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Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rhiannon Giddens will play us out

Stole my mule and away she’s gone

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After being charged with grooming and possessing images depicting child sexual abuse, Nicholas Kachiroubas to be ousted from ICCB (Updated)

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald

The elected Crystal Lake city clerk, who has been charged with grooming and possessing images depicting child sexual abuse, made his initial court appearance Thursday, when a judge ordered he be released from county jail pretrial with conditions while awaiting trial.

The hearing also provided some of the first details of the allegations against Nicholas Kachiroubas, 45, who was arrested Tuesday after authorities from the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office Criminal Investigations Division served a search warrant, according to a news release.

Kachiroubas, who appeared in orange jail-issued clothing, is charged with possessing images of children being sexually abused, a Class 2 felony, and grooming, Judge Carl Metz said at the hearing. […]

Miller said Kachiroubas also possessed a nude photo of a child who was about 7 or 8 years old and that, when police asked Kachiroubas if he thought it was wrong for him to possess such a photo, he allegedly responded: “I guess I didn’t think I was doing anything (wrong).” […]

Kachiroubas is listed on DePaul’s website as an associate professor in the university’s School of Public Service. He also sits on the Illinois Community College Board, and has been the city clerk in Crystal Lake since 2009, having been elected in 2021 to his fourth term.

I’m told by the Illinois Community College Board and the governor’s office that the governor is removing Kachiroubas from the ICCB and we should see a formal announcement later today.

…Adding… And there it is…

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

When it’s finally time to sentence the longest-serving Chicago City Council member in history for racketeering, bribery and attempted extortion, federal prosecutors want a judge to send “a simple, undiluted and unequivocal warning” to government officials across the state: […]

It’s been nearly a decade since an Illinois politician as significant as [ex-Ald Ed Burke] (14th) faced sentencing at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse. Plenty of lesser Chicago pols have been sent away, though, vexing judges inside the building. They’ve mulled the cost-benefit ratio for “rational” politicians who too often choose greed, graft and power over the public good.

Now, U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall, one of the building’s most senior jurists, has a chance to send the loudest message since U.S. District Judge James Zagel gave 14 years to ex-Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Prosecutors want 10 years for Burke. Whatever Kendall does will add to a long-running courthouse debate about how to put a stop to corruption in Chicago — and whether that’s possible. […]

Burke’s sentencing hearing is set to begin at 10 a.m. Monday at the downtown courthouse. Hearings generally begin on time, so Burke must make his way by then to Kendall’s 25th-floor courtroom — which used to belong to Zagel.

* Sun-Times

A federal judge sentenced former Illinois Sen. Annazette Collins to a year in prison Friday for cheating on her taxes in a case with ties to the same investigation that snared indicted former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan.

A jury in February convicted Collins of filing false individual tax returns for the years 2014 and 2015, failing to file one for the year 2016 and failing to file a corporate tax return for 2016.

“Her offenses were driven by greed,” U.S. District Judge Jorge Alonso said. “She doesn’t want to hear that, but it’s absolutely true.” […]

Meanwhile, the case brought by prosecutors revolved around her work with her lobbying firm, Kourtnie Nicole Corp., following her years in the legislature. That firm wound up collecting hefty sums from politically connected firms and utilities.

They included ComEd and AT&T Illinois, both of which were caught up in the Madigan investigation and faced criminal charges.

* Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A project aimed at keeping invasive carp out of the Great Lakes could be in jeopardy if Illinois doesn’t meet a fast-approaching deadline to release federal funds.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has until the end of June to sign the agreement with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or the project will incur additional costs and continue to face delays.

The Brandon Road Interbasin Project is a state-of-the art barricade at an important pinch point at the Brandon Road Lock and Dam along the Des Plaines River in Joliet, Illinois. From there, invasive carp could make their way from the Mississippi River to Lake Michigan.

The project costs more than $1.1 billion, which many say is a small price to pay to keep the Great Lakes healthy and protect the multi-billion dollar fishing and recreation industries.

* Treasurer Micheal Frerichs…

The State Treasurer’s Office made a record $130.1 million in investment earnings from the state investment portfolio in May, Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs announced today.

Treasurer Frerichs is the state’s Chief Investment and Banking Officer. He is responsible for investing state revenue in the state investment portfolio. So far in Fiscal Year 2024, Frerichs’ Office has earned more than $1.3 billion for the state portfolio.

“Every dollar we earn in interest is a dollar that lawmakers don’t have to raise in taxes,” Frerichs said. “The State Treasurer’s Office cannot solve all of our problems, but we can be part of the solution.”

Also in May, nearly $90.9 million in gross investment earnings was earned for cities, villages, school districts, counties and other units of government thattake part in the highly rated Illinois Funds local government investment pool the State Treasurer’s Office operates. So far in Fiscal Year 2024, the Office has earned more than $973.6 million for the Illinois Funds, which has received the highest rating of AAA from Fitch, a national credit ratings agency.

* Illinois Department of Employment Security…

The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that the unemployment rate increased +0.1 percentage point to 4.9 percent, while nonfarm payrolls increased +12,700 in May, based on preliminary data provided by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and released by IDES. The April revised unemployment rate was 4.8 percent, unchanged from the preliminary April unemployment rate. The April monthly change in payrolls was revised from the preliminary report, from +7,300 to +1,900 jobs. The May unemployment rate and payroll jobs estimate reflect activity for the week including the 12th.

In May, the industry sectors with the largest over-the-month job gains included: Professional and Business Services (+7,100), Government (+3,300), and Financial Activities (+2,400). The industry sectors with monthly payroll job declines included Manufacturing (-2,300), Leisure and Hospitality (-1,200), Construction (-100) and Mining (-100). […]

The state’s unemployment rate was +0.9 percentage point higher than the national unemployment rate reported for May. The national unemployment rate was 4.0 percent in May, up +0.1 percentage point from the previous month. The Illinois unemployment rate was up +0.7 percentage point from a year ago when it was 4.2 percent.

Compared to a year ago, total nonfarm payroll jobs increased by +43,900 jobs. The industry groups with the largest jobs increases included: Private Education and Health Services (+29,200), Government (+28,600), and Leisure and Hospitality (+13,900). The industry groups with the largest jobs decreases included: Professional and Business Services (-24,800), Trade, Transportation, and Utilities (-6,600), and Financial Activities (-4,500). In May, total nonfarm payrolls were up +0.7 percent over-the-year in Illinois and up +1.8 percent in the nation.

The number of unemployed workers was 317,400, up +1.3 percent from the prior month, and up +17.8 percent over the same month one year ago. The labor force was up +0.2 percent over-the-month and up +1.4 percent over-the-year. The unemployment rate identifies those individuals who are out of work and seeking employment. An individual who exhausts or is ineligible for benefits is still reflected in the unemployment rate if they actively seek work.

*** Statewide ***

* ABA Journal | 19 state AGs fire back after others demand ABA diversity standards change: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul sent the letter to “reaffirm our commitment to ensuring that diversity, equity, and inclusion programs continue to effectively address discrimination throughout the private and philanthropic sector.” […] “We also write to respond to coordinated attempts to contort the law and invalidate programs aimed at eliminating and preventing racial inequities,” the June 20 letter states.

* Sun-Times | The heat inside your car can turn deadly in minutes this summer: A Sun-Times test this month — before the recent heat wave hit — found the inside temperature of a parked car in a sunny spot rocketed to dangerous levels in minutes. […] The black 2015 Toyota Corolla we tested June 13 on a residential street in Irving Park reached 103.1 degrees in 15 minutes and 114.1 degrees in 45 minutes, according to a sensor placed inside the car out of direct sunlight.

* Press Release | IDNR and Department of Ag to offer free camping at select state parks during 2024 Illinois State Fair: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) and the Illinois Department of Agriculture (IDOA) are teaming up to offer two nights of free camping at select state parks for anyone who purchases a 2024 Illinois State Fair admission book online between June 26 and July 3.

* Center Square | A book about bucket list items to see and do in Illinois: “100 Things to Do in Illinois Before You Die” is published by Reedy Press. Author Melanie Holmes said she wasn’t planning to write a guide book but became aware of Reedy Press’s series and decided there needed to be a book about her home state. […] Holmes said one of her favorite things to do is to visit the zoological park in Hanna City.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | A year on, Chicago is still grappling with the void Jim Crown’s death created: Crown died in a racetrack accident on June 25, 2023, in Colorado on his 70th birthday, just weeks after the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago unveiled a violence-reduction program he championed, one that fell outside the group’s comfort-zone focus on transportation, education and state finance. His death cast a pall over Chicago’s civic community and renewed scrutiny of the city’s boardroom commitment to philanthropic causes against the backdrop of a corporate headquarters drain blamed in part on the city’s bleak homicide record.

* Sun-Times | In bid for young voters, Democrats offer social media influencers press access to August convention: It’s part of a critical voter outreach plan that’s been in place since President Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign and has extended into the halls of the White House — as Biden combats former president Donald Trump and his army of social media influencers. An estimated 32% of people between 18 and 29 got their news from TikTok last year, according to a Pew Research Center poll. And a poll conducted by the University of Chicago’s GenForward late last month found Biden has lost support from young Black and Latino voters compared to 2020.

* ABC Chicago | Indiana Fever vs. Chicago Sky rematch tickets poised to be most expensive in WNBA history: Ticket prices for Clark’s Indiana Fever and Reese’s Chicago Sky are the most expensive for a WNBA game ever, according to TickPick, with the average hovering at around $253 - 187% higher than the Sky’s average purchase price of $88. Currently, the cheapest seat just to see the game is around $250 with the most expensive ticket on sale going for more than $9,000.

* Block Club | 15 Things To Do In Chicago This Weekend: Pride Fest, Vegandale And A Bronzeville Bazaar: This weekend is packed with Chicago street and food festivals, including Pride Fest, Vegandale, Motoblot and the Magnificent Mile Art Festival. There’s also the Andersonville Vintage Market, a Lakeview native plant sale, the Bernard Street Yard Sale in Logan Square, a 5K along the 312 RiverRun trail and the return of the Bronzeville Vendor Fair and Wildflower Music Festival.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WBBM | Embattled Dolton mayor at center of chaotic Thornton Township board meeting: People complained about Henyard’s leadership, about a canceled previous meeting and the amount of time they’re allowed to speak. Those in attendance also argued with one another. They even argued with a man who stood at the podium and suggested they act like adults.

* Tribune | One migrant worker’s effort to claim workers’ comp, a right all workers have despite immigration status: Jose Antuna fell through a drain at a west suburban car wash where he worked and tore his meniscus in mid-November. […] In Illinois, it is illegal under the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 to knowingly hire workers who are in the country without legal permission. However, these workers are as entitled to workers’ compensation benefits when injured on the job as people who are citizens.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | ‘Icon of Springfield’: New plaque recognizes Horseshoe sandwich: Visit Springfield, a tourism division of the Springfield Convention & Visitors Bureau, unveiled a plaque to commemorate the birth of the Horseshoe sandwich at the historic Leland Building at the corner of Sixth Street and Capitol Avenue in Springfield. The location is where the original Springfield Horseshoe Sandwich was created.

* Intelligencer | Steven Cook pleads guilty to falsifying bank records: The president of a southern Illinois bank admitted to a scheme to falsify bank records to facilitate real estate loans. Steven Cook pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Benton, Illinois to three felony counts of aiding and abetting the making of a false bank entry. Cook was the president of SouthernTrust Bank at the time. The bank has branches in Marion, Vienna and Goreville, Illinois. Cook was also a member of the bank’s board and a member of its loan committee.

* WCIA | Illinois Raptor Center in urgent need of donations: The Illinois Raptor Center specializes in aiding all kinds of birds. They said they are currently “floor-to-ceiling” in baby raptors, and are struggling to keep them fed and medicated. The organization also said their air conditioning isn’t working at their office and education center. The break-down puts pressure on their need for funding — however, money for food and meds must be prioritized over repairs, they said.

*** National ***

* AP | Car dealerships are being disrupted by a multi-day outage after cyberattacks on software supplier: For prospective car buyers, that may mean delays at dealerships or vehicle orders written up by hand, with no immediate end in sight. Here’s what you need to know. CDK Global is a major player in the auto sales industry. The company, based just outside of Chicago in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, provides software technology to dealers that helps with day-today operations — like facilitating vehicle sales, financing, insurance and repairs. CDK serves more than 15,000 retail locations across North America, according to the company. Whether all of these locations were impacted by this week’s cyberattacks was not immediately clear.

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You reap what you sow

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Apparently, now Jeanne Ives isn’t pure enough for some folks. Illinois Review

Ever since news broke that embattled Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy was resigning effective July 19th, Illinois GOP state central committee member Jeanne Ives has been working the phones trying to gauge support as she considers a potential run for the party’s top spot – despite spending the last two years angering the very base that made her, and was instrumental in Tracy’s decision to resign.

In December of 2022, Ives stunned a room full of over 200 grassroots activists during a SSC meeting when she defended then IL GOP Finance Chairman Vince Kolber, who had just insulted the grassroots for not donating money to the state party – yelling – in an almost out of body experience that, “Vince is not your problem! This man gave me $750,000 when I ran against Gov. Bruce Rauner!”

Just months before challenging Gov. Rauner in the GOP primary, Ives was seen smiling for a photo with her soon-to-be Republican political opponent. Rauner – bruised and damaged during a vicious primary against Ives, would lose his re-election to political newcomer JB Pritzker by 16 points – just two years before the pandemic and Gov. Pritzker’s shutdown orders and mask mandates.

Last September, Ives endorsed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for president during the 2024 presidential primary, despite the wildly popular former president Donald Trump leading in the polls among Republicans over his political opponents, including DeSantis by over 30 points. And when Ives learned that the president’s son – Donald Trump Jr. was coming to Illinois to promote Letters to Trump last October, her team made requests to interview Trump Jr. on her radio show, and to speak on stage during the event. When the requests were turned down, and this publication accurately reported about it, she became angry – and went on Facebook attacking the event featuring Trump Jr. and falsely alleged that the hosts couldn’t sell tickets.

Hilarious.

  19 Comments      


Coverage roundup: US Supreme Court upholds domestic violence gun law (Updated x2)

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP

The Supreme Court on Friday upheld a federal gun control law that is intended to protect victims of domestic violence.

In their first Second Amendment case since they expanded gun rights in 2022, the justices ruled 8-1 in favor of a 1994 ban on firearms for people under restraining orders to stay away from their spouses or partners. The justices reversed a ruling from the federal appeals court in New Orleans that had struck down the law.

Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the court, said the law uses “common sense” and applies only “after a judge determines that an individual poses a credible threat” of physical violence.

Justice Clarence Thomas, the author of the major 2022 Bruen ruling in a New York case, dissented.

* The Washington Post

The challenge to the law was brought by Zackey Rahimi, a drug dealer who was placed under a restraining order after a 2019 argument with his girlfriend. He argued that the government had violated his Second Amendment rights by blocking him from possessing guns.

Rahimi knocked the woman to the ground in a parking lot, dragged her back to his car and fired a shot at a bystander, according to court records. The girlfriend escaped, but Rahimi later called her and threatened to shoot her if she told anyone about the assault. The pair have a child together.

A Texas court found that Rahimi had “committed family violence” and that such violence was “likely to occur again in the future.” It issued a protective order that suspended Rahimi’s gun license, prohibited him from having guns and warned him that possessing a firearm while the order remained in effect might be a federal felony.

Rahimi later violated the protective order and was involved in five shootings between December 2020 and January 2021, according to a government brief. […]

Rahimi argued in federal court that he had the right to possess guns, but a judge ruled against him on that issue. Afterward, he pleaded guilty to the federal charge and received a sentence of six years in prison. He continued to challenge the law, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit reheard his case after the Supreme Court’s Bruen ruling.

* WAND

Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that since the United States was founded “our nation’s firearm laws have included provisions preventing individuals who threaten physical harm to others from misusing firearms.”

The provision at issue in the case “fits comfortably within this tradition,” he added. […]

In his dissent, Thomas stuck to his view that the history of similar laws at the time of the nation’s founding is determinative. Other justices are more willing to consider laws that are not exactly the same but have a similar effect.

“Not a single historical regulation justifies the statute at issue,” Thomas wrote.

* G-PAC…

The Gun Violence Prevention PAC (G-PAC) of Illinois today applauded the U.S. Supreme Court decision to uphold federal law that bars domestic violence abusers from having guns when they have an order of protection entered against them.

John Schmidt, G-PAC Executive Board Member and former U.S. Associate Attorney General, issued the following statement in response to today’s decision in U.S. v Rahimi:

“The Court’s decision upholds the basic principle that we can deny guns to dangerous people. It rejects the false idea that common sense limits on gun ownership are inconsistent with the Second Amendment right to bear arms for self-defense. The fact that the decision was written by Chief Justice John Roberts with the support of all but one of the other Justices sends a positive sign the Court will continue to uphold sensible laws that protect us against gun violence.”

* The Network…

The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence has released a statement about the U.S. Supreme Court’s 8-1 decision in United States v. Rahimi which upholds a federal law that prohibits people subject to domestic violence orders of protection from possessing firearms. The Court reversed the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit decision that individuals subject to domestic violence protective orders have a constitutional right to possess firearms.

“The Supreme Court has asserted that an individual found by a court to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of another may be temporarily disarmed consistent with the Second Amendment. Survivors of domestic violence deserve to be protected from harm and this decision reinforces the obligation of governments to safeguard survivors. The Illinois General Assembly must reaffirm this right to safety from gun violence and pass Karina’s Bill this fall,” said Amanda Pyron, Executive Director of The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence.

The court held that when an individual has been found by a court to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of another, that individual may be temporarily disarmed consistent with the Second Amendment. Thousands of survivors seek orders of protection each year as an element of safety while they break free from domestic violence situations.

The importance of prohibiting firearms in domestic violence situations cannot be overstated.

    - Risk of intimate partner homicide increases 500% when abusers have access to a gun.

    - Leaving a domestic violence relationship is a period of high lethality risk, including when filing for an order of protection.

    - In domestic violence homicides where the victim had an order of protection, 1 out of 5 victims were killed within two days of the order being issued.

By validating the federal law prohibiting abusers with orders of protection against them from gun possession, the Supreme Court has shown its agreement that the safety of survivors – particularly women – is critical. The Network is grateful to the Supreme Court for its action to protect victims of domestic violence in the U.S.

* Ben Szalinski


More on Karina’s Bill here and here.

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued the following statement in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in U.S. v. Rahimi, which will preserve federal law that prohibits individuals under domestic violence restraining orders from possessing firearms.

“For decades, federal law has barred individuals who are subject to domestic violence restraining orders from possessing firearms, and I am very pleased to see the U.S. Supreme Court uphold these longstanding, commonsense tools that protect victims of domestic violence and prevent gun violence.

“As we highlighted in the brief we led in this case – which was joined by 25 attorneys general across the country – intimate partner violence and gun violence are closely connected. Firearms are the leading cause of intimate partner homicides – more so than all other weapons combined. Studies have shown that an abuser is five times more likely to murder an intimate partner if a firearm is in the home. Laws like the federal law upheld today and similar protections in Illinois that bar abusers from accessing firearms have successfully reduced intimate partner homicide.

“The harms of domestic violence reach beyond intimate partners and family members. Perpetrators of domestic violence are also a threat to public safety. From 2014 to 2019, 60% of mass shootings in the United States either involved domestic violence attacks or the perpetrators had a history of domestic violence.

“Domestic abusers are dangerous and should not have access to firearms. Full stop. Today’s decision is a commonsense win for public safety and gun violence prevention.”

* Senator Dick Durbin…

“Today, the Court reaffirmed that the Second Amendment is not limitless and rejected a meritless challenge to an essential gun safety law. In doing so, they are protecting the lives of women and families across the nation. Unfortunately, Justice Thomas, the lone dissenter in the case, continues to isolate himself from a commonsense view of the limits of the Second Amendment.

“But let’s be clear: the only reason this case was before the Court is that two years ago a conservative supermajority of judicial activists established a radical new standard that makes it much easier for the gun lobby to challenge longstanding gun safety laws. The Court should overturn its misguided Bruen decision as soon as possible.”

In March 2023, Durbin chaired a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing entitled “Protecting Public Safety After New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen.” The hearing focused on the impact of the radical new standard for the constitutionality of modern-day gun safety laws set by the Supreme Court’s decision in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen in 2022. With that decision, the Supreme Court ruled that the constitutionality of modern-day gun safety laws depends on whether the government can demonstrate that there were sufficiently similar historical gun laws in place at the time of the adoption of the Second Amendment in 1791 or the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868. This 2022 ruling opened the door to the Fifth Circuit’s overturning of its original ruling in United States v. Rahimi, thus allowing those with domestic violence protective orders to still possess firearms.

In August 2023, Durbin joined nearly 170 members of Congress in filing an amicus brief in opposition to the constitutional challenge. In the bicameral brief, Durbin and the members called on the Supreme Court to set a clear standard allowing Congress to pass laws that keep the American people safe.

*** Adding *** Rep. Maura Hirschauer…

State Rep. Maura Hirschauer, D-Batavia, issued the following statement Friday after the Supreme Court sided overwhelmingly with gun safety advocates and survivors of domestic violence by upholding federal protections preventing abusers from possessing firearms:

“The United States Supreme Court spoke clearly and forcefully in favor commonsense gun safety, with justices from every end of the ideological spectrum upholding efforts to get guns out of the hands of domestic abusers.

“While this ruling is a great relief for survivors of gender-based violence, the federal protections affirmed today merely preserve the status quo—and for tens of thousands of women and families, it is clear that this is not enough. We now know without question that we can do more, and we must. Here in Illinois, we should move forward by enacting Karina’s Bill, which will provide clear guidance for getting guns out of the hands of abusers, and ensure those weapons are removed sooner—all within a framework that justices have now overwhelmingly endorsed.

“The Supreme Court has shown us that we can enact Karina’s Bill with confidence, knowing that the gun lobby’s bad faith claims have been rejected by the nation’s highest court. I look forward to working with my colleagues to get this important legislation into law as soon as possible.”

*** Adding *** Illinois State Rifle Association…

US Supreme Court Upholds Importance of Due Process in US v. Rahimi

Today, the US Supreme Court held in US v Rahimi that the temporary restriction of a dangerous individual’s ability to possess a firearm is consistent with the history of the 2nd Amendment.

While there are those in Illinois who would seek to remove firearms and deny rights to individuals without the benefit of due process, The Illinois State Rifle Association points out that today’s opinion makes clear that proper due process is an important part of the process where 2nd Amendment rights are concerned.

Notably, Chief Justice Roberts finds that a temporary restriction under 922(g)(8) is proper because in part:

    “A prosecution under Section 922(g)(8) may proceed only if three criteria are met. First, the defendant must have received actual notice and an opportunity to be heard before the order was entered.”

The Illinois State Rifle Association has opposed recent attempts by activists to pass laws which restrict 2nd Amendment Rights without due process, and we strongly encourage those groups to heed the words written in the majority opinion today which also contains the following passages:

    “we note that Section 922(g)(8) applies only once a court has found that the defendant “represents a credible threat to the physical safety” of another.”

    “the Second Amendment right may only be burdened once a defendant has been found to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of others.”

Again, today’s decision makes clear that a court must make a finding before restricting 2nd amendment rights. These rights cannot be curtailed on the basis of an unverified allegation, and the ISRA will continue to fight against attempts to remove firearm owner’s rights to due process in the Illinois legislature.

“Today’s opinion applies solely to those who have been shown to be a credible threat to others through due process in the legal system. The ISRA continues to fight for the rights of peaceful citizens to protect themselves through firearm ownership and exercise of their 2nd amendment rights” - Richard Pearson, Executive Director, Illinois State Rifle Association.

* Related…

    * NPR | In today’s gun rights cases, historians are in hot demand. Here’s why: Bruen has also created sudden, intense interest in research from people such as Brennan Gardner Rivas, an independent scholar who wrote her dissertation on the history of gun regulation in Texas. “The states and attorneys general who are trying to defend their gun laws from challenges now have to seek out historians to identify analogous historical laws,” Rivas says. “They’ve all found me on their own through Googling me and looking up my publications and things like that.”

  24 Comments      


US Attorney’s office files blistering motion supporting Haymarket Center’s discrimination lawsuit against Itasca (Updated)

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* November of 2021

The Itasca Village Board turned down a proposed drug rehab center after two years of debate among residents.

The Haymarket Center wanted to turn a former Holiday Inn, located at 860 West Irving Park Road, into a 240-bed drug treatment center.

Since 2019, there has been opposition by some Itasca residents since the proposal, who argue the village is too small for the facility. They have voiced concerns related to zoning changes, tax revenues and whether emergency services would be able to handle possible increased demand. […]

While the proposed facility cleared zoning and planning, the village’s board had the final say with a 6-0 vote Tuesday night not to go ahead with construction.

* December of 2021

The Haymarket drug treatment center’s more-than-two-year attempt to open a rehab in Itasca took another turn Thursday when officials said U.S. Attorney John Lausch has launched an investigation into whether the village’s rejection of the center was in keeping with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Mayor Jeff Pruyn released a letter Lausch sent last week, in which he announced the probe and noted that the ADA protects people with disabilities — including substance use disorder — from discrimination.

The Lausch letter is here.

* January of 2022

The Haymarket drug treatment center filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against the village of Itasca, claiming its rejection of a rehab facility proposed for a former hotel amounted to discrimination against people with substance-use disorder. […]

“The intentional and orchestrated discriminatory conduct across Itasca’s key governmental entities is designed to interfere with the rights of Haymarket Center, the people with disabilities it serves, and their families,” attorney Mary Rosenberg of Access Living, an advocacy center for the disabled that is representing Haymarket in the lawsuit, said in a statement announcing the lawsuit.

* Today…

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago has sought to file a complaint in intervention in a pending lawsuit against Itasca, Ill., alleging the village engaged in unlawful disability discrimination in reviewing and ultimately denying a zoning request filed by a non-profit health care provider to use its property as a treatment center for people with substance-use disorders.

* From the complaint in intervention

The Department of Justice has since completed an extensive investigation and substantiated Haymarket’s claim that the Village violated Title II of 2 the ADA in reviewing and denying its zoning request. […]

The Village engaged in disparate treatment by employing a host of unprecedented and highly anomalous tactics to frustrate Haymarket’s treatment center proposal. As one primary tactic, Village officials—especially Mayor Jeffrey Pruyn—legitimized, endorsed, and fanned the flames of residents’ fears by issuing scores of public statements disparaging Haymarket and its supporters while urging residents to voice their fears and concerns at zoning hearings. Just as the officials intended, the discriminatory opposition movement swelled, seeped into the hearings, and persisted until it ultimately tainted the decision-making process.

Village officials also concocted a pretextual narrative that the treatment center would impose severe economic harms on the region and its taxing bodies. To accomplish this, before the zoning hearings began, the Village: (1) misclassified the treatment center as a planned development instead of a “health center” special use; (2) waged a public campaign against Haymarket that focused the public discourse on its pretextual economic concerns while amplifying 3 residents’ fears; and (3) drew the Itasca Fire Protection District (“Fire District”) and Itasca School District 10 (“School District”) into the zoning process as “interested parties” to oppose Haymarket.

The misclassification imposed onerous zoning requirements on Haymarket, most notably by requiring it to prove, with assistance from experts and attorneys, that the center would impose no economic harms on the region. The public campaign disseminated pretextual economic talking points to Haymarket’s opponents and further fomented opposition. And the “interested party” designations allowed the Fire and School Districts to leverage nearly trial-like due process rights to help the Village bury Haymarket’s proposal under baseless economic concerns. […]

The tactics prejudiced Haymarket by galvanizing the discriminatory opposition movement around made-up economic impact claims and converting what should have been a routine special-use zoning proceeding into an unprecedented and openly hostile zoning process involving 35 hearings lasting over two years, with heavy participation from attorneys and experts, and imposing staggering costs for Haymarket.

After the hearings concluded, the Village denied zoning approval based on pretextual economic impact concerns that (1) the Village would lose desperately needed tax revenue if a nonprofit rather than a hotel operated at the site; (2) Haymarket’s patients would require costly emergency medical services from the Fire District; and (3) Haymarket patients or their children would overwhelm the local K-8 School District. During the hearings, Haymarket had offered overwhelming proof that these purported concerns were unlawfully considered and baseless, and it made extraordinary concessions to resolve them anyway. But these efforts fell on deaf ears because they spoke only to concerns that were pretext for discrimination.

Lastly, the Village failed to fulfill its accommodation obligations under the ADA prior to denying Haymarket’s zoning request. First, the Village failed to accommodate Haymarket’s reasonable request to use its special-use process. And second, the Village conducted a fake accommodations analysis after deliberately breaking down and failing to conduct any meaningful interactive process that might have revealed solutions to its purported concerns.

…Adding… Haymarket Center President & CEO Dr. Dan Lustig…

We are heartened by the Department of Justice’s finding that Haymarket Center faced a ‘discriminatory’ and ‘onerous’ zoning application process in our effort to open a comprehensive substance use disorder treatment center in the Village of Itasca. By filing to intervene in this case, the DOJ joins Haymarket Center in our efforts to reinforce equality and fairness in healthcare, address discrimination and inequities against those with substance abuse disorder and protect vulnerable populations by ensuring access to life-saving treatment. As always, we welcome the opportunity to find a resolution with Itasca leaders and hope the DOJ filing moves us closer to opening Haymarket DuPage.

  9 Comments      


Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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It’s just a bill

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

An effort is also underway to waive or minimize filing fees for transgender people as they request a legal name change — and allow the petitioner to request that a court seal the name change if public disclosure may harm their health or safety. The bill is aimed at protecting other vulnerable populations, including survivors of violence and refugees. Legislation stalled in the Illinois Senate this spring.

“Obviously, we have to think about the whole state. And here in Chicago, you can live relatively anonymously. But, you’re living in a small town and you have to publish in your local newspaper that you’re transitioning, that’s going to put you at significant risk,” said the bill’s sponsor, State Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago. “So, similarly, we provide the safety waivers for folks who have other risks, whether it’s somebody fleeing a domestic violence situation, somebody coming out of a trafficking situation, things like that. We’ve created these bypasses for folks, and this would have added to it.”

Cassidy is also pushing for a measure that would give a $500 tax credit to people and health care providers who are fleeing states that limit access to abortion or gender affirming care.

Equality Illinois is leading a push for the state to require sex education in public schools. The state provides districts with a “medically accurate, evidence-informed, response and trauma-informed guide” for sex education — but it is optional for districts to provide. Parents can also opt their students out of it.

* Purple Circle LLC CEO Amber Lengacher

With the legislative session over for spring in Illinois, cannabis/hemp industry stakeholders across the state are regrouping and making plans for a veto session in the fall. Hemp advocates and supporters in Illinois must unite over the summer to ensure that their industry is protected, and their business models can continue to flourish. […]

I recently chatted with Rep. Ford about this spring session and his plan for 2024’s veto session.

Here’s what he had to tell me:

Today, after much work and consideration, hemp products are still unregulated in Illinois. Last year, I introduced Illinois House Bill 4161, which would create a regulatory framework for hemp products and establish important requirements like licensing, testing, and labeling. I also introduced HB4193 that would create age minimums for hemp product purchases, limited to adults who are 21 years of age or older. This year, I introduced HB5306, the Industrial Hemp Act, designed to accomplish those same goals.

I agree with Gov. JB Pritzker that a hemp regulatory proposal must be top priority during veto session this fall. I joined him in his disappointment that we couldn’t get a bill through in spring. Going into veto session, I hope to work with all stakeholders to educate lawmakers on solutions to our communities’ issues while still leaving opportunities for this growing industry to flourish in Illinois. We will then finalize a bill that will accomplish all stakeholder goals. Anything else could put hundreds – if not thousands – of Illinois companies out of business and Illinoisans out of work, while starting a new war on drugs in Illinois. Our communities have been targeted and destroyed by this failed war, and it is past time to repair the harm, not create prohibition 2.0.

* Tribune

A crying 6-year-old was brought to an emergency department after being found sluggish and cold to the touch. The parents had been at work when the babysitter gave several cookies from the kitchen to the child as a snack. Each cookie contained several adult doses of THC, the part of marijuana that gets people high. The child was admitted to the hospital overnight and recovered.

This was just one of 244 cases of cannabis edible exposures among children 5 and younger reported in 2023 to the Illinois Poison Center. […]

Illinois lawmakers couldn’t decide between regulating or banning the products this spring, so they did nothing. Unlike licensed cannabis, which must undergo testing and labeling and is only available to those 21 and over, hemp products remain unregulated, without even a legal age restriction, though some companies impose their own age limits and testing.

Nevertheless, exposures appear to occur with both licensed and unlicensed products, said Dr. Michael Wahl, medical director of the poison center.

* Capitol News Illinois

Among the bills that did not pass is a piece of legislation that sought to restore protections for wetlands stripped last year in a United States Supreme Court decision. In May 2023, federal protections for wetlands were gutted, weakening Clean Water Act protections for millions of acres of wetlands across the U.S.

An Illinois bill, SB 771, or the Wetlands Protection Act, that would have reinstated those protections in the state passed in committee, but failed to make it to the chamber floors of the General Assembly. The bill will be considered again during the veto session this fall. […]

Sponsors of the bill said a law is needed for Illinois to fill the gap left by the Supreme Court decision. The reinstatement of regulations would ultimately help reduce flooding in vulnerable communities and improve water quality, proponents said.

One major opponent of the legislation was the Illinois Farm Bureau, which also signed onto the federal lawsuit that eventually reversed wetland protections. Chris Davis, the farm bureau’s director of state legislation, said its opposition stemmed from not enough protections for landowners. […]

Sen. Laura Ellman (D-Naperville), sponsor of the senate Wetlands Protection Bill, said that she’s still committed to working with the farm bureau this summer.

* Fox2 Now

Illinois State Rep. Harry Benton (D-Plainfield) formally introduced HB 5860 on June 11.

The bill would amend Illinois’ Flag Display Act and prohibit officials from knowingly displaying or causing to display “the United States national flag with the union down on government property.” […]
A separate, but closely related bill (HB 5861) would amend Illinois’ Flag Display Act to fine government officials up to $25,000 for flying an American flag upside down on public property. The current penalty for a violation is anywhere from $1-15.

Neither bill addresses whether a government official or someone else could display an American flag upside down on private property.

* Ben Szalinski


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Stop Illinois From Making Credit Cards Hard To Use

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Lawmakers in Springfield recently negotiated a back-room deal that could radically change the way small businesses and consumers use their credit and debit cards to give corporate megastores a multi-million dollar giveaway.

This new law could:

    - Force separate cash payments on sales tax and tips
    - Reduce consumer privacy by exposing more information on your purchases
    - Create costly operational nightmares and paperwork burdens for small businesses

This first-of-its-kind, untested mandate would create chaos, removing credit and debit cards as the safe, secure and hassle-free way to pay in Illinois — all so giant, out-of-state corporations can look a little better to their shareholders.

Prevent credit card chaos. Learn more at guardyourcard.com/illinois.

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Question of the day

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* OK, right up front I need to disclose that I was given the option of receiving a free cicada bobblehead as part of the marketing for this post, which I accepted. But I really would’ve posted it anyway because it’s a pretty cool thing and I’ve purchased other products from this company in the past…

This morning, the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum unveiled the first Cicada Bobblehead. Due to an unusual overlap of the lifecycles of two types (or broods) of cicadas, trillions of the insects are expected to emerge in the United States by the end of June, especially in the Midwest. The 13- and 17-year cicadas only emerge in the midwestern and eastern U.S. in the same year every 221 years, with 2024 being the first such year since 1803. The first-ever Cicada Bobblehead is being produced by the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum.

Positioned on a base bearing its name across the front with a grass-like texture on top, the cicada bobblehead features its prominent red eyes set wide apart, short antennae, and membranous wings. The bobbleheads, which will be individually numbered, are only available through the National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum’s Online Store. Expected to ship in November, the bobbleheads cost $30 each, plus a flat-rate shipping charge of $8 per order. […]

“We’re excited to create this bobblehead celebrating the triumphant return of the cicada,” National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum co-founder and CEO Phil Sklar said. “The sounds of summer have taken on a new meaning in 2024 with the arrival of the popular insects. This bobblehead is a must-have for cicada lovers everywhere!”

Click here if you want to buy one…

Other than the free sample, I won’t make anything else off of this. But maybe we can convince the “Hall of Fame and Museum” to produce an Illinois politics bobblehead line.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

The periodical cicadas, which emerge from underground in the spring every 17 years, are expected to die off by the end of June, according to Morton Arboretum scientists. When they die off, millions of the dead insects will cover the ground in suburban Chicago and much of northern Illinois.

* The Question: What has the cicada situation been like by you?

  47 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  2 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Businesses closed into next week after fire on East Adams Street in Springfield. SJ-R

    - The 400 block of East Adams will remain closed indefinitely until remains of the building are demolished, final demo is set for Tuesday.
    - The cause of the fire is still undetermined.
    - All businesses – save for Buzz Bomb Brewing Co which has a separate side entrance – will be closed for the following week at least for the building’s demolition.

* Related stories…

The fire also left an IMA employee without a home or belongings. Click here for her GoFundMe.

* Jake Lewis

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois a blue haven for gender affirming care, but LGBTQ+ advocates say housing, safety still a concern: An effort is also underway to waive or minimize filing fees for transgender people as they request a legal name change — and allow the petitioner to request that a court seal the name change if public disclosure may harm their health or safety. The bill is aimed at protecting other vulnerable populations, including survivors of violence and refugees. Legislation stalled in the Illinois Senate this spring. “Obviously, we have to think about the whole state. And here in Chicago, you can live relatively anonymously. But, you’re living in a small town and you have to publish in your local newspaper that you’re transitioning, that’s going to put you at significant risk,” said the bill’s sponsor, State Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago.

* The Atlantic | The Truth About America’s Most Common Surgery: Despite the C-section being the country’s most common surgery, many expectant parents are not encouraged to seek out information about the specifics. This leaves mothers poorly equipped for the procedure’s aftermath, especially when the surgery is unplanned. At the beginning of the book, Somerstein recounts her own emergency C-section, during which the anesthesia failed and the obstetric staff disregarded her anguish. “I felt it all: the separation of my rectus muscles; the scissors used to move my bladder; the scalpel, with which he ‘incised’ my uterus,” she writes. “Yet the operation continued. I was expected to bear the pain.” Invisible Labor follows her search for context about this traumatic experience, and her desire to understand why women’s pain is so often treated as psychological rather than physiological.

* WaPo | Reggie Jackson shares searing stories of racism at Negro Leagues tribute: As a young member of the Athletics’ organization in 1967, just before the major league club moved from Kansas City to Oakland, Jackson played for Birmingham at Rickwood Field and other ballparks in the South. On Thursday, he said returning to Birmingham was “not easy.” “The racism, when I played here, the difficulty of going through different places where we traveled — fortunately, I had a manager and I had players on the team who helped me get through it,” he said.

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | State Republican Party chair quits, Del Mar hopes to fill void: Palatine Republican and former lieutenant governor candidate Aaron Del Mar announced Thursday he will seek the chairman’s job. “Moving forward, if my peers believe in me and give me the opportunity to lead this party, the Democrats better be ready. I’m no milquetoast,” said Del Mar, a State Central Committee member.

* WGEM | SkillsUSA Illinois leader excited about funding increase for career and technical education: Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs in Illinois are getting a boost new state budget. The fiscal year 2025 budget will invest $58 million in CTE programs, a $10.3 million increase. […] SkillsUSA Illinois Executive Director Eric Hill said the money will allow it to expand in underserved rural areas and connect more students with real-world learning experiences.

* AGRINEWS | Illinois Soybean Association celebrating 60 seasons of success: The Illinois Soybean Association will observe its 60th anniversary with special events and commemorations throughout the year. Over those six decades, ISA has worked, in tandem with farmers and industry, to help Illinois’ soybean farmers grow better soybeans and find new markets for their products.

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Democratic National Convention officials tour LGBTQ+ businesses ahead of Chicago DNC: “Part of our job as a hosting is to make sure that that is equitably distributed, especially to growing businesses,” DNC Senior Director of Community and Civic Engagement Mo Green said. Side Track, a bar that has been welcoming the LGBTQ+ community for over four decade, is ready.

* Sun-Times | Pilsen ‘serial polluter’ Sims Metal should not get city permit, groups say: Ahead of a community meeting Friday night, multiple organizations are warning Chicago’s public health department that Sims Metal Management should not receive a new permit because it hasn’t yet built and tested pollution controls required after a state lawsuit. In addition to the pollution controls, some community members are asking for a health impact study that would take into account other sources in the area that contribute to poor air quality.

* Sun-Times | White Sox lose for 15th time after leading in seventh inning:
“We let one get away from us,” manager Pedro Grifol said. So it goes for the Sox, who fell to a major-league-worst 20-56 despite six innings of one-run ball from Flexen and RBI from Luis Robert Jr. (double), Andrew Vaughn (single) and Andrew Benintendi (sacrifice fly) against Spencer Arrighetti in the fifth inning.

* Sun-Times | Angel Reese makes WNBA history as first rookie with seven consecutive double doubles: On Thursday, as the Sky (5-9) snapped their four-game losing streak with an 83-72 victory over the Wings, Reese made history with her seventh consecutive double-double. It’s the longest double-double streak by a rookie in WNBA history and the third-longest streak by any player. With it comes a message: Not only is Reese’s game translating just fine, but she’s proving to be the biggest steal of the draft, with a very strong case for Rookie of the Year developing.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘This is not a moment of pride for anybody’: McHenry County Board scales back Pride Month resolution: The scaled-back version includes language such as “Pride Month offers a unique and significant opportunity to affirm and uphold the rights of all to freedom of choice in sexual orientation” and “Pride Month further upholds the ideal that LGBTQ+ residents of McHenry County, as all residents, have the right to live their lives with freedom from fear of harassment; exclusion; educational, housing or employment bias.” The original proclamation included language referencing LGBTQ people serving in government and the military, as well as those who are “forced to hide their identities and live in secrecy and fear due to the criminalization of their relationships,” among other things.

* Daily Southtown | Will County Board members question vote on Pride month resolution: The Will County Board voted Thursday to approve a proclamation recognizing June as LGBTQIA+ Pride Month, but not before some board members questioned why the proclamation was on the agenda. “I would like to know where’s the representation for the traditional family,” said Julie Berkowicz, a Republican from Naperville, who was one of two Republicans questioning why the board was voting on the Pride proclamation.

* Lake County News-Sun | Robert Crimo III expected to change not guilty plea in Highland Park July 4th mass shooting: Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart confirmed Thursday night that Crimo, who had pleaded not guilty to 117 felony counts, is expected to change his plea at a Wednesday hearing before Judge Victoria Rossetti. Rinehart declined to discuss specifics of the plea change, other than making a brief statement. “We have been continuing to work with victims and survivors as the situation develops,” he said.

* ABC Chicago | Rescheduled Thornton Township meeting devolves into chaos as residents complain to Tiffany Henyard: As public comment began, people were upset initially over the amount of time allotted for public comment. “This has got to stop,” a resident said. “Stop shutting down the voice of the people, and you won’t have a problem, because we are going to speak whether you want us to speak or not.”

* The Root | All The Alleged Schemes, Scandals and Shenanigans That Keep This Chicago-Area ‘Super Mayor’ In The News: On top of a recent lawsuit from a previous employee claiming wrongful termination for refusing to aid in her alleged “political schemes,” Henyard’s reputation has been smacked left and right by claims of corruption. She’s denied most if not all of the claims stacked against her, claiming she’s got receipts to prove “fact over fiction.” If you want to keep track of the legal battle, here’s 15 allegations Henyard is going up against.

* Sun-Times | Michelle Mbekeani leaving Cook County state’s attorney’s office 6 months after taking new role: The website, Periodsentence.com, also drew the ire of a judge at the courthouse, who believed her involvement with the organization conflicted with her role in the prosecutor’s office. Judge Michael McHale ordered Mbekeani banned from his courtroom in January after holding a conflicts hearing in the case of Dante Brown, who is fighting to overturn his double murder conviction. She told the judge the website was a “class project” and “not a real business,” according to the judge’s order. When McHale learned that Mbekeani had registered the business with the Illinois secretary of state and asked her to explain, he said he found her answers “duplicitous, incomplete, evasive and untruthful.”

*** Downstate ***

* Door County Pulse | Craig Blietz Painting Hangs in the Illinois Governor’s Mansion: A call from an architect friend in Chicago made Door County artist Craig Blietz aware that a painting of his was featured on the opening page of a book by M.K. Pritzker, wife of Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker. “My friend received the book as a present from his wife and had no idea anything of mine was in there,” Blietz said.

*** National ***

* ProPublica | How a Network of Nonprofits Enriches Fundraisers While Spending Almost Nothing on Its Stated Causes: ProPublica identified a group of connected political nonprofits — with names like American Breast Cancer Coalition and National Coalition for Disabled Veterans — that appear to be funneling more than 90% of donations to fundraisers.

* ABC Chicago | Why millions of student loan borrowers will have lower payments starting in July: For most borrowers, the SAVE plan requires a lower monthly payment than other federal student loan repayment plans, and it cancels student debt for some borrowers after they make as few as 10 years of payments. More than 8 million people have enrolled in the SAVE plan to date.

  4 Comments      


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

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here 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)

Friday, Jun 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Jon Seidel


* Tribune

Three charter school organizations filed a lawsuit in federal court Tuesday, alleging a 2023 amendment to the Illinois School Code interferes with federal labor law and the charter school operators’ free speech and property rights, according to the complaint.

The amendment, which requires charter school operators to include a “union neutrality clause” in new proposals and renewal agreements should be declared “invalid,” plaintiffs Intrinsic Schools, Montessori School of Englewood and advocacy group the Illinois Network of Charter Schools allege in the complaint. The group of charter operators and advocates are asking the court to bar the state statute from being enforced.

Effective immediately upon its signing last year, the amendment to the School Code defines a union neutrality clause as including an agreement not to express anti-union positions, nor “threaten, intimidate, discriminate against, retaliate against, or take any adverse action” against employees based on union representation.The statute also mandates that charter schools provide labor organizations access to employees, to discuss their right to union representation, and it sets forth a union recognition process.

The complaint was spurred by a draft renewal document that Chicago Public Schools sent all charter schools, requiring they comply with the terms of the amendment, said Andrew Broy, president of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools. “We’re making sure that that does not apply – and there’s still a process through which teachers at a school can join a union,” he said.

* Mercy…


*** Statehouse News ***

* Eye On Illinois | Conservation districts feel budget cuts while fairgrounds get big investment: In the context of a $53.1 billion state budget, $4 million isn’t especially significant, about 0.075%. But compared with only $58.1 million for a specific project, that $4 million is a larger chunk – about 6.9%. The $4 million is what Michael Woods, executive director for the Association of Illinois Soil and Water Conservation Districts, said was cut from conservation efforts in the fiscal 2025 budget, according to a June 10 FarmProgress.com report.

*** Statewide ***

* Axios | Illinois top abortion destination for Tennesseans: Tennessee residents obtained 10,570 out-of-state abortions, according to estimates from the Guttmacher Institute. Illinois led the way with 7,120 followed by North Carolina with 1,280.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Johnson announces $10 million expansion of fund for victims of gun violence and their grieving families: Former Mayor Lori Lightfoot established the Emergency Supplemental Victims Fund to compensate grief-sticken families at a time when Chicago homicides were topping 700 for the second straight year. […] Lightfoot lost her reelection bid before she could deliver on her promise to expand the program. Now Johnson is picking up the ball and running with it.

* Tribune | Chicago to expand pilot that pays $1,500 for funerals of homicide victims, $1,000 stipends for survivors: Under the expansion, the Emergency Supplemental Victims Fund will see another $6.4 million — some of that from federal COVID-19 stimulus dollars — over the next two years and expand from five to 15 community areas. There are three categories of funds: $1,000 for basic needs such as medical expenses, child care and groceries; $1,000 for relocation services to move to a safer place; and $1,500 for funeral and burial expenses.

* Chalkbeat | Chicago’s school board election is coming up. Here’s what happens if a district has no candidates.: The most likely answer is that a write-in candidate would win the seat — potentially with just one vote, said Max Bever, a spokesperson for the Chicago Board of Elections. Until 2027, the new board will have 10 elected seats and another 11 seats appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson. Each district is split into two subdistricts; Johnson must fill his seats with people who live in each subdistrict that does not have a winner from the election.

* Sun-Times | CPS to rename 3 schools, including one named after Christopher Columbus: Three Chicago public schools are being renamed in the latest changes aimed at getting rid of racist or otherwise problematic namesakes. They make nine schools that have been renamed since a Chicago Sun-Times investigation in 2020 found 30 schools were named for slaveholders, and schools named after white people — mostly men — outnumbered those named for African Americans by 4-1, Latinos 9-1 and indigenous people 120-1.

* Sun-Times | Owners of West Town pallet firm assess damage after massive fire: ‘Looked like a war scene’: A business that rents space on the lot called Quinn Hagan when workers noticed the fire. He wasn’t in the city, but by the time he got to the West Town location the fire had “erupted,” Donna Hagan told the Sun-Times. “There’s 20,000 dry wood pallets in a lot,” she said. “It was 95 degrees and it was windy. It just took off and then it hit all the tractors, trucks and trailers and hit the building.”

* Block Club | Diehard Cubs, Sox Fans Conquer A Red Line Doubleheader In 90+-Degree Heat: “I want to start the ‘Chicago Bothsiders Club,’” said Kevin McGuire, a season-ticket-holder for the Sox and the Cubs who goes to more than 40 games a year and found a job where he can pick his own hours. “If there’s going to be double the baseball, I’m going to be there.” […] Across town, the struggling Sox, who are 20-55, lugged through a 4-1 evening loss against the Houston Astros. It was the final of three Red Line doubleheaders this season.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | A suburban software company got hacked, again, and auto dealerships are in chaos, again: The CDK cyberattack shutdown has potentially far-reaching implications for auto retail franchises, according to a new report from Seaport Research Partners. “While it’s unclear what the ultimate impact is, the impact is potentially far-reaching as CDK is reportedly contracted by [15,000] dealers nationwide … with some dealers nearly wholly reliant upon it for critical functionality such as CRM, sales processing, inventory management, etc.,” the report said.

* Daily Herald | Hundreds turn out to protest controversial development near Sugar Grove: Several hundred people Tuesday made it very clear they oppose using property taxes to help pay some of the costs of transforming 861 acres of farmland near Sugar Grove into warehouses, offices, stores and housing. […] The hearing was only about whether the land qualifies to become a TIF district. That disappointed many speakers who wanted to talk about The Grove concept, the effect of keeping property taxes from other taxing bodies, whether Route 47 could safely handle an increase in truck traffic, and other concerns.

*** Downstate ***

* IDNR | IDNR, City of East St. Louis announce plan to buy out flood-damaged properties: For the first time, this project includes additional funds to assist homeowners who resided in the flooded structures up to $22,500 in additional funds to purchase a home. These funds are not for non-resident owners or renters. The additional assistance was deemed necessary because of the low value of the structures and the need for the property owners to find a new home that is decent, safe, and sanitary.

* SJ-R | Springfield bars already bracing for end of 3 a.m. liquor licenses: Justin Rebbe said the 2 a.m. licensing for Springfield bars was “a good compromise for now.” That doesn’t mean the co-owner of Clique, which caters to the LGBTQ community, and which has held a 3 a.m. license in downtown Springfield for a little over two years, won’t be considering some changes to the operation.

*** National ***

* Rolling Stone | Donald Sutherland, ‘Klute’ and ‘Ordinary People’ Actor, Dead at 88: Sutherland’s son Kiefer also revealed his father’s death on social media, writing, “With a heavy heart, I tell you that my father, Donald Sutherland, has passed away. I personally think one of the most important actors in the history of film. Never daunted by a role, good, bad or ugly. He loved what he did and did what he loved, and one can never ask for more than that. A life well lived.”

  10 Comments      


More horrible news for the Capital City’s downtown

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have lived in Springfield on and off since 1985. The downtown has never been great, but we’ve lost a lot of venues since the pandemic, and others, like the downtown hotels, have deteriorated. And now this

City of Springfield officials said late Wednesday that a downtown building in the 400 block of East Adams Street heavily damaged by fire will be demolished Thursday.

The building, split on the first floor but open on the upper floors, housed Cat’s Pyjamas Cat Cafe and Electric Quill Tattoo. Cat’s Pyjama’s opened in March, while Electric Quill just moved into its downtown location in May.

* This place is legendary

WAND TV has posted several photos of the destruction.

* WICS

On Wednesday night, city officials tore down two-thirds of the building’s front side. On Thursday morning, they will finish demolishing the front end of the building before taking down the five-story building attached to it on the other side.

* The good folks at Buzz Bomb stepped up

Nine cats that were inside Cat’s Pyjamas were all accounted for and taken initially to Buzz Bomb Brewing Co., but then another downtown location. […]

Buzz Bomb, Bloom Wine Bar and Florals, 2 S. Old State Capitol Plaza, and Ad Astra Wine & Tapas Bar, 308 E. Adams St., are part of a Saturday bar crawl from 2 to 6 p.m. Flanders said there will be donation baskets at each location to help the businesses that have been hurt.

* More…

    * ‘Pillsburied’ exhibit lost in downtown Springfield fire: Curator Robert Mazrim with the nonprofit Moving Pillsbury Forward Project confirmed the news on Wednesday afternoon. The exhibit was located on the third floor of the Adams Street building. He said it was full of important historical artifacts and documents from the old Pillsbury factory, as well as hundreds of art pieces — many of which included elements from the factory site.

    * Donation buckets will be out for first Adams Street Bar Crawl to help downtown fire victims: Ad Astra Wine & Tapas Bar posted to Facebook, “We are waiting to learn more about anyone who is rebuilding, relocating, or simply needing help paying the bills while closed, and will be using this money for one, or more, of these causes. The APL will need help fostering the 9 kitties from the cafe and help feeding them as well. If you can foster or feed, please call them to help.”

  14 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From an Illinois Times interview of US Sen. Dick Durbin

This November will mark 42 years since Durbin defeated incumbent Republican Congressman Paul Findley to begin his tenure as a federal elected official. Durbin was subsequently elected to the U.S. Senate in 1996. Although Durbin’s seat isn’t up for election in 2024, what does the future hold for the long-term Illinois Democrat?

“I have two and a half years left in this term and we’ll decide after that,” said Durbin, who will turn 80 years of age in November.

* The Question: What do you think Durbin will do about reelection? Make sure to explain your answer and take note that I’m not asking you what you think he should do. Thanks.

  28 Comments      


Fun with numbers (Updated)

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois Policy Institute

AFSCME Council 31 filed its 2023 federal report with the U.S. Department of Labor this spring, and its own numbers – from membership to spending practices – don’t look good.

The union claims to represent more than 90,000 state and local government employees in Illinois. Yet just 55,771 of those workers are members of the union, according to the union’s annual report, called an LM-2.

That means nearly 40% have rejected membership in the union supposedly representing their interests.

Um, no.

* First, if you click the link in the IPI’s own story, AFSCME Council 31 includes retirees in that number

Statewide, AFSCME represents more than 90,000 active and retired employees of state, county and city governments, state universities, local school districts and nonprofit agencies.

* Second, the IPI didn’t link to the LM-2’s, so I looked them up myself.

In 2017, the year before the Supreme Court’s Janus decision, which allowed people to pay no dues but still receive full representation, AFSCME Council 31 reported having 57,995 full and part-time members, plus another 7,047 “Agency Fee Payers” - employees who paid for union services without being actual union members.

In 2018, Council 31 reported having 57,000 full and part-time members and no fee payers.

And in 2023, Council 31 reported 55,771 full and part-time members.

So, yeah, there’s been a decline. They lost 2,224 members since before Janus, which is a 3.8 percent drop, not “nearly 40%.”

…Adding… It turns out that Council 31’s 2023 membership actually increased by 2,757 over 2022’s membership. From spokesperson Anders Lindall…

Our active membership of 55,771 as reported on our most recent federal filing reflects growth over each of the last two fiscal years – the result of public and private employers beginning to recover from the pandemic and fill needed positions, and of the great enthusiasm of newly organized workers to join our union in recent years, especially among cultural workers such as library and museum employees.

  26 Comments      


Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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It’s almost a law

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Center Square

The governor is expected to sign House Bill 5238, which will mandate developers and operators of mobile home communities to provide and install a weather radio in each mobile home.

The bill goes further and encourages operators of mobile home communities to provide a written reminder to owners to the homes to replace the batteries in the weather radio. The operators are encouraged to provide reminders during National Fire Prevention Week. Opponents argue the unfunded mandates will make the popular, affordable housing option more expensive. State Sen. Terri Bryant expressed opposition to the bill on the Senate floor. […]

State Sen. Mike Simmons said the bill is necessary because a lot of people who live in mobile home parks might not have cell phones or cell phone reception to alert them when a tornado is in the area. […]

The bill is expected to be signed by the governor and in both chambers mainly Republicans voted against the measure.

* Sun-Times

Legislation banning long-term and costly real estate listing agreements — like those peddled in Illinois by M.V. Realty, a Florida company — has been passed in the state House and Senate and now needs only Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s signature to become law.

The bill, SB3420, passed in May, would make it illegal for people or companies to enter unfair listing agreements with homeowners. Real estate listing agreements would be prohibited if they ran more than a year into the future. And any agreements could not bind future owners of a property.

Violators could be prosecuted under the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act.

For homeowners who’ve already signed an agreement, the legislation would provide a way out. Homeowners would be able to ask a judge to void the agreement, making it unenforceable.

* Center Square

The practice of offering an upfront cash payment in exchange for a decades-long contract for exclusive rights to sell the property may soon be illegal in Illinois.

Non-Titled Recorded Agreements for Personal Services, known as NTRAPS, are contracts between a service provider, such as a real estate firm, and a homeowner in which the homeowner is offered a small amount of money in exchange for signing an agreement for future services.

“What we saw happening in the marketplace was real estate brokerage firms were going to homeowners and paying them as little as $300 dollars to sign a listing agreement that could last for as long as 40 years,” said Elizabeth Blosser, Vice President of Government Affairs with the American Land Title Association. […]

Illinois is one of 30 states that have passed legislation making NTRAPS unenforceable. If signed into law, the measure would prohibit businesses from entering into these real estate contracts. It would also protect property owners from financial loss in the event a contract is included within their property record.

* SB275 was sent to the governor today, from the synopsis

Provides that beginning no later than July 1, 2027 (rather than January 1, 2027), the Secretary of State shall offer to qualified applicants the option to be issued an 8-year driver’s license. Provides that the Secretary shall submit proposed rules to implement this provision to the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules no later than January 1, 2027 (rather than December 31, 2024).

  2 Comments      


Caption contest!

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From left are Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Chicago FOP President John Catanzara at a Juneteenth event yesterday…

  29 Comments      


Stop Illinois From Making Credit Cards Hard To Use

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Lawmakers in Springfield recently negotiated a back-room deal that could radically change the way small businesses and consumers use their credit and debit cards to give corporate megastores a multi-million dollar giveaway.

This new law could:

    - Force separate cash payments on sales tax and tips
    - Reduce consumer privacy by exposing more information on your purchases
    - Create costly operational nightmares and paperwork burdens for small businesses

This first-of-its-kind, untested mandate would create chaos, removing credit and debit cards as the safe, secure and hassle-free way to pay in Illinois — all so giant, out-of-state corporations can look a little better to their shareholders.

Prevent credit card chaos. Learn more at guardyourcard.com/illinois.

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Embattled Tracy will resign as ILGOP chair “preferably no later” than the day after Republican National Convention (Updated)

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More background is here if you need it. Tuesday night Tribune article

The decision by top Illinois Republican officials to dethrone the party’s vice chair could portend even bigger changes for the moribund organization, including renewed efforts to replace its Illinois GOP Chairman Don Tracy.

Mark Shaw, the former chairman of the GOP in Lake County, lost the title of state party vice chair and also was removed from the party’s fundraising committee during a special meeting Monday of the Illinois Republican State Central Committee following controversies last month at the state GOP convention in Collinsville.

State GOP sources familiar with the inner workings of the state party said the events leading up to Shaw’s sanctioning also underscored long-standing concerns about the leadership of Tracy, a Springfield attorney who has headed up the party since February 2021. Tracy took no public position on whether Shaw should continue as state GOP vice chair and said he was powerless to force him to step down — a stance critics cited as weak. They also noted Tracy questioned whether Shaw was being fairly treated.

The party instability comes less than a month before the state’s 64-member delegation heads to Milwaukee for the Republican National Convention’s nomination of former President Donald Trump. The entire delegation is pledged to Trump, including Shaw and Tracy. But conventions are typically designed to display party unity — an element lacking within the Illinois GOP leadership.

“His days are numbered. It’s just a matter of how it happens,” one Republican familiar with the intraparty discussions said of Tracy. The source asked that their name not be used to avoid intensifying the feuding.

* Wednesday resignation press release from Don Tracy…

For almost 3 1/2 years, I have had the honor of Chairing the Illinois Republican Party, and enjoyment of working closely with the great majority of you to rebuild the Illinois Republican Party. In that time, we have doubled State Party operational capabilities by better fundraising and building a bigger team through among other things activation of several new and old SCC Committees such as the Finance Committee and Election Integrity Committee.

When I took on this full-time volunteer job in February, 2021, I thought I would be spending most of my time fighting Democrats, helping elect Republicans, raising money to pay for more Party infrastructure, and advocating for Party unity. Unfortunately, however, I have had to spend far too much time dealing with intra party power struggles, and local intra party animosities that continued after primaries and County Chair elections.
In better days, Illinois Republicans came together after tough intra party elections. Now however, we have Republicans who would rather fight other Republicans than engage in the harder work of defeating incumbent Democrats by convincing swing voters to vote Republican.

Like Vince Kolber, my friend and former Finance Committee Chair, I am also concerned about the current infatuation of some members of the SCC, few as they are, with certain individuals they call “grass roots” leaders. Recent events including the RNC Committeeman election, immediately followed by the retribution sacking of the losing candidate Vice-Chair Mark Shaw, a long time State Party leader and worker, without due process and without taking any step to disciplining others for alleged or admitted Convention misconduct, portends a direction of the State Party I am not comfortable with.

Accordingly, I hereby resign as Chair of the Illinois Republican Party effective upon the election of my successor preferably no later than July 19, 2024 at 5pm. Like Vince, I will continue to personally support many of our great Republican state, local and federal candidates, and our many great Republican County Chairs and other positive and productive Republican leaders.

I hereby appoint Jan Weber as Chair of a Search Committee and empower her to add two other members to that Committee as she sees fit.”

PS My resignation has nothing to do with today’s anonymously sourced Chicago Tribue article. I made my decision to resign early yesterday morning, communicated it to Matt Janes before our 10am staff call yesterday, and began drafting this notice yesterday shortly before or after the staff call. Also, no one from the Tribune called me about this article, which I did not learn of until this morning. And, I do not believe any SCC member talked to the Tribune about the article.

Don Tracy
Chairman
Illinois Republican Party

As I told subscribers, Tracy sent out word of his resignation before the Tribune story was published. The Republican National Convention ends July 18.

* Democratic Party of Illinois react…

Following the latest reports of Illinois GOP dysfunction and Chair Don Tracy’s sudden resignation, the Democratic Party of Illinois released the following statement:

“While the IL GOP finds itself in chaos, the Democratic Party of Illinois enters the 2024 general election as a united party standing for freedom and opportunity for all of Illinois’ working families. As a reminder, last cycle, Illinois Democrats defeated the IL GOP’s MAGA candidate for Governor, re-elected Senator Tammy Duckworth, protected supermajorities in the IL General Assembly, and expanded our representation in Congress. In contrast, the IL GOP has been defined by a litany of electoral disasters, constant infighting, meager fundraising, and a strict adherence to a losing set of anti-choice, anti-worker, pro-Trump policies.

While we don’t expect new leadership to change any of that, we do wish the best of luck to the inevitable MAGA extremist who will succeed Don Tracy as Chair.”

* Tribune follow-up story

Tracy held the party chairmanship since February 2021. An attorney from Springfield and a co-owner of his family’s wealthy food distribution business, he was narrowly elected by a moderate coalition of the Republican State Central Committee over Shaw to replace then-GOP Gov. Bruce Rauner’s handpicked chairman, Tim Schneider, who Shaw helped push out.

Tracy was chosen as the first state Republican chairman from outside the Chicago area since 1988. Though previously an unsuccessful candidate for lieutenant governor in 2014, he was viewed as coming from the donor class of the party rather than having a strong background in rank-and-file political organizing.

That image proved to be his downfall as the GOP suffered continued political losses that led Democrats to control all three branches of state government and saw its suburban base sharply eroded in the populous collar counties. Republicans have lost a sizable share of suburban residents as the party that once embraced fiscal conservatism and social moderation has shifted sharply to more social conservatism and moved the GOP’s geographic base to less-populated rural downstate Illinois.

Tracy failed to find ways to harness the rural populism that was an outgrowth of Trump’s dominance of the party. He also didn’t help party candidates distance themselves from Trump’s unpopularity in the suburbs, the region which has traditionally been the key for Republican success statewide.

* Illinois Review posts its grievance list

During the 2022 Primary, conservative grassroots candidates were viciously attacked by IL GOP-endorsed candidates in mailers paid for by the Illinois Republican Party – falsely claiming that their conservative opponents were “fake” Republicans and “not one of us.”

And in the gubernatorial primary in 2022, the IL GOP-backed candidate Richard Irivn was receiving support from party leadership – and his campaign was even allowed to use the IL GOP postage discount. A perk not afforded to other conservative grassroots candidates for governor.

During the school board races in April of 2023, Tracy and the IL GOP were nowhere to be found – abandoning the grassroots base of the party while Gov. JB Pritzker and the Democratic Party of Illinois spent $800,000 to support their far-left school board candidates and attack their conservative opponents.

Just months before his election as chairman of the IL GOP, Tracy donated to a Democratic candidate endorsed by liberal US Sen. Dick Durbin and Democrat US Rep. Cherie Bustos, a friend and ally of former Democratic US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. But this should come as no surprise because after all, during the 2002 Illinois Primary, Tracy ran as a Democrat. And in 2020, during the height of the pandemic, Tracy’s family-owned business, Dot Foods, where he is an owner, donated to Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden.

…Adding… The Tribune reported the other day that Aaron Del Mar was a frontrunner to replace Tracy. And now there’s a “Draft Del Mar” website

The site ownership has been “Redacted for privacy.”

  33 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What have y’all been getting up to?…

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: How Illinois plans to leap into the future of semiconductors. Crain’s

When President Joe Biden signed the $53 billion CHIPS & Science Act nearly two years ago, it included $5 billion for something called the National Semiconductor Technology Center, a place to develop, test and scale up semiconductor technologies and the industry’s workforce. […]

Semiconductors are at the heart of computer technology, from smartphones to supercomputers. The COVID-19 pandemic was a wake-up call that the U.S. has let too much manufacturing capability move offshore and it’s at risk of losing its technology leadership. The CHIPS & Science Act was a response to those challenges.

Illinois is making a novel pitch for the NSTC, suggesting the feds put the headquarters here, rather than in Silicon Valley, Arizona, upstate New York, Texas, Arizona or one of the other places that are home to chip-fabrication facilities. […]

“It would be an uphill battle, given that Illinois hasn’t had anything in the semiconductor arena in terms of companies,” says Dennis Roberson, former chief technology officer at Motorola and former chairman of the FCC’s Technical Advisory Council. “The argument around quantum is a good argument. But you can’t completely ignore the (chip manufacturing). It’s too tightly integrated.”

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Madison Record | When is a suspect too dangerous to release? Answers may come from two appeals: Supreme Court Justices picked two cases to guide local and appellate judges in deciding when to declare a suspect too dangerous to release. On June 11 they allowed an appeal from a Fourth District appellate court opinion affirming detention of Kendall Morgan on home invasion and battery charges in McLean County. On June 12 they allowed an appeal from a Third District opinion affirming detention of Christian Mikolaitis on charges of attempted murder and aggravated battery in Will County.

* WTTW | New Study Examining Chicago’s Economic and Racial Disparities Finds 72% of White Families Own Homes Compared to 34% of Black Families: “Wealth is probably the paramount indicator of economic security,” said Darrick Hamilton, the Henry Cohen Professor of Economics and Urban Policy and founding director at The New School’s Institute on Race, Power and Political Economy. “We think about it as an outcome, but its essence is functional. What it can do for you if you want to send your kids to college, if you’re faced with the legal challenge of medical condition. A lot of those big ticket items aren’t financed out of your income … you rely on your savings and your wealth.”

* WGEM | “She’s been called Rosa Parks of the 19th century”: Juneteenth dedication ceremony honors Quincy woman: Over at the Woodland Cemetery, people gathered to unveil a memorial stone of the late Emma Coger. Local historians said she’s been called the Rosa Parks of the 19th century. […] “She was visiting friends in Keokuk,” Crickard said. “And the easiest way to [return] to Quincy at the time was by steamboat on the Mississippi River. She tried to purchase a first-class ticket and they denied her.” […] Following the incident, Coger hired a lawyer and fought her case both in Keokuk at the Iowa Supreme Court. She won the trial.

* WAND | Crews called to fire on top of downtown Springfield building: According to a Facebook post made by Robert Mazrim, the curator of the PILLSBURIED art installation, the entire exhibit was destroyed in the fire. Three tons of art and artifacts were brought together to show the rich history of the former Pillsbury Mills plant. […] On Facebook, Cafe Moxo announced that the restaurant would be closed until a damage assessment could be undertaken and repairs made.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WJPF | Vandalized MLK statue to return to Capitol grounds next month: The statue of the slain civil rights leader is expected to return to Springfield’s “Freedom Corner” at the intersection of 2nd Street and Capitol Avenue next month. Crews recently poured the concrete that will secure the base of the sculpture. After the concrete cures and settles, the sculpture will be replaced. State officials are continuing discussions regarding a new MLK statue on the Capitol grounds. Last January, Illinois lawmakers approved legislation calling for a new MLK sculpture at a new location that has yet to be determined.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | Illinois joining other states in establishing long-term energy plan: In a letter to PJM Interconnection, Pritzker and the governors from Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland said collaboration is essential to accomplish a “collective vision.” The states are asking the company to comply with a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) directive and coordinate with states and stakeholders.

* WBEZ | IDPH urges vigilance as COVID cases rise in emergency rooms: Illinois is one of nearly a dozen states that reported at least a moderate uptick that week. The trend has generally been on the rise since the beginning of May, when COVID patients accounted for roughly 0.3% of all people who visited an emergency room nationwide. As of June 8 that rose to 0.6%. But despite the nearly 30% increase, data from the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) shows just 0.5% of people who visited an ER did so because of COVID. Those numbers are still well below the levels seen during spikes last fall and winter.

* WCBU | Aaron Rossi accused of defrauding state of Illinois, private insurers in new federal indictment: A federal grand jury has indicted former Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi on new charges linked to hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of alleged COVID-19 testing fraud. […] The indictment alleges the 40-year-old Morton man was double billing both private insurers and the state of Illinois for the same tests. The state paid out more than $150,000 for tests that were actually already paid for by private insurers.

* Covers | Illinois April Handle Pushes Past New Jersey for Second-Biggest in US: The Illinois Gaming Board’s latest monthly data shows that the Land of Lincoln generated $92 million of adjusted revenue on a handle of $1.1 billion, edging New Jersey ($1.04 billion) for second place behind New York for the month. April’s handle was the sixth-highest amount wagered all-time in Illinois and marked the eighth consecutive $1 billion month.

* Tribune | How Illinois — ‘a racing family’ — stands apart from other states for Black trainers, drivers and owners: The governing body of North American harness racing, the United States Trotting Association, doesn’t ask for race on license applications so it’s impossible to know the exact number of Black drivers and trainers, but a review of the standings at the tracks lends credence to Hoffman’s opinion that they are a small minority. In contrast, in Illinois, they are a significant presence and are making an impact.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | City orders audit after pay mix-up for hundreds of laborers: Union leaders went public with the “fiasco” on June 10. In a fiery update to members posted online, Bob Chianelli, the business manager for LiUNA Local 1001, said city officials failed to fix the situation after the union had spent weeks requesting the city turn over pay registers and correct errors worth tens of thousands for some members. Approximately 125 members were underpaid, Chianelli told the Tribune, while around 800 were overpaid. The overpayments, he estimated, cost somewhere between $2.7 million and $2.9 million.

* Sun-Times | Blaring buzzer across from Pilsen shelter believed installed to annoy migrants — ‘It’s pretty awful’: Ryan Hurley, a former volunteer who helped migrants when they were housed at the Near West District Police Station, said he believes the device is new because he didn’t hear the noise when he was outside the shelter about two months ago. […] The device resembles and sounds like a Mosquito alarm, which is sold as a tool “to reduce anti-social behavior such as loitering, vandalism, graffiti and violence,” according to its website. The devices can get as loud as 108 decibels, or similar to the noise at a rock concert.

* NBC Chicago | ‘So many people in tents’: New documentary follows migrant families’ struggles, triumphs in Chicago: For nearly six months, NBC Chicago reporter Sandra Torres, Telemundo Chicago reporter Ivon Espitia and Senior Digital Producer DS Shin followed the lives of two families and several individuals who left Venezuela to seek asylum in the United States to provide a better life for their families. […] Lightfoot opened up for the first time in the documentary about how she handled the crisis, a year later.

* South Side Weekly | Mayor Johnson on His Organizing Roots and Vision for Chicago: When the interview turned to education, the mayor did not directly answer a yes-or-no question about the possibility of closing public schools during his tenure. Instead, Johnson noted that he participated in the 2015 hunger strike that forced then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel to reopen Dyett High School on the South Side, and offered a quote from W.E.B. DuBois. “The moratorium already exists,” he said. “I fought to make sure that it happened.”

* WTTW | From Utility Shutoff Moratoriums to Air Conditioning Rules, Chicago and Illinois Lawmakers Preparing for Increasingly Hot Temperatures: Whenever the National Weather Service forecasts temperatures hitting 90 degrees, gas and utility residential shutoffs due to nonpayment are prohibited in Illinois. It’s an example of a legal protection that environmental and consumer advocates predict more of in the near future, as climate change continues to wreak havoc. Illinois and Chicago are already taking steps in that direction, but advocates say more needs to be done to protext residents from future exteme weather events.

* Streetsblog | At Transport Chicago, experts discussed creative ideas to save the region’s transit system from looming fiscal cliff: During the panel, transit experts discussed the funding issues Chicago area transit agencies faced before the pandemic, the challenges of regaining ridership, the impact of the funding cuts and potential solutions. Panelist Thomas Bamonte, senior Advisor at the Metropolitan Planning Council, pitched a particularly bold proposal: congestion pricing. […] Bamonte suggested new taxes, mentioning creating a region-wide version of the Chicago tax on ride-hail trips, and a last-mile retail delivery tax on things like Amazon packages. But perhaps most radically, he proposed using the I-294/Tri-State Tollway as a “cordon,” by collecting tolls from drivers using expressways within this boundary, which could be used to fund Chicago transit.

* WBEZ | Chicago’s all-ages rock scene is catching fire, led by bands like Twin Coast: The notion that “rock is dead” isn’t true in Chicago, where an underground surge of bands barely out of high school is suddenly active throughout the city and suburbs. The sibling duo Twin Coast is adding to the growing do-it-yourself, teen-driven scene and creating a mini festival around it. New Static! Revival Now, a five-band bill at Schubas on Thursday, capitalizes on the excitement of the underground scene that is “full of really young, innovative people,” drummer Kira Isbell, 22, said. (Schubas is also the site of a daylong fair on independent musicmaking on June 23, hosted by CHIRP Radio.)

* ABC Chicago | Chicago NASCAR race course route map, street closures, parking restrictions: The starting and finish line of the 2024 NASCAR street course is facing south on South Columbus Drive in front of Buckingham Fountain. From there, drivers turn left on East Balbo Drive, right onto DuSable Lake Shore Drive, hook back around to go north on Columbus, turn left to go west on East Balbo drive, then South Michigan Avenue and around Congress Circle before turning right on to East Jackson Drive and another right back onto Columbus.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | First look at the next Cook County budget shows a $218 million gap: Cook County must close an anticipated $218 million budget shortfall in fiscal 2025, up from the $162 million gap it bridged last year, but lower than the $409 million hole the county faced in 2021 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. And although Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle declined to detail how she plans to close the gap in the 2025 spending plan, she said there will be no new taxes, fines or fees.

* Tribune | Arguments made after rare midtrial appeal halted case against two ex-Cook County assistant state’s attorneys: Months after a rare midtrial appeal halted a case against two former Cook County assistant state’s attorneys charged with misconduct, lawyers Tuesday sparred before a panel of appellate court judges over the legal issues that brought the case to a halt in October. […] The trial was underway before Lake County Judge Daniel Shanes, who was assigned the case after the entire Cook County judiciary was recused, when the special prosecutors handling the case asked for an appeal after Shanes barred large portions of testimony from a key witness.

* Daily Southtown | Will County executive vetoes hiring Robert Schillerstrom as landfill consultant: The County Board voted June 4 to issue a three-month contract for $15,000 to Robert J. Schillerstrom by a 12-6 vote. The six no votes came from board Democrats, who said that staff was already handling information related to landfill expansion. Four members were absent.

*** Downstate ***

* WCBU | Former Spring Valley hospital is headed to the auction block: OSF HealthCare acquired the former St. Margaret’s campus in Peru, reopening it as part of Saint Elizabeth Medical Center. The Peoria-based health care provider ultimately plans to move the main campus to the Peru facility and build a new hospital in Ottawa. But the Spring Valley hospital wasn’t picked up by OSF. The real estate broker said the building could be used for health care again, or alternatively for education, senior housing, or transitional or community living, among other possibilities.

* WREX | Ogle County Sheriff’s Office releases bodycam footage following officer-involved shooting in Lost Nation: Ogle County State’s Attorney Mike Rock has filed Attempted First Degree Murder charges against Jonathon Gounaris (DOB 5/13/1992) following an incident that left three Ogle County law enforcement officers injured. The charges stem from a 12-count information filed in connection with the shooting on June 12, 2024, when officers responded to a residence in Lost Nation after reports of a suicidal threat.

* WCBU | Planned Parenthood clinic marks reopening with leaders vowing to protect reproductive health care: U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen says the reopening of Peoria’s Planned Parenthood facility has strengthened his resolve to protect access to reproductive health care. “You have my word that I will fight to protect the rights to IVF (in-vitro fertilization), the rights to contraception, the rights to gender-affirming care, and when it’s needed, the right to an abortion,” Sorensen said Tuesday during a ceremony at the clinic that was firebombed in January 2023.

* WSIL | Centerstone will open a 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline Call Center in Illinois: “I think this is gonna be a great benefit for the local community because it’s an extra resource and there’s already a strong safety net that we have here in Southern Illinois,” [Centerstone’s Vice President of External Affairs, Robert Lambert] said. Lambert says the new center will start taking calls from people across the state on July 1st.

* WREX | Vendors come out to the largest Juneteenth event in Illinois to celebrate the holiday: With the holiday being celebrated across the country, the Boone County Museum of History said an addition this like comes with a great amount of significance. “It’s very, very significant and as it should be federally recognized. It’s a very important day for African Americans and it’s a very important day for the country as a whole just celebrating real freedom,” Natali Monaghan, the Executive Director of the museum said.

* Daily Journal | Rally spills over into Manteno village board meeting: A rally outside the Leo Hassett Community Center that began at 5 p.m., an hour before the 6 p.m. meeting, in support of Mike “Dirty” Barry spilled over into the board proceedings. Barry, who has been outspoken against the Gotion lithium battery factory in Manteno, was recently dismissed as athletic director of the Manteno Wildcats football program. Through social media, Barry asked people who supported him to show up at the rally, which was also attended by Phil Nagel, who is running against State Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, for Illinois State Senate in District 40 as a Republican.

*** National ***

* NPR | Why isn’t extreme heat considered a disaster in the U.S.?: The massive heat dome that struck the Pacific Northwest in 2021 paralyzed the region. Emergency departments were overwhelmed. Roads buckled in the heat. Hundreds of people died. That same year, Hurricane Ida barreled into the Southeast. Buildings were flattened in Louisiana. Hundreds of thousands lost power. At least 87 people in the U.S. died. Both were deadly and traumatizing. But FEMA distributed billions of dollars and months of post-disaster support to states and families battered by Ida. Victims of the heat dome, on the other hand, received no federal support.

* Missouri Independent | Kansas lawmakers approve tax incentive bill to lure Chiefs, Royals away from Missouri: The House voted 84-38 and the Senate voted 27-8 to approve legislation that would expand a state incentive program in an attempt to lure one or both teams from Kansas City. The bill now heads to Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat, who said in a statement following the Senate vote that the effort to bring the teams to Kansas “shows we’re all-in on keeping our beloved teams in the Kansas City metro.”

* Bloomberg | Mortgage rates drop below 7% for first time since March: The contract rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage decreased 8 basis points to 6.94% in the week ended June 14, according to Mortgage Bankers Association data released Wednesday. The five-year adjustable-rate mortgage slid 18 basis points to 6.27%, matching the lowest level since February.

  4 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Live coverage

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here 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)

Thursday, Jun 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x2)
* Reader comments closed for Independence Day
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some fiscal news
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Groups warn about plan that doesn't appear to be in the works
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid's large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch
* Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)
* Roundup: Pritzker taps Christian Mitchell for LG
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Trump admin freezes $240 million in grants for Illinois K-12 schools
* Yesterday's stories

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