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Migrant shelter population drops below 13,000 for first time since Nov. 28

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the data. Michael Loria at the Sun-Times

The number of migrants staying at Chicago shelters has fallen to its lowest point in months, according to data shared by the city Tuesday, and it has also shut its use of a temporary shelter at Harold Washington Library.

Down from mid- and early-January peaks of nearly 15,000, the number of migrants in shelters fell below 13,000 for the first time since Nov. 28. The number in shelters has dropped by nearly 1,000 since the start of February.

The falling number in shelters comes as the number of arrivals to the Chicago area has slowed significantly since January.

Of 28 shelters active at the end of January, 13 have seen a more than 10% decrease in the number of migrants staying there, including the downtown library, which was closed at the end of last week and had over 100 people staying there throughout January.

* Numbers as of 10:30 this morning

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Municipal League…

Representing local leaders from across the state, the Illinois Municipal League (IML) announced its annual ‘Moving Cities Forward’ legislative platform, which aims to ensure the long-term success of Illinois’ 1,294 cities, villages and towns. […]

Authority to Fulfill Public Notice Mandates Electronically
HB 3154 (Rep. Ford, D-Chicago) and SB 61 (Sen. Castro, D-Elgin)

Public notice requirements are an important and beneficial service provided to citizens. These requirements also add costs to local governments and their taxpayers, particularly for mandates to place notices in newspapers or mail them to residents. This proposal would allow municipalities the option to fulfill any statutorily-mandated newspaper posting requirement by providing notice on the municipality’s website and on a publicly-available, searchable online database operated independently from the municipality. This is a shift to utilize modern technology in a way that recognizes how the public increasingly finds and views public notices.

Restoration of Local Government Distributive Fund (LGDF) Revenues
HB 4455 (Rep. DeLuca, D-Chicago Heights)

LGDF distributions play a role in funding critical municipal services and keeping the local tax burden low. Without LGDF, communities across Illinois would need to explore increases to other fees or taxes – including property taxes. Following the enactment of the state income tax in 1969, 10% of total income tax collections were dedicated to LGDF for distribution to municipalities and counties. Since 2011, the state has decreased the local government share of LGDF, so that, as of State Fiscal Year 2024, it is 6.47% of individual income tax collections and 6.845% of corporate income tax collections. This proposal would incrementally increase amounts transferred from the State of Illinois’ General Revenue Fund to LGDF to 10% of net revenue realized from income taxes imposed on individuals, trusts, estates and corporations.

Reamortization of Downstate Public Safety Pension Funds
HB 1185 (Rep. Vella, D-Rockford)

The current amortization schedule for downstate police and firefighter pension funds is significantly shorter than other statewide, state-administered and Chicago-based pension systems despite downstate public safety pension funds having better funding ratios (excluding the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund). This proposal would extend the amortization date for downstate public safety pension funds from the end of MFY 2040 to MFY 2050 or later (2055) and provide immediate financial relief to affected communities.

Municipal Audit Relief
SB 2875 (Sen. D. Turner, D-Springfield)

In addition to an annual requirement to file a financial report with the Illinois State Comptroller, statutory requirements for annual municipal audits to be performed by CPAs are extremely costly, particularly for small municipalities with small annual budgets. For small communities, the annual financial report and extending the current annual CPA audit requirement to every fourth fiscal year, provides sufficient fiscal transparency. Not only are audits performed by CPAs costly, only a limited number of CPAs perform or specialize in municipal audits, making them difficult to locate and contract for their services. This proposal would provide relief to Illinois municipalities with a population of 1,000 or less, while still allowing for effective financial reporting and transparency.

Authority to Conduct Remote Meetings
HB 1408 (Rep. Yang Rohr, D-Naperville) and SB 103 (Sen. Castro, D-Elgin)

This proposal would permit public officials to conduct a remote meeting without the issuance of a gubernatorial or IDPH disaster declaration. Specifically, this proposal would allow the head of a public body to determine if an in-person meeting would pose a risk to the health or safety of members of the public or the public body, or that conducting a remote meeting is in the best interest of the public or the public body.

These issues are just a few of IML’s priorities outlined in ‘Moving Cities Forward’. Please visit the IML website for more information about the 2024 IML State Legislative Agenda (available via this link).

* Illinois AFL-CIO…

The Illinois AFL-CIO today laid out an agenda to build on the Illinois labor movement’s recent successes like the Workers’ Rights Amendment, the Temp Worker Fairness and Safety Act and Paid Leave for All. Among the organization’s legislative priorities is a push to protect all workers from unwanted religious and political speech in the workplace. Known as captive audience meetings, these mandatory meetings subject employees to the religious or political views of the employer during work hours. When employees decline to participate, they often face retaliation or firing.

“Captive audience meetings are a direct violation of workers’ rights. This forces our most vulnerable employees to choose between their job and their personal values,” remarked Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea. “Employers are increasingly using the workplace to advance their political and religious interests, and this creates an atmosphere ripe for coercion. Without protections in place, workers who choose to walk away from these meetings risk their livelihood.”

In the face of growing extremism across the country, legislators from eighteen states have advanced bills to protect workers from unwanted or offensive political and religious speech unrelated to job performance. These bills are designed to prohibit employers from threatening, disciplining, firing, or retaliating against workers who refuse to attend mandatory workplace meetings focused on communicating opinions on political or religious matters. These meetings are frequently used by employers during union organizing drives.

“Mandatory employer meetings like these are another egregious method to ‘union-bust’ and put money into the pockets of CEOs at the expense of workers,” stated the bill’s chief Senate sponsor, Illinois State Senator Robert Peters, Chair of the Senate Labor Committee. “We know that unions raise the standard of working conditions, increase wages, and decrease inequality. This legislation allows us to reshape the future of workers’ rights by letting employees join a union free from employer interference.”

Captive audience meetings are the employer-preferred method of union busting. An Economic Policy Institute analysis of National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) elections documents shows that 89% of all employers conduct captive audience meetings in response to unionization efforts.

“We need to do everything possible to help the hard-working families of Illinois survive and thrive,” explained Illinois State House Assistant Majority Leader Marcus C. Evans Jr., Chief Sponsor of the bill in the House. “Captive audience meetings impact all workers, whether they are in a union or not. We want to make sure that everyone is safe and secure at work and can walk away without retaliation if they are forced to sit through meetings unrelated to their work responsibilities.”

Often an employer threatens, disciplines, or terminates an employee for objecting to the boss’s political views. Anti-captive audience legislation guarantees workers’ freedoms and ensures that all workers can fully exercise their rights in the workplace.

* Press release…

The City of Chicago will not renew its contract with SoundThinking that expires February 16, 2024, and will decommission the use of ShotSpotter technology on September 22, 2024. During the interim period, law enforcement and other community safety stakeholders will assess tools and programs that effectively increase both safety and trust, and issue recommendations to that effect.

In advance of the decommissioning in September, the Chicago Police Department will work to revamp operations within the Strategic Decision Support Centers, implement new training and further develop response models to gun violence that ultimately reduce shootings and increase accountability.

Moving forward, the City of Chicago will deploy its resources on the most effective strategies and tactics proven to accelerate the current downward trend in violent crime. Doing this work, in consultation with community, violence prevention organizations and law enforcement, provides a pathway to a better, stronger, safer Chicago for all.

* Sun-Times

Mayor Brandon Johnson is expected to announce that he won’t renew the city’s controversial contract with ShotSpotter, making good on a key campaign promise to do away with the gunshot detection system that has come under heavy fire for allegedly being overly costly and ineffective. […]

Johnson outlined the plan during a closed-door meeting Monday night with city officials and advocates, a source said. With ShotSpotter’s roughly $49 million contract expiring on Friday, the city will apparently have to enter into a new deal with parent company SoundThinking to cover the additional months.

While Johnson has publicly remained tight-lipped about his plans for ShotSpotter since taking office, he vowed to nix the deal as a candidate and “invest in new resources that go after illegal guns without physically stopping and frisking Chicagoans on the street.”

He insisted the technology is “unreliable and overly susceptible to human error,” adding that it “played a pivotal role” in the fatal police shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

* Leigh Giangreco



* Heh



* Here’s the rest…

    * Tribune | Democrats flexed muscles in passing out pork in Springfield: In a state known for negotiating local pork-barrel project funds in at least somewhat of a bipartisan fashion, the maneuver illustrated how Democrats enjoying extraordinary House and Senate majorities flexed their dominance and left minority party Republican legislators wanting. … In 2019, former House Republican leader Jim Durkin of Western Springs negotiated various business tax breaks, worked on shaping Pritzker’s statewide pork-barrel bonanza in his first spring session, pulled off a variety of other GOP wins and secured a cut of the local projects for Republicans along the way. “I think most of it, if there was going to be any distribution to Republicans, it was conditioned on putting votes on a budget,” Durkin said. “That’s really what it came down to. And I don’t think that practice has changed.”

    * KFVS | SIH Cancer Institute receives $300K grant: According to a news release, [Republican] State Senator Dale Fowler and [Republican] Representative Paul Jacobs joined members of the cancer institute to announce two $150,000 member initiative grants from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.

    * Illinois Answers | Landlord Pushes Tenants Out Despite Getting State Money: Not even through the COVID-19 pandemic when Collier lost her full-time job and worked sparingly as a maid. She was approved for government rental assistance that covered more than two years worth of her $900 monthly rent, records show. And she said she maintained the same system – keeping every email, every invoice and every receipt. So she was stunned when she faced eviction for allegedly being thousands of dollars behind. She found herself tearfully begging her landlord for relief in a court hearing over Zoom — hoping she’d be given a few extra days before getting kicked out. She was not.

    * Crain’s | One of Chicago’s largest hotels changing hands in $500 million deal: Hotel giant Marriott International will purchase the Sheraton Grand Chicago in Streeterville for $300 million and plans to pay an additional $200 million for the land, in accordance with the terms of a settlement agreement with the property’s owner.

    * Tribune | Pat Fitzgerald asks to move up the trial in his lawsuit against Northwestern so he can return to coaching: A Cook County judge has set an April 2025 trial date, but Webb wants it moved to December 2024. “If we get a trial in December and he’s exonerated, he will still have January to get a coaching position” elsewhere, Webb said. “But if he misses three seasons in a row, it’s going to be significantly different.” Judge Daniel Kubasiak acknowledged that timing is important to Fitzgerald, but he added: “I’m not sure I can necessarily allow that to dictate.”

    * Sun-Times | Little Village mass shooting blamed on dispute between migrants, local residents over double-parked car: [Ald] Rodriguez said the shooting highlights “a real poverty of the soul, where people feel like they can resolve conflicts by shooting guns at other people.” He insisted the solution is further restricting access to firearms.

    * Naperville Sun | Property crime went up nearly 8% in Naperville in 2023, police statistics show: While personal crimes dipped in 2023, property offenses accounted for about 65% of Naperville’s total reported crime for the year, most of which involved theft, fraud or vandalism, data shows. City police reported 2,589 crimes against property in 2023, up 181 from 2,408 property crimes in 2022.

    * WGLT | McLean County circuit clerk faces primary challenge from a former employee: Incumbent Circuit Clerk Don Everhart will face Republican challenger Jason Dazey in the March 19 primary, for which early voting is now underway. With no Democrat in the race, the winner is likely to advance to an unopposed election win in November

    * Daily Journal | Former McLean County recorder sees future in alpaca farm: Newcom had been re-elected as McLean County recorder of deeds, but a referendum asking voters if the recorder’s office should be eliminated also passed — 37,699 to 24,207. Newcom asked if anyone had any ideas for a job. The first to respond was a high school friend who owns an alpaca farm in California, suggesting he start one.

    * SJ-R | Central Illinois couple celebrating 72 years of love this Valentine’s Day: Bill believes he was first introduced to Norma at Frist Baptist Church of Chenoa, where Norma grew up and still attends. Bill recalls how he got a friend of his, Bill Harrison, to act as an intermediary. “I saw Norma at the piano (at church) and we kind of made eye contact with each other,” Bill said. “(Bill Harrison) knew Norma already from school, so I kind of used him to make me acquainted with Norma.

    * Bloomberg | Dolly Parton on how she succeeds in business: How does she keep up the momentum? “I work my butt off,” she says in an interview with Bloomberg News to hawk her newest endeavor with Chicago’s Conagra Brands Inc., a grocery store-wide food line, starting with Dolly Parton’s Buttermilk Pancakes.

    * STLPR | For eclipse-loving students and scientists, southern Illinois marks the spot: “To me, there’s always science to be found,” said Brody Echer, an accounting and information systems management student at Iowa State University who is traveling to Carbondale, Illinois, during the eclipse as part of his work on NASA’s Nationwide Eclipse Ballooning Project. “Eclipses don’t happen every day. It’s one of those things where you have to be there on a certain day, and it won’t wait for anybody.”

    * NYT | The Home of Carter G. Woodson, the Man Behind Black History Month: Though Dr. Woodson was the kind of neighbor who doted on children playing on the street and his stoop, even as other adults told them to behave, 1538 Ninth Street NW was more about his life’s work than serving as a traditional residence. It became known as Dr. Woodson’s “office home,” as Willie Leanna Miles, who was a managing director of the Associated Publishers, put it in her 1991 article “Dr. Carter Godwin Woodson as I Recall Him, 1943-1950.” The article was published in The Journal of Negro History, which was founded by Dr. Woodson and is still running as The Journal of African American History today.

  15 Comments      


I’m not sure what the teachers are supposed to be so angry about

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* HB5152

Amends the Illinois Income Tax Act. Creates an income tax credit for each individual taxpayer who (i) is a healthcare provider who, for the purpose of providing lawful health care services in this State, permanently relocates during the taxable year to this State from a State with more restrictive abortion laws or more restrictive laws concerning access to other lawful health care, (ii) is a patient or the parent or guardian of a patient who, for the purpose of receiving those health care services in this State, permanently relocates during the taxable year to this State from a State with more restrictive abortion laws or more restrictive laws concerning the access to lawful health care, or (iii) is a qualified cohabitant of a person described in item (i) or (ii). Provides that the credit is in the amount of $500. Creates an income tax credit in the amount of $500 for taxpayers who are public school teachers or qualifying cohabitants of public school teachers who permanently relocate to the State from any other State as a result of content-based restrictions on educational materials imposed by the taxpayer’s state of origin. Effective immediately.

* Press release…

State Representative Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich) says Democrats finally agree lowering taxes will stop Illinois’ population loss, but the admission comes by way of using abortion and woke teaching standards to lure new residents to the state.

House Bill 5152 would provide a $500 tax credit for abortion providers, abortion seekers, legal guardians of abortion seekers and teachers of woke policies to move to Illinois.

“The message from the far-left is you can’t have a tax credit to help low-income families, but if it’s related to abortion or woke teaching policies it’s ok” Niemerg said. “We have seen many other states protect the rights of the unborn and protect our kids in schools, but Illinois has gone the opposite direction. We have many great teachers and educators in Illinois. It is my hope they stand against this bill, we must oppose this type of legislation or our future will be lost.”

Illinois lost nearly 84,000 people in 2023. Only two other states lost more population. The out migration in 2023 marked the 10th straight year in population loss.

* I asked the spokesperson who sent the release, “Why should teachers oppose this bill?” His response…

Why would they support it? Most teachers down here are teachers because they like teaching teaching kids. They are not interested in teaching woke ideology. They just want to do their job.

I asked again why teaches should oppose the bill. “What potential harm does it do to them?” I pressed.

Haven’t heard anything back.

  24 Comments      


The ads pretty much write themselves

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

Greg Goldner, the founder of Resolute Public Affairs, is helming Chicago Forward, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit that allows donors to shield their identity while contributing to oppose the [Bring Chicago Home] tax. […]

Goldner touted a coalition of business, real estate and labor groups working together to oppose the tax by questioning the credibility of the proposal and painting it as an extension of reportedly low approval ratings of Johnson’s tenure in office that will lead the city in the wrong direction.

“Frankly, Mayor Johnson’s numbers are not very good … That’s before anyone’s run a negative ad against him,” Goldner said, later adding: “The mantra of saying people aren’t paying their fair share. Well, every year you get a tax bill, and you’re paying your fair share every single year, not just when there’s a transaction.”

But [Vaughn Roland, the political director for Bring Chicago Home] discounted the effort to tie Bring Chicago Home solely to Johnson, noting this has been a roughly six-year organizing effort.

“BCH has had a long history that predates this mayor,” he said. “Community organizations have been organizing around this effort for far too long. And it’s time for someone to do something about it. And it just so happens to be Mayor Brandon Johnson.”

You gotta figure the opposition will try to make this a referendum on the wildly unpopular Mayor Johnson as much as it can.

* Also, problems spending money like this WTTW story exposed will probably undermine its passage

Chicago spent just 29% of the federal relief funds officials promised to use to strengthen the city’s tattered social safety net and provide direct aid to Chicagoans struggling to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic by the end of 2023, according to a WTTW News analysis.

* And then there’s this

Chicago is unifying services for migrants and homeless individuals under one system.

Why it matters: The colliding crises have fueled tensions citywide, but local officials hope a coordinated effort will optimize resources and recast the city’s housing mission as more inclusive.

Maybe, but it will also give Bring Chicago Home opponents an opportunity to inject the migrant issue into their anti-tax campaign: A yes vote shovels more money at migrants.

* Not to mention the Chicagoans running for office and using their opposition to migrants to gain publicity, which feeds the fire. We’ve already talked about 5th House District Democratic challenger Andre Smith and the hype about him from Fox News. Now, check out this story in the National Review

As a victim-services advocate in Chicago, Zerlina Smith-Members struggles every day to obtain scarce resources and shelter space for victims of violence in the city.

As a black mother and activist on Chicago’s West Side, she can’t help but notice the poor-performing schools, the bad health outcomes, the food deserts, the homelessness, the high taxes, the gangs, and the illegal guns that plague her community.

“It’s just a lot, and it’s overwhelming,” Smith-Members said of the challenges.

That is why Smith-Members, an independent Democrat, is frustrated by the response of her party’s far-left leaders to the influx of migrants who have flooded the city over the last year and a half. In a desire to be “welcoming,” the state under Governor J. B. Pritzker has directed $640 million towards sheltering, feeding, and caring for the migrants, while the city of Chicago under mayor Brandon Johnson has paid out at least $138 million, according to media reports.

Smith-Members is running for Mayor Johnson’s former Cook County Board seat. Like Andre Smith, she’s a perennial candidate, but that won’t stop the hype

Smith-Members ran for 29th Ward alderman in 2015 and 2019. In 2022, when West Garfield Park nurse and former 28th Ward candidate Beverly Miles challenged Gov. J.B. Pritzker in the Democratic primary, Smith-Members joined the ticket as lieutenant governor before deciding to challenge Preckwinkle in the same primary instead. She was removed from the ballot.

Also, her husband is running for Republican ward committeeperson

The news release announcing Smith-Members’ candidacy described [her spouse] Members as her campaign manager, said that on the early of morning of Nov. 29, they went to the Office of Cook County Clerk to submit her nominating petitions. When, in a Nov. 30 interview, Austin Weekly News asked Smith-Members about the potential conflict of having a candidate for a Republican office managing a Democratic Primary campaign, she said that “he isn’t my campaign manager any longer.”

  24 Comments      


Gun owners rights groups ask Supreme Court to review Illinois’ assault weapons ban

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Gun owners rights groups on Monday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn Illinois’ ban on assault weapons.

The petition to the high court was widely expected after the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in November affirmed a lower court ruling that allowed the ban on AR-15-style rifles passed by the state Legislature in 2022 to stand. The Illinois State Rifle Association announced that it would take the case to the Supreme Court the day the 7th Circuit ruling was handed down. […]

Petitions filed by both the State Rifle Association and also the National Association for Gun Rights challenge the Illinois law on Second Amendment grounds, claiming the ban violates the Constitution in light of Supreme Court rulings in recent years that have restricted states and municipalities from regulating firearm ownership. The introductory lines of the lawsuit notes the Bruen case from 2022, which struck down a New York law restricting concealed carry licenses for firearms.

“Bruen called on the nation’s legislatures to engage in a sober reassessment of their power to impose burdens on the right to keep and bear arms,” the petition states. “The Illinois legislature ignored that call, and instead of tapping on the regulatory brakes it stomped on the gas and passed a sweeping arms ban that included a ban on the most popular rifle in America.”

Click here to read the petition.

* Illinois State Rifle Association

The Illinois State Rifle Association followed through on a promise made last January to law-abiding, responsible gun owners that they would challenge Gov. JB Pritzker’s so-called “assault weapons ban” on the grounds that the law is unconstitutional – officially filing their appeal with the United States Supreme Court on Monday in Washington, DC.

On January 17, 2023, the ISRA, Firearms Policy Coalition and the Second Amendment Foundation filed a federal lawsuit with the U.S District Court for the Southern District of Illinois challenging the law. After making its way through the legal process and out of District Court, on December 11, 2023, the Seventh Circuit rejected our request for a hearing as expected – paving the way for the certiorari Petition (a formal request to review the case) to the U.S. Supreme Court.

“The ISRA remains on the front lines and continues to stand up to Gov. Pritzker and anti-gun legislators in Springfield on behalf of 2.4 million law-abiding, responsible firearms owners in Illinois,” said ISRA Executive Director Richard Pearson. “Our objective from the very beginning of the process that started the moment Gov. Pritzker signed the bill into law – was to take our case to the United States Supreme Court – and today we followed through on that promise and now our case is in the hands of the highest court in the land,” said Pearson.

The ISRA is confident that if the U.S. Supreme Court accepts this case it will rule favorably, given the court’s previous decisions.

“We believe the Supreme Court will take a look at this case given its clear conflict with other Federal court rulings and the Supreme Court’s own historic ruling in the New York State Rifle & Pistol Association versus Bruen case,” said Pearson. “It is clear that the Pritzker administration is more focused on making criminals out of law-abiding gun owners instead of addressing an inadequate justice system which is permitting violent criminals to continue victimizing the good citizens of Illinois – and we look forward to the Supreme Court righting this wrong,” Pearson concluded.

At the same time the U.S. Supreme Court certiorari Petition is pending, the ISRA and the other Harrel Plaintiffs are preparing for a trial on the issues before Judge McGlynn in the Southern District of Illinois – currently scheduled to take place in the coming months. So whichever direction this case proceeds, ISRA will be ready to stand up for the rights of Illinoisans.

The ISRA is presently leading the charge as a named plaintiff on two cases and playing a supporting role in an additional five more – totaling 7 cases dealing with constitutional issues and on behalf of law-abiding gun owners in Illinois.

* Tribune

The National Association for Gun Rights backed a suit originally filed in the Northern District of Illinois challenging both the statewide ban and a local assault weapons ban enacted by the city of Naperville. In February 2023, a federal judge in that case refused to grant a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the law pending the outcome of a trial in the case.

The Firearms Policy Coalition backed a separate suit in the Southern District of Illinois that also had support from the Illinois State Rifle Association and the Second Amendment Foundation. A judge there granted a preliminary injunction to block enforcement of the law, saying the ban likely violated the Second Amendment.

Both of those cases, along with others, were part of a consolidated appeal before a three-judge panel of the 7th Circuit, which ruled 2-1 in November not to block enforcement of the law.

* More…

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

A bill filed Friday known as the Community Safety Through Stable Homes Act calls for the repeal of local laws that penalize tenants for having contact with police and often require landlords to initiate eviction procedures.

The measure comes months after the mom, Diamond Jones, filed a federal lawsuit against Richton Park, alleging she was forced out of the home she rented because of the village’s crime-free ordinance. […]

The bill would prohibit local governments from requiring landlords to evict a tenant for having contact with police, a criminal conviction or if another person in the household or guest had contact with police. The bill also eliminates local requirements that landlords do criminal background checks.

The bill doesn’t prohibit landlords from doing criminal background checks or prevent them from tenant evictions, Alvarez said.

* Here’s the synopsis of HB5314 from Rep. La Shawn Ford

Amends the Counties Code and the Illinois Municipal Code. Repeals provisions prohibiting ordinances penalizing tenants who contact the police or other emergency services. Adds provisions prohibiting a county or municipality from enacting a program, ordinance, resolution, or other regulation that: (1) penalizes landlords or tenants, guests, or others for contact with a law enforcement agency; (2) requires or encourages landlords to evict or penalize tenants or household members for contact with a law enforcement agency, a criminal conviction, or alleged unlawful conduct, including through cooperating agreements with law enforcement agencies; (3) requires or promotes the use of criminal background checks of prospective and current tenants; (4) defines nuisance behavior to include contact with a law enforcement agency; (5) requires tenants to secure certificates of occupancy as a condition of leasing rental housing or turning on utilities; (6) creates or promotes the use of a registry of individual tenants for the purpose of discouraging landlords from renting to those tenants or otherwise excluding such individuals from rental housing within the subject jurisdiction; (7) penalizes tenants, guests, or others for contact made to police or other emergency services; or (8) requires or promotes the use of a lease addendum that penalizes tenants, guests or others for any of the above-listed conditions or is contrary to or inconsistent with requirements under federal law. Provides that a program, ordinance, resolution, or other regulation that violates the provisions is void and must be repealed no later than one year after the effective date of the amendatory Act. Allows for legal action to enforce the provisions. Limits the concurrent exercise of home rule powers. Amends the Housing Authorities Act to make similar changes for housing authorities. Effective immediately.

* HB5660 from Rep. Nicholas Smith

Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Provides that, whenever a person fails to appear in court and the court continues the case, if the clerk of the court elects to establish a system to send text, email, and telephone notifications, the clerk of the court may send notifications to an email address, may send a text message to the person’s last known cellular telephone number, and if the person does not have a cellular telephone number, may reach the person at the person’s last known landline telephone number regarding the continued court date. Deletes a provision that requires a court to enter an order of failure to appear if a person does not appear in court on or before the continued court date or satisfy the court that the person’s appearance in and surrender to the court is impossible for no fault of the person. Amends the Unified Code of Corrections. Deletes language that allowed the court use mitigating factors when deciding on contempt or imprisonment for nonpayment of a fine.

* Sun-Times

A week after Mayor Brandon Johnson sent Illinois Senate President Don Harmon a letter urging him to support the election of only 10 of 21 school board seats this November, the Oak Park Democrat on Friday filed legislation with the mayor’s preferred plan.

The new Senate measure, sponsored by Harmon, includes ethics provisions the Senate president requested last year, including who can serve as a board member. Harmon had publicly said he looked forward to getting “clear direction” from Johnson after an unresolved dispute over how many seats would be elected this fall.

That direction came last week in a letter Johnson sent to Harmon — putting his full support behind the Chicago Teachers Union-backed plan of electing 10 seats in November and letting the mayor appoint the other 11. That would leave Johnson in control of Chicago Public Schools nearly through the end of his term.

The Senate measure was filed on Friday afternoon.

“I appreciate Mayor Johnson’s clear direction as to his vision for an elected, representative school board for Chicago,” Harmon said in a statement. “We have drafted and now filed Mayor Johnson’s plan so that it can be reviewed by lawmakers and the public in the weeks ahead.”

* Rep. Jennifer Sanalitro filed HB5435 Friday

Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Provides that a unit of local government, including a home rule unit, may not enact an ordinance providing for a noise monitoring system upon any portion of its roadways (removing language allowing the City of Chicago to enact an ordinance providing for a noise monitoring system upon any portion of the roadway known as Lake Shore Drive). Makes changes to the definition of “noise monitoring system”.

* WICS

A State Senator filed legislation in Illinois that would legalize psilocybin for adult-supervised use in a licensed service center.

The legislation, known as the CURE ACT (Compassionate Use and Research of Entheogens Act), aims to tackle treatment-resistant conditions such as anxiety, depression, PTSD, substance abuse, eating disorders, and other mental health conditions. […]

Senate Bill 3695 would not allow for the sale, use, or personal possession of psilocybin in Illinois. […]

The bill would also establish the Illinois Psilocybin Advisory Board under the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation which would create a training program, ethical standards, and licensing requirements.

* KHQA

A statewide push to provide healthy school meals for all children across Illinois may soon become a reality. Coalitions across Illinois are calling on the General Assemble to provide funding in the 2025 state budget.

Last year in the spring 2023 session, Illinois passed the ‘Healthy School Meals for All’ bill which provides free breakfast and lunches to all students who want it, but the bill did not receive the appropriation it needed and that has now left lawmakers in Springfield asking for the proper funding to finally kick-start this movement. […]

Championing House Bill 4785, Representative Maurice West said that this movement was historic for the state, but with no funding from the last session, things would have to change over at the capitol. […]

Like many bills this time of year, House Bill 4785 is still in the initial stages. The hope is to get the funding announced in the Governor’s State of the State Address on February 21st, 2024.

* Sen. Jason Plummer filed SB3508 last week

Creates the End Organ Harvesting Act. Provides that a health benefit plan issuer may not cover a human organ transplant or post-transplant care if: (1) the transplant operation is performed in the People’s Republic of China or another country known to have participated in forced organ harvesting, as designated by the Director of Public Health; or (2) the human organ to be transplanted was procured by sale or donation originating in the People’s Republic of China or another country known to have participated in forced organ harvesting, as designated by the Director of Public Health. Provides that the Director of Public Health may designate additional countries with governments that fund, sponsor, or otherwise facilitate forced organ harvesting and shall provide written notice to the Secretary of Human Services and the Director of Insurance when the Director of Public Health designates an additional country. Defines “forced organ harvesting”. Sets forth provisions concerning applicability and severability.

  12 Comments      


You’d better win, man

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Way back in 1990, I was making $17,000 a year working for an online statehouse news and information company. I was too broke for a vacation, so I helped pay for a modest trip by covering a strike at the Delta Pride catfish processing company in Indianola, Mississippi, for a few publications. Almost all of the striking workers were Black women, and their highly unusual walkout had caused a national stir. I was fascinated by what was happening and wanted to see the action up close.

In the process of covering the strike, I visited the union’s makeshift soup kitchen. I spotted a woman ladling soup who looked a lot like state Rep. Mary Flowers (D-Chicago). Sure enough, after approaching the soup lady I discovered she was indeed Flowers, who, it turned out, is from Mississippi.

Flowers explained that her sister was one of the strikers and she was spending her break helping as best she could. And even though she was there to support family and friends, she was clearly in Mississippi to also demonstrate solidarity with the striking union workers, and she was obviously proud to do her part for the overworked, underpaid and mistreated employees, who eventually prevailed.

We didn’t talk long, but seeing her in those circumstances has always stayed with me.

I’m telling you this because, despite the fact that Flowers has compiled an 89% lifetime AFL-CIO voting record after serving 39 years in the Illinois House, labor unions are falling all over each other to contribute to her Democratic primary opponent, Michael Crawford. As I write this, those union contributions have totaled more than $362,000, and much more is coming Crawford’s way. We’re likely looking at seven figures there.

I’m fully aware that voting records are not the be-all, end-all for any organization, including organized labor. Other factors often come into play.

But it’s abundantly clear that those unions are acting at the behest of House Speaker Chris Welch, who can control their legislative destinies. No way could she have been targeted without his consent and even encouragement.

Welch stripped Flowers of her deputy majority leader title and barred her from attending House Democratic caucus meetings last year after a large majority of his members complained about her behavior. She was disrespectful and rude to colleagues and allegedly abusive to some staff. She was behaving as the opposite of a caucus leader.

I fully support the notion that she should not have run again, and instead should’ve retired and taken her pension of at least $256,000 after one year.

But this whole thing bothers me on multiple levels:

    1 If the massive union contributions succeed in toppling Flowers, how much will Welch owe them for conducting this political hit, and what will he have to do to repay the favor? I’ve been wanting to ask Welch about this for weeks, but for the first time in my career, I was denied an interview request after it was initially granted. I was told he wants to wait until after the primary to explain everything.

    2 How beholden will Michael Crawford be to the unions, and to any other interest groups which chip in on this endeavor, if he wins?

    3 How can other House Democrats be assured that regularly voting for organized labor’s bills will prevent the same dire fate from happening to them? Yes, Flowers is an extreme case, but the unions and Welch are also trying to unseat Rep. Cyril Nichols (D-Chicago), who has a 95% lifetime AFL-CIO voting record. I also wanted to ask Welch why Nichols is being targeted and why other members should feel secure, but, again, my interview request was denied.

I mean, I get it. This is Democratic Party “family business.” Sometimes, things just gotta be done. “We had to sit still and take it,” lamented the “Goodfellas” movie character Henry Hill after his friend Tommy DeVito was whacked by the mob. “It was revenge for Billy Batts, and a lot of other things. And there was nothing that we could do about it.”

Flowers is Flowers. Nichols has associated himself with people hostile to Welch’s leadership, including former Rep. Ken Dunkin. And both Nichols and Flowers have angered other powerful and influential interest groups that Welch relies on. I’d hope, though, that Welch has put some limits on his thankfulness.

I’ll close by stating the obvious: Welch had better win these races. If everyone thought that Flowers was a chaos agent before, just wait to see what happens if she gets another term.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Tim Mapes sentenced to 30 months in prison. Hannah Meisel

    - Tim Mapes was sentenced to 2 1/2 years for lying to a federal grand jury.
    - Mapes stood stoically receiving the news of his sentence, which was preceded by more than 30 minutes of near-monologue from the judge.
    - Judge Kness wondered aloud if Mapes was operating under the old mafia logic of “omertà,” an Italian term for the mob honor code wherein members of organized crime outfits were pressured to solve disputes among themselves and to never cooperate with law enforcement.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Gun rights groups ask SCOTUS to review Illinois’ assault weapons ban: In separate petitions filed Monday, the Colorado-based National Association for Gun Rights and the Nevada-based Firearms Policy Coalition asked the nation’s high court to reverse a decision of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals. That court ruled 2-1 in November not to issue a temporary injunction against the law, finding that rights guaranteed under the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution are not absolute.

    * Tribune | A migrant family in peril: He’s paralyzed. She just had a C-section and is caring for her husband and children. And their immigration papers just got tossed: The city had resettled the family Jan. 28 into a second-floor apartment in Chatham. Isolated inside with all her responsibilities, Chacon learned Tuesday that city officials at the Inn of Chicago in Streeterville — where they’d been staying before being resettled — had thrown away the family’s immigration papers and their newborn daughter’s birth certificate, along with the rest of their belongings. The staff knew of the family’s dire circumstances. “As per protocol staff gathered the rest of their belongings, labeled and stored them. Case management made them aware they will hold them for 48 hours,” said Cassio Mendoza, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s deputy press secretary, in a statement to the Tribune. “An extension was granted for a period of 72 more hours at which point the belongings were disposed of.”

Governor Pritzker continues highlighting Smart Start investments across the state. Starting at the Youth Services Network in Rockford at 9:30 am and then at Aldridge Early Learning Center in East Moline at 12:45 pm. Click here to watch.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

    * Sun-Times | Justice Joy Cunningham runs to keep seat on Illinois Supreme Court, facing primary challenge from Judge Jesse Reyes: Cunningham was appointed to the position in 2022, becoming just the second Black woman to serve on the state’s highest court. But she bristles at how the issue of race has been “injected” into the primary, arguing that voters should be more focused on experience. […] Reyes argues it isn’t about race — it’s about ensuring everyone has a voice on the bench — noting Latinos now make up over a quarter of Cook County’s population.

    * Fox Chicago | Former Dolton police chief exposes Mayor Tiffany Henyard’s alleged misuse of police detail: [Former Dolton Police Chief Robert Collins] said Henyard’s security detail was warranted when it started in 2021 after a police-involved shooting in Dolton sparked protests and threats. “And at some point, the protests stopped,” Collins remembered. “The things going on and around the protests eventually stopped. But the detail continued.”

    * Sun-Times | Proposal in Springfield seeks to stop evictions spurred by police calls: A bill filed Friday known as the Community Safety Through Stable Homes Act calls for the repeal of local laws that penalize tenants for having contact with police and often require landlords to initiate eviction procedures. The measure comes months after the mom, Diamond Jones, filed a federal lawsuit against Richton Park, alleging she was forced out of the home she rented because of the village’s crime-free ordinance.

    * WCIA | Illinois American Water, Citizen’s Utility Board at odds over rate hike: The company filed a request with the Illinois Commerce Commission to raise its rates on Thursday, Feb. 8. They said the average residential wastewater bill would go up by about $5 per month, with the average customer seeing a $24 increase in residential monthly water service bills.

    * Tribune | Gov. J.B. Pritzker says his office to meet with developers proposing new White Sox stadium: “I set out what I think are the parameters that the taxpayers expect, which is why we need to be careful about how we use public dollars,” Pritzker said. “And a private business like a professional team, even if they’re beloved by so many people, are nevertheless similar to lots of other businesses in the state.”

    * KHQA | Illinois rallies for budget appropriation to enable healthy school meals for all: Last year in the spring 2023 session, Illinois passed the ‘Healthy School Meals for All’ bill which provides free breakfast and lunches to all students who want it, but the bill did not receive the appropriation it needed and that has now left lawmakers in Springfield asking for the proper funding to finally kick-start this movement.

    * WCIA | Rep. Buckner: “We have to use our advantage” when pushing for federal immigration reform: House Democrat Kam Buckner is saying it’s time for the state use all the tools it has to try and make that change happen, including pressuring Democrat leadership in Washington D.C. by threatening to pass on the Democratic National Convention, which is scheduled for August.

    * Daily Herald | ‘Stood up for our taxpayers’: District 214 superintendent defends approach in property tax battle with Bears: Northwest Suburban High School District 214 Superintendent Scott Rowe denied his and two other Arlington Heights-area school districts are being “greedy” in their ongoing property tax battle with the Chicago Bears. And though he said the two sides were “very, very close” to an agreement on a property valuation and tax payments for the Arlington Park site, the schools aren’t willing to go as far as the NFL franchise’s tax attorneys want them to go. That’s because of the long-term implications of a short-term deal.

    * WHBF | Thomson employees speak out about abuse concerns: More than 1,000 reports of abuse have been reported since 2020 from Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Thomson, more than 100 employees left the prison last year, citing their resignations as a direct result of the misconduct they endured. The abuse at the prison has the attention of Iowa Senator Joni Ernst, who feels the workers need federal protections and says the Federal Bureau of Prisons covered up the incidents. As Our Quad Cities News reporter Jackson Rozinsky found out, workers have a lot to say about the abuse they’ve faced and what they think needs to be done.

    * Tribune | Illinois Arts Council reorganizes in effort to expand reach across state: “We heard our application was very cumbersome,” said Illinois Arts Council board Chair Nora Daley, who was appointed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker in 2022. “A lot of our small and mid-sized organizations don’t have development teams. And so our application — we really streamlined where we are asking for information that is going to inform our decisions.”

    * South Side Weekly | Activists Spar with ShotSpotter CEO at CCPSA Meeting: Jose Manuel Almanza Jr., director of advocacy and movement building for Equiticity, called on Clark to release more information about ShotSpotter’s technology functions before continuing to invest in the technology. “If you’re saying it works, prove it,” he said. “Let the OIG [Office of the Inspector General] inspect the algorithm.”

    * Sun-Times | After mayoral letter, state Senate president files ‘Mayor Johnson’s plan’ to elect 10 school board members this year: The new bill includes ethics provisions Senate President Don Harmon requested last year. Last week, Mayor Brandon Johnson sent Harmon a letter supporting the Chicago Teachers Union-backed plan to elect 10 members in November, while the mayor appoints the other 11.

    * WBEZ | Household income and education levels are on the rise in most parts of the Chicago area: Between the five-year periods ending in 2012 and 2022, the median household income in Chicago grew from $59,000 to more than $71,000 (in inflation-adjusted 2022 dollars). For all of Cook County, median household income improved from about $68,000 to more than $78,000.

    * WTTW | Just 29% of Federal COVID-19 Relief Funds Meant to Transform Chicago Have Been Spent: Data: In all, Chicago spent less than $160 million on a host of programs including affordable housing, mental health, violence prevention, youth job programs and help for unhoused Chicagoans through Dec. 31, according to the most recent reports filed with the U.S. Department of the Treasury as required by federal law. Chicago’s entire budget for the federally funded programs is approximately $550 million, records show.

    * Chalkbeat | Chicago Public Schools plans to end Aramark cleaning contract: The school board’s latest agreement with the Philadelphia-based company is set to end June 30, 2024. According to a school board committee agenda posted Monday, the district is asking board members to increase the current contract, which started Aug. 2021, from $369 million to $391 million “due to unforeseen expenditures associated with overtime, custodial supplies and custodial equipment.”

    * CBS Chicago | Belvidere, Illinois goes from loser to winner with idled Stellantis plant reopening: The news in Belvidere, the City of Murals, was like a bucket of paint tossed upon Vincent van Gogh’s “Starry Night.” It was a gut punch for plant veteran Deanna “This is my survival for me and my three boys,” Viel said. “It’s a lot of emotion. First, you had your whole world crash down. Then, we had the big, ‘OK, we’re going to make it.”

    * Tribune | Jon Margolis, Tribune political columnist who wrote with wry wit, dies: “He was one of the best political reporters the Tribune has ever had,” said former Tribune publisher and editor in chief R. Bruce Dold. “He loved following (campaigns), talking to voters during the day, talking with the (politicians) late into the night. He did the hard work to really understand what was going on in the country, and his writing for the Tribune reflected that.” Margolis, 83, died of natural causes Jan. 29 at the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington, Vermont, said his daughter, Katey. He moved to Vermont after retiring from the Tribune in 1995.

    * SJ-R | New UIS Sangamon Experience exhibit highlights often-overlooked central Illinois history: The exhibit takes us back to 1973, when Sangamon State University (SSU), now UIS, Professor David Hilligoss spoke with David Schurr, SSU’s dean of humanities, who emphasized that “as a public affairs university, SSU should prioritize its commitment to the community more than any other state school.” When Hilligoss was hired by SSU in 1973 as a key member of the university’s innovative Individual Option curriculum, he actively advocated for American Indian causes nationwide. He worked alongside notable activists in campaigns related to the rights of incarcerated Native Americans, preserving indigenous cultural heritage, and fulfilling treaty rights, among other causes.

    * Chicago Reader | Making Black queer spaces: Party Noire (PN) is a Chicago-based and events-focused organization. On the group’s website, PN describes its community as “an inclusive cultural hub” created to celebrate and hold space for “Black femmes, queer women of color [QWOC], and Black womanhood along the gender spectrum.” Party Noire threw its first party in 2015 with no expectations of what might follow. The group didn’t imagine that, eight years later, they would be able to curate 300- to 500-person parties regularly on their own, plus partner with media giants like Red Bull, Canvas Studios, and Pitchfork Music Festival at venues across the city.

    * Tribune | Chicago Black Restaurant Week 2024: 6 specials we’re excited to try, from Haitian cuisine to a nonalcoholic wine shop: The event, in its ninth year, is a celebration of Black-owned food, beverage and dessert businesses, said founder Lauran A. Smith. […] Asked if she had to pick one place among 52 participants, Smith replied without hesitation. “I’m going to try what Batter & Berries in Olympia Fields has going on, because they have partnered with Shawn Michelle’s Homemade Ice Cream,” she said.

    * Tribune | Family dreams and hopes ‘shattered’ after Chicago Marathon winner’s death in Kenya: Kelvin Kiptum’s family said Monday their dreams and future hopes have been shattered after the death of the marathon world record holder in a car crash Sunday night. Kiptum and his Rwandan coach, Gervais Hakizimana, were killed in the crash near the town of Kaptagat in western Kenya, in the heart of the high-altitude region that’s renowned as a training base for the best distance runners from Kenya and across the world.

    * Tribune | Chicago White Sox, coming off a 101-loss season, enter spring training with ‘a lot to prove to themselves’: [General manager Chris Getz] wants the Sox “to play cleaner, winning-type baseball.” After finishing tied for 10th in the AL with 95 errors, the Sox emphasized defense with a number of their offseason moves. They signed catcher Martín Maldonado and shortstop Paul DeJong and traded for catcher Max Stassi and infielders Nicky Lopez and Braden Shewmake.

    * Chicago Mag | Lincoln Owes His Presidency to Illinois: Lincoln was the perfect leader to guide the nation through the Civil War, and toward the abolition of slavery. He was not, however, an indispensable man, nor was his presidency inevitable. In the spring of 1860, Lincoln was simply the right man from the right place. He won the Republican nomination both because of who he wasn’t — William Seward, the New York abolitionist considered too radical by Midwestern Republicans — and where he was from: Central Illinois, the swing region of a swing state. Illinois had voted for Democrat James Buchanan in 1856. The Republicans needed to flip the “Sucker State” to win in 1860, along with New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Indiana.

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Tuesday, Feb 13, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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