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Afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bond Buyer

Illinois’ bonds are underappreciated, Wells Fargo Head of Municipal Markets Strategy Vikram Rai said Monday as he released a report on the state titled, “Why Illinois Beckons.”

“All the negative news was drowning out all the positive news and the positive developments about Illinois’ improving story,” Rai said during Monday’s municipal market weekly call, noting that Illinois, the sixth largest U.S. state by population, has a larger gross domestic product than Saudi Arabia.

While Rai acknowledged that the biggest credit challenge Illinois faces involves its long-term liability burden, he argued in the call and in the report that the state is on the upswing.

* Tribune

It could be months before Deerfield-based Baxter International is able to fully ramp back up its supplies of IV fluids, after its largest manufacturing plant was damaged by Hurricane Helene, Baxter said Wednesday – something that could have serious implications for hospitals.

The hurricane last month led to flooding at Baxter’s North Cove plant, in Marion, N.C., forcing the company to temporarily shut down the facility. That plant was the largest manufacturer of intravenous and peritoneal dialysis solutions in the U.S. Intravenous solutions are used in hospitals and other care settings to deliver medication, keep patients hydrated and/or address electrolyte imbalances.

Baxter said in a statement Wednesday that its goal is to return to 90% to 100% allocation of certain IV solutions by the end of 2024, by re-starting the plant in phases and by importing products from other Baxter facilities.

For now, Baxter is limiting how much customers can order based on their past purchases, medical necessity and inventory, allowing them 60% of what they normally get. Baxter is also ramping up production of the products at its plants outside of the U.S. to help fill the need.

Related news about a Springfield hospital is here.

* WSIL

Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton will embark on a three-day tour of Southern and Central Illinois from October 9-11, 2024.

She will make stops in Bloomington, Springfield, Murphysboro, Carbondale, Metropolis, Marion, Herrin, and Vienna.

The trip is to demonstrate the Lt. Governor’s commitment to uplifting communities across the state, driven by her role as Chair of the Governor’s Rural Affairs Council.

The tour will highlight economic initiatives, celebrate historical landmarks, and engage with local leaders and residents.

*** Statewide ***

* WGLT | Illinois physicians, public health officials launch ‘Adults Need Vaccines Too’ campaign: The campaign, launched by the Illinois Academy of Family Physicians (IAFP) and the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH), comes amid low vaccination rates. The vaccine rate among adults currently aims for a 70% goal.

* Nextstar | Illinois to replace diesel buses with new electric models: The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) is making $27 million of funding available for cities to replace diesel public transit buses with all-new electric models. According to the IEPA, the grant will cover 75% of the cost of an electric bus and charging infrastructure, with a minimum award of $300,000 to government and transit agencies that apply.

* CNI | Advocates seek support for drug price control board: Citizen Action/Illinois, along with other groups, convened a town hall meeting in Rockford Tuesday – the fifth in a series of such meetings the group has held since last spring – to push for passage of House Bill 4472, which would establish a Health Care Availability and Access Board. That five-member board, appointed by the governor, would have authority to set caps on the prices paid by both insurance plans and consumers for certain high-cost drugs.

* Sun-Times | Illinois Secretary of State’s office revokes 5 ‘Oct. 7′ license plates: State officials say the controversial plates were yanked after being deemed “hate speech or fighting words,” but civil libertarians say the decision raises constitutional questions about suppressing political expression.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Johnson drops ShotSpotter veto plan, political brawl over police tool continues: South Side Ald. Jeanette Taylor, 20th, was absent for the September vote. She told the Tribune earlier this week she planned to vote against the mayor in a bid to keep acoustic gunshot technology in Chicago. Taylor doing so would likely mean 34 votes in favor of it, the minimum needed to override Johnson’s veto.

* Block Club | South Side Officials Raise $2.5 Million In Effort To Keep ShotSpotter In Chicago: Community leaders including Ald. Stephanie Coleman (16th), Ald. Peter Chico (10th), St. Sabina’s Father Michael Pfleger and former Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan joined Ald. David Moore (17th) at City Hall Tuesday morning to demand the city continue to use ShotSpotter to “save lives.” ShotSpotter, which uses a network of sensors to detect and report the sound of gunshots, began to be phased out in late September. Mayor Brandon Johnson, who fulfilled a campaign to discontinue the service, has since announced a “request for information” for companies interested in replacing the first responder technology.

* Sun-Times | Johnson cancels 2 months of police academy classes, orders layoff lists to cut $75M: At an emergency Cabinet meeting Tuesday, Chief Operating Officer John Roberson ordered other department heads to identify personnel cuts and to submit their proposals by Friday. The goal is to find $75 million more in savings in 2025.

* WBEZ | An international chess tournament got underway this morning in the Cook County jail: In a room of the Chicago jailhouse - walls were covered in flags representing other nations – like Mexico, Switzerland and Brazil. The tournament is only for people behind bars.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Thornton Township trustees cite safety concerns in skipping meeting, Trustee Jerry Jones resigns: Township official and close Henyard ally Keith Price, who Henyard said was tasked with bolstering security at the Township Hall, shot back with claims he offered to install metal detectors and criticized trustees for insisting the board meet downstairs instead of upstairs, where Henyard feels more safe. “Many of you remember the supervisor had concerns about safety because it was a lot of attacks on her,” Price said. “The board would not comply.”

* Crain’s | Cook County tax collections tumble to a 10-year low: Cook County’s tax collection rate fell to its lowest level in more than a decade as south suburban property owners felt the strain of record-high increases and a tight turnaround between tax bills. The county collected 95.1% of property taxes billed for tax year 2023 as of Sept. 1, a month after bills were due, down about 1.3 percentage points from the same period for the previous year and making for the highest delinquency since 2012, according to an analysis from the office of Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas. Read the full analysis here.

*** Downstate ***

* WBEZ | In the wake of Sonya Massey’s death, Springfield will test a new way to handle mental health calls: Now, change is coming to the state capital. Sangamon County will be one of the first in Illinois to pilot a statewide plan to send clinicians to mental health crises instead of police. However, even proponents of the change aren’t sure it would have prevented what happened to Massey, raising questions about how best to work with people in the midst of mental health emergencies.

* SJ-R | ‘It should have surfaced.’ Debate over allegation against sheriff’s husband boils over: Speakers at Tuesday’s Sangamon County Board meeting and a board member himself reiterated concerns that an allegation of unwanted physical contact against the husband of current Sangamon County Sheriff Paula Crouch wasn’t brought to the public’s attention during a background search last month. Board chairman Andy Van Meter said the investigation of battery against Robert S. Crouch Jr., now the Riverton Police Chief, wasn’t relevant to the determination of Paula Crouch’s fitness for office.

* Effingham Daily News | Effingham considers ban on camping on public property: The ordinance would prohibit people from sleeping or camping on publicly owned property. It would also prohibit people from sleeping in their car for more than two hours between the hours of midnight and 6 a.m. without prior permission from the city. … The first violation would trigger a $75 fine. Six or more violations in a 24-month period would result in a fine of $750 or incarceration, according to the proposal.

* WCIA | Douglas Co. board suspends animal shelter manager indefinitely: The Douglas County Board made the decision at their meeting Tuesday afternoon and was unwilling to confirm an exact reason for the disciplinary action at this point. The board told the manager, Spencer Hall, she’s being suspended with pay indefinitely. She is one of just two employees working at the animal shelter. Last week, she criticized the Douglas County State Attorney’s decision to temporarily resolve a Murdoch dog-abuse case, which resulted in the owner taking back four of the seized dogs from the shelter.

* SJ-R | New business brings locally, organically grown groceries right to your door: The Farms Of Illinois is a supply chain delivery system launched by farmer and entrepreneur Clint Bland, whose goal is to bring organic produce to your door without skimping on farmer’s livelihood. “I’m taking a different approach here and trying to promote each of these businesses and keeping their name,” Bland said. “Twin Willows processes their pork, and the farms sell Twin Willows pork. It has their farm name on it and it’s more of a promotion, that’s why I call it an alliance.”

* WCIA | U of I alum, Hot Ones host Sean Evans to sound siren against Purdue: Sean Evans, host of the Emmy-nominated YouTube series Hot Ones, will be sounding the air raid siren before kickoff at Memorial Stadium. An Illinois alum, Evans graduated in 2008 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in broadcast journalism.

Isabel gathered several of these stories.

  10 Comments      


Since my name was used in the debate…

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez and Caise D. Hassan writing in the Tribune

State funding for CPS has decreased as a share of total funding. According to Chalkbeat Chicago, CPS’ share of funding from Illinois, based on the state’s evidence-based funding (EBF) formula, dropped from 24% to 21%. Even government watchdog Rich Miller, in an article critical of Johnson, estimates CPS should receive under the EBF law $503 million of the withheld funds.

Way to twist my words there, folks. I never said CPS “should” receive that money. Also, zero state funds are being “withheld.” That’s just a ridiculous thing to say.

* But first, let’s go to the Chalkbeat article

Chicago gets about 21% of the funding distributed through the state’s evidence-based formula — which allocates money to districts based on their students’ needs — but serves about 18% of Illinois’ students, said State Superintendent Tony Sanders.

“I think it’s important to note that we still have districts that are below what Chicago was funded,” Sanders said.

Data show 49 Illinois districts are still below 70% adequately funded, compared to 72 districts last year and 430 districts in 2018, right after the state’s funding formula was revamped. Chicago is considered 79% adequately funded. […]

CPS’s budget includes a total of $2.6 billion in state funding.

CPS is getting a slightly lower percentage of EBF money because the district moved up a tier on its adequate funding levels. That’s actually good news.

* Now, from my column

According to the Illinois State Board of Education, if the state had decided last fiscal year to just all of a sudden abandon the funding “ramp” and immediately reach 90% adequacy, the total state cost would’ve been $2.5 billion.

Of that $2.5 billion, the ISBE says, Chicago would’ve received $503 million, less than half the $1.1 billion that Mayor Johnson claims the state owes.

So, where does the $1.1 billion number come from? According to the state board, that amount would’ve been owed to Chicago last fiscal year if the state immediately funded schools at 100% of their adequacy levels. However, the board points out that 100% funding is not in state law, despite what the mayor is saying.

Again, that $505 million for CPS would require an immediate outlay of $2.5 billion for all schools. And that’s base spending, not one-time.

* Back to the op-ed

Gov. JB Pritzker, who sent his children to private schools in Chicago, rejected Johnson’s request that Springfield release $1.1 billion in funds earmarked for CPS. Pritzker smacked CPS from the bully pulpit, saying that the General Assembly should not throw more money at a financial mess — a mess his wealthy circle, as we shall argue, created.

That’s not what he said, but whatever. He can defend himself. But they blast a guy for sending his kids to private school while the president of the Chicago Teachers Union has a kid in private school? Puh-leaze.

* Again, to the op-ed

Pritzker and former Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s billionaire peers on Wall Street dug this huge hole in CPS’ finances. These bankers introduced “toxic swaps” and other outrageous debt instruments to CPS as an alternative method of funding to traditional municipal bonds. These ended up costing Chicagoans billions more in interest than the traditional offerings.

I can think of a very uncharitable way to read their little “analysis,” especially considering some of the alderperson’s past statements, but I won’t go there.

* One more excerpt

Pritzker should collaborate with Johnson, the General Assembly and the new school board to improve our schools. The rhetoric about taking over CPS is unproductive and beyond the state’s authority.

Literally nobody is talking about a state take-over of CPS.

* From the Pritzker administration…

Governor Pritzker shares the belief that a well funded public school system is critical to the success of our state. That’s why, to date, his administration has increased funding for CPS by 14%. That number jumps to 16.6% when accounting for estimated FY25 investments. Overall, during that time, the administration has increased funding for EBF by $1.8 billion. We look forward to further discussions next Spring when, in partnership with the General Assembly, Governor Pritzker will continue to make responsible decisions, investment in public schools across the state, and balance our seventh straight budget.

  21 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The jury selection process continues in the federal corruption trial of former House Speaker Michael Madigan. Click here to follow along, but here’s a fun little quote…


* The Question: What would you ask the potential Madigan jurors to find out if they will be neutral? Explain if necessary, snark is not discouraged.

  46 Comments      


Rockford’s new permanent casino posts big numbers

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Nexstar Media

Hard Rock Casino Rockford brought in the 2nd highest casino gambling revenue of any casino operating in Illinois, according to the Illinois Gaming Board.

In September 2024, Hard Rock Casino Rockford brought in $13,717,722 in revenue. Of that, $3 million is allocated to the state, and $843,040 to Rockford and the surrounding cities.

That makes Rockford’s casino the second largest in revenue in the state, behind the Rivers Casino Des Planes, which brought in $41.5 million in September. […]

On Monday, Rockford City Council voted on a one-year contract to use the casino tax revenue to support Rockford Promise college scholarships, the planned International Women’s Baseball Museum, and the economic development of high-risk neighborhoods. The beneficiaries could change each year when the contracts expire.

* Meanwhile, let’s move on to Hannah Meisel

Illinois surpassed $2 billion in tax revenue last year from all types of gambling and the state lottery – a record bolstered by continued growth in video gambling, sports betting and the opening of several new casinos.

But that growth comes at the expense of Illinois’ traditional riverboat casinos and the horse racing industry, which has been on a downward trajectory for decades.

An annual report published last week by the General Assembly’s fiscal forecasting arm laid out the state’s record nearly $2.1 billion in revenues, nearly half of which was earmarked for infrastructure projects, while most of the remainder went to education.

While the Illinois Lottery continues to make up a significant portion of the state’s wagering revenues, it might soon be eclipsed by Illinois’ ever-growing video gambling industry. In the last fiscal year, the lottery netted $886 million in state tax revenue while video gambling’s state taxes climbed to $848 million. […]

COGFA’s report indicates overall casino revenue growth is mainly due to the success of Rivers Casino in Des Plaines and the opening of five new casinos statewide in the past few years. A sixth, in Chicago’s south suburbs, is slated to open later this fall.

Illinois’ nine riverboat legacy casinos, most of which have been running for about three decades, have seen their revenues decline “for nine consecutive years,” according to the report. Visits to casinos in East St. Louis, East Peoria and Joliet’s Harrah’s Casino have seen significant drop-off.

Go read the rest. COGFA’s report is here.

  7 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Brad Biggs

Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren says his focus for a new stadium project remains on the Museum Campus in Chicago, with a goal of breaking ground on construction in 2025. […]

Warren said he remains optimistic even as the Bears have struggled to gain traction for public money to get the project rolling.

“Me worn down?” he said. “Never. These stadium projects … that’s why you do them once every 30, 40, 50 years. I’m actually energized by it because anything that is great in life, anything that lasts 50 years, takes a lot of energy and effort.

Biggs goes on to note that the last stadium project for the Bears was completed a mere 21 years ago.

  28 Comments      


End of an era

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* SJ-R

Yelloh, formerly known as Schwan’s Home Delivery, announced last month it’s closing its delivery service this November. The company cited multiple insurmountable business challenges for the decision, including economic and market forces, as well as changing consumer lifestyles.

In a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification, or WARN act, filed to the state of Illinois on Sept. 30 by parent group Cygnus Home Service, LLC, 119 Illinoisians will be affected across the state from the layoff. The final day of work for employees will be Nov. 22 of this year. […]

Founded in 1952, the Minnesota-based frozen food delivery giant has grown to nationwide size as a leader of the country’s largest fleet of yellow freezer trucks. The business operates as a direct-to-consumer frozen food service, with 1,100 employees nationwide. The company changed its name from Schwan’s to Yelloh in 2023 after their yellow-colored vehicles.

Yelloh Board Member Micahel Ziebell said in a statement the food supply chain disruption during the pandemic affected the business, alongside other challenges to maintain operation in a digital landscape.

I grew up eating Schwan’s. My Uncle Bill was a Schwan’s driver. We lived in rural Iroquois County, so deliveries were always appreciated. Plus, its butter brickle ice cream was heaven. Seriously. Heaven.

Several years ago, I saw a Schwan’s truck go by and chased the driver down and got a menu. It wasn’t good. Lots of meh frozen food and no butter brickle. I didn’t realize that they’d since upgraded their menu, or I would’ve given them another go.

Anyway, just a little story about a very unique part of rural Illinois life that is now gone.

  32 Comments      


Astonishing results from Illinois Supreme Court commision study on lawyer bullying

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WCIA

On Oct. 1, the Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Professionalism released a study on the impact of bullying in the Illinois legal profession. With over 6,000 Illinois lawyers as respondents, they’re using the data to raise awareness for National Bullying Prevention Month. […]

18% of survey respondents said they left a job practicing law because of bullying. That means almost 10,000 attorneys currently practicing in Illinois have left a career opportunity for this reason alone.

Overall, the responses found that while bullying impacts lawyers from all backgrounds, it disproportionately affects female attorneys, attorneys with disabilities, attorneys of color, younger attorneys and LGBTQ+ attorneys.

* From the press release

The study found lawyers from groups traditionally underrepresented in the legal profession experienced bullying at higher rates:

    • 38% of female lawyers were bullied, compared to 15% of male lawyers
    • 38% of lawyers with an impairment that substantially limits a major life activity were bullied, compared to 23% of lawyers without that level of disability
    • 29% of LGBTQ+ lawyers were verbally bullied related to their sexual orientation, compared to 3% of heterosexual lawyers

In breaking down experiences of bullying by race:

    • 36% of Middle Eastern/North African lawyers were bullied
    • 35% of Black/African American lawyers were bullied
    • 34% of Hispanic lawyers were bullied
    • 32% of multiracial lawyers were bullied
    • 28% of Asian American lawyers were bullied
    • 23% of white lawyers were bullied

In addition, younger attorneys were more likely to experience bullying, with the probability of being bullied decreasing for each increasingly older group of lawyers. Thirty-nine percent of lawyers aged 25 to 35 were bullied, compared to 12% of lawyers aged 66 to 75.

That’s all just insane. Forget about the differences between categories for a moment and just think of the crazy number of attorneys who said they’ve been bullied.

* More

The report outlines recommendations that workplaces, bar associations, law schools, government organizations, and others can take to help prevent bullying in the legal profession.

These include:

    • Legal workplaces should develop, implement, and enforce anti-bullying policies. These policies should clearly define bullying, detail concrete and meaningful remedial actions for engaging in bullying (including mandatory training, reprimand, demotion, termination, or other consequences), outline the process for reporting bullying, require an investigation of the allegations and documentation of the results, and prohibit retaliation for reporting. Existing anti-harassment policies that only prohibit harassment based on a protected class are insufficient.
    • Legal workplaces should conduct training specific to their organization’s anti-bullying policies and procedures to equip lawyers with tools to respond, whether they are being targeted by bullying or witnessing it.
    • Law schools should also offer educational programs and training to law students on bullying prevention.
    • Courts should enforce anti-bullying standards in courtrooms and litigation activities.
    • The Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission (ARDC) should continue to review the bullying complaints it receives and, when such complaints show bullying behavior that violates the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct, recommend appropriate remediation or disciplinary measures to send a strong message against the bullying.
    • Bar associations should use their resources and reach to advance programs that educate members on the prevalence and impact of bullying in the legal profession.
    • Lawyers being bullied should respond in the way they feel best safeguards their rights, well-being, and career.

The full report is here.

  37 Comments      


The Importance Of Energy Storage

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Recent polling shows 72% of Illinoisans support incentives for energy storage, and a majority of Illinoisans would be likely to for a candidate that supports building more energy storage in the state.

But it’s not just popular. It’s urgent — Building more storage today is the best way to save Illinois families and businesses from rapidly rising energy costs. By guaranteeing a backup of affordable energy at times when heat waves, storms, or cold snaps threaten
the grid, storage is the key to affordable, reliable energy independence.

Save families money and make energy more reliable. With energy costs set to rise, we need energy storage now. Learn more about energy storage and outstanding bills about it here.

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I asked Isabel to take the morning off because she’s not feeling well. So, talk amongst yourselves, but keep it Illinois-centric, please.

  5 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Oct 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* The legal front
* Question of the day
* It’s just a bill
* Roundup: Mistrial declared after jury deadlocks in Sen. Emil Jones III bribery case
* Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans
* Durbin on his retirement decision, Pritzker to endorse Stratton (Updated)
* Open thread
* Healing Communities: Illinois Hospitals Support Individual And Community Health And Well-being
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* UPDATE: Jones judge declares a mistrial - UPDATE: Jones jury: 'The jury is unable to reach a unanimous verdict on any of the three counts' - Jones jury: 'The jury cannot come to a unanimous verdict on all three counts. No one is willing to surrender their honest beliefs' (Updated x10)
* Yesterday's stories

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