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Afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Melissa Conyears-Ervin has decided to run against Danny Davis. Lynn Sweet

City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin is poised to challenge Rep. Danny Davis in the March 2024 Democratic primary, changing her mind about not running if he seeks another term as Kina Collins announces a third try against Davis.

Davis, 81, a South Austin resident, has made it clear for months that he will be seeking another term in 2024. […]

She will show fundraising muscle in her first Federal Election Commission report, pulling in, according to a draft, $283,486 as of June 30.

The Davis campaign raised about $100,000 in the last quarter, a spokesperson said.

* Not a bad idea

A Lincoln Avenue motel once known as a hot-pillow haven and targeted for demolition will be turned into “stabilization housing” for people with mental health and substance abuse issues, thanks to a plan to combat homelessness that could become a model for all 50 wards.

On Monday, the City Council’s Committee on Housing and Real Estate gave Mayor Brandon Johnson the go-ahead to acquire the Diplomat Motel, 5230 N. Lincoln Ave., for $2.9 million and turn its 40 rooms into supportive housing with a host of wrap-around service on site.

The plan is aimed at duplicating the nurturing, hotel-to-housing model that worked so well during the pandemic.

Residents would stay for three to six months.

* Subscribers have been briefed (including two updates today), but here’s Politico

Natalie Toro, a Chicago Public Schools teacher, was appointed Monday evening to the sought-after 20th District state Senate seat vacated by Cristina Pacione-Zayas, who’s now in the Chicago mayor’s office.

Chicago Ald. Scott Waguespack (32nd) and Clerk of the Circuit Court Iris Martinez both endorsed Toro, giving her a huge block of support over the other seven candidates, some of whom she will face in next year’s election. Waguespack and Martinez held large weighted votes that pushed Toro over the finish line. Here’s how the votes are dispersed.

The appointment process was tension-filled as it saw a range of Latino candidates from Democratic to progressive to left-of-progressive. Toro sits in the middle while Graciela Guzman, Pacione-Zayas’ Senate district director, is seen as the more progressive candidate. Only Toro and Guzman received votes.

Ald. Carlos Ramirez Rosa said Guzman lost out because committee people backed by the Fraternal Order of Police picked a more conservative candidate. In a statement, he praised the Northwest Side Progressive Coalition for supporting Guzman.

Toro drew a quick congratulations Monday evening from Sylvia Puente, CEO of the Latino Policy Forum and co-chair of the Illinois Latino Agenda. “We look forward to a productive working relationship,” she said in a statement.

The district is a bit more progressive than the weighted vote suggests. Gonna be a barn-burner of a primary.

* Rep. Kelly has done a lot right since being appointed to that seat in 2021…


* Center Square

Despite a heavy emphasis on equity at the Illinois Statehouse, a new study ranks Illinois as the worst state in the country on racial economic equality.

The personal finance website WalletHub placed Illinois near the bottom in several categories, including the difference between white and Black residents in median annual income.

“The fifth largest gap in the country,” researcher Jill Gonzalez said. “The same with the labor force participation rate. Illinois is again the fifth highest and the second highest when looking at the unemployment rate.” […]

Illinois ranked 40th in the poverty rate, 46th in the homeless rate, and 49th in the share of unsheltered homeless. […]

Other Midwestern states scored poorly in the study, including Wisconsin as the second worst state and Iowa the third worst in the country.

“Despite”? Maybe that would be the reason why this state needs to do more.

* Press release…

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle issued a disaster proclamation today for suburban Cook County in response to storms that hit the region on July 2. Several rounds of storms dumped nearly nine inches of rain in less than 24 hours in parts of the County, leading to severe flooding and other storm damage. Berwyn, Cicero and Stickney were the hardest hit suburban Cook County municipalities.

By signing this proclamation, the County is able to pursue all available resources to assist communities and residents in their recovery efforts.

The MWRD was criticized for not opening the Chicago River lock to Lake Michigan earlier. From its response

The elevation of the Chicago River downtown exceeded Lake Michigan’s elevation so the locks were opened at 4 p.m. on July 2 and the reversal ended at 2:30 a.m. on July 3. Reversing to the lake only happens in extreme situations. Reversals dating back to 1985 are listed at this link: https://mwrd.org/sites/default/files/documents/Lake_Michigan_Reversals_0422.pdf

In other words, when the Chicago area waterway levels are higher than Lake Michigan, only then can the MWRD open control structures to move as much water as possible out of the system. We cannot open the gates and lock before that time. There is NO MAGIC KEY OR BUTTON to use at will. Opening the gates and lock not only provide overbank flooding protection but they allow for more capacity for stormwater. As a result, the MWRD can only reverse the waterway to the lake when the river level is ABOVE Lake Michigan levels. If we were to open the lock and gates too early, Lake Michigan would have a tsunami effect, overtaking the river and flooding everything in its path in downtown Chicago and along the waterways, totally decimating the riverwalk and municipalities downstream, on the South side and on the North side. The destruction that would be caused by opening the gates and lock too early is unimaginable.

Yikes.

* Isabel’s roundup…

  5 Comments      


Rate the new CTBA pension idea

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Center for Tax and Budget Accountability has released a new pension payment plan

Under CTBA’s model:

    o the funded ratio target for 2045 moves from its current level of 90 percent under the Pension Ramp to a target of 80 percent funded, which is the GAO standard for a public pension system to be healthy;

    o a total of $6.7 billion in pension obligations bonds are issued over the FY 2023 through FY 2030 sequence, with all the bond proceeds being used to front-load payments to the pension systems and retire existing unfunded liability debt;

    o the contributions to the pension systems are moved from the last day of the fiscal year to the first day, thereby generating an additional year of investment returns on said contributions, which has a positive, compounding effect over time; and

    o the repayment of outstanding unfunded liabilities is re-amortized on a level-dollar basis, eliminating the fiscal strain created by the back-loading of payments under the existing Pension Ramp.

The CTBA claims doing this would save the state $62.8 billion. From a press release…

Based on the re-amortization approach modeled out in the report, the state can save 19 percent of the total debt service remaining under the Pension Ramp, which would reduce taxpayer costs by $62.8 billion between now and 2045, the final year of the Pension Ramp payment schedule.

Another benefit of the re-amortization of the debt owed to the pension system outlined in the Report is that it would get the state’s five pension systems healthier faster than the current Pension Ramp.

According to Sarah Wasik, CTBA’s Senior Research and Policy Analyst: “Any business that could refinance debt and save billions of dollars would do so. It makes sense for the state of Illinois to do the same and take the opportunity to refinance its pension debt, so it can save billions of taxpayer dollars.”

Click here for lots more details.

Considering that the NY rating agencies have been complaining for years that Illinois has a 90 percent funding model by 2045 instead of a 100 percent model, I’m not sure how this would go over with them.

Your thoughts?

…Adding… I always pay attention to what Yvette Shields at the Bond Buyer says…


  19 Comments      


Canadian wildfires have burned the equivalent of Indiana

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Washington Post

Blistering temperatures reached unheard-of northerly latitudes in Canada over the weekend amid dangerously hot and dry conditions, lightning storms and new blazes that intensified the country’s historically severe fire season.

The temperature soared as high as 100 degrees in the Northwest Territories on Saturday, the hottest temperature ever measured north of 65 degrees latitude in the Western Hemisphere, according to Christopher Burt, an extreme-weather historian.

The scorching temperatures over western Canada exacerbated the country’s unprecedented wildfire crisis. A record 22.7 million acres (9.2 million hectares) have burned so far, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, blowing past the previous high mark of 17.5 million acres (7.1 million hectares) in 1995. There are months of the wildfire season to go.

I got curious so I looked up some things. 9.2 million hectares works out to 35,521 square miles, making it 64 percent of all the land in Illinois (55,593 square miles). Indiana land is 35,868 square miles, meaning it’s just a tiny bit larger than the area burned so far (and there are “months of the wildfire season to go”).

* From the CBC

Researchers say there are ways to slow these changes, starting with reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

In addition, [Jennifer Baltzer, an associate professor in the department of biology at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario] said improved fire management, by allowing some fires to burn in some cases, and increasing the number of prescribed burns in others, would help scale back the number of out-of-control, large-scale fires.

* Isabel did a quick roundup…

    * NYT | Canada’s Ability to Prevent Forest Fires Lags Behind the Need: At a time when many Canadians are asking if the country has enough wildfire fighting resources, several experts say the government should be focused on doing all it can to prevent wildfires, a focus from which it has strayed since budget cuts imposed in the 1990s that hampered the nation’s forest service.

    * Sun-Times | Underground climate change poses a ‘silent hazard’ in Chicago and other cities, researchers find: Heat can cause the ground to swell and building foundations to slowly sink, particularly in the high-temperature Loop — but that hot air can be captured and turned into energy, Northwestern researchers say.

    * Accesswire | Wilmette Park District is Ready to ‘Go Solar’ After Governor Pritzker Signs Bill Legalizing Long-Term Solar Contracts: “We are very excited for this change in state law that will finally allow us to go solar,” said Mike Murdock, Wilmette Park District commissioner and former board president. “The project will cover over 90 percent of the Community Recreation Center’s roof and provide more than 50 percent of the building’s electrical usage over the next 25 years. It will help us do our part to support the climate and save taxpayer money, all while continuing to provide top-tier services for our residents.”

    * Ben Jealous | To feel less heat, we need more trees in our cities: The need couldn’t be simpler to state: Plant more trees where there are too few. But meeting the need has been less of a priority for those in neighborhoods where shade isn’t a luxury. We can’t overlook the fact that urban trees help everyone — they keep close to a billion metric tons of climate-killing carbon out of the atmosphere.

    * Fox Illinois | University YMCA announces 21st annual Dump & Run Recycling Program and sale: Each year, the YMCA keeps around 30 tons of unwanted goods out of Champaign-Urbana’s dumpsters and landfills. Collection of usable items will begin from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Monday, July 31 at the U of I Stock Pavillion, located at 1402 W. Pennsylvania Ave. in Urbana. Collections will then occur from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. every weekday and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturdays through August 12. The YMCA offers free pick-up days for furniture and bicycle donations from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on August 5 and August 12. Request a pick-up here.

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Pritzker leading trade mission to UK

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Governor Pritzker along with leaders in business and education from around the state will embark on a trade mission to the United Kingdom on July 16. The Governor will kick off the international trip by attending the Goodwood Festival of Speed from July 13-16 to discuss Illinois’ commitment to electric vehicle manufacturing with automobile, energy, and supply chain industry leaders.

Following the Goodwood Festival of Speed, a delegation of business and education leaders will meet with their counterparts in London to discuss strengthening economic cooperation between the State of Illinois and the United Kingdom. Programming throughout the mission will focus on manufacturing, clean energy and technology, quantum, higher education collaboration, and other key industries.

“When I first ran for Governor, I promised to be our state’s best Chief Marketing Officer—letting the world know that Illinois is the best place to live, work, and do business,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Over the next several days, I couldn’t be more excited to meet with UK and international leaders—sharing the many virtues of our state, from our talented workforce and world-class manufacturing industry to our booming electric vehicle ecosystem and ambitious clean energy goals.”

“The State of Illinois and the United Kingdom have a longstanding economic relationship and as Illinois’ economic development agency, we look forward to building upon this enduring partnership,” said DCEO Director Kristin Richards. “With $5 billion in bilateral trade in 2022, this trip will help us further strengthen our ties and give us the opportunity to meet with some of the most talented leaders across industries in the UK while forging connections on business opportunities that will benefit Illinoisans and people from Britain alike.”

“The UK is one of the top foreign investors in Illinois, so this trip is about building on that strength to encourage more British companies to be in Illinois,” said Intersect Illinois CEO Dan Seals. “We’re making the case for our skilled workforce, our central location, our quality of life, and our international outlook.”

Leaders joining the trade mission include:

    • Governor JB Pritzker
    • First Lady MK Pritzker
    • Emanuel “Chris” Welch, Speaker of the IL House
    • Anne Caprara, Chief of Staff to Governor Pritzker
    • Andy Manar, Deputy Governor
    • Christy George, First Assistant Deputy Governor
    • Martin Torres, Deputy Governor
    • Sean Rapelyea, Senior Advisor for External Affairs
    • Jordan Abudayyeh, Deputy Chief of Staff for Communications
    • Kristin Richards, Director, DCEO
    • Margo Markopoulos, DCEO, Director of Trade and Investment
    • Cas Peters, DCEO, Senior Policy Advisor
    • Dan Seals, Intersect Illinois, CEO
    • Paulina San Millan, Intersect Illinois, VP for Business Development
    • Alan Gogbashian, UK Consul General to Chicago
    • Tim Killeen, University of Illinois, President
    • Jay Walsh, University of Illinois, VP
    • Juan de Pablo, University of Chicago, EVP
    • Raj Echambadi, Illinois Institute of Technology, President
    • Kate Waimey Timmerman, Chicago Quantum Exchange, CEO
    • David Awschalom, Chicago Quantum Exchange, Director
    • Pranav Gokhale, Infleqtion, VP of Quantum Software
    • Carmen Rossi, 8 Hospitality, CEO
    • Meredith O’Connor, JLL, International Director
    • AJ Patton, 548 Enterprise, CEO
    • Jim Reynolds, Loop Capital, CEO
    • Wendell Dallas, Nicor Gas, President and CEO
    • Gil Quiniones, ComEd, CEO
    • Torrence Hinton, People’s Gas and North Shore Gas, President
    • Leonard Singh, Ameren, Chairman and President
    • Kara Demirjian Huss, T/CCI Manufacturing, VP; DCC Marketing, Founder & President
    • Berardino Baratta, MxD, CEO
    • Mark Denzler, Illinois Manufacturing Association, CEO
    • David Boulay, Illinois Manufacturing Excellence Center, President
    • Michael Jacobson, Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association, CEO
    • Rob Karr, Illinois Retail Merchants Association, CEO
    • Jeff Baker, Illinois Realtors Association, CEO
    • Michael Gobber, Illinois Realtors Association, President
    • Brad Tietz, Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, VP of Gov. Relations
    • Monica Mueller, Motorola Solutions, VP of Gov. Affairs
    • Dan Lynch, United Airlines, VP of State and Local Govt.
    • John Atkinson, Marsh US in Chicago, Chairman and Managing Director

Illinois and the United Kingdom have a long history of shared economic cooperation.

Exports are a Vital Part of Illinois’ Economy

    • Illinois exports exceeded $78 billion in 2022 with the preliminary agricultural adjusted figure reaching $82.2 billion, both all-time highs
    • Illinois is the largest exporting state in the Midwest and the 5th largest in the nation
    • 19 out of the top 20 export industries increased since 2021
    • Since 2009, Illinois exports have increased by $36.55 billion, or 87.8%
    • Export activities support over 800K jobs in Illinois

Total Trade between Illinois and United Kingdom in 2022

    • Illinois exports to United Kingdom totaled $1.94 billion in 2022
    • United Kingdom is Illinois’ 9th largest export market
    • Illinois ranks 10th among the 50 U.S. states in exports to United Kingdom
    • Illinois imports from United Kingdom totaled $3.14 billion in 2022, a 139.8% increase since 2009.
    • United Kingdom is Illinois’ 13th largest import market
    • Illinois ranks 6th among the 50 U.S. states in imports from United Kingdom

…Adding… According to the governor’s office, staff travel is covered by the governor’s office and DCEO is covering its staff travel. The governor is paying for his own travel and for staff travel to Goodwood and lodging at Goodwood. Everyone else is paying for their own stuff. DCEO and Intersect are sharing some of the costs associated with programming

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Feds rebut Mapes’ claims about McClain with new filing

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here and here if you need it. Jon Seidel

Michael Madigan’s former chief of staff reached out to a defense attorney for the then-powerful Illinois House speaker after he was approached by FBI agents in early 2019, then he called a longtime Madigan confidant and said he was “reporting in,” prosecutors say.

While the feds do not argue those actions by Timothy Mapes were unlawful, they do say it demonstrates “his loyalty” to Madigan and Michael McClain, “and his intentional effort to withhold information” from a federal grand jury in March 2021.

That and other details about the case against Mapes were revealed in a 65-page document filed by prosecutors early Tuesday morning, four weeks ahead of Mapes’ trial on perjury and attempted obstruction of justice charges. […]

Mapes told a grand jury in March 2021 that he did not recall being told if McClain did any work for Madigan between 2017 and 2019. But prosecutors contend the “close relationship” between Mapes and McClain, as well as their “consistent communications,” show that “Mapes could not have forgotten the critical role McClain played in Madigan’s political operation.”

* From the federal filing

This evidence demonstrates that Mapes lied in the grand jury when he testified that he did not know what interactions McClain had with Madigan from 2017 to 2019. The evidence reveals that Mapes knew McClain was working on a piece of legislation related to property in Chinatown for Madigan, and that Mapes contacted Madigan’s lawyer after FBI agents contacted Mapes in 2019. The evidence also shows Mapes’ frequent communications with McClain concerning a wide range of personal and professional topics and their close relationship with each other.

* The feds have a lot of audio files to back up their claim that Mapes knew about interactions between McClain and Madigan. There are a ton of examples, but here are some

GX15 (5/30/18 at 6:26 p.m.). This call again is an example of Mapes and McClain discussing sensitive political issues that affect Madigan. It is the first of four calls between the two men on one night. McClain fills Mapes in on a woman who accused then-Representative Public Official B of sexual harassment. At the end of the call, McClain gives Mapes advice as to how Public Official B should address the allegations, and Mapes says “okay.” Contrary to Mapes’ motion, this is an adoptive admission, but in any event it is admissible to show Mapes was on notice of the sensitive role McClain played in matters affecting Madigan and the Speaker’s Office. This call is relevant for the additional reason that Mapes specifically lied about Public Official B, as alleged in Count Two of the indictment. This and other calls show that Mapes is highly attuned to the drama surrounding Public Official B and McClain’s role in mitigating the fall-out for Madigan. This call thus makes it more likely that Mapes was well aware of McClain’s role in forcing Public Official B out of office months later, in the fall of 2018. (There are also calls between Mapes and McClain about Public Official B’s ouster, but this earlier call also makes it more likely that Mapes would not have somehow forgotten those later calls.)

GX16 (5/30/18 at 9:34 p.m.). In this short follow-up call, Mapes tells McClain that “we’re in the midst of all kind of things going on,” including related to Public Official B. McClain offers to share what he knows, and Mapes says ‘let me put you on with the boss. Okay? . . . so you’re going to inform him what you know and go from there.” This call demonstrates as clear as day that Mapes knew McClain communicated with Madigan in 2018, because Mapes sets up that conversation. It also is an example of McClain working for Madigan, helping get information to him about a brewing sexual harassment scandal. Although the call was minimized, and thus the conversation with Madigan was not included in the recorded portion, the excerpted portion nevertheless clearly shows the manner in which McClain was brought in to help with sensitive issues impacting the Speaker’s Office.

Public Official B is former Rep. Lou Lang, who, the filing claims, will be testifying at Mapes’ trial.

* Public Official C is Rep. Bob Rita, who will also be testifying

GX57 (8/21/18). In this call, McClain tells Mapes that he is in Chicago to meet with Public Official C about gaming legislation (which Public Official C will testify about at trial) and that he was having dinner with Madigan. This is yet another example of McClain relaying assignments he was working on for Madigan and describing plans to meet with Madigan. Mapes also asks McClain if “they” had started “Sunday phone calls,” a reference to Sunday review meetings held by Madigan and his close staff in the Speaker’s Office, which the jury will also hear about at trial. Again, this call shows that Mapes is well aware that McClain is doing work for Madigan. Mapes also asks about Public Official B, and if there had been any report as to the sexual harassment allegations against him. The entirety of this call shows how much detail Mapes knows about McClain’s comings and goings, in just one brief phone call. […]

GX12 (5/24/18). This is a call between McClain and Public Official C, who will testify about trial. The indictment alleges that Mapes gave testimony about McClain’s interactions with Public Official C. Dkt. 1, Count 2. The two men are generally discussing gaming legislation, a topic that is relevant because McClain tells Mapes in another call (GX57) that one of McClain’s “assignments” from Madigan was to work with Public Official C on gaming legislation. The bulk of the call will not be offered for its truth but to show McClain playing the exact role he told Mapes about; advising Public Official C on gaming. Significantly, when Public Official C asks how to move the bill, McClain tells him, “let me check with Mapes.” This last statement is admissible as a statement of intention or plan under Rule 803(3), and it is relevant because it shows McClain’s plan to talk to Mapes about gaming legislation.

* Will Cousineau will also testify at the trial

GX13 (5/25/18). In this call, McClain tells Cousineau that he should talk to Mapes about a piece of legislation one of Cousineau’s lobbying clients want on a bill. This is not offered for its truth. Instead it’s a piece of advice, and thus admissible as a “verbal act” rather than for its truth. Cousineau will be able to testify about this call, and the role Mapes played in the Speaker’s Office both before and after his resignation.

Lang, Rita and Cousineau all testified at the ComEd Four trial. None have been accused of wrongdoing. Lang and Rita both received “non-target” letters from prosecutors. Cousineau was granted immunity.

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Looking back at Northwestern’s 2021 cheerleader sexual harassment, racism lawsuits

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Former Northwestern University cheerleader Alyssa Johnson…


* A February 2021 article from the Daily Northwestern

Erika Carter (SESP ’18) never imagined she would sue her alma mater.

As a Black member of Northwestern’s cheer program from 2016 to 2018, she faced unequal treatment for wearing her natural hair, was forced to split up from other Black teammates on the sidelines for “optics” and was told in writing that ethnically Black hairstyles like braids were not allowed on the team. Now in her post-graduation years, she said she plans to take legal action for the racial discrimination she experienced.[…]

Carter is one of many women to detail racist behavior and abuse from former Northwestern cheer coach Pamela Bonnevier. Bonnevier was fired in Fall 2020, but interviews with current and former cheer team members indicate consistent negligence and cover-up from other University officials. The experiences Carter and her teammates voice raise questions about reporting processes and the handling of racism in the University’s athletic and marketing departments.

In an April 2017 email, Bonnevier told Carter wearing braids would impact her eligibility for post-season events and travel to away football games.

“You have to decide for yourself how (getting braids) fits into your needs/wants,” Bonnevier added in the email. “Just throwing this out there.. A wig for events could be an option for you.”

In her second season on the team, Carter said she felt she was given less prominence and fewer opportunities to travel to away games because she chose to wear her natural hair. Carter also said she and other Black cheerleaders were also told by Bonnevier they were not allowed to stand next to each other at games and events because of “optics.”

* That wasn’t the only cheerleader lawsuit against the university that year. Tribune

But early in her first season, the “dark side” of the program emerged, according to a federal lawsuit Richardson filed Friday against Northwestern. In the 58-page complaint, Richardson details repeated instances where she said she was groped by drunken fans and alumni during university-sanctioned events, alleging the cheer team’s head coach required female members to “mingle” with powerful donors for the school’s financial gain.

“It became clear to (Richardson) that the cheerleaders were being presented as sex objects to titillate the men that funded the majority of Northwestern’s athletics programs,” the lawsuit says. “After all, the happier these men were, the more money the university would receive from them.”

During these encounters in 2018 and 2019, Richardson alleges that older men touched her breasts and buttocks over her uniform, picked her up without her consent and made “sexually charged comments” about her appearance, according to the lawsuit, which was filed in the Northern District of Illinois. Richardson recalled instances when the men offered her alcohol, though she was underage, or asked to meet up later, the lawsuit says.

Still, according to the lawsuit, head coach Pam Bonnevier continued telling the cheerleaders to socialize on their own, despite their requests to pair up during football tailgates and donor events. The female students were instructed to take photos with fans even if they behaved inappropriately, the lawsuit says.

* WBEZ in May of 2021

Northwestern University’s athletic director admitted in a secretly-taped meeting just before his Wednesday resignation that he had not been sufficiently sympathetic about allegations of sexual harassment that were brought to him.

A day before his resignation, Mike Polisky admitted during a private meeting with Northwestern student-athletes and staff that he had regrets about how he reacted when cheerleaders came to him with allegations of sexual harassment two years ago.

“I wish that I would have been more empathetic in the moment. … I think that that might have alleviated some of the angst and frustration from some of the members of the cheer team,” Polisky said on a secretly recorded tape of the meeting, obtained exclusively by WBEZ.[…]

In the university meeting, Polisky also said he felt sickened by what he heard from the members of the cheer squad when they came to see him in his office.

“There was also alleged inappropriate touching and different things at some of the tailgates, and what I felt in my head, what I felt in my stomach … again, as a father of two daughters, this cannot happen to anybody. And by the way, our mascot, we came to learn, also had been inappropriately touched at tailgates out on the road. It’s not acceptable.”

* NYT coverage

The lawsuit, filed in a U.S. District Court in the school’s state of Illinois, also contends that the Title IX office violated federal policy by delaying a formal investigation into these actions over a year after Richardson reported them.

In her university thesis, which details the experiences of her and other cheerleaders, Richardson wrote that in January 2019 members of her team met with Polisky to voice their concerns around tailgating. He responded, “What did you expect as cheerleaders?” She added that Polisky had accused two teammates of fabricating evidence when they sent 16 anonymously written accounts of harassment to him and Heather Obering, the associate athletic director for marketing, at the same meeting. […]

Polisky denied these allegations in an email through his attorneys to The New York Times on Friday, as did a representative for Obering. Both have moved to dismiss the case, along with the university. An attorney for Bonnevier did not respond to requests for comment.

Polisky and Obering forwarded complaints from the January 2019 meeting to the university’s Office of Equity, which investigated. Later in 2019, policies restricting hairstyles were removed and cheerleaders were no longer required to participate in tailgates, a spokeswoman for the university, Jeri B. Ward, wrote in an email to The Times on Thursday. Bonnevier’s contract was not renewed in 2020 after she was found to have violated the university’s discrimination and harassment policy, Ward said.

* Tribune in May of 2021

That fateful meeting in January 2019 set the stage for a controversy that rocked Northwestern this month, leading to a large campus protest and Polisky’s resignation just nine days after he was promoted to the department’s top post. Students, faculty and even some powerful university trustees opposed Polisky’s appointment because he is named as a defendant in an ongoing lawsuit brought by Richardson alleging the university mishandled her repeated complaints. Polisky didn’t respond to requests for comment. […]

Even though Polisky stepped down, the difficult questions provoked by his selection are anything but settled. Many in the university community are demanding answers as to why Polisky, a white man involved in active litigation, was chosen over the other finalists, two of whom were Black and one a white woman. Some say it feels as if an old boys’ club drives hiring decisions.

“It’s always important for us to understand when things go wrong, how do we hold people accountable and who do we hold accountable…?” said Tyris Jones, a former Northwestern running back who graduated in 2012.

Jones said he reached out to the athletic department with concerns and ideas and encourages former teammates and alumni to do the same. As a “predominantly white institution,” Northwestern has an opportunity to rebuild trust in the Black and brown communities based on whom it picks for leadership roles, Jones said.

  34 Comments      


Time for some leadership

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I usually try to avoid writing much about local Springfield matters, but this really jumped out at me. SJ-R

City Water, Light and Power’s Chief Utility Engineer [Doug Brown] said the cost of the June 29 storm is somewhere in the neighborhood of $20 million to the utility itself. […]

The utility, he said, is focused for now on returning the grid to the state it was in. “Any discussion,” Brown said, of further improvements, like burying power lines or installing Advanced Metering Infrastructure, or AMI, would be done “at enormous cost and with competing priorities, it would be up to the mayor and city council if we want to proceed in that direction in the future.”

The AMI technology would not have sped up the physical repairs but would have improved communication by automatically letting the utility know about outages, Brown acknowledged.

* WCIA

Right now, the city learns that an area of the grid is down by hearing directly from customers. Other infrastructure upgrades might be too far fetched going forward, though.

“Where do you draw the line, you know, people say, we’ll bury the power lines that’s an enormous cost,” Brown said. “I don’t think that they want to pay for that kind of a rate increase for.”

These storms aren’t going to be any weaker or less frequent as time goes by. So, either pay now or pay later. Some actual leadership would be nice, for a change. Turn the discussion to the possibilities of a bright future with a new direction.

* Flashback to 2009

Downtown Springfield’s skyline is becoming de-cluttered, block by block.

City Water, Light and Power crews have been burying unattractive power lines that run through downtown’s alleys for about eight years.

The 10-year, $7 million undertaking is about two-thirds of the way complete, according to the city-owned utility. Estimated completion date: 2012.

If they can do it downtown, they can do it elsewhere.

  34 Comments      


Lawsuit filed over “horrific conditions” at Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A bit of background

Pursuant to 730 ILCS 5/3-15-2(b), the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice (IDJJ) is responsible for establishing minimum standards for juvenile detention centers across the state. For the first time since 1998, the County Detention Standards were updated in 2021 to reflect current practice. Updates included the addition of portions for the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), and enhanced guidelines for areas such as youth grievances, mental health service requirements, visitation guidelines, educational guidelines, and restrictions to the use of confinement. IDJJ conducts annual inspections of all county detention centers to monitor compliance and offer technical assistance.

Illinois county juvenile detention centers do NOT fall under the jurisdiction of the State of Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice.

And

The Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center serves law enforcement and the juvenile justice system within 26 rural southern Illinois counties.

* From last October

A southern Illinois juvenile detention center is a “a facility in crisis.”

That’s the words used by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice following an inspection in Franklin County.

The full, 15-page report can be found here.

During an August 2 inspection at the Franklin County Detention Center, the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice found what it calls “extremely low” staffing levels at the facility.

The report shows just eight full-time works and four part-time employees were working at the detention center at the time of the inspection.

Inspectors say they also found the facility to be non-compliant in several areas, including personal hygiene, food services and education.

* ACLU of Illinois…

A young person who has been housed at the Franklin County Juvenile Detention Center filed a federal lawsuit challenging the conditions at the facility. The lawsuit’s description of horrific conditions at the facility mirror the findings of a recent report by the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice. The youth, along with several others currently or recently detained at the facility, describe being locked into cells the size of parking spaces for 20 to 24 hours a day, unable to flush their own toilets, and struggling to sleep under fluorescent lights that never turn off. The youth held at the facility also are not provided any meaningful mental health care or allowed to attend school.

These conditions are present in a facility that detains youth as young as 11 years old. Each year, Franklin County JDC detains hundreds from multiple counties across Southern Illinois.

“The bottom line is that the officials responsible for this facility are failing to treat youth in their care as children,” said Kevin Fee, Senior Special Litigation Counsel at the ACLU of Illinois, one of the lawyers representing the unnamed youth in the lawsuit. “These youth are isolated for long periods of time with no chance to exercise their minds or bodies. There is widespread consensus that no one should be subjected to solitary confinement, let alone an 11 year old who is at such a crucial early stage in their social and emotional development. It is inhumane.”

Among conditions detailed in the complaint filed in federal court:

    • Young people are regularly confined alone their small rooms for 20-23 hours per day, and sometimes receive enhanced solitary confinement for days on end;
    • Fluorescent lights in the rooms remain at full brightness for 24 hours each day;
    • The rooms are not sanitary, including many that leak when it rains and others that have significant mold;
    • Youth are not provided pillows or adequate bed linen for the mattresses where they sleep;
    • Water is regularly shut off as a part of an opaque discipline system;
    • Youth must “buzz” detention staff if they need additional toilet paper or to have their toilet flushed (toilets in the rooms are flushed from outside);
    • Young people have no meaningful access to mental health care to deal with their inhumane surroundings;
    • Youth have no regular educational classes, instead being given worksheets to complete on their own.

Nearly a year ago, in August 2022, the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice conducted an audit of the Franklin County facility and concluded that it was a “facility in crisis.” The IDJJ cited a range of problems from extended confinement to the lack of clothing and personal hygiene to a behavioral program that was standardless and vague.

“Our clients all make one thing clear – Franklin County and the leadership of the JDC have put policies in place that led to youth being detained in constitutionally inadequate conditions, and they have failed to organize and pay for the resources necessary to appropriately care for children in its facility,” added Fee. “This situation must be rectified now, so that no 11 year old is locked up in these awful conditions. We look forward to sharing all this information with a federal court.”

The federal lawsuit was filed in the Southern District of Illinois on behalf of a young person (known by his initials, L.S.) and a putative class of other youth detained at the facility. The complaint asks the federal court to ensure that immediate steps are taken to address the harms caused by the conditions and lack of services.

A full copy of the complaint can be found here.

…Adding… A bill was passed this spring to extend the jurisdiction of the Department of Juvenile Justice’s independent ombudsman to cover county detention facilities like the one in Franklin County. The governor has yet to take action on the bill.

  3 Comments      


Fun with numbers

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

llinois hotels pulled in a record amount of tax revenue for the state during the past 12 months, another benchmark in the hospitality sector’s recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic that devastated it.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker today announced that the state collected nearly $308 million in hotel tax revenue during its 2023 fiscal year, which ended on June 30. The figure was up 36% from the 2022 fiscal year and topped the previous record high of $296 million the state pulled in from hotels during its 2019 fiscal year.

The hotel tax revenue number is still below pre-pandemic levels when factoring in inflation, but remains an important financial boost for a state that has leaned more heavily in recent years on taxes tied to tourism and the convention industry.

Statewide hotel tax proceeds fell as low as $93 million during the fiscal year that ended in mid-2021, a drop-off that forced multiple public agencies that rely on hotel taxes to dip deep into their reserves to maintain operations or make debt service payments. […]

Visitation statewide totaled 111.3 million in 2022, the state reported. That was up 14% year over year, though still below the 122.8 million visitors that came to Illinois in 2019.

As noted in the article, the new revenue numbers did not outpace inflation. The $296 million collected through June of 2019 would equal $351.45 million in the most recent available calculation (May) from the BLS inflation calculator. That’s $43.45 million below revenues collected in FY2023.

Even so, the trend appears friendly.

* Sun-Times

Three consecutive Taylor Swift concerts last month helped to break an all-time hotel weekend occupancy record in Chicago.

Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Kristin Richards credited the Enjoy Illinois 300 NASCAR race, held last month in Madison near the Missouri border, with boosting tourism downstate. Rend Lake and Walkers Bluff in southern Illinois also saw an increase in tourism.

The Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association said record attendance at the 2022 Illinois State Fair, Lollapalooza and Suenos music festivals in Chicago and the John Deere Classic in the Quad Cities also helped boost hotel numbers. Having the Illinois Legislature back in full session for the first time since 2020 helped downtown Springfield — and corporate relocations, such as Rivian in Bloomington, also helped increase hotel traffic.

State and local tax revenue from visitor spending totaled in $4.2 billion in 2022, according to a Tourism Economics Report. The report also noted there were 270,600 workers in the state’s tourism and hospitality industry, an increase of 38,300 jobs from 2021.

* Tribune

The record hotel revenue likely reflects higher room rates, however, as occupancy remains below pre-pandemic levels in Chicago, the state’s largest hotel market, according to data from Choose Chicago, the city’s tourism arm. Illinois did not provide statewide hotel occupancy rates. […]

The state’s tourism industry was essentially cut in half during the depths of the pandemic, bottoming at 67 million visitors and $23 billion in spending in calendar year 2020, according to the data. In April 2022, the state launched the $30 million “Middle of Everything” TV campaign featuring Illinois-born actress and comedian Jane Lynch.

* Capitol News Illinois

Michael Jacobson, president of the Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association, said that while revenues have returned, staffing levels and occupancy rates overall have not yet reached pre-pandemic levels, although they were trending toward recovery.

  8 Comments      


Illinois “one of the most backwards states in the nation on everything we know how to measure when it comes to the care of people with developmental disabilities”

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Choate is the tip of the iceberg, according to this story from Lee Enterprises Midwest, Capitol News Illinois and ProPublica

People with developmental disabilities living in Illinois’ publicly run institutions have been punched, slapped, hosed down, thrown about and dragged across rooms; in other cases, staff failures contributed to patient harm and death, state police and internal investigative records show.

The Illinois State Police division that looks into alleged criminal wrongdoing by state employees investigates more allegations against workers at these seven residential centers than it does at any other department’s workplaces, including state prisons, which house far more people, according to an analysis of state police data.

It has opened 200 investigations into employee misconduct at these developmental centers since 2012 — most of them outside of Choate.

The state’s seven developmental centers, home to about 1,600 people, are situated from the bottom of the state at the edge of the Shawnee National Forest all the way north to the Wisconsin border. The oldest operating facility opened in 1873 and the newest one in 1987. They house dozens, and in some cases hundreds, of people with developmental disabilities in a hospital-like setting. These residents have a range of conditions: genetic, acquired from a problematic birth, or resulting from exposure to dangerous chemicals or from injury in childhood or adolescence.

As in other states, many of these facilities were built in small towns and rural areas. Today, they are short-staffed and at times chaotic and dangerous, according to a slew of reports and interviews with workers and advocates. This May, the safety concerns inside the developmental centers prompted a court-appointed monitor to urge IDHS to stop placing anyone covered by an expansive consent decree into any of the agency’s developmental centers.

“Too many residents suffer physical injury, sexual assault and death to regard placement in such facilities as safe,” wrote Ronnie Cohn, the monitor and a New-York based expert on disability services, in a report that was prepared at the behest of a federal judge in ongoing proceedings.

Illinois is a stubborn outlier among states, continuing to funnel huge sums of money into institutional care. Many others have entirely shuttered or significantly downsized their state-run institutions. Illinois has about the same number of people living in them as do California, Florida, New York and Ohio combined. In Illinois, the lawsuit that led to the 2011 consent decree argued that the state had violated the civil rights of people with developmental disabilities by failing to offer enough options for community-based care. The next year, the state closed one of its centers and tried to shut another; that effort, to shutter the Murray Developmental Center in southern Illinois, failed in the face of union and community pushback. Now, the state is making space for 60 more residents at Murray, some of which will likely transfer from Choate.

“This is one of the most backwards states in the nation on everything we know how to measure when it comes to the care of people with developmental disabilities,” said Allan Bergman, a consultant from suburban Chicago who advises clients and governments across the U.S. on disability policies and programs.

We asked IDHS about the new reporting on issues within the state’s developmental centers. Agency spokesperson Marisa Kollias pointed out that the state had announced a broader review of every facility that IDHS operates as part of its response to the reporting on Choate. She said in a statement that the state has worked to “identify the root causes of misconduct” and correct them. Among recent improvements, IDHS has appointed a new chief safety officer, held numerous trainings on how to report abuse and neglect and ordered more than 400 security cameras for installation across all of its facilities by the end of the year, she said.

Additionally, IDHS acknowledged shortcomings in the community care settings that operate under the agency’s oversight. Kollias said that the community system had been financially neglected by the prior administration and noted that Pritzker’s administration has successfully advocated for millions of dollars in new spending for these programs. Funding for home- and community-based care has roughly doubled what it was when Pritzker took office to more than $1.7 billion, though advocates contend it’s still not enough after years of steep cuts.

State police investigations of claims against staff at Illinois’ developmental centers are on the rise: Nearly 70% of them over the past decade were initiated since 2019, the year Pritzker took office.

Of the 200 state police investigations into employee misconduct over the past decade, 161 pertained to allegations of physical abuse and criminal battery; 25 to allegations of sexual assault and custodial sexual misconduct; and 10 to alleged criminal neglect of residents. Four were death investigations.

Of those cases, 22 led to convictions, almost all of them for abuse.

A spokesperson for the state police said the agency could not speak to the reasons for the increase or for the disparity in the volume of cases from IDHS facilities that it handled in recent years as compared with Illinois Department of Corrections prisons or other agency workplaces.

But Kollias, the IDHS spokesperson, said the department views the increase in state police investigations “as an improvement in accountability at the facilities.” She also noted that most cases did not lead to convictions.

Both the numbers and interviews show how difficult it is to pursue charges, even when investigations get underway. In the facilities outside of Choate, between 50% and 99% of residents have disabilities that are diagnosed as “severe and profound”; some of those individuals are nonverbal and unable to communicate in traditional ways. Investigative records show instances of employees failing to report abuse or working together to hide it, or a general reluctance on the part of state employees to share information with investigators. Even when there’s a conviction, state police investigators are not always able to fully determine what happened.

For instance, among the more recent physical abuse cases where a conviction was secured is one from Shapiro Developmental Center in Kankakee, a small industrial city on the outskirts of suburban Chicago. In 2020, a patient was found with U-shaped markings and dark bruising on his chest, back, arms, legs and genitals.

A nurse examined his injuries but dismissed them as a rash from medication. A physician who examined him the next day had a different take: She believed the markings were consistent with someone striking the patient with an object, such as a belt or cord. The U-shaped markings looked like they could have been from a belt buckle, she told investigators.

Police interviewed multiple employees who worked the night shift, but they offered little information. The patient was unable to provide police specific details of the incident. He was only able to tell them a female worker “beat the hell” out of him on the night shift by striking his genitals with an unknown object.

The patient’s treatment plan notes that he needs help managing behaviors that include irritability, agitation and outbursts. One employee admitted to police that she had slapped the patient across the face that evening after she had directed the patient to stop a problematic behavior and he told her to “shut up, bitch.” But the worker denied she was responsible for any of his more serious injuries. No one else came forward with any information.

The worker pleaded guilty last year to misdemeanor battery and received 12 months of court supervision. She was fired from Shapiro, but neither state police nor IDHS’ inspector general were able to determine the cause of the patient’s more extensive injuries.

Peter Neumer, the IDHS inspector general, said his department regularly encounters cover-ups at facilities across the state, which prompted him to push for a new legal measure enhancing the penalty options against those who attempt to stonewall or obfuscate investigators. Pritzker recently signed it into law.

Go read the rest.

  25 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  20 Comments      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Jul 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Governor Pritzker meets with the family of Sonya Massey (Updated)
* It’s just a bill
* Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Pritzker hasn’t received VP vetting materials from Harris, but doesn’t shut down speculations that he’s interested
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Your moment of zen
* Yesterday's stories

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