Reader comments closed for the holidays
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * As I write this, we have raised $44,742 to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for foster kids. I didn’t expect we’d raise that much because we didn’t have the $10,000 matching donation we received last year. So, we should all be pleased at what we’ve done. It’s not too late to donate, though. Click here if you’ve been putting it off. Thanks!!! * Once again, it’s time for our annual tradition of Christmas songs loved by my mother when she was a child. Here’s Frosty the Snowman, Suzy Snowflake and Hardrock, Coco and Joe…
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And the winners are…
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The 2024 Wordslinger Golden Horseshoe Award for Best CapitolFax.com Commenter goes to Stephanie Kollmann…
* Congratulations to everyone who won this year…
Best Place to Gather for Drinks, Etc. During Session Weeks: JP Kelly’s Best Senate Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Dana Hooven Best Senate Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Thera Bond Best House Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Breeann Steinacher Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Caitlin Anderson Best Republican State Senate Staff Member: Bill Schneider Best Democratic State Senate Staff Member: Mary Hanahan Best Republican State House Staff Member: Dane Thull Best Democratic State House Staff Member: Kat Bray Best Statehouse-Related Public Relations Spokesperson: Bridget Shanahan and Becky Carroll Best Government Spokesperson/Comms: Jordan Abudayyeh Best Republican Illinois State Representative: Rep. Jeff Keicher Best Democratic Illinois State Representative: Rep. Lindsey LaPointe Best Republican Illinois State Senator: Senate Republican Leader John Curran Best Democratic Illinois State Senator: Sen. Patrick Joyce Best Contract Lobbyist: Liz Brown-Reeves and Litesa Wallace Best In-House Lobbyist: Frances Orenic Best Legislative Liaison: Wendy Butler Best Do-Gooder Lobbyist: John Amdor Best Statewide Staffer: Anne Caprara Best State Agency Director: Kristin Richards Best Statewide Officer: Auditor General Frank Mautino Best US Representative: Lauren Underwood Wordslinger Golden Horseshoe Award for Best CapitolFax.com: Commenter Stephanie Kollmann
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to previous editions
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Governor Pritzker signed seven bills into law today…
* A little piece of Illinois history…
* Capitol News Illinois | State lawmakers consider Tier 2 pension changes as new session approaches: Lawmakers are tentatively scheduled to be back in Springfield on Jan. 4 for a lame duck session before new lawmakers are sworn in on Jan. 8. “Whether that will all come together in a fashion that is ready for lame duck or not remains to be seen,” Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, told Capitol News Illinois. “I do think we’re closer than we were than at the beginning of the legislative session.” * WSPY | Legislation adjusting weight limits for vehicles with alternative fuel sources part of Benton’s busy spring legislative session work: One piece of legislation Benton has been working on is House Bill 5882, which would amend the state’s vehicle code to increase the weight limit on vehicles that run on alternative fuels. He says one company in his district is looking at rolling out a hydrogen-powered vehicle as a transport between their facilities in Plainfield. * IPE Real Assets | Illinois Firefighters pension fund adds $80m to new infrastructure allocation: The Firefighters Pension Investment Fund (FPIF) of Illinois has continued to build up its new infrastructure allocation by investing $80m (€76.1m) in infrastructure funds managed by Stonepeak and Global Infrastructure Partners. The pension fund confirmed to IPE Real Assets that has committed $40m to Stonepeak Fund V and invested the same amount in GIP Fund V. The moves follow a request for proposal issued earlier this year to select one to three infrastructure fund managers. * Tribune | Attorney for CPS CEO Pedro Martinez threatens to sue school board if they move forward with firing: The attorney for embattled Chicago Public Schools chief Pedro Martinez sent a letter to the sitting school board Friday asking for clarification about whether they will move to fire the CEO by 2 p.m. and threatening legal action to prevent it if so. Any action against Martinez taken Friday would be a breach of their fiduciary duty, wrote Maritnez’s lawyer William J. Quinlan of the Quinlan Law Firm LLC, and raised a host of other concerns, including whether the new board members had the authority to fire him or appoint a co-CEO to work alongside him.
* WGN | Nearly 4 million expected to pass through Chicago airports for holidays: An estimated 3.6 million travelers are expected to pass through Chicago’s two airports between Friday and January 2. The busiest days are expected to be Monday at O’Hare and the following Sunday at Midway. Friday morning flights out of O’Hare were delayed due to a ground stop caused by snow and ice. * Block Club | 94-Year-Old Midway Airport Volunteer Wants To Ease Your Holiday Travel Dread: ‘You Got To Be Cool’: Robert Garrison takes work where he can get it. Busboy. Dining car waiter. Librarian. Taxi driver. Mail sorter. Doorman. House cleaner. “I do the best I can with them,” Garrison said. “You put yourself into it, you like what you’re doing at the moment … it keeps you healthy.” But for the past year, the gregarious service worker, who turned 94 in August, has settled into what he says may be his last job: manning the information desk in the lower-level baggage claim area of Midway Airport. * Injustice Watch | Sheriff Tom Dart skips hearing on Cook County Jail deaths as families offer tearful testimony: Commissioner Tara Stamps said testimony from Sampson and the other families turned the hearing into “one of the heaviest meetings I’ve participated in.” […] “My first question is where is Sheriff Dart? Is he supposed to be here?” Stamps asked jail officials representing Dart’s office at the hearing. “This is one of the times that I personally would have wanted him to be present — to hear the testimony, the hurt of the families who’ve been impacted by the deaths of their loved ones in his care,” Stamps said. * WBEZ | Cook County Board of Review fires aide with criminal background: Board of Review Commissioner Samantha Steele initially defended giving Jon Snyder a job on her staff at the obscure but influential agency, where Steele is one of three commissioners with power to decide property tax appeals across the county. But Steele suspended Snyder in June and initiated an internal investigation after a reporter asked her about his past. And in confidential documents obtained by WBEZ, Board of Review investigators alleged that Snyder “has had multiple violations” of a policy regulating side jobs for agency employees. * Streetsblog | Tribune claimed Elston, Milwaukee PBLs “reduced… vehicular capacity.” Editor declined to run retraction. CDOT confirmed editorial was inaccurate: Except that the Tribune’s claim that Elston and Milwaukee are more likely to jam up nowadays because the installation of protected bike lanes “reduced their [motor] vehicular capacity” isn’t true. The stretches of these two avenues where there are now PBLs have one mixed-traffic (”travel”) lane in each direction. They also generally had one “car” lane in each direction before the protected lanes were installed. So there was no major reduction in motor vehicle capacity! * Daily Herald | A year after Invest in Kids’ demise, Catholic schools work to fund scholarships: A year after the state eliminated a tax credit that helped students from lower-income families attend private schools, Catholic schools in the suburbs are seeking other ways to fund scholarships. Among them is St. Hubert School in Hoffman Estates, where school leaders created the Fr. Mike’s Kids fund to help address a $130,000 shortfall that directly affects the tuition of 24 students. * Taylor Media | Rep. Rita Named Township Officials of Illinois Legislator of the Year: State Representative Bob Rita has been named the 2024 Legislator of the Year by the Township Officials of Illinois (TOI) in recognition of his commitment to township government and community service. * WGN | Kane County authorities deploy new tool to stop fleeing drivers: Faced with the potential for injury and death, not to mention millions in liability, the sheriff’s department here is deploying a new tool to stop fleeing drivers in their tracks. Video of a test shared with WGN Investigates shows a police vehicle get close to a car in front when a deployed cable attaches onto the wheel or undercarriage of the fleeing car. The officer then hits the brakes, forcing the speeding car to stop. * Shaw Local | From Arrest to Commutation: The Full Story of Rita Crundwell: Rita Crundwell, the former Dixon comptroller, committed one of the largest municipal frauds in U.S. history, embezzling more than $53 million over two decades. Her actions devastated the city but also led to a remarkable recovery story. * ABC Chicago | Teamsters say ‘momentum continues’ as Christmastime strike against Amazon enters 2nd day: Amazon said the strike was not expected to impact operations and claimed the strikes were being attended by outside organizers. Kelly Nantel, director of Global Corporate Issues and Media Relations at Amazon, said the company had not seen an impact on deliveries. * Shaw Local | St. Charles water makes splash with 1st place for taste: About 150 brawny men, most of them bewhiskered and some sporting reflective safety vests, packed into Global Brew Tap House in St. Charles Thursday for Kane County’s who-has-the-best-tasting-water contest. Three judges sat at the bar, scoresheets at the ready, each grimly facing nine glasses of water from nine municipalities brave enough to put up their product for what is the Academy Awards of water: the 2025 Taste Test for Kane County Cities and Villages. * WTVO | Rockford continues to climb the ranks as one of the nation’s hottest real estate markets: The ranking comes partly because Rockford boasts the third-lowest median home price among the top 20 markets. Another reason for the boom was due to Rockford’s housing inventory increase over the past seven months, making it the first stretch of this magnitude in 15 years. * WCIA | Macon Co. father accused of threatening school officials with gun: Sergeant Scott Flannery said the incident happened at Argenta-Oreana Elementary School after students left for the day. The investigation revealed that a verbal altercation happened between students on a bus and one of their fathers — identified as 33-year-old Michael Evans — went to the school after. Flannery said Evans demanded the names of the other children involved in the altercation with his child. When staff refused to tell him, Evans allegedly made a threatening statement and lifted his clothes to reveal a gun tucked in his waistband. * Muddy River News | ‘We don’t deserve this’: Employee threatens legal action after embattled Park Board commissioner refuses to resign: The Quincy Park Board approved a resolution during a special meeting Thursday afternoon that censured long-time Commissioner John Frankenhoff for conduct that President Mark Philpot described as “unbecoming of a commissioner.” However, the employee who formally lodged a complaint against Frankenhoff wants more. Marketing Operations Director Marcelo Beroiza said during a six-minute statement to the Park Board that he wanted Frankenhoff to resign after Thursday’s meeting. “If he doesn’t, I’ve been reaching out for some support, and my intention is to contact the Illinois Human Rights Commission and the NAACP, file an order of protection against John and seek legal counsel,” Beroiza said. * BND | How a Collinsville teen found himself performing with country music star Zach Bryan: Rainn Hoelting, 15, of Collinsville was a fan on a mission. A budding musician, he knew country artist Zach Bryan often brought youngsters on stage to play with him on the song “Heading South,” which is about never giving up on your dreams. So, Rainn enlisted his family to help make his dream come true on Dec. 12 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. * New Republic | The Democrats Have a Crime Problem. Blame the Media: A 2022 analysis of media coverage of crime in New York City paints a damning picture of how the news distorted people’s perceptions. Toward the end of the analysis, a graph compares two values: actual shootings in New York City and mentions of shootings in local media, from 2019 to the end of 2022. For most of the graph, the two are uncorrelated at best; spikes in shootings often produce no change in coverage, and coverage sometimes spikes even as shootings remain flat. In 2022, in the run-up to a crucial federal midterm election, however, the picture becomes much worse: Shootings themselves remain almost completely flat, but the coverage of them soars, hitting levels about three to four times higher than during previous periods with similar levels of gun violence. * NPR | Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots: A group of high-level managers at the Louisiana Department of Health walked into a Nov. 14 meeting in Baton Rouge expecting to talk about outreach and community events. Instead, they were told by an assistant secretary in the department and another official that department leadership had a new policy: Advertising or otherwise promoting the COVID, influenza or mpox vaccines, an established practice there — and at most other public health entities in the U.S. — must stop. * ABC | Oops, wrong number! The real story behind NORAD’s Santa tracker: In 1955, Sears Roebuck & Co. ran an advertisement in a Colorado Springs-area newspaper with a phone number that children could call to speak with Santa. But rather than being a direct line to the North Pole, the misprinted number instead connected to a telephone on the desk of the Continental Air Defense Command’s director of operations, Col. Harry Shoup.
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Report: Far-right Illinois billionaires may have skirted immigration rules
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Guardian…
Apparently, the Uihlein’s have such a strict anti-drug policy that, according to the report, they were having a tough time fully staffing some of their warehouses, including in Pennsylvania. Hence the Mexican workers, who are paid in Mexico and allegedly receive far less in wages than their American counterparts. You should really read the whole thing. It’s quite interesting. And even if they’re not violating the law (and I assume they have lawyers who can back them up), this Mexican worker shuttle service the company is alleged to be running is a pretty clear advance warning of the dangers of severe worker shortages if we see mass deportations. Most companies can’t afford such a thing.
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards (Updated)
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best US Representative goes to Lauren Underwood…
* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statewide Officer goes to Auditor General Frank Mautino…
Congrats to both. * Our final category…
Please make sure to explain your nomination or it won’t count. * As Isabel has told you, today is the last day we’ll be reminding y’all about donating to Lutheran Social Services of Illinois to help them give Christmas presents to foster kids. You can give after today, of course. But if you’ve been procrastinating, or have a few extra bucks left in your holiday budget, now would be a good time to give. Please, click here. Thanks! *** UPDATE *** An anonymous donor has just contributed $5,000 to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Many thanks! We’re now up to $43,442. That’s great!!! But, you know, LSSI could always use more. We’ve raised enough to buy presents for 1,738 kids, but there are hundreds more out there. Please, click here.
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Energy Storage Brings Cheaper Electricity, Greater Reliability
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois’ economy is growing and as a result, so is electricity demand. This rising demand is projected to outpace supply, which means higher costs and the potential for reliability issues. The solution? Build more clean energy resources while lowering demand peaks. By expanding small- and large-scale energy storage and renewable energy, Illinois can ensure the economy has the electricity it needs to fuel growth. What’s more, renewable energy is low-cost while energy storage optimizes supply and demand, lowering costs for all Illinoisans. Illinois can’t make a successful transition away from expensive fossil fuel plants without enough energy storage. Support comprehensive renewable energy and energy storage policies; learn more here. https://www.solarpowersillinois.com/legislation-hb-5856
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Open thread
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on?… It’s our last day bugging you, but the fundraiser will stay open! Click here to help bring joy to kids in foster care.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Help make the holidays brighter for foster kids in Illinois…
* Sun-Times | Illinois’ first drive-thru DMV kiosk opens in Lombard: The state’s first drive-thru DMV kiosk opened this week at the Lombard driver services facility at 837 Westmore-Meters Road, offering 24/7 access to renew registrations and licenses, and to obtain license plate stickers. “This creates a better environment for folks who visit our office, and just adds a new level of convenience for people to fit things into their busy schedules,” Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said ahead of Friday’s grand opening. * Tribune | ICC approves amended ComEd grid improvement plan with $600 million rate hike: The decision comes a year after the ICC rejected another grid plan from ComEd — which would have been more costly for consumers — for reasons that included a failure to show the cost-effectiveness of proposed system investments and not fully complying with the clean-energy goals set by Illinois’ ambitious Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. At the time, the utility’s plan projected a fivefold jump in solar power systems, increased demands from electric vehicles and the need for infrastructure upgrades to address severe weather caused by climate change. * Capitol New Illinois | Worried about grid reliability, state officials seek to boost renewables, energy storage: Several experts – including those involved in crafting the state’s energy reform, current and former regulators, and those in the renewable energy industry – are warning that prices will spike this summer and rolling blackouts could become necessary in the coming years. That is, unless the state takes action to make sure enough electricity is available – in the right place and at the right times of day. * Bloomberg | Pritzker Scores $820 Million Green Fuel Investment for Illinois: Avina Clean Hydrogen Inc. will build an $820 million sustainable aviation fuel facility in southern Illinois, in the latest investment as Governor J.B. Pritzker moves to position his state as a center for new technologies and clean energy. The investment announced Thursday will generate at least 150 new jobs, but the company is still working to finalize the location for the facility, a spokesperson for Pritzker said. Avina will get about $38.2 million in incentives from the state’s Reimagining Energy and Vehicles incentive program. * WAND | New Illinois law will establish emerging adult program for young prisoners: The law requires the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice to establish an emerging adults program for 18 to 21-year-olds in prisons. These people can be transported to the juvenile justice center in Harrisburg to participate in therapy sessions, case management, vocational training and higher education opportunities. * Center Square | Taxpayers to buy $19.9 million in electric school buses for Illinois: On Thursday, Pritzker’s office announced the Illinois State Board of Education awarded a $19.9 million grant from the Clean Heavy-Duty Vehicles Grant Program funded by federal tax dollars as part of President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. Troy Community Consolidated School District 30-C is set to get 32 school buses and charging infrastructure. Joliet Township High School District 204 and Zion-Benton Township High School District 126 will each get 10 school buses and charging infrastructure. Six other districts will also get at least one bus and charging infrastructure. * WAND | Integrity in Death Care Act: New Illinois funeral home regulations take effect Jan. 1: Gov. JB Pritzker signed the Integrity in Death Care Act to require an identification system for human remains to ensure funeral homes never mishandle human remains again. Under the law, anyone intentionally violating preparation room procedures and rules could face a Class 4 felony. People engaging in funeral directing or embalming without a license would be charged with a Class A misdemeanor. * Sun-Times | Money, missteps behind the monthslong CPS saga: The costs of even a modest CTU contract, plus a pension payment for non-teacher CPS employees that Martinez has refused to take on from City Hall, are still expected to cause a mid-year budget deficit. A record tax increment financing surplus is helping fill some of that gap. But without an additional solution, an estimated $140 million hole will remain, and budget cuts could come in the second half of the school year. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson adviser told CPS board he wanted CEO Pedro Martinez out by late September: In a Sept. 12 email sent to Jianan Shi and Elizabeth Todd-Breland, the board’s president and vice president at the time, Deputy Mayor for Labor Relations Bridget Early wrote, “Here’s what lies ahead for the Board for the remainder of this term: CEO out by 9/26 … Land contract, current leadership is not on track to getting this done before a strike.” Early’s email laid out a series of “talking points” she said included “board expectations from the mayor.” As her last bullet point under the section for board member talking points, Early wrote: “Exit option — ‘I have told the Mayor that I am committed to landing these items before the end of the term. It is okay if this is a lot to take on. If this feels like too much, we can work on an exit plan.’” * The Triibe | ‘Santa looks like me’: How Santa Larry brings representation to Chicago for Christmas: “When [Black] children come to the museum, they’re not expecting to see me, but when they do, they freak out,” Santa Larry told The TRiiBE. “They say, ‘Oh my God, Santa Claus, you look like me,’ and I say, ‘Yes, I do.’” Since 2019, Santa Larry has been spreading holiday cheer across Chicago. As an additional treat, some of Santa Larry’s youngest visitors have said they would go the extra mile to prepare milk and a full meal to ensure he’s got enough energy to deliver maximum presents. * Tribune | How Chicago’s zoo animals stay warm during cold, snowy winters: A chilly Chicago winter doesn’t necessarily mean the African lions at the Lincoln Park Zoo have to go inside. In fact, as temperatures dip — even as cold as 10 degrees or in the snow — the pride may huddle up on heated rocks in their exhibit to spend more time relaxing outdoors. “They also have access to indoor holding areas in the winter, so if they want to go into a space that’s completely enclosed and warmer, they can go in there whenever they like,” said Dave Bernier, the zoo’s general curator. “We give them the choice, and luckily, they choose the exhibit spaces a lot more than they choose the holding spaces.” * Sun-Times | Dozens of elected officials demand Cook County chief judge make immediate changes in domestic violence court: Almost 30 Chicago-area elected officials — from alderpersons to district councilors — signed a letter Thursday demanding Cook County Chief Judge Timothy Evans move quickly to permanently reassign Judge Thomas Nowinski and begin a review of all pretrial services procedures at the Domestic Violence Courthouse. “Through these actions, you can help to restore trust among survivors in the court system, and most importantly, you can ensure that you are truly doing all you can to protect lives and prevent more tragedy,” the letter states. * Sun-Times | Far-right provocateur Nick Fuentes says a ‘would-be assassin’ came to kill him at his suburban home: Fuentes’ account aligns with a statement released by Berwyn police, which said a man wanted in a triple homicide downstate was killed in a shootout with officers near Fuentes’ home. * Patch | Booze, Cigars Purchased On Elmhurst D205 Credit Card, Records Show: The official was the district’s facilities director, Todd Schmidt, who resigned earlier this month after being arrested on unrelated felony charges in Rockford. From 2020 to 2022, Patch counted $47,615 in personal expenses on Schmidt’s district-issued credit card, also known as a P-card. * Daily Herald | Will County Board appoints Lockport construction company owner to vacancy; forest preserve board organizes: The Will County Board voted unanimously Thursday to appoint Lockport Republican David Oxley as a 5th District board member to fill the position vacated when member Annette Parker was elected county clerk in November. Oxley is a lifelong Lockport resident, who has served on the city’s Plan Commission for 32 years, including the last eight years as chair. He is the owner of Oxley Construction, a concrete and carpentry company. He is married with three children and six grandchildren. * Daily Herald | Barrington plans to spend big to transform village infrastructure: More than $13.2 million is budgeted for capital improvements. That’s nearly $5 million more than the village expects to spend on capital improvements this year, and a significant amount for a village that has a $50 million annual operating budget. One big-ticket item is an upgrade to the village’s wastewater treatment facility located at 302 N. Raymond Ave., behind the public works garage. The plant treats an average of 2.5 million gallons of wastewater per day and more than 900 million gallons per year. * Tribune | La Grange Area League of Women Voters celebrate century of participation: Exactly one century ago, the La Grange Chapter of League of Women Voters was founded, in 1924, by Francis Kidston, and grew over the last 100 years to include 120 members from 12 different suburbs, including La Grange Park, Brookfield, Countryside, Lyons, McCook, and Riverside. Now called the La Grange Area LWV, the organization celebrated its centennial Dec. 9, starting with a proclamation from La Grange Village President Mark Kuchler. * WCIA | City of Champaign plan working to reduce gun violence: The Community Gun Violence Reduction Blueprint works to prevent gun violence, support the community and use data to inform decisions. It’s something that’s been in the works since 2016 when city officials said Champaign saw an increase in gun violence. The plan passed through the city council two years ago. The more than $3 million budget aims to prevent gun violence before it starts. It maps out the root causes of gun violence and the areas of the city that have been most affected. * WCIA | Mahomet community remembers the Masons following triple homicide: As the Mahomet community comes together…they’re also left wondering with just as many questions following the triple homicide that took place Wednesday night. WCIA is working to find answers and bring some clarity to the situation. At this time, Illinois state police is handling the investigation.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $36,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Background is here if you need it. Illinois Commerce Commission…
* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* Bloomberg…
* The Tax Foundation…
* Tribune | After prosecutors rest, defense in Madigan corruption trial calls ex-AT&T exec about deal to hire Eddie Acevedo: Defense attorneys are likely to call far fewer witnesses, but with a break next week for the Christmas holiday, it appears the defense phase of the trial will stretch into the new year. Prosecutors have indicated they will call at least one witness in rebuttal. The alleged scheme by AT&T to bribe Madigan makes up just one of the 23 counts of the indictment, but it has taken up a good portion of the last two weeks of testimony. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois scholarship program aimed at getting more teachers of color faces court challenge: Now, even as advocates say more needs to be done to increase the number of teachers of color in classrooms, the Minority Teachers of Illinois Scholarship program has become the target of a lawsuit claiming it discriminates against white students by limiting awards to Black, Latino, Asian American, and Native American students. Despite the lawsuit claims, numbers show that the majority of the teacher workforce in the state remains white and initiatives such as the scholarship program have made only a small dent in diversifying the ranks. In 2024, 80% of Illinois teachers were white, compared to 85% in 2010. Currently, about 6.4% of the teacher workforce is Black, 8.9% is Latino, and 2.2% is Asian American, according to the Illinois State Board of Education’s 2024 report card data. * Block Club | The Never-Ending Line: Migrants Wait For Benefits That Never Come: The families line up outside the state government office at North and California avenues as early as 4 every morning, several hours before it opens, to secure their spots. […] The families know the wait can be long, sometimes up to 10 hours. And they know it can be fruitless. In many cases, they leave with merely a piece of paper reminding them when they’ll have to come back. When they return, they start the process all over again. * Tribune | Martinez remains mum as alderman, advocates, call for special Board of Ed meeting to be rescheduled: Chicago Public Schools Chief Pedro Martinez didn’t address the controversy surrounding a special board of education meeting called to oust him, instead focusing on congratulating the Luther Bank Elementary School community for earning a rare designation, in being inclusive of students with disabilities as a Special Olympics Unified Champion School. Speaking in English and Spanish to a packed auditorium Thursday morning, Martinez thanked staff for their hard work and encouraged students to continue cultivating a culture of respect. “We need to be treating each other with kindness, with empathy,” he said. “Our children need our support. Our parents and family members need that support.” * Sun-Times | CTA locks down Red Line extension funding before Trump takes office: The Federal Transit Administration intends to sign an agreement that will contractually obligate the $1.9 billion in federal grants to the project, according to an announcement from Illinois’ congressional delegation. U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin called the funding commitment a “significant milestone.” * Unraveled | Abusive cop named in whistleblower suit convicted of assault: A Chicago cop recently found guilty of assault is also the subject of a whistleblower lawsuit against the City of Chicago that alleges the police department failed to address his “history of violence and misconduct directed toward female colleagues.” According to an October 2023 complaint filed by an anonymous Jane Doe, first reported by the Chicago Sun-Times last year, Chicago police officer Marco Torres became intimately involved with the complainant, a fellow CPD detective, in 2022. His behavior quickly escalated to multiple instances of “aggravated assault, aggravated battery, stalking, intimidation, and criminal sexual assault,” according to attorneys representing Doe. Torres was arrested March 14 of this year on domestic battery and assault charges. * Block Club | Bally’s Casino Apologizes After Demolition Debris Spills Into Chicago River: The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, which oversees stormwater and wastewater treatment across the Chicago area, confirmed that Bally’s Chicago and the Chicago Community Builders Collective — the general contractor building the new casino — accepted responsibility for the demolition debris. “A multi-phase clean-up has been initiated by the construction company,” Fore said in an email to Block Club on Monday. “An oil boom was installed below the Chicago Avenue Bridge to collect any flowing debris, and a barge is now positioned at the site to stop additional debris from entering the river.” * Sun-Times | Sammy Sosa and Cubs begin reconciliation: A rift between the two, rooted in Sosa’s ties to the steroid era and refusal to admit that he used performance enhancing drugs, has kept Sosa out of Cubs events and away from Wrigley Field. But on Thursday, Sosa sent out a revealing statement. “There were times I did whatever I could to recover from injuries in an effort to keep my strength up to perform over 162 games,” he said in part. “I never broke any laws, but in hindsight, I made mistakes and I apologize.” * Tribune | Are the Chicago Bulls and Boston Celtics ruining basketball? ‘We just have to play our generation of basketball.’: The main source of this panic is simple. Ratings are down. Fewer fans are tuning into games on television. And never mind that gate revenue and attendance remain steady — this loss of national viewership has thrown up panic flags for fans and executives alike across the league. The underlying fear behind this panic is more intense, more intimate: a sense that basketball itself is devolving into something lesser and unwanted. * Daily Herald | Does Bears GM Ryan Poles deserve to be next scapegoat? Here’s a look at his record: The first Poles draft was 2022 and he actually got off to a great start, choosing Kyler Gordon and Jaquon Brisker with his first two picks, both in the second round. Reminder: The worst Bears mistake this season was letting Brisker stay in the game after a brutal helmet-to-helmet hit against Carolina. The safety has been sidelined ever since. The rest of that draft isn’t looking great. Velus Jones is gone, Braxton Jones made an impressive rise from fifth-round pick to starting left tackle, but still doesn’t look cut out for that job. The rest of that class has one pleasant surprise in DB Elijah Hicks. * Tribune | Amazon delivery drivers in Skokie, six other facilities go on strike: ‘We’re the ones who move the packages every day’: Driver Luke Cianciotto called Amazon’s refusal to recognize the drivers as employees a “ruse.” “Everybody can see through it,” Cianciotto said. “If anybody is an Amazon worker, it’s us. We’re the ones who move the packages every day.” “I wear Amazon clothing. I deliver Amazon packages in Amazon vans to Amazon customers who order on an Amazon website,” said Ash’shura Brooks, another driver. “I just feel like it’s not right.” * Press Release | Former Head of Suburban Chicago Public Library Sentenced to Two Years in Prison for Embezzling More Than $770,000: From 2009 to 2019, XAVIER MENZIES misappropriated approximately $770,715 from the library. Much of the money was initially received by the Markham library from the public library district in nearby Posen, Ill., which paid Markham for allowing Posen residents to access the library and use its services. Menzies opened bank accounts in the name of Markham Public Library and deposited checks made out to the library. He later withdrew the funds and used the money for personal expenses, including mortgage payments, ticket purchases, and auto repairs. Menzies concealed the scheme by routinely misrepresenting the library’s financial condition to the Markham Public Library’s Board of Trustees. * Sun-Times | Far-right provocateur Nicholas Fuentes appears for first hearing on battery charge: Simple battery, a Class A misdemeanor is punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine. Battery offenses are eligible for pretrial detention in Illinois if prosecutors ask for it and a judge makes certain findings in the case, but defendants in Illinois have the presumption of release. Fuentes, his attorney and Rose each appeared for the brief hearing via the live-streaming service Zoom before Judge Shawnte Raines-Welch at the Fourth District courthouse in Maywood. * WGN | Judge rules against Tiffany Henyard’s power grab: Judge Thaddeus Wilson said Henyard’s lawyer chose not file an answer to trustees’ complaint that she was acting beyond her authority to appoint people for key village positions without their advice and consent. The permanent injunction entered this week specifically says Ronnie Burge, Sr is restrained from “holding himself out at the Village Police Chief or conducting any duties.” * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin focuses on innovation, technology during fourth State of the City address of year: The mayor decided to break his State of the City address this year into quarterly speeches, each focusing on a different theme. During the speech on Wednesday, which was held at the Aurora factory and headquarters of Gripple Inc., Irvin said that Aurora has a history of innovation, such as its early adoption of electric street lights, and the city is continuing to embrace that spirit as it heads into the future. “Aurora is no longer simply the City of Lights. We are becoming a city of bytes, bandwidth and breakthroughs. We’re becoming the City of Light Speed,” he said. * WMBD | Peoria’s airport to have daily flights to Denver: United Airlines will have daily roundtrip flights to Denver that will leave at about 8:50 a.m. each day and then return 12 hours later. This will allow passengers to connect to various places out west as well as some international locations. * WCIA | ‘I think I’ve done pretty good’; Mattoon man donates 25th gallon of blood: David Myers has donated 25 gallons of blood over the last five decades. “I was trying to get my five, and then I was trying to get my ten, and 20 was my goal,” Myers said. A pint of blood can save about three lives. ImpactLife blood center in Mattoon says Myers’ 25 gallons can save about 600. * AP | California declared an emergency. How serious is bird flu?: Officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stressed again this week that the virus poses low risk to the general public. Importantly, there are no reports of person-to-person transmission and no signs that the virus has changed to spread more easily among humans. In general, flu experts agreed with that assessment, saying it’s too soon to tell what trajectory the outbreak could take. * Popular Information | Lies, damn lies, and shoplifting statistics: But this year, the [National Retail Federation] announced it would not release its annual survey. What happened? Mary McGinty, NRF vice president of communications and public affairs, claims that “a broad study about retail shrink is no longer sufficient for capturing the key challenges and needs of the industry.” In other words, the survey did not reinforce the industry’s preferred narrative that shoplifting is a growing problem that demands an aggressive state and federal response.
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Illinois Supreme Court: Judges and attorneys can use AI tools, with limits
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Reuters…
From the court’s policy…
Click here for the fact sheet.
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Are we really doing this again?
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * A year ago, the Registrar and the Director of Research at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum voted against approving the purchase of a $15,625 flag, after it had already been bought in violation of ALPLM policy. Purchases above $2,000 must be reviewed by a collections committee in advance. One of the objections raised was the flag’s provenance. In an eerie flashback to the now-infamous Lincoln stovepipe hat, the flag’s authenticity has been challenged. More on that here. * In May, the Associated Press reported that one of the two “no” votes, Registrar Eldon Yeakel was fired by the ALPLM…
* And now we’ve learned that the Director of Research, who was the other “no” vote, was also fired…
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Madigan trial roundup: Defense calls ex-AT&T exec about deal to hire Acevedo (Updated)
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
…Adding… McClain rests his case…
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State spending pressures abound
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Capitol News Illinois…
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small. We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Janet, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Illinois education officials want lawmakers to revise student discipline, ticketing
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* From ISBE’s legislative agenda…
* Related…
* Word In Black | What Illinois’ Ticket Crackdown Means for Black Students: School-based ticketing is a growing concern nationwide, and its data has consistently shown the alarming impacts of such policies. While it’s unknown exactly how many schools or districts use the practice, it’s a particularly acute problem in Illinois. According to the Illinois Department of Education, Black students make up just 17% of the state’s public school population but account for 42% of ticketed incidents. In the 2021-22 school year, Illinois’s Black and Hispanic students received about 68% of the tickets issued at school, even though they make up about 33% of district enrollment. * Chalkbeat | Chicago to change how it flags disruptive behaviors for its youngest students: Chicago Public Schools did away with suspensions in preschool through second grade in 2014 — with one exception. A district official who oversees networks of schools can sign off on a one-day suspension in situations when school leaders fear a student presents a danger to peers and staff. In the school year before the change took effect, schools suspended students in those grades about 2,240 times, including 1,830 out-of-school suspensions. That was out of more than 5,000 times that students were flagged for misconduct under the student code of conduct that year. * USA Today | Young children misbehave. Some are kicked out of school for acting their age: An analysis by The Hechinger Report of school discipline data from 20 states found widespread use of suspensions for students of all ages for ill-defined, subjective categories of misbehavior, such as disorderly conduct, defiance and insubordination. From 2017 to 2022, state reports cited these categories as a reason for suspension or expulsion more than 2.8 million times. * Education Week | What Happened When a State Banned Suspensions for Young Students: A statewide ban on suspensions for some of the youngest learners in Maryland successfully reduced the use of the practice—but didn’t address how exclusionary discipline affects students of color or students with disabilities, researchers concluded in a recent study.
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rich is taking the morning off, but he asked me to give out the awards today… * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best State Agency Director goes to Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Kristin Richards…
* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statewide Staffer goes to Anne Caprara…
Congratulations! * On to today’s categories…
Best Statewide Officer Please explain your nominations or they won’t count. Also please nominate in both categories. Thanks! * A reminder! We’re shutting down for winter break on Friday, but there’s still time to help LSSI bring joy to children in foster care. While we won’t be here to nudge you, your support can make a world of difference. These kids have faced so much chaos in their lives. A simple gift can bring them comfort and remind them they’re cared for. Let’s spread some love and light this holiday season. Thank you for being part of this effort! Please click here and donate if you are able…
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Open thread
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?… Every child deserves a little holiday magic. Help LSSI bring joy to kids in foster care this Christmas—donate today.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Make this Christmas special for a child in foster care—your support can bring joy and hope this holiday season. Donate now! * ICYMI: CPS board moves to oust schools CEO Pedro Martinez. WBEZ…
- Martinez has already fought off two attempts to remove him from what he has called his “dream job” at the helm of the nation’s fourth-largest school system. - Sources have said Martinez wanted to stay until at least the end of the school year. * Related stories… * Crain’s | How would Pritzker’s crackdown on delta-8 affect sales? These states’ track records offer clues.: More than a dozen states have passed laws to regulate or ban delta-8 products made from hemp, a cousin of cannabis that ordinarily contains low levels of THC, the chemical associated with marijuana’s high. In delta-8 products, the levels are concentrated to have increased potency. * Capitol News Illinois | Budget pressures could impact K-12 funding: With budget forecasters predicting flat revenue growth over the next year and continued demands for increased spending in other areas of the budget such as pension costs and health care, members of the Illinois State Board of Education were told Wednesday that they are now in a different fiscal environment. “I do not envy anybody involved in that process because it won’t be a fun time,” Eric Noggle, revenue manager of the legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, or COGFA, told the board. * Center Square | Starting Jan. 1, IL media companies must report 120 days before out-of-state sale: Senate Bill 3592 passed the Senate in April. Sponsor of the bill state Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Rockford, said it requires local media outlets looking to sell to an out-of-state buyer to provide a 120-day notice to the state and their staff. “Private equity firms are coming and buying newspapers, consolidating them until they provide very little local news content with no local journalist and sometimes those newsrooms are shut down as what happened in southern Illinois not that long ago,” Stadelman said in April. * WAND | Illinois Democratic lawmakers, advocates argue housing is a human right: Gov. JB Pritzker signed an executive order last week to tackle the lack of affordable housing across the state. However, some Democratic lawmakers believe the state should treat housing as a human right. Nearly one-third of Illinois households spend more than 30% of their income on housing and the state has a shortage of roughly 290,000 homes affordable for low-income families. * SJ-R | Illinois sees most significant wage drop in the country since 1935, data shows: Illinois nearly 100 years ago could boast the highest national average for an entry level hourly wage, but it is currently ranks close to last amongst other states. Coming from the top spot in 1935, Illinois now ranks 39th. Average entry level workers earn $14.06 hourly in Illinois, but in 1935 they would have earned $15.43 hourly with inflation adjustments. * Bloomberg | Chicago Faces More Fiscal Pain Even After Budget Narrowly Passes: Higher wages, pension bills and inflation are still weighing on the city as Covid-era funds used to help plug the 2025 deficit are ending. That means less cushion for future shortfalls, and the outlook for more state and federal aid is uncertain. Johnson said that he’ll keep pushing for progressive revenue like higher levies on the rich, a campaign vow that hasn’t panned out yet. * Sun-Times | Wall collapses at future Bally’s casino site sending debris into the Chicago River: Looking out her window early Saturday afternoon, Michele Berman noticed something that looked like black-mesh netting across the river, partially blocking demolition of the former Chicago Tribune’s Freedom Center printing plant. Within a couple of hours, she said, a wall collapsed, sinking the netting into the Chicago River while debris and a sizable amount of white substance dumped into the water. * ABC Chicago | Advocate investing $1B on Chicago’s South Side in new hospital at IL Quantum, Microelectronics Park: One billion dollars is going toward healthcare on the South Side of Chicago. It’s a monumental investment by Advocate Health Care, changing the lives of some of those who need it most. * Block Club | After School Matters Opening Huge Teen Center Near Cabrini-Green: After School Matters, a nonprofit that provides after-school and summer programs for CPS high school students, is overhauling a 36,000-square-foot building near the site of the former Cabrini-Green public housing projects. The renovated space, located inside a former Catholic school at 1065 N. Orleans St., will mark a significant expansion for After School Matters, allowing the organization to offer opportunities there for up to 1,500 teens annually. The facility will host classes in STEM subjects, the arts and culinary arts, as well as expanded sports programming. * WTTW | CTA Officially Secures $1.9B in Federal Funding for Red Line Extension: The 5.6-mile extension will add new stations at 103rd Street, 111th Street, Michigan Avenue near 116th Street, and 130th Street. In August, the transit agency’s board of directors awarded a design-build contract for the project to a coalition of firms with extensive transit experience, including work on the CTA’s ongoing Red and Purple Modernization effort on the North Side. * Sun-Times | CTA increasing bus service to pre-pandemic levels: The CTA’s winter schedule adds more weekday buses on 19 lines and additional weekend buses on six lines, the agency said Wednesday. The CTA has been increasing the frequency of its trains and buses since the COVID-19 pandemic sent ridership tumbling. The agency has struggled to hire and retain operators but has doubled its hiring efforts in the last year. * Block Club | South Side Metra Stations Get Accessible Upgrades For First Time In 100 Years: The 79th St./Chatham Metra Electric Line station resumed service Monday, over a year after closing for construction in summer 2023. The station is now equipped with ADA-accessible street-level entrances, lobbies with elevators and new stairs, deck platforms, lighting and signage, according to a news release. * Block Club | White Sox Change Stadium Name To ‘Rate Field,’ Fans Collectively Boo: “There’s apathy, more than anything,” one fan said about the anticlimactic name change. The White Sox’s naming rights deal with Chicago mortgage company Guaranteed Rate runs through 2029. * Daily Herald | ‘It does affect me’: Williams trying to deal with Bears’ losing streak: The Bears fired offensive coordinator Shane Waldron, then fired head coach Matt Eberflus. Still, the team keeps losing. After Monday night’s 30-12 loss to the Vikings, Williams called this season “frustrating and encouraging.” He said he’s encouraged by the Bears’ fight. The frustrations come from, well, all the losing. * Daily Herald | ‘A big, bold undertaking’: Elgin plans to move ‘Tent City’ residents to hotel, tear down encampment: The city’s agreement with Litchfield Motel, Inc., the business operating the hotel at 1585 Dundee Ave., calls for a block of 50 rooms for four months at $65 per day for single occupancy. Provisions in the agreement will provide scaled rates for partnered individuals and those with pets. * Daily Herald | Schaumburg’s 5-year, $412.7 million capital improvement plan envisions no tax hikes: Schaumburg’s ambitious five-year, $412.7 million capital improvement plan includes replacements of village hall and the police station, renovations to two fire stations and the Al Larson Prairie Center for the Arts as well as extensive road maintenance, all without raising taxes. In fact, no property taxes are included among the revenue sources at all apart from eligible allocations from tax increment financing (TIF) districts. * Daily Southtown | Homer Glen Village Board race finalized with 9 candidates for 3 trustee positions: Objections were filed to nominating petitions for 15 of the 17 interested candidates who filed to run for three trustee positions. Pericles Abbasi, an attorney to Craig Carlson who objected to 14 of those petitions, withdrew the five outstanding objections to petitions from Ruben L. Pazmino, Kevin Koukol, John Hayes, Katie Surges and Kyle Surges. Because their objections were removed, they will appear on the April 1 ballot. * ABC Chicago | Teamsters union strike against Amazon to impact Skokie facility amid holiday shipping season: Workers in Skokie will be joining other amazon employees across the country in California and New York to put pressure on the company to reach a labor agreement. All of this taking place just days before Christmas. The unions said it gave Amazon a December 15 deadline to come to the bargaining table and negotiate a contract with better pay and working conditions. * WCIA | WCIA holds blood drive in memory of two former employees: For 10 years WCIA has been encouraging viewers to donate blood during our gift of life drive. It’s in honor of Robert Reese and Dave Benton. Jennifer Roscoe talked to their families this week about their legacy that lives on. We lost Robert Reese 12 years ago, and Dave Benton nine years ago. Both to cancer, both too soon. * WSIL | More than 82,000 deer harvested during Illinois firearm deer season: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources says hunters harvested a preliminary total of 82,496 deer during the seven-day 2024 Illinois firearm deer season that concluded December 8. That’s compared to 76,494 deer during the 2023 firearm season.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $36,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller We’ve raised over $36,000 so far to help LSSI buy Christmas gifts for children in foster care—thank you! Let’s keep the holiday magic going. Donate today to bring joy to even more children in foster care.
* Bloomberg…
* WTTW…
* Tribune | After prosecutors rest, defense in Madigan corruption trial calls ex-AT&T exec about deal to hire Edward Acevedo: After 30 days of testimony over three months, prosecutors rested their case in chief Wednesday in the blockbuster public corruption trial of Michael Madigan, formerly the immensely powerful speaker of the Illinois House and leader of the state Democratic Party. Prosecutors presented about 150 wiretapped calls and undercover video recordings in the case against Madigan and his co-defendant, ex-lobbyist Michael McClain. * WGN | Prosecutors rest case in Madigan federal corruption trial: The only witness to take the stand for the defense so far is Stephen Selcke, longtime AT&T Illinois lobbyist, who testified separately for the prosecution during the trial of former AT&T Illinois President Paul La Schiazza, which ended in a hung jury. La Schiazza allegedly agreed to pay Madigan allies, including former state Rep. Edward “Eddie” Acevedo, a one-time assistant majority leader to Madigan, thousands of dollars in do-nothing contracts. * Capitol News Illinois | Feds set to rest case in Madigan trial; defense prepares to call first witnesses: Though he wouldn’t get a formal diagnosis of dementia until a few years – and one felony plea – later, former state Rep. Eddie Acevedo told FBI agents and government lawyers in a September 2019 interview that he had memory problems. Those memory issues made for confused and, at times, emotionally charged testimony this week when the government called Acevedo as one of its final witnesses in the trial of ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan. Prosecutors are set to rest their case Wednesday while defense attorneys gear up to call their own witnesses. * NBC Chicago | Is the DMV open in Illinois during Christmas week? What to know about holiday hours: Illinois drivers license and DMV facilities across the state will be closed for part of Christmas Week for 2024, according to the Illinois Secretary of State, as well as the week following. According to the Illinois Secretary of State’s list of state holidays, DMVs will be closed on Tuesday, Dec. 24 — Christmas Eve — and Wednesday, Dec. 25, Christmas Day. * WBEZ | How the new Chicago budget will hit your pocketbook: In all, increased fees, fines or taxes on everything from plastic bags to rideshares are expected to yield an additional $170 million in revenue for 2025 — helping to close a $982 million deficit. The hikes helped Johnson make good on a promise not to layoff or furlough city workers, or cut essential services. While his budget nixes some vacant positions from the city’s spending, no current employees will lose their jobs. * Tribune | Chicago Board of Education meeting called, schools’ chief job could be discussed: If the board were to vote to fire Martinez, it would happen in closed session. There is a motion for a closed session on the agenda to discuss the employment of CPS personnel, but it is not clear if the board’s lawyers will move to oust the district’s leader. Anything can technically be discussed in a closed session. * Block Club | Trump Wants To Deport Them. Chicago Is Scaling Back Help. Meet The Migrants Stuck In Limbo: More than two years after busloads of migrants began arriving in Chicago from the southern border, many of the new arrivals are broke, unhoused or facing eviction, prohibited from working legally and unable to return safely to their home countries — essentially stuck in limbo. Yet local government officials have scaled back resources for recent arrivals by closing shelters and ending rental assistance, citing a decline in new arrivals and budget constraints. * Crain’s | How did we get all these McMansions? UIC professor finds their origin story.: Stewart Hicks, an architecture professor at the University of Illinois Chicago, believes he’s found the birthplace of the McMansion movement. In a video he posted to YouTube Dec. 12, Hicks traces the McMansion back to the late 1950s invention of a modest metal plate made to keep roofs solid in the face of storms. “This little invention is responsible for the suburbs as we know it,” Hicks says in the video, the 139th in a series about architecture he started posting during the pandemic. Hicks, who has degrees in architecture from the University of Michigan and Princeton University, has been teaching at UIC since 2012. He’s now an associate professor of architecture and associate dean of physical resources and planning and lives in the West Loop.
* NBC Chicago | Chicago White Sox announce new ballpark name for 2025 season: The Chicago White Sox will be playing in a renamed ballpark for the 2025 season. According to an announcement from the team Tuesday, the ballpark will now be known as Rate Field beginning with the 2025 season, reflecting their sponsor’s name change that dropped the word “Guaranteed” earlier this year. * Daily Herald | Accused Highland Park parade shooter’s incriminating statements to be admitted at trial: Incriminating statements made by the man charged with fatally shooting seven people two years ago at Highland Park’s Independence Day parade can be played in court at his trial, a judge ruled Wednesday. Lake County Judge Victoria Rossetti denied defense attorney’s motion to suppress the videotaped remarks Robert E. Crimo III gave to police after his arrest, rejecting arguments that his constitutional rights had been violated during questioning. * Daily Southtown | Homer Glen Village Board race finalized with 9 candidates for 3 trustee positions: Objections were filed to nominating petitions for 15 of the 17 interested candidates who filed to run for three trustee positions. Pericles Abbasi, an attorney to Craig Carlson who objected to 14 of those petitions, withdrew the five outstanding objections to petitions from Ruben L. Pazmino, Kevin Koukol, John Hayes, Katie Surges and Kyle Surges. Because their objections were removed, they will appear on the April 1 ballot. * Daily Southtown | Lawsuit seeking back rent from Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard pushed to January: Hull filed eviction papers in September, saying Henyard and Kamal Woods owe more than $3,350 in unpaid rent and late fees for the home in the 14600 block of Harvard Street. In an amended complaint filed Dec. 2, Hull now seeks more than $13,600 in rent, damages and attorney fees. The new complaint said Henyard and Woods last paid rent in August. * ABC Chicago | Supervisor Tiffany Henyard warns Thornton Township shutdown could start Wednesday: The threat of a government shutdown comes as a fifth Thornton Township meeting had to be canceled because of a lack of a quorum. The result of Trustees Carmen Carlisle and Chris Gonzalez not showing up. Their aim is to block Supervisor Tiffany Henyard from appointing someone to a vacant trustee position, who could provide tie-breaking votes. * Capitol City Now | The man with two jobs: The answer has not changed, but aldermen continue to press the question: Can Frank Lesko serve as Springfield city clerk and Sangamon County recorder simultaneously? “There’s about 26 pages from the attorney general’s office.” said corporation counsel Greg Moredock. “They will look at each individual conflict, and there has never been an opinion (dealing with the combination of) a city clerk and a county recorder.” * WJBD | Centralia City Manager announces plan to resign: “I’m going to miss you terribly, but you taught me a lot about city management, and I appreciate that,” Allen said to Smith. “You’ve taken the time, listened, and done a lot of things that I asked you to do. You have done fabulously for the city.” Smith plans to vacate the city manager position in January, and will be joining the Crain, Miller & Wernsman law firm in Centralia. * Herald & Review | Decatur council approves hiring of high-powered lobbying firm: The Decatur City Council unanimously approved a two year, $8,333-per-month contract with Mercury Public Affairs, adding to the city’s portfolio of lobbyists to push the city’s legislative agenda and fight to bring more state and federal dollars back to Soy City. * WSIL | Carbondale city leaders look to the future in their state of the city address: “I am proud of our budget,” Mayor Harvey says. “We’ve received these awards for our budget for many years.” During her speech, Harvey shared that the city has not raised its portion of property tax for several years, and talked about its work to invest in the town. * WaPo | How much abuse can a local newspaper reporter take?: On Feb. 1, Tom Lisi took a seat in Courtroom 12 of the Lancaster County Courthouse. He was looking into a possible story on how prosecutors handle criminal cases, a routine outing on his beat as county reporter for LNP/Lancaster Online, which is a daily newspaper of 70 newsroom positions in south-central Pennsylvania that shares ownership with Harrisburg-based public broadcaster WITF. After settling into his seat, Lisi received some not-so-routine attention from a deputy sheriff, who yanked the journalist from the courtroom and inquired about the topic of his reporting.
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Please, slow down and move over
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Fox Chicago…
* Meanwhile…
- Illinois launches campaign to combat teen distracted driving - Illinois State Police squad car hit while at scene of another crash in Downers Grove * Today from the Illinois State Police…
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Energy Storage Brings Cheaper Electricity, Greater Reliability
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois’ economy is growing and as a result, so is electricity demand. This rising demand is projected to outpace supply, which means higher costs and the potential for reliability issues. The solution? Build more clean energy resources while lowering demand peaks. By expanding small- and large-scale energy storage and renewable energy, Illinois can ensure the economy has the electricity it needs to fuel growth. What’s more, renewable energy is low-cost while energy storage optimizes supply and demand, lowering costs for all Illinoisans. Illinois can’t make a successful transition away from expensive fossil fuel plants without enough energy storage. Support comprehensive renewable energy and energy storage policies; learn more here. https://www.solarpowersillinois.com/legislation-hb-5856
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It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rep. Janet Yang Rohr filed HB5923 yesterday…
Click here for more background on Alyssa’s law. * A mobile panic alert system similar to Rep. Yang Rohr’s proposal was used during a school shooting in Georgia ABC…
* Florida passed legislation requiring panic buttons in classrooms in 2020. CNN…
In 2019, the Illinois State Board of Education reported a total of 4,231 public schools across the state. Outfitting each school with a panic button at an estimated cost of $8,000 could amount to nearly $34 million. * New York also passed legislation, though it only requires schools to consider installing the alarms…
Thoughts?
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Roundup: Federal prosecutors rest their case against Michael Madigan
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Just in…
* Sun-Times…
* Yesterday, ex-state Rep. Acevedo was back on the stand. Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* WGN…
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Do-Gooder Lobbyist goes to John Amdor…
Amdor is, indeed, an Illinois treasure. I just love the guy. John also has one of the coolest houses that you have ever seen. * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Legislative Liaison goes to Wendy Butler…
Congratulations! * On to today’s categories…
Best Statewide Staffer Please explain your nominations or they won’t count. Also please nominate in both categories. Thanks! * We’re shutting down on Friday for the winter break. You’ll still be able to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids after then, but we won’t be around to bug you several times a day. So, please, please click here and donate whatever you can to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois brighten a child’s life. Think of the awful chaos in these kids’ lives and the joy a simple gift could bring to their hearts. We’re not trying to solve big problems with this annual fundraiser, we’re simply hoping to alleviate some heartache. Again, please click here. Thank you.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please… We’ve raised over $35,000 to help LSSI buy Christmas gifts for children in foster care—every $25 brings us closer to making their holiday magical! Click here to donate if you are able.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: We’ve raised over $35,000 to make Christmas magical for children in foster care! Click here to donate… But with 2,530 kids to serve, we still need your help to cross the finish line. $25 buys a gift and brings joy to a child this holiday season. Let’s keep the momentum going—Christmas is just around the corner! * WTTW | Waiting for Grace: Incarcerated People Hope Pritzker Addresses More Petitions for Clemency: Zavala is one of more than 1,100 people who submitted petitions for clemency to the Illinois Prisoner Review Board in 2021 alone. He’s one of 535 that landed on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk. […] The Prisoner Review Board said just this year, Pritzker has granted only six clemency petitions. In 2023 he granted 57, and 11 in 2022. But he granted 144 in 2020 and 2021 each. * Center Square | Illinois Senate Human Rights Committee says housing is a human right: State Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, said he called for the hearing in an effort to fight for humane, clean and well-kept residential buildings while addressing the strain of increased property taxes in Illinois, the second highest in the nation. “Housing directly impacts a person’s health, ability to thrive, and generations of families just like my own, so today we aim to address the fact that housing is a human right,” said Simmons. * Sanborn Williams Consulting | IDFPR Hosts Town Hall on New Licensing Software Launch: Secretary Mario Treto opened up the town hall meeting with a pledge to be a partner with license holders, wanting to right the debacles of the past and not just start a new chapter but write a new book on the relationship between licensees and regulators. Treto’s genuine desire to improve the licensing system has already been felt by the music therapists, who have had a direct line of communication with the Department to get every glitch fixed, even something as small as a formatting issue on a pocket-sized license printout. * WREX | Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie has returned from the State of Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Midwest Delegation: Representative McCombie sharing that following the delegation, the Illinois House’s next step is to successfully re-file a resolution in remembrance of October 7th. Adding that once passed, it’ll show as another form of strong support. * Covers | Revenue Plummets in Illinois Despite Record Sports Betting Handle in October: Sports betting operators’ 5.6% hold was the state’s eighth-lowest ever and down from four points year-over-year. Retail sportsbooks didn’t even produce a 4% win rate on the $36.7 million wagered in person. Mobile operators kept 5.7% of a nearly $1.41 billion handle. * WAND | Workers prepare for Illinois minimum wage increase in the new year: “So for tipped workers you know, it goes up to $9 dollars an hour. It was set at 8 dollars and 40 cents, so it goes up to nine. And, for those child workers or those under the age of 18, it will go up to $13 dollars,” explained Jason Keller, the Assistant Director for the Illinois Department of Labor. This is the 7th and final minimum wage increase, with the first one being in January of 2020. * Fox Chicago | Scott’s Law violations on the rise in Illinois, Dan Ryan and Eisenhower are ‘danger zones’: The Illinois State Police is urging drivers to follow Scott’s Law—commonly known as the Move-Over Law—after a troubling rise in crashes this year. With 25 crashes related to violations, 12 state troopers have been injured, and Chicagoland remains a hotspot for these dangerous incidents. * Tribune | Calls for CTU transparency from principals and newly elected school board members: Angel Gutierrez, who won the race for school board in the Southwest Side’s District 8, wrote a letter to Chicago Public Schools officials last Friday asking for an explanation as to why a scheduled training for newly elected school board members this week was canceled. Gutierrez urged the current seven-member appointed board “to refrain from making significant decisions until the new board — both elected and appointed — is officially seated in five weeks.” * Greg Hinz | Will Johnson learn from his budget fiasco?: Overall, this budget process was the bonehead amateur hour, be it initially proposing a $300 million property tax that was a deal breaker and not a conversation starter, moving to gut enforcement of the police department consent decree that is critical to achieving racial justice in Chicago, or trying to pass the budget tab to Chicago Public Schools, Springfield or the business community — anyone except Johnson’s labor allies, who suffered neither job nor pay cuts. * WBEZ | Chicago Film Office leader out of job at city’s cultural department: Deputy Commissioner Jonah Zeiger’s departure, which was confirmed Tuesday by the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, is the latest in a series of high-profile staff changes in recent months at the department. Zeiger — who often greeted the public at events like Millennium Park’s movie series and other film festivals — is at least the fourth DCASE deputy commissioner to exit since Mayor Brandon Johnson appointed Clinée Hedspeth to lead the department in March. * Crain’s | Old Post Office owner nears deal for East Loop office tower: If a sale is completed at close to that price — no guarantee, given many buyers’ struggle to secure financing today for office purchases — it would add to the list of office building sales downtown that have financially clobbered sellers over the past couple years. The COVID-19-fueled rise of remote work has combined with elevated interest rates to hammer office property values and leave landlords with few options to pay off maturing debt. The result: a Chicago central business district riddled with buildings in foreclosure and other types of financial distress. * ABC Chicago | Supervisor Tiffany Henyard threatens Thornton Township government shutdown: The threat of a shutdown comes as a Thornton Township meeting, for the fifth time in recent weeks, had to be canceled because of a lack of a quorum. It was the result of Trustees Carmen Carlisle and Chris Gonzalez not showing up. Their aim is to block Henyard from appointing someone who could provide tie-breaking votes to a vacant trustee position. * Sun-Times | Sheriff Tom Dart plans to scrap decades-old electronic monitoring program over safety concerns: More than 1,500 people are in the program, including more than 100 facing charges of murder or attempted murder. Dart says he thinks the program should be for people charged with lower-level crimes. He’s negotiating with Chief Judge Timothy Evans to handle all of the county’s electronic monitoring cases after April 1. * Naperville Sun | After decades of red, 2024 election shows DuPage County now ‘reliably blue,’ observers say: County-wide, three-term DuPage County Coroner Richard Jorgensen was unseated by Democratic challenger Judith Lukas. Democratic incumbents prevailed in their reelection bids for circuit clerk and auditor while the Democratic candidate clinched a win in the race for recorder. On the DuPage County Board, a Democratic challenger unseated her Republican predecessor, while other Democratic incumbents held onto their seats, leaving the body with 12 Democrats, six Republicans and a Democratic chair. * Daily Herald | Des Plaines joins coalition against hate speech: Des Plaines is the latest community to join a suburban coalition against hate speech and hate crimes. The city council on Monday approved a resolution supporting the Cook County United Against Hate initiative. Championed by Cook County Commissioner Scott Britton, the organization formed nearly three years ago after antisemitic literature was left in residential driveways across northern Cook County. * Daily Herald | Authorities: Two dozen geese sickened, killed by lead pellets in suburban parks: The volunteer managed to catch one and bring it to the DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center in Glen Ellyn. X-rays determined the goose had eaten lead pellets. From Nov. 15 to Dec. 7, volunteers captured sick geese nearby. Some were found in retention ditches off North Avenue in Lombard, at North Terrace Pond in Villa Park, and some at an industrial park retention pond in Addison. * Herald Whig | Quincy Park Board to consider action on Frankenhoff: Following accusations from Trent Lyons made last week as his explanation for his resignation, the Quincy Park Board will hold a special meeting on Thursday to consider action against long-time Commissioner John Frankenhoff. In his statement of resignation as a Park Board commissioner and the board’s vice president, Lyons said the motivating factor in his stepping down was what he called Frankenhoff’s “history of manipulation, bullying, harassment, and abuse.” * WCIA | Central IL volunteer fire departments facing staffing shortage issues: “The last ten years, we’ve kind of seen a trend in people not wanting to do it,” Dilley said. “The last five years, it’s become a crisis, for us at least. And I think for a lot of other departments.” He said right now they have a roster of 10 to 12 people. They’ve tried everything from recruitment videos, sending out mailers to the communities, pleading for help and brainstorming with other departments. But nothing has worked. * WCIA | 23 Central IL nursing homes, rehab facilities fined by IDPH: Almost two dozen nursing homes and rehab facilities across Central Illinois are facing fines from the IDPH for violations of both state and federal law. The Illinois Department of Public Health recently released its quarterly report for nursing home violations throughout the state. Over 300 facilities were fined between $50,000 and $500 for violations of varying severity that were found in the third quarter of the year. * WCIA | Southern Illinois organization temporarily closes meal centers after delays in reimbursements: The organization gets reimbursements through the Department on Aging, but in October, they never got paid and have used up their reserve funding. And when they do get payments, they say they’re often late. “Right now, it consistently runs about 60 plus days behind in funding,” Jessica Backs, the executive director of BCMW Community Services, said. “The program itself, on average is $50,000 to $60,000 a month to run, so it does take a big chunk of change to operate and run the program to ensure that we have staff, food, gas for the cars and so forth, insurance and things like that.” * WGLT | State grant to fund sustainable park in west Bloomington: The city said the project is a step forward in Bloomington’s commitment to environmental stewardship, public education, and residential quality of life. The grant is one of 100 park projects the state is funding with $55.2 million; 29 of the grants from the Open Space Land Acquisition and Development, or OSLAD, program will go to economically distressed communities. * WSIL | Local lawmakers team up with food pantry for free turkey giveaway: State Senator Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro) and State Representative David Friess (R-Red Bud) partnered with Meridian Health Plan of Illinois and Chester Area Christian Food Pantry. On Wednesday, they handed out donated turkeys to more than 130 Randolph County residents at the food pantry’s mobile market. * SJ-R | Possible closure of Boys & Girls Clubs programs in Springfield has families in limbo: More than one parent or grandparent has said they are heartbroken that their child’s Boys & Girls Clubs of America program could be closing because of grant funding that was not able to be renewed earlier this month. Eight programs in Springfield are scheduled to end after New Years, though money raised and matched by large donor could extend the programs to reach the end of the school year. * WIFR | Rockford-area leaders support funding private school safety after Madison shooting: State Rep. Dave Vella (D-Rockford) attended Boylan Catholic High School years after a student shot his teacher in 1983. On Monday, a deadly shooting at a private Christian school in Madison, Wis., reminded him of his responsibility as a lawmaker: “to protect every child in my district.” That duty also raises a question to him: how can private schools stay as safe as public schools? * WTVO | ‘The culture is shifting’ Winnebago Co. overdose deaths plummet: The nation has experienced a decline in overdose deaths, according to the CDC, and Winnebago County is no exception. Overdose deaths in Winnebago County peaked in 2022 at 166, but as 2024 starts to wind down, there have been only 63 overdose deaths. This would be a 57.7% decrease compared to last year. * Crain’s | Marriott acquires cabins near Starved Rock as part of 2025 outdoor recreation push: Marriott International is expanding into the outdoor hospitality market through deals with Postcard Cabins and Trailborn that include the acquisition of a large network of cabins near the popular Starved Rock State Park. The two companies specialize in accommodations tailored to outdoor recreation, and the new portfolio will serve as the anchor of Marriott’s outdoor-focused collection set to launch in 2025. * Tampa Bay Times | Pinellas County approves bonds to pay for new Rays stadium: “It was unsurprising to see the Commissioners acknowledge how important the Tampa Bay Rays and our stadium development agreement are to this community and its citizens,” Rays president Matt Silverman said. “As we have made clear, the County’s delay has caused the ballpark’s completion to slide into 2029. As a result, the cost of the project has increased significantly, and we cannot absorb this increase alone. When the County and City wish to engage, we remain ready to solve this funding gap together.” * WaPo | In online drone panic, conspiracy thinking has gone mainstream: More than half of U.S. adults now get their news from social media, according to data from the Pew Research Center, and the voracious demands of the content economy often influence what’s considered newsworthy and how fast stories develop. Over the past month, as authorities have met the growing drone panic with occasional flight restrictions and scant information, online creators and communities have taken over, rushing to fill in the blanks with theories tailored to followers across the political spectrum.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $32,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Christmas is a week from tomorrow!. Thanks to your generosity, we’ve raised more than $33K to help LSSI buy Christmas presents for children in foster care. That’s an incredible start—but we’re not done yet! Your gift makes all the difference. Let’s make this Christmas unforgettable for children in need! Click here to donate. * Bloomberg…
* ABC Chicago…
Click here for the press release. * Alexi Giannoulias | Competent governance is a good political strategy: If Democrats are looking for a new political priority, we should consider administrative competence and innovation. It’s not very sexy, but in a world of increasing uncertainty, more reliable delivery of basic services just might be something people want right now. For example, for as long as most of us can remember, state departments of motor vehicles (DMVs) have been a shorthand joke about inefficient government at its finest. Getting a driver’s license or updating your vehicle registration has been likened to getting a root canal. When I became secretary of state in 2023, we were under no illusions that Illinois’ DMV could one day be a “fun” experience, but we hoped it might be something less than a frustrating, time-consuming inconvenience. We hoped it might actually be efficient. * Crain’s | Ascension, Prime hospital deal gets green light from state: As part of the deal, Prime will shut down one of the hospitals — Ascension St. Elizabeth, which serves the Humboldt Park and Wicker Park communities — because of low patient volume. It will be repurposed as something more valuable to the community. The health facilities board is slated to review that particular decision in March. Aside from Ascension St. Elizabeth, Ascension plans to offload Ascension Resurrection and Ascension Saint Mary hospitals in Chicago; Ascension Holy Family in Des Plaines; Ascension Mercy in Aurora; Ascension Saint Francis in Evanston; Ascension Saint Joseph in Joliet and Elgin; and Ascension Saint Mary in Kankakee. * SJ-R | Hundreds of new laws coming to Illinois in 2025. Here are 10 you need to know about: Employers with 15 or more employees will be required to disclose pay scale and benefit information in job postings. The change is result of an amendment to the Equal Pay Act of 2003 that was contained in HB 3129, passed by the General Assembly and signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker in 2023. * Block Club | Pricier Checkout Bags, Rideshares, Streaming: Here Are The Fee And Tax Hikes In Chicago’s 2025 Budget: During a post-Council press conference on Monday evening, Johnson defended the bag tax hike and other increases as necessary to continue funding city services, as well as expanding programs like his signature summer youth hiring initiative. “There’s no cuts to services, there’s no layoffs, there’s no furloughs,” Johnson said. “Services for garbage, for snow removal, for lights, those services are still being made available, even though that there are some individuals that wanted to cut those services. We didn’t do that. We protect working people in this city.” * Block Club | Chicago Promised Better Mental Health Care. Shooting Survivors Say They Haven’t Seen It: During The Trace’s second Chicago Survivor Storytelling Workshop, all seven participants said that survivors of gun violence should have easy access to mental health care and support groups — but despite officials’ rhetoric, resources are still falling short. In 2023, when Mayor Brandon Johnson took office, he promised to reopen the six mental health clinics that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel had shut down across the city. […] Getting a foot in the counseling door is not easy Before people can start counseling, they often have to overcome several obstacles, including cultural stigmas. In the Latino community, Rendon said, seeing a therapist can mark someone as “crazy.” Men, he added, often are expected “to be tough” and “let it go.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Joshua Long has led Chicago Public Schools’ disability office for a year. What has changed?: Before Long took on this role, the district’s disabilities office faced significant challenges. During the early days of the pandemic, schools struggled to provide new Individualized Education Programs to students and to update existing plans. The district has also struggled to transport students with disabilities to schools, and advocates have filed several complaints with the Illinois State Board of Education for lack of busing and long transportation times. In 2023, the state found that the district’s restraint and time-out practices were putting students at risk. Speaking to Chalkbeat Chicago, Long reflected on the past year, shared what he’s working on, and opened up about his ideas for the future even as Chicago Public Schools even with tight budgets. * Sun-Times | Mac Properties diverts housing voucher holders from Hyde Park’s desirable apartments, class action suit says: In some instances described in the suit, plaintiffs said they were denied apartment applications or tours of certain Mac buildings once leasing agents learned of their housing voucher. Other voucher holders said agents falsely told them that their desired property did not have any available units, only for non-voucher holders to inquire about the same units with success. * Daily Herald | Why you won’t be able to use Kennedy Expressway reversibles until mid-January: Pavement reconstruction on the reversible lanes went smoothly but the electrical and software aspects of the REVLAC work was challenging, Illinois Department of Transportation District 1 Bureau Chief of Construction Jon Schumacher said. The project included “removing and replacing 90,000 feet of power cable, installing nearly 150 feet of fiber optic cables, six restraining barriers, 120 swing gates and 54 cameras,” he explained. Final testing of the system should start Jan. 2. * WTTW | Demolition of Damen Silos Clears Key Hurdle, as Army Corps Lends Its Approval: Chicago’s Department of Buildings, in consultation with the Department of Public Health, still needs to weigh in on the demolition permit application, but the Corps’ approval was necessary due to the site’s location on the South Branch of the Chicago River. The massive silos — popular with urban explorers and famously featured in “Transformers: Age of Extinction” — date back more than a century but haven’t been used as grain elevators since the 1970s. * WTTW | Community Organizations Work to Combat Chicago’s Food Insecurity Crisis, Grocery Deserts: This year, the state of Illinois began offering grants to small grocers who open stores in food deserts through the Illinois Grocery Initiative. Chicago is also looking into opening a city-owned supermarket, but has not yet released a plan. Until then, nonprofit organizations said they will continue to fill the gap as much as possible. * Sun-Times | Advocate plans $1 billion investment in South Side health care, will replace Trinity Hospital: The new, 52-bed hospital will replace Advocate Trinity Hospital, a 263-bed hospital that’s been on the South Side since 1895. The hospital system hopes the investment closes Chicago’s 30-year life expectancy gap between residents on the South and North sides, Advocate Trinity Hospital President Michelle Blakely told the Chicago Sun-Times. * WTTW | Caught on Camera! River Otter Snapped for First Time in 15 Years of Monitoring by Lincoln Park Zoo’s Wildlife Cams: After more than a few false IDs and several tantalizing random hints of an otter-like shoulder or tail, one of the zoo’s cameras finally clicked at the right moment and, for the first time in nearly 15 years, caught an otter in full view. Twice. Staff spotted the photos of the elusive otter during a quick initial scroll through image files collected during the institute’s fall monitoring “season” — one of four conducted annually in January, April, July and October. […] Still, Chicago is 150 miles from the nearest place where otters were reintroduced in Illinois. The fact that they’ve ventured so far into urban territory is a testament to the health of the region’s rivers. * Courier-News | Elgin council to vote on plan to move tent city residents to hotels, tear down encampment: Elgin City Council members will discuss a proposal Wednesday under which the city would secure a block of 50 rooms at a rate of $65 per day for single occupancy over a four-month period. A scaled rate would be available for couples and those with pets. The estimated cost would be $390,000, which would come from the $614,400 the city has earmarked in the budget to help the homeless. Additionally, Elgin has $400,000 in Safe Spaces, Healthy Minds Affordable Housing grant money awarded through the Kane County Health Department, city officials said. * Daily Herald | Power station being built for Mount Prospect data center, legislative hurdles linger: Meanwhile, the village board at Tuesday’s meeting is expected to approve a maximum $60,000 contract for lobbying services with Mac Strategies Group. Former state Sen. Matt Murphy will be working in Springfield on behalf of the village. One of the issues the village is seeking help with is the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act, otherwise known as BIPA. This legislation would affect data center operations like CloudHQ. * Sun-Times | Amazon workers in Skokie authorize potential strike: Amid the busy holiday shopping season, hundreds of workers at an Amazon delivery station in Skokie have voted to authorize a potential strike as they continue demands for a union contract with the online retail behemoth. Workers are not currently on strike, but a work stoppage could happen any time, said a spokesperson for the Teamsters labor union, which represents hundreds of delivery drivers at the Skokie facility. * Daily Herald | $13 million project to eliminate Buffalo Grove bottleneck complete: Construction included building an additional travel lane in each direction and a road median with left turn lanes. A multiuse path was built on the north side of Aptakisic and a sidewalk on the south. Other elements include new underground storm sewer to improve drainage, concrete curbs, guardrails and a wider shoulder to better accommodate on-road bicyclists, according to the division of transportation. * Daily Herald | ‘Such a force for good’: Renowned environmental lawyer Collins who fought for pollution victims dies: Collins, devoted family man and nationally honored litigator who fought corporate polluters and won millions for victims, died Sunday at age 67. The Naperville resident fought a “valiant battle” following a heart attack last month, relatives said. “He was a big personality, a big presence, and he just wanted to do something to make the world a better place,” Collins’ wife, Meg, said Monday. * Daily Herald | Why Glendale Heights village president could be thrown off ballot: A Monday hearing on a petition challenge was continued for a week so the Glendale Heights Municipal Officers Electoral Board could get a report from the DuPage County clerk about the validity of some contested signatures on Khokhar’s nominating petition. The same is true for a challenge to the petition of Ed Pope, who is also running for village president. * AFSCME | Workers at another Illinois library organize with AFSCME: They voted unanimously to form their union, which was certified by the Illinois Labor Relations Board on Nov. 6. The UFL has been Urbana-Champaign’s public library since 1874. Library employees were motivated to organize by a pattern of unfair and unequal treatment from management. “We were all frustrated, trying to understand why the people who actually make this library run were being treated like dirt,” said Callie Ferencak, a library assistant and a member of the organizing committee. * 25News Now | 800 Central Illinois kids will have a very Merry Christmas: The Baby Fold has served Central Illinois children and families since 1902, offering various services from intervention to post-adoption. Each year, the organization gets to fulfill Christmas wish lists for the children in their program, and this year, they are creating Christmas magic for 800 kids. * BND | Illinois State Police agent accused of hitting Swansea teen’s car and leaving scene: Shiloh Police Department records show that Sgt. Chris Flynn cited Feix on charges of disregarding a traffic signal and leaving the scene. In a police interview shortly after the accident, Feix reportedly told Flynn his grandmother was sick, and he was headed to see her in west Belleville when he “tapped somebody” at the intersection of Hartman Lane and Thouvenot Lane, which becomes Frank Scott Parkway. * ESPN | MLB study identifies factors for rise in pitching injuries: The study identified problems occurring at both the professional and amateur levels after interviewing over 200 people within the industry, including “former professional pitchers, orthopedic surgeons, athletic trainers, club officials, biomechanists, player agents, amateur baseball stakeholders, and other experts in pitcher development.” The study made broad recommendations — including potential rule changes — to address the increase in pitching injuries. MLB, however, said the study was just the first step in a process which needs even more examination.
* ProPublica | A Coast Guard Commander Miscarried. She Nearly Died After Being Denied Care: There’s also no exception for catastrophic or fatal fetal anomalies. In such cases, service members either have to pay out of pocket for abortions or carry to term fetuses that won’t survive outside the womb. Tricare does allow abortions in cases like Nakagawa’s, in which the fetus has no heartbeat. But even then, some doctors who treat military service members say that Tricare requires more documentation and takes longer to approve these procedures than other insurers, putting women at risk.
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Pritzker dragged into Trump’s latest media lawsuit
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Daily Beast…
The alleged creation of an alleged “false narrative of inevitability for Harris” allegedly involved Gov. JB Pritzker. * From the lawsuit…
* The “stray tweet” referenced above… ![]() * Back to the lawsuit…
I’ve asked the Pritzker campaign for comment and I’ll update with any response.
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best In-House Lobbyist goes to a relative newbie: Frances Orenic at the IL AFL-CIO…
* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Contract Lobbyist is a tie between two commenter favorites: Liz Brown-Reeves…
* And Litesa Wallace…
Congratulations! * On to today’s categories…
Best Legislative Liaison Remember to try and nominate in both categories and remember to explain your nominations or they won’t count. Thanks. * I breathed a sigh of relief when we reached $30,000 yesterday to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Unlike last year, we haven’t had a wealthy person issue a matching donation challenge. But, we’re up to $33,320 as I write this. Christmas is fast approaching. And our annual winter break is even closer than that. So, please, click here and do what you can to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy presents for those kids. Thanks!
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Preckwinkle: ‘We have a system, unfortunately, that benefits [property] tax appeal lawyers’
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Cook County has a little over 40 percent of the state’s population, so it’s economic health is very important. Property taxes, particularly commercial property taxes, can play a big role in that health, or lack thereof. The county commissioned a study to take a look at its property tax system. The commercial system was looked at first. The full study is here. More info is here. From a press release…
* Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle was on WBEZ recently and summed up another part of the problem…
More on that particular aspect…
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Roundup: Ex-state Rep. Acevedo takes the stand in Madigan corruption trial (Updated)
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Sun-Times federal courts reporter Jon Seidel…
* Tribune…
…Adding… The prosecution plans to rest their case later today…
* More…
* Sun-Times | ‘Did you bring your glasses today sir?’ Testimony of ex-state Rep. Edward Acevedo gets testy: By reminding Acevedo of his failure to bring his glasses to court on Monday — which drew the ire of the judge — Bhachu set the tone for what would be a rapid-fire series of questions about Acevedo’s memory and how his testimony in Madigan’s trial differed from what he told a federal grand jury under oath two years ago. Acevedo, meanwhile, has been diagnosed with dementia and a brain tumor, and his testimony is sure to be framed by the defense as unreliable.
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* HB5841’s synopsis…
* Tribune…
Thoughts?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Open thread
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois… Don’t forget! We’ve made great progress, raising $32,520 so far—but there’s still more to do to support the incredible work of LSSI this holiday season. Your generosity helps bring hope, care, and joy to families who need it most. Click here to donate.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller We’ve raised $32,520 so far—enough for 1,300 gifts! But with 2,530 kids counting on us, we still need your help to close the gap. Click here to donate. * ICYMI: After weeks of wrangling, Johnson wins narrow passage of his $17.1B budget. Crain’s…
- A separate vote on city spending, revised downward from $17.3 billion, was approved 27-to-23. -Johnson also looked ahead, pledging to find the progressive revenue that has thus far escaped his grasp. He repeatedly mentioned working with state leaders to take a second run at imposing a graduated income tax at the state level. * Related stories… ∙ Block Club: City Council Passes 2025 Budget That Avoids Property Tax Hike ∙ Tribune: Aldermen finally pass Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 Chicago budget ∙ Sun-Times: City Council finally passes Johnson’s $17.3B budget — with no property tax hike * BND | Metro-east mobile home parks bought by outside investment firm leave tenants ‘suffering’: Residents of multiple local mobile home parks purchased by Homes of America have been living with leaking roofs, mold and pests and going without heating or cooling because they say the company is deferring needed maintenance and leaving tenants feeling ignored, while also raising the costs to live in what were once affordable homes. Their complaints and living conditions were detailed in interviews, as well as a number of lawsuits and government inspection reports. * Streetsblog | Illinois could help beat the transit fiscal cliff by shifting federal funding from highways to public transportation: “Every governor in the U.S. has the opportunity to move money towards public transportation that they have already received from the Bipartisan Infrastructure law,” Levin explained. He noted that in November, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro moved $153 million in BIL money from highway funding towards SEPTA, Philadelphia’s transit authority. “We think Illinois has an opportunity to do the same.” * KHQA | Illinois law requires employers to disclose pay scale and benefits in job postings by 2025: The Pay Transparency Law takes effect January 1, 2025, in Illinois. This law requires pay scale and benefit information in job postings. The Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) is reminding job seekers and employers that, effective January 1, 2025, all job postings made by employers with 15 or more employees will need to include pay scale and benefit information. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ presidential electors to meet Tuesday to cast votes for Harris: After Tuesday’s ceremony at the Statehouse, the electors’ ballots will be sent to the president of the U.S. Senate, where they will be opened and counted during a joint session of Congress on Jan. 6. Since the vice president serves as president of the Senate, that means Harris will have the responsibility to open the ballots and declare her opponent, Trump, the winner. * Press Release | Eliot Clay Selected as New AISWCD Executive Director: The Association of Illinois Soil & Water Conservation Districts (AISWCD) is pleased to announce the selection of Eliot Clay as its new Executive Director. Clay, a seasoned policy leader with deep expertise in agriculture, conservation and environmental issues, brings a wealth of experience to the organization. Clay comes to the AISWCD from the Illinois Environmental Council (IEC), where he led their policy agenda on agriculture, conservation and on how natural and working lands are utilized in Illinois. * Chicago Business Journal | Intersect Illinois’ new CEO Christy George unveils her 2025 goals: Among the things Intersect Illinois, a statewide economic development organization, seeks to do next year is recruit more businesses to the state and help local businesses expand their footprint. Those are some of the goals Christy George, Intersect’s president and CEO, said she hopes to achieve after being hired in November to head up the nonprofit. * Pantagraph | Illinois Farm Bureau launches beer collaboration with Destihl: Illinois Farm Bureau, originally known as the Illinois Agricultural Association, calls Roots Lager a toast to the hard-working family farmers across Illinois “who feed our communities and protect our environment, the organization said in a news release. “We are always looking for fun, innovative ways to tell people about the value of an Illinois Farm Bureau membership,” said IFB President Brian Duncan in a statement. “Illinois Farm Bureau gives its members an advantage through impactful advocacy, trusted information and meaningful development to support their careers and Illinois farm families.” * Chalkbeat Chicago | Mayor Johnson announces 10 of 11 appointees for new Chicago Board of Education: Mayor Brandon Johnson picked 10 of 11 people Monday to round out the city’s new half-elected, half-appointed school board — including some who ran unsuccessfully in Chicago’s first school board elections this November. The new board will be sworn in Jan. 15, 2025, and will include 10 people who won in November. State law required the mayor choose the other 11 people, including a board president, by Monday. * Sun-Times | Mayor appoints new members to fill CPS school board: Johnson’s 11 appointees are led by new school board president Sean Harden, a consulting executive who worked as an executive assistant to former Mayor Richard M. Daley in the mid 2000s, then for CPS as deputy CEO for community affairs from 2009 to 2011 under then-schools chief Ron Huberman. Since then, he has been involved in real estate development, community revitalization and workforce development organizations. * Block Club | CPS Shares Plan To Keep Open 5 Of 7 Acero Charter Schools Due To Close: The district’s recommendation came after nearly two-and-a-half hours of public comment at Thursday’s Board of Education meeting, as teachers and families pleaded with the district to help save the seven campuses. * Crain’s | Columbia College launches layoffs, course restructuring as deficit looms: Columbia College Chicago’s board of trustees today approved a plan to restructure the school’s course offerings, which will include elimination of up to 25 full-time faculty positions and some programs and offerings, as the school tries to close a $34 million deficit it recorded in fiscal year 2024. * Crain’s | Harris Poll: Chicagoans don’t want to pay more taxes or have services cut: Taxes and fees topped Cook County residents’ list of policy concerns in our poll, with 66% citing the issue — that even beat public safety, which only 55% named. The two issues were virtually tied among city dwellers specifically (with 66% citing public safety, and 65% citing taxes and fees), but that only underscores the extent to which it is at the front of public consciousness. * Tribune | Chicago Stars and Sky make the case for equality and ‘drive toward change’ in a stadium public funding bill hearing: Chicago Stars President Karen Leetzow wants to further the conversation and education about equity in women’s sports. As the Stars navigate building a training center and venue, Leetzow and other key figures within the Chicago women’s soccer and basketball scene finally had an opportunity to address equality in public funding to Illinois state representatives. * Sun-Times | Bears keep heading south in NFC North as Vikings blast them 30-12: The Bears dropped their eighth consecutive game Monday night — this time predictably getting trucked 30-12 by the Vikings in a nationally televised game — to tie the second-longest losing streak in franchise history. When they fell behind 27-6 with 10 minutes left, Williams had completed 14 of 23 passes for 157 yards with no touchdowns for an 81.3 passer rating. The Bears (4-10) have a ton of problems, but they’re not going anywhere with him playing like that. * WTTW | Start Sharpening Your Puns, Chicago. Annual ‘Name a Snowplow’ Contest Is Now Underway: Submissions — limited to 50 characters or less — are due by Jan. 4 or whenever entries hit 20,000, whichever comes first. (Click here * Block Club | Christkindlmarket Is The Most Overcrowded Holiday Market In The US, Survey Says: Last year, 1.3 million visitors passed through the Daley Plaza Christkindlmarket, while 480,000 people visited the Wrigley Field Christkindlmarket, according to market organizers. The market had a record-breaking year for attendance in 2023 across its three markets in the Loop, Lakeview and Aurora. * Daily Herald | ‘Matlock’ moment sinks candidate’s Elk Grove Village board bid: Elk Grove Village’s spring village board election will be uncontested after trustee candidate Jacob Glimco was tossed from the ballot Monday for not having enough valid signatures on his nominating petitions. The village electoral board — a rarely-constituted panel composed of Mayor Craig Johnson, Village Clerk Lorrie Murphy and Trustee Chris Prochno — formally invalidated three signatures and sustained one, during a hearing Monday afternoon on fellow first-time candidate Keith Lasken’s objection to Glimco’s nomination. * Sun-Times | Suburban pizzeria owner gets 4 years for largest sales tax evasion in state history, prosecutors say: Cirrincione, 60, pleaded guilty on Nov. 12 to a felony count of continuing a financial criminal enterprise. Prosecutors accused him of failing to report over $104 million in income from a chain of family-owned pizza restaurants and businesses in Chicago and the suburbs. * SJ-R | Crouch: Merit commission part of new hiring process for sheriff’s department: Among the most pertinent hiring changes under Crouch are a sheriff’s merit commission and a mandate that investigators review records in person if an applicant worked at another law enforcement agency. Those changes come as the U.S. Department of Justice last month launched an investigation into the sheriff’s department and other county offices. The offices had to comply in turning over records by Dec. 14. * Herald Whig | Airline reliability key for new EAS provider: Southern Airways Express, the city’s current provider, promised it would expand Quincy’s air traffic from the 10-12,000 passengers it got annually under Cape Air and SkyWest Airlines up to 20,000 annually. Instead, complaints of unreliability that was first attributed to pilot shortages, then weather and mechanical failures and finally fleet shortages reduced traffic to 4,000. * PJ Star | Comedy icon Chevy Chase dines at longtime Peoria steakhouse during visit: Comedy icon Chevy Chase – who starred as Clark Griswold – hopefully enjoyed a meal with fewer mishaps when he and his family visited Jim’s Steakhouse in Downtown Peoria this past weekend. * The Atlantic | The Technology That Actually Runs Our World: In 2024, culture is boring and stale due to the algorithms calling the shots on what gets produced and praised—or so the critics say. The New Yorker staff writer Kyle Chayka wrote an entire book about how Big Tech has successfully “flattened culture” into a series of facsimile coffee shops and mid-century-modern furniture. The critic Jason Farago argued in The New York Times Magazine that “the plunge through our screens” and “our submission to algorithmic recommendation engines” have created a lack of momentum. Pinning the blame on new inventions isn’t a fresh argument either: In a 1923 essay, Aldous Huxley pointed to the ease of cultural production, driven by a growing middle-class desire for entertainment, as a major culprit for why mass-market books, movies, and music were so unsatisfying.
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $32,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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