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Afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Illinois has the seventh-highest number of jobs in the clean-vehicle sector among all U.S. states.

Nearly 14,000 people were employed in clean-vehicle jobs in Illinois last year, according to a report by Environmental Entrepreneurs, or E2, an economic and environmental advocacy group affiliated with the Natural Resources Defense Council.

However, Illinois trails several of its Midwest neighbors, led by Michigan, which employed 32,271 people in clean-vehicle jobs, followed by Ohio and Indiana, with about 22,000 each.

* Crain’s

Staff members of the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors are calling for the removal of the organization’s CEO, its current president and two other high-level officials, the latest turn in a sexual harassment controversy that has been swirling since a New York Times article about a “culture of fear” created by its past president.

“The buck has to stop somewhere,” says a confidential letter by staff members, a copy of which Crain’s received. The writers say upper-level staff knew about the pattern of bad behavior and focused on protecting the president rather than the staff. They delivered the letter to NAR’s executive committee Monday. […]

The New York Times reported in late August that three women who work in NAR’s Chicago office said Parcell harassed them in different ways. The 16 incidents involving Parcell that the Times investigated included retaliating against one woman after a consensual relationship ended by questioning her authority over her workplace team, sticking his hands down his pants in front of another and texting a picture of his crotch to a third. Parcell denied the report but resigned the next day. The Times article had sources saying harassment is ingrained in NAR’s culture and protected by a tight group of NAR staff.

* From the Illinois Education Association…

Hi Rich,

I wanted to let you know Sept. 23 marks the 40th anniversary of Gov. Thompson signing the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act into law. That’s right Big Jim, a Republican governor, worked together with the IEA to make CB for educators the law of the land. It’s a fascinating story to say the least and cleared the way for limits on class sizes, special education and essentially public education as we know it today.

Here’s our video on the history of the IELRA

And the abridged version - our Op-Ed in the Sun Times

* This is a pretty easy endorsement because Katz Muhl has already pushed the incumbent (Rep. Jonathan Carroll) into retirement

Tracy Katz Muhl announced today that she earned the endorsement of Illinois Governor JB Pritzker in the race to represent Illinois’ 57th Legislative District in the State House.

“Tracy Katz Muhl has tenaciously served her community as a grassroots organizer, Democratic committeeperson, gun violence prevention advocate, attorney, and school board president. She will be an effective and thoughtful representative for the 57th district, and I am thrilled to endorse her,” Pritzker said.

* Politico

— Judge Celia Gamrath, a candidate for appellate court, is out with an endorsement list that includes the Cook County Democratic Party, Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky, Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and IUOE, Local 150, IUOE, Local 399, Plumbers and Local 130. Full list here […]

— William “Billy” Morgan is running for state representative for the 79th District as a Democrat. He’s a Monee Township trustee who previously worked in then-Gov. Pat Quinn’s office. Republican state Rep. Jackie Haas has held the seat since December 2020.

As subscribers know, Morgan will likely have a primary opponent.

* Commuters Take Action op-ed in the Chicago Tribune

It’s been nearly a year since the CTA announced its first set of new schedules reducing bus and rail service. In the months since, service has been slashed several more times, resulting in the current schedules: 13% less bus service and 21% less rail service than before the pandemic. Now, as other transit agencies around the country restore their service to pre-pandemic levels (or better), even deeper cuts are likely to be coming to the CTA in October. Instead of cutting more transit service, it’s time to cut CTA President Dorval Carter Jr. […]

At Commuters Take Action, we used staffing and service delivery data from this July and August to create a mock schedule to predict what service is likely to look like in October. We found that, based on its current workforce, the CTA is likely to remove 34 rail runs from its weekday schedules and up to 117 runs from Saturday and Sunday schedules — a total service reduction of 404 runs, or an additional 5% of the current scheduled service. This would mean Chicago would have 28% less rail service than it did before the pandemic.

Carter has dismissed the CTA’s challenges as something all transit agencies across the nation are experiencing. But the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority in the District of Columbia restored most of its bus and rail service to pre-pandemic levels in August 2020 and announced this June that its Metrobus schedules would begin to exceed pre-pandemic service. Recently, the WMATA announced its 11th rail schedule service increase in 12 months. The agency is now running more rail service than ever before in its history and anticipates adding more service next year.

And New York City’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority has increased service on its N, R, G, J, M, 1 and 6 lines this summer, cutting wait times for more than 3 million riders combined.

Other cities have not only returned to pre-pandemic public transit service levels, but they’ve also improved beyond them. Meanwhile, Chicago’s transit continues to decline. Carter has had years to prove he’s competent to run the CTA. Stacked up against leaders of other transit agencies, it’s clear that he’s failing.

* Also…


* Isabel’s roundup…

    * WAND | Illinois clean energy jobs grew 3% in 2022: Clean energy businesses in Illinois added more than 3,600 workers in 2022, now employing 123,799 people in Illinois. That is according to a new study of employment data released by the national business group E2 (Environmental Entrepreneurs and Evergreen Climate Innovations.

    * WBEZ | CPS math scores still lag pre-pandemic levels, while English has recovered. Here’s a model CPS says can help: Overall, only 17.5% of Chicago Public Schools elementary students met or exceeded math standards on the 2023 state test, according to scores released Tuesday. That is slightly better than 14.9% in 2022, but still less than 23.6% in 2019 before the pandemic.

    * Chalkbeat | In Chicago’s early state test results, encouraging gains and some areas of concern: Overall, 26% of students who took the reading test this year met or exceeded state standards — just two percentage points lower than results on the 2019 test, the last one before COVID upended learning. In math, 17% of students scored proficient, compared with 24% in 2019.

    * NPR Illinois | One woman’s abortion story: ”I remember somebody on the same day as me. She said she already had five kids and just could not couldn’t handle any more kids. She knew having an abortion was going to be what was best for her because then she wouldn’t be taking anything away from her other children. But she still, she just felt so bad and was crying like the entire day. And then had to be outside with those other people. And I just felt so bad for her, too, because she really only had that one option to go with, and then she’s being berated for it walking in and out of the clinic.”

    * Rockford Register Star | Most Rockford area defendants go free on first day of no cash bail in Illinois: Over five hours, Paccagnini presided over 26 defendant appearances ranging from domestic battery to endangering the life of a child. Of those, Winnebago County State’s Attorney J. Hanley asked Paccagnini to detain nine defendants after an arrest over the weekend. Paccagnini declined to detain all but two saying that measures like “no contact orders” and other pretrial release conditions should be sufficient to protect the community.

    * Crain’s | Lolla gave Chicago economy a $422 million jolt, study says: According to a report commissioned by Lollapalooza promoter C3 Presents and conducted by Texas-based research group AngelouEconomics, Lollapalooza generated more than $422 million for Chicago’s economy, compared to $336 million last year.

    * Crain’s | A Chicago union struggles as Hollywood strikes drag on: IATSE Local 476 Chicago Studio Mechanics is the foundation of Illinois’ burgeoning entertainment industry, supplying the sets, lighting and makeup for your favorite local shows, from “Chicago P.D.” to “The Bear.” But as writers and actors remain on strike, the behind-the-scenes crew workers are struggling as the absence of work forces some into food insecurity and health insurance plans near a breaking point.

    * SJ-R | Hospital, clinic websites, other functions are again functioning after cyber attack: Kelly Barbeau, Illinois Division director of marketing/communications for HSHS, did not respond to an email seeking clarification regarding what systems are still out. HSHS representatives said “federal law enforcement” was investigating the attack. Rebecca Cramblit, a public affairs officer for FBI Springfield, would not confirm or deny an investigation.

    * WICS | EMS workers charged with first-degree murder appear back in court: “I don’t think there’s any remorse it is a very nuanced and involved process right now and in fact, as a judge from the bench described it this morning we are entering a brave new world,” Scott Hanken, Finley’s attorney, said. said there are new documents and discoveries by the state. Both Finley and Cadigan will appear back in court on Nov. 27.

    * Sun-Times | Latinos are making economic gains in Chicago suburbs and deserve more political power: Latino population growth brings critical contributions to local suburban economies and to our regional economy as a whole. Latinos have the highest labor force participation rate of any racial or ethnic group in the region, and they represent the fastest-growing segment of spending power — a total of $68 billion in Illinois.

    * ABC Chicago | Some Kia drivers say missed software update notices result in engine failure: “They said there was an update that I didn’t do and that I received a notice in 2018,” she said. “I never received the notice, so I contacted Kia, they said sorry we can’t help you, you didn’t do the update.” She said after calling the manufacturer, Kia emailed her a software update letter dated July 26, 2018.

    * SJ-R | Breeze Airways bringing new service to Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport: Springfield Airport Authority and Springfield Sangamon County Growth Alliance officials announced Tuesday that Breeze Airways will begin service from Springfield to Orlando on Dec. 1 and to Tampa on Dec. 4.

    * WICS | City officials discuss IEPA moving their headquarters to White Oaks Mall: Ward 7 Alderman Brad Carlson said about 40% of the work has been finished with project completion set for spring. Carlson feels the new headquarters is necessary due to IEPA’s current home sitting on the path of planned improvements to Springfield’s 9th Street rail corridor.

    * Daily Herald | ‘Inundated with interest:’ Utah-based pickleball company plans major expansion in suburbs: The company plans to repurpose vacant big-box retail spaces in Mundelein, Naperville and Villa Park with openings anticipated in December.

    * NYT | The Kids on the Night Shift: The morning after Marcos’s injury, workers in Dreamland began talking about a child whose arm had been nearly torn off at the plant. Word soon spread through town. There were reasons that supervisors, teachers, federal inspectors and even police officers had said nothing for years about children working at the slaughterhouses. Everyone understood that the children were under extraordinary pressure to earn money to pay off their travel debts and help their families back home. They were living on a remote stretch of peninsula with few job options — if the plants shut down because of a labor scandal, the local economy could collapse. Now, with an eighth grader in the hospital, many wondered if they had been wrong to keep quiet.

    * Kansas City Star | Republican candidate for Missouri governor vows to burn books after viral flamethrower video: A Republican candidate for Missouri governor on Monday vowed to burn books if elected after he was criticized for a video showing him burning cardboard boxes with a flamethrower. […] “In the video, I am taking a flame thrower to cardboard boxes representing what I am going to do to the leftist policies and RINO corruption of the Jeff City swamp,” Eigel said in a statement to The Star on Monday. “But let’s be clear, you bring those woke pornographic books to Missouri schools to try to brainwash our kids, and I’ll burn those too - on the front lawn of the governor’s mansion.”

    * The Triibe | Chicago ballers like David Jasson are hoping the Windy City Bulls tryout opens the door to the NBA: On Sept. 16, hundreds of aspiring NBA G League players took their best shot at earning a Windy City Bulls training camp invitation at the team’s annual open tryout at the Wintrust Sports Complex in Bedford Park, Ill. The Windy City Bulls have hosted training camps every year prior to the start of their regular seasons since the team debuted for the 2016-17 season.

    * CNBC | FTX sues Sam Bankman-Fried’s parents, aims to claw back some of the $26 million in gifts and property: Fried is also accused of encouraging her son and others within the company to avoid, if not violate, federal campaign finance disclosure rules by “engaging in straw donations or otherwise concealing the FTX Group as the source of the contributions.”

  9 Comments      


And it begins

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW

During the very first initial appearance hearing in Cook County, 24-year-old Esmeralda Aguilar was released with conditions following her arrest on four felony charges of aggravated battery to a peace officer.

According to Assistant State’s Attorney Lorraine Scaduto, Aguilar was attending the Mexican Independence Day festivities in the 200 block of North Wabash at around 2:30 a.m. Sunday when she allegedly pulled out a canister of pepper spray and sprayed it at four Chicago police officers.

This was captured on body camera video, Scaduto said, adding that three of the officers required hospitalization, while a fourth suffered pain and discomfort, but did not seek immediate medical treatment.

Aguilar’s public defender noted that this was her first Chicago arrest and that she is the sole provider for a young child. Prosecutors did not seek to detain her in jail pre-trial, so Marubio released her with some set conditions, including that she appear for all her hearings and does not commit another crime.

“You need to be in court on time every time,” Marubio said, noting that if Aguilar violated her release order, it would be revoked and she would be taken back into custody.

* Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

“Reports that on the very first day of no cash bail, a violent offender arrested for attacking four Chicago Police Officers, sending two of them to the hospital, was immediately released because the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office didn’t even bother to file a motion to seek detaining the accused are problematic. This highlights the misplaced priorities of Illinois’ criminal justice system when the prosecutor prioritizes the freedom of a violent offender over the safety of those police officers dedicated to protecting and serving our communities. Is there any wonder why police recruitment is at an all-time low in this state?”

Are we assuming she wouldn’t have been offered bail under the old system?

…Adding… Will has covered bond court for years, so he knows whereof he speaks…


  49 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rep. Anthony DeLuca filed HB4135 yesterday

Amends the Counties Code. Provides that a county may require a commercial solar energy facility to be sited 500 feet (rather than 50 feet) to the nearest point on the property line of a nonparticipating property and 500 feet (rather than 150 feet) from the nearest point on the outside wall of an occupied community building or dwelling on nonparticipating properties.

* Rep. Kevin Schmidt filed HB4134 last week

Amends the Abandoned Newborn Infant Protection Act. Adds maternity homes and pregnancy resource centers to the list of facilities that must accept a relinquished newborn infant in accordance with the Act. Expands the definition of “relinquish” to include bringing a newborn infant to a maternity home or pregnancy resource center or leaving an infant in a child rescue pod. Defines “maternity home”, “pregnancy resource center”, and “child pod”. Provides that after a newborn infant is relinquished to a maternity home or pregnancy resource center, the facility must arrange for the transportation of the infant to the nearest hospital as soon as transportation can be arranged. Provides that the act of relinquishing a newborn infant serves as implied consent for the hospital to which the infant is transported and that hospital’s medical personnel and physicians on staff to treat and provide care for the infant. Provides that if the parent of a newborn infant returns to the maternity home or pregnancy resource center to reclaim the infant within 72 hours after relinquishment, the maternity home or pregnancy resource center must inform the parent of the name or location of the hospital to which the infant was transported. Authorizes the Department of Children and Family Services to adopt all necessary rules for the administration of the Act, including rules governing specifications, installation, maintenance, and oversight of child rescue pods.

* Rep. Sue Scherer’s HB4136

Amends the School Boards Article of the School Code. Provides that, for the 2023-2024 school year, the school board of Decatur School District 61 may allow pupils to attend for less than the required minimum term of actual pupil attendance in an emergency if those pupils (i) receive an additional 2 clock hours of school work beyond the end of the scheduled school day for up to 25 days and (ii) receive the same total amount of clock hours of school work that they would have received if they had attended for the required minimum term. Defines “emergency”. Effective immediately.

* A bullying prevention bill from Rep. Margaret Croke

Amends the Courses of Study Article of the School Code. Provides that the provisions concerning bullying prevention apply to nonpublic, sectarian schools.

* HR405 from Rep. Joyce Mason

Recognizes National Domestic Violence Awareness Month in October 2023 and supports and commends the efforts of those people and organizations who work tirelessly to help victims break free of the devastating effects of domestic abuse.

  2 Comments      


More like this, please

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Last week, Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa suggested that the restaurants take a five-year phase-in of the elimination of the subminimum wage

Like a diner who sends back a bad meal, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s City Council floor leader on Friday turned up his nose at the Illinois Restaurant Association’s latest attempt to stop the elimination of the subminimum wage for tipped workers.

Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th) said the restaurant industry’s latest proposal to raise the minimum wage for tipped workers to $20.54 an hour at Chicago restaurants with more than $3 million in annual revenues is “dead on arrival.” […]

At Thursday’s City Council meeting, the ordinance that gives Chicago restaurants two years to eliminate the subminimum wage for tipped workers was referred again to the Committee on Workforce Development.

“We have the votes to pass the ordinance as is. If changes are gonna be made, they need to happen soon, because the committee meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, and aldermanic briefings are scheduled for Tuesday,” Ramirez-Rosa said.

“It’s one thing to introduce an ordinance that’s a completely different structure to provide restaurant workers with higher wages. It’s another thing to say, ‘We want more years.’ If anyone is interested in five years, that’s the ask they should be making at this moment — not pushing this ordinance that is not gonna get anywhere,” he said.

Told that time was running out, [Sam Toia, president of the restaurant association] sent a text message that read, “I will definitely be communicating with folks over the next 24 hours! … We definitely need a five-year phase-in.”

Guess what happened. A five-year phase-in

Mayor Brandon Johnson on Monday signed off on a compromise that would deliver on his campaign promise to eliminate the “subminimum wage” for tipped workers while appeasing Chicago restaurants by giving them five years to swallow the 66% increase in labor costs.

It calls for tipped workers — currently paid 60% of Chicago’s minimum wage — to receive 8% annual increases beginning on July 1, 2024, until they reach 100% parity on July 1, 2028. […]

“The train was leaving the station. I know how to count votes. I counted the votes,” Toia told the Sun-Times. “I definitely think it could lead to some job loss. But it’s much easier for restaurant owners/operators to bake this into their budget over five years than over two years.”

Toia commended the mayor for his willingness to compromise, even though he clearly had the votes.

“I will say this about Mayor Johnson and his team: They communicated. They listened. They will communicate all day long, all night long. There was a lot of communication going on over the last 48 or 72 hours all the way into the late night. … They did start at two years. Less than 24 hours ago, I’m still hearing, ‘You’re lucky to get three,’” Toia said.

Just because you have the votes for something, doesn’t mean you should pass it as-is. Get some buy-in from the other side.

It’s a lesson more people could learn.

  11 Comments      


Fun with numbers

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fox 32

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s projected budget deficit is a staggering $538 million, far exceeding the $85 million shortfall Lori Lightfoot predicted before being voted out of office.

Just last week, while speaking at the Economic Club of Chicago, Johnson rejected the idea of leaning on property owners to make up the difference.

Ald. Raymond Lopez (15th) believes Johnson may not have a grasp on the complexities of accounting factors and revenue streams that keep city services functioning in Chicago. […]

Lopez says there are currently fully funded programs within former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s final budget that could ostensibly leave Chicago in the black.

“You could literally cancel all of them right now and save about $600 million right now, which happens to be the exact number of the budget deficit,” said Lopez

The complete failure to ask an obvious follow-up question intrigued me, so I reached out to Lopez and asked him for the $600 million list of Lightfoot programs. His response…

I have a list of all vacancies built into the 2023 budget.

I asked for that and then asked for the program list. Ald. Lopez never produced a list of programs that could be cut in order to save $600 million.

Click here for the list of vacancies. Lopez said those vacancies account for “roughly $550-600″ million. There are 4,599 total vacancies on that list. At $100K per vacancy, that works out to about $460 million.

But here’s the real problem. The Chicago Police Department has 36 percent of those vacancies: 1,669 openings, which is by far the largest. Think a majority of the city council is gonna vote to defund all or even most of those positions?

Next highest? The Department of Public Health, with 500 vacancies.

* Two caveats. 1) This list is a year old. Several positions may have already been filled. 2) Not all of the remainder of those unfilled positions will be filled in the coming year. Likely not even close to all. Local governments everywhere are having a tough time recruiting employees. So, yeah, the proclaimed $538 million city budget deficit is way off the mark (and in more ways than just this).

* Let’s move on to another bit of fun with numbers. KSDK TV

“Illinois begins its ill-advised experiment and it becomes the first state in the nation to completely eliminate cash bail in exchange for a system that promises to be more fair,” Sen. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro) said in a prepared video statement. “But fair for who? Because it’s certainly not fair for our county court systems.”

Bryant, who used to work for the state prison system, argued that removing cash bail from the criminal justice system would come with a cost to taxpayers if county boards elect to raise taxes to offset the loss of bond payments.

“Defunding our courts, limiting victim services, and making law abiding citizens pay for criminals bail with their taxes is just not justice,” she claimed.

Senate Republican staffers pointed to a Civic Federation task force report that found Illinois county clerks collected a combined $10,248,189 in fees from bond payments in 2021. An additional $28,008,893 in fees collected from bond payments in 2021 were disbursed to various other local government programs, including sheriff’s departments, probation offices, prosecutors, specialty courts, and child advocacy programs, according to the report.

* Center Square

State Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, said the end of cash bail will hurt victims of crimes.

“It’s absolutely not fair to the victims of crime,” Bryant said. “From restitution payments to victims services, bonds and fees often contribute to vital services to help victims recover from their trauma.”

ACLU of Illinois’ Ben Ruddell said nothing in the Pretrial Fairness Act takes away the responsibility of someone convicted of a crime to pay restitution that’s been ordered by a court.

“We don’t take it out of their pocket on the front end, though, when they’ve been just accused of a crime,” Ruddell said. “We wait until they’ve been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, which is how it ought to work.”

* From that Civic Federation task force report

Based on the most recent 2021 data, the majority of bond payments are used to satisfy the payment of fees and fines, many of which support government functions at the state, local and county level. Across 95 Illinois counties that provided data for 2021 (excluding Cook County and a handful of smaller counties), bond payments processed and disbursed in criminal cases totaled $83.1 million. Just under half of those total bond payments, 48% or $39.5 million, were applied to satisfy court-ordered fees. A smaller portion, approximately 10%, were applied to satisfy court-ordered fines, and another 3% were applied to restitution payments. Approximately 39%, or $32.6 million, were refunded back to the person who posted the bond or paid directly to private attorneys.

Three percent of $83.1 million equals $2.5 million in restitution payments. That’s not a heavy local burden. And here are restitution payment numbers for the counties in Sen. Bryant’s district…

Total restitution for those counties was $199,947 out of $6,377,158, or 3 percent.

  15 Comments      


Zenna Ramos will be sworn in Thursday

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here and here if you need it. From the Village of Riverside’s Director of Public Safety Matt Buckley

On August 31, 2023, the Village of Riverside and Zenna Ramos appeared before the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board’s Waiver Review Committee to appeal the denial of Ramos waiver of basic training this denial led to her decertification in April 2023.

The Village of Riverside was successful in our appeal, this success was not possible without the support of Governor J.B. Pritzker, State Representative LaShawn Ford, State Representative Abdelnasser Rashid, State Representative Elizabeth Hernandez, State Senator Mike Porfirio, Riverside Village President Joseph Ballerine and Board of Trustees.

On Monday, September 18, 2023, the Village received a letter acknowledging that Officer Ramos received her Waiver of Basic Training and requirements moving forward. We are excited to announce a public swearing in ceremony for Officer Zenna Ramos.

Officer Ramos’ swearing in ceremony is important as that appeal is symbolic of what the Village of Riverside and those that have supported Officer Ramos throughout this process stand for and represent. The collective “We” believe in second chances, that individuals can overcome their circumstances and be successful. If given the chance and the support system, the opportunities are only limited by the commitment to overcome those challenges.

Director of Public Safety Matt Buckley states; “Officer Ramos has demonstrated to me that she is the type of Officer we want working at the Riverside Police Department. She has worked tirelessly to prove herself and has shown resilience throughout this entire process.”

The swearing in ceremony will occur outside of Riverside Town Hall located at 27 Riverside Road, Riverside at 6:30 PM.

I don’t understand the process at the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board. Why are staff members empowered to make these decertification decisions? Why is it now up to a recently created review committee to make sure the proper staff actions were taken in the first place?

These potentially career-ending decisions should be made by the board itself, the same way it’s done at the Illinois Commerce Commission and the Illinois State Board of Elections. Staff does the research, makes recommendations, and the boards then hold hearings and take public votes.

  8 Comments      


Senate Republicans take credit, but Senate Democrats blamed for pushing PRB changes

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Illinois Prisoner Review Board took heavy fire from Senate Republicans the last couple of years. But it wasn’t until the super-majority Senate Democrats sided with the SGOPs that anything started to change. From March of last year

The Senate Executive Appointments Committee moved six appointees to the Illinois Prisoner Review Board through committee on Tuesday, but the only appointee of Gov. JB Pritzker that came for a vote before the full Senate was rejected.

The 15-member Prisoner Review Board decides on the release and conditions of release for offenders from the Illinois Department of Corrections. The governor appoints the board, the Executive Appointments Committee votes on whether to recommend those appointments, and the full Senate determines whether the members will be approved.

On Tuesday morning, PRB member Jeff Mears was recommended by the Senate Executive Appointments Committee, but by late Tuesday afternoon he failed to reach the 30-vote threshold for approval by the full Senate.

In addition to 18 Republicans who voted no, 18 Democrats did not vote. Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, joined the GOP and voted no. […]

“Republicans have set out on a mission to dismantle a constitutional function of government, just like the previous governor,” [Pritzker spokesperson Jordan Abudayyeh] said in a statement. “We remain committed to ensuring that highly qualified nominees fill these roles, especially because we must fulfill our constitutional obligations for justice and cannot jeopardize key public safety functions of the board like revoking parole for those who violate the terms of their release.”

* And now the Tribune reports that the PRB went from approving the parole of about 40 percent of prisoners it reviewed in 2021, to 15 percent of a similar number of cases in the ensuing 20 months. Republicans are taking credit

Edith Crigler, a Democrat who stepped down as the board’s chairperson earlier this year, said Pritzker didn’t do enough to stand up for the board when it came under fire from Republicans, and also said she thinks the attacks have had an effect on the board’s work.

“The members on the board now are thinking more about how their vote is going to be viewed by the General Assembly, and especially by the (Senate) executive appointment committee, than the merit of the case,” said Crigler, a social worker who was appointed to the board in 2011 by then-Gov. Pat Quinn. “I’ve sat in the room with them and I’ve listened to them deliberate. And they are very, very conservative.”

Republican state Sen. Steve McClure was among those leading the charge to reject two of Pritzker’s review board appointments in early 2022. He took credit for convincing the Democratic-controlled Senate that some of the board’s decisions were problematic.

“People often ask what Republicans do in the Capitol when you don’t have many numbers,” McClure, of Springfield, said, citing the Democrats’ 40-19 advantage over Republicans in the Senate. “But this is probably our biggest accomplishment as Republicans, was turning around the PRB.”

* Emily Miller, Senior Advisor to the Governor for Policy and Legislative Affairs and an old friend of this website, rightly pointed at the Senate Democrats, who are, after all, firmly in charge of their chamber…


Your thoughts?

  27 Comments      


Roundup: How Illinois navigated its first day of no cash bail

Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Starting off in Lake County…


* More from that Lake County case

The first defendant in Lake County to be ordered held detained under the new SAFE-T Act is a man who was out on a $350,000 bond when he was arrested for residential burglary. […]

He had been charged late last month with aggravated battery of a peace officer, violation of order protection, two counts of disorderly conduct and aggravated assault. […]

During a first appearance hearing Monday morning, Lake County Raymond Collins found probable cause to hold Sasin for a detention hearing. […]

Potkonjak ordered Sasin to be detained during the pendency of his case after finding there was evidence Sasin committed the offenses.

The judge also found there were no conditions that could mitigate the real and present threat to the safety of others that Sasin poses.

* Sun-Times

The first day of bail reform in Cook County’s Domestic Violence Court began an hour late Monday as even small cases now demanded more paperwork and closer review. […]

Prosecutors sought to detain people in 14 of the cases. The judge granted their requests in five of them after evaluating the person’s criminal background and checking the assessment from Pretrial Services. […]

The first person to be ordered detained was a woman charged with misdemeanor domestic battery and simple assault following a fight with her sister and niece. The woman had three prior domestic battery arrests and two convictions — all with different complaining witnesses.

Hogan pointed to her history of domestic violence and the Pretrial Services finding that she was at risk for committing other crimes.

* Tribune

During a detention hearing at the Leighton Criminal Court Building Monday afternoon, an assistant state’s attorney argued to a judge that a defendant facing a felony weapons charge should be held in jail while awaiting trial.

“The defendant did in fact flee on foot while holding a handgun,” Assistant State’s Attorney Joseph Sorrentino said. “He was seen on camera pointing the gun at an individual … the state’s position is that the defendant poses a real and present threat to safety.”

Assistant Public Defender Lillian McCartin, though, countered that the pod camera the prosecutor referenced had not been turned over to the defense. The prosecutor previously told the judge the state did not yet have the video. […]

In that case, Cook County Judge Susana Ortiz ordered the defendant released on electronic monitoring, denying the state’s petition for detention.

* More…

    * WTTW | A Look Inside Cook County Courtrooms on the Day Cash Bail Ends in Illinois: While court operations have changed — there’s technical and language differences, and some court calls are split into separate hearings — there did not appear to be any substantial difficulties, delays or hold ups during the first wave of hearings.

    * Daily Herald | ‘It went well’: As cashless bail starts in suburban courts, who was detained, who wasn’t: Of six first-appearance hearings — formerly known as bond hearings — held in Kane County, one defendant was detained on a domestic violence charge and another was detained on a stalking charge, Hull said.

    * Naperville Sun | Thanks to a low amount of cases and a lot of ‘pregame work,’ Kane County says it had successful first day of cashless bail system: Kane County Associate Judge Salvatore LoPiccolo, tasked with presiding over pretrial hearings Monday through Friday, saw six cases Monday. Four people were released without bail and two had detention hearings in the afternoon. Of the two, only one person was detained.

    * KSDK | Illinois enters new era without cash bail: In St. Clair County, the chief judge ordered staff to convert one courtroom into a space for detention hearings. […] The first day of preliminary hearings was merely a preview of the heavier lifting that begins on Tuesday when the sheriff’s deputies will transport defendants to the court to appear at their detention hearings in person and defense attorneys will help them make their case to go home.

    * WCIA | The SAFE-T Act is now in effect, and Central Illinois counties are navigating changes in courts, jails: In the Champaign County courtroom on Monday, Judge Brett Olmstead started arraignment by addressing the new cash bail system and explaining it to defendants. In one of the cases, the suspect was issued a bond over the weekend but was in court the day the SAFE-T Act went into effect. “It was a timing issue because we had one individual who was arrested over the weekend and the cash bond was set in weekend court, so there was a bit of confusion about what to do with him,” Julia Rietz, the Champaign County State’s Attorney, said.

    * WMBD | A new era dawns in Peoria County as No Cash Bail comes to local courtrooms: The other case, the second man, was more gray. Here, Assistant Public Defender Steve Glancy was able to argue that the crime, harassment through an electronic device, didn’t rise to the level of being a detainable offense. In the past, Glancy would have argued for a lower bond but not whether his client was held without bond pending trial. […] All of which convinced Donahue to release him but even then, there was confusion as Donahue, a long-time veteran of Peoria County courts, both as a judge and as a defense attorney, sought to put conditions on the man’s release such as electronic monitoring, a curfew and to check in with county probation officials. But unlike in the past, he had to put those in a written order.

    * KWQC | Confusion in Rock Island County courtroom as no-cash bail takes effect: One case involved Jason Wright. He’s been held for months on gun and drug charges. […] [His wife, Rebecka] watched each case for hints about what might happen to her husband. And while some high-level defendants were let go today, most were detained – including Jason Wright. The judge said he had about a quarter pound of cocaine and a “virtual arsenal” of guns in his house.

    * CBS Chicago | Illinois becomes first state to end cash bail: One of the first hearings in what was once bond court Monday was the case of Cortez Murphy. Prosecutors said Murphy, who was on an electronic ankle monitor for a burglary charge, damaged the monitor last week and fled from police as his bracelet siren activated. […] With those factors at play, the judge Murphy was a “high-level flight risk,” and his release was denied. Details, not dollars, determined that Murphy will stay locked up.

    * Herald Review | No-cash bail has its first day in Macon County court: The first arraignment case to be heard in Macon County Circuit Court under the new no-cash bail law turned out to be a Decatur teenager accused of an ambush stabbing murder. And a judge decided that particular defendant wasn’t going anywhere and had to remain in custody. But for most of the rest of the docket, heard over the course of an hour Monday afternoon, it was a different story: of the 12 cases in all that came up, Judge Lindsey Shelton found grounds to release nine defendants on charges ranging from domestic violence to battering police officers.

    * WCBU | First day of no-cash bail sees split decisions in Peoria County court: In Peoria, the first day saw only two hearings come before Circuit Court Judge Sean Donahue. In both instances, the State’s Attorney’s office filed petitions seeking to have the defendant detained until trial. […] Donahue sided with the defense and denied the petition to detain the defendant. However, he did impose pretrial conditions, including electronic monitoring, no contact with the victim and the victim’s family, a 7 p.m.-7 a.m. curfew, no possession of any weapons and no out-of-state travel without permission from pretrial services.

    * KFVS | Southern Ill. law enforcement raise concerns as state becomes first to end cash bail: [ Williamson County Sheriff Jeff Diederich] began releasing inmates on Friday, in order to comply with the new law. As of Monday afternoon, he says a total of 40 inmates have been released since Friday evening.

    * WSPD | Local police chief, state’s attorney say they’re uncertain about outcomes after Illinois ends cash bail: Metropolis Police Chief Harry Masse said it’s his job to enforce the law, but he is concerned about the possible negative outcomes the SAFE-T Act could have on his community. “I hope I’m wrong. I’m hoping that you’ll come back next year and I’ll see nothing change. We haven’t had any offenders that we released on cashless bail do something more serious while they were awaiting trial,” he said.

    * BND | St. Clair County sets 1st hearings to decide whether defendants stay in jail before trial: Three detention hearings are scheduled in St. Clair County and one is scheduled in Madison County on Tuesday. No hearings were scheduled on Monday.

    * SJ-R | Cash bail ends in Illinois but further reform is still a possibility: The hearing requirement has some counties, particularly those downstate, concerned they lack the staff to meet demands. To account for an expected increased demand on public defenders, the state invested $10 million to create the Public Defender Fund where all counties outside of Cook County receive anywhere from $77,000 up to $147,555.

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Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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