Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar » Illinois
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Daily Southtown | Emails show Calumet City Mayor Thaddeus Jones prevents public employees from communicating with aldermen: First Ward Ald. Michael Navarrete sent an email Sept. 12 to set up a time to meet with Calumet City’s economic development director Donald Alesky and Valencia Williams, who works for the small business resources and assistance office. Navarrete proposed a monthly meeting with them so both parties can be better aligned on development proposals and zoning issues. […] Despite not being included in the original emails, Jones interjected and responded to Navarrete Sept. 21. “In the future, please do not send these communications to my employees,” Jones wrote in reference to the Navarrete’s messages to Alesky and Lanzito. “Further, I have instructed Don Alesky and Attorney Dominick not to meet with you and to forward all of your communications to my office for review and responses.”

* Block Club | Brighton Park Tent Encampment Construction On Hold For At Least A Week: An environmental report found the site “safe for temporary residential” after remediation, but state officials must still sign off. Neighbors are suing to try to block the shelter, and a judge ordered city officials to notify neighbors of activity at the site.

* Daily Herald | Republican files to take on Schneider, while Casten faces a new challenger: Oakbrook Terrace resident Mahnoor Ahmad submitted paperwork to run as a Democrat for the 6th District seat now held by Democrat Sean Casten of Downers Grove. Additionally, Lake Forest resident Jim Carris filed to run as a Republican for the 10th Congressional seat now held by Democrat Brad Schneider of Highland Park.

* Tribune | Executive testifies about holding up hiring ex-Ald. Ed Burke’s law firm for Burger King tax appeals: “More or less it seemed…like we weren’t getting the type of service I was getting with (their current firm), which was speed accuracy and organization,” Wachaa testified. Wachaa also testified about getting a quick education in old school, Chicago-style bureaucracy when a colleague who ran their 150 Chicago-area Burger Kings emailed about a meeting he’d had with Burke.

* Daily Herald | McHenry doesn’t want gambling parlors, but defining what those are is no sure bet: The problem, City Administrator Derik Morefield said, is defining what a gambling cafe is. “This is a whole topic we wrangled over in 2016 or 2017,” Morefield said, as McHenry tried to define what a gambling parlor looks like or develop guidelines for the city to follow. “We couldn’t come up with anything to define it,” Morefield said.

* Washington Examiner | Ronny Jackson endorses Mike Bost for reelection amid primary challenge from the right: “Ronny Jackson is a true patriot who has served his country in the Trump White House, in Congress, and in the U.S. Navy,” Bost said. “Ronny and I have become great friends because we’re fighting for the same things: President Trump’s America First agenda and draining the D.C. Swamp. I am honored to have his endorsement and value his friendship.” Bost has also been endorsed by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH).

* Sun-Times | New discount rate system a ‘game changer’ for Chicagoans struggling with heating bills, advocates say: The new system was approved as part of the decision that also saw regulators cut a rate hike requested by Peoples Gas from $402 million down to about $301 million. That’s still a record-high increase — which will tack on $6 to the average monthly household bill, as estimated by consumer watchdogs — but the revamped discount rates will deliver much more help to the people who need it most, advocates say.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s mental health plan in Chicago starts small but carries big political implications: The mayor’s answer in his first budget was far from a full response. While he cautioned supporters that reopening the clinics would take time, his budget called for restoring only two clinics and placing them in yet-to-be-determined locations. Still, by including $5.2 million to expand mental health services and $15.9 million to double staffing for the city’s team of behavioral health professionals who respond to mental health and substance abuse crises, Johnson is trying to show he isn’t dropping the ball on the issue while preaching patience and signaling a more robust response is yet to come.

* River Bender | Sierra Club Illinois’ Three Rivers Project And The Village Of Godfrey To Host Invasive Species Management Training And Work Day: “We hope other municipalities across the Riverbend will join us and Sierra Club Illinois for this free invasive species management training and work day,” said Chris Logan, Director of Parks and Recreation for the Village of Godfrey. “Removing invasive species from our local parks and trails is not only critical to our work to protect and conserve local natural resources and spaces, but also to ensuring the citizens of Godfrey and beyond can enjoy our parks for generations to come.”

* The Telegraph | Randy Presswood files lawsuit against Madison County Board and sanitary district: Randy Presswood, who has been rejected as an appointee to the Metro East Sanitary District Board, has filed a lawsuit against two Madison County Board members, the MESD and MESD officials. […] Presswood claims Oney and Fancher gave confidential personnel information about Presswood, who worked for MESD for 37 years before retiring as a supervisor, to Madison and Babcock, who then used the information outside of official board or committee meetings to convince others to vote against Presswood’s appointment.

* The Daily Illini | Q&A with new UI trustee Jesse Ruiz: Jesse Ruiz graduated from the University in 1988 with a bachelor’s degree in economics. He was appointed to the University of Illinois Board of Trustees by Gov. JB Pritzker on Oct. 27. […] From 2019-21, he worked as the deputy governor of education at the Office of the Governor in Illinois. Ruiz currently works as a general counsel at the Vistria Group, a private equity firm focused on social good. Ruiz’s appointment as a member of the Illinois Board of Trustees will last until 2029.

* Sun-Times | Bears coach Matt Eberflus doesn’t answer whether he believes he’s ‘safe’ for 2024: Eberflus was asked if, based on his relationship with general manager Ryan Poles, he believes he is “safe” for next season and responded by saying, “What you can focus on is leadership. The first rule of leadership is leading yourself… That’s really what you focus on: put your best foot forward every day.”

* Sun-Times | Brendan Savage, whose mom sued to get him back on basketball team, plays for Hinsdale South: Brendan Savage, the Hinsdale South senior whose mother sued to get him back on the basketball team, played in his first game of the season Friday at Downers Grove South. Savage received the full high school basketball experience. Mustangs fans booed him when he first checked in with three minutes left in the first quarter. He was the first player off the bench for the Hornets.

* WCIA | Secretary of State looking for 2023 John Lewis Youth Leadership award nominations: The award honors young people whose civic contributions have created a lasting impact in their community. Officials say any member of the public can nominate a young Illinoisan making a difference in their community. The National Association of Secretaries of State established the award after the landmark civil rights leader died in 2020.

* WSIL | SIU Carbondale offers rooms for Eclipse visitors in April: Community bathrooms and private showers will be available. All persons staying on campus will receive commemorative SIU eclipse glasses. The package costs $750 before tax. A pass for parking will add $25 to that total. The Dining Hall will be open with meals costing around $12.50 a person.

* Sun-Times | Amusing doc ‘A Disturbance in the Force’ shows some love for awful ‘Star Wars Holiday Special’: Over the course of the next two hours, “The Star Wars Holiday Special” served up one of the looniest, most disjointed, garish, ill-conceived and at times indecipherably bizarre and undeniably dreadful television programming in the history of the medium. Airing once and then disappearing into the mist of mythology, lore and geekdom, this gargantuan misstep early on in the “Star Wars” canon was so unspeakably awful that George Lucas reportedly once proclaimed, “If I had the time and a sledgehammer, I would track down every copy of that show and smash it.”

* Daily Herald | A 50-foot tree and hundreds of ornaments: How Union Station is transformed for the holidays: “It’s hard to see up there,” explained Delgado, who gives directions to workers in mechanical lifts high above passing Metra commuters and Amtrak customers. “We believe this is the tallest indoor tree in Chicago,” said Marc Magliari, spokesman for Amtrak, which owns Union Station.

* ABC Chicago | Holiday shopping options made in Illinois: If you consider shopping local this December, you could help to sustain a small business in Illinois. Daniel Thomas, deputy director at the Illinois Office of Tourism, shared some “Made in Illinois” options that can all be shipped.

  5 Comments      


Pre-pandemic investor tax credit rule change causing problems

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

A tax break designed to coax wealthy individuals to put their money into startups is coming back to bite some of those investors in the wallet.

The state of Illinois is poised to claw back tax breaks from investors who backed fledgling companies that now are failing to meet in-state hiring requirements, largely because of a surge in remote work that resulted from the COVID-19 pandemic. […]

The Illinois Department of Revenue says that so far 25 investors will have to pay back nearly $1 million in tax credits because several startups no longer comply with the law’s requirement that 51% of a company’s jobs and 75% of the new positions created during the three years following an investment be located in Illinois. […]

Among them is Chicago-based Rheaply, which operates an online platform that helps companies reuse and sell used laboratory and office equipment. About 60% of its roughly 60 employees are in Illinois.

The company meets the 51% threshold specified in the statute but not the 75% requirement for new jobs, which was created in 2018 by the Legislature’s 12-member Joint Commission on Administrative Rules.

JCAR doesn’t create rules, of course, but some backers of the Illinois angel tax-credit program want those administrative rules changed.

* During a recent Crain’s podcast, the author of the piece John Pletz explained that several other nearby states have a similar tax credit program, including Wisconsin, Indiana and Kentucky. But their rules are limited to at least 50 percent or 51 percent of employees who must live in-state. Illinois’ 75 percent in-state threshold for new hires is unique, he said, and is “causing people problems.”

Thoughts?

  6 Comments      


State/charitable migrant food money runs out January 1, but city won’t say what will happen during two weeks of no funding

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We talked about this Friday, but Tina Sfondeles and Michael Loria highlight an upcoming two-week funding gap that the city won’t talk about

Citing further “delays” in the city’s procurement process, Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration on Friday said it would chip in an additional $2 million to feed asylum-seekers in Chicago through the end of the year.

Another $2 million will be matched by the Chicago Food Depository, which has already been providing meals to migrants since June, in partnership with 15 minority-owned restaurants in Chicago. […]

The request for further funding came this week, and the state agreed to help until the end of the year with an understanding the city will assume the cost in January. […]

Mary May, a spokeswoman from Chicago’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications, said in a statement the deadline for an RFP for the food contract closed on Friday and was delayed because the city received more than 200 questions from applicants. May said the new contract is slated to begin Jan. 15.

It’s unclear who will be funding the food between Jan. 1 and Jan. 15, when the city said its contract would begin. The city did not comment on that gap.

* Meanwhile, according to the city, another 25 buses arrived last week. Isabel charted the arrivals dating back to the seven days ending October 6, when 53 buses arrived…

* The good news is the city and state have been able to move lots of folks out of police stations and airports. The numbers in the staging areas peaked on October 20th, at 3,684 people. As of last Friday, those numbers were down to just 1,032, with only 877 in police district headquarters and the rest at O’Hare…

* Coverage roundup from Isabel…

    * Block Club | Portage Park’s St. Bartholomew School Building Will House At Least 300 Migrants: The Catholic school at 4910 W. Addison St., which closed earlier this year after merging with Pope Francis Academy, will house between 300-350 migrants, who could move in early January, wrote Ald. Ruth Cruz (30th) in a letter to constituents. The decision was made between the city and the Archdiocese of Chicago, the alderwoman said.

    * NBC Chicago | Governor pauses construction at Brighton Park migrant site following environmental report: Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has paused construction on a base camp for migrants in Chicago’s Brighton Park neighborhood following the release of an environmental report last week. According to the governor’s office, the pause is intended so the governor can review the report and discuss further with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. Those discussions are expected to take place Monday.

    * CBS | Illinois pauses construction of Chicago migrant tent camp in Brighton Park: The state is funding construction of the tent encampment. Last week, Pritzker’s office announced $65 million in funding for the Brighton Park site and for a brick-and-mortar shelter for migrants at a shuttered CVS pharmacy in Little Village. Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office confirmed work at the Brighton Park site is on hold while IEPA reviews the city’s environmental assessment of the site.

    * Tribune | A plea to Biden from longtime undocumented immigrants in Chicago: ‘Please don’t forget about us, we need job permits too’: The work authorization, advocates say, would allow those immigrants to step out from the shadows and improve their lives exponentially. They would receive workplace protections and legally set wages that they may be too afraid to demand under the current circumstances. And they could visit their home countries without sacrificing the lives they have built in the United States. Many living in the country illegally go the rest of their lives without seeing family because they would be barred from reentering the U.S. if they left.

    * WGN | Elk Grove passes ordinance to help migrants while keeping community safe: The first being migrants who want to stay at a hotel or motel will need to have a document that says they were examined by an infectious disease doctor who verifies they are free of contagious diseases. This applies to people who’ve been in the United States for less than 60 days. […] The second part of the ordinance prevents warehouse and vacant shopping center owners from converting their buildings into temporary housing.

    * WTTW | State, Greater Chicago Food Depository to Spend Additional $4M on Meals for Migrants; City to Take Over Next Year: Illinois and the Greater Chicago Food Depository will each spend $2 million, on top of $10.5 million the state has spent thus far on a contract with the depository to provide meals to migrants. Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration cites “procurement delays” by Chicago as the reason for the shortfall, and says that the city in January will assume the responsibility of making sure migrants are fed, according to a news release.

    * Tribune | Volunteer networks step up to provide health needs to migrants at police stations: Migrants’ immunity is often weakened from their strenuous journeys walking to get here. In an average week, said Koruba, police make about 50 to 60 ambulance calls across all districts.

    * Tribune | Volunteer networks step up to provide health needs to migrants at police stations: Mutual aid networks and free and charitable organizations have stepped up to provide health needs to migrants who are sleeping on the floor at police stations and waiting for space in one of the 26 brick-and-mortar shelters around the city. But it is not uncommon for migrants to turn — or, in some cases, return — to police stations looking for basic medical resources, as necessities in shelters can be sparse or nonexistent. It’s not dissimilar from what migrants faced in their countries of origin.

    * Tribune | State, food bank step in to keep migrants fed during December amid city contract delay: The city in mid-October solicited bids for a new food vendor contract that was to begin Friday, but last week the Johnson administration pushed that start date back a month and a half to Jan. 15, according to city records. The delay raised questions about whether migrants would be fed throughout December. The new deadline for food vendors to submit proposals was noon Friday.

    * Sen. Robert Peters | Chicago must remain a sanctuary city because ‘that is who we are’: Chicagoans do not subscribe to Trump’s “build the wall” politics. We rejected his xenophobia in 2016 and 2020, and we need to reject it now as we approach the 2024 presidential election and the Democratic National Convention that will be held in Chicago in August. The convention is a once-in-a-generation moment for the city to shine. Instead, some of our city’s leaders are flirting with embarrassing us on the world stage and causing deep fissures within the Democratic Party, which needs to be unified to prevent Trump from becoming president for a second time.

  5 Comments      


Question of the day: 2023 Golden Horseshoe Awards

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 2023 Golden Horseshoe for Best Place to Gather for Dinner During Session Weeks goes to Maldaner’s

Never had a bad meal there. The traditional feel combined with its status as one of last of the downtown hold-outs, give the place a nostalgic old-school vibe.

The voting was all over the place, but I liked that explanation the best.

* The 2023 Golden Horseshoe for Best Place to Gather for Drinks, Etc. During Session Weeks goes to Boone’s

Boones, especially on a night warm enough to be outside. Good atmosphere and a Springfield tradition in the bar scene.

Runner-up goes to JP Kelly’s.

* Today’s categories…

Best Senate Democrat Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager

Best Senate Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manage

I know it’s difficult to nominate in both categories for things like this, but please do your best. Also, remember this is about intensity, not numbers. If you don’t explain your nomination, it won’t count.

* We raised more than $2,500 over the weekend to buy Christmas presents for foster kids. That means 100 more kids will receive presents, bringing our total to more than 1,600 children. Thanks!!!

Lutheran Social Services of Illinois serves more than 2,500 foster kids, so we have a ways to go. Please, click here and contribute if you haven’t already, or if you can afford just a little more.

  29 Comments      


Report: Illinois prisons need $2.5 billion for overdue repairs

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGLT

The final report from a consulting firm hired by the state has found three of Illinois’ 27 prison facilities, including the Pontiac and Logan correctional centers, approaching “inoperable,” and a list of more than $2.5 billion in overdue repairs in aging institutions across the state.

CGL Companies warns in the report initially released in May that the existing price tag of “deferred maintenance” at Illinois prisons could double in five years if unaddressed. Significant deterioration was reported at all prisons, with only three of 27 prisons ranked in the “fully operational range,” and the remainder in the “impaired operation range.” Pontiac, Logan and Joliet’s Stateville were categorized as nearly inoperable.

About 9,600 prisoners, or 20% of the state’s prison population, are still housed in prisons dating back to the 1800s. Facilities constructed between 1970 and 2000 house 30,486 prisoners, about 65% of the overall prison census.

The report notes Pontiac’s history as the second oldest prison in the state, with two cellhouses built in 1892 when the facility served as the State Reformatory for Youth. With $235 million in needed repairs, the Livingston County prison is near the top of the list for deferred maintenance. Pontiac also has the highest operational cost of $65,800 per inmate, double the agency’s average, according to the report.

* Recommendations in the CGL report

• Address Deferred Maintenance Backlog. Without significant progress in addressing existing deferred maintenance, the deterioration of IDOC physical plant will accelerate, impacting its ability to safely manage its facilities and meet its objectives. At nearly every correctional facility, IDOC’s mission and goals as well as safety and security are negatively impacted by its worsening conditions. A substantial increase in capital funding will be needed to avert future facility crises.

• Replace the Dixon Psychiatric Unit: The Dixon Psychiatric Unit (DPU) does not effectively support the treatment and supervision of IDOC’s most difficult to manage and vulnerable population. The DPU’s X-House design is nearly identical to the facilities IDOC opened in the 1980’s and 1990’s to house general population, medium security incarcerated males. This unit should be replaced with a purpose-built design that provides appropriate housing for a severe mental health population along with adequate treatment and staff space in a design that creates a supportive environment. Estimated Cost in today’s dollars to build a 215 bed Secure Psychiatric Unit: $58,634,249 - $72,271,582 depending on location.

• Add Mental Health Treatment/Staff Spaces across IDOC: The lack of appropriate space for mental health professionals and mental health treatment is a substantial concern and impedes IDOC’s abilities to meet its operational goals. The department’s existing facilities were never built to manage the size of the existing mental health caseload or provide office and treatment space. The result has been that IDOC has had to make do with whatever space it could find, even at the detriment of other services. Many health care units were packed with staff and valuable exam rooms, x-ray rooms and other areas had been converted to mental health offices. […]

• Consider Reducing Pontiac’s Capacity. Given its age, outdated/inefficient design, extensive physical plant needs, high cost to operate, and difficulty in recruiting and retaining staff, consideration should be given to reducing Pontiac Correctional Center’s capacity. During the course of this master planning effort, the population at Pontiac was reduced due to its high staff vacancy rate through the closure of its Medium Security Unit (442 beds). That left an August 2022 rated capacity of 778.
From a purely fiscal standpoint, Pontiac remains the most expensive facility in the state to operate on an annual basis with an annual per capita cost over $65,000 and has $235 million in deferred maintenance. Given these issues, and the excess male maximum security capacity in the system, additional capacity could be taken offline reducing agency expenses. This should improve facility security and allow Pontiac to focus its resources on the remaining population and their service needs.

Click here to read the full report.

* WBEZ in July

While the state-commissioned report focused on infrastructure issues, it also highlighted other problems that make the situation even more urgent — an elderly prison population and extreme short staffing, with around a quarter of positions vacant.

According to the report, the staffing crisis can be blamed in part on the remote, rural location of some prisons.

In September 2022, the executive director of the union for prison workers sent a letter to the head of the Department of Corrections warning that prisons were dangerously short staffed, according to documents obtained by WBEZ. She reported officers were “working to the point of exhaustion — 16 hours straight is all too common” and employees were suffering both mental and physical trauma, including some who had died by suicide.

Almost every aspect of the prison system is impacted by the extreme short staffing. There isn’t enough staff to transport people to outside healthcare appointments. Incarcerated people are left in their cells, unable to go to the dining hall for meals or outside for recreation because there is not enough security staff. One facility has about 40% of its guard positions unfilled.

* In August, Governor Pritzker defended keeping the prisons open

Brian Mackey: I talk to advocates who say, as you pointed out, the Department of Corrections population peaked at more than 49,000 individuals 10 years ago. Now, it’s fewer than 30,000 this spring. It was even lower than that in the pandemic. We could have closed several prisons, many units within prison facilities. As you said, some of which date back to the 1800s. An advocate I was speaking to said, it doesn’t seem all that complicated, right? Population’s down, staffing is down, $2.5 billion is needed to fix these facilities that are unsafe and inhumane. Why not close them down?

Governor Pritzker: If you assumed that every prisoner was like every other prisoner? Yes, it sounds like a reasonable focus that we would just simply — let’s close some and push people into others. And we’ll have a perfect system. The reality is that we have a lot of different kinds, we have people who are in maximum security with people who are in minimum security, you know, we have facilities that are made more for older populations, we have women’s facilities. It’s just not as easy as I think people would like to think that it is, number one. Number two, we have to think a lot about location. Where are these prisons located across our state? Because as we’ve seen in our healthcare system in, for example, psychiatric hospitals; our need for nurses in developmental disabilities hospitals, and so on. We can’t find the kind of workers that we’re looking for in some parts of the state. That’s not a knock on anything, it’s just that when you get more rural, there are fewer people to choose from; there maybe are fewer people that got the kind of specific training that you need there. And it’s true in in our corrections facilities, too. So I think this has all got to be a public conversation. And it’s one that I think is accelerated by the study that we commissioned, and it’s now been delivered that everybody can read. […]

Brian Mackey: How do we get from here to there? How do we get to you’re making a future budget proposal that says we should have X fewer facilities? We’ve had the public conversation, how do we get from this study to there?

Governor Pritzker: Well, again, you’re assuming fewer facilities — I don’t know if that’s the right answer. I think there’s an argument to be made that having facilities that are less populated within a facility is one of the answers. Maybe we have facilities — the same number of facilities and fewer prisoners. In each one, again, we can talk about the the financial implications for the state of all of that, and we can talk about the implications for the human rights of the people who are incarcerated, not to mention the safety of the workers at a facility. I want the legislature to hold hearings about it, I think they should. And I want advocates on both sides to speak up — including, for example, corrections officers, who know their facilities well and know what works well. I think everybody should be heard here.

  10 Comments      


Rep. Halbrook says he now understands seniority, while his opponent claims his allies ‘tried to bully, persuade, and bribe me out of the race’

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tom Kacich looks at the Republican primary shaping up between the father of the “Kick Chicago out of Illinois” campaign and an equally conservative opponent named Marsha Webb. The main issue so far is term limits

State Rep. Brad Halbrook, R-Shelbyville, who represented parts of Champaign County before the 2021 redistricting, is now running for a sixth term in the Illinois House, even though he said in a 2016 News-Gazette questionnaire that he would not serve more than five terms. Halbrook ran for and won races for state representative in 2012, 2016, 2018, 2020 and 2022. […]

“I looked at the current situation,” Halbrook said. State Sen. “Dan Caulkins was one of the founding members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus. There were five of us then. With him leaving, I looked at the tenure of the remaining House Republicans. We’re a rather youthful caucus. So in a world where seniority and experience matters, I just made the decision that I would stay in.” […]

Ironically, Caulkins, R-Decatur, is set to leave the Illinois House — and the Freedom Caucus — after next year’s election in order to honor his pledge to serve only three terms. […]

“There are only seven of us. I had anticipated that number to be much larger than it is today. For whatever reason, it’s not,” Halbrook said. “But if you look at the issues that have surfaced in the last year and a half, the Illinois Freedom Caucus has led on those issues.” […]

He said he now recognizes that seniority matters in the Legislature.

“You have to be in your third term to either get a chairmanship or a (minority-party) spokesperson position on committees,” he said. “I’m now a spokesperson on an appropriations committee. We’ve been able to ask hard questions of agency heads, although they’ve been able to stonewall and not respond. But at least we make them hear the questions.”

“I had anticipated that number to be much larger than it is today.”

Sigh.

* Anyway, his opponent Marsha Webb is quoted extensively in Tom’s story, so read the whole thing. But here’s her Facebook response

If you can be persuaded to break a term limit pledge to your constituents, what else can you be persuaded to break or change?

Who “persuaded” you to break your term limit pledge? Is it the same select few that tried to bully, persuade, and bribe me out of the race against you?

Who do you place your loyalty with? Your constituents or a caucus that you are a member of?

This sounds like Orwellian style double talk.

Folks, read the article for yourself and form your own opinions.

I am running to take your voices to the state house.

  24 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** State pauses construction at migrant base camp site

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Shortly after this City of Chicago press release went out, the governor’s office confirmed that it had paused construction over the weekend at the Brighton Park migrant tent camp, pending a review by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. From the city…

As reported last week, the City of Chicago’s Department of Assets, Information, and Services contracted Terracon Consultants, Inc. to conduct an environmental investigation at the 3710 South California Avenue site. The sample results were compared to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency’s remediation standards for residential use. According to the report, soil with mercury levels was identified at one location and was removed and properly disposed offsite at a landfill, and with the limited soil removal and placement and maintenance of the barrier, the site is safe for temporary residential use.

Further base camp construction and remediation of an additional 1 ft. x 1 ft. x 1 ft. area of the 9.5-acre site will continue per the timeline set by the State of Illinois. There is no construction or remediation scheduled at this time. The City will share assessment of subsequent remediation as it becomes available.

The full Environmental and Investigation and Correction Action Summary Report can be found in the general City of Chicago FAQ on the new arrival mission.

*** UPDATE *** The construction pause will continue tomorrow “as IEPA continues their review,” the governor’s office says.

  23 Comments      


Protected: *** UPDATED x10 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates (Use last week’s password)

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


*** UPDATED x1 *** The wrong fight over the wrong things at the wrong time

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I mean, if it wasn’t obvious on Friday night when the Johnson administration handed the Brighton Park environmental report to reporters before they gave it to the governor’s office, then I’m not sure where you’ve been

Mayor Brandon Johnson campaigned on a promise to be the likable consensus-builder that Lori Lightfoot wasn’t.

He touted lessons learned as one of 10 siblings in a home with one bathroom, along with his previous work as a paid organizer for the Chicago Teachers Union. Listening, negotiating and collaborating is part of his DNA.

And yet, Johnson’s relationship with Gov. J.B. Pritzker is off to a rocky start not all that different from the tension between Lightfoot and Pritzker that worsened during the pandemic and became a hallmark of her single term.

The full story by Fran Spielman and Tina Sfondeles is definitely worth a read. I learned some things. The end graf is brutal

“The governor has spent a lot of time, effort and money on national politics … The folks in the Pritzker administration don’t want to be embarrassed by a city that doesn’t really seem to have a plan,” Giangreco said. “All [Johnson] seems to say is, ‘I need Washington or Springfield to fix this for me.’”

That last sentence in particular is a sharp insight.

Some Chicago mayors have at times considered themselves more important than the state’s governors, and some actually were. But instead of consolidating support after the election, this mayor has allowed circumstances to alienate much of the city, including at least parts of his progressive base. Pritzker, on the other hand, has consolidated power with the two legislative leaders, taken control of the state party, has a net worth in the billions and is undoubtedly far more popular in Chicago than the mayor. There’s just not much Johnson can do to him at this point which won’t badly backfire.

Whatever the case, the fighting isn’t good in the long term, so this really needs to end soon.

*** UPDATE *** Gov. Pritzker was asked about this today

We have a good relationship with one another. And I know the media would like to, every time there’s a governor and a mayor of Chicago, when you occasionally have things you’re working out together. They want to turn it into ‘They hate each other.’

Now there have been mayors and governors in the past that don’t like each other. But the truth is that we get along an we have a lot to accomplish. Chicago is an important economic driver for the country, not to mention for the state of Illinois. And I’ve really made it my mission - I’ve had now three mayors that I’ve worked with - I’ve made it my mission to make sure that the relationship is good. Even when you disagree occasionally on something, you just need to work it out. And whenever we have disagreed, we have worked it out. So I feel really good about the relationship and about the future working together. We do share one overriding concern together and that’s lifting up the working people of our state, making sure that people are doing well, that families are thriving, making the investments that are necessary for that. S that’s a great common ground to work from.

  36 Comments      


Almost time to ease up on the accelerator pedal

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget released a revised state revenue and spending forecast last month for the current fiscal year, and it’s pretty good. Its projections for the next fiscal year, however, were not nearly as strong.

Projected fiscal year 2024 revenues have been revised upward by $1.4 billion. However, “most of this fiscal year 2024 revenue forecast revision is assumed to be one-time in nature,” the budget office warned.

Spending has also been revised upward by $969 million, leaving a $422 million net surplus.

According to the governor’s office, that revised spending estimate includes the $160 million the governor is spending on migrants. “With the $160 million we’re spending, we still have a $422 million surplus,” said Pritzker spokesperson Jordan Abudayyeh.

Unlike most of the revenue, many cost increases don’t appear to be one-time. And, of course, it’s unknown how long the migrant crisis will last, but it could very well wind up being a semi-permanent budgetary pressure.

That net $422 million surplus, if the estimates hold, will come in handy because the budget office is projecting FY2025’s revenues will be $480 million below its revised FY24 estimate. That, combined with increased spending, will result in a projected deficit next fiscal year of $891 million. The deficit is expected to rise to $1.4 billion in FY26 and $1.66 billion in FY27.

Pension expenditures, including for the Chicago Teachers’ Pension Fund, are projected to be $10.14 billion this fiscal year, or 19.7% of projected General Funds expenditures including the supplemental appropriations costs, which is a little below where they’ve been for the past few years. Pension payments will rise to $10.5 billion in FY25, or 20% of all projected state General Funds spending. And they’ll go up to $10.8 billion in FY26, for the same 20% of all projected General Funds spending.

In other words, while the pension payments will be high, they’ll be stable and sustainable as a percentage of the budget — as long as the projections hold up.

Education costs are projected to rise by $952 million between this fiscal year and FY26 . The costs as a percentage of the budget will go from 25% this year to not quite 26% of the budget in FY26. Human services costs will rise $652 million by FY26, and health care costs will rise $614 million during the same period.
A deficit in fiscal year 2025

Let’s go back to that projected $891 million deficit next fiscal year, which starts in July.

Can the projection be trusted? After all, the global pandemic threw every economist off their game. Abruptly shutting down the world’s economy and then trying to turn it back on again, with gigantic bottlenecks and labor shortages emerging everywhere amid massive and sustained government stimulus, resulting inflation, rising interest rates and an economic boom just had no precedent.

In November 2020, near the height of the “second wave” of COVID-19, the governor’s budget office projected this fiscal year 2024’s budget would have about a $4.7 billion deficit with a state unpaid bill backlog of $24.5 billion. Instead, we’ve had years of budget surpluses, which along with prudent budgeting have wiped out the bill backlog, allowed the state to put $2 billion into a rainy day fund and pay off much of its non-capital debt while prepaying some pension obligations. Illinois’ bond ratings, which once neared junk status, have steadily risen to the “A” level with all three rating agencies.

But even before the pandemic, in the fall of 2019, FY24’s deficit was projected to be $3.1 billion with $16 billion in backlogs. A year earlier, in 2018, the current fiscal year’s deficit was projected to be $3.2 billion with a $20.5 billion backlog.

So, again, can the latest projection be trusted? Not completely, but it should still be heeded. After a period of being mostly careful not to drastically increase the state’s base spending, and instead using much of the unexpected revenue bonanzas for one-time items, the legislature and the governor added a ton of money to base spending last spring. If revenues do fall off next fiscal year, base spending will likely have to be cut.

The governor’s budget address is three months away, so the budget-making process is about to begin. We’ve seen countless forecast adjustments during the past few years, so maybe this one will change, too. But, in the meantime, everyone should prepare themselves for some belt-tightening in the months ahead.

  6 Comments      


Several new items and updates to the ol’ blog

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I spent part of the weekend expanding our automated news coverage here. The first thing you may have noticed is that our live coverage is back, sorta. As explained below, this will be different than the old Scribble Live feed because Twitter broke not only itself but almost everything else it touched.

These new feeds do not update instantly in front of your eyes, like Scribble Live did. There’s also a bit of posting lagtime and the new service itself may not last long. We just can’t give you any guarantees on any of this right now until Elon either gets his act together or a realistic online alternative develops. I also added a live coverage post for federal criminal trials.

* The automated news feeds on the right-hand side of the page have been tweaked to display a bit better, but almost all of the sources have also been expanded.

Bing News search results have been added to the Google results, for instance, so you’ll get more stories about more topics.

For some reason, the Capitol News Illinois feed had vanished, but it’s been restored.

More news sections of the Sun-Times and Tribune have been added. Suburban and exurban stories from Shaw Local and other local papers have been combined with an enhanced Daily Herald coverage feed.

All four legislative caucuses have newsletters, so they’ve been given a feed. News feeds from both state parties and the two Cook County parties are also in there. A feed of news stories from numerous radio and television stations was also created, as was a feed of State Journal-Register stories. Several newspapers were added to the Downstate feed.

I’ve added some Substack accounts and more bloggers to the Blog feed. And more news sources have been added to the federal officeholder news feeds. There’s also a new feed for hyper-local Chicago outlets and one for college student papers.

  7 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Chicago finds the Brighton Park migrant tent site safe for temporary residential use despite contaminants. Sun-Times

    -Arsenic, mercury, lead, manganese and a chemical used in PVC were among the heavy metals and toxic contaminants discovered in the soil.
    -“The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will have to review it,” said Jordan Abudayyeh, a spokeswoman for Gov. J.B. Pritzker. “We will not utilize that site if IEPA does not sign off.”
    - The city claims as long as contaminated soil is removed and a stone barrier of at least six inches covers the entire nine-acre site the camp will be safe.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * WGLT | Report finds Logan, Pontiac and Stateville prisons nearly inoperable: The final report from a consulting firm hired by the state has found three of Illinois’ 27 prison facilities, including the Pontiac and Logan correctional centers, approaching “inoperable,” and a list of more than $2.5 billion in overdue repairs in aging institutions across the state. CGL Companies warns in the report initially released in May that the existing price tag of “deferred maintenance” at Illinois prisons could double in five years if unaddressed. Significant deterioration was reported at all prisons, with only three of 27 prisons ranked in the “fully operational range,” and the remainder in the “impaired operation range.” Pontiac, Logan and Joliet’s Stateville were categorized as nearly inoperable.

    * Tribune | Volunteer networks step up to provide health needs to migrants at police stations: Mutual aid networks and free and charitable organizations have stepped up to provide health needs to migrants who are sleeping on the floor at police stations and waiting for space in one of the 26 brick-and-mortar shelters around the city. But it is not uncommon for migrants to turn — or, in some cases, return — to police stations looking for basic medical resources, as necessities in shelters can be sparse or nonexistent. It’s not dissimilar from what migrants faced in their countries of origin.

    * ABC Chicago | Brighton Park migrant camp plans need IEPA approval for construction to move forward, state says: The state is funding the project, but Gov. JB Pritzker’s Office said they will not move forward unless the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency signs off the report. New video shows construction still underway at 38th and California on Sunday.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

    * Tribune | State, food bank step in to keep migrants fed during December amid city contract delay: The city in mid-October solicited bids for a new food vendor contract that was to begin Friday, but last week the Johnson administration pushed that start date back a month and a half to Jan. 15, according to city records. The delay raised questions about whether migrants would be fed throughout December. The new deadline for food vendors to submit proposals was noon Friday.

    * Sen. Robert Peters | Chicago must remain a sanctuary city because ‘that is who we are’: Chicagoans do not subscribe to Trump’s “build the wall” politics. We rejected his xenophobia in 2016 and 2020, and we need to reject it now as we approach the 2024 presidential election and the Democratic National Convention that will be held in Chicago in August. The convention is a once-in-a-generation moment for the city to shine. Instead, some of our city’s leaders are flirting with embarrassing us on the world stage and causing deep fissures within the Democratic Party, which needs to be unified to prevent Trump from becoming president for a second time.

    * Daily Herald | A return to tradition: Why Illinois’ primary election is moving back to March in 2024: State Rep. Maurice West, a Rockford Democrat, sponsored the 2021 legislation that set the date for the 2022 primary. At the time, he said the state’s traditional, seven-month gap between primary and general elections was “long and risky, negatively affecting public policymaking.” West deliberately proposed a one-time change “just to see how it works.” If success is measured by voter turnout, the change was a failure.

    * Tribune | Amid drug abuse crisis, state mounts effort to recruit and train more counselors: The state is spending $3 million in an effort to recruit and retain more substance abuse counselors amid a surge in drug abuse and overdoses that began during the COVID-19 pandemic. […] The state money will go toward expanding a program to recruit potential CADCs to help them with tuition payments, scholarships, internship stipends and other payments related to the training needed to get certified. The program also offers assistance with job placement, continuing education and credential renewal opportunities for existing CADCs.

    * WTAX | New leader for IL Chamber: The Illinois Chamber of Commerce has a new president and CEO. Lou Sandoval’s career has taken him from the biotech industry through marine sales through business consulting, and he says that’s prepared him for his new position.

    * Brownfield | Outgoing Illinois Farm Bureau president reflects on decade of service: Illinois Farm Bureau president Rich Guebert has spent the last 10 years representing Illinois farmers on a state, national, and global stage. Throughout his term, he’s met with two sitting Presidents, two Secretaries of Agriculture, and the Speaker of the U.S. House. “I’m going to be forever grateful that I can tell agriculture’s story to those folks with influence,” he says. “And drive policy, that’s not only important to our members here in Illinois, but farmers and ranchers all across the United States.”

    * State Week | Pritzker and the state’s economy: Gov. J.B. Pritzker talked about the state’s business climate and more during a Crain’s Chicago Business luncheon. The governor touted recent announcements of jobs being added, especially at new manufacturing sites. We’ll talk about Pritzker’s economic record.

    * Capitol News Illinois | Supreme Court rules teen bicyclist is covered by father’s auto insurance policy: The Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday that automobile insurance policies must cover people against uninsured motorists and hit-and-run accidents, even if the person covered by the policy is not in a vehicle at the time of the accident.

    * Daily Herald | Illinois judges reflect on the legacy of pioneering Supreme Court jurist Sandra Day O’Connor: The death of trailblazing jurist Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, prompted expressions of praise and gratitude from the women she inspired to pursue careers in the judiciary. Among them was Illinois Supreme Court Justice Mary K. O’Brien, a longtime O’Connor admirer who says the late Supreme Court justice “always sought to hear the other side, to find common ground, to listen.”

    * Crain’s | For Illinois’ cannabis industry, the roller-coaster ride continues: After years of delay, new license holders are entering the market at a healthy clip, which is helping diversify ownership in the industry and bring down Illinois’ notoriously high prices. There are 173 pot shops in Illinois, up from 113 a year ago. State regulators think 190 could be open by the end of the year.

    * ABC Chicago | Father of 6-year-old Muslim boy killed in unincorp. Plainfield stabbing speaks with ABC7: Odai recalled the moment he got that call from the Will County sheriff. “I’m confused. He told me, ‘Wadee killed,’” Odai said. “I said, ‘No, Wadee is still a kid.’ He said, ‘No, somebody killed him.’”

    * WaPo | Factory reopening could save this town, but many still bash the economy: Closed factories almost never reopen. So when Jason Vassar heard last month that his shuttered auto factory plans to restart, he considered it a “blessing.” The Stellantis plant that laid him off in March had agreed to resume production and rehire its workers to help end a nationwide strike against the company. It even pledged to build a $3.2 billion battery factory next door, encouraged by the prospect of federal manufacturing subsidies from the Biden administration.

    * NYT | What to Know About the Purdue Pharma Case Before the Supreme Court: At issue is whether a bankruptcy plan can be engineered to give legal immunity to a third party — in this case, members of the Sackler family, who once controlled Purdue Pharma — even though they themselves have not declared bankruptcy. If the court approves the deal, that could affirm a litigation tactic that has become increasingly popular in resolving lawsuits in which many people claim similar injuries from the same entity, be it a drug or consumer product. By turning to the bankruptcy courts as a tool to resolve those claims, businesses aim to free themselves from civil liability and prevent future lawsuits.

  3 Comments      


*** Live coverage ***

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Live coverage is back, sorta. This will be different than the old Scribble Live feed because Twitter broke itself and almost everything else it touched. These new feeds do not update instantly. There’s a bit of posting lagtime, but it’s much better than nothing. We are also limited to just 20 Twitter sources. The service may also not last long. We just can’t give you any guarantees about this. You can still click here or here to follow breaking news the way we’ve done since Twitter stopped Scribble Live from working…

  1 Comment      


*** Live Ed Burke Trial Coverage ***

Monday, Dec 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* These new feeds do not update instantly. There’s a bit of a lagtime and you have to refresh the page every now and then. The service we’re using may also not last long. We just can’t give you any guarantees. You can still click here to follow the Ed Burke trial on Twitter. Posts without a Twitter author name below them are from online news sources via Bing

  Comments Off      


Pritzker says state has settled labor dispute at migrant tent city

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Press release…

Governor Pritzker announced the state has come to an agreement with Iron Workers Local 1 to ensure skilled iron workers will be present at the build site for new shelter space for asylum seekers. Upon learning of a potential labor issue late Thursday night, the state worked closely with the Iron Workers Local to negotiate sending additional union labor to the site as quickly as possible. The 38th and California site is being constructed to house approximately 2,000 recent arrivals to the city ahead of worsening winter weather conditions.

“When my administration was made aware of an issue that could have resulted in a work stoppage and increased costs at a new asylum seeker shelter site, we acted immediately to ensure union iron workers were represented and that the project could continue without delay,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “I am grateful to the Iron Workers for their collaborative work with my office to reach agreement and I am pleased this project can proceed.”

“Upon learning of concerns regarding labor use at the 38th and California site, Governor Pritzker and state officials immediately began negotiations to ensure the project could continue efficiently while maintaining the commitment to organized labor that the Governor has demonstrated since day one of his administration,” said John Gardiner, President, Iron Workers Union Local 1. “Skilled union ironworkers will be on site tomorrow to aid in the safe construction of this base camp and provide shelter for those desperately in need.”

“I commend John Gardiner for his leadership and tireless advocacy for Ironworkers Local 1, and I’d like to thank Governor Pritzker for responding quickly to our members to reach this important agreement,” said Michael Macellaio, President of the Chicago & Cook County Building & Construction Trades Council.

It’s late Friday night and we’re all still working. I haven’t seen anything like this since the Rauner years. Thanks, mayor.

  Comments Off      


*** UPDATED x4 - Coverage roundup - Reporters received report before governor - Report finds high levels of mercury in soil - Report released to reporters *** After stonewalling governor’s office, city finally shares pollution report on migrant tent city

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From WBBM


* From Jordan Abudayyeh at the Governor’s office…

The State has repeatedly requested this report from the city and despite assurances it would be sent, that has yet to occur. When the State does receive the report the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will need to review it. We will not have additional comment until we receive the report.

* Alice Yin


* Abudayyeh at 8:33 tonight…

Update. We just got it: The state just received the environmental report. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will need to review it. We will not have additional comment until the review of the nearly 800 page document is complete.

*** UPDATE 1 *** From Natalie Moore at WBEZ


*** UPDATE 2 *** Click here for the full report…

* Metals were below the residential ROs with the exception of arsenic, lead, mercury, and manganese, which exceeded in residential ingestion exposure route at certain sample locations.

    * Mercury exceeded the residential outdoor inhalation exposure route and the default CSAT limit in sample SB-15 (1-3’) and its associated duplicate sample, DUP-004. These two samples were further evaluated with elemental mercury laboratory analysis, as provided in Table 1, which confirmed the exceedances.

*** UPDATE 3 *** From Rich: The governor’s office has been asking for this report for days, and they sent it to reporters first? Yeah, that’s wise…


*** UPDATE 4 *** Coverage roundup…

    * Tribune

    After weeks of pressure, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration dropped a voluminous environmental assessment of a proposed tent camp for migrants late Friday that said contaminants are being removed from the former Southwest Side industrial site.

    The nearly 800-page report by outside contractor Terracon Consultants was released to the Tribune on Friday evening.

    It said high levels of mercury and other chemicals were found and are being removed from the Brighton Park lot at 3710 S. California Ave., where workers had already begun building the giant tents for incoming migrants this week. […]

    “Terracon conducted a field investigation under a sampling plan that was developed for this specific site,” a Johnson spokesperson wrote in a statement, before noting soil with mercury levels and other contaminants, which were addressed through removal as well as an “engineered barrier” along the site. “With the limited soil removal and placement and maintenance of the barrier, the site is safe for temporary residential use.”

    The report notes that despite the presence of toxic substances at the site, the levels detected are within state guidelines and as a result pose minimal risks to temporary occupants of the tent encampment.

    * WTTW

    Tests were performed in 16 locations on the site, and soil, groundwater and soil gas samples were taken and analyzed, according to the report.

    Mercury was located in one location on the site, and the soil in that area was removed and disposed of, according to the report.

    In another location, the organic compound bis(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate was found, the report said. That compound is used in the manufacturing of polyvinyl chloride, a rigid yet flexible plastic. That soil will also be removed and disposed of, according to the report.

    At multiple locations on the site, the tests found evidence of two semi-volatile organic compounds and four metals that exceeded limits considered safe for residential use, according to the report.

    That prompted city officials to require that the entire site “be covered with imported clean stone from a quarry and compaction of the stone to a minimum thickness of six inches throughout the site. The stone layer will be periodically inspected and maintained,” the report said.

    * ABC Chicago

    Crews are also placing a clean crushed stone barrier around the site that will be regularly inspected.

    The statement goes on to say in part, “With the limited soil removal and placement and maintenance of the barrier, the site is safe for temporary residential use.” […]

    City officials have said they hope to have the site up and running by mid-December.

    Alderwoman Julia Ramirez and her office are reviewing the new findings and plan to comment soon.

    * Sun-Times

    The state, which is committing $65 million for the shelter and is directing the contractor building on the site, will have to sign off on the environmental report.

    “The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will have to review it,” said Jordan Abudayyeh, a spokeswoman for Gov. J.B. Pritzker. “We will not utilize that site if IEPA does not sign off.”

    She declined to comment further until state officials review the report.

    The city’s consultant said it can’t guarantee there isn’t additional contamination, and if additional materials are discovered, “activities should be halted.”

    “We cannot represent that the site contains no hazardous substances, toxic material, petroleum products or other latent conditions beyond those identified during this evaluation,” the city consultant Terracon said in the report.

  Comments Off      


Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I told you about Kathy Greenholdt earlier this week when we kicked off our annual fundraiser to buy Christmas presents for LSSI foster kids (please click here to donate). Kathy wrote a touching song about her late sister Lynn. She also wrote a song that I think should be Illinois’ new official state song. Have a listen and we’ll talk again Monday

Home is my sweet Illinois

  Comments Off      


Afternoon roundup

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’ve reset the donation target amount to match what we raised last year, adjusted for inflation…

The money we’ve contributed so far will help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for 1,503 foster kids. LSSI serves 2,530 children. That means we’ve met 59 percent of their basic goal and will create a little joy for lots of kiddos.

I have my doubts that we’ll make our fundraising goal. Last year’s unprecedented final tally completely surprised me. Also, it’s been my experience that donations tend to drop off after the first couple-two-tree days. We had a good Tuesday, a great Wednesday (people really stepped up to score that $10,000 match), an OK Thursday, but almost zip today, likely because we haven’t posted a reminder.

So, please, if you can, click here and contribute. Thanks.

* Daily Illini

Illinois is the first state to offer fully funded universal tests and licensure preparation classes to public university undergraduate students in the newly passed Prepare for Illinois’ Future Program. The program entails that Illinois public universities’ undergraduate students will have free access to necessary resources to assist them in their preparation for graduate school admission tests and professional licensure.

On Nov. 7, La Shawn Ford, Illinois state representative and chair of the Illinois Higher House Appropriations Committee, announced that the Prepare for Illinois’ Future Program will warrant $10 million of the state of Illinois’ budget.

The funding of the program was passed with the intention of providing free test preparation classes for the MCAT, the LSAT, the GRE and the GMAT in the 2024 fiscal year.

In addition to the graduate school admission tests, the Prepare for Illinois’ Future Program will include free preparation assistance for professional licensure preparation in nursing, teaching, real estate and securities professional exams.

Sounds like a good idea.

* Text message…

In case you might find it of at least slight interest, Congressman Jackson, as of a couple of minutes ago when I checked ISBE, has not filed his nominating petitions. The only IL congressperson not to have done so yet. Only 1 GOP candidate has filed in the first district. I haven’t seen any outlet take note of this.

I’m trying to reach US Rep. Jackson’s campaign, but no luck so far.

* Glad to see the BGA’s policy director standing up for a reporter who wrote a very strong story only to see it trashed by those weirdos on the Tribune editorial board…


Speaking of this topic, here’s an Illinois House rule that you might not know exists

In accordance with Article IV, Sec. 6(d) of the Constitution, the House during its session may punish by imprisonment any person, not a member, guilty of disrespect to the House by disorderly or contemptuous behavior in its presence. That imprisonment shall not extend beyond 24 hours at one time unless the person persists in disorderly or contemptuous behavior.

The Senate has a nearly identical rule.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * WBEZ | Chicago pastor on housing migrants in his church: ‘This is your new home’: I was sharing earlier today about a gentleman that we received from Police District 14. I was in the basement showing them where the showers were at, with the kitchen where they can cook, and opening cupboards and cabinets. And, one gentleman, when I opened the cabinet, he saw all the snacks and all the food and all the supplies that he hadn’t seen, maybe for years, going back to his days in Venezuela. And the term “taken aback” is usually used figuratively right? “I was taken aback.” This guy literally took a step back because he was overwhelmed by what he saw. And that overwhelmed me. And immediately he just started crying. We were meeting there for the first time. We just had a couple of conversations before. And so, my instinct was to go and embrace him and tell him ‘you’re safe here” and “this is your new home.”

    * Crain’s | Tesla’s truck isn’t a Rivian killer yet: Tesla is expected to produce about 75,000 trucks next year, Baird Equity Research estimates. Rivian is expected to increase production at its plant in Normal to 75,000 to 80,000 vehicles, up from about 50,000 this year.

    * Bloomberg | Battery startup opens Chicago plant as U.S. seeks to curb reliance on China: NanoGraf received $10 million in funding from the U.S. government to build what the company says is the Midwest’s first large-volume facility to produce silicon oxide — an important ingredient for a new kind of longer-lasting battery that can be used in electric vehicles and medical devices. It’s part of a wave of investment in US capacity to make more lithium-ion batteries at home as the country looks to compete with China, which controls large swaths of the world’s output.

    * Tribune | Peoples Gas asks to restore $134 million of ‘paused’ pipeline replacement work, says hundreds of jobs may be lost: The utility is hoping to claw back more than half of the $265 million cut from its budget when the ICC issued an order last month to pause the long-running System Modernization Program to replace 2,000 miles of aging iron pipes below Chicago streets, pending an investigation. “The company understands the Commission’s directive to pause work on SMP; however, the $265 million in work that was paused includes more than $134 million in other critical safety and reliability work outside of SMP,” Peoples Gas spokesperson David Schwartz said in a statement.

    * WBEZ | These conservation-minded Illinois farmers are in a race against climate change to save their soil: Jake Lieb drives his John Deere two-seater around his property and across the shallow Camp Creek. The waterway cuts back and forth through miles of farm fields until it reaches the Sangamon River and eventually pours into Lake Decatur 32 miles away — the man-made source of water for 200,000 people. These are troubled waters. The city of Decatur paid $100 million in 2021 to dredge so much polluted sediment from the lake that it could have filled the Willis Tower seven times.

    * Crain’s | Illinois boosts Amtrak in soaring year for rail travel: Almost 28.6 million customers rode Amtrak nationwide last year, according to fiscal 2023 passenger figures released Thursday. That’s a 24.6% increase from the previous year — albeit still shy of 32 million rides in the 2019 fiscal year. The increase reflects a resurgence in rail travel, which has been slow to bounce back from its struggles during the COVID-19 pandemic. […] The Hiawatha, which connects Chicago to Milwaukee via Glenview, saw a year-over-year increase in passenger activity of 26.9%. The line provided 636,854 customer trips from October 2022 to September 2023, the most of any Midwestern route.

    * Crain’s | Feds and city’s inspector general eye Bally’s casino deal: A federal law enforcement agency and Chicago’s inspector general are looking into the process by which Bally’s won the Chicago casino license, according to people familiar with the matter. Crain’s has learned one inquiry is being led by the U.S. attorney’s office, and stems from complaints lodged by losing bidders. The existence of the federal inquiry was confirmed by Ald. Brian Hopkins, 2nd, a longtime critic of the Lightfoot administration’s handling of the casino process, and by other sources.

    * Sun-Times | South Loop had a hybrid car dealership — a century ago. Now it’s headed toward demolition: In addition to its remarkable car-making history, the former Woods Motor Vehicle building is also a pretty nice example of early Chicago School architecture with its minimalist, grid-like face adorned with three bays of large windows designed to bring in natural light. It would be a mark against the city’s architectural heritage to lose a building of this character and pedigree.

    * Crain’s | Northwestern medical residents announce intent to unionize: The group of physicians across Northwestern’s McGaw Medical Center filed their intent to join the Committee of Interns & Residents, a division of the Service Employees International Union, with the National Labor Relations Board and have requested voluntary recognition of the union from Northwestern management, according to a statement today.

    * SJ-R | Friend-In-Deed, Central Illinois Food Bank team up again for a drive-through giveaway: Friend-In-Deed, started by the late State Journal-Register editor Ed Armstrong in 1960, is looking to raise $85,000 this holiday season to assist with the two food drive-throughs and to help out 100 homeless families from Springfield School District 186. Unlike in some previous years, there is no application required for the drive-through food giveaways.

    * Sun-Times | Jussie Smollett’s 2021 conviction, sentence upheld on appeal: A Cook County jury found Smollett guilty of five counts of disorderly conduct in 2021, and he was sentenced to 30 months of probation, with the first 150 days to be served at Cook County Jail. Smollett appealed the conviction and was released while it was pending after spending six days behind bars. A spokeswoman for the actor said Smollett will appeal Friday’s decision.

    * Tribune | Michigan grad sues state after losing ‘G0BLUE’ license plate: Joseph Hardig III said the plate has been on family vehicles for years. But he was told it was assigned to another car owner when he recently tried to renew it at a Secretary of State office. “My dad’s passed away. I got it from him. It’s meaningful to me. We’re just huge fans and love the university,” Hardig told The Detroit News. Hardig, a suburban Detroit lawyer, is asking a judge to block the state from giving the plate to an Ann Arbor man, who is also a University of Michigan graduate and lives just minutes from the football stadium.

  2 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some campaign updates

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Citing ‘delays’ in Chicago’s procurement process, Pritzker announces $2 million to feed asylum seekers

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The city just can’t get its act together on anything…

Building on the State’s data-driven plan to improve the asylum seeker response, Governor JB Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS), and the Greater Chicago Food Depository announced an additional $4 million investment to provide meals to asylum seekers through the end of the calendar year. The additional $2 million state investment will be matched by philanthropy through the Food Depository.

At the request of the City of Chicago in June 2023, the State has provided $10.5 million in funding to the Greater Chicago Food Depository, a food bank with a network of community-based providers, to deliver meals to asylum seekers while the City worked to procure additional vendors. Due to delays in the procurement process, the State and Food Depository will now contribute an additional $2 million each, to ensure asylum seekers are fed through the month of December. In January, the City of Chicago will assume this responsibility as the State ramps up its shelter, resettlement, and Temporary Protected Status and Employee Authorization Document efforts. The State will also provide the meals at the recently announced shelter sites in Brighton Park and Little Village, which will house up to 2,200 people at full capacity.

“In Illinois – we welcome asylum seeking families with dignity and that means ensuring they don’t go hungry,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “The State is continuing to make strategic investments in the absence of the resources and coordination we continue to advocate for from Congress and the federal government.”

This $2 million investment from the State builds on Governor Pritzker’s recently announced $160 million investment, via IDHS, to improve the asylum-seeker path to self-sufficiency, as well as the $478 million in State funding that has been allocated to the asylum seeker response over Fiscal Years 2023 and 2024.

Before this latest investment, the State provided $10.5 million in funding for food for new arrivals, bringing the total now to $12.5 million. The State began partnering with the Greater Chicago Food Depository for this purpose in June 2023.

“I am grateful to the Greater Chicago Food Depository for continuously meeting this need,” said Dulce Quintero, IDHS Secretary Designate. “The Depository has been an invaluable partner to the State as we continue to address this humanitarian crisis.”

“The Greater Chicago Food Depository believes food is a basic human right. It is a privilege to provide daily meals for asylum seeking new arrivals in our community while continuing our work of serving anyone in need of food across Chicago and Cook County,” said Kate Maehr, Executive Director and CEO of the Food Depository. “Our response for new arrivals has been bolstered by support from the state of Illinois and the generosity of private philanthropy. We are incredibly grateful that the State of Illinois has stepped up again and again this year to protect residents from hunger, both lifelong Illinoisans and our newest neighbors.”

The Greater Chicago Food Depository has worked with the State of Illinois and the City of Chicago to provide food for asylum seeking new arrivals since Texas began busing them to Illinois last summer. This year, the Food Depository’s response has expanded to include daily lunch and dinner, fresh fruit, breakfast items, and hygiene essentials at shelters and police stations across Chicago. The Food Depository’s response has been funded by critical investments from the State of Illinois and generous contributions from private donors.

To supply meals for new arrivals, the Food Depository has been working in partnership with more than 15 minority-owned restaurants and caterers based in neighborhoods across Chicago. By contracting with these local businesses, the Food Depository is supplying up to 20,000 nourishing and culturally affirming meals each day, while investing millions of dollars back into the local community – creating economic impact and jobs for Chicagoans. The response serves as a model of how to address hunger while also guiding funds and resources to neighborhoods that have endured historic disinvestment.

  7 Comments      


Union says Pritzker office intervention at least temporarily prevented likely construction shutdown at migrant camp

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yesterday…

Migrant Camp Sight Target of Iron Workers Picket;
Construction Shutdown Likely

What:
On Thursday, November 30, Iron Workers Local 1 Union filed a notice of intention to picket the Brighton Park migrant camp site on Friday, December 1, which is currently under construction, due to the contractor’s failure to hire certified union ironworkers. The Iron Workers Local 1 Union’s picket line will likely be honored by other union workers, if any, on the site, causing them to lay down their tools and leading to a construction shutdown.

Who:

    · Ken Davis, Business Agent, Iron Workers Local 1 Union
    · John Gardiner, President, Iron Workers Local 1 Union
    · Rank and file Iron Workers from Local 1 Union
    · Scabby The Rat

Where:
Brighton Park, 2822 W. 38th Street, Chicago (corner of 38th and California)

When:
Friday, December 1, 2023; 6 a.m. – 2p.m.

Trade union members almost never cross a picket line, and there are plenty of other unions on that site. A picket would have likely shut the whole thing down.

* Today…

The following statement can be attributed to John Gardiner, President/Business Manager, Iron Workers Union Local 1:

“On Thursday, November 30, Iron Workers Union Local 1 filed a notice of intention to picket the Brighton Park migrant camp site on Friday, December 1, which is currently under construction, due to the contractor’s failure to hire certified union ironworkers. After receiving a call from the governor’s office last night, Thursday, the Iron Workers Local 1 agreed to a 24-hour pause on our picket to allow for negotiations. We paused our picket for 24-hours out of courtesy to the governor’s office. We met virtually this morning with multiple, high-level officials, and will continue to talk throughout the day.”

Apparently, nobody told the governor’s office in advance about the impending labor action until I sent them the union’s press release last night asking for comment.

…Adding… The mayor’s office has reached out to say they had “Multiple conversations on Thursday” with the governor’s office.

[Both releases had a date typo, so I was asked to update the post.]

  29 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Former Kenwood Oakland Community Organization organizer, Chicago Democratic Socialist Caucus member and second-term Chicago Ald. Jeanette Taylor was on Ben Joravsky’s show

Joravsky: As you said, we’ve got some work to do in the movement.

Taylor: Absolutely.

Joravsky: What do you mean by that?

Taylor: A) we should not be on the Fifth Floor. And I’m speaking my whole heart. I feel like, and I’ve said this to them, and so whoever get the backlash, come on with it because I’m ready for it.

We were not ready because we haven’t been in government long enough to know how government really runs. You still got Rahm’s, you still got Daddy Daley’s people still in these committees, still in these departments. And so we got some uprooting to do.

But we just weren’t, I felt like we’re not ready and it’s showing out in the wash. I don’t gotta say it, people see it.

And we stopped doing the most important thing that movements do, and that means organize. Ain’t no way we’re on the Fifth Floor and we’re having all these issues and now they’re talking about he’s going to be a one-term mayor. Because we ain’t doing the thing that the movement does best, and that’s to organize our people and get people to see the entire picture, not the part of the picture or not a part of a conversation that they came in on.

Half of the people that are hollering at us that come to City Hall are not things that City Hall can fix. They are things that City Hall initiated, but they are not things that City Hall can fix. Why not take those people to the side and say, Hey, how do we help you? How do we do this? Well, we won’t do that.

We’re pretending like now we got the power let us show you how it’s supposed to be done. And we look real stupid right now.

The full show is here.

…Adding… I wrote this in comments, then decided to front-page it…

===Practitioners of “movement” politics are intellectually wired to operate as disrupters — or as an opposition party. Being in charge is not part of what they do.===

While mostly true, the alderperson’s comments are spot on.

The Brighton Park fiasco is a great case in point. They could’ve had people canvassing that neighborhood to calm folks down and counter the misinformation. The CTU has plenty of front groups and allies that could be dispatched.

Also, Johnson’s father is a pastor. He’s tapped in to a huge church network. Why did it take the mayor so long to talk to churches about taking in asylum-seekers? Why didn’t he bring pastors in and urge them to calm down their parishioners with facts instead of inciting fear and hate?

I could go on, but why bother?

  42 Comments      


Not-for-profits at risk as state funding nears end

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a January 2021 press release

Using revenue from adult-use cannabis sales, the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority (ICJIA) today announced 80 grants totaling $31.5 million to organizations to help the communities hardest hit by the failed war on drugs. The organizations’ work includes violence prevention, legal aid, and re-entry services.

The grants are part of the Restore, Reinvest, and Renew (R3) Program, which was created as a key equity element of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act (CRTA), signed by Governor Pritzker in 2019. The law requires that 25 percent of all cannabis revenue be used to support communities impacted by economic disinvestment, violence, and the severe and disproportionate damage caused by the war on drugs, largely and disproportionately impacted low income Illinoisans and communities of color.

Awardees include nonprofit organizations, local units of government, tax-exempt faith-based organizations, businesses, and other community organizations that serve residents of—or are based in—designated eligible R3 zones.

That first round of funding was known as Cohort 1. The funding for Cohort 1 will end in January. Cohort 2 was started in July of 2022, and it will run through June of 2025.

But if you are one of those initial 80 grant recipients and you didn’t make it into Cohort 2, or have programs that aren’t funded by Cohort 2, then you’re gonna have to wait until at least the fall of next year to apply for the third round of state grants.

* The Children’s Place Association is one of those groups. Here’s Cinaiya Stubbs, the association’s CEO…

The decision by the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority to close out cannabis-funded, anti-violence programs on January 31, 2024 – without the next round of funding in place until fall 2024 at the earliest – for the 1st cohort of community providers, such as The Children’s Place Association, means that, for example, the care we provide to more than 90 youth ranging from kindergarten to 8th grade, and 15 community families in and around Humboldt Park will abruptly end and some staff will need to be let go.

The better decision by ICJIA would have been to have a “funding bridge” in place to prevent the interruption of services to families across Illinois and loss of valuable staff who may never return.

That last sentence is important. As we saw during the turbulent Rauner era, once service providers fully or partially shut down and lay off workers, it’s super difficult to build those groups back up again. This is literally human services infrastructure, and it can’t be replaced nearly as easily as physical infrastructure like a damaged bridge.

* Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton chairs the R3 board. So I asked her office for comment…

While Cohort 1 funding period is ending after 3 years in compliance Grant Accountability and Transparency Act, Cohort 2 continues to provide $133 million in programming in R3-eligible areas throughout Illinois. Those funds won’t expire until July 2025 and will again overlap with future Cohort grant cycles. Qualifying Cohort 1 grantees may apply for future R3 funds and any other ICJIA-administered state violence prevention grants.

The R3 program is designed to create a pathway to funding for qualifying grassroots community organizations in a process that is fair and equitable. Grants are awarded via a competitive process to ensure funding is available and accessible in each R3 area.

It’s our goal to ensure that communities throughout the state that have been disproportionally impacted by the war on drugs can have equitable access to R3 grants. We will continue to collaborate with ICJIA and continue to invest in the people and communities of Illinois.

Cold comfort to the groups that are losing out.

  25 Comments      


Illinois Supreme Court again cites the plain language of a law to overturn lower court’s ruling

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC 7 in January

Data show that 40% of all pedestrians struck last year in Chicago were victims of hit-and-run crashes.

The ABC7 I-Team talked to one victim who said her court battle is an insurance claim wake-up call, for both walkers and bike riders.

One local woman thought her auto insurance would cover her when she was struck by a hit and run driver. When that didn’t happen, she brought her battle to court. […]

But in court, Direct Auto Insurance Company said in order to file a claim for a payout under uninsured motorist coverage, the customer must have been inside an automobile at the time of the hit-and-run.

* The circuit court sided with the insurance company. The appellate court reversed that decision

The appellate court said it didn’t matter that Direct Auto’s policy states that coverage is available only to insureds who are injured while they are occupants of an insured vehicle.

“The terms of an insurance policy that conflict with a statute are void and unenforceable,” the majority opinion says. “Similarly, insurance policy terms cannot circumvent the underlying purpose of a statute in force at the time the policy is issued.”

* And yesterday, the Illinois Supreme Court sided with the appellate court. Sun-Times

The Illinois Supreme Court ruled Thursday that insured pedestrians or bicyclists struck by a hit-and-run or uninsured driver should be entitled to uninsured motorist coverage from their insurance companies.

The court said auto insurance companies whose policies include language requiring a person to be in an insured motor vehicle to qualify for uninsured motorist coverage are violating both the Illinois Insurance Code and public policy. […]

Attorneys for Direct Auto could not immediately be reached for comment.

* From the opinion

The plain language of section 143a of the Insurance Code makes clear that an insurance policy cannot be “renewed, delivered, or issued for delivery” in Illinois unless it provides coverage to “any person” for injuries “arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle.” A bicyclist injured by an uninsured motorist vehicle is a “person” who suffered injuries arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of “a motor vehicle.” Therefore, the injured person’s status as an occupant of a vehicle is irrelevant since the statute includes “any person” in the protected category.

* From the law firm which fought this case all the way to the top

“If you ride a bike in our streets, or are crossing the street, you can have the peace of mind knowing that if you are injured by a hit-and-run or uninsured driver, your insurance will cover you. And if they deny that claim, Disparti Law will be there to stand behind you for what is right,” continues Larry Disparti, Founder of Disparti Law Group.

  6 Comments      


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

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: The Illinois Supreme Court ruled FOID records are exempt from public disclosure. Capitol News Illinois

    - The case revolved around a 2011 amendment to the Freedom of Information Act that exempts from public disclosure the names and information of people who have applied for or received FOID cards or concealed carry permits.
    - In a 7-0 ruling, the court said the Illinois State Police acted properly when it denied FOIA requests from individuals who sought copies of letters explaining why their FOID cards had been denied or revoked.
    - The court also said those individuals could have obtained those records through other means.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

  4 Comments      


Live coverage

Friday, Dec 1, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to follow the Ed Burke trial.

  Comments Off      


Afternoon roundup

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Donations have been a bit on the slow side today, so please click here and help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks!

* Background is here if you need it. I asked the governor’s office for a response to the US Steel layoff announcements. Here’s Gov. JB Pritzker…

“U.S. Steel’s Granite City operation is a union shop with a long history in Illinois, and it’s alarming that company executives would announce these layoffs alongside a move to a right-to-work state where they can pay workers less and subject them to worse working conditions. The lack of responsible communication between the company, its employees and the state is potentially unlawful and the Department of Labor will work to ensure workers’ rights are protected. DCEO will continue to provide rapid response services to those affected by the layoffs to assist with finding new employment. Illinois’s top-tier workforce cannot be easily replaced—the diligence, training, and hard work of these U.S. Steel employees makes them a valuable asset to companies who care about producing a top-tier product.”

* IDOL…

The Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) has issued a subpoena to the United States Steel Corporation (US Steel) to investigate its compliance with the Illinois Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN).

The Illinois WARN Act requires employers with 75 or more full-time employees to give workers and state and local government officials 60 days advance notice of a plant closing or mass layoff.

IDOL was informed Tuesday, November 28, 2023, of a mass, impending layoff at Granite City Works in Granite City. This follows layoffs that were announced in September, although US Steel characterized those as temporary at the time. More than 1,000 workers will have lost their jobs at the conclusion of the layoffs.

“Mass layoffs impact entire communities,” said IDOL Director Jane Flanagan. “At the Department of Labor, we want to ensure that workers are given the required notice under law before they are laid off. It is also our intention to make certain United States Steel Corporation has acted in compliance with the WARN Act.”

An employer that fails to provide notice as required by the Act is liable to each affected employee for back pay and benefits for the period of the violation, up to a maximum of 60 days. The employer may also be subject to a civil penalty of up to $500 for each day of the notice violation.

* WCIA

It has been more than a year since the Dobbs decision changed the course of abortion access across the country. The outcome is exactly what some experts expected.

Some states banned the procedure while others opened their borders for people seeking care. Illinois was one of them. Planned Parenthood Illinois says the numbers have gone up significantly.

Planned Parenthood reported a 54 percent increase in abortions since overturning Roe versus Wade and a 700% increase in traveling from outside of the state. […]

Since the Dobbs decision, patients traveling from 29 states now make up 85 percent of all abortion appointments, Planned Parenthood announced the first mobile abortion clinic, and vasectomy appointments went up by 97 percent.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Center Square | Some Illinois law enforcement say enforcing gun ban violations not a priority: During recent public hearings, the agency said prosecution of first and subsequent offenses will be up to the 102 different county state’s attorneys. “That’s going to be up to the state’s attorney and the courts,” ISP attorney Suzanne Bond said. […] “We recognize that it is the law and we respect it. We also have limited resources and have to set priorities for the office, and this will not be one of our top priorities,” [McHenry County, State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally] told The Center Square, noting that each case will have unique circumstances.

    * WAND | One Aim Illinois: Lawmakers, advocates call healing critical in gun violence prevention: “We need to have those that are at the forefront, the ones that are most impacted, the ones that are ostracized and sort of the forgotten voices,” said Monse Ayala, an organizer with Increase the Peace. “That’s a lot of our young people. We need to have agency over how we are tackling this and what they need from us and how we can do better for them.”

    * Press Release | IDNR receives grant to recognize and research African American heritage properties in southern Illinois: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) has been awarded a $75,000 grant from the National Park Service to recognize significant African American heritage properties in southern Illinois. Illinois was one of 21 projects in 16 states and the District of Columbia to receive funding from the Underrepresented Community Grants (URC) program through the Historic Preservation Fund administered by the National Park Service.

    * RiverBender | Gov. Pritzker Celebrates Completion Of I-280 Over Mississippi River In Quad Cities: The Baker Bridge opened in 1973 and today carries more than 28,000 vehicles a day, almost 20% of which are trucks. The new deck is the first replacement since the bridge opened. A $49.7 million project began in 2021 with the demolition and replacement of the westbound bridge deck, followed by the eastbound bridge deck in 2022. The final stage of the project, which patched and resurfaced I-280 from the bridge to the Illinois 92 interchange, was combined with another $16 million improvement that extended the work from the Illinois 92 interchange to east of the Milan Beltway. Additional work included bridge painting and lighting upgrades at Illinois 92.

    * WCIA | Meta launches new data center in Illinois: Meta officials joined Governor J.B. Pritzker and other state leaders to celebrate the start of the data center in DeKalb. Officials say the facility will bring 200 jobs and represents a nearly $1 billion investment to Illinois’ economy. […] Meta officials chose the chose DeKalb area because it offered excellent infrastructure, access to renewable energy, and a strong talent for both constructing and operating the center. The data center is supported by 100% renewable energy, officials said.

    * RiverBender | Gov. Pritzker Celebrates Opening Of Meta’s Dekalb Data Center: Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined local elected officials, Meta leadership, and business and academic leaders to celebrate the opening of Meta’s Data Center in Dekalb. The data center is now fully operational and is supported by 100% renewable energy

    * The Crusader | Pritzker Administration, IDPH to host 2023 Illinois Minority Health Conference in Bloomington December 4 & 5: The conference at Illinois State University is designed to share knowledge on health disparities and social justice issues; build competencies among healthcare professionals; and develop collaborations with service providers and community partners aimed at more effectively serving minorities and other disadvantaged communities in Illinois.

    * Dispatch-Argus | Henry County board member announces candidancy for Illinois’ 37th State Senate District: Republican Henry County Board member Tim Yager is running for the 37th State Senate District in Illinois. […] Republican Sen. Win Stoller holds the seat. Stoller was elected in 2020 and announced in August that he would not seek reelection.

    * WGN | Kankakee County moving to encrypt public safety scanners: The Kankakee County Communication Center is beginning the project soon and starting with police channels. That is expected to take three to six months and then fire/EMS channels will be encrypted. The general public and media outlets will not be able to hear transmissions in real time. The county is citing three reasons for the move; officer safety, citizen privacy and reporting accuracy. The county said agencies will distribute information through social media when it’s “appropriate and factual.

    * Crain’s | Ford: UAW strike cut profits by $1.7B, new contract to cost $8.8B: Ford Motor Co. said Thursday its new four-and-a-half-year labor contract with the UAW is expected to raise costs by $8.8 billion, or an average of about $900 per vehicle by 2028. Ford said it lost $1.7 billion in profits from the union’s 41-day strike against the automaker. The company now expects $10 billion to $10.5 billion in adjusted earnings before interest and taxes, down from previous guidance of $11 billion to $12 billion.

    * ABC Chicago | Migrants in Chicago: City won’t use Amundsen Park fieldhouse as migrant shelter: “The city did a really terrible job at handling this,” Donald Glover, president of the Amundsen Park Advisory Council, said. “They held our community and our park hostage for almost 60 days. We couldn’t use the park. Our kids couldn’t use it, our seniors couldn’t use it and they could have been more transparent. Hopefully in the future they will include rather than the exclude people.”

    * CBS Chicago | 17 Chicago churches to take in migrants from police stations, as work begins on tent camp in Brighton Park: Dubbed the “Unity Initiative,” the mayor on Tuesday joined a group of faith leaders and philanthropic groups to announce that 17 churches will begin providing shelter and other services for migrants as soon as Wednesday. The number of churches participating in the program could expand later. John Zayas, associate pastor at Grace and Peace Church in Austin, said the goal is to start sending buses to police stations on Wednesday.

    * WBEZ | New seating protocols at Chicago’s City Council meetings draw sharp criticisms: The Rules Committee, which oversees the council’s security team, outlined the new protocols to WBEZ, but has not published them publicly. The committee clarified on Thursday that members of the public will not be turned away if the third floor is full, and will be allowed to sit on the second floor in that instance. The committee also clarified this seating protocol is for full council meetings, not committee meetings.

    * Daily Egyptian | Set up “to fail:” Air Traffic Control shortage casts clouds over SIU aviation program: Two sources close to the situation said a newly hired controller who didn’t get enough training created the hazardous conditions. The Daily Egyptian is granting these sources anonymity, but their stories corroborate each other’s. One source said, “So what happened was, there was a new tower controller who has recently…been signed off for solo operations that he could conduct without being supervised…he just lost the whole picture. He was clearing the wrong airplanes, getting people mixed-up, sending people towards each other.”

    * Pew | State Automated Retirement Programs Would Reduce Taxpayer Burden From Insufficient Savings: Today, as many as 56 million private sector workers lack access to a retirement savings plan through their jobs. The analysts who conducted the study for The Pew Charitable Trusts estimate that such limited savings could lead to a cumulative additional cost to the federal government of $964 billion between 2021 and 2040. State spending on these programs, stemming from administrative costs, required state match formulas, and supplemental state benefits, totals another $334 billion over that period. And social spending does not replace the entirety of the gap, requiring many households to reduce their standard of living in retirement. … Eleven states have already launched automated savings programs to help more private sector workers routinely put money away for retirement. This year, lawmakers in more states are introducing measures to expand those opportunities. These bills create savings options—sometimes referred to as Work & Save or Secure Choice—that allow people to set up state-sponsored individual retirement accounts (IRAs). Typically, workers at companies without employer-based benefits are enrolled automatically but can opt out. The states that already approved programs are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Maine, New York, New Jersey, Oregon, and Virginia.

    * Tribune | Advocates, survivors of detainees mourn 16 who died in Cook County Jail: “Every person back there is a human being, and they have loved ones like us,” Cassandra Greer Lee said, nodding across the street to one of the buildings in the jail complex on South California Avenue. Lee’s husband Nickolas was the third person to die of COVID-19 while in custody in April 2020. She stood with Vicki Willis, whose son Alteriq Pleasant died in custody last year.

    * NYT | Airlines Race Toward a Future of Powering Their Jets With Corn: “We’re on track to massively increase water usage without any real sense of how sensitive our aquifers are,” said Jeffrey Broberg, who is concerned about groundwater in Minnesota, a major corn state, where he is a water-use consultant and founder of the Minnesota Well Owners Organization. United Airlines this year signed a deal with a Nebraska ethanol company to buy enough sustainable aviation fuel, as the biofuel is known, to power 50,000 flights a year. In August, Delta announced a plan to create a sustainable fuel hub in Minnesota, a major corn state. The Biden administration could decide on its tax incentives for the industry as soon as December.

    * ABC Chicago | Illinois Holocaust survivors write letter to share powerful message: The video says, “Over 80 years ago our lives changed irrevocably. As Jewish children in Europe during the Holocaust, we experienced the destruction of our families, traditions and communities.” “When they saw the attacks on Israeli on October 7, obviously it was so traumatizing, and re-traumatizing for so may of them, they’ve said over and over again that in a moment of crisis, that’s not the time to retreat, it’s the time to lean in,” Bernard Cherkasov, CEO of the Illinois Holocaust Museum, said. “There is no justification for Hamas’s terror…The plight of civilians trapped in a war zone is one that we also know all too well,” the video says.

  2 Comments      


Supreme Court rules HIPAA workers exempt from BIPA

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a September story by Capitol News Illinois

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

It’s the same act that formed the basis of several high-profile lawsuits that have led to massive penalties or settlements, such as the $650 million Facebook agreed to pay its Illinois users after it was alleged to have misused biometric data.

The nurses allege that, by requiring the use of fingerprint scanners to open medicine cabinets, Northwestern Medicine, UChicago Medicine and Becton, Dickinson and Co. – the company that makes the medicine cabinets – violated BIPA.

According to court filings, the hospital systems did not collect written releases allowing them to use the fingerprint data, nor did the hospitals provide information about how the biometrics would be stored or eventually destroyed. They also failed to obtain consent to disclose the fingerprint data to third-party vendors that host it.

* The Supreme Court unanimously sided with the hospitals today. The justices said two questions were at issue

“Whether the exclusion in Section 10 of [the Biometric Information Privacy Act] for ‘information collected, used, or stored for health care treatment, payment, or operations under the federal Health [I]nsurance [P]ortability and Accountability Act of 1996’ [(HIPAA)] applies to biometric information of health care workers (as opposed to patients) collected, used or stored for health care treatment, payment or operations under HIPAA,”

and

“Does finger-scan information collected by a health care provider from its employees fall within the [Act’s] exclusion for ‘information collected, used, or stored for health care treatment, payment, or operations under [HIPAA],’ when the employee’s finger-scan information is used for purposes related to ‘health care,’ ‘treatment,’ ‘payment,’ or ‘operations’ as those terms are defined by the HIPAA statute and regulations?”

The appellate court had earlier said no to both, finding that “if the legislature intended to exclude all health care workers from the Act’s protections, it would have done so.” Hospitals freaked out, but the Illinois Supreme Court just ruled the biometric scans were excluded from the state’s infamous Biometric Information Privacy Act, or BIPA.

* Like with the other Supreme Court case we discussed today, the plain language of the statute was at the heart of the matter…

When the statutory language is plain and unambiguous, a court may not “depart from a statute’s plain language by reading into the law exceptions, limitations, or conditions that the legislature did not express.” Schultz v. Illinois Farmers Insurance Co., 237 Ill. 2d 391, 408 (2010). “Nevertheless, in construing a statute, the court may consider the reason for the law, the problems sought to be remedied, the purposes to be achieved, and the consequences of construing the statute one way or another.” McDonald v. Symphony Bronzeville Park, LLC, 2022 IL 126511, ¶ 18.

* Yadda, yadda, yadda and after a whole lot of word parsing

Pursuant to its plain language, the Act excludes from its protections the biometric information of health care workers where that information is collected, used, or stored for health care treatment, payment, or operations, as those functions are defined by HIPAA. A health care worker’s biometric information, used to permit access to medication dispensing stations for patient care, falls under “information collected, used, or stored for health care treatment, payment, or operations under [HIPAA]” and is exempt from the Act’s protections pursuant to section 10 of the Act. […]

For the foregoing reasons, we answer the certified questions in the affirmative, reverse the judgment of the appellate court, and remand the cause to the circuit court for further proceedings.

[Hat tip: Hannah Meisel]

  1 Comment      


ISP creates online form to help Illinoisans report suspected corruption

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

To help root out public corruption in Illinois, the Illinois State Police (ISP) Special Investigations Unit (SIU) has created an online form for the public to report suspected corruption directly to ISP.

“The Illinois State Police Special Investigations Unit is dedicated to seeking out those who abuse their position and power to take advantage of others, betraying the public’s trust,” said ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly. “By making it easier for the public to confidentially report suspected corruption, we can begin restoring the public’s trust in government. ISP will continue to work with its partners in law enforcement to investigate misconduct and corruption.”

ISP created an online form where the public can provide information confidentially to the ISP SIU about suspected corruption. Examples of public corruption may include an elected official steering contracts to friends in exchange for a monetary kickback, overbilling a contractor and embezzling the money, personally benefiting from federal/state-funded programs, wire fraud, and money laundering.

The online form is for suspected public corruption allegations only. Individuals may be unsure to which law enforcement agency or department they should report claims of public corruption. Having allegations reported to one place will streamline the process and allow ISP to respond more quickly. ISP will triage all online submissions and determine the correct agency to handle the investigation.

Director Kelly established the Statewide SIU within the Division of Criminal Investigation in March 2020. SIU focuses on public corruption crimes and conducting investigations into criminal misconduct by elected officials and government appointees at the state, county, and local levels. SIU handles allegations of intimidation by public officials, fraud as it relates to state and local government procurement contracts, election fraud, misuse of a public official position, and acting as a source of influence to benefit from matters concerning the allocation of business enterprise, contracts, state-funded programs, kickbacks, and bribery. Since its creation, SIU has opened 82 cases, including dozens of joint cases with federal law enforcement agencies.

In one case, SIU investigated allegations of theft and official misconduct against a former township road commissioner accused of using the township credit card to make personal purchases. SIU found the purchases were made over two and a half years and totaled approximately $27,300. After SIU’s extensive investigation, the former commissioner faced 22 count of felony charges. He pled guilty and was sentenced to 18 months of probation and $27,300 restitution.
-
In another case, SIU investigated allegations of theft and fraud by a former county coroner. SIU found the former coroner and his wife used taxpayer dollars to fund travel to other states for their son’s sports tournaments, forged official documents, and used a county credit card to buy gas for their personal vehicles for almost two years. SIU estimated the total thefts to be in the tens of thousands of dollars. SIU arrested both the former coroner and his wife who were charged with numerous felonies, including Theft of Government Funds, Unlawful Use of a Credit Card, Conspiracy to Commit Theft, Conspiracy to Commit Credit Card Fraud, and Official Misconduct. The coroner pled guilty and was sentenced to six months in jail, four years of probation, and ordered to repay $32,817.05.

The online form can be found on the ISP website under the Division of Criminal Investigations, Special Investigations Unit at https://isp.illinois.gov/CriminalInvestigations/SIUComplaintDisclaimerForm

I clicked through. You don’t need to include your name or address, but an email and phone number are required.

Thoughts?

…Adding… Maybe somebody could report this one

At issue is the future of the building at 320 E. Main St. in Rochester that once housed The Alibi, a bar and restaurant. The building’s most recent tenant was Ben Suerdieck, who was evicted June 13 by a Sangamon County judge for failing to pay $9,075 in rent.

The week after Ben Suerdieck was evicted, his former landlord, who sought to reopen a business in the building, had his application for a liquor license rejected. The decision was made by Village President Joe Suerdieck, who is also the municipality’s liquor commissioner and the father of Ben.

  17 Comments      


Unclear on budgetary concepts

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

Aside from the tens of millions of dollars for housing migrants, the state budget has $550 million in taxpayer subsidies for the health care of migrants over 65.

Um, no. That healthcare spending line is only for undocumented immigrants and it’s only for those who are 42 and older. Asylum-seekers are not undocumented. They’re covered under a different program that qualifies for federal matching funds.

* Meanwhile, this is from a recent Sun-Times editorial

The Johnson administration is now spending $40 million a month on the migrant emergency — which, in its defense, is not a crisis of its own making. Still, migrants have been arriving by the busload since August 2022, and every candidate for mayor surely knew his or her administration would have to deal with the growing emergency. […]

At the current spending clip, the $150 million budgeted for the entire year will evaporate in a little less than four months.

The city’s budget is also “balanced” by using one-time revenue of $786.5 million, the editorial board noted. One-time revenue is fine, as long as it’s only used for one-time expenditures.

* From a new BGA report

A proposed extension of Chicago’s collective bargaining agreement with the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 would cost the city hundreds of millions of dollars over a three-and-a-half-year period – and would include the largest set of city employee raises in Chicago’s recent history.

The potential deal, announced by Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration in late October, would update and extend the city’s contract with its rank-and-file police officers. […]

Johnson’s proposal includes a 5% salary bump for FOP-represented police in 2024 and 2025, up from the 2.5% and 2% raises for those years that were agreed upon in the Lightfoot administration’s extension. A larger raise for 2024 was not included in the roughly $2 billion appropriation for the police department passed by City Council earlier this month, meaning approval of a contract with Johnson’s proposed terms would immediately put the city approximately $27.7 million over budget for 2024.

So, he finalized the contract weeks before the budget was approved, but didn’t include the added costs into the budget?

Yes, it’s a small amount in relation to the size of the overall budget, but the city is currently scrambling like mad to find change under its couch cushions to deal with the aslym-seekers, so every single dollar matters.

Revelations like these really make me wonder what other deficits are buried in the city’s budget.

  3 Comments      


A dumb rule that needs to end

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico

State Rep. Kam Buckner is urging transportation officials to modernize procedures so that riders on Metra Electric trains can also use South Shore trains. “Many Chicagoans have stood on the platform of our Museum Campus, watched a South Shore train pull up, open the doors, and been told by the conductor they are not allowed to enter that train to ride,” he wrote in a letter to leaders of the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District (NICTD) and Metra Metropolitan Rail. “I have had that exact experience. The doors close and they are left at the station, waiting for the next Metra train.”

Looking at legislation: Buckner, who is passionate about rail transportation, said he’s considering filing legislation that will require outbound trains on the South Shore Line to pick up riders at all stops. He sent similar letters to the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) and the Regional Transportation Authority (RTA) about his concerns.

* From Rep. Buckner’s letter

I live along the Metra Electric and I have often wished I could take advantage of the South Shore trains to catch a ride up to Millennium Station. That, however, is currently prohibited. Many Chicagoans, have stood on the platform of our Museum Campus, watched a South Shore train pull up, open the doors, and been told by the conductor they are not allowed to enter that train to ride, I have had that exact experience. The doors close and they are left at the station, waiting for the next Metra train. At a time when we are scrambling to prepare for transit’s fiscal cliff and working to earn every single rider back to transit we possibly can, intentionally restricting service to make transit more inconvenient and less attractive is malfeasance.

This is a policy created decades ago that we current policymakers have all inherited. It’s the starkest example of how we need to reimagine our services and our shared transportation assets to better serve the residents who pay to maintain them.

* This is just so ridiculous and is apparently based on an old non-compete agreement. NICTD is the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District and MED is the Metra Electric District

  6 Comments      


Question of the day: 2023 Golden Horseshoe Awards

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yes, it’s that time of year again, when we single out the best of the best of the Statehouse world.

We generally start with the best “session” restaurants and taverns, but the area we used to call “The Sandbox” just doesn’t dominate after-hours congregating like it did pre-pandemic. Places have closed (including my formerly favorite hangout) and out-of-towners are living further away from downtown. Also, people just don’t drink alcohol like they once did. These days, you can run into Statehouse types almost anywhere after session. Heck, I met up with some folks at Island Bay Yacht Club during veto session - and that’s about as far away from 2nd and Capitol as you can get. But some of the old school hangouts are still going strong. It was tough getting a table at Maldaner’s and Saputo’s during veto, for example.

So, the award titles have been slightly changed to reflect reality…

    * Best place to gather for dinner during session weeks

    * Best place to gather for drinks, etc. during session weeks

Our rules haven’t changed, however. Submissions with no explanations will not count. Please justify your votes by telling us why your faves should win. Also, please do your very best to nominate in both categories. Enjoy!

* Also, if you haven’t yet contributed or can afford to kick in a few more bucks, click here and help Lutheran Social Services buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks!

  26 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Starting off with HB4243 from Rep. Jed Davis (R-Newark)

Amends the Illinois Clinical Laboratory and Blood Bank Act. Requires a blood bank to test or have tested donated blood for evidence of any COVID-19 vaccine and any other messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) vaccine components, and requires a blood donor to disclose during each blood donor screening process whether the blood donor has received a COVID-19 vaccine or any other mRNA vaccine during the donor’s lifetime. Requires blood or blood components to include on their labels a designation that the blood or blood components tested positive for evidence of a COVID-19 vaccine or any other mRNA vaccine component or was drawn from a blood donor who disclosed the donor have received a COVID-19 vaccine or any other mRNA vaccine during the donor’s lifetime. Provides that the Department of Public Health must adopt rules to implement the changes made by the amendatory Act.

* HB4235 was filed by Rep. Charles Meier (R-Okawville) on Monday

Amends the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act. Provides that, notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Illinois Emergency Management Agency must adopt amendments to its rules governing the administration of the Emergency Management Performance Grant program to ensure that every county emergency services and disaster agency in the State receives a base allotment of no less than $25,000 per fiscal year, with the remaining allocation of funds to be distributed to county emergency services and disaster agencies as deemed appropriate by the Director of the Agency. Provides that, in distributing the remaining allocation of funds, the Director shall consider, among other things, any limitation on a county’s tax base, the increased costs of accreditation requirements for smaller agencies, and the increase in the number of disasters that affect smaller counties in the State. Effective immediately.

* HB4239 from Rep. Mary Flowers (D-Chicago)

Amends the Medical School Curriculum Act. Provides that, for medical students who, on or after the effective date of the amendatory Act, matriculate into a medical school that is subject to the Act, the minimum required curriculum shall also include a medical humanities course that covers, among other things, the effects of institutional racism on medical education, medical research, and medical care in the United States. Effective immediately.

* Rep. Jenn Ladisch Douglass (D-Elmhurst) filed HB4240

Amends the Downstate Forest Preserve District Act. Restores language concerning how the terms of elected commissioners are to be determined for a forest preserve district having boundaries that are coextensive with the boundaries of a county having a population of more than 800,000 but less than 3,000,000. Specifies that the changes made by the amendatory Act are to be deemed to have been in continuous effect since November 15, 2021 (the effective date of the Public Act that deleted language concerning how the terms of elected commissioners of such a district are to be determined) and are to remain in effect until lawfully repealed. Provides that all actions that were taken on or after 2021 and before the effective date of the amendatory Act by a downstate forest preserve district or any other person and that are consistent with or in reliance on the changes made by the amendatory Act are validated. Effective immediately.

* HB4245 from Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield)

Amends the Illinois Act on Aging. In provisions concerning the Community Care Program (program), removes from the list of program services clearinghouse information provided by senior citizen home owners who want to rent rooms to or share living space with other senior citizens. In a provision requiring the Department on Aging to perform certain actions to increase the effectiveness of the program, removes a requirement that the Department ensure the determination of need tool is accurate in determining program participants’ level of need. In a provision concerning pre-service certification for in-home workers who provide housekeeping or home aide services, requires employing agencies to pay wages to in-home workers for pre-service and in-service training. Provides that the Department may authorize (rather than shall delay) program services until an applicant is determined eligible for medical assistance under the Illinois Public Aid Code. Removes a provision requiring the Department to implement co-payments under the program. Requires the Department to make annual (rather than quarterly) reports on care coordination unit performance and adherence to service guidelines. Removes expired rate levels. Provides that all final administrative decisions of the Department are subject to judicial review. Makes other changes.

* Rep. Kimberly du Buclet (D-Chicago) introduced HR515 last week

Declares November 24, 2023 as Buddy Guy Day.

  19 Comments      


LSSI Holiday Drive: Let’s build on this wave of kindness

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rich asked me to write my first-ever pitch to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for foster kids. So here goes!

Yesterday, an anonymous donor matched $10,000 in contributions to help buy Christmas gifts for foster children. We raised $27,000 yesterday alone, bringing the total donations since Tuesday to more than $34,000!

Let’s try to build on this wave of kindness today.

* As Rich has already told you, we have 2,530 foster kids to help this year. Gifts average $25 each, so that’s a total need of $63,250. Thanks to your donations, 1,379 children will receive presents. But that’s only half as many presents as there are kids to help, so please, click here and contribute what you can.

What they’re saying:

* Mariah Heinz, Director of Donor Engagement at Lutheran Social Services of Illinois, shared a couple of quotes that I thought you’d like to see…

LSSI Foster Parent: “My foster children have received Christmas gifts from LSSI. I never expected it! They just appeared. The kids loved them and it helped ease the stress of the holidays, which was a gift to me! I know people who give don’t witness in person what a difference their gifts make, but I can tell you they do make a difference, more than they will ever know.”

LSSI Employee: “Being able to provide our families with a gift for Christmas is impactful for both the families and the staff. Many of our families struggle every day day to meet their basic needs, so the idea of buying Christmas presents is usually a dream. Providing them with the mechanism to make their dreams possible reminds us what is truly important during this holiday season, nourishing the human spirit.”

“Lutheran Social Services of Illinois is the largest foster care provider in the state, offering traditional foster care as well as therapeutic foster care which serves children who have experienced severe trauma,” LSSI’s Heinz said. “Children in foster care often live with much uncertainty. A Christmas present brings joy and normalcy, and helps build a bond with a foster family. It lets them know that they matter.”

Extra contributions are used to meet urgent needs for the kids, Heinz said, including things like buying new boots for growing feet, providing warm coats, or supplying clothes and diapers for children who enter care unexpectedly without personal items.

How You Can Help:

Your support is crucial in ensuring that every child in foster care experiences the joy and normalcy that every child deserves, especially during the holiday season. Click here to make a contribution. Thanks!!!

  2 Comments      


Illinois Supreme Court rules people can’t legally FOIA their FOID card info

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From September

The [Illinois Supreme Court case] case stems from two people requesting public records regarding why their FOID cards, a state-issued identification required in Illinois to own or buy firearms and ammunition, were either revoked or suspended. The plaintiffs’ FOIA requests to Illinois State Police were denied. After challenges, the case made it to the Illinois Supreme Court on Tuesday.

Illinois State Police attorney Valerie Quinn said that they can’t release such personal information through FOIA and the proper way to request such information is through the Firearms Services Bureau.

“No one is trying to keep people’s personal applications and denial letters a secret from them but the Firearms Services Bureau needs to be able to verify that you are who you say you are before releasing copies of your confidential information,” Quinn said. […]

Representing the plaintiffs, attorney Thomas Maag said going through the FSB isn’t conducive.

“They don’t answer the telephone for hours at a time. They don’t answer emails for days and or weeks at a time,” Maag said. “I invite this court to go to their website and dial the telephone number and see how many hours it takes to get a person, if you even can.”

They’re not a third party seeking their own address or other personal information, Maag said.

* The Supreme Court issued a unanimous ruling today, with Justice Joy Cunningham writing the opinion

The appellate court agreed with the trial court that the legislature’s use of the plural terms “names” and “people,” rather than the singular terms “name” and “person”, meant the exemption set forth in section 7.5(v) does not apply to a request for one’s own FOID card information. According to the appellate court, the term “people,” by its plain meaning, necessitates more than a single individual. To interpret section 7.5(v) as applying to a request for one’s own information, the court concluded, would render the term “people” meaningless. […]

The appellate court then rejected ISP’s argument that there is no way for it to verify that the FOIA requester is, in fact, the person whose information is being sought, finding it “unpersuasive as the individual’s written FOIA request, by necessity to identify the application and denial letter sought, should provide ISP with sufficient information to demonstrate that the requester was seeking his/her own information.” According to the appellate court, if the request is insufficient, additional verifying information could be required before release of the information. […]

ISP contends the appellate court erred in its interpretation of section 7.5(v). According to ISP, section 7.5(v) is a blanket exemption prohibiting the disclosure of all FOID card information under FOIA, and there is no exception for individuals who are seeking their own information. We agree. […]

In support of its interpretation of section 7.5(v), the appellate court emphasized that the statute uses the plural terms “names” and “people” and, therefore, must not exempt from disclosure an individual’s request for his or her own information. However, section 1.03 of the Statute on Statutes provides that “[w]ords importing the singular number may extend and be applied to several persons or things, and words importing the plural number may include the singular.” This is a well-settled principle of statutory construction. […]

Section 7(1)(b), in turn, states that “[p]rivate information” is exempt from disclosure [under FOIA] “unless disclosure is required by another provision of this Act, a State or federal law, or a court order.” Here, there is no dispute that no state or federal law or court order requires the disclosure of FOID card information. Accordingly, we conclude the appellate court erred in holding that an individual may consent to disclosure of his or her FOID card information under FOIA.

…Adding… Somebody just pointed something out to me via text…

I get it, they were FOIAing their own info. But I don’t think the FOIA law makes that distinction. Once you release something through FOIA it is a public record. I don’t think you can release it to one person and then say no to everyone else. That seems to be counter to what FOIA is about.

Yeah. Maag and the other courts seemed to have a profound misunderstanding about what FOIA is.

  19 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Burke case judge to consider granting a mistrial, Jon Seidel at the Sun-Times writes

    - This comes after prosecutors elicited a comment from a witness Wednesday about the “Chicago way of doing business” being “very corrupt.”
    - Layers will file written briefs early today.
    -When Assistant U.S. Attorney Diane MacArthur explained that she did not expect Amtrak executive Ray Lang to make the comment at issue, Kendall quickly asked the veteran prosecutor, “What were you expecting him to say?”

* Related stories…

* …Adding…Here’s an update from Jason Meisner


* Jon Seidel


* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Sun-Times | Black utility workers in lawsuit allege they face discrimination while working at Peoples Gas: She is among 11 former and current Peoples Gas employees who filed a federal lawsuit Tuesday against Peoples Gas, alleging that Black workers and customers were sexualized by non-Black workers and faced racial slurs. The lawsuit alleges that Black workers are relegated to an area that serves the South Side, and they frequently get assigned to jobs in neighborhoods without security where some have faced attacks. The workers also allege that Peoples Gas did not do enough after concerns were raised about workplace racism and hazards.

    * Tribune | Illinois grape growers prepare to take on the invasive spotted lanternfly after first sighting this fall: The black spotted insects were identified for the first time in Illinois in September. Since then, there’s been at least seven more positive sightings, according to Scott Schirmer, the nursery and northern field office section manager at the Illinois Department of Agriculture. One of them was in DuPage County, while the rest were in southern Cook County, he said.

    * WTTW | Teacher Vacancies in Illinois Disproportionately Impact Students of Color: Report: Advance Illinois breaks down in its latest report, “The State of Our Educator Pipeline 2023,” how school districts across the state are struggling to fill special education and bilingual teaching positions. The organization said that’s having a disproportionate impact on Black and Latino students. “Most tragically, students of color and students from low-income households are dramatically more likely to be in districts with high vacancy levels, more than twice the vacancy rates than the rest of state,” said Robin Steans, president of Advance Illinois.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

    * Crain’s | Opponents of Illinois’ assault-weapons ban file emergency plea at U.S. Supreme Court:
    “The 7th Circuit’s decision was manifestly erroneous,” says the emergency application filed in National Association for Gun Rights v. City of Naperville. Besides the gun rights group, the opponents include Robert C. Bevis, owner of Law Weapons & Supply in Naperville, and their challenge applies as well to a separate Naperville ordinance prohibiting assault weapons.

    * Daily Herald | Study: Illinois, other Midwestern states behind on renewable energy: Five Midwestern states — Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin — are lagging behind other states when it comes to renewable energy, a new study from environmental organization The Nature Conservancy reports. In Illinois, almost 20% of generated electricity comes from wind and solar as of March 2023. While that’s more than triple the amount generated a decade earlier, the state’s renewable portfolio pales in comparison to states such as Iowa, South Dakota and Oklahoma that are each generating more than 50% of their electricity from solar and wind.

    * QC Times | Henry County board member announces candidancy for Illinois’ 37th State Senate District: Republican Henry County Board member Tim Wager is running for the 37th State Senate District in Illinois. Republican Sen. Win Stoller holds the seat. Stoller was elected in 2020 and announced in August that he would not seek reelection.

    * Center Square | Illinois’ cannabis industry seeking changes to increase licensing: During the fall veto session, advocates and lawmakers discussed an amendment to a measure to make it easier for small growers and address a lack of licenses for transporters. State Rep. Norine Hammond, R-Macomb, said the amendment does three things, including cutting application fees.

    * Tribune | Biden EPA proposes requirements for utilities to remove toxic lead water pipes within a decade; Chicago likely to get more time: More than 9 million homes nationwide get their drinking water from a service line made of lead. Chicago has 400,000 of the toxic pipes, more than any other city. Illinois has more than any other state.

    * BGA | Johnson Proposes Historically Large Pay Raises for Police: Johnson’s proposal includes a 5% salary bump for FOP-represented police in 2024 and 2025, up from the 2.5% and 2% raises for those years that were agreed upon in the Lightfoot administration’s extension. A larger raise for 2024 was not included in the roughly $2 billion appropriation for the police department passed by City Council earlier this month, meaning approval of a contract with Johnson’s proposed terms would immediately put the city approximately $27.7 million over budget for 2024.

    * Tribune | Protesters in Brighton Park speak out against migrant camp as construction begins: The construction begins after Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced Monday that the state would take an increased role in opening the tent encampment, a location chosen by the city that appears to be the most expedient option. The state will foot the cost of operating the Brighton Park lot as part of its $160 million contribution to migrant services in Chicago.

    * Shaw Local | State Police gun violence prevention effort requires broad input: The Illinois State Police issued a news release Monday touting its updated Clear and Present Danger reporting system, through which education, medical and law enforcement professionals submit information about people believed to pose a significant threat. ISP evaluates the reports against the person’s status within the Firearm Owner’s Identification program.

    * SJ-R | ‘A capital place for giants’: Museum has village of Atlanta thinking big: “I’ll never forget it,” recalled Thomas. “It was my job to go to Atlanta’s then-mayor (Bill Martin). I sat down at his kitchen table, and I can remember looking at him across the table, saying, ‘Bill, how would you like a 19-foot-tall statue of a guy holding a hot dog right downtown?’ To his ever-lasting credit, he didn’t pause for more than three seconds, and said, ‘Sure, I think that sounds like a great idea.’”

    * Bloomberg | Chicago billionaire Byron Trott is in talks for minority stake in Miami Dolphins: Trott, the chairman and co-chief executive officer of merchant bank BDT & MSD Partners, may be taking part in the discussions with another prospective investor, according to one of the people. The negotiations are preliminary and could end with Trott deciding not to invest. Bloomberg News reported earlier this month that billionaire Ken Griffin is in talks with Ross to buy a minority stake in the team, the Hard Rock Stadium and the F1 Miami Grand Prix.

    * Crain’s | McDonald’s secretive new restaurant is getting set to open in Bolingbrook: A peek at the menu reveals beverages like a S’Mores Cold Brew, a Churro Frappe and a Blueberry Ginger Boost, but more familiar McDonald’s fare such as the Egg McMuffin is also on display.

    * Sun-Times | Arthur Williams, beloved circulation desk worker at the Brookfield Library, dies at 52: Countless children will never forget getting their first library card, with Mr. Williams speaking to them like they were readers of any age about to embark on a special journey. “These touches, these small things was how he got to know the community and in return he just developed these long lasting relationships,” Coughran said.

    * WJBC | No holiday displays this season at the Illinois Capitol due to ongoing construction: Rabbi Meir Moscowitz of the group responsible for the annual menorah display, Lubavich Chabad of Illinois, does not sound as if the one-year absence has thrown him. “We’re definitely going to put up the menorah somewhere – not sure yet where. Every year we put more and more menorahs. It’s like the holiday itself: every night, you light one more candle.”

  15 Comments      


Live coverage

Thursday, Nov 30, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to follow the Ed Burke trial.

  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
* Reader comments closed for the next week
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates
* Three-quarters of OEIG investigations into Paycheck Protection Program abuses resulted in misconduct findings
* SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
* Sen. Dale Fowler honors term limit pledge, won’t seek reelection; Rep. Paul Jacobs launches bid for 59th Senate seat
* Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
* Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller