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DPI claims to have helped elect 84 out of 117 and blocked another 73 out of 101 local school and library board candidates

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* DPI…

After a resounding number of local election wins, the Democratic Party of Illinois (DPI) is celebrating its success in preventing extremists from being elected to numerous school and library board seats across the state.

While results are yet to be certified, 73 of the 101 extremists that DPI identified and opposed lost their races, and of the 117 candidates recommended by DPI, 84 were elected.

In several districts including Oswego CUSD 308, Lyons Township High School District 204, Hononegah High School District 207, and McLean County School District 5 each of the extreme candidates that DPI exposed were unsuccessful.

Additionally, DPI targeted 42 Awake IL endorsed candidates, and 37 of them lost, a clear indication that Illinoisans disavowed their hateful rhetoric and dangerous platform.

“Last night, Illinoisans rejected the regressive vision of extremist candidates across the state, and once again showed that they believe in continuing to move our state forward. With so much on the line, DPI was proud to step in to push back against political agendas that posed a threat to our fundamental values,” DPI Chair Lisa Hernandez said. “I look forward to the ways in which these newly elected board members will work to make Illinois a safe and just place for all our children to grow up.”

“Illinoisans continue to reaffirm their commitment to a forward-looking state, and DPI is proud to have played a part in making that vision a reality. While we’re pleased by the outcomes of yesterday’s elections, our work isn’t done. This is just the beginning for DPI as we build a state party that functions as a resource and a support system for Democrats every year, in every corner of Illinois,” said DPI Executive Director Ben Hardin. “We knew this work wouldn’t be easy, especially given the organized movement from the far-right to disguise their true agenda, but we’re grateful that voters saw through the falsehoods and turned out to support credible community advocates. Our values were on the line in these races, and I’m proud that Illinoisans once again voted for fairness, equity, and inclusion in our state.”

The Democratic Party of Illinois launched an innovative program to prevent extremists from taking over school and library boards in response to dark money and candidate support from far-right organizations. DPI opposed candidates backed by known far-right organizations as well as those who have embraced values and policies that contradict those of the Party including censoring or banning books, blocking full spectrum sex education, teaching revisionist history and ignoring public health.” Throughout this unprecedented program, DPI reached hundreds of thousands of individuals and households in Illinois via digital and mail communications as well as on the ground organizing support, keeping over 70 extremists out of school and library board seats. The positive impacts of this support were made clear by the results of yesterday’s elections.

This initiative was brought forth as part of the new party building directive under the leadership of Chair Hernandez to provide year round support to Democrats through grassroots organizing and continuous voter engagement.

No list was provided.

  15 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Heh…


* The Question: Your one-word description of yesterday? One real word only, please.

  41 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was asked today about a bill passed by the Senate to rescind the state’s longtime moratorium on constructing new nuclear plants. The object is to spur development of small nuke plants

Over the years, I think the environmental movement has looked at nuclear differently, especially over the last 15 years, than it did prior. Because you talk about nuclear today, you’re not talking about building another Byron plant or Zion as it used to be. Instead, you’re talking about small modular reactors. And that’s something that’s new. They’re small, they are considered much, much safer. There’s something you can really, if you had a million square foot plant for example, you could have your own small modular reactor that’s next to that plant that’s providing all the energy just for that plant.

So you know, banning nuclear entirely in a world where it’s become much safer and these are smaller, less prone to an accident, more likely for us to be able to maintain them for a long period of time. That’s something that’s worthy of consideration.

Now the devil’s in the details and we want to make sure that we’re not just opening this up to nuclear everywhere or any type of nuclear. So, I’ve talked to Sen. Rezin a bit about this and to some of the people who are contemplating sponsoring it in the House, and we will continue that dialogue. I don’t know where that bill will go this session, but I’m not opposed to it as if I’m just dead set against any nuclear. I just want, if we’re going to consider it, it’s got to be safe.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* The governor was also asked about Misty Buscher’s Springfield mayoral win

Well, I congratulate her on her victory. I’ve worked with Mayor Langfelder now for the last four years, and we’ve gotten an awful lot done for Springfield together and I know that I’ll work with the new mayor on whatever is best for the city of Springfield. We all spend an awful lot of time here, even if we’re not here full time. And we know that this is a special city. It’s our capital city, it ought to shine for the world. We want to bring tourists and bring the rest of the world to Springfield. And so I’m going to work closely, as I will with the mayors all across the state of Illinois.

* He was also asked about why he thought the move to ban books was gaining steam and where it was coming from

Well, the extremists are coming after your literature. They’re coming after your libraries, they’re coming after your books under the guise of ‘we’re protecting somebody.’ That’s always the guise under which people end up banning or burning books.

The reality is more information is better. Obviously we all believe in age-appropriate materials. But the reality is our libraries have been able to manage this for years and years and years. And all of a sudden there’s this mythical thing that’s popped up with the far right, that, you know these books are being pushed on people somehow. That’s not what’s happening hasn’t been happening. Just like there’s no CRT in schools. They’ve made that up. K through 12 education has no CRT. In higher ed, there are graduate programs where people are teaching, learning, choosing. These are adults choosing to take courses like that or teach them. But K 12 education, there’s no CRT, just like there is no need for us to take books off the shelves in our libraries. They have been age appropriate for many years, librarians are highly capable of managing that.

* On that topic, he was asked which book had the most impact on him growing up

You’re gonna look for me to pick Moby Dick or some other major classic. But I’m going to tell you the book that had the most impact on me. My great-grandfather immigrated to this country from Ukraine in 1881. And he was nine years old when he arrived. He had nothing. He sold Chicago Tribunes on a street corner to survive. There was a social service agency that gave him a place to live, a public school that gave him a place to go to school and learn English. And he became a successful lawyer during his lifetime.

He wrote a book near the end of his life, it’s called Three Score after Ten. It’s not on the bookshelves anywhere because it was just written privately by him for our family. And it’s a quite a long tome, but it’s about the history of my family, where we came from, the challenges that our family went through, the the fact that our lives, our family’s lives were threatened, had to escape and become refugees out of Ukraine, and made it to the United States. And it’s one of the reasons I believe in standing up for refugees and helping them resettle when they come to the United States when they’re escaping violence. So that book had an enormous impact on me. I read it when I was 13 years old first, and I’ve probably read it at least five or seven times since. .

* AG Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul, as part of a coalition of 22 states, urged the Biden administration to scrap dangerous federal rules that allow employers to interfere in the reproductive health decisions of their employees.

The rules, put in place under the prior administration, took away contraceptive coverage from women who should have been entitled to complete coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). They added broad, unreasonable exemptions that allowed nearly all types of employers to deny birth control coverage to their employees based on religious or moral objections.

In a comment letter addressed to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Acting U.S. Labor Secretary Julie Su, Raoul and the coalition applaud the Biden administration’s proposal to restore access to cost-free contraceptive coverage by rescinding the moral exemption and creating alternate means to cover contraceptive services for individuals whose plan sponsors claim the religious exemption. However, the letter also expresses opposition to the administration’s decision to retain the overly broad religious exemption promulgated in 2018, which is deemed far beyond what is necessary to protect those with religious objections.

“More than 60 million women rely on coverage for preventative services, including contraception, as a fundamental part of their health care plan,” Raoul said. “Access to contraceptive care supports people’s ability to control their reproductive health and promotes access to education, jobs and financial empowerment. Employers do not have the right to stand between their employees and the reproductive health care they need.”

* A bit of housekeeping news…


* Heh…


…Adding… Crain’s

Gov. J.B. Pritzker appointed five new members to the board of trustees of Northeastern Illinois University, pending confirmation by the Illinois Senate.

The announcement comes after trustees moved to oust president Gloria Gibson amid concerns over the school’s flagging enrollment and abysmal graduation rates. Four of the previous trustees’ terms have expired and another quit in frustration. The board is made up of nine members. […]

As Crain’s previously reported, the faculty last fall issued a vote of no confidence in president Gibson and followed that with another no-confidence vote for the board. By then, the board had acted, deciding not to renew Gibson’s contract that expires June 30. In February, the vice president for enrollment management resigned.


…Adding…
US Attorney’s Office

A federal judge in Chicago held the City of Chicago liable for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act by failing to provide accessible pedestrian signals at signalized intersections throughout the city to those who are blind or have low vision.

In April of 2021, the Justice Department moved to intervene in a disability discrimination lawsuit that people with visual disabilities brought against the City under the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act. The United States’ complaint in intervention alleged that the city fails to provide people who are blind, have low vision or are deaf-blind with equal access to pedestrian signal information at intersections. Pedestrian signal information, such as a flashing “Walk/Don’t Walk” signal, indicates when it is safe to cross the street for sighted pedestrians.

Accessible pedestrian signals (APSs) are devices that provide pedestrians with safe-crossing information in a non-visual format, such as through audible tones, speech messages and vibrotactile surfaces. Since at least 2006, Chicago has recognized the need to install APSs for pedestrians with visual disabilities, specifically identifying the need for such installation in multiple city documents. Yet, while Chicago currently provides sighted pedestrians visual crossing signals at nearly 2,800 intersections, the United States’ suit alleged that — at the time it intervened — fewer than one percent of those were equipped with APSs for people who are blind or have low vision.

On March 31, U.S. District Judge Elaine E. Bucklo sided with the United States and the private plaintiffs in a decision on both sides’ motions for summary judgment, holding the city in violation of the ADA and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The court found that the city had provided APS at only a “miniscule portion of the whole,” and thus had failed “to provide ‘meaningful access’ to its network of existing facilities and to ensure that newly constructed signals are designed and constructed in such a manner as to be ‘readily accessible’ by blind individuals.”

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * NBC Chicago | 1 Firefighter Dead, Another Injured in High-Rise Blaze in Chicago’s Gold Coast: Officials: A Chicago firefighter has died after being “very critically” injured while battling a high-rise blaze in the city’s Gold Coast neighborhood that injured another firefighter Wednesday morning.

    * NYT | Chicago Mayor’s Race Could Be a Blueprint for Democratic Messaging on Crime: Mr. Johnson’s victory may be a lesson for other Democrats struggling with the issue under the verbal assault of Republicans. Representative Delia Ramirez, a newly elected progressive Democrat from Chicago’s Northwest Side, was ecstatic. “We’ve had a police department that had been attempting to do the jobs of social workers, counselors, mediators, you name it,” she said. “What we haven’t had is help.”

    * Tribune | Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s advice to successor Brandon Johnson: ‘Be humble. Be grateful.’: Later in the day, Lightfoot broke weeks of silence since losing her bid for re-election to address a question about what advice she’d give Johnson when it comes to handling the all-too-frequent call of a first responder death. This time, it was Chicago Fire Department Lt. Jan Tchoryk, 55. “Be humble. Be grateful,” Lightfoot said she would tell her successor. “Our first responders literally give their lives. There’s a lot of rhetoric that’s out there about first responders, particularly on the police side. When you’ve seen what I’ve seen, when you have to make the calls that I’ve had to make, you better be humble, and you better be grateful.”

    * The 21st Show | What’s going on in the ComEd trials?: To explain the history of the case and what’s been happening in court, The 21st was joined by a pair of journalists who have been following the story, Dave McKinney and Hannah Meisel.

    * KFVS | Carolin Harvey wins election to become first Black mayor of Carbondale: ”I want to say thank you and I would like to say hopefully we all can work together whether you voted for me or not,” Harvey said. “We’re all part of Carbondale and we want to move forward to do what’s best for all of the citizens of Carbondale.”

    * Medill Reports | ‘I’m not that scared kid anymore’: Highland Park’s Rachel Jacoby on her path to becoming an anti-gun violence activist: Jacoby, 26, never expected to be on the front line of the anti-gun violence movement. She grew up “Midwestern polite”: She didn’t talk about religion or politics. She hung out with her parents, baked the “best cookies in Highland Park” and competed in soccer, tennis and other sports. But today, she is one of the loudest voices fighting for change and a driving force behind recent groundbreaking gun-reform legislation in Illinois.

    * Crain’s | Northwestern, U of C join effort to boost enrollment from rural America: The newly formed STARS College Network is bankrolled by a $20 million gift from Chicago-based Trott Family Philanthropies, the foundation of Byron and Tina Trott. The nationwide effort is designed to empower students to find the best institution for them, whether that be a STARS — Small-Town And Rural Students — member university or not, said James G. Nondorf, STARS co-chair and vice president of enrollment and student advancement at the University of Chicago, in a statement.

    * Bloomberg | For-profit colleges ask Supreme Court to block student loan deal: The emergency application, which challenges the Education Department’s authority to cancel so many loans in the accord, bears similarities to a pending Supreme Court fight over President Joe Biden’s plan to slash the student debt of more than 40 million people. The Supreme Court’s handling of the new case could offer hints about the outcome of the bigger fight. The court heard arguments on Biden’s plan Feb. 28 and is scheduled to rule by the end of June.

    * State Journal-Register | Cannabis, electric aggregation questions fail; township questions pass: Chatham voters saw two cannabis-related measures on their ballots, one allowing dispensaries to establish businesses and the other permitting growers, cultivation centers, and transporters to operate within the village. […] Before 9 p.m., 100% of the 11 voting precincts had been tallied and the advisory questions failed. Slightly more than 1,500 voters cast their ballots on the questions, where neither levied more than 45% of the voter’s support.

    * PJ Star | Fulton County suffers damage from funnel clouds, storms: Illinois Route 100 was closed Tuesday night from Lewistown to the junction with Illinois Route 78 due to multiple power poles and power lines being down, according to the Fulton County Emergency Services and Disaster Agency. Authorities also reported that several people were injured from the storm. The National Weather Service in Lincoln said one funnel cloud was observed near Bryant.

    * NPR | Twitter labels NPR’s account as ’state-affiliated media’, which is untrue: NPR operates independently of the U.S. government. And while federal money is important to the overall public media system, NPR gets less than 1% of its annual budget, on average, from federal sources. Noting the millions of listeners who support and rely upon NPR for “independent, fact-based journalism,” NPR CEO John Lansing stated, “NPR stands for freedom of speech and holding the powerful accountable. It is unacceptable for Twitter to label us this way. A vigorous, vibrant free press is essential to the health of our democracy.”

    * NFL | Illinois CB Devon Witherspoon runs 4.42-second 40-yard dash at private workout: The 5-foot-11, 181-pound Witherspoon ran 40-yard dash times of 4.46 and 4.42 seconds at his private workout at Illinois, according to NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah. Because of a hamstring injury, Witherspoon was unable to work out at all at the NFL Scouting Combine or Illinois’ pro day on March 10.

    * Patch | 23 IL Billionaires Make Forbes List Of Richest People In The World: Those on the world’s billionaires list, which includes 23 Illinois residents, aren’t as flush as they were a year ago, but collectively are still worth $12.2 trillion, Forbes said with the release of its annual list.

    * Capital B | What Happens When a Black Enclave Is Built by Big Oil: Despite a historic focus on environmental injustices by the Biden administration, ExxonMobil leaders last year cited his administration’s calls for the country’s oil companies to ramp up production as one of the motivators behind completing the project. A recent forecast by the Energy Information Administration found that petrochemical projects ushered in during the first two years of Biden’s administration will not allow the country to reach a 50% drop in domestic greenhouse gas emissions from 2005 levels by 2030 as once targeted by the administration.

  8 Comments      


Chicago election coverage roundup

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lots of news…

  17 Comments      


Pritzker on Johnson, Vallas and school board races

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was asked today about his react to yesterday’s mayoral race. Brandon Johnson, the reporter said, “barely won” the race (which is an odd thing to say because Johnson’s currently ahead by three percentage points and that lead is expected to grow as more mail-in ballots are received). Anyway, to the response

Well, let’s start by saying congratulations to Brandon Johnson on his big win. I think there were a lot of people who were surprised and in fact, when you say it was a small margin, actually, I think there were people who thought he would lose by a larger margin than he ended up winning by, but he won. And he overcame, I think, suggestions that he couldn’t. And so anybody that’s ever run for public office knows that when you can overcome expectations, and eke out or succeed in winning, especially in an important city like Chicago, they deserve enormous kudos. I look forward to working with Mayor-elect Johnson. I spoke with him last night, he was still celebrating and had had a very long day. But we’ll be meeting no doubt over the next couple of weeks as he moves in, his transition, to make sure that the state of Illinois is doing whatever we can to be supportive of him as mayor as we are of mayors all across the state.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* Asked if the election signified a “sea change” for the city, Pritzker said

Look, he’s younger than most of the mayors that have gotten elected. He’s somebody who comes out of an activist background. I think there’s a lot to admire about him. He’s a teacher, and I believe that he will bring a certain vibrancy to the city. So I’m excited about that. And I want to make sure that all of the very important things that Chicago needs to work on, whether it’s balancing its budget, paying its pensions, all the stuff that sounds boring to everybody, and doesn’t get brought up sometimes in the midst of an election campaign, but are very important for the future of the city. That those are just baseline things. And I want the state to be helpful in that endeavor as we are trying to be for municipalities across the state. So I do believe that this is a change for the city, something new. But you know what? It’s a new generation of voters that came to the polls. There is a change that’s gone on across the Midwest, I might add, that people who believe in investing in workers, investing in families, investing in young people have come to leadership positions as governor, as mayor in states think about Wisconsin and Michigan and Minnesota and how those legislatures turned Democratic in Michigan and Minnesota. And so I think he’s part of a kind of a sea change that’s going on, in what I guess politically we’d all call the Blue Wall.

* Later, in talking about gun violence, Pritzker returned to the topic of the mayor’s race, without mentioning Paul Vallas by name

There was one candidate who made out crime as if it’s a single issue. You know, that it has one facet to it, and that is putting more law enforcement on the street. Now, I happen to think that we do need more law enforcement on the street, but that doesn’t mean that that’s the only thing that you should do. That doesn’t solve the problem by itself. You also have to make sure that, again, that we’re providing resources for mental health and substance use treatment. And many of the young people who are getting ahold of guns are in need of mental health and substance use treatment. And if we can address those issues, we take a huge burden off the police and, I believe, reduce violent crime significantly, because we’re addressing some of the underlying causes.

Subscribers were shown a Chicago poll this morning which dug into many of those very issues.

* Pritzker was also asked if he had any reaction to the school board races across the state

Yes, my reaction is that fortunately, the voters saw through the hidden extremists who were running for school board across … the Chicago suburbs and the surrounding counties. Just to be clear, Cook County suburbs and surrounding counties. I mean, really, you know, the extremists got trounced yesterday, and it’s been acknowledged by some of the more extreme politicians in the state overnight and this morning on Facebook and elsewhere. And I’m glad that those folks were shown up, and, frankly, tossed out.

  36 Comments      


ComEd 4 trial coverage roundup

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

    * Sun-Times | FBI raids uncovered no evidence that Madigan allies did any work for ComEd salaries: And that’s despite $1.3 million in payments to the men that jurors also heard about Tuesday. The money came from ComEd, through various intermediaries, allegedly as part of a bribery conspiracy that lasted nearly a decade. The feds say it was aimed at swaying Madigan as legislation crucial to ComEd moved through Springfield. A parade of FBI special agents revealed the details of the May 2019 raids during the ongoing trial of McClain, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore, ex-ComEd lobbyist John Hooker and onetime City Club President Jay Doherty.

    * Crain’s | In FBI raids on Madigan pals’ homes, one in particular yields treasure: Many of the figures who’ve become familiar names to the jury in the “ComEd Four” trial after more than two weeks of courtroom proceedings were on that list, usually identified by a single name. Shaw Decremer, former Madigan aide turned lobbyist, was one. Decremer was one of the Commonwealth Edison lobbyists that evidence showed acted as a conduit to pay Madigan’s political associates under subcontracting arrangements meant to hide the payments, according to prosecutors.

    * Tribune | Jurors in ‘ComEd Four’ bribery trial shown ‘Magic Lobbying List’ of Michael Madigan allies: Stuffed in a tote bag in the back of McClain’s silver Toyota Avalon was a handwritten “Magic Lobbying List,” with the names of former Madigan staffers, associates and allies, who’d gone on to lucrative lobbying careers, scrawled on stationery from a boutique hotel in Chicago. The list was shown for the first time Tuesday in the ongoing trial of the “ComEd Four,” where McClain and three former ComEd executives and lobbyists are accused of conspiring to funnel hundreds of thousands of dollars to various Madigan-connected “subcontractors” in exchange for the powerful Democrat’s influence over legislation the utility wanted passed, or blocked, in Springfield.

    * Hannah Meisel | FBI agents say they found no evidence ComEd subcontractors worked for monthly stipends: One of the versions of the list also bore the speaker’s distinctive cursive script, adding names and phone numbers to the collection – and crossing one of his additions out. […] “As best as I know, it was a list of individuals who had been helpful to the speaker and speaker’s office over time,” Will Cousineau, Madigan’s longtime political director said during his testimony, adding that McClain would use the list to dole out work on certain projects.

    * CST Editorial Board | Utilities must be transparent about secret ‘risk ranking’ of customers: The “riskiest” ComEd customers, for instance, could have their service cut off 16 days after they are flagged for disconnection based on their risk ranking. Others who aren’t designated as high-risk receive a 40-day cushion. It all means faster disconnection for those with the least ability to pay, while those with more financial means get more of a break. At a time when more people are struggling to pay their utility bills, more people are at risk of finding their utilities shut off if they get behind on payment

  5 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Environmental lobby day is the 19th…


* Shaw Local

Sometimes lawmakers advance plans that shape the state for generations. Others are simple applications of common sense that solve an obvious problem.

The latter aren’t always headline material, but can have significant benefits. Consider Senate Bill 2288, headed to the House on a 57-0 vote, which Amends the Articulation Initiative Act in hopes of eliminating situations where community college students have to repeat courses at four-year schools

State Sen. Cristina Castro, D-Elgin, introduced the bill and said the idea is to “reduce the burden on our students and accelerate the time it takes them to earn a degree and start a meaningful career.”

So long as the four-year school offers the specific major, a student’s community college transcripts would transfer as fully equivalent. This effort represents another vote of confidence in the vital community college network, one of the state’s best investments in higher education.

* WMBD…

Rep. Darin LaHood (R-Illinois) has introduced bipartisan legislation to strengthen existing laws for mishandling classified documents.

The Classified Documents Accountability Act would create civil penalties of $500,000 per violation, create a screening and certification process for classified materials during administration transitions, and revoke security clearances from officials who violate the act. Outgoing Presidents and Vice Presidents would also be required to certify they do not have any classified documents in their possession.

“So right now the law, the way it’s structured, it really turns on intent or knowledge, and what was your intent and knowledge in that. It doesn’t address carelessness or negligence or sloppiness,” said LaHood. […]

LaHood introduced the bill with Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Chicago), who also sits on the House Intelligence Committee.

* Rep. Yang Rohr will be the lead sponsor in the House. WAND

Sen. Doris Turner (D-Springfield) said her bill allows school buses to have two stop arms with flashing red lights to partially obstruct roads to ensure safety for riders and pedestrians.

“Student safety has to be our top priority,” Turner said. “Allowing school busses to have an extended arm would provide more protections for passengers and hopefully lessen the number of drivers who pass stopped busses.”

Any drivers hitting a bus or outstretched stop arm will face steep fines. […]

Sen. Chapin Rose (R-Mahomet) passed the same plan nearly five years ago. Although, he stressed that the Illinois Department of Transportation never created administrative rules to implement the law.

“They could’ve done this well before now,” Rose said. “So what this bill is doing now is basically telling IDOT, ‘Too late. We’re just going to go ahead and tell you you have no choice now but to do it.’ Thank goodness that nobody has gotten killed in the meantime.”

* Sen. Dan McConchie introduced legislation after seeing news coverage on a couple claiming the City of Chicago was forcing them to pay a red light violation that wasn’t theirs. Here’s WGN

A new bill has been introduced to protect Illinois drivers from wrongfully issued automated tickets. […]

“It is abysmal that it takes a news outlet such as yours to run a story and contact these elected officials or these employees in order to get them to do the right thing,” Illinois Senator Dan McConchie (R-26) said.

The Department of Finance said the red light violation has been withdrawn, and the motorist will receive a confirmation notice. […]

“It needs to be a streamline simplified process and it cannot be allowed that you prove it’s actually not me that the fine could stick anyway,” McConchie said.

* NIU’s student newspaper

Illinois [legislature] should pass the bill to legalize natural organic reduction, or human composting. Think the circle of life, not the woodchipper scene from “Fargo.”

Proposed by Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, the bill was recently passed by the Illinois House of Representatives. Should it pass the Senate, Illinois will become the seventh state to legalize the procedure. […]

While Neil Blackstone, a professor in the biological sciences department at NIU, notes the logistical downsides of human composting, he said he ultimately supports the bill. Blackstone’s only true critique is the procedure’s unsettling name.
“If people want to do it, what’s the harm? I mean, as long as, you know, people realize that you don’t put a dead body out in your backyard to compost,” Blackstone said. […]

“Turning human persons into compost for the purpose of fertilization of trees, as one would with vegetable trimmings and eggshells, degrades the human person,” according to Catholic Conference of Illinois.

Returning to the Earth should not be so heavily stigmatized. The decomposition of our bodies is not a process we should be afraid of. Joining the soil is one of the few realities we share with every other organism on the planet.

  9 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Keep Uber Affordable. Stop Lawsuit Abuse. Oppose HB 2231

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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*** UPDATED x1 - IEA claims 90 percent success rate *** A look at some other local races

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* One problem the state government has had with recruiting new employees is convincing people to live in Springfield. The city just hasn’t moved forward in years. Maybe this will change things some

Two-term mayor Jim Langfelder conceded Tuesday night following an unsuccessful bid for a third term as the city’s top official.

The concession means that City Treasurer Misty Buscher will be just the second woman elected mayor of Springfield. With all precincts reporting, Buscher defeated Langfelder by 772 votes, getting 51.5% of the vote to Langfelder’s 48.5%.

* Equality Illinois…

“We are extremely proud of the historic electoral victories of Clare Killman for the Carbondale City Council and Jackie McKethen for the Crete Library Board. With yesterday’s exciting election results, Killman will be the first Trans person to serve on a city council in Illinois and McKethen will be the first Trans person to serve on a library board in Illinois. With only five Trans people now elected to office in Illinois, Trans people remain severely underrepresented in all levels of government. Killman and McKethen will be powerful voices for change and will inspire more Trans people to run for office in their communities. Now more than ever, we need Trans voices in rooms of power. We look forward to advancing justice with Clare Killman on the Carbondale City Council and Jackie McKethen on the Crete Library Board.”

* Also in Carbondale

On Tuesday, April 4, just after 9 p.m., mayoral candidate Harold Visser conceded, giving the win to opponent Carolin Harvey. Harvey has been acting mayor, or mayor pro tem, since Mayor Mike Henry took a leave of absence.

She is now the City of Carbondale’s first Black mayor. Her platform includes curbing crime in the city and increasing the availability of housing for low and middle income families.

And

If unofficial totals hold once mail-in and early voting ballots are counted and with the election of Carolin Harvey as mayor, for the first time in Carbondale history a majority of the city council will be women.

* Some Awake Illinois results…


…Adding… Those Quincy candidates were also supported by US Rep. Mary Miller and Tom Devore. And Darren Bailey’s candidate in Richland County’s school district, Dusty Kocher, lost.

* WGLT

Candidates from both of the informal slates seeking four seats on the Unit 5 school board said the heated race left them exhausted, though their reasons differ.

Vote totals as of late tonight indicate incumbents Amy Roser and Kelly Pyle, along with newcomers Alex Williams and Mark Adams, are slated to win those four seats. Together, they comprised an informal slate that was pro-referendum and endorsed by the Unit Five Education Association teachers’ union. […]

Dennis Frank was one of four candidates who ran on an informal Students First slate, largely united by a shared campaign value that the referendum was not a solution to a growing deficit in the district’s education fund. Frank ran with Mollie Emery, Brad Wurth and Amee Jada; none appeared to have a viable chance at snagging a seat as of late tonight with 100% precincts reporting. […]

“I think we ran a good race. I think it’s unfortunate that we voted in the same school board that we had before; Unit 5 is in a mess, I truly believe that,” Frank said. “I’m probably joining a lot of other people and I’ll probably leave the state of Illinois. That’s where my next step is — meaning you can’t stay here and hope for better things. We just keep voting the same way.”

* And, finally, my youngest brother (Isabel’s dad) won his race…


WE DID IT. 'Thank you' to every person who voted for me and supported our campaign. Now it is time to get to work!

Posted by Devin Miller on Tuesday, April 4, 2023

What else happened out there?

…Adding… Moms Demand Action is declaring victory in some Illinois races…

• David Kaptain, who was elected Mayor of Elgin, IL
• Martha Paschke, who was elected Alderperson for Geneva, IL, Ward 4
• Kelly Henry, who was elected to the Elmhurst, IL School District 205 Board of Education
• Julie Hill, who was elected to the Glen Ellyn, IL School District 41 Board of Education
• Becky McCabe, who was elected to the St. Charles, IL Community School Unit District 303 Board of Education
• Beth Pope, who was elected to the Warren, IL Township High School District 121 Board of Education
• Meghan McMillin, who was elected to the West Northfield, IL School District 31 Board of Education
• Amy Sabor, who was elected to the Woodland, IL Community Consolidated School District 50 Board of Education
• Jackie McGrath, who was elected as Barrington, IL Public Library District Trustee
• Lauren Kunstler, who was elected as Geneva, IL Public Library Board Trustee

…Adding… Some Republican high-points

[Naperville mayoral candidate Scott] Wehrli took in almost twice as much in campaign donations as White, much of it from real estate developers and brokers and Republican political action committees, while much of White’s money came from unions and Democratic state lawmakers.

White voted for the city’s ban on the sale of assault rifles, made in response to last year’s mass shooting in Highland Park, while Wehrli questioned whether it’s made anyone safer. […]

Terry D’Arcy, a car dealer and well-known philanthropist, held a big lead and declared victory over two-term incumbent Bob O’Dekirk in the race for Joliet mayor. […]

Still, the mayor’s critics accuse him of alienating neighboring communities with an often-overbearing leadership style that provokes political infighting that has marred his tenure as mayor. The city has had five city managers in as many years. The Police Department, meanwhile, is on its fourth chief since 2017 and is the target of an ongoing Illinois attorney general’s office civil probe.

*** UPDATE *** From IEA President Kathi Griffin…

We are thrilled to see public education win and win big during the April 4 consolidated elections. This was an unprecedented school board election cycle. For the first time ever, there was a national dark money group created to put extremist, fringe candidates on our local school boards. But these outside influences were no match for our members and the good people of Illinois. Illinois voters have spoken. They believe we need strong public schools for all students.

It gives me great joy to say the Illinois Education Association (IEA) had a nearly 90 percent success rate in the races for which we recommended candidates. This confirms what we see reflected in the data from the IEA’s State of Education Report year after year, Illinoisans trust our educators most when it comes to making decisions within our public schools.

Our IEA locals participated in school board elections at an astounding rate this cycle. We were involved in upwards of 100 different races across the state, holding meet and greets, canvassing and campaigning on behalf of pro-public education candidates who will put our students first. We also supported and helped elect former public education teacher and union organizer, Brandon Johnson, to be Chicago’s next mayor. I want to issue a deep, heartfelt thank you to all our teachers, education support staff and public education advocates for your hard work. Because of you, voters knew what was at stake and overwhelmingly chose to support our students, our educators and our public schools. We know strong schools mean strong communities. Together we can do what’s best for ALL students. Public schools unite us.

  48 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What an eventful night! What’s goin’ on?

  80 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  10 Comments      


*** ComEd 4 trial live coverage ***

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Apr 5, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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*** Live election night coverage ***

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Live updates and results from various media outlets…

If you find anything I’ve missed, please let me know in comments. Some outlets just didn’t have anything in place as of late this afternoon.

* I’ll adjust this live tweet list as we go along, adding or subtracting as necessary. You’ll likely see a bit of off-topic content here until the polls close and votes start to come in…

  100 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mathematically challenged…


* Wow…


* Chicago…


There will be a live coverage thread tonight right here on the blog.

* Oh my…


* Universally derided…


* Help our guy out, please…


* Isabel’s roundup…

    * WBEZ | Illinois officials obtained do-not-resuscitate orders from prisoners who were not of sound mind: In 2016, a man incarcerated at an Illinois prison signed a living will, stating he was of sound mind and did not want certain medical interventions to extend his life. But there was a problem. When he signed the do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order, he had a diagnosis of dementia and his signature was disorganized and illegible.

    * Sun-Times | 5 students in custody after reports of possible gun at Highland Park High School: Five students were taken into custody after Highland Park High School was placed on lockdown Tuesday for reports of a student “potentially in possession of a gun.” There were no reports of shots fired but students and staff were ordered to remain in place while police secured the building, according to a statement posted on the city’s Facebook page.

    * Lake County News-Sun | Father of alleged Highland Park parade shooter back in court; judge prods lawyers to move case along: Judge George Strickland, who is hearing the case against Robert Crimo Jr., asked his attorney and prosecutors to try to complete the discovery phase of the case, if possible, by the next hearing. Crimo Jr. is scheduled to appear again on June 14.

    * Sun-Times | FOP boss files complaint about city housing migrants at police stations: Catanzara said “it’s inhumane” for the city to relegate migrants to sleeping on “hard floors night after night,” insisting they “should not be camping out there indefinitely like a homeless shelter.” He said officers shouldn’t have to work in those conditions, either.

    * SIU | SIU’s Paul Simon Institute to host ‘rising star’ Illinois state Rep. Margaret Croke: The series will feature new leaders who are “already shaping the Prairie State and are poised to become increasingly influential,” Shaw said. The institute will host, both virtually and in person, young leaders from the Illinois General Assembly, mayors, and members of city councils, county commissions and school boards.

    * Crain’s | Chicago health chief touts record on mental health: Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said Tuesday that she’s committed to remaining in public health and proud of her progress on improving mental health over the past four years. Arwady responded to the news that mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson does not intend to keep her in the role if he wins today’s election. While Arwady says she would prefer to remain leading CDPH in the next administration, Johnson would change course.

    * WICS | Illinois AG warns resident for storm-related repair scams: Raoul cautioned residents that scammers often move quickly into communities to take advantage of people with damage to their homes or businesses. Raoul noted these “storm chasers” use the opportunity to pressure people into making quick and often expensive decisions about cleanup and construction work. Raoul also warned residents that scam artists may be operating as public adjusters who offer “free” inspections to submit a claim to property owners’ insurance companies.

    * Bloomberg | This key Wisconsin race will show just how important abortion is to voters: Liberal Democrats hope to take control of the Wisconsin State Supreme Court for the first time in 15 years Tuesday with a win by Janet Protasiewicz, who is favored over Republican-backed Daniel Kelly, after the state Democratic Party and outside groups poured money into the race.

    * Bloomberg Opinion | Too much of America is emptying out. More immigration can help.: The situation is much worse for places that were affordable before the pandemic. Cities and towns in rural Midwest that lose people are looking at a larger fiscal loss, because there’s no guarantee people will return even at lower prices. They could adjust to the smaller population by raising taxes, but that won’t exactly help attract new residents. A permanent loss of population will be a blow to local businesses, too, which will further reduce government revenue.

    * Pew | U.S. journalists’ beats vary widely by gender and other factors: Men account for 83% of the surveyed journalists who indicated that they cover sports, far higher than the 15% who are women. Men also account for majorities of those who cover political news (60%) and news about science and technology (58%). By comparison, women are more likely than men to cover three of the 11 news beats studied: health, education and families, and social issues and policy. For instance, women account for nearly two-thirds (64%) of surveyed journalists who cover news about health, while only about a third (34%) are men.

    * Sun-Times | White Sox’ Liam Hendriks announces he’s starting last round of chemo: Cult hero A.J. Pierzynski threw the ceremonial first pitch, and Grammy Award-winning artist Jon Secada sang a passionate rendition of the national anthem. But the most uplifting moment before the White Sox’ home opener Monday was a brief message from closer Liam Hendriks, who provided an encouraging update after disclosing Jan. 8 he was undergoing treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma.

    * AP | NASA names astronauts to next moon mission, first crew under Artemis: “We are going back to the moon and Canada is at the center of this exciting journey,” said the Honorable François-Philippe Champagne, the minister responsible for the Canadian Space Agency. “Thanks to our longstanding collaboration with NASA, a Canadian astronaut will fly on this historic mission. On behalf of all Canadians, I want to congratulate Jeremy for being at the forefront of one of the most ambitious human endeavors ever undertaken. Canada’s participation in the Artemis program is not only a defining chapter of our history in space, but also a testament to the friendship and close partnership between our two nations.”

  5 Comments      


IEA says school board candidate banned from school district property, and other stories from the front

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the IEA

ALGONQUIN – Community Unit School District 300 School Board Candidate Kristina Konstanty filed a fake police report against an LGBTQ+ District 300 teacher. The false claim was filed after the openly gay, District 300 teacher, Lisa Kopetsky, made comments at a school board meeting supporting LGBTQ+ students and the district’s LGBTQ+ club, known as SWANS club, an acronym for “students who are not silent.”

“I don’t want anyone else to go through what I’ve had to go through.That’s the only reason I’m sharing my story,” Kopetsky said. “I’m a product of District 300 schools. I graduated from Jacobs High School. My children go to school here. I teach here. I love our schools and our community. But if I can be singled out and harassed because of my sexual orientation, so can our students. This is absolutely unacceptable. We have to do better.” […]

“Konstanty didn’t just file a fake police report against me. She’s gone after me online, harassing me through posts on social media. My phone won’t stop ringing with spam phone calls. My email inbox is overflowing. She’s doxing me. I’m worried about my safety and my family’s safety” Kopetsky said. “We need to do more to protect our educators. I totally understand why people leave the teaching profession. We have to do more, so we can save others from going through this nightmare.”

Shortly after APD closed Konstanty’s false report, she announced her candidacy for school board. Then, at the Jan. 10 school board meeting, Konstanty was openly campaigning for her school board candidacy, which is against Illinois Election Code. The district noted her behavior was “confrontational, disrespectful and abusive” in a No Trespass Notification letter sent to Konstanty. The letter also noted Konstanty is no longer allowed on District 300 property. […]

“She can’t even enter district property without receiving prior approval, but she’s running for school board? It should be abundantly clear to anyone looking over this timeline of events to see that Kristina Konstanty is not someone who is remotely qualified to serve our public schools,” Williamson said.

…Adding… As noted in comments, Kristina Konstanty was endorsed by Awake Illinois yesterday.

* Last week

A New York-based political action committee belatedly reported that it so far has spent more than $13,000 backing conservative candidates in next week’s local school board elections in Illinois.

Its reports were submitted beginning late Tuesday after the Tribune wrote that the group had not disclosed what it spent on mailers that began arriving in Chicago-area mailboxes last week within the time frame required under state law.

The 1776 Project PAC — which, according to its website, funds school board candidates who support teaching “patriotism and pride in American history” and oppose the teaching of critical race theory — is backing more than a dozen candidates in Illinois districts including Barrington and Oswego in the April 4 election.

1776 Project PAC mailer…


* On to these unusual doorhangers in the Elmhurst area, which Isabel told you about yesterday. Notice that they have no “Paid for by” notification on them…


“Vote for anyone except these people,” is a different way of doing things. They even have a website

These people waste class time on curriculum fads; waste money on “equity” consultants and curriculum; and only listen to special interest groups, to the detriment of good learning outcomes.

Some folks sure are upset about equity. Also, note how they claim these liberals are somehow book burners…

And not a single “Paid for by” on the site that I can find.

Patch

The hopefuls have no official alliances. But local progressives are backing incumbents Beth Hosler and Courtenae Trautmann and newcomers Kelly Asseff and Kelly Henry.

The most conservative candidate is seen as Tom Chavez, who has been speaking at board meetings for the last couple of years.

His supporters are also favoring Lan Li, Linda Nudera and Jammie Esker Schaer. […]

He argued local children were the subject of Marxist indoctrination.

…Adding… Tom Chavez, Lan Li, Linda Nudera and Jammie Esker Schaer were all endorsed by Awake Illinois yesterday.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * : In Illinois, this ideological battle is on full display in Tuesday’s elections as residents throughout the state vote in mayoral and school and library board elections. Local school and library board elections, nonpartisan by design, now are subject to credible threats from candidates intent on furthering exclusionary policies such as book bans and opposition to diversity, equity and inclusion policies. The Democratic Party of Illinois has made an unprecedented commitment of $300,000 to combat them.

    * Pantagraph | Meet the District 87 school board candidates: The four candidates for the Bloomington District 87 school board spoke with The Pantagraph recently about their priorities and goals if elected during Tuesday’s election.

    * Patch | 9 Candidates Up For 4 Seats On District 200 Board: Nine candidates are in the running for four seats on the Community Unit School District 200 Board of Education. Two candidates are facing off for one unexpired two-year term and seven are vying for three open seats with full four-year terms.

    * Patch | 4 Vie For 3 Seats On Palos Dist. 118 School Board: Four candidates running for three open seats on the Palos Dist. 118 school board in the April 4 consolidated election. Two candidates out of four responded to the Patch candidate questionnaire.

    * Patch | ETHS, D-65 Elections: Who Will Be Elected To Evanston School Boards?: With only two incumbents running for three open seats on each of Evanston’s public school boards, there are bound to be new faces elected on Tuesday in Evanston/Skokie School District 65 and Evanston Township High School District 202.

    * Patch | Nothing Quiet About D86 Board Race: Three of the candidates, Kay Gallo, Catherine Greenspon and Andrew Catton, are outspoken critics of Superintendent Tammy Prentiss, who was promoted in 2019. Like the other three, candidate Asma Akhras criticized the way Prentiss handled a high-profile incident involving an anti-racist consultant. Still another, Deborah Willoughby, praised the superintendent in a Patch questionnaire.

    * Patch | 4 Vie For 3 Seats On Plainfield D202 Board Of Education: The candidates are Savena Joiner, Elias Kalantis, Margarita Morelos and Heather Roach. The only incumbent is Roach, who was first elected to the position in 2015 and reelected in 2019. Kevin Kirberg, who currently serves as Board president, and Treasa Howard-Collins are not seeking reelection.

    * Patch | Progressives Vs. Conservatives In Elmhurst D205: During the pandemic, Elmhurst school board meetings became battlegrounds over issues such as school shutdowns, masks and critical race theory. Public comments at times became heated. At one meeting, the board recessed for about five minutes when mask mandate backers shouted down a public commenter who refused to wear one.

    * Patch | 6 Vie For 3 Seats On Mokena 159 Board Of Education: According to candidate questionnaires submitted to Patch, Tunney is the lone candidate with school governance experience and is the current President of the Mokena PTA. Coleman and Fryer did not respond to multiple requests from Patch to submit questionnaires.

    * Patch | 8 Candidates Run For 3 LTHS Board Of Education Positions: Tylka-Shaw and Lewandowski are both incumbent board members. Tylka-Shaw serves as secretary of the board, and was elected in 2019. Lewandowski has served on the board since 1999. According to the District website, Lewandowski is an LTHS alumnus and “wants to provide a safe and secure environment to educate all LTHS students and to continue to work with the administration to establish goals for improving student achievement.”

  22 Comments      


Caption contest!

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Daniella Mazzio

  32 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Afternoon precinct reports

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hope everyone is OK…

Statement from Lake County Clerk Anthony Vega on Highland Park School District Lockdown

Waukegan, IL – At approximately 10:55 a.m., Two North Shore District 112 schools, Braeside Elementary School of 150 Pierce Rd, Highland Park, IL 60035 serving Precincts Moraine 222, 228, 229, 230, 231, and 232 and Red Oak Elementary School of 530 Red Oak Ln, Highland Park, IL 60035 serving Precincts Moraine 220, 221, 224, 225, 226, and 227 went into a lockdown status due to heavy police presence at Highland Park High School. The Highland Park Public Library at 494 Laurel Ln., Highland Park, IL, 60035 serving Precincts Moraine 217, 218, 219, and 223 has also gone into lockdown status.

This lockdown has subsequently halted all voter services at these locations at this time. At the point of the lockdown being lifted our office will petition the court to extend voting for the same length of time as the lockdown. All voters currently unable to vote at Braeside Elementary School, Red Oak Elementary School, or Highland Park Public Library may visit the Lake County Clerk’s Office at 18 N County St, Waukegan, IL 60085 to vote if they would prefer not to wait.

Any information regarding the police situation will be addressed by the City of Highland Park and North Shore School District 112. Please direct further questions or concerns to the North Shore School District 112 or Highland Park Police Department.

Please see the below statement from the Highland Park School District:

“Please be advised of a heavy police presence at Highland Park High School. HPHS has been placed on a lockdown due to a report of a student potentially in possession of a gun at school. There are no reported shots fired. Students and school staff should remain in place to facilitate the work of law enforcement to secure the building. The City will provide an update once the building has been secured.

All District 112 Schools are in Secure Building status right now - no one can enter or exit the schools in District 112 until further notice. Students are safe in their classrooms.

Voting at Red Oak and Braeside is being delayed due to the Secure Building status.

We are in direct communication with law enforcement. More information will be forthcoming from D112, the County Clerk and the City.”

More here.

* Hopefully, things are a lot calmer near you. What’s going on out there?

*** UPDATE *** Over…


  31 Comments      


Freedom Caucus claims to be “exploring an ethics complaint” over potential rules violation, while member asks top justice about recusals in gun case

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Just FYI, but the Republicans knew the Democrats were losing members as 3rd Reading deadline night progressed (they even asked to verify roll calls that evening), but waited until after all their bills had been voted on before asking for a roll call verification of the very last bill on the House’s 2nd Reading calendar. Also, if it hadn’t been for the Freedom Caucus’ rule change dumping the consent calendar for substantive bills, the House might not have been in so late. By one count, 283 of the 465 bills the House passed garnered at least 100 votes. Also, staff voting members’ switches is a bipartisan thing, but we’ve seen controversy about this before (remember “Buttongate”?). It’s not a legal violation, but it is a rules violation and the folks back home probably do not love the practice, so here you go…

The Illinois Freedom Caucus is issuing the following statement calling for an ethics investigation into the recent House Floor voting controversy and the Parliamentary action the House leadership took on March 24th in Springfield.

“As Members of the Illinois House of Representatives, it is our duty to serve the people. Our mission is to enact and support legislation that is beneficial for the working families and taxpayers of Illinois. Voters have sent us to Springfield to act in good faith and to conduct business ethically and in accordance with state law. Unfortunately in the late hours of March 24th, that public trust was violated by members and staff of the House Democratic Caucus in the General Assembly.

In typical fashion our government was debating substantive legislation way behind schedule until nearly midnight. During the debate, the Democratic leadership attempted to shut off the opportunity for opposing speakers to discuss legislation. Shortly after this time it became apparent that many members of the Democratic Caucus were absent from the House Floor, and in fact were absent from the Capitol Complex entirely. Yet somehow, they were still voting on legislation.

Representative Dan Caulkins of the Illinois Freedom Caucus raised the issue of the accuracy of votes cast, and he requested a verification of votes cast for the previous bill. A verified roll call means for any ‘YES’ votes to count, legislators had to be in the chamber in order for those votes to count. Initially, his request was denied, but after debate on the verification request, verification was granted.

That verification showed at least four votes were cast on the motion which could not be verified. Those votes were removed, the bill failed to pass, and shortly after the verification, the House adjourned. However, there is no denying that votes were improperly cast for members who were not present to vote, and there were attempts to prevent verification from proceeding in an effort to cover up false votes.

The Democratic majority has power in Springfield, and they are certainly not shy about reminding us of that fact. But it is possible to exercise power without abusing it. We need a more ethical, transparent and accountable government, which is why we are exploring an ethics complaint with the Legislative Inspector General. The abuse of power must come to an end.”

The Illinois Freedom Caucus is comprised of State Representatives Chris Miller (R-Oakland), chairman; Blaine Wilhour (R-Beecher City), vice-chairman; Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich); Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville); Dan Caulkins (R-Decatur); Jed Davis (R-Newark) and David Friess (R-Red Bud). The members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus are members of the Illinois General Assembly who are advocating for limited government, lower taxes and accountability and integrity in government.

* From Speaker Chris Welch’s spokesperson Jaclyn Driscoll…

The Freedom Caucus has repeatedly proven that they have no sincere interest in governing. Their one goal is to obstruct the will of the majority of voters in Illinois because their policies continuously fail at the ballot box. Democrats remain focused on getting the work done and lifting up communities across this state.

* Background is here if you need it, but Freedom Caucus member Rep. Brad Halbrook serves on the House Appropriations-General Service Committee. And Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis testified at the committee about her budget request today. Rep. Halbrook then asked her this question

Halbrook: Do you think that Justices Rochford and O’Brien… [will] do the right thing and recuse themselves in relationship to the gun ban case?

Theis: There are motions pending before the court as we speak, and at this point, I’m not going to make a comment on those motions until they’ve been decided.

As another FYI, Supreme Court candidates are not allowed to personally solicit campaign contributions. But as a recent motion filed by the attorney for Rep. Caulkins noted, G-PAC and Giffords PAC endorsed both high court candidates and had this explanation on its website

In order to earn the endorsement of G-PAC and Giffords PAC, each candidate voiced their support of the organizations’ top legislative priority: banning assault weapons and large-capacity magazines in Illinois.

A G-PAC spokesperson declined comment.

  12 Comments      


Keep Uber Affordable. Stop Lawsuit Abuse. Oppose HB 2231

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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That toddlin’ town roundup

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You could hardly get more different results if you tried. As the crosstabs show, this IZQ poll vastly differs with the Victory Research poll on men and on race. VR had Vallas up by 13 points among men. The IZQ poll has them tied, 48-48. VR had Vallas leading among whites 76-19, the IZQ poll has Vallas up by just 10, at 54-44. VR had Johnson up among Black voters 76-20 with 3 percent undecided, but this IZQ poll has Johnson leading 64-22 with 14 undecided. VR had Vallas up 50-43 among Latino voters, while this IZQ poll has Vallas up by 17 points. Also, the VR poll had the two tied among those who had voted and had Vallas leading 50-43 among those who hadn’t yet voted, while this poll had large Johnson leads among early voters and had Vallas leading by just 4 points among those who were waiting until today. And, according to this poll, Vallas is still stuck at 45..



* Meanwhile…


* And…


…Adding… Heh…


* Isabel’s roundup…

  54 Comments      


Hold Uber Accountable. Support HB 2231.

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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ComEd 4 trial coverage roundup

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

    * Sun-Times | Ex-ComEd lobbyist suspected new CEO Dominguez would be ‘wired’: The longtime confidant of then-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan had already retired from his lobbying job, so Madigan asked who would serve as ComEd’s “lead” on the bill. McClain couldn’t come up with a name — but he knew he didn’t trust ComEd’s new CEO, Joseph Dominguez. “I would trust Joe to think that … this is a quid pro quo,”McClain said in February 2019 of Dominguez, a former federal prosecutor. “And that he’s wired.”

    * Crain’s | One conversation gets as close to the quid for the quo as ‘ComEd Four’ trial has gotten: With that summation, McClain in that call undermines much of what the defense has presented so far in terms of how Madigan helped ComEd in Springfield. Attorneys repeatedly have said Madigan’s staffers drove hard bargains in negotiations with ComEd and Exelon and didn’t give in to their initial requests. In one example, Madigan’s aides in 2016 talked Exelon down from a subsidy of $285 million annually for two nuclear plants that otherwise would close, to $235 million, according to evidence the defense presented. Over the 10 years of that subsidy — which ratepayers statewide still are paying in their electric bills — that translated into more than $2 billion.

    * Tribune | ‘We had to hire these guys‘: Jury in ‘ComEd Four’ trial hears recordings laying out role of Madigan’s confidant as go-between for utility: On another call from February 2019, McClain boasted to an Exelon executive he’d been doing “assignments” for Madigan for 25 years and “you’ve never read about me in a newspaper.” The recordings, which were played back-to-back for an hour without a witness on the stand, featured a who’s who of Madigan’s most trusted associates, including 13th Ward Ald. Marty Quinn, former state Rep. John Bradley, former top staffer-turned lobbyist Shaw Decremer, as well as the speaker’s son, Andrew.

    * Center Square | ‘ComEd Four’ video evidence shows effort ‘to keep Mike Madigan happy’: An undated recording has McClain talking with Madigan, who’s on trial for the alleged scheme next year, about various associates. “When you’re with Anne, you’re talking about Mike Zalewski,” Madigan said. “Mike Zalewski and Juan Ochoa, and Joe Dominguez,” McClain said. “Those are the three.”

    * Telephone conversation between Michael McClain and John Hooker and Anne Pramaggiore | ComEd Exhibit 136-T: PRAMAGGIORE: Well and they, and they gotta you know the other thing Michael is, you know this is, this is a different group that they have to deal with inside the company, and you have to have somebody who knows, that the, the Speaker trusts, and can sort through this stuff to make sure that the right information is flowing.

  11 Comments      


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

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

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Open thread

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s Election Day! What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

…Adding… [From Rich] Let’s also use this post as a morning precinct report. What are you seeing out there? Let us know where you are if you can.

…Adding… Fresh thread is here.

  42 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go!…

  2 Comments      


*** ComEd 4 trial live coverage ***

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Apr 4, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


L

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Afternoon roundup

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From Heather Wier Vaught’s excellent weekend newsletter

LEGISLATIVE

Schedule: Both chambers met [last] week. Friday was the Third Reading deadline in the Senate, and they finished early in the day without any major incidents. In total, the Senate passed 265 bills over to the House, and the House passed 443 bills to the Senate. Members will be back in their district offices for the next two weeks, and both chambers reconvene April 18-20.

Senate Hearings on Chicago Elected School Board: The General Assembly is tasked with drawing districts for the soon-to-be elected Chicago Board of Education. The Senate’s Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board will hold hearings throughout Chicago April 5 through 17 to gather public input. The public may provide in-person testimony, submit written testimony, or submit witness slips in advance of the hearings via email at ChicagoERSBCommittee@senatedem.ilga.gov.

House Appropriations-Higher Education Procurement Subcommittee: House Appropriations-Higher Education Committee Chair, LaShawn Ford, announced the creation of a new subcommittee aimed at examining equity and inclusion in university procurements. Chairman Ford stated in a press release, “There is disparity in the number of contracts awarded to Black, Brown, and women contractors,” “The subcommittee would be examining what policies, if any, lead these institutions to not award contracts equitably, or if they hold standards that could dissuade companies from pursuing project bids.” Illinois has some of the most robust procurement laws in the country, and contractors and vendors often find the process difficult to navigate. Last year the General Assembly created a new Task Force on Procurement to undertake a comprehensive review of procurement laws and policies, including those that apply to universities. Universities are subject to the provisions of the Procurement Code and oversight by the Chief Procurement Officer for Higher Education.

Mary Gill Appointed to the House: Mary Gill was appointed to fill the vacancy of State Representative Fran Hurley, who Governor Pritzker appointed to the State Labor Relations Board. Gill is the Executive Director of the Mt. Greenwood Community and Business Association (MGCBA).

JUDICIAL

Plaintiffs in Assault Weapon Case Move to Disqualify Justices: Plaintiffs in the assault weapon ban case before the Illinois Supreme Court moved to disqualify Justices Elizabeth Rochford and Mary Kay O’Brien based on campaign contributions from Governor Pritzker, Speaker Welch, and attorneys representing President Harmon. Candidates for the judiciary are prohibited from soliciting or accepting campaign funds themselves, rather contributions to judicial candidate committees must be solicited and accepted by others. The Act being challenged was passed after the 2022 election, and contributions to the committees supporting the new justices were publicly available. Plaintiffs chose to named the Governor, Speaker, and President as defendants in the case, and now seek to use the named defendants as justification for the recusal of the two recently-elected justices.

This is not the first time campaign contributions have been used to attempt to disqualify justices in high profile cases. In 2005, plaintiffs in Avery v State Farm moved to disqualify then recently-elected Justice Lloyd Karmeier citing campaign contributions the committee supporting Karmeier received from State Farm and its employees. Justice Karmeier stated he would not recuse himself and the court denied the motion as moot. In 2014, plaintiffs in Price v Philip Morris moved to disqualify Justice Karmeier for the same contributions. Justice Karmeier wrote a 16-page opinion explaining his reasoning for not recusing, relying heavily on the rule of necessity, which holds that absent a clear reason to recuse a justice should hear a case, and no member of the court sought his recusal. He ultimately participated in both cases, in which billions of dollars were at stake for all parties in the case. Unlike the plaintiffs in Avery or Price, none of the defendants in this case have any financial interest in the outcome of the pending lawsuit, merely policy and political interests. More here.

* More…

    * ABC Chicago | ‘I couldn’t save him’: Son recounts final moments before father killed in Belvidere roof collapse : “I just remember seeing all these people lifting the roof off of the people. And just trying to pull people out and seeing somebody not moving being pulled out was terrifying,” said concert-goer Christina Johnson. Outside the venue, high winds tore down the theater’s marquee, with bricks littering the street.

    * Nebraska Examiner | Former Illinois prison chief being named to head Nebraska Department of Corrections: Jeffreys will succeed Diane Sabatka-Rine, who had served as interim director of the Nebraska of Corrections since October, when Scott Frakes retired. Frakes had led the Nebraska department since 2015, shortly after then-Gov. Pete Ricketts was elected to his first term, and was paid $255,000 a year — one of the highest salaries for a corrections director in the

    * Crain’s | Walmart heirs pour money into pro-charter school groups backing Paul Vallas: The Walton family, both through individual relatives of Sam and Helen Walton and the Walton Family Foundation, is influential in the charter school space, spending hundreds of millions on education efforts across the country. That includes Chicago, where they’ve funded the launch of charter schools and donated to school-choice advocacy groups.

    * Beatriz Diaz-Pollack | The culture wars have infected school and library board elections in Illinois: On March 24, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a measure with the deceivingly innocuous introduction, “To ensure the rights of parents are honored and protected in the nation’s public schools.” Make no mistake: This bill is a proverbial wolf in sheep’s clothing and will have devastating effects, including right here in Illinois.

    * WBEZ | Chicago State University faculty walk out on strike: In a written statement released over the weekend, university administrators said all support services and most, if not all, classes would continue during the strike. They said they have offered an additional bargaining session on Tuesday, but the union has yet to confirm it.

    * Crain’s | Workers at 3 Navy Pier venues OK strike: Ahead of the strike vote yesterday, the National Labor Relations Board’s Region 13 filed a complaint Feb. 24 against Maverick Hotels & Restaurants, which employs the workers. The NLRB has alleged that the company has violated the National Labor Relations Act and “has been failing and refusing to bargain collectively and in good faith and failing to provide information necessary for the Union’s performance of its duties,” the agency said in a news release.

    * Crain’s | Clayco unit taps Schnur as chief operating officer: The move comes less than a year after CRG raised $450 million to invest in industrial development projects, a commercial property sector that thrived during the COVID-19 pandemic as companies clamored for warehouse space to store and distribute goods bought online. Schnur also takes the operational reins at CRG after a series of regional office expansions over the past few years.

    * Axios | Important elections to watch in Chicago’s suburbs: Pandemic precautions and culture wars over what’s taught in schools have thrust these previously sleepy, nonpartisan races into the center of political debate. Conservative groups have poured thousands of dollars into several suburban school board races and library board elections, only to be matched by Governor Pritzker and other Democrats.

    * Sun-Times | Data centers keep coming, but not all deals will compute: Experts believe that as artificial intelligence gains acceptance, it will increase demand for data centers. Chicago is well positioned for this. A 2023 report by Cushman & Wakefield said among global markets, Chicago is tied for 5th place in its appeal for data centers. The ranking is based on factors such as land costs, reliable utilities and state-authorized tax incentives.

    * PJ Star | Ask the candidates: What is your view on regulation of the cannabis industry in Peoria?: Here’s what we asked: What is your view on the regulation of the cannabis industry in Peoria? Should the city impose additional restrictions on the number and location of dispensaries? Should it allow on-site consumption of cannabis products at dispensaries?

    * Media Matters | With conventional abortion pill regimens likely to be pulled, anti-choice activists are increasingly attacking a safe alternative: If mifepristone ceases to be widely available, clinics are expected to prescribe misoprostol-only protocols for medication abortions, a common regimen in other countries. Though misoprostol-only abortions do have a slightly higher failure rate and a higher incidence of side effects compared to mifepristone and misoprostol taken together, the World Health Organization and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists have identified abortions via misoprostol as a safe and effective alternative when mifepristone is unavailable. Misoprostol is currently approved by the FDA to treat ulcers, meaning that doctors who prescribe the medication for abortions do so “off-label,” which is allowed “as long as it is within the standard of care.”

    * AP | Man gets new trial in Chicago honor student’s death:Micheail Ward was found guilty in connection with the death of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton and sentenced to 84 years in prison in 2019.[2] The Chicago Sun-Times reported Friday that the 1st District Appellate Court ruled that detectives improperly extracted a confession from Ward after he invoked his right to remain silent at least three times during a 12-hour interrogation.[3] Ward was 18 years old at the time of the shooting.

    * ProPublica | The True Dangers of Long Trains: Today, the rail administration says it lacks enough evidence that long trains pose a particular risk. But ProPublica discovered it is a quandary of the agency’s own making: It doesn’t require companies to provide certain basic information after accidents — notably, the length of the train — that would allow it to assess once and for all the extent of the danger.

    * Fox Chicago | Illinois State Police trooper injured after driver strikes squad car on I-94: The trooper’s vehicle was blocking traffic from entering the flooded southbound lanes of Interstate 94 around 8:20 p.m. due to a major storm that had passed through the area, according to ISP.

    * Pantagraph | Here are some takeaways from the first two weeks of Illinois spring practice: Illinois wrapped up its second week of spring practice with a scrimmage on Saturday. It got some windy and cold conditions as a preview to a third fall under coach Bret Bielema. That didn’t stop kickers Caleb Griffin and David Olano from hitting 57-yard field goals at the end of the afternoon, or new quarterbacks Luke Altmyer and John Paddock.

  2 Comments      


Awake Illinois releases its school board endorsements

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Awake Illinois has unveiled all of its school board endorsements on its website. They endorsed three candidates in the race for Lyons Township High School board

Awake Illinois supports Tim Vlcek, Frank Evans and David Herndon. The other candidates are incumbents Kari Dillon and Jill Beda Daniels and newcomers Tim Albores and Justin Clark. Three seats are available in the election. […]

In an email, Vlcek said, “I’m unaware of any endorsement from Awake nor have I requested one. I’ve run my own campaign delivering my message on my platform.”

Herndon said in an email that he did not seek the endorsement and that Awake did not speak with him about it.

“I made it clear from the start of my campaign since this was supposedly a nonpartisan election, I was not seeking or wanting any endorsements from any political organizations, and therefore I do not accept it,” he said. “I have received a broad range of endorsements from people that I have never met or spoken to. Because someone endorses me does not mean I absorb their platforms or values. All of this outside influence from all sides is distracting from the issues in this race which is how best to educate kids and bring transparency and public engagement back to the Board. If the Board was doing their job there would not be all of this influence pouring in from all sides.”

Vleck attended an Awake Illinois workshop in January. Vleck, Evans and Herndon were backed by an anonymous mailer last month.

* In Elmhurst, Awake Illinois is supporting Linda Nudera, Lan Li, Tom Chavez and Jammie Esker Schaer

In response, Nudera emailed a statement saying she was not aware of the endorsement and was not part of the group.

But she said that after a review of Awake’s website, the group is “not just a platform for concerned parents, but they support inner-city initiatives like Project HOOD and our military Veterans – both honorable philanthropies.” […]

“I find irony in the fact that Democratic organizations are supporting a slate of homogeneous women for the school board versus a heterogeneous panel made up of both men and women, multicultural with diverse skill sets,” Nudera said. […]

In an email, Li said he is independent and has no involvement with Awake. He said he has received just one donation – $100 from an old friend in Arlington Heights. He said he has paid for everything else.

“Concerning the endorsement from Awake Illinois, I have not been directly contacted or interviewed by any of its members,” Li said. “My assumption is that they endorsed me based on my website and word of mouth. Maybe they believe that I am not as radical as some of the other candidates. Nonetheless, I have no control over who finds me agreeable or disagreeable.”

* Elmhurst also had an anonymous mailer. Patch

A door hanger was spread in Elmhurst over the weekend urging residents to “save our children.”

The door hanger, which was authored anonymously, asked residents to vote in Tuesday’s election against incumbents Courtenae Trautmann and Beth Hosler and newcomers Kelly Henry and Kelly Asseff. […]

Then the flyer ended with a grammatical mistake.

“End Woke Policy’s and teach Math, Reading and Writing,” it said.

“Policy’s” is not possessive in this instance. It should have read “policies.”

* Awake Illinois is supporting Catherine Greenspon and Andrew Catton for Hinsdale High School District 86 board

Greenspon said who endorses her doesn’t change who she is and what she stands for.

“That any group or individual would endorse me when I so openly stand for collaboration and unity gives me hope,” Greenspon said in an email. “My actions speak louder than words. My whole adult life has been dedicated to serving others. That’s who I am today and who I will be after all the votes are counted.”

At board meetings, Greenspon said, “I talk to everyone. I want for everyone to feel welcome to conversation, feel seen and feel heard. Throughout this campaign, I have been supported by a diverse group of people, which is representative of our school district.” […]

The endorsement of Catton was not a surprise. He has aired views that resemble those of Awake. Last year, he posted a story titled “Assume Public Schools Sexually Abuse Your Kids Til Proven Otherwise.” In January, Patch documented some of Catton’s social media posts.

  24 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet S. Bhachu during redirect with the prosecution’s star witness, former ComEd VP Fidel Marquez…


Thoughts?

  10 Comments      


Meanwhile, in Opposite Land…

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NBC

With little fanfare, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed legislation Monday allowing residents to carry a concealed loaded weapon without a permit.

DeSantis signed the bill in a non-public event in his office with only bill sponsors, legislative leaders and gun rights advocates, including the National Rifle Association, in attendance. […]

Florida is now the 26th state in the country to pass some form of permitless carry legislation. The signing comes one week after six people, including three children were gunned down at The Covenant School in Nashville.

“This is a momentous step in the Constitutional Carry movement as now the majority of American states recognize the Constitution protects the right for law-abiding Americans to defend themselves outside their homes without fees or permits,” Randy Kozuch, interim executive director, NRA-ILA, said in a statement, which included a picture of the event. “The carry movement began decades ago and the NRA has been working to get this legislation passed throughout America. Therefore, today is indeed a day to celebrate.”

Opponents of the proposal have said it will increase gun violence, and they said it was telling that DeSantis did not hold a public signing ceremony like he has done in the past for other high-profile bills.

* It should be no surprise that there’s more out of Florida

Florida’s ban on providing gender-affirming care to new patients went into effect this month after the state’s Boards of Medicine and Osteopathic Medicine voted to approve the rule last year. Under the rule, gender-affirming care includes treatments like puberty blockers, hormone replacement therapy and surgery. The ban makes an exception to allow minors who were already receiving this care before January 2023 to continue their treatments.

“Everybody is in a kind of chaos right now,” said Joseph Knoll, a nurse practitioner and the CEO of Spektrum Health, a community-based health center located in central Florida that specializes in medical and mental health services for the LGBTQ community and beyond. He told me that the new rules leave healthcare professionals who provide this care “feeling helpless.”

Doctors and other practitioners who violate the ban could lose their medical license and be hit with hefty fines. Many are even considering leaving the state, given the uncertainty of future restrictions on their practice. Part of the dismay comes from feeling that the deck has been unfairly stacked. Local news outlets have reported that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis appointed all the members of the “vociferously apolitical” Board of Medicine, several of whom made contributions to his campaign totaling $80,000. DeSantis is reportedly considering running for president in 2024 and gender-affirming care is an issue that many conservative lawmakers have been pushing across the country. […]

Florida, unlike the other states, initially chose not to take a legislative route, instead moving ahead via state medical boards. A bill, though, is currently making its way through the Florida House of Representatives to codify the ban on gender-affirming care. This bill also includes a ban on changing the sex as recorded on a birth certificate, prohibits health insurance providers from covering any treatments related to youth transitioning and prohibits organizations that provide transition-related healthcare to minors from receiving public funds.

Already, this has led to clinics shutting down preemptively. Outlets reported that the Johns Hopkins All Children Hospital in St. Petersburg and Nicklaus Children’s Hospital in Miami, among others, stopped accepting new patients into programs that provided hormones or puberty blockers well before the law went into effect. The fear of prosecution leaves few providers still offering these services.

* Kentucky

Kentucky state Sen. Karen Berg had to deal with the most devastating thing a mother could imagine.

In December last year, Berg’s transgender son Henry Berg-Brosseau died by suicide. He was just 24 and a prominent LGBTQ rights activist who inspired his mother to run for office. […]

Two weeks later, Berg was awash with grief but had to pick herself up and go to the state Capitol for the 2023 legislative session. She says she felt exhausted. […]

More than two months later, she watched her Republican colleagues, one by one, vote to override a veto on Senate Bill 150, banning all gender-affirming medical care for trans youth in Kentucky including puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

For public schools, the bill restricts which bathrooms students can use and puts limits on discussing gender and sexuality. It also allows teachers to refer to students by their gender assigned at birth.

It’s exactly what her son Henry fought against.

* Mississippi

House Bill 1020, which would significantly increase state control over Jackson’s judicial system and policing, passed the Mississippi House, 72-41, on Friday, sending one of the most controversial bills of the 2023 session to the governor’s desk as lawmakers wind down their work for the year.

Democratic leadership promised the bill, if it is signed into law by Gov. Tate Reeves, will see legal challenges immediately upon taking effect on July 1.

“Legal action takes place when there is a cause of action. Cause of action does not become effective until the law actually is enacted. As soon as this bill becomes law, there will be lawsuits filed,” House Minority Leader Robert Johnson, D-Natchez, said.

It would create a new unelected court system within an expanded Capitol Complex Improvement District, add temporary appointed judges to the Hinds County court system, increase the boundaries of the CCID and allow Capitol Police to work outside of that area, expanding their jurisdiction to include the entire city, all of which local leaders have opposed.

* Texas

A federal judge in Texas ruled that at least 12 books removed from public libraries by Llano County officials, many because of their LGBTQ and racial content, must be placed back onto shelves within 24 hours, according to an order filed Thursday.

Seven residents sued county officials in April 2022, claiming their First and 14th Amendment rights were violated when books deemed inappropriate by some people in the community and Republican lawmakers were removed from public libraries or access was restricted.

The lawsuit filed in the US District Court for the Western District of Texas in San Antonio claimed county officials removed books from the shelves of the three-branch public library system “because they disagree with the ideas within them” and terminated access to thousands of digital books because they could not ban two specific titles.

Books ordered to return to shelves include “Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents” by Isabel Wilkerson, “They Called Themselves the K.K.K.: The Birth of an American Terrorist Group” by Susan Campbell Bartoletti and “Being Jazz: My Life as a (Transgender) Teen” by Jazz Jennings.

* Wisconsin

Control of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and likely the future of abortion access, Republican-drawn legislative maps and years of GOP policies in the key swing state rests with the outcome an election Tuesday that has seen record campaign spending.

The winner of the high-stakes contest between Republican-backed Dan Kelly and Democratic-supported Janet Protasiewicz will determine majority control of the court headed into the 2024 presidential election. The court came within one vote of overturning President Joe Biden’s narrow win in 2020, and both sides expect another close race in 2024.

It’s the latest election where abortion rights has been the central issue since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last June. It’s also an example of how officially nonpartisan court races have grown into political battles as major legal fights play out at the state level.

All of it has fueled spending that will double, and likely triple or more, the previous high of $15.4 million spent on a state court race in Illinois in 2004. Democrats have spent heavily for Protasiewicz and Republicans for Kelly.

  20 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I had booked a train last week to Chicago on Friday evening. I figured it would be delayed because of the major storms rolling through. So I wasn’t surprised to receive a message saying it was, indeed, delayed. The train eventually departed at 8 o’clock, but it stopped a few minutes later, and then it began to back up. The conductor came on the intercom to tell us that downed power lines were on the tracks ahead, so the train would go back to the Springfield station to wait. I pulled out my iPad and booked a train for the next morning, figuring there was no way in heck that train would begin moving at any sort of reasonable hour. I got off the train and went back home and woke up to see the next morning that Amtrak had waited until 3:30 AM to cancel the route.

Oy. Those poor people.

Saturday morning, I received a text from Amtrak saying there was a problem with my train and its departure would be delayed by 20 minutes. A friend took me to the station and we arrived about 15 minutes before the train’s delayed departure. He suggested I look up the train’s status online to see if anything had changed. I did, and nothing had changed. I walked into the station only to find out that the train had left at its originally scheduled time, about five minutes before I got there.

Ugh. The first train couldn’t be helped, but that second one is on Amtrak.

I ended up renting a car online, but Hertz didn’t have a car when my friend (same guy) took me over there an hour later.

Argh.

I finally got out of town after booking a rental car from Budget over the phone.

Anyway, while frustrating, my experiences were nothing at all compared to some of the devastation that occurred in Illinois due to that major storm.

* The Question: Did you have any storm damage on Friday, or do you have any interesting storm-related stories to tell about Friday?

  19 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Kam Buckner now has the bill in the House


Press release

To ensure local governments do not compromise driver or pedestrian safety in order to accommodate large trucks on non-designated highways, State Senator Mike Simmons passed a measure out of the Senate on Friday.

“Construction on highways can be time consuming, dangerous and can significantly impact traffic flow,” said Simmons (D-Chicago). “This legislation will allow local governments to avoid such a big undertaking by not requiring them to change their non-designated highways to accommodate larger trucks and vehicles.”

Senate Bill 2278 provides that an agency or local government will not be required to design, construct, widen or alter a non-designated highway to accommodate trucks between 55 and 65 feet in length. Additionally, a local government will be required to report to the Illinois Department of Transportation any limitations that prohibit the operation of vehicles on non-designated highways and any non-designated highway that is not designed or constructed after Jan. 1, 2023 to accommodate trucks between 55 and 65 feet in length.

“Widening intersections to accommodate these larger trucks takes away space that can be used for bike lanes, pedestrian walkways and green space,” Simmons said. “This is an unnecessary undertaking for what is, on many roads, only an occasional need.”

* HB3413 passed the House and is now in Senate Assignments. Here’s ProPublica

In January, a ProPublica investigation revealed that institutions have not returned the remains of at least 15,461 Native Americans who were excavated from Illinois. We also revealed how the Illinois State Museum had for decades displayed open Native American graves at Dickson Mounds, a burial site that was billed as a tourist attraction and then as an “educational” exhibit before its closure in the 1990s. […]

State Rep. Mark L. Walker, a Democrat who represents part of Chicago’s northwest suburbs, said he introduced the bill after leaders of the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation brought the issue to his attention. Walker, who has a master’s degree in anthropology, said it is “atrocious” that some museums and universities still keep the human remains and funerary items of Native Americans. […]

If passed by the Senate and signed into law, the bill would create a cemetery on state land where repatriated Native American ancestors and their belongings could be reburied. The state would be responsible for protecting the cemetery, which would not be for public use, from potential looting or vandalization. […]

The bill would establish a Tribal Repatriation Fund, which could only be used to help return ancestors and items and for reburial and would help pay for repatriation work using money from fines and other penalties collected from individuals or organizations that knowingly disturb burial sites.

* News-Gazette

It will be easier for customers to pick up their prescriptions at drug stores if a bill sponsored by state Sen. Chapin Rose passes the Illinois House and is signed into law. […]

Rose said that currently a pharmacist can be in the building, but if he or she is taking lunch, a prescription that has been filled cannot be dispensed until he or she returns to work. It can make for a major inconvenience — and in some cases an emergency — for some people. […]

Andy Hudson of Hudson Drug Shop of Paxton said the bill seems designed to help the chain pharmacies because they generally only have one pharmacist on duty.

“Unfortunately that ultimately puts things on businesses like us who want to do things the high-quality way at even more of a disadvantage,” Hudson said. […]

“It’s a good access-to-care bill,” Rose said, adding he believes it is likely the House will pass it.

* Marijuana Moment

The Illinois Senate has approved legislation that would prevent the smell of marijuana from being used as probable cause to search a vehicle or its passengers.

The Senate voted 33–20 on Thursday to pass the bill, SB 125. It’s now set to be considered by the state’s House of Representatives. […]

A striking amendment from [the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Rachel Ventura] that was approved on the Senate floor Thursday replaced the bill’s language as it was originally introduced in January.

As passed by the body, the bill says that “if a motor vehicle is driven or occupied by an individual 21 years of age or over, the odor of burnt or raw cannabis in a motor vehicle by itself shall not constitute probable cause for the search of the motor vehicle, vehicle operator, or passengers in the vehicle.”

* Illinois Community College Board…

A bill that would equalize the value of major course credits at all Illinois higher education institutions reducing the time and money students spend towards earning a degree has unanimously passed out of the Illinois Senate.

SB2288 strengthens the Illinois Articulation Initiative (IAI) Act (110 ILCS 152) by requiring public colleges and universities to accept all major coursesapproved for transfer through IAI as equivalent major courses, as long as a specific major is offered at the receiving institution.

Under current law, 4-year institutions can accept IAI major courses as either direct course equivalents or as elective credits. As a result, some students transferring to a public university must repeat courses already completed at a community college level in order to complete a degree at the university level.

“Students that earn major coursework credit at a community college should not have to spend more precious time and money to re-earn the same credit at a four-year university. This legislation will reduce the burden on our students and accelerate the time it takes them to earn a degree and start a meaningful career,” said bill sponsor Sen. Cristina Castro (D-Elgin).

The bill is part of the Illinois Community College Board’s (ICCB) larger initiative to increase access to educational opportunities and strengthen Illinois’ growing workforce. […]

The bill now moves to the Illinois House of Representatives for approval.

* State Journal-Register

Senate Bill 1463 from state Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago, passed on Wednesday in a 37-19 vote and would eliminate the issuing of nearly all juvenile court fines and fees if [it passes the House and then] signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker.

Individuals under the age of 18 would still owe restitution for violations of traffic, boating, fishing or game law along with municipal ordinance violations. The bill has received its first reading in the state House of Representatives and is now in the House Rules Committee. […]

Peters said the real impact is often felt when families have to take-on credit card debt to cover their fines and fees. […]

Still, Republicans voting against the bill were concerned that this would be a financial loss for counties. State Sen. Jill Tracy, R-Quincy, said during floor debate on Wednesday that Adams County, her home county, issued $22,000 in fines either last year or in 2021. … The Illinois Sheriff’s Association also opposes the legislation.

* SB380 passed the Senate Friday…

When Bloomington resident Curt Richardson got his DNA test results back from Ancestry.com, his life – and those of his parents – changed forever when they learned they had been victims of fertility fraud.

Richardson’s story is similar to hundreds of others across the state and nation who have lived most of their lives thinking the very people who raised them were their biological parents. State Senator Dave Koehler is working to bring awareness to fertility fraud and provide justice to the families who fall victim to the heinous act.

“Fertility fraud is an issue that has been overlooked for far too long,” said Koehler (D – Peoria). “This is a horrible practice that has gone unpunished. Illinois needs to join other states in taking a stand for those who have been affected by this horrendous act.”

Fertility fraud occurs when a health care provider knowingly or intentionally uses their own human reproductive cells during an assisted reproductive treatment without the patient’s informed written consent.

When Richardson received his at-home DNA test results in June of 2021, he knew he couldn’t be silent. Richardson reached out to Koehler for help to ensure that if any other Illinoisans becomes victim of fertility fraud, they would be able to take legal action.

Senate Bill 380 would create the Illinois Fertility Fraud Act, which would allow people to bring action against health care providers who knowingly or intentionally use their own reproductive cells without the patient’s informed written consent.

  4 Comments      


That toddlin’ town roundup

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s just a poll, and we’ll know the real numbers soon enough, but Victory Research has now done four head-to-heads on the Vallas vs. Johnson race…

2/12-15: Vallas 46, Johnson 33
3/6-9: Vallas 45, Johnson 39
3/20-23: Vallas 46, Johnson 44
3/29-31: Vallas 50, Johnson 45

If this poll is right, then the undecideds are breaking toward Vallas and he’s finally moved above that 45-46 level he’d been stuck at for weeks.

If you compare the last two polls and look at where the candidates have moved at or beyond the overall 3.2 percent margin of error in the final poll (even though the MoE for these subsets are larger), you’ll see Vallas has moved up a bit with both men and women. He’s now equal with Johnson among women and leading Johnson by 13 big points among men.

Vallas’ numbers also increased by 5 points in Lakefront wards, and the poll found him ahead there by 9 points. Vallas moved up 4 points among Latinos and led by 7 in the latest survey.

Johnson was leading among 18-30s by 20, but they don’t vote in large numbers. Vallas was ahead by 11 points among seniors, and they do vote in large numbers.

Of those who hadn’t yet voted, Vallas led by 7 points. The two were tied among those who’d voted already.

* Crain’s

Meanwhile, though Johnson pulled in another $125,000 over the weekend from the American Federation of Teachers union, United Working Families and state Sen. Mattie Hunter, D-Chicago, Vallas, yet again, pulled in a lot more. Vallas’ weekend haul topped $410,000, including another $100,000 from Koch Foods CEO Joe Grendys (the chicken processing mogul already had donated $200,000), $50,000 from airplane maintenance exec Neil Book and $25,000 from Merchandise Mart Properties.

The ad disparity on Chicago TV is simply breathtaking.

* Instead of paying these bills long ago, or immediately correcting the problem, Johnson initially brushed it all off and then flip-flopped, thereby extending the story and bringing in other news media outlets which had ignored the original piece, like the Tribune

Chicago mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson paid off more than $3,000 in water and sewer bills to the city after facing criticism over his handling of his personal finances.

The controversy erupted in recent days after it emerged that Johnson owed $3,357.04 in unpaid water and sewer bills and more than $400 for unpaid parking tickets to the city.

* I have no idea why the Johnson campaign thinks that a two-minute ad featuring out-of-state talking heads is gonna move any kind of needle…

The Brandon Johnson campaign has taken the extraordinary step of airing a two-minute television ad on broadcast and cable across Chicago on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. The documentary-style ad––titled “Trail of Destruction”––features parents, policy experts, and community leaders from Philadelphia and New Orleans warning Chicagoans of Paul Vallas’ disastrous record.

* Not good…


* Pat Quinn isn’t really a “centrist,” but claiming that Tabares and Martinez are progressives is truly a laugh riot…


…Adding… Like I said…


* Former CTU leaders for Vallas…


* Vallas campaign…

Vallas for Mayor Public Events for April 3

Paul Vallas returns to his childhood community, joins Senator Dick Durbin, Congressman Bobby Rush & others for GOTV events across Chicago

Chicago, IL – Mayoral Candidate Paul Vallas returns to his childhood neighborhood Monday morning with a visit to a longtime donut shop in Chicago’s Roseland community where he was born and raised. Vallas will also join U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, retired Congressman Bobby Rush, mayoral candidate Ja’Mal Green and others for a series of GOTV events.

* Digital ad or simply a YouTube video?…

The Brandon Johnson campaign today released a new digital ad exposing Paul Vallas repeatedly insulting President Joe Biden and criticizing the Biden Administration on conservative talk radio. The final digital ad before election day comes as Paul Vallas is still under fire for calling the impeachment of Donald Trump a “witch hunt.”

* Candidates generally have protected speech in their ads. Third party advertisers generally do not. Press release…

On Friday, March 31, 2023 the Chicago Republican Party served cease and desist demand letters on multiple local television stations over their broadcast of an advertisement by the Brandon Johnson Campaign that claimed that Paul Vallas had been “endorsed” by the Chicago GOP. […]

Boulton noted that no broadcaster had given a response to the letter despite the passage of 48 hours. “Perhaps they will respond to the Federal Communications Commission,” Boulton speculated.

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Sun-Times | Johnson, Vallas tour South Side churches in final weekend campaign push before mayoral runoff: Johnson and Vallas both focused largely on African American wards where Mayor Lori Lightfoot performed well in the general election, as the runoff contenders vie for the nearly 17% of voter support that went to the outgoing mayor Feb. 28 — and the 10% or more Chicagoans who remain undecided, according to most polls.

    * Tribune | Brandon Johnson on the campaign trail: Banter, invocations of Black forebears — and promises of a Chicago brimming in ‘vibrancy’: Johnson then launched into his stump speech centered on the single-word theme of his campaign: “investment.” He vowed access to fully funded neighborhood schools, affordable housing, new senior facilities, reliable transportation, a healthy environment and good jobs.

    * Tribune | Paul Vallas on the campaign trail: ‘Wonkish’ spiels, boundless anecdotes — and a laser focus on crime: But soon, the focus turned to an issue that’s caused the Chicago mayoral candidate to visibly wince on the campaign trail: repeated attacks from rival Brandon Johnson claiming that Vallas opposes the teaching of Black history and has palled around with right-wing extremists. “It’s frustrating when somebody calls you a racist,” he said, unprompted. “Racists don’t do 55% minority contractors. Racists don’t go to New Orleans when 110 of the 120 schools have been destroyed by Hurricane Katrina and were uninhabitable.”

    * Sun-Times Editorial Board | The next mayor has a chance to revitalize public education in Chicago: Lobby in Springfield for full funding of the state’s Evidence-Based Formula. The EBF ties school funding directly to the costs of educational practices that research has proven will improve achievement. Created by legislators in fiscal year 2018, it has funneled $1.6 billion more to public schools since then, most of it going to the neediest schools across Illinois, and has provided money for property tax relief as well. Problem is, the state has yet to fully fund the EBF; it’s underfunded by $3.6 billion.

    * The Hill | Chicago mayor’s race reaches fever pitch in final days: While some strategists caution against looking at municipal elections strictly through a national lens, many observers are watching the Chicago mayor’s race to gauge the mood of the electorate as Democrats prepare to face another presidential cycle.

    * Politico | ‘A dangerous force’: Chicago mayor’s race tests teachers union clout: In Brandon Johnson — a progressive county commissioner, former CTU organizer and teacher whose soaring oratory has been a hallmark of rallies and contract fights — the union’s critics see a takeover of the city’s politics.

    * NYT | Chicagoans Are Picking a Mayor. Here’s What Matters From 4 Key Wards.: The residents of the 19th Ward on the Far Southwest Side of Chicago know how the rest of the city sees them: a white, conservative bubble of police officers and firefighters, Irish pubs and Catholic churches that is a relic of the old Chicago political machine. “There is that history,” said Clare Duggan, a Democratic political organizer who is a resident and native of the Beverly neighborhood. “But we have a dichotomy in the 19th Ward.”

    * Tribune | Chicago mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson pays off more than $3,000 in water bill debts to the city: Initially, the Johnson campaign released a statement noting the bills were “on a previously established payment plan, and are on schedule to be fully resolved before (he) takes office as our next mayor.” […] “Like a lot of working families, a few years ago, my family got behind on our water bills and established a payment plan. We’re not alone — there’s $421 million in unpaid water bills right now because for too long our city has leaned on rate hikes and fees to combat the budget deficit Paul contributed to,” Johnson said. “I don’t want this to be a distraction in the crucial final days of this race, so we’ve tightened our belt and decided to pay it off now. I have zero debt with the city.”

    * New Yorker | Paul Vallas’s Cops-and-Crime Campaign to Run Chicago: Early on, Vallas seized on the violence that has spiked in Chicago, and across the country, during the pandemic. In a recent poll, sixty-three per cent of Chicagoans said that they feel unsafe in daily life. Vallas, who credits the four police officers in his family for inspiring his public-safety policies, has pledged to fill the department’s seventeen hundred vacancies. “He’s meeting people where they are,” Aviva Bowen, a political strategist, told me. “They’re afraid.” At the same time, he needs to draw in voters who want major reforms in a department that is currently operating under a federal consent decree and has paid hundreds of millions of dollars to settle complaints of brutality. It’s a tough needle to thread. He’s advancing a lower-key community-policing model and pledging “zero tolerance” for officers who violate the law or the Constitution, while also welcoming the endorsement of Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police, whose leader, John Catanzara, has posted on Facebook that Muslims “all deserve a bullet.”

    * Monroe Anderson | What makes Paul Vallas the “Democrat of choice” for powerful Republicans?: If Vallas’s newly hired police turn out to be a bunch of Officer Friendlies, treating Black men on the West Side like they treat white men in Lincoln Park, that would be a step in the right direction. On the other hand, if the officers become an occupying army in the Black community, sprinkled with some Jon Burge and Jason Van Dyke types, then we can get ready for more tortured false confessions and more mass protests over trigger-happy cops using Black men for target practice.

    * Chalkbeat | Comparing Chicago’s 2023 mayoral candidates on 5 key education issues: Johnson wants to overhaul the district’s current student-based budgeting system, which he argues has been harmful to schools. Basing school budgetson enrollment restricts individual campuses from giving students a full offering of programs and support, he’s said in the campaign trail. Instead, he favors an approach that fully funds school staff — including social workers, librarians, and nurses — regardless of enrollment. […] Vallas wants to get more funding directly to individual schools and out of central office. On the campaign trail, he has argued that only 60% of the district’s budget is currently making it to schools. Vallas favors a system that lets Local Schools Councils, elected members at each school, decide how funds are spent in their respective buildings. He also wants state funds such as Title I directly to assigned schools.

    * Block Club | Election Day ‘Get-Out-The-Vote’ Efforts Could Be Deciding Factor In Nail-Biter Mayor’s Race, Experts Say: “A final push to get out the vote is going to make the difference,” Dominguez said. “There’s just such a large number of undecideds, and both candidates need to find ways to elevate enthusiasm amongst their base.” A neck-and-neck race with more than 200,000 vote-by-mail ballots out means there may not be a clear winner by election night, said Max Bever, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners spokesperson. Experts similarly warned of that possibility ahead of the Feb. 28 election, and multiple aldermanic results weren’t determined until mid-March.

    * Sun-Times | 6th, 21st Ward candidates discuss future of South Side ahead of runoff: Time to ‘resurrect dreams of residents’: Two South Side City Council races put a pair of neighborhood pastors, a retired firefighter and a community activist into runoff contests in wards where longtime alderpersons are exiting their posts.

    * Block Club | Chicagoans Should Vote Early As Tornadoes Possible, Severe Storms Expected Election Day, Officials Say: Tuesday’s election is expected to be highly consequential: Chicagoans will vote on the city’s next mayor, choosing between the ideologically divided Brandon Johnson and Paul Vallas. Fourteen aldermanic races are also up for grabs in the runoff election. But potentially dangerous storms are also expected Tuesday, especially later in the day: There could be damaging wind, hail and tornadoes, according to the National Weather Service.

    * Tribune | As city’s most active voting precinct, Cook County inmates vote with help from jail and advocates: Voting at the Cook County Jail has risen sharply since the jail added pioneering in-person polling places in 2020. Incarcerated voters say they feel more heard as voting rights groups work to educate and register inmates, and politicians are taking note of the increasingly involved voters.

    * WTTW | Chicago Public Schools Teacher Charged With Stalking Mayor Lori Lightfoot: Garrett McLinn was also charged with disorderly conduct and five counts of resisting a police officer, according to police. The arrest took place on the Logan Square block where Lightfoot lives. Sources close to Lightfoot say members of the mayor’s security detail confronted McLinn as he was causing a disruption outside of her home, and that the confrontation escalated. McLinn has appeared outside the mayor’s house on at least one other occasion, sources said.

    * Crain’s | Why the City Council structure gives rise to corruption: “When people understandably and rationally assume that actors in city government are acting in their own interests and not the interests of the people they serve, that makes it harder to conduct responsible government,” says Deborah Witzburg, Chicago’s inspector general. “Chicago has not earned the benefit of any doubt. We have earned ourselves a world in which people profoundly distrust city government, and so when things go wrong, there is gaping space for worst assumptions.”

  85 Comments      


Keep Uber Affordable. Stop Lawsuit Abuse. Oppose HB 2231

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Krishnamoorthi once again questions Census’ Illinois estimates

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

If you’re getting a strong and unpleasant sense of déjà vu about the new U.S. Census Bureau’s population estimates for counties, including Cook County, you’re not alone. U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., is feeling it as well.

Krishnamoorthi, who sits on the House Oversight and Accountability Committee, has been trying to force the Census Bureau to retool its population estimates because they have been so awfully inaccurate going back years and years.

The Census Bureau’s annual statewide population estimates released in December 2020 claimed Illinois had cumulatively lost an astounding 240,000 people over the previous decade, representing 2% of the state’s population.

The publication of those estimates every year showing sharp population declines regularly provoked an uproar in the news media and among pundits, particularly on the rightward end of the spectrum. And it came to a head in 2020, when the Census claimed Illinois had lost the equivalent of more than two Springfields.

But when the actual Census, based on real-life counts of human beings and not estimates, was published in 2021, the state’s population loss was pegged at 18,000 people, just 7.5% of the previously estimated loss.

The following year, after the Census Bureau delved deeply into its own numbers, the federal agency admitted it had blundered. The Bureau’s Post-Enumeration Survey, using what the Census Bureau said was a “statistical technique called dual-system estimation,” found that Illinois’ population actually grew by about 250,000 people, an almost 500,000-person shift from that December 2020 estimate.

Yet, here we are, back to reading about the results of annual U.S. Census surveys, and nobody seems to remember any of that history or has bothered to remind the public to take these estimates with a gigantic grain of salt.

This past December, the Census Bureau released estimates claiming the state’s population had fallen by 113,776 people, which prompted several handwringing stories without any historical context.

In January, Krishnamoorthi called on the Bureau to conduct a thorough methodological review of its estimate process. A month later, Krishnamoorthi received a communication from the Bureau saying this review would, indeed, be done, but “potential” changes using tools from the Post-Enumeration Survey wouldn’t be implemented until this coming December at the very earliest, if at all.

Which brings us to last week.

“Cook County lost 68,000 people last year, Census Bureau says,” blared a recent Crain’s Chicago Business headline about the Bureau’s newly released “Vintage 2022 estimates.” The story included no context about the wild inaccuracy of previous Census Bureau estimates.

Crain’s wasn’t alone. “Cook County population drop second-worst in country,” declared a Sun-Times headline. That story, too, did not include any context of prior errors. “Baseball season has begun and Cook County residents are going, going, gone by the tens of thousands, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s latest estimates,” the story began.

“Census data shows urban counties rebounding, but Cook County’s population has yet to recover from pandemic dip,” was the Chicago Tribune’s take, also without any reference to the Bureau’s previous blunders.

The Bureau’s faulty estimates did vast reputational harm to the state during the previous decade and centered intense public debate around proposed policy fixes to halt what was thought to be a huge population decline, which turned out not to be real when actual noses were counted. And even then, a post-count examination found the physical headcount was short by a very large margin.

So, Krishnamoorthi has written yet another letter to the Census Bureau demanding answers. The latest estimate “appears to echo” earlier data “that drove misleading narratives and rhetoric surrounding purported population losses in Illinois which were subsequently revealed to be unfounded,” the Schaumburg Democrat wrote to Bureau Director Robert Santos.

And the numbers don’t just harm the state’s reputation and provoke public debates based on faulty data, but they can have a major impact on federal funding the state receives.

“Beyond the implications such data have for our understanding of our state’s population dynamics,” Krishnamoorthi wrote, “Census Bureau data will be utilized over the next decade to allocate roughly $1.5 trillion in federal funding through approximately 100 programs, including Medicaid, SNAP, Medicare, Highway Planning and Construction, and Pell grants.”

The rest of the state’s congressional delegation, including our two U.S. senators, should step up and join Krishnamoorthi’s calls for change at the Census Bureau. And in the meantime, the news media in this state ought to stop flushing the Bureau’s past mistakes down the collective memory hole.

  17 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Hope y’all had a relaxing weekend! What’s goin’ on?

  20 Comments      


Morning briefing

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go!…

  7 Comments      


*** ComEd 4 trial live coverage ***

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  2 Comments      


Live coverage

Monday, Apr 3, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


L

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