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Afternoon roundup

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Governor JB Pritzker was joined today by Lieutenant Governor Julianna Stratton, Illinois State Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza, elected officials, and first responders to sign the Act-of-Duty Bill into law. HB 3162 retroactively provides Chicago police officers and firefighters disability benefits for the time they were unable to serve due to contracting COVID-19 between March 9, 2020, and June 30, 2021.

“Since the darkest days of the pandemic, our first responders — police officers, firefighters, and EMS workers alike — have been on the ground, putting their own health and safety at risk to protect others,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “When our first responders are disabled on the job, they deserve comprehensive benefits. HB 3162, a bipartisan Act-of-Duty Bill, ensures they get the benefits they are entitled to.”

“Our first responders serve and protect, heal and care, comfort and support, Illinois residents in their time of greatest need,” said Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton. “During the pandemic they continued to answer the call, many at great cost to themselves and their families. This law will provide them with full disability benefits they deserve for the selfless sacrifice they have made on behalf of the people of Illinois.”

As the COVID-19 pandemic gripped our nation in the early months of 2020, first responders jumped into action assisting the sick, dispersing testing kits, transporting infected patients to the hospital, and more. When officers contracted the virus themselves, even after taking precautions and wearing PPE, they often needed to be hospitalized and many were left without the salary and healthcare coverage they needed. For the past three years, COVID-19 was the leading cause of law enforcement deaths - far surpassing firearm and traffic-related deaths.

“Chicago police and firefighters should not have to die to qualify for full COVID disability benefits. And that was the unfortunate message the city’s pension disability board was sending with its rulings against my brother and Officer Diana Cordova-Nestad – and the other first responders disabled by COVID in the days before vaccines were available who are waiting to go before the board,” Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza said. “That’s unforgivable. I can’t thank everyone enough - my sponsors, Representative Hoffman and Senator Cunningham, legislators, and Governor Pritzker, for fixing this injustice for my brother and all our first responders.”

“Our first responders put their lives on the line to ensure we could rely on emergency services in the darkest days of the pandemic,” Assistant Majority Leader Jay Hoffman (D-Belleville). “The least we can do is make sure they receive the benefits they are rightly owed. I am appreciative of the strong advocacy on this topic from Comptroller Mendoza, first responders and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.”

“Today, we have taken a significant step towards recognizing the sacrifices of Chicago police and firefighters who have suffered from the long-term effects of COVID-19,” said State Senator Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago). “This action puts Chicago police and fire in parity with the rest of the state by giving them access to the full disability benefits they deserve.”

The Illinois Works Jobs Program Act has already been revised to ensure that families of the COVID-19’s fallen first responders receive their benefits. The Act-of-Duty Bill furthers this initiative, giving those who were disabled due to the virus the benefits that they deserve.

Since the onset of the pandemic, more than 100 million Americans have been infected with COVID-19 and more than one million of those were left with long-term COVID-related disabilities.

“I am proud to stand with Comptroller Mendoza in support of our police officers and firefighters across the state. This legislation provides Chicago police officers and firefighters with the same COVID-19 disability benefits as our officers and firefighters in downstate Illinois,” said Deputy Republican Leader Norine Hammond (R-Macomb). “These brave officers and firefighters who fell ill and were injured in the line of duty deserve our utmost support and with today’s action, they will finally receive the financial support they’ve earned. We cannot thank them enough for their service to the people of Illinois.”

“In the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic, our first responders put their lives on the line to ensure the health and safety of our communities. Now when they need us, we need to be there for them,” said Assistant Majority Leader Natalie Manley. “By including the rebuttable presumption for first responders who have become disabled as a result of COVID-19, we are correcting a great injustice and ensuring that our first responders have the resources they need to live fulfilling lives.”

“While most of us were at home during COVID trying to protect ourselves, our police and firemen were in the midst of the virus, serving on the frontlines to serve and protect our communities,” said Senator Dale Fowler (R-Harrisburg). “It’s incredibly important we support them through this legislation, because they are the everyday heroes of our communities, and they shouldn’t have to stress about compensation in an event of a COVID exposure leading to a disability.”

“As a strong advocate for our law enforcement officials, I’m proud to continue supporting them by ensuring they receive the benefits they deserve,” said State Senator Meg Loughran Cappel (D-Shorewood). “We have to continue prioritizing the men and women who protect our communities.”

* This bill has passed both chambers…

To increase the baseline financial penalty for civil rights violations, State Senator Robert Peters championed a measure to create the Civil Rights Remedies Restoration Act.

“Business enterprises receiving federal funds should not be immune to the consequences of discriminating against people,” said Peters (D-Chicago). “Protecting businesses from punishment when they knowingly commit discriminatory acts goes against Illinois values.”

House Bill 2248 was created in response to the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller, P.L.L.C. that ruled emotional distress damages are not recoverable in a private action under the anti-discrimination provisions of either the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 or the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The bill would allow state claims for violations of federal civil rights laws to be heard in any court with jurisdiction. It further provides that Illinois courts may award no less than $4,000 in damages or other relief for violations.

“Illinois has maintained the status of being a welcoming state for everyone,” Peters said. “The Civil Rights Remedies Restoration Act will serve as a source of relief for those seeking assistance for emotional distress due to discrimination. Considering previous court rulings that have prevented Illinois courts from intervening, this measure eliminates the red tape and allows victims to pursue financial justice.”

* Press release…

“The American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network (ACS CAN) supports legislation passed today by the Senate that will prohibit the use of e-cigarettes everywhere that smoking is prohibited under the state’s smoke-free law. ACS CAN supports everyone’s right to breathe clean smoke-free air.

“E-cigarettes pose a potential risk to people who do not use them through secondhand exposure to toxicants in the aerosol. Prohibiting the use of e-cigarettes in workplaces, including restaurants, bars and gaming facilities, can protect the public’s health by preventing nonusers from being exposed to nicotine and other potentially harmful chemicals in the aerosol emitted by these products. No one should have to choose between their health and their job.

“ACS CAN commends the General Assembly for passing this important legislation and looks forward to seeing Gov. Pritzker sign it into law.”

* Pitch…

Hello,
Writing to you about an international finance industry-backed bill (HB73) that would do away with portions of consumer protection laws that were recently put in place.

Last year, former Senator Collins, the legal funding industry, and advocacy groups negotiated a bill that gave a regulatory framework with consumer protections to ensure loans cannot be larger than $100k — the Consumer Legal Funding Act (CLFA) was signed into law.

But HB73 wants to do away with portions of that law:

    • The bill would add a carveout to the Consumer Legal Funding Act (CLFA) for legal funding greater than $500k
    • Under HB 73, the sky’s the limit on the principal amount, finance charges, and fees which could be harmful to consumers
    • There is only one known proponent–the International Legal Finance Association. According to a WSJ article, foreign-funded shell companies underwrite many patent-infringement lawsuits against U.S. firms in industries critical to national security.

I wanted to offer you an interview with a rep from Woodstock Institute, an organization that works to advance economic justice and racial equity within financial systems.

* Press release…

The CHANGE Illinois team has successfully pushed legislation through the Illinois General Assembly! Our bill, HB 1496, is designed to fairly and effectively implement the ban on prison gerrymandering to ensure fairer representation for all Illinoisans.

We asked our supporters to take action and send an email to their representatives to call HB 1496 for a Senate floor vote. With your help, we were able to successfully shepherd it through both the Illinois House and Senate and get it one step closer to being signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker.

* Equality Illinois…

A statement from Myles Brady Davis, Communications Director of Equality Illinois, the state’s civil rights organization for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) Illinoisans:

“We are extremely excited by Clare Killman’s historic inauguration to the Carbondale City Council. Killman is the first Trans person to serve on a city council in Illinois and she is one of only five Trans people now elected to office in Illinois. Killman’s inauguration is impactful for Carbondale, which has become a significant community of safety and refuge in Southern Illinois for folks seeking access to reproductive healthcare and gender-affirming healthcare that is otherwise limited, prohibited, or criminalized in their home states.

“Killman will be a powerful voice for change and will inspire more Trans people to run for office in their communities. We know Trans people remain severely underrepresented in all levels of government. At this time when more than 700 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced in state capitols across the country in 2023, when the opponents of equality are working hard to take healthcare away from Trans people, when anti-Trans forces have tried to silence an elected Trans state legislator in Montana, we need many more Trans voices in rooms of power. Now more than ever.”

* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…

  1 Comment      


Meanwhile, in Opposite Land…

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Idaho

A federal judge denied Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador’s request to reconsider the order barring the state from prosecuting emergency room physicians for providing abortion care to stabilize a patient.

U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill made his initial decision to block part of Idaho’s ban on abortions in August, just before the ban went into effect, following a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Department of Justice against the state.

Idaho’s ban on abortion applies to all stages of pregnancy and makes exceptions only for documented cases of rape and incest or to save the pregnant person’s life.

The Justice Department argued that the ban conflicts with the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, which requires hospitals that accept Medicare to provide stabilizing medical care for all those who come to the hospital with an emergency. Winmill ruled that the two laws were in conflict and the federal law superseded the state law.

* Indiana

For generations, the Kinsey Institute has shined a light on diverse aspects of sex and sexuality, in pursuit of answers that bring us closer to understanding fundamental questions of human existence. In a time of divisive politics and disinformation, it is more imperative than ever to preserve and defend the right of such academic institutions to illuminate the unfolding frontiers of science — even, and especially, research that might challenge us as it advances our understanding of ourselves.

Thus it is tremendously disappointing that Indiana lawmakers voted late last month to approve a budget that specifically blocks Indiana University from using state funding to support the Kinsey Institute, and that last week Gov. Eric Holcomb signed it into state law. This is an unprecedented action that takes aim at the very foundation of academic freedom.

The Kinsey Institute, where I serve as the executive director and a senior scientist, is the leading sex research institute in the world. We publish dozens of scientific and academic articles each year, across multiple disciplines. Our faculty are internationally renowned biologists, psychologists, anthropologists, health scientists and demographers. We house the world’s largest library and research collection of sexuality-related materials, and scholars from across the globe visit us to study these materials and to train in our research theories and methods. […]

As Kinsey wrote in 1956: “It is incomprehensible that we should know so little about such an important subject as sex, unless you realize the multiplicity of forces which have operated to dissuade the scientist, to intimidate the scientist, and to force him to cease research in these areas.”

* Kentucky

A Powell County woman is being faced with an impossible decision: give birth to a child who will likely be born stillborn or travel hours away across state lines for an abortion. […]

“I see my baby that has no brain, that has no life and it hurts,” Maberry said. […]

She tells us she has to leave the state to seek abortion care because, at this point in her pregnancy, terminating isn’t an option in the State of Kentucky. […]

“We’ve been called hypocrites. We’ve been told that they hope we have to carry this baby to term and be made to,” Maberry said. “Those people that say that; they don’t know our story, they don’t know our pain and I hope to God, they never have to.”

* Florida

Construction workers say many employees have not showed up to work because they fear deportation.

Critics say Florida Senate Bill 1718 is to blame.

If signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis, businesses could face a $10,000 fine for every undocumented employee and the state could revoke their business license.

Because of this, many construction workers who spoke to CBS News Miami say they are fearful of the future.

“Many workers are leaving, thinking they’re going to be deported, so they’re going to other states,” says Jose, an employee. “Everyone is really uneasy…we just want to work to help our families.”

* More from Florida

Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida signed a series of bills Monday that bans Chinese citizens from buying land in the state. […]

One bill restricts Chinese nationals from buying land in Florida unless they are also American citizens or permanent residents.

Chinese citizens with non-tourist visas, meanwhile, would be limited to buying fewer than two acres of land that is at least five miles away from any military institutions, the Tampa Bay television news outlet WTVT reported.

* Even more from the Sunshine State

Florida has rejected dozens of social studies textbooks and worked with publishers to edit dozens more, the state’s education department announced on Tuesday, in the latest effort under Gov. Ron DeSantis to scrub textbooks of contested topics, especially surrounding contemporary issues of race and social justice.

State officials originally rejected 82 out of 101 submitted textbooks because of what they considered “inaccurate material, errors and other information that was not aligned with Florida law,” the Department of Education said in a news release.

But as part of an extensive effort to revise the materials, Florida worked with publishers to make changes, ultimately approving 66 of the 101 textbooks. Still, 35 were rejected even after that process. […]

The revisions outlined by the state included:

    - An elementary school textbook no longer includes “home support” guidance on how to talk about the national anthem, which had included advice that parents could “use this as an opportunity to talk about why some citizens are choosing to ‘Take a Knee’ to protest police brutality and racism.’” Florida officials said that content was not age-appropriate.

    - A text on different types of economies was edited to take out a description of socialism as keeping things “nice and even” and potentially promoting greater equality. The description was flagged as inaccurate, and mention of the term “socialism” was removed entirely.

    - A middle school textbook no longer includes a passage on the Black Lives Matter movement, the murder of George Floyd and its impact on society. The removed passage described protests, noting that “many Americans sympathized with the Black Lives Matter movement,” while other people were critical of looting and violence and viewed the movement as anti-police. The state said the passage contained “unsolicited topics.”

* Missouri

A school board member in central Missouri resigned Tuesday, blaming a slate of bills introduced by state lawmakers that would negatively affect her transgender daughter.

Katherine Sasser, who served for two years on the Columbia School Board, said at a school board meeting Monday that her family will also move before the start of the next school year because the state “is no longer a safe place” for them, according to KOMU-TV, a local NBC affiliate. […]

While holding back tears at the board meeting, Sasser called on other school board members to “use our agency and privilege, wherever we find it, to stand in on behalf of those who continue to be attacked and minoritized,” KOMU-TV reported.

“Especially in these challenging times, believe people when they say who they are and what they need,” she said. “Lean in to community and care with one another. Choose compassionate action. Take care of yourselves and take care of each other.”

* Those bills now go to the desk of Missouri Gov. Mike Parson

In the waning days of their legislative session, Missouri lawmakers passed a bill on Wednesday that would ban transition care for transgender youth.

The legislation, which had stalled for weeks in the Republican-controlled General Assembly because of disagreement over whether to include exceptions, is the latest in a national push by conservatives to limit access to medical care for transgender children, including puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones and surgeries.

The Missouri bill allows young people already receiving hormone treatments and puberty blockers to continue doing so, and the portion of the bill restricting hormone treatment and puberty blockers would expire in 2027. The measure would also ban transition surgeries for adult prisoners.

Missouri lawmakers also passed on Wednesday a bill that would ban transgender women and girls from competing on sports teams that align with their gender identity.

  22 Comments      


Pritzker responds to Quinn, talks budget, punts to legislators on healthcare for undocumented residents, holds out hope for more federal funds to deal with asylum-seeker influx

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker was asked by reporters today if he had a response to former Gov. Pat Quinn’s call for a special session to take up a set of ethics reforms

I saw the letter and I know there were enumerated some ideas at the end of the letter and I think those are, you know, ideas, some of them worthy of consideration. […]

Well, he’s asking for a special session. We’re still in session. So there’s an opportunity while in session and, of course, all along there are opportunities for the General Assembly to take up these ideas. […]

Well, again, I mean, the General Assembly has, you know, committees and hearings and has addressed ethics concerns over time. I don’t think that there’s anything that’s been specifically brought up by the recent doings in court that isn’t already illegal in law. They have been found guilty. And I think we need to look always at upgrading and improving our ethics laws in the state and so I want to continue to do that.

* Pritzker was then asked about downward revenue projections for the current fiscal year and if that means he’d be taking any of his budget proposals off the table, or what other impacts it could have

Well as you know, we also projected downward number in the budget that I proposed in February, because we understand that the broader economy is slowing down a bit. And we also understood that the benefit to the economy of some of the stimulus that was put into it in prior years will also wane. So this is actually a lower revenue estimate that was put into my budget than we actually thought. We wanted to make sure that we were being conservative and you’ve seen I think everybody’s come down very close to where we are on the revenue estimate. So my budget actually takes all of it into account and if we pass the budget as it is, that budget would be balanced and indeed we would have a surplus.

* Has he figured out what to do about the exploding Medicaid program costs for non-citizens?

Well, the General Assembly is considering all the options. The budgeteers as well as the various caucuses. So, it’s something that I hope they’ll come forward with their ideas about among the options that we presented, that they might want to use in order to make sure that the program fits within the budget. But my priority to be clear is balancing the budget. I’ve done that every year with the leaders. We need to make sure we do that again. We’re on a great trajectory from a fiscal perspective, we want to stay on that trajectory.

* He was also asked about Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s emergency declaration in the wake of an influx of asylum-seeking migrants

What I can say is that we’re gonna do everything we can to take care of those who are sent here by Governor Abbott, that are sent here by mayors of cities in Texas. And it’s a humanitarian crisis. There’s no doubt about it. Thousands of people that are here legally, I might add. Asylum seekers here legally, who are being sent from the place that they arrived to someplace that they did not necessarily choose to go to. But it is our obligation as Americans to help take care of them. And it’s obligation of the federal government to step up and help us deal with that challenge. But we will do everything that we can. And I think if the mayor felt that an emergency needed to be declared, remember that just gives her more procurement capability than anything else. That is what she felt was necessary and I think that we’ve got to do what is necessary to take care of these folks. […]

There was an $800 million appropriation at FEMA that is meant to support states that are challenged with this. We’ve not received enough of that yet. And there will be I think more grants given in the next month, I am told, but we’re gonna fight hard for it and we deserve it. We’re doing everything that we should do to provide food, clothing and shelter for people who need it.

More on this presser later. I’m still waiting on some answers to a different question.

  7 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* HB218 is on Third reading in the House

Gunmakers would be held responsible for dangerous marketing that contributes to gun violence under new legislation introduced by state Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, D-Glenview.

“In 2020, guns surpassed traffic fatalities as the leading cause of death for children in the U.S. In 2023 alone, there were 58 unintentional shootings by children,” said Gong-Gershowitz. “Gun manufacturers enjoy a special immunity under federal law: they can legally market an insurrection to white supremacist groups like the Proud Boys and pink assault weapons to children too young to own one. HB218 is designed to hold gun manufacturers accountable and ensure families devastated by gun violence have a path to justice in Illinois civil court.”

Marketing campaigns sponsored by gun manufacturers often depict wanton violence, a weapon’s ability to cause egregious bodily harm and glorification of extreme paramilitary behaviors, effectively promoting violent criminal activity. Recently, an Illinois gunmaker began marketing a “JR-15,” a smaller version of the notorious AR-15 rifle but designed for children.

In the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shooting, courts found that parents have a reasonable claim against a gun manufacturer that engages in deceptive marketing campaigns promoting “illegal offensive use of the rifle.”

House Bill 218 would empower victims of gun violence to bring civil legal action against gun manufacturers in cases when firearm advertising contributes to illegal shootings. This legislation is the result of months of work by the House Firearms Safety and Reform Working Group in concert with stakeholders and representatives of the Senate and the Illinois Attorney General’s office.

* HB676 is on Third Reading


* Capitol News Illinois

Senate Bill 850 would direct the state’s Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, or DCEO, to establish the “Grocery Initiative,” a program that would study “food deserts” in Illinois and provide grants to new or existing grocery stores in these areas. The grants would be available to grocery stores that are organized as independently owned for-profits, co-ops and nonprofit organizations as well as grocery stores owned by units of local government.

“It’s incredibly expensive to run a grocery store,” bill sponsor Rep. Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington Heights, said in an interview. “It takes a lot of product and your margins are very thin.”

The initiative was first introduced in Gov. JB Pritzker’s proposed budget for the upcoming fiscal year, which called for $20 million to fund the program. Canty, who is sponsoring the proposal in the House, said she will continue to work on it in the next two weeks as lawmakers craft next year’s budget.

The initiative was first introduced in Gov. JB Pritzker’s proposed budget for the upcoming fiscal year, which called for $20 million to fund the program. Canty, who is sponsoring the proposal in the House, said she will continue to work on it in the next two weeks as lawmakers craft next year’s budget.

* WGN

A bill in the state capitol would remove the exemption of drivers of rideshare apps like Uber and Lyft, and lump them in with carriers such as bus drivers, train conductors, airline pilots, and taxi drivers, who have “vicarious liability”: if a bus rider for an unsafe ride sues the driver, the bus company can also be found liable for employing an unsafe driver under Illinois law.

Lyft officials are strongly opposed to the bill. They argue with the current laws in place, only 0.0002% of their rides have a registered safety incident. Representatives of the company also say the new rule would increase the cost for riders.

Uber is also against the bill. They argue if the bill becomes law, it may cause them to end services in some parts of the state and impact service for users in the state. […]

The Senate passed an amendment to the House’s bill. It now returns to the House. If approved, the bill heads to Gov. JB Pritzker to be signed into law.

* Uber now appeals to Mayor-elect Johnson…


* Tribune

Advocates called Tuesday for changes to help medical cannabis patients and to broaden opportunities in the marijuana industry.

The Alliance for Cannabis Equity, a collective of social justice advocates, medical caretakers and trade associations, is seeking the changes to be combined in state law under an omnibus bill.

For medical patients, the group called for making curbside or drive-thru pickup permanent and for buying cannabis tax-free at any dispensary. For motorists, police would be prohibited from using cannabis as probable cause to make a stop. People with prior criminal convictions would be allowed to work in the industry; craft growers would get more space to cultivate their crop; and a single agency would replace the myriad agencies that regulate the industry.

“No substantive social equity law has been passed for two years, and action is desperately needed to address many issues,” said Douglas Kelly of Cannabis Equity Illinois Coalition. […]

Rep. LaShawn Ford, a Chicago Democrat, has led a cannabis working group that’s met to address some of these issues. He hopes to have a single bill to encompass many of these problems before the General Assembly adjourns its session, as scheduled for May 19.

* Scott Holland

Policies don’t inherently prevent problems, they primarily provide recourse. But that truth doesn’t mean such efforts are wasted.

Consider two pieces of legislation moving through the General Assembly. House Bill 3425, which has already cleared both chambers, is the “anti-bullying bill” requiring schools to give parental notice of alleged bullying incidents within 24 hours. Senate Bill 90, which the Education Committee advanced to the full Senate, stipulates “each school district, charter school or nonpublic, nonsectarian elementary or secondary school must create, implement and maintain a policy on discrimination and harassment based on race, color, or national origin and retaliation.”

Many schools have well established programs for reducing bullying or being proactive about inclusion and tolerance. It’s hard to quantify when such efforts make a difference in the hearts and minds of individual kids, although at the district and region level there surely have been countless meetings and reports about what “works.”

Still, and I try not to come off as a crank when I say this, if some kid wants to call another kid fat or ugly or weak or just shake them down for lunch money, well, it’s probably going to happen and all the language in the school handbook mostly establishes the roadmap for what happens next.

* HB2044 is on First Reading in its originating chamber. Reps. Dagmara Avelar and Ryan Spain

All around Illinois, the signs of change are apparent. The COVID-19 pandemic changed our economy, how we live and work, and how working-class and lower-income families struggle day to day.

We come together to argue for a solution to one of our State’s most pressing needs to address this change head on: Affordable housing. This is not a regional problem, or one of partisan politics. We all know someone who needs help finding a home to call their own, without bankrupting them. […]

As envisioned under House Bill 2044, Illinois can take a major step toward addressing its affordable housing shortage by mirroring that successful federal tax credit program with a State credit that more than 20 other states already have adopted.

The Build Illinois Homes State Tax Credit calls for creating an estimated 3,500 homes or apartments each year, generating nearly $1 billion in economic activity and $300 million in State and local taxes paid over the next decade, and more than 17,000 jobs supported during that time. Each annual round of tax credits will cost the state $350 million spread over 10 years, but the economic returns generated from the program will more than offset the cost.

* Chief Medical Officer at Planned Parenthood of Illinois Amy Whitaker

A recent patient came in with concerns about her pregnancy. She had been somewhere else and was told she was carrying twins, but that one might not be developing as well as the other.

She showed us the ultrasound pictures on her phone. However, the images did not resemble typical medical ultrasound images. We quickly realized that the patient had been misinformed and had not actually received anything close to the standard of care for pregnancy diagnosis and assessment.

After she was given an ultrasound at Planned Parenthood, it was determined that the patient actually had a molar pregnancy (a rare complication) which is not viable and, if left untreated, can cause cancer. It is an outrage that the patient had been led to believe that she had received legitimate health care for her pregnancy, when really she was given the wrong information that could have caused severe health issues.

Senate Bill 1909, the Deceptive Practices of Limited Services Pregnancy Centers Act, protects patients and allows everyone the freedom to receive medically-accurate and unbiased information. It is not intended to close down any organization; rather, it holds accountable those that systematically employ deception, fraud, and false pretense in order to sway a patient’s health care decisions.

Rep. Bill Hauter opposes access to abortion. He introduced HB 4028, which singles out abortion for special regulations which are not applied to any other similar medical procedure. Clearly, Hauter believes that abortion should be marginalized from other health care and targeted for extra regulation.

* Illinois Answers

State Sen. Robert Martwick (D-Chicago) is proposing legislation he says would “fix” a 2010 law that aimed to stem Illinois’ pension crisis by cutting back retirement benefits for future public employees. Researchers have since warned that the measure likely went too far, potentially depriving workers of benefits they’re entitled to under federal law.

Chicago leaders and other local governments are blasting the bills for their promise to burden taxpayers with hundreds of millions more dollars in pension obligations. And at least one fiscal watchdog says the proposals risk repeating the previous law’s sin of taking action before studying the consequences. […]

Other critics, like leaders of the nonpartisan budget watchdog The Civic Federation, say Martwick and his allies risk repeating their predecessors’ mistakes by plowing forward with a “fix” without taking time to study how the new benefit formula would hold up over time. […]

Martwick responded that it can be “quite expensive” to run actuarial studies of every proposal. But he said he trusts the formula JB Pritzker’s administration reached to rejigger police and fire pensions in 2019, as well as the analysis by Preckwinkle’s finance team of an appropriate formula for county pensioners.

  39 Comments      


Advocates want a do-over on Chicago’s elected school board draft map

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

Parents, teachers and community groups on Tuesday asked Illinois Democrats to go back to the drawing board and create a new map for Chicago’s upcoming first school board elections. They want a map based on the city’s student demographics rather than its overall population.

About a dozen people spoke out at a virtual hearing Tuesday evening. This comes days after lawmakers from the House and Senate released a first draft map. Lawmakers have until July 1 to draw the voting boundaries.

As first noted by Chalkbeat Chicago, the draft map proposes seven majority white districts, seven majority Black districts and six majority Latino districts — closely resembling the city’s population, which is 33% white, 29% Black, and 29% Latino, according to the U.S. Census.

But the CPS student population is 11% white, 36% Black and 47% Latino.

* Here’s a visual…


* Chalkbeat

“Our students need representation who understand their communities and the challenges that they face in their daily life,” said Vanessa Espinoza, a parent with Kids First Chicago. “We know that board members who have shared experiences with the communities they serve can better understand the needs of the students.”

Espinoza called the draft map “unconscionable” because she said it underrepresents Latino families in Chicago. Kids First Chicago has published a map that will create eight Latino districts and seven Black districts, she told lawmakers. […]

It is unusual for lawmakers to use school district enrollment rather than city population numbers to create districts for an elected school board, but advocates say it is the only way to ensure that Black and Latino families are equitably represented. […]

It remains unclear how many maps will be drawn during the general assembly’s map-making process. State lawmakers have published a draft map for 20 districts, and have received nine map proposals from the public, Sen. Kimberly Lightford, who represents that city’s West side and west suburbs, said Tuesday.

* The Chicago Tribune

State Rep. Ann Williams, who leads the House Democrats’ Chicago Public School’s Districting, stressed the current map is only a starting point.

“We will be seeing another map; it will look different,” Williams, who represents Lakeview, said at the end of Saturday’s hearing. “We are hearing what you are saying and taking your input into perspective and into account.” […]

For decades, Chicago’s Board of Education members have been appointed by the mayor, unlike most school systems, whose governing boards are chosen by voters. But under a change in state law, the Chicago school board will expand from seven appointed to 21 elected members by 2026. The transition will begin with the November 2024 election, when 10 members will be elected and 10 members, plus the board president, will be appointed. […]

Jamie Groth Searle with the Southwest Collective, a nonprofit that advocates for Southwest Side residents, called out the borders of one district in particular to make the point that the map fails to keep communities intact.

“Can you explain why you drew a district that is 79 blocks long?” Searle asked. The panel responded by reminding the audience that this was a preliminary map.

* Press release…

As legislators work through remapping the Chicago School Board districts, Cor Strategies’ data experts developed a map that provides more representation to Chicago’s Hispanic and Asian communities.

Cor’s data experts built a model, pulling data which included registered voting data, along with data from the Chicago Public Schools and Census Bureau, that more fairly and accurately took the city’s demographics into account.

Click to view the proposed map here.

In the proposed map, the district breakdown includes:

    16 Majority Minority Districts
    7 Hispanic Districts
    7 Black Districts
    1 Asian Plurality District
    5 White Districts

“The stark contrast between the school district map we developed and what has been proposed already is we accurately include the Asian community and we don’t underrepresent Hispanics,” said Cor’s Chicago Political Expert Chris Jackowiak. “If you just look at voting data, you don’t get the full scope of Chicago demographics and that’s how Hispanics and Asians can end up being so misrepresented in maps that have been politically drawn.”

Springfield Democrats claim their new maps would bring them closer to community-led education, yet certain minority groups would actually have less representation if these maps were passed.

Cor Strategies Founder Collin Corbett said, “We’re not map-makers but we are data experts, and our data team was able to identify maps that would lead to even more Hispanic and Asian representation on the school boards than what the Democrats in the House and Senate proposed, so clearly their maps could be improved to better reflect the city.”

Cor Strategies is a GOP firm.

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bp Is Investing In Illinois

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Question of the day

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WICS TV

The Multi-Purpose Arena (MPA) will be up and running for the 2023 Illinois State Fair.

The MPA underwent an $8.6 million overhaul in 2022, repairing sidewalks, walls, steps, expansion joints, and electrical systems, readjusting the tension structure, installing a new canopy, and rebuilding the retaining walls around the facility. The funding was made possible by the Governor’s historic Rebuild Illinois capital program, which modernizes infrastructure throughout the state.

* I’ve always thought the Multi-Purpose Arena was cool looking, so I’m glad it’s back…

The name is just so boring, though. It’s a cool-looking place, so it ought to have a cool name.

* The Question: Your name change suggestions for the Multi-Purpose Arena? Snarky fun is not prohibited, but it is somewhat discouraged. Thanks.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Drivers On The Uber platform Are Moving Toward A Zero-Emission Future By 2030 In Illinois

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In 2022, electric vehicle drivers on the Uber platform have avoided using over 12.5M gallons of gas, globally.

Read our commitments here.

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The Flowers banishment and removal goes way beyond a single remark

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This piece covers only a tiny part of the real story

Rep. Mary Flowers removed from leadership after saying staff member resembled Hitler

A longtime Democratic state representative has been removed from Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch’s legislative leadership team.

State Rep. Mary Flowers of Chicago believes it’s because she told a House staff member he resembled Adolf Hitler. She said his appearance that day made her feel uncomfortable and disrespected.

“This is my workplace. I was stunned when I walked in and saw this young man looking like Hitler,” Flowers said of the staffer, whom she did not name. She said she also asked him about the look directly, to which he laughed. […]

“This is so petty it’s ridiculous,” Flowers told WBEZ, accusing Welch of not following established protocol. “There’s a process. There’s an [Office of Executive Inspector General] process, and whoever my accuser is, is supposed to go fill out a form.”

While OEIG oversees complaints for agencies that fall under the governor’s purview, someone making a complaint against a state representative would likely go through the Legislative Inspector General, or LIG.

Deputy Majority Leaders aren’t banned from party caucus meetings and stripped of their positions for an isolated remark. There’s so much more to this story.

* Here’s House Speaker Chris Welch’s full letter to Rep. Flowers, which I shared with subscribers after it was sent yesterday…

Dear Leader Flowers:

On Monday, May 8, I called you to request a meeting in my office in Room 300. The intent of this meeting was to discuss your repeated unwillingness to meet the expectations enumerated in the Leadership Agreements that all members of the House Democratic Leadership team agreed to, and the actions I would be taking as a result.

While I believe we owed it to one another to have this conversation in person, you refused to meet unless told the purpose of the meeting. I informed you that as a result of your behavior in caucus meetings, in leadership meetings, and toward staff you would no longer be invited to participate in meetings of the House Democratic Caucus and meetings of our Democratic leadership team during the 103rd General Assembly. You stated that you would not meet in-person without your attorney present.

As you know, in February, the members of the House Democratic leadership team wrote and adopted Leadership Agreements stating how we will communicate with fellow members and staff. Included in this document, drafted by you and your leadership colleagues, are pledges to:

    - Start with respect
    - Find the commonality
    - Pick our battles
    - Check our intentions
    - Don’t start with blame or accusations
    - Show others grace

Since signing the Leadership Agreements, you have consistently shown an unwillingness to meet these expectations.

Specifically, in a Caucus meeting on Tuesday, May 2, you used language widely recognized as a slur intended to divide people - including members of our own Caucus - based on their national origin. In this same meeting, you compared the appearance of a staff member to Adolf Hitler. You declined to offer the caucus a sincere apology for either comment when asked. This was not the first time you made derogatory comments toward colleagues and staff.

At a Caucus meeting earlier this year, when several members expressed that they felt bullied or insulted by you, you dismissed their concerns and attempted to further belittle them in front of colleagues and staff.

In individual meetings with you, I have informed you of how I expect members treat colleagues and staff, and I have requested specifically that you refrain from abusive behavior. This conduct has continued unabated.

These are a few of many examples of pervasive behavior that fails to start with respect, divides rather than builds commonality, weaponizes blame against colleagues, and refuses to show others grace. You have made no effort to correct your behavior despite being asked and despite being informed your actions violate the Leadership Agreements, and potentially the spirit of the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act and the Illinois Human Rights Act. I cannot, and will not, tolerate this behavior toward members and staff.

Your refusal to even meet to discuss this situation shows a further lack of respect for your colleagues and the agreements we all signed. I am again requesting we meet before the end of the spring session, along with any counsel you deem necessary.

As discussed in our call, participation in the House Democratic Caucus meetings and leadership team meetings are a privilege. Your actions have precluded your further participation in these meetings.

I am further informing you that as a result of your refusal to meet and discuss this matter respectfully, I am removing you as a member of my leadership team effective at the end of the day on May 31, 2023.

Sincerely,

Emanuel “Chris” Welch
State Representative, 7th District
Speaker of the Illinois House

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

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Good morning! What’s going on?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

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Live coverage

Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Help Illinois Colleges And Universities Go Green. Support Renewable Energy Credits.

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Support Renewable Energy Credits for Illinois’ public universities to help offset the cost of solar power on campus, help fight climate change and create good-paying union jobs.

Join Climate Jobs Illinois’ Carbon Free Healthy Schools campaign: www.climatejobsillinois.org/schools

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Afternoon roundup

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From WBEZ’s story on people whose SNAP benefits were stolen

This tension has fueled a proposed law that would require the Illinois Department of Human Services, or DHS, which administers SNAP benefits around the state, to not only replace stolen benefits with state dollars from January to September 2022, but also to track skimming going forward.

State Rep. Sonya Harper, D-Chicago, a former SNAP recipient, led the proposal’s passage in the House — which included the reimbursement portion. She and legal advocates say the state claims it would cost at least $20 million, but they’re not clear what those estimates are based on.

“They refuse to budge,” Harper said of leaders at DHS who don’t want to include the reimbursement portion.

But her proposal was recently gutted.

State Sen. Mattie Hunter, D-Chicago, introduced an amendment that would strip the reimbursement portion from the bill. There’s a public hearing slated for this week.

The hostile amendment was approved today.

* Nothing to see here. Move along

Illinois leads the nation in the number of tornadoes so far this year with 86. There were 22 confirmed tornadoes alone across the state during a March 31 outbreak that killed several people.

State climatologist Trent Ford said 2023 this far has been highly unusual.

“Our peak is between April and June climatologically, so to get that many tornadoes, basically a year’s worth of tornadoes just in January, February and March is really incredible,” Ford said.

Ford said the traditional so-called “tornado alley” could possibly be shifting slightly east to include Illinois.

“This area here in Illinois and especially further south as you get into parts of Tennessee, Mississippi and down to the Gulf Coast has seen an increase in at least a frequency of those tornado days,” Ford said.

* The House passed HJR35 today to appoint Legislative Inspector General Michael McCuskey to a full five-year term that ends June 30, 2028. Judge McCuskey has a very long and respected history on both the state and federal judicial benches. The joint resolution passed 112-1. Rep. Wilhour was the lone “No” vote, probably because he couldn’t get answers to his questions about what sponsoring Rep. Maurice West planned to do about the powers of the LIG. West is putting together an omnibus bill on ethics and elections.

* Mayor Lightfoot declares emergency…

Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot issued an emergency declaration in response to the surge of new arrivals since last month, with large numbers of people, mostly families, arriving to Chicago and following the arrival today of 48 individuals and families inhumanely bussed to Chicago by Texas Governor Greg Abbott. Since August 2022, the City has coordinated a multi-departmental, city-wide strategy in partnership with the State and Cook County for receiving and providing emergency care for over 8,000 new arrivals.

This humanitarian crisis has required collective and swift action, which is why the City has partnered with a variety of City departments, Aldermen, community-based organizations, and community leaders to identify sites to serve as temporary respite centers and temporary shelters to address this recent surge in new arrivals.

We should all understand that this crisis will likely deepen before we see it get better, so as we move forward, the City of Chicago will have to bring additional locations online to prepare for the arrival of more individuals and families and to relieve Chicago Police Department districts. The City of Chicago is in the midst of a national humanitarian crisis, and through a unified effort in accordance with its values as a welcoming city, Chicago is doing everything it can to respond to the urgency of this matter. The City has continued to call on federal and state governments to support the new arrival mission with much-needed additional funding and resources for emergency shelter and resettlement, as there are not enough resources currently to meet the need.

* From the ISP…

The Illinois State Police (ISP) Division of Internal Investigation (DII) continues to investigate an officer involved shooting that occurred on Interstate 64 near Mount Vernon, IL in which an ISP officer was shot.

On Tuesday, May 9, 2023 at approximately 3:00 a.m. on Interstate 64 eastbound at mile post 72, an ISP Trooper stopped to assist a stranded motorist on the right shoulder. Upon arrival, the Trooper encountered 23-year-old Brandon L. Griffin of Albuquerque, NM and a female passenger in the vehicle. A second ISP Officer arrived for routine assistance a short time later. While on scene, an altercation occurred during which gunfire was exchanged between Griffin and a responding officer.

A 16-year ISP officer suffered serious, although non-life threatening, injuries after being shot during the altercation and is being treated at a regional hospital. Griffin was pronounced deceased on scene by Jefferson County Coroner’s Office personnel. The other involved Trooper and female passenger were uninjured. Initially, all lanes of Interstate 64 eastbound were closed, but were reopened at approximately 6:25 a.m. Eastbound lanes were temporarily shut down again at 7:48 a.m. as part of the investigation, but reopened at 8:53 a.m.

In accordance with the Police and Community Relations Improvement Act (50 ILCS 727) and the Illinois State Police Law (20 ILCS 2605), Special Agents of the Illinois State Police Division of Internal Investigation are investigating these events.

This investigation is open and ongoing. ISP is currently processing evidence and conducting interviews. Upon completion of the investigation, all evidence and facts will be submitted for review to the Jefferson County State’s Attorney’s Office. No additional information is available at this time.

* Rep. Haas…

Following the Illinois Fallen Firefighter Memorial Ceremony, Firefighter/Paramedic Kyle Haemker of the Bradley Fire Department received the prestigious Medal of Honor. 79th District State Representative Jackie Haas (R-Kankakee), who represents Bradley in the House of Representatives, echoed praises for Firefighter/Paramedic Haemker for this well-deserved award.

On December 14th, 2022, FF/PM Haemker was heading home when he noticed an accident. Stopping to assist, there was a vehicle fully submerged in water. Bystanders informed Haemker that the driver was still inside the vehicle, and he dove into the frigid water to remove the driver from the vehicle, saving this person’s life.

“It’s common to hear that heroes walk among us, but to hear of such courage and strength for one’s neighbor truly demonstrates the heroism of Firefighter Haemker,” said Rep. Haas. “He went out of his way and put himself at risk to save someone else. Selflessness, bravery, and compassion is what drove him and what drives firefighters from Kankakee to Carbondale. The 79th District is so proud of Firefighter Haemker receiving this deserved honor and to have him serve our district.”

The Medal of Honor is the highest award given by the State of Illinois to a firefighter for an act of bravery or heroism, by which the firefighter has demonstrated in great degree the characteristics of selflessness and personal courage above and beyond the call of duty, under adverse conditions, with the possibility of extreme personal risk. It is presented following the Illinois Firefighter Memorial Ceremony at the Illinois State Capitol, a bronze work of art to honor those who have made the supreme sacrifice.

* Jim O’Donnell at the Daily Herald

Two days after his Two Phil’s took a lead in the stretch of the Kentucky Derby before finishing a game second, trainer Larry Rivelli said Monday that the colt will not start in the Preakness.

“Too soon,” Rivelli — a resident of North Barrington — told The Daily Herald. “‘Phil’ came out of the Derby great. We shipped back to Chicago Sunday but the Preakness is just twelve days away. That’s just too soon.”

Sent off as the 9-1 fourth choice in a field of 18, Two Phil’s followed fast fractions before surging into the lead of the $3M, mile-and-one-quarter classic on an inside path turning for home.

Under notably sharp handling by jockey Jareth Loveberry, the 3-year-old chestnut opened up only to be passed by the late-closing champ Mage ($32 to win) in the final 170 yards.

* ILGOP…

Last week, the “ComEd Four'’ were found guilty on all charges related to a conspiracy to bribe Former Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan, and while this guilty verdict is a reflection on every House Democrat who enabled Former Speaker Madigan and the pervasive culture of corruption in Springfield over the past few decades, more questions remain.

At present, one very large question is why – in December 2020 – now House Speaker Chris Welch, Democratic Party of Illinois Chairwoman Lisa Hernandez, and State Rep. Natalie Manley voted along party lines to shut down the Special Investigating Committee tasked with looking into alleged misconduct by then House Speaker Michael Madigan. This was a clear abdication of their responsibility and duty to taxpayers, and they should have to explain this to their constituents.

“Speaker Chris Welch, Democratic Party of Illinois Chairwoman Lisa Hernandez, and other Democrats on the Special Investigating Committee failed the people of Illinois, and it is no surprise they continue to cover up the truth. Why did Welch and Hernandez refer to the special investigation committee on Madigan a ‘political show’ and ‘sham investigation’? They had the opportunity to uphold their oaths of office and end the culture of corruption but chose not to,” said Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy. “This guilty verdict only proved what we already knew – that Illinois Democrat corruption is not a Republican talking point but something that is unfortunately real, pervasive, and a serious threat to honest government,” added Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy.

Instead of promoting accountability, and ending the pervasive corruption that has plagued our state, Speaker Welch, Chairwoman Hernandez, and other House Democrats chose to protect the politicians and political insiders by covering for Mike Madigan, and they were rewarded handsomely for their loyalty with major leadership positions in the Democratic Party. In light of last week’s guilty verdict, Welch and Herandez should have to explain this decision to their constituents and all Illinois voters.

* Rep. Mayfield…

State Rep. Rita Mayfield, D-Waukegan, recently passed a bill that protects dog owners from housing discrimination based on the breed of dog they own. Breed-based discrimination by can lead to higher prices and even to difficulty in finding affordable housing based on outdated and biased beliefs about what breeds are “dangerous.”

“Nobody should have to choose between being able to afford shelter and having to give up a treasured family pet,” Mayfield said. “The idea that certain breeds are inherently dangerous has been debunked for some time and it is time for both public policy and the practices of insurance companies to conform to reality.”

Mayfield’s House Bill 1049—which passed both House and Senate with bipartisan majorities and now goes to the Governor’s desk for signature—prohibits insurance companies from denying coverage or charging exorbitant rates because of the breed of a tenant or homeowner’s dog.

It would remain permissible for insurers to deny or alter coverage based on whether there is evidence that a specific dog poses a provable risk.

“Our dogs are members of our family, not mere possessions to be disposed of because a bean counter doesn’t like them,” Mayfield said. “Making housing more expensive and harder to find for superficial reasons not only doesn’t help anyone, it makes a lot of people worse off. It’s time for a change.”

* This is one weird lede

As states look to generate more revenue in an inflationary economy, along with the risk of a recession, progressive governors like J.B. Pritzker who advocate for progressive income taxes also support one of the most regressive taxes: lotteries.

Governors of almost every ideology back lotteries. And, unlike taxes, lotteries aren’t mandatory.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Center Square | Illinois State Police: ‘Assault weapons’ bought during week of injunction are illegal: Illinois State Police say any purchase of firearms or attachments the state deems as “assault weapons” from during the six-day injunction against Illinois’ gun ban will be illegal after Jan. 1, 2024.

    * The Hill | Illinois among the best US states for broadband access: After the pandemic knocked millions of Americans back home to continue work and school, the importance of broadband access in the U.S. has come under a microscope. While the transition had sweeping effects on our mental health, the struggle was compounded in states and areas with poor broadband access. Federal and state authorities have directed billions toward closing the broadband divide, but many Americans may still have a long wait for high-speed internet in their homes.

    * Daily Herald | ‘Absolutely disheartening’: FAA rejects nighttime O’Hare runway rotation to spread out jet noise: The FAA “is not able to approve the air traffic feasibility of the proposal,” Acting Regional Manager Joseph Miniace wrote the Chicago Department of Aviation on May 3.

    * Crain’s | Illinois marijuana sales stalled in April: The number of marijuana products sold in the state during April was up 9% from a year earlier, roughly in line with the growth rate in March.

    * Block Club | Ald. Jim Gardiner Delayed Six Corners Senior Living Complex After Receiving A $5,000 Bribe, Court Documents Allege: Embattled Ald. Jim Gardiner (45th), who was recently reelected to a second term, accepted cash payments from a disgruntled developer in 2019 as a bribe to stall The Point at Six Corners, now known as The Clarendale, according to allegations in court records made public last week as part of an FBI investigation into the alderman.

    * SJ-R | Bill that would raise penalties for assault on DCFS workers faces uphill climb: But bills that would give DCFS case workers like Knight the same protected status as police officers and firefighters harmed while performing official duties have stalled in a House committee. And though a similar Senate bill has shown new signs of life, it, too, faces a difficult climb to passage.

    * Illinois Times | New solar farms proposed for Sangamon County: Homeowners who are opposing the 5-megawatt, $10 million River Maple Solar II project, as well as some homeowners adjacent to a similar-sized proposed solar farm in a more secluded site a half-mile away at Gaule and Jostes roads, say the solar farms will be ugly, scare away birds, deer and foxes, reduce property values and generally interrupt the pastoral landscape many moved to rural America to enjoy.

    * Crain’s | Bally’s plans to offer some city residents stakes in Chicago casino: The Rhode Island-based gambling giant had previously disclosed on its website plans to allow “minority investors” to “own 25% of the project,” which is slated to be developed on the 30-acre riverfront site now home to the Chicago Tribune’s Freedom Center printing plant. Bally’s framed that as a centerpiece of its community benefit commitment to the city.

    * Pioneer Press | In portions of meetings, Skokie officials violated Open Meetings Act, Illinois Attorney General finds: Skokie lawmakers violated the Open Meetings Act for a four-minute portion of a Jan. 3 meeting and a larger portion of a Jan. 17 meeting while discussing the appointment process for village attorneys, per a ruling from the Illinois Attorney General’s Public Access Counselor, who suggested the non-confidential portion be made public.

    * WGEM | QPS changes policies for grooming, sexual abuse law: Proposed policy changes will help Quincy Public Schools comply with a new state law tied to grooming of students and child sexual abuse. According to our newsgathering partners at the Herald-Whig, Faith’s Law, set to go into effect July 1, requires an employment history review before hiring someone who has direct contact with students.

    * Business Insider | RIP Metaverse: The Metaverse, the once-buzzy technology that promised to allow users to hang out awkwardly in a disorientating video-game-like world, has died after being abandoned by the business world. It was three years old. … Companies’ rush to get into the game led Wall Street investors, consultants, and analysts to try to one up each other’s projections for the Metaverse’s growth. The consulting firm Gartner claimed that 25% of people would spend at least one hour a day in the Metaverse by 2026. The Wall Street Journal said the Metaverse would change the way we work forever. The global consulting firm McKinsey predicted that the Metaverse could generate up to “$5 trillion in value,” adding that around 95% of business leaders expected the Metaverse to “positively impact their industry” within five to 10 years. Not to be outdone, Citi put out a massive report that declared the Metaverse would be a $13 trillion opportunity.

    * NYT | In Norway, the Electric Vehicle Future Has Already Arrived: About 80 percent of new cars sold in Norway are battery-powered. As a result, the air is cleaner, the streets are quieter and the grid hasn’t collapsed. But problems with unreliable chargers persist.

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Hold Uber Accountable. Support HB 2231.

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Question of the day

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Former Gov. Pat Quinn had his own ethical issues with the Neighborhood Recovery Initiative and hiring at IDOT and crafting a new job for Madigan crony Patrick Ward and being accused by Dick Durbin of having been a ghost payroller under Dan Walker. But those days are long-forgotten and he held a press conference today to demand that Gov. JB Pritzker call an immediate special session on ethics. His proposals

(1) Amending Article XIV, Section 3 of the Illinois Constitution to allow voters to enact stricter ethics laws directly by initiative petition and binding referendum;

(2) Enacting a mandatory conflict of interest law to prevent legislators from voting or taking official action on matters involving personal, family, or financial interests;

(3) Prohibiting taxpayer-paid pensions for legislators and former legislators convicted of public integrity felonies;

(4) Strengthening the office and powers of the Legislative Inspector General including subpoena powers to help perform thorough investigations and root out misconduct;

(5) Prohibiting legislators from doubledipping by being on two public payrolls while in office;

(6) Restrictions on the campaign contributions and charitable donations of regulated utilities and monopolies;

(7) Stronger revolving door prohibitions on legislators leaving the General Assembly and joining the payroll of an entity with a lobbying interest; and

(8) Robust income tax disclosure requirements for statewide constitutional offices and legislative leaders.

We did this with the House GOP proposals, so let’s try it again.

* The Question: Which, if any, of these ideas do you support the most and which, if any, do you oppose? Make sure to explain your answers, please. Thanks.

…Adding… From Senate President Don Harmon’s spokesperson John Patterson…

We appreciate Mr. Quinn’s input and look forward to reviewing his letter.
At the end of the day, the people in the ComEd Four trial were convicted because what they did was already, and always has been, illegal.

Senate President Harmon will continue to be a champion of ethics. The point he has been trying to drive home is that what we need in public service are good people focused on the state’s welfare rather than their own self-interests. 

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Bring Offshore Wind To Lake Michigan

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Tell state legislators to bring offshore wind to Lake Michigan. Fight climate change. Create thousands of union jobs for local communities. And generate homegrown clean energy.

Support the Rust Belt to Green Belt Pilot Project Act.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Extra! (Updated)

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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As Lightfoot departs office, where’s the plan for helping migrants?

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here’s some background if you need it. Block Club Chicago

In her farewell speech Monday, outgoing Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot touted her accomplishments during a term marred by a pandemic, civil unrest and a skyrocketing homicide rate.

But she failed to address the escalating crisis the city faces now that has left migrants without beds and showers living on floors of police stations and respite centers as officials scramble to serve the thousands of new people arriving in Chicago.

Alderpeople and those working on the front lines with migrants say Lightfoot’s team was “woefully unprepared” to tackle the crisis. And Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson, who takes office next week, hasn’t offered up a specific plan, either.

* More Block Club

Other alderpeople Monday criticized the city and state response to the unfolding crisis. Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) suggested that National Guard armories around the city could be good sites to temporarily house migrants.

“There really isn’t a single element of this response that’s adequate,” Hopkins said.

* FOP President John Catanzara lodged a complaint about the city housing migrants at police stations in April. But now the Police Sergeants’ Association is speaking up. WGN

Another police union is calling out the City of Chicago for sending newly arrived migrants and asylum seekers to police stations for extended periods of time.

James Calvino, president of the Chicago Police Sergeants’ Association, penned an open letter to the City where he claims, “families are remaining in stations for days and, sometimes weeks at a time.” […]

One mother told WGN she and her two daughters had been shipped back and forth between the 8th and 14th district police stations while waiting for placement at a shelter. […]

“If a Police Officer was to walk into a home with the same conditions that exists in the stations,” reads Calvino’s letter, in part. “They would be forced to call DCFS and remove any/all children, due to the poor conditions.”

Click here for the full letter from Calvino

* ABC Chicago

The New Life Center in Little Village is packed as more migrants arrive in Chicago every day, and with the pandemic-era Title 42 police ending Thursday, an even larger flood of new arrivals is expected.

All who are sent to Chicago are in need of food, shelter and resources.

“We are anticipating that it will continue to grow. What’s already happening will just continue to grow,” said Chris Ophus, assistant director of New Life Centers. […]

“The biggest thing is probably there is a need to open more shelters. There is going to be a need to open more shelters,” Ophus said.

In April, the Tribune reported that 12 migrant shelters had been closed, leaving just eight.

* WSJ

Chicago leaders say they are working on plans to accommodate the expected influx, but haven’t released many details.

“We’ve been thinking about a potential surge since the beginning of the year, knowing that May 11 was coming,” said Nubia Willman, the city’s chief engagement officer for communities.

The city last week started using parks buildings to temporarily house some migrants. The city has also proposed using the former South Shore High School building for what it is calling a respite center where migrants could wait for shelter beds, taking pressure off police stations. Community leaders near the high school have complained that they didn’t have input into the decision, echoing a controversy at another shuttered school, Wadsworth Elementary, which is being used as a shelter for about 500 migrants.

Chicago’s mayor-elect, Brandon Johnson, said he would work toward a coordinated response at the city, state and federal level, adding: “I’m going to work collaboratively with the people of Chicago and alderpersons who represent areas where we can be supportive for asylum seekers to make sure every community, and every person in it, is protected.”

  16 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* A productive Monday from the House…


* SB2253 is on First Reading in the Senate. WAND

Volunteer firefighters could receive a $500 tax credit starting next year. The plan is gaining strong support following the deadly dust storm pileup on I-55 last week.

Democrats and Republicans are coming together to back the proposed tax break. The Illinois Firefighters Association said Monday this could be a new incentive to address the critical shortage of volunteer firefighters. Sponsors said it will also be a thank you for dedication and hard work. […]

The plan would apply to volunteer firefighters who serve at least nine months and make less than $10,000 each year. Lawmakers also spent time Monday honoring the Central Illinois heroes who responded to the deadly pileup accident during the dust storm on May 1.

“I accept this on behalf of the responders that were out there in unimaginable conditions in a scene that looked more like a Hollywood movie than it did a section of I-55,” said MABAS Division 56 President Kevin Schott.

* Journal Courier

State Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer says a Senate bill he presented in the House would close legal loopholes and ensure the parents of developmentally disabled children can have access to health records without a court order.

The Jacksonville Republican said Senate Bill 188, which he presented in the Adoption & Child Welfare Committee, resulted from a case in which a parent could not obtain lab results for her 14-year-old son although he has Down syndrome and cannot make his own medical decisions. She had to hire an attorney to file a petition requesting access.

“If a child is under the age of 12, parents have access to these records. If they are over 18, they can be declared a disabled adult. Between those ages, [parents] need the child’s permission; even when the parent is required to sign a consent for the child,” Davidsmeyer said. […]

The bill was returned May 2 to the Adoption & Child Welfare Committee for discussion of a House floor amendment, according to the Legislative Information System. The amendment stipulates records could be made available for services “for which the parent is treated as the child’s personal representative” rather than “related to the health care service the parent consented to.”

* AP

Illinois bills that would update existing laws to be more gender inclusive and add protections for LGBTQ marriages are ready for action by Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who said he will sign them. […]

One bill would replace certain pronouns with the nouns to which the pronouns refer, such as “minor” instead of “he or she,” and “person who gives birth” in place of “mother” in some existing laws concerning children in the state’s care.

Before her “no” vote, Republican Caucus Whip Sen. Jil Tracy said: “I gave birth to two boys that weighed over 10 pounds (4.5 kilograms). I think I deserve more dignity that just ‘a person who gave birth.’ I’m a mother.” […]

Another bill would require state agencies to track employees who identify as non-binary or gender non-conforming to help achieve workforce diversity, and a third bill would make it easier for LGBTQ couples who resided in other states to marry in Illinois.

* Northern Star

A bipartisan vote of 50-2 Thursday passed a bill that would build on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s previous executive order to combat homelessness in Illinois.

Bill “HB2831” was passed in both Houses and was a win for the Supportive Housing Providers Association, a non-profit group that provides supportive and affordable housing services to individuals who have been homeless and/or have special needs.

“HB 2831 will expand upon Pritzker’s Executive Order creating the Interagency Task Force on Homelessness and reflect the legislature’s commitment in addressing the big picture issues of homelessness, institutionalization, and housing instability in Illinois,” said David Esposito, executive director of the SHPA.

Pritzker issued an executive order in Sept. 2021, to combat homelessness during the COVID-19 pandemic when a study by the University of Illinois, called the COVID-19 Eviction Crisis Study, estimated 60,000 evictions were expected to occur in 2021.

* Sun-Times

Illinois should move carefully before repealing its three-decade-old moratorium on new nuclear power plants.

On Tuesday, the House Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee will discuss an amended version of a bill passed by the state Senate to lift the moratorium and allow “advanced nuclear reactors.” Advocates of ending the moratorium have said they want to make it possible to build small power nuclear power plants in the state, which would take advantage of new federal spending, although the technology to make that possible is years in the future. And it’s not clear how the “advanced nuclear reactors” in the bill would differ from small modular ones.

Meanwhile, Illinois still faces the problem that led to the moratorium in the first place: There is no long-term storage facility to store nuclear waste, which can go on emitting hazardous radiation for tens of thousands of years.

As envisioned, small modular nuclear power plants would have about a third of the generating capacity of traditional nuclear reactors. Their modular design would allow them to be factory assembled, saving money and allowing them to be constructed on sites too small for traditional reactors. U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry has said small modular reactors can be a tool to fight against climate change.

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Pass Senate Bill 1763 To Preserve And Expand Access to Healthcare

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Expanding access to care was a core component to the Affordable Care Act and is a big part of recent efforts to advance health equity, with significant progress made to break down barriers to care. From rural to urban Illinois, though, access to care is being threatened as hospitals face daunting financial challenges.

Recent spikes in labor, supply and drug costs—along with below-cost reimbursement from Illinois’ Medicaid program—have left hospitals with the difficult choice to reduce services to survive. Earlier this year, St. Margaret’s Health – Peru closed because “factors beyond our control have brought about many unforeseen fiscal hardships.”

Medicaid—the state’s largest insurer—only reimburses hospitals less than 80% of the cost of care. That financial loss makes it harder for hospitals to remain viable. Importantly, when a hospital closes or reduces services, it impacts everyone in the community, not only persons covered by Medicaid.

SB 1763 would provide the first General Revenue Fund Medicaid hospital rate increase in 28 years, bringing a much-needed 20% across-the-board increase to hospital Medicaid base rates.

The bill would narrow the gap between the cost of care and Medicaid reimbursement. Illinois hospitals need your help now: Pass SB 1763 to help preserve access to care for everyone by improving Medicaid hospital rates. Discover the facts to learn more.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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bp Is Investing In Illinois

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on today? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

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Live coverage

Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Afternoon roundup

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Argh

Most Illinois public school districts that tested sinks and fountains for tiny traces of brain-damaging lead as required by a 2017 state law had to tell parents they found the toxic metal quietly lurking in the children’s drinking water.

According to a Tribune analysis of state data, more than 1,800 of the roughly 2,100 public schools that submitted test results identified some amount of lead in their drinking water. That includes more than 1,350 schools where at least one water sample had lead levels exceeding 5 parts per billion, the threshold where parental notification is required.

But despite the widespread nature of the problem — and the threat lead poses to young brains, even in small amounts — the state’s efforts to curtail lead in school drinking water mostly ended there.

The Illinois Department of Public Health, the state agency tasked with overseeing the law, did not make the statewide testing results public. It did not ensure that all eligible schools had conducted testing and submitted their results. And it offered schools conflicting guidance on what steps they should take after finding elevated lead levels in their drinking water.

More

The law did say that IDPH was to provide guidance on mitigation strategies. But the agency has offered shifting instructions on what was supposed to happen following the lead tests, sometimes telling districts that they had to work to reduce any lead they found and sometimes that mitigation was simply recommended.

The result was a patchwork of responses from Illinois schools, the Tribune found. Some districts spent millions to greatly reduce or eliminate the lead in their school drinking water, while others reported taking little action, even though the toxic metal can hamper brain development even in very small amounts.< [...]

In Illinois, the 2017 law directed schools to notify parents of results above 5 parts per billion but did not set a level where mitigation was required. This left school administrators to navigate a dizzying labyrinth of guidance that shifted as time went by.

* Update…


* District map-drawing doesn’t work this way. It has to focus on voting age populations, not students

“The preliminary map that you released yesterday under-represents the Latino population compared to their proportion of the CPS population and over-represents the white population,” Jessica Cañas, representing Kids First Chicago, a children’s and parents’ advocacy group, told the panel of lawmakers.

“CPS is 47% Latino students, yet only 30% of these districts will likely yield Latino board members,” Cañas said.

Black students come in second in the racial breakdown of CPS enrollment with 36% followed by white students at 11%, according to the most recent CPS data. The map that was released on Friday shows that white voting-age residents make up the largest percentage of all voting-age residents in seven of the 20 proposed districts, compared to six with a majority Hispanic voting-age population and seven black voter-dominated districts.

* Greg Hinz

Durbin is about as establishment as it gets nowadays in Illinois Democratic politics, a longtime fixture who crosses many eras and political factions. But Durbin has been catching a lot of heat lately from his party’s resurgent left wing for a few reasons: endorsing Paul Vallas for mayor, squabbling with Gov. J.B. Pritzker over the state party chairmanship and how he’s handled his chairmanship of the federal judge-making Senate Judiciary Committee. […]

Typical of the spot in which he finds himself: a pretty good grilling he got today from Jake Tapper on CNN, who, among other things, asked why Durbin isn’t pushing for Judiciary member Sen. Dianne Feinstein to resign if she can’t soon rejoin his closely divided panel. And Tapper also pressed Durbin on why he isn’t doing more about what many view as an ethics scandal on the Supreme Court.

Durbin didn’t do much to suggest Feinstein, his “friend and colleague of many years,” should call it quits. “I hope she does what’s right . . . soon,” Durbin put it.

He was considerably more assertive on SCOTUS, terming the situation “embarrassing,” calling on Chief Justice John Roberts to issue a code on his own, and declaring that “everything is on the table.” including subpoenaing one or more justices to testify.

Thoughts?

* Uber complains to the DNC

Jaime Harrison
Chair
Democratic National Committee

Chair Harrison,

I’m reaching out to make you aware of a proposed bill that we believe could significantly impact our operations in the State of Illinois, so that you can prepare appropriately for the upcoming convention.

If passed as is, HB 2231 could make Illinois one of, if not the only place, in the country to treat rideshare as a common carrier. There remains a lot of uncertainty over what new restrictions drivers could face, but it could lead to new barriers or eligibility requirements for drivers, which could in turn lead to fewer drivers on the road. Fewer drivers may mean higher wait times and less reliability. On extremely busy days, like during the convention, there might not be enough drivers to meet rider demand at all.

The bill could also lead to some of the most expensive insurance requirements in the country, which may lead to significant price increases. That’s despite the fact that Illinois already has some insurance requirements for rideshare 3 times that of local taxis. It’s possible Chicago could become one of the most expensive markets in the country for rideshare. Most of the additional costs would go to cover insurance, increasing prices for riders but not necessarily fares for drivers. It’s especially disappointing that the State legislature rejected reasonable compromises that might reduce costs and allow for the implementation of new safety features. Higher costs could also lead to increased frustration among drivers who see that more and more of their fare is used to cover the cost of government-mandated insurance. Frustrated drivers may opt to leave the app, leaving Chicago with fewer drivers.

We know that planning for the Convention is already well underway, and we don’t want you caught off guard if the availability of on-demand transportation is less than anticipated as a result of the new law. Our hope is that drivers and riders will continue their use of our app as normal. However, given the likely impact this legislation may have on rider pricing and driver earnings, we have significant concerns about how it could affect the reliability of our app.
Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

Sincerely,
Josh Gold
Senior Director, Policy & Communications
Uber Technologies, Inc.

The bill cleared the Senate and will receive a concurrence vote in the House.

* Press release…

This month, more than 20 students recently accepted into the Northwestern Prison Education Program (NPEP) — the only bachelor’s degree-granting program for incarcerated students offered by a top 10 university in the United States, will begin classes at Stateville Correctional Center.

“NPEP is the gateway, the entrance, into a world of scholars, freedom educators, and amazing, beautiful people,” said Demetrius Cunningham, one of the students recently accepted into NPEP. “It’s a dream come true.”

Donnell Green, another recently admitted NPEP student, shared similar feelings. “When an incarcerated individual says they want to make the best of their situation — being an NPEP student is what they mean.”

This new addition will make up NPEP’s third cohort of students at Stateville Correctional Center. These students will join the first and second cohorts of NPEP students who are currently working on their bachelor’s degrees.

“Cohorts 1 and 2 have welcomed me like family,” said Shawn Thigpen, a Cohort 3 student.

“I finally found a family who loves and truly has care for me,” said Jacob Currey, another Cohort 3 student, of the existing NPEP students. “They connect, assess, respond, and encourage.”

For this most recent round of admissions, NPEP’s Admissions Committee — made up of Northwestern administrators and faculty members— received nearly 400 applications from individuals at facilities across the state of Illinois. In addition to the 20 students accepted into NPEP earlier this year, 20 more students from the applicant pool will join NPEP this summer as members of the program’s fourth cohort.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Sun-Times | Naperville, state of Illinois urge U.S. Supreme Court not to block ban on assault-style weapons: Robert Bevis, a gun shop owner in Naperville, has challenged a town ordinance and a state law ending the sale of the weapons, arguing that they violate the Second Amendment. Bevis so far has failed to persuade federal judges in Chicago and has asked the Supreme Court for an emergency injunction stopping the laws from being enforced while his case is heard.

    * Sun-Times | Top cop’s wife coached slain officer’s high school cheerleading team: ‘She did not deserve this’: His wife, former police Capt. Saadia Carter, said memories and photos quickly began pouring in from members of the cheerleading team she coached at UIC College Prep on the Near West Side. “She always had something funny to say and was guaranteed to pass on her infectious smile,” Carter said of Preston. “She did not deserve this!” Nicknamed “Legs,” Preston played the role of flyer, the team member who’s tossed in the air during stunts. Carter’s daughter — Preston’s friend — was the team’s captain.

    * Triibe | Why is the State’s Attorney’s Office hiding ShotSpotter evidence?: The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office (CCSAO) has routinely hidden evidence from defendants that was obtained from ShotSpotter, a gunshot-detection system, according to Brendan Max, the chief of the Forensic Science Division at the Cook County Public Defender’s Office (PDO). The CCSAO’s pattern of failing to inform defendants about how ShotSpotter determines noises are gunshots is similar to a 2020 case in which a man was falsely charged with murder based on a ShotSpotter alert.

    * Injustice Watch | Videos of Cook County judge with massage parlor owner raise ethics questions: Associate Judge Gregory P. Vazquez, who filed papers to retire amid Injustice Watch’s investigation, appears on a police raid body camera with the owner of a Brookfield massage parlor known for unlawful sex work. Vazquez said he was merely giving a friend a ride.

    * Daily Herald | Experts warn of costlier COVID care as emergency declaration ends: “The problem is we’ve been relying on testing, treatments and vaccines being widely available as a public health measure, and those tools were paid for by the emergency declaration,” said Dr. Emily Landon, head of the University of Chicago’s infectious disease prevention and control program. “The last people who should be making decisions about public health is the insurance industry. We don’t want to see these tools become inaccessible.”

    * Tribune | McDonald’s faces new lawsuit over its advertising spending with Black-owned media: The lawsuit hinges on a commitment McDonald’s made in the spring of 2021 to increase the share of advertising dollars it was spending with Black-owned media from 2% to 5% between 2021 and 2024. The lawsuit alleges McDonald’s “did not come close” to spending 2% of its advertising budget with Black-owned media in 2021 and that it is not on track to spend 5% by next year.

    * Tribune | Chicago Public Schools parents take issue with proposed elected school board map: “The preliminary map that you released yesterday under-represents the Latino population compared to their proportion of the CPS population and over-represents the white population,” Jessica Cañas, representing Kids First Chicago, a children’s and parents’ advocacy group, told the panel of lawmakers.

    * Chicago Mag | The Long Game: When it came to fundraising, Paul Vallas had Brandon Johnson beat. Days before the April 4 mayoral runoff, Vallas reported contributions of over $19 million, more than half of that coming from 44 individuals or organizations. Johnson clocked in at just over $11 million, largely from unions. But where Johnson had the upper hand, and what ultimately propelled him to an upset victory, was his community outreach — appealing to supportive voters to turn out to the polls. The person leading that charge was Emma Tai, executive director of United Working Families, a political advocacy organization started in 2014 by social-welfare and labor groups, including the Chicago Teachers Union. Tai spoke to Chicago about the decade-long effort to elect a progressive mayor, how she abandoned a community organizer’s mindset of only going after winnable targets, and why she identifies with a certain rebel in the Star Wars universe.

    * The Triibe | Hyde Park Summer Fest founder wants its impact to outweigh negative headlines about Chicago: ”So we’re approaching this as being neighbors to our neighborhood, and trying to provide benefits for our neighborhood,” Swain said. “So communities are always at the heart of what we’re thinking.”

    * WaPo Editorial Board | This is the solution to the covid learning loss crisis: Foremost among those is what’s known as high-dosage tutoring. This is basically what it sounds like. Students get relatively individualized instruction, and they get it often — ideally, three or fewer kids per teacher for three hours each week. The average child in districts that reopened quickly during the pandemic lost the equivalent of about seven to 10 weeks of progress, about a quarter of a normal school year; the average student at high-poverty schools that stayed remote for the majority of the 2020-2021 school year lost the equivalent of about 22 weeks. High-dosage tutoring, done correctly, could compensate, giving kids as much as an additional year of growth every year it’s implemented.

    * Daily Herald | ‘On life support’: How Illinois’ horse racing industry is trying to survive after Arlington’s closure: Closure of the grand racing palace in Arlington Heights only accelerated the industry’s decline in Illinois, where there are now fewer equines being bred on downstate farms, many have left to race in other states, and a long-anticipated racino project at Hawthorne — the lone remaining Chicago-area track where both thoroughbreds and standardbreds now race — is stalled amid financing woes. In March, Tim Carey, Hawthorne’s president and CEO, pleaded with state lawmakers to preserve his track’s veto power over the opening of any new harness track within 35 miles, amid a new consortium’s proposal for just that in Richton Park.

    * SJ-R | Another street near downtown Springfield to close for multiple months: No vehicular traffic will be allowed on Washington between Ninth and 11th streets. The road is set to re-open in the late fall.

    * WTTW | Newton Minow’s Daughters Reflect on Father’s Legacy: ‘He Had a Wonderful, Meaningful Life’: Nell Minow said that kind of effort was emblematic of who her dad was as both a man and a father. “He was always there for us, always the best listener, always the best cheerleader, always setting the best example,” Nell Minow said. “He was a great, great, great father.”

    * Belleville News-Democrat | Illinois Youth Police Camp gives teenage boys and girls a disciplined path to success: “The camp definitely helped plant seeds of ambition and fortitude to pursue all my endeavors,” said Hardin, a 2013 Madison High School graduate. “I think the main things the camp teaches are teamwork, commitment and pride. I think those three principles are the most relevant from the camp. I feel a lot of people — especially my generation — lack those team building skills.

    * Lake County News-Sun | Monster Truck Wars wows spectators at Lake County Fairgrounds; ‘Oh my God, that was so cool’: The Powerwheels race was free for young drivers. Families parked their Power Wheels-type ride-ons in a pit area to be ready for the children’s race at intermission. Guadalupe Guadiana of Waukegan, the parent of racer Daniel Garcia, 5, said, “I never did this. We’re living through our kids.”

    * NYT | Asked to Delete References to Racism From Her Book, an Author Refused: When Tokuda-Hall read the details of the offer, she felt deflated — then outraged. Scholastic wanted her to delete references to racism in America from her author’s note, in which she addresses readers directly. The decision was wrenching, Tokuda-Hall said, but she turned Scholastic down and went public, describing her predicament in a blog post and a Twitter post that drew more than five million views.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser and events list

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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The rest of the story

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From about 13 months ago

A veteran police officer in Illinois resigned Tuesday after researchers connected him to a deluge of violent and bigoted social media posts that glorified Adolf Hitler and hate crimes.

The resignation of Springfield Police Department Officer Aaron Paul Nichols, 46, came shortly after his department announced an investigation into the posts, first surfaced by Anonymous Comrades Collective (ACC), a group of anti-fascist researchers.

“If I found a genie and I had one wish? The Jews would be a distant memory in 72 hours,” one of the posts allegedly written by Nichols reads.

The Springfield Police Department said on Friday that it had launched an investigation into Nichols’ “racist comments,” and that his “police powers had been removed.” On Tuesday, the department told HuffPost in a statement that Nichols, who joined the department in 2004, resigned instead of meeting with investigators.

* Washington Post reporter Hannah Allam followed up

After the meeting, [Springfield Police Chief Ken Scarlette] said it was frustrating that he could not yet deliver an ending for the saga. His biggest play was decertification, a formal request for the revocation of Nichols’s ability to work elsewhere as a law enforcement officer, an option that had not been available in Illinois until the governor introduced it as part of recent criminal justice reforms.

The process was so new, Scarlette said, that when he sent the request — just four days after learning of Nichols’s online posts — his contact at the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board, known as ILETSB, told him there were no personnel to consider the issue and likened the office to “flying a plane in the air that has not been put together.”

Twelve months later, ILETSB still had not officially ruled on the matter. Officials there did not respond to a phone message or email seeking comment.

The move might not be monumental, Scarlette said, but it would be an answer to the question that still comes up in every meeting, one concrete win in his year-long fight against hate.

“You don’t get to just resign and this whole thing goes away,” he said. “Because it’s not going away for me as chief. It’s not going away for this agency. It’s not going away for the city.”

The whole thing is worth a read, but the WaPo reporter wasn’t able to reach the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board for whatever reason [Adding: An ILETSB official says the board never received a call or message from anyone at the Washington Post].

I contacted the ILETSB today and was told that because the resignation happened before July 1 of last year, when the decertification statute took effect, the board had no legal means of proceeding with a discretionary decertification.

But, I was told, former officer Nichols is now in a state database, so if he applies for another police job in Illinois, he’ll be flagged as having a misconduct violation when another police agency contacts the ILETSB as required. Also, it will now be essentially impossible for Nichols to be recertified by the ILETSB.

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Meanwhile, in Opposite Land…

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Oklahoma

Before February, Jaci Statton wasn’t particularly focused on Oklahoma’s abortion bans. “I was like, ‘Well, that’s not going to affect me. I won’t ever need one,’ ” she says. […]

Then, in mid-February, she started to feel really sick — nauseous and dizzy and weak. The first few pregnancy tests came back negative, but after several trips to the hospital, a blood test confirmed it: She was pregnant. […]

In Jaci’s case, there was a problem. The treatment is a dilation and curettage or D&C — a procedure that clears tissue out of the uterus. A D&C is the most common type of surgical abortion. Even though Jaci’s pregnancy was not viable and the embryo would never develop into a full-term infant, there was cardiac activity. Jaci’s doctor said she couldn’t treat Jaci at the Catholic hospital where she works.

Jaci was transferred to the University of Oklahoma Medical Center. Doctors there confirmed the partial molar pregnancy diagnosis and were ready to do a D&C, but Jaci says an ultrasound tech from the emergency department objected because he detected fetal cardiac activity. The D&C didn’t happen. Instead, she was transferred yet again, this time to Oklahoma Children’s Hospital. […]

At Oklahoma Children’s Hospital, she says the medical staff told her that her condition was serious. “You at the most will last maybe two weeks,” she remembers them telling her. But still, cardiac activity was detectable, and the doctors would not provide a D&C.

Eventually, Statton was able to travel out of state to Wichita, Kansas to receive life-saving care.

* Oklahoma Governor Stitt said he will veto a bill set to fund PBS through 2026


* Florida

Conservation groups across the Southeast United States are urging Gov. DeSantis to veto a bill that would allow the use of radioactive fertilizer waste in road construction across the state.

The bill passed by legislators permits the use of toxic phosphogypsum in “demonstration” road projects in Florida. Critics said this is the first step in a phosphate industry push to eventually use the waste in roads nationwide.

The Environmental Protection Agency prohibits using the toxic phosphate waste in roadway construction because it poses an unacceptable risk to road construction workers, public health and the environment.

The bill would require the Florida Department of Transportation to complete a study on the feasibility of using phosphogypsum as a material for road construction, with a short timeline and completion date of April 1, 2024.

* A thread on banned books in Florida…


* Disney vs. DeSantis

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Friday signed a bill into law that gives a new board he controls the power to void development agreements its predecessor body signed with Disney - the latest episode in a feud between the conservative governor and the entertainment giant.

Under the bill, which passed the Republican-controlled legislature largely along party lines, the Central Tourism Oversight District Board - whose members are appointed by DeSantis - can cancel any deals signed up to three months before the board’s creation.

“Make no mistake about it, the reason why the legislature had to act was not because of anything we did,” DeSantis said at a news conference Friday. “It was basically born out of Disney’s arrogance that they would be able to subcontract around the duly enacted laws of the state of Florida. That’s wrong.”

The legislature formed the board in February to replace the Disney-controlled Reedy Creek Improvement District to oversee development in the 25,000 acres (10,120 hectares) surrounding Walt Disney World, effectively wresting control from the company and handing it to DeSantis.

* It’s Missouri’s final week of session

After barely passing a budget on time Friday thanks to a filibuster over a Cass County landfill, legislators still have major priorities to try to pass in the dwindling hours of the session, including restrictions on initiative ballot petitions and gender-affirming care. […]

Missouri lawmakers followed several other GOP-leaning states by pursuing legislation curtailing treatments like puberty blockers and hormone therapy for minors. But it’s likely that the final product will be less restrictive than in some of those other places.

That’s because Senate Democrats extracted compromises to exempt transgender youth who are already receiving gender-affirming care. And the law would expire after four years, which gives Democrats in the upper chamber a chance to filibuster any effort to extend it.

But House Republicans don’t want gender care legislation that includes an expiration date or exemptions.

One added wrinkle to this debate is emergency restriction rules from Attorney General Andrew Bailey. Since state statutes trump emergency rules, it’s possible that passage of gender-affirming care legislation that only affects minors will supersede Bailey’s guidelines that also affect adults.

* Missouri

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey is trying to convince the state auditor’s office to increase the projected cost of an initiative petition seeking to enshrine abortion rights in the constitution, according to records obtained by The Independent. […]

Bailey wrote on April 10 that the fiscal note should tally in the billions.

“…because the impact to the State of Missouri is likely to be so drastic but is not reflected in the submissions you received from state and local entities, the fiscal note on which your summary relied is legally deficient,” he wrote. […]

Fitzpatrick pushed back on each Bailey’s claims, writing on April 21 that though he vehemently opposes abortion and would like to be able to say the initiative petition would cost the state billions of dollars, “it wouldn’t.”

“To submit a fiscal note summary that I know contains inaccurate information would violate my duty as State Auditor to produce an accurate fiscal note summary,” Fitzpatrick wrote.

* South Carolina

The Sisters, as they call themselves, are the women in the South Carolina State Senate — the only women, three Republicans, one Independent and one Democrat, in a legislature that ranks 47th among states in the proportion of women. As a block, they are refusing to allow the legislature to pass a near-total ban on abortion, despite a Republican supermajority.

Three times in eight months, Republican leaders in the chamber have tried to ban abortion beginning at conception. Three times, the women have resisted, even as fellow Republicans have threatened primary challenges and anti-abortion activists have paraded empty strollers and groups of children heckling the women as “baby killers.”

Before the most recent debate started in April, the anti-abortion group Students for Life dropped off gift bags at the offices of the three Republican women containing plastic spines, infant size but intended to encourage the women to grow one, with notes signed, “the pre-born.”

The women filibustered, taking the gifts to the podium on the Senate floor to declare themselves even more firmly in resistance. “I’ve got one hell of a spine already, but now I’ve got another backup,” Senator Katrina Shealy said, flanked by the two other Republican women, all holding their plastic spines like trophies.

After three days of debate, during which the women spoke for as long as four hours each at a time, Senate leadership acknowledged — again — that it did not have the votes to pass the ban.

* North Dakota

North Dakota’s Republican Gov. Doug Burgum has signed a bill into law that allows public school teachers and state government employees to ignore the pronouns their transgender students and colleagues use, the governor’s office announced Monday.

The new law also requires teachers to tell a parent or legal guardian if the student identifies as transgender. It also prohibits transgender students from using the bathroom of their choice without prior approval from a parent or guardian.

It is effective immediately.

Burgum said in a statement that the new law “largely codifies existing practices while reaffirming the First Amendment right to free speech … balancing the rights and interests of students, parents and teachers.”

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Report: US Rep. Danny Davis will run again

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Lynn Sweet

Rep. Danny Davis, D-Ill., is making it official: He will seek another term, raising the question on Monday of whether Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin will continue exploring a congressional bid, since she had said she would run only if Davis retired.

Davis, 82, will make a public announcement about his 2024 bid for a 15th term in the coming weeks, Davis chief of staff Tumia Romero, who is also his top political adviser, told the Sun-Times.

The impending campaign launch and official announcement seems intended to make it clear beyond a doubt Davis is not going to retire. On Feb. 2, 2023, Davis, filed a statement of 2024 candidacy with the Federal Election Commission.

Conyears-Ervin told the Sun-Times in a statement: “Last month, I announced I was exploring a run for Congress, and that process continues. In the coming months, I will determine how I can best serve the people of the Seventh Congressional District.”

Thoughts?

  26 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Fran Spielman

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration is sounding the alarm about a pair of firefighters pension sweeteners poised for legislative approval that, mayoral aides warn, could saddle Chicago taxpayers with $3 billion in additional costs.

The companion bills are co-sponsored by Lightfoot’s legislative nemesis, state Sen. Robert Martwick (D-Chicago) and by Sen. Cristina Pacione-Zayas, the progressive champion who will serve as deputy chief of staff to Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson.

They appear to be on a fast track to reach Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk during the spring session.

One of the bills would increase benefits for Chicago firefighters hired after Jan. 1, 2011, when Illinois created a two-tiered pension system that reduced benefits for newly-hired workers to chip away at the state’s mountain of pension debt.

The second bill would change the final average salary used in calculating a Chicago firefighters pension.

* HB2471 has been placed on the House calendar for a concurrence vote


* Sun-Times Editorial Board publishes an opposite take from the Tribune’s Editorial Board last month. Here’s the CS-T

Because of Illinois’ unusual geology, many companies throughout the nation’s midsection might want to capture carbon dioxide emissions from their operations and ship the gas to Illinois for sequestration underground.

Before that happens, Illinois should put strong safeguards in place to protect residents, landowners, taxpayers, drinking water and the climate. […]

The Legislature is considering bills to regulate carbon capture, and stakeholders are in the process of negotiation. The Illinois House Energy & Environment Committee held a subject matter meeting on the topic May 1. Any final bill should ensure Illinois is regulating the technology responsibly.

Keeping carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere is an important goal. But it needs to be done in a way that is safe for people and the environment.

* HB2 is on Second Reading in the House. Center Square

A proposed bill moving through the Illinois legislature could legalize the creation of spaces for people to use illegal drugs under medical supervision in an effort to prevent overdoses.

House Bill 2 would allow the Illinois Department of Human Services to create overdose prevention sites, and would connect drug users with treatment programs.

The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, says fentanyl-laced drugs are killing Illinoisans on a daily basis.

Ford said funds from the opioid settlement with pharmaceutical companies could be used for the program.

* WCCU

Pro-choice group, Planned Parenthood, is pushing for legislation to stop people in Illinois from advertising services from another organization near abortion providers. […]

Director of Advocacy, Rianne Hawkins, for Planned Parenthood gave an example of what happens when advocates from separate groups come near their building.

“Physically, redirecting patients from our health center to their facility,” Hawkins said.

Hawkins explained why she find this deceptive.

“They might advertise that they offer [a] full-range of care, then do not offer that full-range of care”, Hawkins added. […]

The bill has been passed in the Senate and is now the House for legislators to debate on it.

* Chicago Tribune

Newly constructed homes in Illinois would be required to include the infrastructure needed for electric vehicle charging stations under a bill now on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk.

The “Electric Vehicle Charging Act,” passed by the state House Thursday on a party-line 69-38 vote after earlier approval by the Senate, requires that new single-family or small multifamily homes offer at least “one EV-capable parking space for each residential unit that has dedicated parking.” A large multifamily residential building must “have 100% of its total parking spaces EV-capable.” […]

“This is a bill that reflects our future, and future-proofs the future with electric vehicles in this state,” Democratic state Sen. Sara Feigenholtz, who represents Chicago’s Lakeview community and was the chief sponsor of this bill, told the Tribune. “This sort of trickles down to my constituents.”

Republican state Rep. Travis Weaver took issue with that reasoning from Feigenholtz, noting that it was led in both chambers by lawmakers who represent parts of Chicago’s North Side and does not suit the interests of all Illinois residents.

“If less than 1% of cars on the road are EVs, and less than 0.1% of cars in my district are EVs, I just don’t see why we’re having people in downstate Illinois pay for this infrastructure,” said Weaver, who represents a swath of central Illinois.

* American Council of Engineering Companies of Illinois…

With two weeks remaining in the 2023 Spring legislative session, the American Council of Engineering Companies of Illinois (ACEC Illinois) has launched a grassroots advocacy and digital campaign seeking support for legislative measures that would retain and recruit engineers in an effort to close the skills-gap shortage while protecting Rebuild Illinois.

The organization is seeking support to pass several pieces of legislation including tax credits that will prioritize the development of engineering talent for the workforce, promote engineering innovation, protect engineering companies and ensure Illinois’ road, transportation and physical infrastructure projects continue to be well-funded by the state and completed by the most qualified professionals in the industry. Additional information on the measures can be found at https://illinoisengineeringmatters.com/.

“Illinois needs a competitive edge to recruit and retain engineering talent and make the state the top destination for engineers,” said Kevin Artl, President and CEO of the American Council of Engineering Companies of Illinois. “That is why we are supporting legislation that provides tax credits to attract talent from out of state and encourage professionals to remain in-state to work on the state’s highest priority infrastructure projects.”

ACEC Illinois is calling for support for the passage of legislation such as the State Innovation Tax Credit (HB2423) (SB 2084) that creates a State of Illinois innovation tax credit that would be administered by the Department of Revenue, rather than the IRS, aiding in the state’s goal of attracting more research and development programs to Illinois. This legislation is sponsored by Rep. Marty Moylan and Senator Don DeWitte. ACEC-Illinois is also calling for passage of the Retain Illinois Students of Engineering (RISE) Tax Credit (HB 2425) (SB 2282) which aims to attract and retain engineers as the industry faces a shortage of educated talent. Sponsored by Rep. Marty Moylan and Senator Ram Villivalam, the legislation provides for a tax credit of 10% of the salary paid to recent graduates of Illinois’ engineering schools and 5% of the salary paid to recent graduates of engineering schools outside of Illinois.

Data from the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics and the ACEC Research Institute show the engineering workforce in Illinois is already at full employment with shortages of engineers and land surveyors projected in the near future. ACEC Illinois believes the passage of these bills will give Illinois a competitive edge against every other state in the nation when it comes to recruiting and retaining engineering talent. It will help grow Illinois’ engineering industry sector, help deliver key projects on time and on budget, help resolve engineering workforce shortages; be a huge boost to the economy and improve the state’s bottom line.

  16 Comments      


That toddlin’ town roundup

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Last week

Ald. Nick Sposato, 38th, who is a member of the unofficial Chicago Police Department caucus and among the most conservative aldermen, said he is “very optimistic” about Johnson’s ability to maintain relationships with the City Council, but that the days of lasting super-majorities held by Chicago mayor’s “are over.”

“The lefty loons are going to be with him, and then you got people that are just against everything and everybody who are going to be against him and then you get some people that will be like, ‘OK, let’s try to work together and, and get some things done,’” he said, pegging the number that will be with Johnson on certain issues at 20.

* Fran Spielman last night

Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson has forged a compromise to shrink the number of City Council committees from 28 to 20 and replace Finance Committee Chairman Scott Waguespack (32nd) with Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd), whose endorsement of Johnson was a turning point of his mayoral campaign.

The plan will also install Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th), chair of the City Council’s Democratic-Socialist caucus, as chair of the powerful Zoning Committee. […]

Jason Lee, a senior adviser to Johnson’s transition team, maintained that the mayor-elect’s goal was “not necessarily about stacking committees with our allies, because we think a lot of folks can become our allies.” […]

Instead of increasing the number of City Council committees from 19 to 28, what Johnson is calling the “Unity Plan” would retain the original 19 and create one additional committee: “Police and Fire.” […]

During an interview with the Sun-Times last month, Waguespack warned Johnson to “leave this alone” and make no changes to the City Council reorganization approved on March 30.

* Politico this morning

Johnson has assigned Ald. Pat Dowell to be the City Council finance chair, bumping Ald. Scott Waguespack (32nd) from the high-powered position. The move upends Waguespack’s efforts to make the council a fully independent reorganization. Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) will now head the budget committee, according to a list obtained by Playbook. […]

Black aldermen who backed Vallas: Ald. Michelle Harris (8th) and Ald. Walter Burnett Jr. (27th) both backed Lightfoot in round one and Vallas in round two, but Johnson surprised and gave both of them committee leadership jobs. Harris will head Rules and Burnett is the vice mayor, a signal that Johnson isn’t holding a grudge.

The list is interesting. Ald. Brian Hopkins, who backed Vallas, will chair the new Public Safety Committee. Sposato will retain the chair on Special Events and Ald. Matt O’Shea keeps Aviation.

* More from Crain’s last night

“There has been ongoing dialogue and collaboration between veteran City Council members, the mayor-elect, and those conversations have been fruitful and positive,” Ramirez Rosa told Crain’s.

Ald. Gilbert Villegas, 36th, the chair of the Latino Caucus who was set to take over the Zoning Committee, will instead remain the chair of Committee on Economic, Capital & Technology Development.

Ald. Brendan Reilly, 42nd, will also be left without a leadership position. A new tourism-focused committee he was set to chair will not exist in the new structure. He is also losing his position as President Pro Tempore to Ald. Sam Nugent, 39th, a moderate who backed Vallas in the election. […]

Ervin, the chair of the Black Caucus and another Johnson supporter, is set to take over for Dowell as chair of the Budget Committee. With Dowell at Finance and Ervin at Budget, Johnson will have two backers atop the two most influential committees, but both aldermen are more moderate than the progressive coalition that put Johnson in office.

Quite the maneuver.

* From a Sun-Times story about the progressive pragmatism of many of Johnson’s early decisions

Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd), who endorsed Vallas, was equally encouraged.

“He’s trying to strike a balance. He’s clearly determined not to make the mistakes of the previous mayor and alienate people,” Hopkins said.

“Politics is a game of addition. So he’s trying to add to his progressive, Socialist base by appealing to the more moderate wing of the Democratic Party.”

* I just couldn’t pass this one up. The American Thinker post is entitled “Was the Chicago mayor victory of radical leftist Brandon Johnson an inside job?”

Writing on John Kass’s website, Pat Hickey posits the theory that the moderate Democrat opposing the victorious radical teachers’ union candidate, Brandon Johnson, was undone by his campaign manager, Joe Trippi, a veteran Democrat campaign consultant. He makes a good case that a critical statement put out by the losing candidate, Paul Vallas, on the advice of Trippi, discouraged Republican and conservative voters from turning out for the runoff.

    [S]omeone asked Joe Trippi to run the Vallas campaign. Who suggested Joe Trippi, the man who sent the screamer Howard Dean into oblivion? It was someone who wanted to please Cook County President Toni Preckwinkle.

    She has no fingerprints on this, but I must believe it to be so. Toni Preckwinkle wields great power and remains a humorless racist with a penchant for political torture. It was Toni Preckwinkle who might have uttered, “Will no one rid me of this troublesome geek (policy wonk)?” One of Toni’s barons must have decided to do the old Thomas Becket on Paul Vallas. The broadsword used to hack Paul Vallas was California Techno-politico Joe Trippi.

Utterly hilarious.

* And for some odd reason, Crain’s gave Matthew Yglesias column space to come up with goofy takes like this

I think it’s a little weird how invested Chicago is in having plentiful parks, given that the weather is trash most of the time, but on nice days they really are nice parks.

Why even bother with these people?

* Isabel’s roundup…

  25 Comments      


Help Illinois Colleges And Universities Go Green. Support Renewable Energy Credits.

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Support Renewable Energy Credits for Illinois’ public universities to help offset the cost of solar power on campus, help fight climate change and create good-paying union jobs.

Join Climate Jobs Illinois’ Carbon Free Healthy Schools campaign: www.climatejobsillinois.org/schools

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ComEd Four trial reflection roundup

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

    * Joe Cahill | The ‘ComEd Four’ trial was an ethical wake-up call for corporate execs: The case shows how corporate ethics can become less than an afterthought under the pressure of financial imperatives that drive ambitious executives. That’s where company directors are supposed to come in; their job is to oversee the conduct of senior executives and step in to head off wrongdoing that can expose the company to criminal liability.

    * WBEZ | The ComEd jury foreman says Madigan is a dangerous force in Illinois politics: Through seven weeks on the jury, Goldenberg grew to understand Madigan’s “manipulative” way of wielding power and wringing bribes from one of the state’s biggest employers in exchange for favorable treatment of company legislation. She said Madigan, who was first elected speaker in 1983 and in power until the federal probe involving ComEd led to his ouster in 2021, was “crafty” and embodied a “dangerous force … that we don’t want to have repeated, in my opinion, within the government.”

    * WBEZ | What ComEd trial guilty verdicts could mean for Michael Madigan and Illinois politics: Lobbyists rarely face sanctions from the state. Annual reports from the secretary of state’s inspector general’s office documented eight complaints in 2019 for “improper lobbying activity,” eight in 2020 and six in 2021. Most wound up being resolved without fines or other sanctions. The exception was a 2021 sexual harassment case involving a lobbyist for Exelon, ComEd’s corporate parent. In that case, which didn’t come up in the ComEd trial, the state Executive Ethics Commission imposed $6,000 in fines against the lobbyist and suspended his lobbyist registration. Those steps came after he had been fired by Exelon.

    * Daily Herald | ComEd convictions send message to Springfield, but are Democratic leaders listening?: So, here we are again. In a state where, by one count, more than 2,100 Illinois public officials have gone to federal prison, four private citizens appear headed for that fate, apparently for determining that in order to get what you want from this state’s government, you play what Mike McClain, a contract lobbyist for ComEd and one of the four defendants convicted, called in a wiretapped conversation a “tier one” game of bribery and favors.

    * SJ-R | Following ‘Com-Ed’ trial, lobbying and ethics reform the talk of the Capitol: Chances of reform before the session adjournment were slim at best Reform for Illinois executive director Alisa Kaplan told The State Journal-Register on Friday. The 2021 omnibus bill was “woefully inadequate,” she said, with special attention given towards the “revolving door” pattern where former legislators return to the Capitol as lobbyists within a short window of time.

    * Tribune | Following ‘ComEd Four’ convictions, US Rep. Sean Casten calls for Michael Madigan to resign remaining Democratic post: “Mr. Madigan will have his day in court, but the corruption has come too close to his office for him to claim ignorance. Public service is a sacred trust. For the good of our democracy and the Democratic Party, he should step down at once,” Casten said in a statement.

    * Sun-Times | Judge sets sentencing dates for ComEd conspirators: On Friday, a federal judge set McClain’s sentencing for Jan. 11, making him the first of the ComEd defendants to be sentenced. Pramaggiore’s sentencing is set for Jan. 16, Hooker’s Jan. 25 and Doherty’s Jan. 30.

    * Tribune | Sentencing hearings set for January for ‘ComEd Four’ in scheme to bribe Madigan: Typically, federal defendants are required to report to prison within a couple of months of being sentenced, but McClain’s attorneys could ask Leinenweber to extend that date so he won’t have to prepare for his second trial from behind bars.

  10 Comments      


Landing the budget plane won’t be easy this year

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune takes a look at the ever-escalating costs of funding health care for undocumented immigrants

During a Wednesday budget hearing for the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, which administers the health care coverage for immigrants, state Sen. Chapin Rose, a Republican from Mahomet, said the projected overrun in the program next year “is a significant hit because of the other choices that are now going to have to be made by the General Assembly on how to fill this $880 million gap.”

The program also is running over budget in the current year, with the total tab now expected to be about $690 million, more than three times what was budgeted, according to the Department of Healthcare and Family Services.

However, the department expects to be able to absorb the cost due to lower-than-expected spending in other areas, Ben Winick, the department’s chief of staff, told a Senate committee Wednesday.

Rose said the projected current year cost overrun would be enough to cover increased funding for services for intellectually and developmentally disabled residents and put the state in compliance with a federal consent decree. Community service providers have repeatedly requested such funding in recent years, but Democrats have said the state can’t afford it.

The governor’s office wouldn’t say how it proposes to address the exploding costs of the immigrant health care program, or whether options such as closing enrollment in the program or raising taxes to pay for it are on the table.

What a mess.

* And Brenden Moore does a good job laying out many of the budget items demanded by various folks

Progressives, for instance, have been pushing for the creation of a $700 child tax credit for low- and middle-income families.

The Latino Caucus has been pushing for the expansion of a program that provides health care to non-citizen adults who are otherwise ineligible for Medicaid benefits. The program is currently for those who are 42 or older, but some want to make anyone over the age of 18.

Advocates for those with developmental disabilities are pushing for a pay increase for professionals who work with those individuals in community-based settings.

Healthcare providers and industry advocates are pushing for an increase hospital Medicaid reimbursement rates.

Local officials have been calling for a gradual restoration of the Local Government Distributive Fund, which is the share of the state’s income tax that goes towards municipalities, to 10%.

I think Rep. Will Guzzardi said it best

“I know we had these flush years from a fiscal perspective. But from a community perspective, these have been lean years, these have been really difficult years and there’s so much trauma in our communities.”

* Related…

    * Illinois’ government has spent billions in federal pandemic aid. What do some programs do when the money runs out?: Some programs started by the state with federal aid during the pandemic could be allowed to continue with funding in the next state budget. One of them involves grants from the Department of Human Services that were intended to help child-care businesses stay open, especially for parents considered essential workers during the pandemic. The grants also created incentives for child-care workers to stay in the industry. “We’ve got folks leaving for higher-paying jobs which have less education requirements, and honestly, less hours,” said Shauna Ejeh, senior vice president of programs for Illinois Action for Children. “And so we know that we’ve got to up our wages and benefits … if we want to attract and retain quality childcare workers, teacher’s assistants, classroom staff — everything from cooks to bus drivers.”

  25 Comments      


If you want to truly address homelessness, look to Rockford (and Houston)

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* New York Times

During the last decade, Houston, the nation’s fourth most populous city, has moved more than 25,000 homeless people directly into apartments and houses. The overwhelming majority of them have remained housed after two years. The number of people deemed homeless in the Houston region has been cut by 63 percent since 2011, according to the latest numbers from local officials. Even judging by the more modest metrics registered in a 2020 federal report, Houston did more than twice as well as the rest of the country at reducing homelessness over the previous decade. Ten years ago, homeless veterans, one of the categories that the federal government tracks, waited 720 days and had to navigate 76 bureaucratic steps to get from the street into permanent housing with support from social service counselors. Today, a streamlined process means the wait for housing is 32 days.

Houston has gotten this far by teaming with county agencies and persuading scores of local service providers, corporations and charitable nonprofits — organizations that often bicker and compete with one another — to row in unison. Together, they’ve gone all in on “housing first,” a practice, supported by decades of research, that moves the most vulnerable people straight from the streets into apartments, not into shelters, and without first requiring them to wean themselves off drugs or complete a 12-step program or find God or a job.

There are addiction recovery and religious conversion programs that succeed in getting people off the street. But housing first involves a different logic: When you’re drowning, it doesn’t help if your rescuer insists you learn to swim before returning you to shore. You can address your issues once you’re on land. Or not. Either way, you join the wider population of people battling demons behind closed doors.

Success, of course, relies on strong and coordinated leadership, which the City of Chicago and other smaller cities across the state simply have not had on this topic, except for one area.

* The Rockford area (Winnebago & Boone Counties) pulled it off

As unemployment rates rose, so did homelessness. In 2014, roughly 700 of the city’s 147,000 residents were unhoused.

Rockford has been working to reverse that trend since partnering with Community Solutions, a New York City nonprofit dedicated to ending homelessness through a housing-first approach, in 2015. As a result, in 2017 Rockford became the first city in the nation to reach functional zero, effectively ending homelessness, for two of the city’s homeless populations: veterans and the chronically homeless.

Reaching functional zero homelessness doesn’t mean that no one in Rockford experiences homelessness. But it does mean that there are more people getting housed than there are people becoming homeless. And that when homelessness does occur, it’s rare and brief.

More here, here and here.

* Governing Magazine

Developed in large part by the social scientist Sam Tsemberis and the longtime federal administrator Philip Mangano, Housing First has been tried in a growing number of American cities. It still requires cooperative landlords and often employs case managers and other Continuum of Care strategies, but the housing itself comes before anything else. Some of the communities that have tried it have reported remarkable results. Utah County, which includes the city of Provo, has reported that 87 percent of Housing First clients were maintaining their housing for at least a year and that chronic homelessness had declined by 50 percent over several years.

But it’s not an end in itself.

* From a Maine newspaper called the Sun Journal

A recent study found that Housing First programs decreased homelessness by 88% and improved housing stability by 41%, compared to Treatment First programs.

Jack Tsai, campus dean and professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, writing in the American Journal of Public Health in 2020 stated, “Studies have found that Housing First results in greater improvements in housing outcomes for homeless adults in North America. Housing First may lead to greater reductions in inpatient and emergency health care services but may have limited effects on clinical and social outcomes.” […]

[Jeff Olivet, executive director of the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness, said] “We know that Housing First is not a panacea. Housing First was designed to end homelessness at the individual level — not to solve the structural causes of homelessness, such as the severe lack of affordable housing, ongoing impacts of structural racism, and lack of access to mental health care and drug and alcohol treatment on demand. Blaming Housing First for the ongoing homelessness crisis is like blaming cancer treatments for cancer. It doesn’t cure every person, and we have much more to learn, but we are saving lives on a daily basis.”

* From that aforementioned study

Results: Twenty-six studies in the United States and Canada met inclusion criteria. Compared with Treatment First, Housing First programs decreased homelessness by 88% and improved housing stability by 41%. For clients living with HIV infection, Housing First programs reduced homelessness by 37%, viral load by 22%, depression by 13%, emergency departments use by 41%, hospitalization by 36%, and mortality by 37%.

Conclusions: Housing First programs improved housing stability and reduced homelessness more effectively than Treatment First programs. In addition, Housing First programs showed health benefits and reduced health services use. Health care systems that serve homeless patients may promote their health and well-being by linking them with effective housing services.

You cannot solve the homeless problem until you put people into housing. That won’t end the problem, but it has to be done first. Temporary shelter beds are barely even a bandaid, let alone a solution.

  24 Comments      


The opposite of “Opposite Land”

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The Illinois Senate debated and passed several bills last Thursday dealing with what the news media likes to call “culture war” issues.

Perhaps the least controversial (there was almost no debate) was House Bill 1591, which deletes some anti-miscegenation laws still on the books since 1915. Even so, nine Republicans voted against the bill.

A bill pushed by the American Civil Liberties Union to amend the state’s Children and Family Services Act, House Bill 1596, also attracted GOP ire. The bill is an attempt to address an auditor general’s report about how the Department of Children and Family Services was “failing to meet the needs of the growing number of LGBTQ+ youth under their care.” So, phrases like “he or she” was replaced with “minor” or “the child,” etc.

In language addressing what happens when mothers relinquish their children or neglect or abuse them, the word “mother” was replaced with the word “person,” although “mother” was left intact in a definition of the term “parent.”

A couple of Republican women said they were insulted by the word change. “I earned the right to be called mother,” said Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, adding that she was “offended” the bill was brought to the floor shortly before Mother’s Day, even though most of the language changes were about people who aren’t exactly model parents. The opposition appeared to have an impact because a handful of Democrats took a walk and the bill passed 36-19.

Then came House Bill 2350, which changed some state insurance code language to make sure a small number of people receive Pap smears and prostate cancer screening. The way the current law mandates insurance coverage seems to exclude those who no longer identify with their birth gender. So, the bill changes some words in the statute to make sure nobody is left out of what can be life-saving coverage.

Things got a bit heated. Sen. Jil Tracy, R-Quincy, declared the Senate was “wasting our time” on the legislation while good Republican bills were “languishing” in the chamber’s Assignments Committee, which is where bills that aren’t voted on by certain deadlines are sent to die. She also called the bill “bizarre.”

“Biological males cannot get Pap smears! It’s not possible!” thundered Sen. Andrew Chesney, R-Freeport.

Well, yeah. Nobody, including the bill sponsors, said they could.

Chesney then went even further by spreading a rumor during debate that has been debunked about a kabillion times.

“This is why your kids are dressing up as furries and want kitty litter in the bathrooms!” Chesney declared about the legislation. The kitty litter thing is a completely fabricated far-right claim that some schools are being forced to put kitty litter in their restrooms to accommodate students. It’s utter nonsense.

Eventually, Sen. Rob Martwick, D-Chicago, had heard enough. “The idea that you would make a stand against simply ensuring that the law provides that human beings, human beings can get life-saving cancer screenings because you have some ideological opposition to the lifestyle that they chose is really nothing short of cruel,” Martwick said. The bill passed 37-17.

House Bill 2389 was called a bit later. It’s an initiative of Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias to prevent police from using the excuse of things like an air freshener or parking pass hanging from a driver’s rearview mirror as a pretext to pull drivers over.

Black and Brown drivers have complained for years that police single them out for enforcement of a law that few people even know exist. But you’d have thought the sponsoring Democrats were trying to enable horrific dangers the way the opposition reacted. Drivers with no front view at all could run down kids near schools if this bill passed, one warned.

Sen. Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, eventually rose to point out that the extreme scenarios outlined by the Republicans were all addressed in the state’s reckless driving statute. “This is a good bill,” Cunningham, a former Cook County Sheriff employee, said. The bill passed 41-11.

An anti-bullying bill, House Bill 3425, was debated near the end of a long day. The proposal would require school officials to notify parents of alleged bullying incidents involving their children within 24 hours after the officials learn of the allegations.

Sen. Seth Lewis, R-Bartlett, warned that the legislation could exacerbate the state’s growing difficulties with retaining and recruiting school administrators. Lewis wound up voting “No” along with four GOP colleagues. But several Republicans voted for it, and it passed 50-5.

It was quite a day.

* Related…

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

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Everyone get through those storms alright? What’s going on in your part of Illinois today?

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

    * Sun-Times | Mayor-elect Johnson forges ‘Unity Plan’ to reorganize the new City Council: Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson has forged a compromise to shrink the number of City Council committees from 28 to 20 and replace Finance Committee Chairman Scott Waguespack (32nd) with Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd), whose endorsement of Johnson was a turning point of his mayoral campaign. The plan will also install Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th), chair of the City Council’s Democratic-Socialist caucus, as chair of the powerful Zoning Committee. … The plan shrinks the number of Council panels from 28 to 20. … “There was a lot of push back on the 28 committees. A lot of push back on the sustainability and viability of that broad of a committee structure. When it was clear to everybody involved that the committee structure had to be reduced, it’s a game of musical chairs, unfortunately,” said a source familiar with the negotiations. [Adding: Committee chairs are here.]

    * WBEZ | Illinois isn’t reimbursing allegedly stolen SNAP benefits: Torres discovered that someone allegedly spent more than $3,000 of her food benefits at a small corner store she says she’s never been to about four miles from her home in South Lawndale on the West Side. […] But in Illinois, advocates that include Legal Council for Health Justice and the Shriver Center on Poverty Law in Chicago say Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration has not agreed to replace stolen funds. And now SNAP recipients are also losing a bump in benefits they received during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    * Tribune | An Illinois law required schools to test water for lead. They found it all over the state.: According to a Tribune analysis of state data, more than 1,800 of the roughly 2,100 public schools that submitted test results identified some amount of lead in their drinking water. That includes more than 1,350 schools where at least one water sample had lead levels exceeding 5 parts per billion, the threshold where parental notification is required.

    * Tribune | Did your Illinois public school find lead in its water? Look up results here: If a district found a lead level above 5 parts per billion at any fixture, the law required officials to notify parents but didn’t mandate that schools work to reduce lead. To find out what public schools did after finding high lead levels, the Tribune spoke with officials, sent surveys or filed records requests to those districts. The state data for the most part does not include results of voluntary retesting.

    * ABC Chicago | Chicago volunteers plead for resources to handle migrant influx as Title 42 set to expire this week: For some migrant families who have arrived in Chicago, their front yard is the entrance to 8th District Police Station. The only place they have to sleep is the station’s lobby floor. “Some of these families have traveled for over a year to get here,” said 8th District Police Response Team lead volunteer coordinator Erika Villegas. “By foot, through jungles, through trains, through so much trauma.”

    * Sun-Times | Off-duty Chicago police officer killed in Avalon Park always wanted to be a cop, father says: Preston described his daughter as a “beautiful soul” who “always saw the best in people” and had long wanted to be a police officer. He said her calling had seemed like destiny, recalling that he and his ex-wife had a police escort to the hospital before she was born.

    * Tribune | Following ‘ComEd Four’ convictions, US Rep. Sean Casten calls for Michael Madigan to resign remaining Democratic post: “Mr. Madigan will have his day in court, but the corruption has come too close to his office for him to claim ignorance. Public service is a sacred trust. For the good of our democracy and the Democratic Party, he should step down at once,” Casten said in a statement.

    * WGN | Teamsters oust suburban board after more than $1M in questionable expenses: A letter sent by Teamsters general president Sean O’Brien to local members said an audit found Local 731’s board gave itself nearly $304,000 in bonuses over five years without the required approval of membership. Auditors also questioned nearly $66,000 in spending they said was excessive or unrelated to union business. It includes two visits to Gibsons Bar and Steakhouse that racked up a total tab of $37,000, including nearly $16,000 in alcohol. The audit also questioned $924,000 in donations and contributions the union made in recent years without membership approval.

    * Tribune | Aurora City Council considers civility pledge:The pledge says: “In the interest of civility, I pledge to promote civility by listening, being respectful of others, acknowledging that we are all striving to support and improve our community and understanding that we each may have different ideas for achieving that objective.”

    * Tribune | Evanston’s groundbreaking reparations plan was stumbling. A brother and sister pushed it forward.: Last year, Kenneth and Shelia, 75, were given the option to become first-time homeowners after they were picked as two of the first 16 Evanstonians to each receive $25,000 in what’s considered the first attempt by a U.S. city to pay reparations to its Black residents. But when their randomly assigned numbers were plucked from a bingo cage on that momentous January day, the Widemans inadvertently exposed a flaw in the fledgling program.

    * Sun-Times | Judge sets sentencing dates for ComEd conspirators: On Friday, a federal judge set McClain’s sentencing for Jan. 11, making him the first of the ComEd defendants to be sentenced. Pramaggiore’s sentencing is set for Jan. 16, Hooker’s Jan. 25 and Doherty’s Jan. 30.

    * SJ-R | Buscher sworn in as mayor, saying she stands ’shoulder to shoulder’ with new city council: Quoting U.S. women’s soccer star Abby Wambach, who said she “never scored a goal…without getting a pass from someone else,” Buscher said she and council members would make “many goals, together, (for the city).”

    * The Intelligencer | Constitution Day bill heads to Pritzker: “Currently, Constitution Day is recognized federally but not by our state and so this legislation ensures that our schools are honoring this commemorative holiday and providing our students with an educational opportunity to learn more about their fundamental rights and our government,” said Harriss.

    * Daily Herald | Where did the Arlington Park regulars go? Many ended up at a Prospect Heights OTB: But for a group of local horseplayers, the back patio at a Prospect Heights sports bar/OTB has become their regular meeting spot since the closure of Arlington Park in 2021. It’s where they still get together to play the ponies, share memories, and debate all that went wrong and what could have happened differently to keep their favorite racetrack open.

    * Fox 2 | Five victims identified from deadly dust storm crashes in Illinois: The victims identified Saturday include… Joseph Bates, 73, of Crystal Lake, Illinois; Donna Bates, 71, of Crystal Lake, Illinois; Earl LeGrand, 64, of Florissant, Missouri; Michael Zinchuk, 55, of Champaign, Illinois; Amy Zinchuk, 54, of Champaign, Illinois

  16 Comments      


Live coverage

Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  1 Comment      


Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* First, a bit of news…

The Illinois Senate and House Democratic caucuses today released a draft Chicago Elected School Board District map for the public to review ahead of hearings to gather feedback and consider potential changes.

Click here or here if you’re interested in seeing the maps.

* Willie Nelson celebrated his 90th birthday this week and Billy Strings was there

Bathing my mem’ried mind
In the wetness of its soul

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Afternoon roundup

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson released the following statement on the new arrival of asylum-seekers in Chicago:

“The truth of the matter is that we have governors around the border who have demonstrated they are not open to collaborating, and that of course is a disappointment. I’m prepared to have conversations with everyone — particularly those who have used this as a weapon against cities — because asylum seekers are experiencing extremely difficult conditions, both emotionally and physically.

“What we will do day one is make sure there is a real effort to coordinate our resources at the federal, state, county and city levels. We are already in the process of developing the infrastructure for that type of coordination, but also for engaging in a real community process that allows for our response to not just meet the need, but include all stakeholders in solving what is ultimately a crisis that was engineered by outside forces.

“I’m going to work collaboratively with the people of Chicago and alderpersons who represent areas where we can be supportive for asylum seekers to make sure every community, and every person in it, is protected. Many communities have for too long been denied basic amenities and resources that could help strengthen them, but the stronger our communities are, the better position we are in to support both newcomers, and current residents and families.”

* From Springfield Mayor Misty Buscher’s inaugural address today

I would like to share with you a quote by Abby Wambach, because this is our vision for the next four years. “I never scored a goal in my life without getting a pass from someone else.” The Mayor cannot score a goal, without getting a pass or many passes from the other members of the team that are the other twelve elected officials. We are team Springfield, we are going to make many goals, together. Our Team that the citizens have elected are going to take our passions and turn them into actions for a better Springfield.

More on Wambach is here.

* Crain’s

A bill that would make it easier to move tens of thousands of effectively abandoned residential lots back onto the tax rolls and into productive use has picked up some late-session momentum in Springfield, clearing a House committee this morning.

Under the proposal pushed by Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and The Chicago Community Trust, an estimated 50,000 tax-delinquent properties that have not been claimed by anyone, most of them residential lots on the South and West sides, could pass into county control in three years or shortly thereafter, rather than going four, five, six years or longer as a neighborhood blight.

The county still would have to put the delinquent property up for sale once in its annual scavenger sale and give the owner an opportunity to pay off the tax debt. But after one attempt at a sale, the county could acquire the properties, arranging for resale or passing them on to the Cook County Land Bank Authority or Chicago and other municipalities that seek redevelopment of largely empty areas.

The bill would apply statewide, says sponsoring state Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, who was able to get the bill through the House Revenue Committee by an 11-6 vote. But the major impact would be in Cook County, which has had a persistent problem with abandoned properties in certain neighborhoods for decades. “We need to do something different,” Buckner said.

* Comptroller Mendoza…

Democratic and Republican state senators unanimously approved Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza’s Act-of-Duty bill to cover Chicago first responders severely stricken by COVID-19 in the days before vaccines were available.

The bill, which was unanimously approved by the state House of Representatives last month, now goes to Gov. Pritzker for his signature.

“My brother and all his fellow officers targeted by the city’s unfair policy are so grateful for today’s vote by the state Senate. We can’t say ‘Thank You!’ enough to Senators Cunningham, Senator Fowler, Representative Hoffman, Speaker Welch and all the legislators who fought for this,” Comptroller Mendoza said.

Comptroller Mendoza’s brother, Chicago Police Det. Sgt. Joaquin Mendoza, was the first COVID disability case to go before the city’s police disability board, which adopted a policy of not giving disability pensions to officers disabled by COVID.

“I watched in disbelief as the board’s majority inexplicably ruled against their own doctor’s findings and gave my brother only an Ordinary Disability benefit instead of a Duty Disability benefit, which means he’d only get 50% of his salary for five years and no health care insurance,” Comptroller Mendoza said.

* Sen. Preston…

State Senator Willie Preston passed a measure to remove all references to the death penalty in criminal statutes.

“The language we use influences attitudes and behavior,” said Preston (D-Chicago). “It’s important that we clean up the language used in our laws to avoid creating unconscious biases.”

HB 3762 makes improvements to the language used in certain criminal laws by removing the use of all references to the death penalty. Capital punishment has been abolished in the Illinois since 2011. Removing references that refer to death sentencing and the type of drugs that can be administered to cause death constitutes a vital component of the Illinois culture to avoid unintentional predispositions when determining sentencing for defendants.

“How we choose to write and speak on laws plays a big role in how others see the law,” said Preston. “We may perceive something to be harmless, when in reality we are unknowingly influencing the world around us. These improvements help mitigate that.”

House Bill 3762 passed the Senate.

* Washington Post

Turnout in last year’s midterm elections fell from a century-high point of 50 percent in 2018 to 46.6 percent in 2022, and census data released Tuesday suggest the drop was concentrated among Black voters, younger voters and college graduates.

Black voter turnout dropped by nearly 10 percentage points, from 51.7 percent in 2018 to 42 percent in 2022, according to a Washington Post analysis of the Census Bureau’s turnout survey. White voter turnout slipped by only 1.5 points to 53.4 percent. The 11-point turnout gap between White and Black voters is the largest in any presidential or midterm election since at least 2000.

* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…

  3 Comments      


Five and a half years after major employer requests traffic light, huge road-work project begins

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* April 6, 2019 in the Kankakee Daily Journal

CSL Behring is in the early phases of a 1.8 million-square-foot expansion which will easily require an investment far north of $1 billion.

Although employment projections have not been publicized yet, there is speculation it could come close to doubling the existing 1,600-member workforce.

The Australian-based pharmaceutical company has not asked for a penny of financial assistance or tax breaks from any governmental body.

It has made one seemingly simple request. This request was made 16 months ago, and as of this week, it still has not been satisfied.

CSL wants a traffic light put at its pending new entrance at the intersection at the Lowe’s Hardware store. The company has told the Illinois Department of Transportation it will pay for the stoplight.

Incredibly, a state thirsting for manufacturing development has yet to OK what seems to be a simple request. […]

Abell said CSL is making the largest investment anywhere in the state and perhaps beyond and yet, their request cannot be resolved.

“We can’t get a three-way light to become a four-way light.” […]

Kankakee County Board Chairman Andy Wheeler said he’s been calling IDOT in Springfield, local state political leaders and anyone else he can think of to get the situation rectified.

I kinda lost my cool when I read that story. I’m from that part of the world. They’ve had hard times since the 1980s, when most of the good jobs left. It just about broke me to see how poorly that invaluable company was being treated.

After I posted the story on Monday, April 8, then-Sen. Toi Hutchinson contacted IDOT about the problem and the department promised to expedite a fix. Gov. Pritzker visited the site a couple of weeks later.

* A ceremonial groundbreaking event was held at the plant entrance that August.

They eventually did get their stoplight.

* October of 2019…

Today, State Representative Lindsay Parkhurst (R – Kankakee) is excited to announce major road and bridge projects for the 79th District stemming from the Rebuild Illinois Capital Plan. […]

The $8.5 million project to improve the efficiency at the intersection of Route 50 and Armour Road has been included in the Capital Plan. … The project includes adding turn lanes, removing the 4-way stop sign at CSL Behring and replacing it with a stoplight, and coordinating stoplights on Armour Road and Route 50 to increase the efficiency of the flow of traffic. The first part of this project is slated for 2020.

I posted the complete press release on the blog at the time and the resulting reader comments actually generated a news story in Kankakee. Heh.

* Anyway, 65 months after CSL Behring first requested a four-way traffic light, 49 months after I first wrote about it and 45 months since the groundbreaking, IDOT is starting an ambitious project. Press release…

Gov. JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) were joined today by local officials and community leaders to announce the start of improvements to the intersection of Illinois 50 and Armour Road, a project that will reduce congestion and enhance safety while promoting economic development and job growth. Made possible by Gov. Pritzker’s historic, bipartisan Rebuild Illinois capital program, the $13.8 million project is the final step to improving traffic flow in a busy area surrounded by retail, lodging, and CSL Behring, Kankakee County’s largest employer.

“Revitalizing communities, redesigning transit systems — these are the kinds of changes that I’m proud to support — here and all across the state. And it’s the kind of change that sits at the heart and soul of what Rebuild Illinois is all about,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This project has a ripple effect that spreads throughout the county, meeting community needs on many levels. It makes Bradley-Bourbonnais a more welcoming place for Kankakee’s largest manufacturing employer, while also creating new construction jobs and investing money back into local business.”

The project consists of widening and resurfacing the intersection of Illinois 50 and Armour Road with additional dedicated turn lanes. Improvements also include new storm sewers, an updated biking and walking path, sidewalks, new curbs and gutters, improved lighting, modernized traffic signals, and landscaping. The project will improve access from Armour Road to Pharmaceutical Drive/Arthur Burch Drive, an access point for the CSL Behring factory on the intersection’s southwest corner.

The project will eliminate the need for a four-way stop at one of the entrances to CSL Behring’s Bradley facility, which employs more than 1,600 people and recently underwent a $1 billion expansion. The work also removes a bottleneck for the approximately 16,900 motorists who use Armour Road and the 24,000 drivers on Illinois 50 each day. […]

Gov. Pritzker visited the CSL Behring plant in 2019 five months after being elected, pledging his support to help expedite plans to build a new plant main entrance on Illinois 50 and advance improvements to the intersection with Armour Road that are starting this spring. With the plant’s main entrance open and intersection work progressing, chronic backups in the area have diminished, improving traffic flow and safety surrounding a major state employer and tech jobs creator.

* The locals appear to be happy…

On Friday, House Assistant Minority Leader Jackie Haas (R-Kankakee) joined Governor JB Pritzker and other community leaders to launch the reconstruction of the Illinois 50 and Armour Road intersection. This project, funded through the Rebuild Illinois program, will widen and resurface this important intersection in the village of Bradley.

“This is a terrific day to launch such an important infrastructure project for the 79th District and Kankakee River Valley region,” said Leader Haas. “By making this critical intersection easier and safer to navigate, we will help connect constituents and visitors alike to economic engines of our communities in Kankakee County. I urge all traveling in the area during this construction period to be mindful of road workers and their safety, as well as the safety of other drivers.”

  4 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the House vs. Senate softball game…

I couldn’t decide which one to use, so I just posted all three into kind of a story.

* The Question: Caption?

  14 Comments      


Meanwhile, in Opposite Land…

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Opposite Land, indeed…

* Texas

In March, a Texas man, Marcus Silva, sued three women for $1 million each after they helped his ex-wife obtain an abortion last summer using pills. The suit alleged that the termination of the pregnancy qualified as wrongful death under state law, and he presented text messages between his ex-wife and the women as evidence.

In the post-Roe era, the suit horrified abortion-rights advocates and galvanized opponents. Both sides view it as a test case aimed at discouraging anyone from helping women access abortion in states where the procedure is now banned or severely restricted.

This week, two of the women, Jackie Noyola and Amy Carpenter, filed their response in court: They are countersuing Mr. Silva for invasion of privacy in addition to offering a number of defenses to his claims. Ms. Noyola and Ms. Carpenter, who are close friends of Brittni Silva, Mr. Silva’s ex-wife, said he searched her phone without her consent and read their private messages. […]

The suit asserts that under that state law, the rights of a fetus are equivalent to those of an adult. If Mr. Mitchell’s argument succeeds, it would be a legal victory for the concept of fetal personhood — a goal of many abortion opponents.

* Florida

The Florida legislature passed a bill Thursday that will let the state take transgender minors away from their families if they are receiving gender-affirming care.

The bill passed the Senate by a vote of 26–13, mainly along party lines, and the House shortly after by a vote of 83–28, again along party lines. The measure now goes to the desk of Governor Ron DeSantis, who has previously expressed support for it and will likely sign it into law.

If he signs it into law, the measure will allow the state to take custody of a child if they have been “subjected to or [are] threatened with being subjected to” gender-affirming care, which includes puberty blockers and hormone replacement therapy. Florida courts could modify custody agreements from a different state if the minor is likely to receive gender-affirming care in that second state. The text refers to gender-affirming care as “sex-reassignment prescriptions or procedures” and qualifies this care as a form of “physical harm.”

Medical facilities would have to give the state Department of Health a signed attestation that they neither provide gender-affirming care to any patients under the age of 18 nor refer people to providers that do. Their medical license renewal is contingent upon sending in this attestation.

* North Carolina

North Carolina hastily approved legislation on Thursday that would ban most abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy, setting the stage for a likely test of the Republican Party’s new, but slim, supermajority.

After an emotional, five-hour debate, the Senate, by a vote of 29-20, approved a ban the House had already passed the night before.

The bill now goes to the state’s Democratic governor, who has called it “extreme,” and said he would veto it. He has 10 days to act.

But the legislature has the potential to override his veto if Republicans can keep their party united to muster enough votes.

* New Jersey

Tammy Murphy, the first lady of New Jersey, has made infant and maternal health her signature cause during her husband’s tenure as governor. She led the push for free nurse visits for newborns and expanded access to doulas during labor, with a goal of improving New Jersey’s abysmal pregnancy-related death rates.

But a gender-discrimination lawsuit, filed by four female troopers against the State Police, accuses Ms. Murphy of failing to practice what she has so often preached.

The suit claims that Ms. Murphy refused to permit a State Police trooper assigned to protect her to use a carriage house at the family’s riverside estate in Middletown, N.J., to pump breast milk during breaks.

The first lady told the woman’s supervisor, who runs the State Police unit that guards Gov. Philip D. Murphy and his family, that “it was not encouraged because of optics by guests who may be on the premises,” the lawsuit states.

* Indiana via the AP

Indiana’s governor on Thursday signed a bill that will require schools to notify a parent if a student requests a name or pronoun change at school, one of the final bills approved in a legislative session that had targeted LGBTQ+ people in the state, especially students.

Critics worry the law could out transgender children to their families and erode trust between students and teachers while supporters have contested the legislation keeps parents empowered and informed about their children when at school.

Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb’s approval of the legislation comes in a year when GOP-led legislatures around the country are seeking to curb LGBTQ+ rights, specifically targeting trans people’s participation in sports, workplaces and schools, as well as their access to health care.

Recently, Florida Republicans on Wednesday also approved a bill that would prevent students and teachers from being required to use pronouns that don’t correspond to someone’s sex, a bill Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is expected to sign into law. Meanwhile, at least 16 states, including Indiana,have banned or restricted access to gender-affirming care such as hormones, puberty blockers, and surgeries.

  32 Comments      


Drivers On The Uber platform Are Moving Toward A Zero-Emission Future By 2030 In Illinois

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In 2022, electric vehicle drivers on the Uber platform have avoided using over 12.5M gallons of gas, globally.

Read our commitments here.

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It’s just a bill

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

House Bill 3413 would streamline the process in which Illinois returns Native American remains and materials to their communities. The bill passed unanimously in the House in March and an amended version cleared a Senate committee unanimously this week, sending it to the full Senate for consideration. […]

For 30 years, the state museum has resisted returning remains and materials back to their original communities, according to a ProPublica investigation. Despite the 1990 passage of the federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, the state museum still maintains one of the largest collections of Native American remains in the country.

That law provides a process for federal agencies and museums receiving federal funds to repatriate or transfer their collections to lineal descendants or tribes. As of 2022, the Illinois State Museum had only returned 2 percent of the 7,700 remains it reported to the U.S. government, or just 156 individuals. […]

The Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, a federally recognized Native American tribe in Kansas with historic ties to Illinois, advocated in favor of the bill.

* HB2203 was re-referred to the House Rules Committee back in March. The deadline hasn’t changed and the sponsor lost one of his co-sponsors, Rep. Debbie Meyers-Martin. From the Sun-Times

The five biggest auto insurers in Illinois have raised automobile insurance rates a whopping $527 million since January, an analysis by two consumer groups shows. […]

Besides being able to raise rates as they like, only needing to notify state officials of their plans, Illinois insurers can consider non-driving factors in setting those rates — such as gender, occupation and whether a person rents or owns a home. […]

Now, state Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, has introduced legislation to address those issues and crack down on insurers. Guzzardi’s bill would:

    -Require automobile insurers to get prior state approval for rate hikes.

    -Ban “excessive” insurance increases.

    -Prohibit using gender, marital status, age, occupation, schooling, home ownership, wealth, credit scores or a customer’s past insurance company relationships in setting car insurance rates.

* WAND

Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago) said his bill could expand education and job training credits for incarcerated people to become eligible for mandatory supervised release sooner. The proposal would also update state law regarding drug testing prior to parole hearings, as drug tests would only be required if there is reasonable suspicion of illegal drug use.

“There are requirements that the Department of Corrections makes certain disclosures to participants so they know what their goals are and what they need to do to successfully complete their term under MSR,” Cunningham said Thursday.

Senate Bill 423 states that parole officers would be required to complete quarterly reports for the Department of Corrections. However, AFSCME leaders told Cunningham they are currently opposed to that idea. […]

Senate Bill 423 passed unanimously out of the Senate Special Committee on Criminal Law & Public Safety. The legislation now heads to the Senate floor for further consideration.

* Center Square

Republican lawmakers from both chambers hosted separate news conferences Thursday and outlined what they hope to accomplish before the end of the session, despite being in the minority. […]

State Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, said one of the ways to do this is by addressing the high cost of energy.

“Senate Bill 2200, that would get rebates into the pockets of the families that need them the most,” Plummer said. “To be clear, this policy has already passed. It’s there. All we have to do is fund it. We can fund it right now. We are spending money on many other things. We can fund Illinois families that are struggling under egregious energy bills that the General Assembly caused.” […]

State Rep. Steven Reick, R-Woodstock, said he has a measure related to DCFS he hopes to pass.

“I put forth a bill to require DCFS to institute a caseload tracking system with yearly reports to the General Assembly as to the ongoing case files, operation of the caseload management system itself, the ratio of active files to personnel, and how appropriations can be structured to incentivize caseload management,” Reick said.

* WCIA

A bill supported by Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias passed out of the Senate Thursday that would change the law so police can’t pull someone over solely for having something hang on a rearview mirror.

“There is absolutely no data to support that pulling people over for an air freshener or a rosary hanging from their rearview mirror reduces violent crime or prevents accidents,” Secretary Giannoulias said. “Amending the current law will not jeopardize public safety; instead, it will result in greater equity on the road and improve relationships between police and community by eliminating pretextual traffic stops that disproportionately affect people of color.”

The bill passed out of the Senate 41-11. […]

The bill now heads to the Governor J.B. Pritzker’s desk.

Subscribers know more, but the scare tactics used by opponents about completely obstructed views would be covered under the reckless driving statutes.

* Chicago Tribune

A new Senate bill amendment backed by the Cook County treasurer’s office and the Chicago Community Trust seeks to reform Illinois’ property tax sale system.

Backers such as state Rep. Kam Buckner, a Chicago Democrat, say the bill would cut the cost for homeowners trying to pay off property tax debt in half, close a loophole that critics said allowed private investors and hedge funds to profit off local governments and help get vacant or abandoned properties back on the tax rolls. […]

The treasurer’s office and the Chicago Community Trust introduced separate and overlapping bills aimed at reforming the delinquent property tax system earlier this year. A merged proposal cleared the House Revenue and Finance Committee Thursday and is on track for House floor approval later this month. […]

The amendment, Senate Bill 1675 Amendment 1, would reform the state’s system for selling delinquent property taxes. Under the current system, property owners who don’t pay their bills can see their taxes put up for auction. When sold, a lien is put against the home or business until the owner can pay the taxes back to the buyer, plus interest. Delinquent sales allow taxing bodies to collect revenues they’re owed while giving property owners extra time to pay their bills without losing their homes. Investors, too, can make a profit at a low risk. Most homeowners do eventually pay back their taxes with interest.

* WMBD

A measure amending language in child welfare and juvenile court statutes to be more inclusive has passed in the Illinois Senate.

House Bill 1596 recognizes the growing number of minor Illinoisians who identify as LGBTQ+ and amends the language to better reflect their identities.

The ACLU Director of Systems Reform Policy, Nora-Collins Mandeville said that, “Today’s majority vote in the Senate sends House Bill 1596 to the Governor’s desk for final approval. A few years ago, the Illinois Auditor General reported that DCFS was failing to meet the needs of the growing number of LGBTQ+ youth under their care.” […]

The legislation now heads to the Illinois Governor’s desk for signing into law.

* WAND

Opioids have been involved in over 70% of fatal drug overdoses in Illinois. State lawmakers hope to pass a package of bills to address the opioid crisis before session ends.

Sen. Paul Faraci (D-Champaign) told reporters Thursday that pharmacists, nurses, and physician assistants are the only people currently authorized to use overdose prevention equipment. Faraci said his plan could allow trained overdose responders to use fentanyl testing strips to help people in need. […]

House Bill 1121 passed unanimously out of the House in March. The plan also received unanimous support from the Senate Public Health Committee on April 19. […]

House Bill 1557 could require most music venues to have Naloxone and other opioid-overdose antidotes on hand. The legislation applies to for-profit venues with an occupancy of 1,000 or more people. Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) said the proposal also requires venue staff to be trained on how to properly use antidotes to safely prevent an overdose. […]

House Bill 1557 passed out of the House on a 105-2 vote on March 23. The Senate Public Health Committee unanimously approved the plan on April 19.

  10 Comments      


Because… Madigan!

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wednesday ILGOP press release…

Earlier this week, the “ComEd Four” were found guilty on all charges related to a conspiracy to bribe Former Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan.

“Finally, we are starting to see Illinois Democrats held accountable for their corrupt actions. After decades of Democratic insiders putting their personal interests ahead of Illinois residents, it’s now clear that the Madigan Democrat machine corrupted Illinois State government,” said Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy.

“Former Speaker Madigan may be gone, but we can’t forget that Illinois Democrats across the state – from Gov. JB Pritzker on down – supported, enabled and kissed the ring of Speaker Madigan,” added Chairman Don Tracy.

Rick Pearson

Former Illinois House Republican leader Jim Durkin, who left the legislature after last year’s elections solidified the Democrats’ legislative supermajorities, said the verdict “opened a window” for GOP candidates to go after Democratic lawmakers who participated in Madigan’s operation.

”We have actually been given a glimpse of how Mike Madigan and his playbook, how they have operated in this corrupt manner for such a long time. It has now been brought to a jury, exposed and convicted of federal crimes,” Durkin said. “So Republicans should be talking of course about Mike Madigan, what he’s done to the state, what he’s done to our reputation, what he’s done to our finances.”

But, Durkin said, the window of opportunity slams shut if the political conversation turns from corruption to social issues.

” ‘Republicans, you’re anti-women, you’re anti-choice.’ We’ve got to stay away from that,” Durkin said, “particularly in the areas where we have to compete and where we should be winning — that is in the suburbs and the collar counties.”

* Ray Long and Jason Meisner

It’s clear from the jurors who spoke after Tuesday’s clean-sweep guilty verdicts that the argument that Madigan and his associates have been pitching to the public — that this was all politics as usual — fell completely flat in a federal courtroom.

“We bought it for a while, but then when evidence started unfolding (we thought) ‘Explain to us how you can turn around and pay these folks gazillions of dollars and they’re not doing anything?’ ” juror Rob Garnes told the Tribune. “What does that have to do with lobbying?”

Hiring a lobbyist based on a leader’s recommendation and then not using that lobbyist could become problematic.

Back to the story

Garnes said the general consensus of the panel was that, while nobody’s perfect, it seemed like no one seemed willing to step in and put a stop to the corruption.

“They just continually do it over and over and over again,” said Garnes, an IT professional who lives in Westmont.

Madigan surrounded himself with people who got the things he wanted done. Nobody in that circle seemed to question him about the line between right and wrong. Hubristically fatal mistake.

* WBEZ

The state is suspending the legislative pension of former Commonwealth Edison lobbyist Michael McClain, but the move may not be permanent.

A spokesman for the state General Assembly Retirement System tells WBEZ that it has moved to withhold McClain’s pension following a federal jury’s verdicts against him in the ComEd bribery trial. […]

State law holds that legislative pensions can be revoked if a legislator has engaged in misconduct arising out of or in connection with his or her service in the General Assembly.

That could be a factor against the permanent revoking of McClain’s benefits — the wrongdoing that federal prosecutors focused upon spanned between 2011 and 2019, long after McClain’s time as a Democratic lawmaker from Quincy.

Which brings up the question of whether future legislators’ pensions should be yanked if they’re convicted of a felony. Your thoughts?

* I’ve seen lots of folks say this about Madigan

But the writing is already on the wall – cut a deal with prosecutors now, or go to trial and risk spending the rest of your life in prison.

OK, cut a deal on what? The feds generally cut deals to avoid iffy trials and/or in exchange for the head of someone higher up the criminal food chain. The unanimous ComEd Four verdict indicates that Madigan’s trial likely won’t be all that iffy, and, as far as the G is concerned, Madigan was at the very tippity top of the food chain.

Unless Madigan agrees to plead guilty and takes a long sentence (perhaps, for instance, if they bust someone truly close to him), I don’t see it happening.

* On another topic…

Following the verdict in the ‘ComEd 4 trial’, Congressman Sean Casten (D) is calling for Michael Madigan to immediately step down as the Committeeman for the 13th Ward of Chicago.

Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06) represents thousands of Illinoisans in the 13th Ward of Chicago.

“Mr. Madigan will have his day in court, but the corruption has come too close to his office for him to claim ignorance. Public service is a sacred trust. For the good of our democracy and the Democratic Party, he should step down at once,” said Rep. Casten.

I kinda wonder what US Rep. Chuy Garcia thinks, since his congressional district covers the 13th Ward. So, I reached out and will let you know.

  29 Comments      


Two Phil’s is Illinois’ first Kentucky Derby contender since 2007

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Larry Rivelli is a body in constant motion on the backstretch at Hawthorne Race Course. […]

But his pacing comes to a standstill when it’s time to trot out Two Phil’s, the 3-year-old chestnut colt with the white-striped snout, who commands all of Rivelli’s attention. Other trainers and riders stop to poke their heads over the backstretch gate, too, for a view of one of the horse’s final training sessions before the biggest race in the world.

All eyes in the state’s entire horse racing industry will be focused on Two Phil’s this weekend, too, as he’s poised to become the first Illinois-based horse to compete in the Kentucky Derby since Recapturetheglory finished fifth in 2007. […]

It’s the first Derby run for Rivelli, unquestionably Illinois’ top thoroughbred trainer with 1,772 wins and more than $36 million in earnings since 2000.

* Daily Herald

A full field of 20 is scheduled to go postward. Two Phil’s — No. 3 with Derby rookie Jareth Loveberry in the irons — is a sixth selection in the morning line at 12-1.

The top opening picks are: Forte (No. 15, trainer Todd Pletcher, 3-1), Tapit Trice (No. 5, Pletcher, 5-1) and Angel of Empire (No. 14, Brad Cox, 8-1). […]

TWO PHIL’S IS JOINTLY OWNED BY Patricia’s Hope LLC (Vinnie Foglia and mother Pat Foglia, both of North Barrington, 80 percent) and former advertising exec Phil Sagan of Bloomingdale, who bred the chestnut charger in Kentucky.

The colt is named for Sagan and eightysomething Phil La Sala of Bensenville. La Sala is the father of longtime Chicago jockey Jerry La Sala, who was instrumental in helping to bring about the breeding of Hard Spun to Mia Torri, a General Quarters mare. Anthony Sagan — the son of the breeder — also played a role.

* News and Tribune

The group has a live chance on that stage. Two Phil’s got here through winning the Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) at Turfway Park, which is not traditionally a producer of top Derby contenders, though last year’s winner, Rich Strike did come from it.

However, he’s won at Churchill. He has experience, and his connections think he has the temperament to perform well in an environment that stresses out some runners.

“Real cool,” Rivelli said. “He’s perfect for this type of setting. He’s laid back, he likes to sleep. Nothing really bothers him.”

And if Two Phil’s does the unlikely, a major city will celebrate.

“Everybody back home before we left were patting me on the back, you know, ‘Bring home the Derby,’” Rivelli said. “That’s pretty cool.

* A little background on Two Phil’s name…


* What a pretty horse…


You can watch Two Phil’s win at Turfway Park here. [From Rich: You really gotta watch that race. Wow.]

* Thoroughbred Daily

While Two Phil’s is now a serious Derby contender, he was once a horse that slipped through the cracks in the sales ring. He was a $150,000 RNA at Keeneland September and he failed to garner much interest the following spring at OBS. The Sagans decided to send the colt to Rivelli, hoping that the conditioner could get a win on his record as a juvenile and they could find a buyer from there. […]

Two Phil’s has never actually raced in Illinois, he has trained out of Rivelli’s barn at Hawthorne Park and shipped to six different tracks, collecting four wins and two more placings from eight career starts. Rivelli decided to keep the same routine for the Derby, with Two Phil’s putting in his final five-furlong prep in :59 flat on Mar 27. at Hawthorne before heading to Churchill Downs on Sunday. […]

Rivelli will readily admit that while Two Phil’s is already a winner at Churchill, having claimed the GIII Street Sense S. last October, the big question surrounding the colt is about just how strong his affinity for synthetic might be. His 101 Beyer Speed Figure at Turfway Park in the Jeff Ruby, which is the biggest number among the Derby contenders, is 13 Beyer points higher than his second-best figure from a second-place finish in the GIII Lecomte S. in January.

Now that Derby week is well underway and the Two Phil’s contingent is in Louisville, the dream is starting to become a reality for Rivelli as he represents his grandfather and uncle that went before him, his fellow Chicago horsemen back home and, perhaps in some ways, his beloved Arlington Park, where he won nine training titles before it closed two years ago.

* DRF

For years, Arlington Park’s opening day coincided with Kentucky Oaks Day. Then COVID-19 struck, and Arlington didn’t begin a 2020 meeting until July. In 2021, the opener returned to the first Friday in May – a dark day, not a celebration. Churchill Downs Inc., Arlington’s owner, already had decided, strictly for financial reasons, to shed the track from its corporate portfolio. In May 2022, the massive Arlington grandstand, the vast tract of land upon which it rests, stood quiet as a remote Illinois prairie.

No one would have felt the closure more acutely than the trainer Larry Rivelli, the owner Vince Foglia, and the jockey Jareth Loveberry. Rivelli won every Arlington training title from 2014 through Arlington’s end. Foglia, who races as Patricia’s Hope LLC, was the perennial leading owner starting in 2015. Loveberry, late to the party, arrived in 2020, winning the riding title that year and the next.

“I grew up by Arlington Park. I went to the high school nearest Arlington Park,” Foglia said. “The whole thing feels tragic. I drive by it all the time and just say, ‘Wow, what a shame.’ ”

Let the first Friday in May 2023 rouse bittersweet memory. Rivelli, Foglia, and Loveberry have other business on Saturday.

Will you be watching the Derby?

* More…

  16 Comments      


Sun-Times reports that Chicago is sitting on a $700 million surplus as state costs grow again for health insurance coverage of undocumented residents

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

At a joint City Council committee hearing last week, alderpersons were told Chicago is out of money, space and time to handle the “humanitarian crisis” caused by asylum-seekers descending on Chicago, with 40,000 people waiting at the border and a surge that has yet to peak. […]

With “zero dollars” from the federal government for 2023 costs and a $53 million shortfall to meet the [migrant] surge through June, [City of Chicago] Budget Director Susie Park said the Council will soon be asked to approve a “mid-year budget amendment” that applies portions of a nearly $700 million surplus to plug the gap.

Also

Gov. J.B. Pritzker said since August, the state has provided $240 million for arriving migrants being transported from places like Texas.

* But, wait, there’s more

Matthew Doughtie, manager of emergency management services for the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications, told alderpersons 13 options have been identified as additional shelter locations, “none of them great. … Each of them comes at a cost, be they financial personal or political cost. But, they’re options nonetheless.”

According to the Tribune, the city closed twelve (12) migrant shelters after standing them up last year. The city can’t reopen them?

* Meanwhile, the state’s estimated costs have grown yet again for a DHFS program to a pretty scarily high number. From Capitol News Illinois

The estimated cost for Illinois to continue providing health care coverage to noncitizens who are otherwise ineligible for Medicaid benefits has been revised upward to $1.1 billion for the upcoming fiscal year.

As of the end of March, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services estimated it would cost $990 million to fund the program that provides state-funded health care to individuals age 42 and older who would otherwise qualify for Medicaid if not for their citizenship status.

The new estimate, shared by IDHFS Director Theresa Eagleson in testimony to a Senate appropriations committee Wednesday night, is now $880 million beyond the $220 million estimate included in Gov. JB Pritzker’s February budget proposal. […]

IDHFS chief of staff Ben Winick told the committee that the original estimate relied on the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey data to estimate the eligible population, then assumed a certain percentage would enroll. But both the cost of providing care and the number of enrollees have far outpaced estimates.

Obviously, they really need to find a way to get a handle on those costs. It’s starting to remind me of how the Edgar administration was overrun by Medicaid costs in the 1990s.

By the way, there it is again. The ACS always undercounts Illinois.

  16 Comments      


ComEd parent to pay shareholders $173 million for Madigan scheme, while ratepayers got five bucks each last month

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Steve Daniels

A day after former Commonwealth Edison CEO Anne Pramaggiore was convicted of bribery and conspiracy, ComEd parent Exelon disclosed a likely $173 million cost tied to addressing a class-action lawsuit accusing the company of hiding the scheme from shareholders.

The December 2019 lawsuit, filed in federal court in Chicago, has proceeded under an agreement with the federal government barring inclusion of company communications with the feds from discovery. That agreement expires May 15, according to Exelon’s U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission filing today. […]

The plaintiffs, New York-based Local 295 IBT Employers Pension Fund, recently agreed to the $173 million settlement, said Jim Barz, attorney with Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd in Chicago. It remains subject to court approval. […]

This settlement won’t hit Exelon’s bottom line, though, because the company expects the entirety to be covered by liability insurance for directors and officers.

The Exelon filing is here.

* And then there’s this from last August

The average household ratepayer in northern Illinois will get a $4.80 credit on their electric bill next April in recompense for Commonwealth Edison’s nine-year-long bribery scheme.

The Illinois Commerce Commission unanimously approved ComEd’s $31 million offer to settle the issue of how much ratepayers should be refunded for the scheme, aimed at currying favor with then-House Speaker Michael Madigan. ComEd is adding another $7 million under Federal Energy Regulatory Commission jurisdiction, so the total refund is $38 million.

That refund was doled out last month.

  10 Comments      


bp Is Investing In Illinois

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

  Comments Off      


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

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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  Comments Off      


Open thread

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s Friday! What’s goin’ on?…

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go!…

  6 Comments      


Live coverage

Friday, May 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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