a portion of a state law that restricts access to gender-affirming health care for adults, dealing a blow to transgender individuals in a state whose medical care has been significantly disrupted by a slate of policies adopted by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R).

Florida in May joined more than a dozen other states in banning gender-affirming health care for transgender minors under legislation signed by DeSantis. The law, Senate Bill 254, also set up significant barriers for transgender adults to get needed treatment.

District Court Judge Robert Hinkle in June partially blocked the law’s restrictions on gender-affirming health care for transgender youths, ruling that the Florida law prohibits the administration of care “even when medically appropriate” and there is “no rational basis for a state to categorically ban these treatments.”

But the law does “not prohibit adults from obtaining treatments of the kind the plaintiffs seek,” Hinkle wrote in an order filed Monday, responding to a motion seeking an emergency block on the law’s restrictions on adult care.

* Florida, New Hampshire, Oklahoma via Rolling Stone

On Thursday, the New Hampshire Board of Education voted unanimously to approve an online PragerU “Cash Course” for use in the state’s remote Learn Everywhere program. Students who take the course, which consists of 15 five-minute videos, would be able to earn graduation credit toward the state’s financial literacy education requirement. […]

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration, which has prioritized infusing schools with right-wing ideology, was certainly accommodating in Florida. The push in New Hampshire was backed by Edelblut and board chair Andrew Cline, who also serves as president of the Josiah Bartlett Center, a conservative free-market think tank. Earlier this month in Oklahoma, culture warring Republican superintendent Ryan Walters announced a “partnership” with PragerU, without subjecting the materials to a state curriculum review. In Texas, where school board members are elected, the organization has been making overtures to Republican members of the board and engaged in deceptive practices to suggest their materials have received state approval.

In each of these states, concerns have been raised — and often ignored — over PragerU’s content. “[They’re] notorious for having ultra-conservative and highly ideological views on everything from climate change, to racism, to slavery, [and] anti-LGBTQ stances,” Matt Wilhelm, the Democratic leader of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, tells Rolling Stone. “Obviously, we’ve got concerns about PragerU and their reputation threatening the integrity of public education in the state of New Hampshire.” […]

In Oklahoma, school districts protested their superintendent’s approval of PragerU by forcefully declaring that the organization’s content does not align with their established educational standards. Various districts told OKC Fox25 that they had no plans to allow Prager’s content to actually be used in classrooms, as it had not undergone review in accordance with Oklahoma Academic Standards.

* Austin Chronicle

Travel restrictions have begun popping up around Texas, as anti-abortion activists attempt to block Texans from receiving legal abortions outside the state.

Last week, the city of Chandler and Mason County both introduced ordinances that would intimidate those attempting to use city or county roads to leave the state for an abortion, but they failed amid concerns about legal ramifications. However, Mitchell and Goliad counties have already passed similar ordinances, and the city of Llano introduced another that has since been temporarily tabled. Interstate 20 runs through Mitchell County on the way from Dallas toward New Mexico, and Llano sits at the crossroads of Highways 29 and 71, which Austinites would take to New Mexico.

The ordinances – which Planned Parenthood Texas Votes contends are blatantly unconstitutional – use a similar vigilante enforcement system as SB 8, which allows citizens to sue people violating the ordinance.

Wendy Davis, senior advisor at PPTV, said in a press release this week that the laws “foster even greater fear, intimidation, and confusion among people traveling for abortion and reproductive health care. … By attempting to restrict travel, Texas seeks to make pregnant people prisoners of the state, isolate them from support, and force them to give birth no matter what.” Lilith Fund told the Washington Post that the purpose of the laws is not enforcement but intimidation.

If such ordinances are contested and go to the Supreme Court, it’s unlikely they would be upheld – Vox notes that even Brett Kavanaugh, during hearings on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, said he would protect the constitutional right to interstate travel. But in the suit that decided SB 8’s constitutionality, Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, the Supreme Court allowed bounty hunters to enforce laws. And other states have already found ways to work around the constitution – in April, Idaho made it a crime to help a minor obtain an abortion, including by traveling across state lines. That law is the subject of a Planned Parenthood suit, which should be decided within the next few weeks.

* The Guardian

In this year’s only opportunity for US voters to directly weigh in on the right to abortion, an upcoming ballot referendum in Ohio will include language that describes a fetus as an “unborn child”, in a disappointing loss for abortion rights activists in the state who had sued to stop voters from seeing language they say is misleading.

Ohioans are set to vote on 7 November on a referendum to enshrine abortion rights into the state’s constitution. The outcome of the vote could not only determine the future of Ohio’s six-week abortion ban, which is currently frozen pending litigation, but also for the midwest writ large. The state has become one of the few in the region to still permit abortions since the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade last year.

The Ohio referendum’s journey to the ballot box has been a long one. In an August special election, voters resoundingly rejected a GOP-backed ballot measure that would have required all constitutional amendments to garner 60% of the vote, rather than the simple majority currently required for passage. The measure was loudly denounced as an attempt to kneecap the abortion referendum and keep it from passing.

Weeks after Republicans lost that election, the Ohio ballot board met to decide what language should show up on voters’ ballots regarding Issue 1, the abortion referendum. Ohioans United for Reproductive Rights proposed using the text of the amendment, which includes guarantees that the state cannot interfere with the right to contraception, miscarriage care and abortion up until the point of viability, a benchmark that’s generally pegged to about 24 weeks of pregnancy.

* Idaho and Tennessee

Women and physicians in Idaho and Tennessee have sued their home states after they say they were denied abortion care despite being diagnosed with serious, life-threatening medical conditions while pregnant.

The lawsuits are led by the Center for Reproductive Rights, an advocacy organization based in Washington, D.C., which also helped a patient in Oklahoma file a complaint against a hospital that denied her abortion care.

The filings come after 13 women sued the state of Texas for similar reasons and a judge in that case ruled that all the women should have been given abortions. That ruling has been appealed by the state and is now on hold, according to the Center for Reproductive Rights.

“It is clear that in filing that lawsuit in Texas, we hit the tip of a very large iceberg,” said Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center, on Tuesday. “Today, (plaintiffs) are holding their states accountable for the suffering they have caused.”

* The Hill

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) defended legislation she signed that bans most abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, after former President Trump called Florida’s six-week ban on the procedure a “terrible thing.”

“It’s never a ‘terrible thing’ to protect innocent life,” Reynolds said Tuesday in a post on X. “I’m proud of the fetal heartbeat bill the Iowa legislature passed and I signed in 2018 and again earlier this year.”

Trump, whose Supreme Court justice appointments led to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, criticized Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) for signing a six-week abortion ban. The former president called the move “a terrible thing and a terrible mistake” during an interview Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Trump has faced backlash from opponents of abortion rights for his comments.

Reynolds signed Iowa’s abortion ban into law in July. The state passed a similar version of the law in 2018, but a court halted it because Roe v. Wade was still in effect.

* AP

Abortion-rights advocates asked a judge on Monday to rewrite what they call misleading descriptions of several constitutional amendments on abortion that voters could see on Missouri’s 2024 ballot.

Missouri is among several states, including Ohio, where abortion opponents are fighting efforts to ensure or restore access to the procedure following the fall of Roe v. Wade last year.

In part, one of the Missouri petitions would amend the state’s constitution to ban government infringement on the “fundamental right to reproductive freedom, which entails the right to make and carry out decisions about all matters relating to reproductive health care.”

* Indiana

After his failed efforts to discipline an Indiana doctor who provided emergency abortion care to a 10-year-old rape survivor, the state’s anti-abortion Republican attorney general is now suing her employer.

His lawsuit also comes as he faces three ethics charges from the state Supreme Court’s Disciplinary Commission, which found that Todd Rokita’s statements to right-wing media and elsewhere about Dr Caitlin Bernard in the wake of the high-profile case violated attorney ethics rules. […]

During an appearance on Fox News, Mr Rokita called her “an abortion activist acting as a doctor”. He later issued subpoenas to doctors and healthcare facilities seeking medical records relating to the patient.

Last year, as Mr Rokita sought to revoke the doctor’s license, a judge argued that he acted unlawfully with his allegations of wrongdoing in violation of his own office’s confidentiality requirements. He caused “irreparable harm” to her reputation with his “unlawful breaches” of confidentiality provisions after he discussed his investigation on national news and in the press, according to a judge.

  20 Comments      


Reports: Stellantis may transform Belvidere plant into logistics ‘mega hub’ or EV battery components manufacturer

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jeff Kolkey at the Rockford Register Star

As reports surface that Stellantis wants to transform the Belvidere Assembly Plant from a manufacturing facility into an enormous Amazon-style distribution center, union officials say the company is already testing the waters by storing parts at a nearby Yanfeng facility.

A United Auto Workers stand-up strike is approaching a week after its labor agreements with the Big Three automakers — including Stellantis, the maker of Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge and owner of the Belvidere Assembly Plant — expired at midnight Thursday.

It was previously reported Stellantis was seeking the right to close 18 facilities. But CNBC on Monday reported that provision was tied to a plan to possibly close 10 Mopar parts and distribution locations, while investing in modernization, opening other locations and turning the Belvidere plant into a logistics “mega hub.” There has also been talk of manufacturing battery components at the Belvidere plant. […]

Although UAW leaders have sought a new vehicle for Belvidere workers to manufacture, Stellantis on Saturday night issued a statement saying that its contract offer included a “strong future” for the Belvidere Assembly Plant. The statement also said “we stand ready to get everyone back to work as soon as possible.” […]

Stellantis has used the Belvidere Assembly Plant property to store thousands vehicles before distributing them to dealerships across the country. The Belvidere plant is a freight rail carrier hub making it a convenient location to store and ship the vehicles.

* CNBC

The most recent contract proposal by automaker Stellantis to the United Auto Workers union could lead to the closure of 18 U.S. facilities, but it could also bring new investments and repurpose an idled vehicle assembly plant in Illinois, sources familiar with the discussions told CNBC. […]

The proposal included a potential “Mega Hub” at Belvidere Assembly, which the automaker indefinitely idled in February. […]

Two sources said the parts proposal for Belvidere has been one of several discussions regarding the plant, and the offer could change, based on the talks. Discussions have also taken place about using part of Belvidere — a nearly 5 million-square-foot facility — for electric vehicle battery components, they said.

* WTVO

On Sunday, Stellantis sent a statement to UAW members, saying: “Once again the Union has mischaracterized the facts. It was made very clear to the UAW leadership that the competitive offer presented on Thursday included a strong future for Belvidere and was connected to the contract deadline. Our intention was to present a strong proposal for Belvidere and, at the same time, avoid a strike for our represented workers. The truth is UAW leadership ignored Belvidere in favor of a strike. As we stated earlier today, ‘we are glad to continue to work on a solution (for Belvidere). We want to have a solution including that (Belvidere).’ When we work together, we win together. We stand ready to get everyone back to work as soon as possible.”

* Crain’s

The state of Illinois has been working with Stellantis for a couple of years on ways to keep the plant open and to ensure it has a future in the shift to electric vehicles. Lawmakers approved a package of incentives that specifically includes EV-component part makers and manufacturers that convert or expand existing facilities.

  26 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

We’ve all dreamed of winning the lottery, retiring early, and traveling all around the country. Well, that dream is now a reality for one lucky Illinois Lottery player.

A 66-year old Illinois man, who wishes to remain anonymous, is celebrating big time after spending $20 on a 100X Payout Instant Ticket and winning the game’s top prize – a whopping $2,000,000.

The winning ticket was purchased at Pilot Travel Center, located at 3801 N. Division St. in Morris.

“My wife and I stopped for gas and I picked up a scratch-off ticket,” said the newly minted-millionaire. “She said, ‘Don’t scratch it in front of me - I’m bad luck.’ So once we got back home, I scratched the ticket alone and I couldn’t believe it - the ticket was a $2 million winner! I was laughing and crying at the same time. We are just ecstatic.”

After realizing his incredible luck, the happy winner decided it was time to pursue his dreams after 40 years of working, and told his boss that he’s retiring.

“When I told my boss the news of my retirement, he wasn’t happy,” said the lucky winner. “He asked me – ‘What’s it going to take to get you to stay?’ I chuckled and said, ‘$2 million dollars!’”

The lucky Illinois Lottery winner has played many different scratch-off games, but on that day, he chose a specific ticket due to its color.

“I picked the pink ticket because it’s my granddaughter’s favorite color,” explained the lucky winner. “Every year I take my family to the Chicago RV & Camping Show. After winning today, she asked me, ‘Grandpa, when do I get to go for a ride in your new RV?’ So, I guess I’m buying an RV now’” he laughed.

So far this year, 19 other Illinois Lottery players have become millionaires after winning on Instant Tickets.

In total, more than 48 million winning Instant Tickets have been sold in Illinois, netting lottery players over $1.04 billion in prizes in 2023.

The Illinois Lottery currently offers more than 50 different Instant Ticket games at over 7,000 retail locations across Illinois.

The Illinois Lottery encourages all winners to write their name on the back of their ticket and keep it in a safe place until they’re ready to claim their prize. Winners should visit IllinoisLottery.com/winning for more information on how to claim their prizes.

* The Question: How often do you buy lottery tickets, and have you ever won anything substantial?

  43 Comments      


SAFE-T Act to the rescue?

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Edwardsville Intelligencer from September 8th

A Troy man accused of shooting a woman to death early Tuesday posted $100,000 bail Friday and was released from the Madison County Jail, a spokesperson at the facility confirmed late Friday afternoon.

* Scott Holland referenced that story in his latest column

Without cash bail as an option, the suspect would’ve spent the last two weeks in county lockup, and he’d generally be there outside of court appearances as the criminal trial proceeds. Instead, he found the money to buy time at home. That’s the system proponents fought to preserve, including the Madison County state’s attorney who helped the ultimately unsuccessful legal challenge seeking to block the reform.

“Accused killer pays $100,000 to leave county jail” isn’t the whole story, but it’s enough information to question how the old system stacks the legal deck – and in whose favor.

* And now, the Madison County state’s attorney is using the SAFE-T Act to try and put that Troy man back in jail

The Madison County State’s Attorney’s Office filed a petition Monday to deny pretrial release for a Troy man accused of murder, even though the defendant has been free on $100,000 bail since Sept. 8.

Cash bail, however, no longer exists in Illinois as of Monday via the state’s SAFE-T Act.

Now, a judge in Madison County court is required to hold an “immediate” detention hearing, according to the new law.

Michael S. Perham, 52, of Troy, faces two counts of first-degree murder in the shooting of his girlfriend, Maha Tiimob, in a Troy townhouse on Sept. 5. […]

That petition brings to light more details in the fatal shooting of Tiimob, who allegedly was shot multiple times, including at least twice in the back, court records show.

* Related…

    * Plato Twp. man faces felony domestic battery charges in alleged face-stomping incident: A Plato Township man, who was charged with stomping on the victim’s face and fracturing her facial bones – and whose previous domestic battery charges included knocking out the victim’s teeth – is being held without bond in the Kane County jail after he violated the terms of his release not to contact the victim. … Zimmerman had been charged previously with domestic battery against the same victim in 2020 and twice in 2021, court records show. … Zimmerman was charged twice in May 2021, on May 7 with misdemeanor domestic battery and on May 18 with felony as well as misdemeanor domestic battery, records show. The felony charge stemmed from an incident in which he punched the victim in the face, causing her teeth to be knocked out, according to a June 22, 2021 indictment against Zimmerman.

    * Some downstate counties struggled as bail reform took hold this week; one didn’t even try applying the new law: In the McLean County courthouse in Bloomington, three people had pretrial hearings on Monday. The hearings happened in a packed courtroom, with four judges and State’s Attorney Erika Reynolds watching from the gallery. Reynolds was one of several state’s attorneys who joined a failed legal bid to stop the abolition of bail. In an example of Monday’s confusion over the new law’s implementation, the judge, prosecutor and defense attorney debated whether a man arrested Saturday on gun charges was eligible for cash bail under the old system or if he should be processed under the new system. Unlike what played out in Sangamon County, the man’s attorney argued he should be eligible for the old cash bail system, hoping to get his client out of jail. Ultimately, the judge sided with prosecutors, and McLean County had its first hearing on a petition to detain under the new system. Prosecutors successfully argued that the defendant — a 24-year-old accused of possessing a gun as a felon — posed a risk to public safety.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  10 Comments      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.

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* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
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* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates
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* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
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* Open thread
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* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
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