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State Fair showdown avoided

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I initially skimmed this when I first read it and missed the last paragraph

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is coming to Illinois in 10 days to headline a fundraiser for incumbent Congressman Mike Bost, who’s facing a competitive primary in the 12th District with former gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey. […]

McCarthy will be in O’Fallon on Aug. 17 for Bost’s luncheon fundraiser. That’s the same day as Republican Day at the State Fair when all the big GOP names show a united front to kick off the campaign season. It wasn’t ideal, but “with multiple schedules, we had to work with the day that aligned” with everyone, Bost’s spokesman Myles Nelson told Playbook.

Speaker McCarthy’s visit is not unexpected, of course. Bost is the incumbent.

* The timing is interesting, however. And it’s probably a relief for the ILGOP.

So far, the only really big race to watch in Illinois next year is Bost vs. Bailey. Therefore, Republican Day at the Illinois State Fair next Thursday looked to me like it was going to be dominated by that battle, which could’ve turned out to be uncomfortable for everyone involved (except people like me, of course). I joked to a friend last week that maybe the ILGOP should just cancel the whole thing to avoid a possible train wreck.

But Speaker McCarthy, inadvertently or not, has given the state party an out. Bailey will get access to the news media at the fairgrounds, but Bost will be home in his district, near to his local news media outlets, and that’s a decent contrast for him.

Anyway, not the biggest story in the world, nor the most important, but I thought I’d mention it since I forgot to include the piece in the afternoon roundup.

What are you looking forward to at this year’s State Fair?

  8 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Today, 27th Ward Democratic Committeeperson and Chair Walter Burnett announced the date, time, and location for the Democratic Party’s Fifth District Illinois State Senate Committee meeting. The Committee will conduct in-person interviews at Plumbers Local 130, 1340 W Washington, Basement, Chicago, IL 60607 to fill the vacancy in the 5th District of the Illinois State Senate created by the resignation of Senator Patricia Van Pelt. Doors will open at 12:30pm and the meeting will begin promptly at 1:00pm. The meeting will conclude upon the completion of the candidate interviews, committee deliberations, and an appointment to fill the vacancy by a majority of the entire weighted vote of the Committeepersons.

Candidates who would like to apply for the position of 5th District State Senator will need to send their cover letter and resume to this email address: wbj863@gmail.com by August 11, 2023.

The members of the 5th District’s election committee include Committeeperson Daniel LaSpata (1st Ward), Committeeperson Tim Egan (2nd Ward), Comitteeperson John Daley (11th Ward), Committeeperson George Cardenas (12th Ward), Committeeperson Mike Rodriguez (22nd Ward), VACANT (24th Ward), Committeperson Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th Ward), Committeeperson Walter Burnett (27th Ward), Committeeperson Jason Ervin (28th Ward), Committeeperson Chris Taliaferro (29th Ward), Committeeperson Scott Waguespack (32nd Ward), Committeeperson Emma Mitts (37th), Committeeperson Brendan Reilly (42nd Ward), and Committeeperson Lucy Moog (43rd Township).

What:

Democratic Committee Meeting to fill the vacancy in the office of the Illinois State Senate for the 5th District

When:

Tuesday, August 15, 2023
12:30pm - Doors open to public and press
1:00pm - Meeting and interviews begin

The apparently vacant 24th Ward Committeeperson slot can only be filled by the central committee, per party bylaws.

* Daily Southtown

Residents of Robbins looked up at their town’s water tower last week and watched as hundreds of gallons of water cascaded down from the top.

When a water main broke July 28 and increased the flow of water into the tower, it triggered the emergency overflow system used to prevent the water tower from bursting. It also resurfaced questions about why the state’s leadership isn’t doing more to upgrade the community’s infrastructure.

“If the governor really cared about the people, he’s a billionaire. He could fix all of Illinois himself,” said Robbins Mayor Darren Bryant, who is asking lawmakers for $40 million for his town to conduct infrastructure upgrades. “Put a billion to it, governor, if you want to run for president.”

Yeah, that’ll work.

* Meanwhile, here’s Fox 32

Community leaders are calling for a meeting with Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker saying violence is a disease and civility is the cure.

The purpose of the proposed meeting with the governor is to lay out the Illinois Plan of Civility. […]

State Rep. La Shawn Ford said civility involves kindness, empathy, and understanding while promoting respectful and polite behavior.

Rep. Ford should teach a class in how to regularly get TV news coverage.

* Rick Pearson

When the Will County Board decided to send four of its members to the National Association of Counties’ legislative conference in Washington this past February, the contingent included new Republican board member Daniel Butler of Frankfort. […]

Little more than two years earlier, prior to being elected to office, Butler was in Washington attending then-President Donald Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally. Butler joined the march to the U.S. Capitol but he was not charged and he said he did not enter the building as insurgents staged a deadly insurrection in a failed attempt to stop the counting of Electoral College votes that made Biden the nation’s president.

Displaying a long history on social media of propagating elaborate and widely debunked conspiracy theories — ranging from pandemic vaccines linked with computer chip technology to a QAnon-backed tale contending Italian satellites were used in 2020 to switch votes from Trump to Biden — Butler won a seat on the Will County Board on Nov. 8. […]

Butler said he still has doubts that Biden’s vote total in defeating Trump exceeded that of President Barack Obama and said he recalls hearing that “some satellite in Rome that the Vatican has” was used to switch votes from Trump to Biden and “they traced stuff that went to a server in Germany.” […]

Butler’s election was assisted by more than $3,300 worth of campaign mailings paid by the Illinois Republican Party, campaign records show. The Illinois GOP did not respond to a request for comment.

Um, wait. Butler claims the Pope’s satellite was used to defeat Trump? Are there no Catholic voters in that guy’s district or in the ILGOP who might be just a wee bit upset about this? Sheesh.

* The task force report isn’t due until next March, which will be too late to implement RCV for the presidential primary cycle…

Governor Pritzker signed SB2123 into law [last week] , greenlighting a task force to evaluate the implementation of Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) in presidential primaries and to analyze the necessary modernization of Illinois’ elections equipment and systems. The Ranked Choice and Voting Systems Task Force will begin convening to analyze the state’s capacity for implementation of RCV and will release a comprehensive report in March, 2024.

The convening of this task force will be the first time in Illinois history that there will be a concerted state-led effort to review RCV and the state’s capacity for implementation. The task force’s work will give lawmakers and election officials a better understanding of RCV, while also facilitating an accounting for how the state certifies certain election systems and equipment, many of which are outdated and less secure.

“Ranked Choice Voting helps ensure everyone’s vote counts” said Patrick Hanley at FairVote Illinois. “Modernizing election equipment is not only critical to implementing Ranked Choice Voting, but it will also ensure election integrity and security at a time when election workers and the systems they use are under increased threat.”

Right now, more than 30% of Illinois’ counties are utilizing outdated voting machines and systems. The RCV Task Force’s report will provide details about the costs of updating these machines to process RCV ballots and make elections more fair and more secure. […]

RCV in presidential primaries is an elegant solution to many of the problems facing our electoral system today. It solves the wasted vote problem that happens now in our current system where voters who vote early can select a candidate who later drops out before the Illinois contest, rendering their vote wasted and their voice silenced.

In 2020, 70,000 Democratic votes were wasted in the presidential primary. Likewise, 30,000 Republican votes were wasted in Illinois’ 2016 presidential primary.

Our current system allows people to vote early for presidential candidates in primaries, even if they are no longer in the race

“Too many votes are wasted in presidential primaries because our current system allows people to vote early for candidates who eventually drop out before the primary day,” State Representative and State Central Committeeman Maurice West (D-Rockford) said. “Ranked Choice Voting ensures voters’ voices are heard and helps solve that problem. It’s a common-sense solution to address a flaw in our system, and I’m grateful for the Governor’s support in exploring this important issue.”

RCV gives voters the option to rank candidates in order of preference – first, second, third, and so on. If their first choice is not viable, their vote counts for their highest-ranked candidate who is. The ability to rank backup choices ensures voters’ voices are heard and rewards candidates with the broadest appeal.

Currently Maine and Alaska have adopted RCV statewide, including for presidential primaries, and over 60 cities and counties have adopted RCV for local elections.

* Press release…

State Representative Tony McCombie (Savanna) was successful in spearheading five legislative initiatives through the Illinois House, all of which passed with bipartisan support and were recently signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker.

“These bills are common sense solutions for Illinois and will help make communities across our state safer, streamline certain government processes, and celebrate those who fight for our nation,” said McCombie. “For me, this is about solving problems and making life better for residents.”

The bills signed by the Governor include:

House Bill 3203: Works to curb the fentanyl epidemic affecting communities across the state by allowing a pharmacist or retailer (rather than only a pharmacist) to sell fentanyl test strips over-the-counter to the public to test for the presence of fentanyl.

House Bill 3206: Beginning July 1, 2024, the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation shall supplement all paper-based certificates and licenses (rather than certificates, licenses, and authorities) with a digitally verified electronic credential.

House Bill 3436: Allows the issuance of the Thank a Line Worker license plate decal by the Illinois Department of Education and creates the Thank a Line Worker Scholarship Fund through the purchase of the decals, which shall be paid as grants in support of scholarships for students studying electrical distribution at an Illinois college or university.

House Bill 1465: Increases competitive bidding threshold to $30,000 for Road Districts as had been done for townships.

Senate Bill 1072: Designates the Honor and Remember flag as the specific symbol to acknowledge American servicemen and women who lost their lives in the line of duty.

* Press release…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker signed SB 2195, also known as the “So Kids Can Move” initiative, which will allow thousands of children and youth with limb loss or limb difference to afford prosthetic care that enables them to participate in physical activities. This legislation makes Illinois just the fourth state in the nation to pass this act. […]

The legislation requires insurance coverage for medically necessary prosthetic or custom orthotic devices to maximize the patient’s whole-body health and function. It amends the Accident and Health Article of the Illinois Insurance Code and codifies that with respect to an enrollee at any age, coverage of a prosthetic or custom orthotic device shall be provided.

* I would’ve guessed Washington, DC /s…


* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Tribune | After long delays, new cannabis businesses are opening in Illinois with a vow to help others along the way: Existing medical cannabis growers and dispensaries were allowed to begin recreational sales in 2020. Since then, startups had to wait through multiple delays until 192 initial new licenses were issued with preference for veterans and social equity applicants, generally defined as those coming from poor areas with high arrest rates, or with prior minor cannabis convictions. As of mid-July, just 27 of those new social equity businesses have opened, due mainly to license holders being unable to get financing.

    * WTVO | Pritzker signs Racism Free Schools Act into law: The Illinois Department of Human Rights is required to model a training program to prevent discrimination and harassment in elementary and high schools. The law would also make the failure of a school to take disciplinary action against a harassing student a civil rights violation and applies to public, private, and charter schools in Illinois.

    * John T. Shaw | Finding candor, compassion and fun in politics: It’s a curious sign of our times that one of the best places that I’ve found to witness candor, compassion, and fun in American politics is the Illinois State Archives’ website. I suspect it is not the first place that most people would go to feel good about politics.

    * Crain’s | This federal push is spawning green shoots of innovation in the Midwest: The U.S. CHIPS and Science Act and other recent federal legislation aimed at reinvigorating innovation and high-tech production leadership includes funding to support science, R&D, manufacturing, technology commercialization and workforce development to help the United States better compete globally in advanced technologies as well as reclaim leadership in the crucial semiconductor industry.

    * Daily Herald | It’s not just O’Hare: Suburban airports pumping billions into the economy: At the DuPage Airport, “business is booming,” Executive Director Mark Doles said. “The corporate and business traffic is extremely strong — as is flight training.”Diversification is one reason the state’s public-use airports generate $95.5 billion dollars in total annual economic activity, the Illinois Department of Transportation reported.

    * Crain’s | Citigroup slashing suburban office space, relocating to Schaumburg: The move is in line with the trend of companies shrinking their office footprints in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which set off a remote work movement that has driven up the suburban office vacancy rate to almost 29%, a record-high. The Chicago suburbs have collectively lost 3 million square feet of tenants since the beginning of 2020, according to data from brokerage Jones Lang LaSalle, a wave of attrition that is pushing some landlords to the financial brink and others into foreclosure.

    * Sun-Times | Gunman fatally shot 8-year-old girl after complaining about her being too loud, neighbors say: “Just little kids playing, he would come out just yelling about the noise. It just didn’t make sense, none of it made sense,” Kelley said. “Everybody in the community would just tell him they are just kids having fun playing, just let them be.”

    * Austin Weekly | Want to improve public safety? Beat facilitators needed: Beat facilitators are residents or business owners of a specific police beat who volunteer to be the liaison between the community and the police. They work closely with each district’s office of community policing, also known as Chicago Alternative Policing Strategy to co-chair and help facilitate beat meetings. Beat facilitators represent the residents’ interests, identify community needs and communicate with residents, business owners and police officers in their beat. Thus, beat facilitators often reside or work in the beat they represent.

    * NYT | How a Sexual Assault in a School Bathroom Became a Political Weapon: “Look, the kid is not transgender,” [Scott Ziegler, interim superintendent] recalled [Tim Flynn, the Stone Bridge principal] saying. “He runs with the drama crowd, and you know how the drama crowd can be. They’re attention-seeking. And he’s been experimenting with different looks.” He wore skirts on occasion, “but he has never come out to the school as either nonbinary or transgender.” (Flynn did not respond to requests for comment.) The boy’s mother described her son similarly. “He had presented to me this desire to explore a different lifestyle,” she said, which involved sometimes wearing women’s clothes. But he was “absolutely not” transgender, she said, and “he did not identify as fluid or anything like that.” If the boy had never to anyone’s knowledge identified as anything other than a boy, Ziegler reasoned, then he would not have been allowed in the girls’ bathroom under Policy 8040 any more than he would have been under the existing rules.

    * Tribune News Service | Heidi Stevens: Combatting FOPO (Fear of Other People’s Opinions) and other tips for navigating middle school with grace: “Tweens operate in a complex social system and must solve problems in the absence of life experience or perspective, all while in the throes of puberty and with brains that aren’t yet fully developed,” Fagell writes.

    * The Hill | America’s white majority is aging out: “Race is the most complicated variable in the census, and it’s the one that draws people like moths to the flame,” said Dowell Myers, a professor of policy, planning and demography at the University of Southern California.

    * WICS | Illinois State Fair introduces affordable ‘Small Plates, Big Tastes’ food program to delight every tastebud: The Illinois State Fair created Small Plates, Big Tastes. For just $3, you can get sample-size portions from any Village of Cultures vendor. “There are so many tasty options all around the fairgrounds, especially in the Village of Cultures, that we came up with a great way for fairgoers to travel around the world without breaking the bank,” said Illinois State Fair Manager Rebecca Clark.

    * NBC Chicago | Illinois State Fair to get underway this week. Details on tickets, concerts and more: Festivities will officially kick off on Thursday at the Illinois State Fairgrounds in Springfield, with the agricultural and entertainment spectacle starting at 7 a.m. Carnival rides won’t be up and running until noon, however. The fair’s popular opening event — the longtime Twilight Parade — will get underway at 5:30 p.m.

  10 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times: “Gov. J.B. Pritzker listens as researchers explain their work in one of the University of Chicago quantum engineering laboratories last month”…

* The Question: Caption?

  52 Comments      


Another 1st Amendment court fight appears heading for Illinois

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

Illinois will soon outlaw advertising for firearms that officials determine produces a public safety threat or appeals to children, militants or others who might later use the weapons illegally, as the state continues its quest to curb mass shootings. […]

The prime exhibit in Democratic Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s effort is the JR-15, a smaller, lighter version of the AR-15 semi-automatic rifle advertised with the tag line, “Get ‘em One Like Yours.” The maker says it is deliberately made smaller, with added safety features, to fit younger shooters as they learn from adults how to safely maneuver such a weapon. Raoul says it’s marketed to children and potentially entices them to skip the adult supervision and start firing. […]

Illinois would be the eighth state to approve legislation that allows such lawsuits against firearms manufacturers or distributors. […]

Raoul finds precedent in the 25-year-old settlement with large tobacco companies and more recently with advertising for vaping. […]

Except that other industries don’t produce constitutionally protected products, counters the National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry trade association that has filed federal lawsuits in nearly every state that has approved a similar law.

A federal lawsuit filed against the California law failed in federal district court, but is being appealed.

* The Illinois-based company that produces the JR-15 website attracted lots of attention with its initial marketing rollout…


* The company has since adjusted its pitch

Thoughts?

  31 Comments      


FCC tightens regulations on campaign robocalls

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* JD Supra

Effective July 20, 2023, nonprofit organizations and others making non-commercial calls using an artificial or prerecorded voice (known as robocalls) to residential lines may make no more than three such calls to a particular residential line within any consecutive 30-day period without prior express consent of the called party and must give the called party the ability to opt out of any future calls they do not wish to receive.

These new requirements are part of regulations issued by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in response to the Pallone-Thune Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence Act (the TRACED Act) passed by Congress in 2019.

More

Phone Number Provided Must Connect to Opt-Out Option. Robocalls are already required to include a phone number through which the organization may be reached. The FCC’s new rules require that this phone number must allow people to make do-not-call requests during regular business hours. If the call goes unanswered, answering machine or voicemail messages must include a toll-free number that connects the recipient to the voice or key press opt-out mechanism described above.

Written Policy and Training. Nonprofit and political organizations that make robocalls must have a written policy for maintaining a do-not-call list that is available on demand. Organizations must also provide training opportunities about these rules to personnel who are involved with robocall operations.

* Harmon Curran blog

The types of robocall subject to the three-call-per-month limit is not restricted to fundraising calls. Rather, non-commercial calls such as calls conducting research, market surveys, political polling, or similar noncommercial activities are also subject to the three-call-per-month limit.

The rules are here.

* Cor Strategies…

Three new FCC rules within the Telephone Consumer Protection Act went into effect at the end of June that will limit telecom capabilities, whether you’re conducting a poll or doing paid outreach to voters via robocalls.

We wanted to make sure you were aware of these changes because ignoring them (or being unaware) can cost you thousands of dollars in violations—or worse.

New FCC Rules

    1. All automated calls need to identify who the caller is at the beginning of the call.
    2. Within 2 seconds of identifying who the caller is, you need to provide specific opt out instructions.
    3. An entity can only call a phone number with automated voice three times within a 30-day period.

What does this mean for you? For polls, more data will need to be obtained to compensate for the third rule. In addition, we’ll likely see more drop off and need to make more overall attempts to hit a desired sample size. Overall, this just means things will get pricier, unfortunately.

At the end of the day, this trio of rules fits what we’ve been saying—automated response gathering is reaching the end of its useful life, and other solutions, like texting, panels, and live dialing will soon make up a majority of any samples. And robocalls—well, robocalling has been 99% dead for a while now, easily replaced with competitively priced peer-to-peer messaging.

  6 Comments      


Former Madigan chief of staff Tim Mapes’ perjury trial begins

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Tribune

As the bombshell federal investigation into then-House Speaker Michael Madigan was heating up two years ago, prosecutors handed Madigan’s former chief of staff Tim Mapes the ultimate free pass, albeit with one crucial string attached.

Granted immunity, Mapes was assured he would not be charged as long as he told the truth to a federal grand jury. But he allegedly blew it.

According to prosecutors, Mapes lied repeatedly in his March 31, 2021, grand jury testimony in an ill-fated attempt to protect his longtime boss, claiming he couldn’t recall anything relevant about Madigan’s relationship with Michael McClain, the speaker’s longtime confidant at the center of the probe.

Those allegedly misleading statements had little effect, as Madigan and McClain were both indicted on racketeering charges last year alleging Madigan was at the top of a criminal enterprise aimed at enriching himself and his cronies and maintaining his nearly unfettered political power.

Click here for the seven alleged lies that could send Mapes to prison.

* Jon Seidel for the Sun-Times

Now, Mapes is set to stand trial starting Monday in Chicago on federal charges of perjury and attempted obstruction of justice for an alleged bid to block prosecutors’ investigation of Madigan, who forced Mapes to resign in 2018, and Michael McClain, another Springfield insider. […]

Madigan and McClain also loom large in Mapes’ case. Key witnesses from McClain’s first trial are set to return to the stand. Among them: state Rep. Robert “Bob” Rita, who has testified in two corruption trials this year, and former Madigan aide Will Cousineau.

The backdrop this time will be a series of #MeToo scandals in 2018 that rocked Springfield and forced key figures, including Mapes, out of office.

The FBI was listening at the time, and prosecutors are ready to play recordings that were secretly made amid the fallout.

* Here is Jon’s thread on today’s trial proceedings

Follow along today by clicking here.

* Capitol News Illinois

And in this trial, federal prosecutors will attempt to show that Mapes was well aware of McClain’s role as Madigan’s other right-hand man, a label often used for Mapes himself in the decades he served the speaker.

In the weeks following Mapes’ ouster in early June 2018, he and McClain spoke about a dozen times, according to federal court records.

“You’re the only person’s made me cry today,” McClain told Mapes on the day he was forced to resign, according to court records. “Anything I can do, ya know, I’m willing to do, you know that, don’t ya?”

That afternoon, McClain also told Mapes, “I never thought you would be the one to leave the fox hole.”

* Click here for the witness list …


* More…

  7 Comments      


Putting that WSJ editorial into context

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a recent Wall St. Journal editorial

The best argument against collective bargaining for government workers is that no one represents taxpayers. Union chiefs and the politicians they support sit on both sides of the bargaining table. That was demonstrated again last week when Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a whopping new contract with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (Afscme).

The contract covers the next four years and gives 35,000 public workers 19.28% raises, outpacing the growth in private wages. That’s more than the Teamsters are getting for tenured drivers in their rich new deal from United Parcel Service, and that’s merely the increase in Afscme base pay. Many workers will get more pay increases based on job tenure. The contract also includes a $1,200 “stipend” to every worker merely for ratifying the contract. Mr. Pritzker included these bonuses in his last contract negotiation in 2019, supposedly to compensate workers for the financial “hardship” of being a state worker under previous Governor Bruce Rauner. (Remember when a Governor tried to represent taxpayers?) The unions liked the sweetener, so now it has become an expected fillip.

The governor’s office says the increases are actually 17.95 percent over four years. They also pointed to this AP story

Public employers across the U.S. have faced similar struggles to fill jobs, leading to one of the largest surges in state government pay raises in 15 years. Many cities, counties and school districts also are hiking wages to try to retain and attract workers amid aggressive competition from private sector employers. […]

In Georgia, state employee turnover hit a high of 25% in 2022. Thousands of workers left the Department of Corrections, pushing its vacancy rate to around 50%. The state began a series of pay raises. This year, all state employees and teachers got at least a $2,000 raise, with corrections officers getting $4,000 and state troopers $6,000. […]

Missouri gave state workers a 7.5% pay raise in 2022. This spring, Gov. Mike Parson signed an emergency spending bill with an additional 8.7% raise, plus an extra $2 an hour for people working evening and night shifts at prisons, mental health facilities and other institutions. The vacancy rate for entry level corrections officers now is declining, and the average number of applications for all state positions is up 18% since the start of last year. […]

Since 2022, the [Brevard County transit system in Floriday] has twice raised bus driver wages to a current rate of $17.47 an hour. The school board recently countered with a $5 increase to a minimum $20 an hour for the upcoming school year. The goal is to hire enough drivers to regularly get kids to class on time, said school system communications director Russell Bruhn.

* Nevada

Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo signed another important budget bill on Thursday, bringing 12% raises to state employees starting in July. […]

The bill goes beyond Lombardo’s proposed 8% raise with another 4% raise next year. Democratic lawmakers built on that plan by increasing it to 12% in the 2023-2024 fiscal year — a 50% increase over Lombardo’s proposal. Democrats changed the structure of the governor’s proposed bonuses and added more permanent pay increases. […]

The state has been struggling to fill positions, with a job vacancy rate around 20%. This budget contains quarterly bonuses for employees of $250 to help retain staff on top of the 12% raise. Longevity pay is also part of the compensation plan after it was removed in lean budget years after the Great Recession.

* Oregon

The state’s largest public employee union has reached a tentative agreement on a new labor contract with the state of Oregon that would include a 13% to 22% pay increase over the next two years. […]

Workers are set to receive a 6.5% cost-of-living raise in December, followed by another 6.55% cost of living increase in early 2025. As part of the contract, the state will also hand out one-time payouts of $1,500 to state employees in September. […]

The average worker will see about 19% with steps and COLAs

* And UPS

International Brotherhood of Teamsters President Sean O’Brien said in a statement that UPS “put $30 billion of new money on the table as a direct result of these negotiations,” and called the tentative agreement “the best contract in the history of UPS.” […]

They also notched a big win through the creation of 7,500 full-time jobs. The negotiating committee said part-timers would get a 48 percent wage increase on average over the five years of the contract.

  43 Comments      


GOP fights among itself over state’s new non-citizen police law

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Republican U.S. Rep. Mary Miller helped ignite a firestorm over the weekend of July 29th when she expressed her disgust on social media with Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

Miller (no relation) claimed on Twitter that Pritzker had signed a bill late on a Friday afternoon “to allow illegal immigrants to become police officers, giving non-citizens the power to arrest citizens in our state.”

Miller continued by claiming: “No sane state would allow foreign nationals to arrest their citizens, this is madness!” Her more well-known Republican colleague Lauren Boebert amplified the issue the next day and Fox News picked up the ball and ran with it. The rest of the right-wing media soon followed and a typical feeding frenzy ensued.

Trouble is, Miller’s own husband, state Rep. Chris Miller, R-Oakland (also no relation), voted “Yes” on the House’s initial version of the bill, which would’ve allowed non-citizens to become police officers.

Oops.

House Bill 3751 cleared the House on a unanimous roll call on March 24th. It specifically struck out an existing state law which prohibited sheriffs and law enforcement from employing non-citizens as law enforcement officers. The bill then added language allowing those non-citizens who are “legally authorized to work in the United States under federal law,” and who received federal approval to “obtain, carry, or purchase or otherwise possess a firearm,” to become law enforcement officers.

The bill was supported by various groups, including the Chicago Fraternal Order of Police, and passed 101-0. One of the bill’s chief co-sponsors was Rep. John Cabello, R-Machesney Park, a Donald Trump-supporting police officer.

After the bill arrived in the Senate, its sponsor added an amendment allowing people, “against whom immigration action has been deferred by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services under the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) process,” to also become police officers.

Sen. Dan McConchie, R-Hawthorne Woods, the former Senate Republican Leader, voted for that version, but all other Senate Republicans opposed the bill as amended, as did two Democrats, Sens. Patrick Joyce, D-Reddick, and Willie Preston, D-Chicago.

Most all House Republicans stood firm during their chamber’s motion to concur with the new Senate amendment, including House Republican Leader Tony McCombie. Not one member of McCombie’s leadership team voted against the motion, which passed 100-7. However seven of the eight members of the House’s self-declared “Freedom Caucus” voted against it, including Rep. Miller. The eighth member, Rep. David Friess, R-Red Bud, had an excused absence.

Pritzker eventually pointed out on Twitter that House members, “including those who are now complaining about it,” had voted for the bill before the Senate Republicans “started spreading lies.”

State Rep. Miller responded to the governor online by claiming his own vote against “legislation allowing non-citizens to arrest actual citizens,” paled in comparison to Pritzker’s “blatantly attacking the Consitional [sic] right of honest citizens to bear arms.”

But, again, state Rep. Miller did indeed vote to allow “non-citizens to arrest actual citizens.” His spouse, the congressperson, tweeted at Pritzker the same day that “Giving foreign nationals the power to arrest US citizens in Illinois is not ‘common sense.’” Ms. Miller should’ve maybe had a talk with her husband last spring.

As you might imagine, several House Republicans are eager for this particular news cycle to end. It’s enraging the base, and there’s some worry that it could lead to some Republican primary challenges.

But McCombie went on a southern Illinois radio station WJPF last week to defend her fellow Republicans who voted for the bill.

“Every single [House] Republican, all 40 of us, voted for this bill,” McCombie told host Tom Miller (also no relation). “And that is because what the media is saying is not accurate. You can’t have 40 Republicans voting for a bill that is going to have undocumented illegal immigrants become a police officer. That is not gonna happen.” She also rightly pointed out that the asylum-seeking migrants pouring into Illinois won’t qualify, either, because they’re not allowed to work.

McCombie blamed Democrats for creating an environment that is forcing people out of policing as a career. This bill, she said, could help alleviate that problem. And she stressed that only people who could be approved by the federal government to possess and carry a firearm would qualify.

“It is a conditional step to support law enforcement,” McCombie said. “It is not, it is not a license to give illegal immigrants, undocumented folks who are coming across our borders illegally, the ability to become law enforcement. Hard stop.”

Discuss.

  18 Comments      


Roundup: Judge protects crisis pregnancy centers from Illinois’ Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Hannah Meisel for Capitol News Illinois

A new law allowing Illinoisans to sue so-called crisis pregnancy centers under the state’s Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act is on hold after a federal judge late Thursday granted a preliminary injunction against it.

After a lengthy hearing in his Rockford courtroom, Judge Iain Johnston issued a brief oral ruling on Thursday evening, saying the law violated the First Amendment. Nearly 24 hours later, Johnston on Friday filed a 14-page order explaining the preliminary injunction, which began by recalling a joke told by the late conservative U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.

“Justice Scalia once said that he wished all federal judges were given a stamp that read ‘stupid but constitutional,’” Johnston wrote. “SB 1909 is both stupid and very likely unconstitutional.”

Johnston, who was appointed by former President Donald Trump in 2020, went on to characterize the law as “likely classic content and viewpoint discrimination prohibited by the First Amendment.”

Read the ruling by clicking here.

* Crain’s

The law, signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker last week, was challenged by the National Institute of Family & Life Advocates, Women’s Help Services (doing business as 1st Way Life Center and Focus Women’s Center), Rockford Family Initiative, Relevant Pregnancy Options Center and Pro-life Action League. […]

In the motion, the anti-abortion groups argue that the Illinois law violates First Amendment protection of speech because it “goes far beyond traditional restrictions on deceptive business practices, in part by stating in its express legislative intent that it unapologetically targets alleged pro-life ‘misinformation’ — that is, controverted facts about abortion that the Illinois General Assembly majority believes are not among the ‘orthodox’ views on the subject.”

During a press conference last week, Raoul said the law simply clarifies that the state’s long-standing deceptive practices law applies to crisis pregnancy centers that use practices like deceiving patients that they are part of existing abortion clinics or removing people from near an abortion clinic to delay them from entering that clinic.

* Sun-Times

Pritzker said he’s confident the law will ultimately be upheld.

“I’m disappointed that the far right is interfering with the ability for women to access safe medical care without deception or lies,” Pritzker said in a statement. “This law is constitutional, and I am confident that the law will ultimately be found constitutional and we’ll continue to work alongside Attorney General Raoul to ensure Illinois patients are protected from misinformation.”

Johnston heard more than four hours of testimony from anti-abortion advocates during an emergency hearing Thursday afternoon. They said the law has threatened their rights to free speech and expression and their ability to distribute literature that identifies alternatives to abortion.

* WIFR

During Thursday’s hearing, the plaintiffs presented four witnesses to the stand, where the defendant had none. Those testifying included Anne O’Connor, vice president of legal affairs for NIFLA; Judy Cocks, executive director of Women’s Health Services; Kevin Rilott, director of the Rockford Family Initiative; and Matt Yonke, communications director for the Pro-Life Action League.

During the courts final moments, Judge Johnston said he thought it was “crazy” that Raoul was not stopped while creating the bill.

The state is expected to appeal the ruling. The plaintiffs said they will continue to fight for their side of the debate, no matter how high the case goes in the federal court process.

* More…

  7 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  12 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  9 Comments      


Live coverage

Monday, Aug 7, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ScribbleLive is down. Twitt- I mean X has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Corrections officer put on administrative leave for mocking murder victim (Updated)
* Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Republican chair claims Pritzker 'desperate' to leave Illinois (Updated)
* Former South Works steel site will be transformed into a massive quantum campus (Updated)
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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