Afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Sun-Times…
The governor also acknowledged the Illinois State Police is on alert for synagogues and gathering places for Jewish people across the state. He said there is no immediate threat that the FBI or law enforcement has detected.
“But they are remaining vigilant, as should all of you,” Pritzker said.
* WBBM Radio…
As the backer of the new state law penalizing book bans in Illinois, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias says he is getting death threats just like some library officials have.
Giannoulias says it’s abhorrent that people are making threats against libraries because they have books on their shelves that some find objectionable. The new law he proposed withholds state grants to libraries that agree to ban books.
Now, he’s getting threats, too, Giannoulias said at a Union League Club of Chicago luncheon Tuesday.
* Click here to check out the replies…
* Bailey supported Donald Trump’s preferred candidate Jim Jordan…
* During last night’s University of Chicago Institute of Politics event, Gov. Pritzker was asked by the moderator: “There’s a sense that blue states are getting more and more progressive and red states are shifting in the other direction, getting more and more deeply conservative. Do you feel like we are at a point now where we are in essence living in two different Americas?”…
The great sort, as we’ve seen. Look, I do think that there are people who are choosing to leave places like Texas and Florida, which are taking away peoples’ rights. I mean, if you’re a parent of a transgender child, why would you stay in Texas? Why would you stay in Florida? If you’re a woman who’s seeking to exercise her reproductive health rights, why would you stay in Texas or Florida? And we can name lots of other states like that right now. Missouri or Iowa. The fact is that I do think it’s important for us to make the case to people that they should move to our state. But here’s what I would say to you. When you say, well, the red states are moving red and the blue states are moving bluer. I mean, does anybody think Georgia is getting redder? I don’t think so. Does anybody think Texas is getting redder? I don’t think so. And in fact, those two are great examples of a real shift that’s happening in the South, where if we can protect voting rights in those states, and many other Southern states have excluded people of color or tried their best to do that. And there have been case after case after case that’s been brought to protect their rights. And the more we do that, the more we’re going to see people step up and go vote. And believe me when I tell you that across the South that there are an awful lot of Democrats who, if they show up at the polls, we will win.
Please pardon all transcription errors.
* There’s a tendency among some in the Washington, DC press corps to blame Democrats for Republicans moving so far to the right, as if Republican voters and the people they elect have no personal agency. The Washington Post followed in that tradition over the weekend with an Illinois-related piece…
Illinois Democrats drew new maps. The changes pushed the GOP to the right.
The governor was asked about that as well last night…
I want to have you pay attention to one really important thing. We did not create the problem that Republicans are having now. They are extremists. Mary Miller, who is a member of that crazy caucus, and is a Representative here, US representative here in Illinois, legitimately beat another congressperson to win the seat. He didn’t run as good a campaign. Donald Trump was very popular in the area and chose to endorse her over the other Republican in that primary. That you know, that challenge is happening with Republicans all over the country. And they’re the ones who have this problem. I mean, they, like I said, there’s a fever in the Republican Party and primaries, you’re seeing it. There’s a race going on in Southern Illinois right now between incumbent Republican Mike Bost and his Republican opponent Darren Bailey. And I think one might say that what is going on here, this is the Republicans eating each other alive. So, that article, I want you to look at the chart that’s in the middle of that article. That chart shows the states that that they said were gerrymandered. You know, how many of them were Republican gerrymanders versus Democratic gerrymanders? It was like three to one Republicans over Democrats. So this is a national problem. If you’re going to solve redistricting, and the problem of redistricting, you have to do it at the national level. It cannot be done state by state because we would be unilaterally disarming.
The chart…
Deputy Gov. Andy Manar also commented on the WaPo piece…
And the idea that congressional districts in rural America should be molded around the (mostly Republican) incumbents that occupy them to save Republican Party from itself is so DC.
Your thoughts?
* Maybe now Bloomberg will stop its incessant claims about how Johnson had proposed a tax on electronic trades. Tribune…
But the vast majority of Johnson’s economic agenda that he laid out during his campaign and entailed a bundle of new taxes was not included in next year’s budget proposal. Those campaign plans, which were met with trepidation from the business class, included reinstating a $4-per-employee corporate head tax on large companies, boosting the jet fuel levy, instituting a charge on securities trades and increasing the hotel tax. […]
Closing the gap will entail Johnson taking a record $434 million from tax-increment financing funds, $39 million more than last year while $50 million more will come from the previous year’s surplus. Taking money from TIFs is a tactic previous mayors have used that has been controversial because it is a one-time fix.
The administration is also counting on an additional $112.6 million in “operational efficiencies within our departments as we look towards service deliveries without service cuts,” his budget director Annette Guzman told reporters in a Tuesday briefing. Another $89.2 million will be saved via bond refinancing, and $41.5 million will be trimmed from personnel expenses on health care management.
In an unexpected prediction, the city also is projecting $186.8 million more in revenue, mostly from local taxes, than it previously indicated while another $35 million in funds will come from revenue enforcement collections.
* Center Square gonna Center Square…
Police union president: Chicago crime ‘getting worse, not better’ […]
Catanzara said numbers may show crime is down in some areas, but perception is everything.
“We are taking suggestions and recommendations on what should be done because it is getting worse, not better,” Catanzara said. “Violent crime may be down, but the feeling of being less safe in this city is prevalent.”
* Tim Mapes has been reaching out to old friends and acquaintances asking them to send character letters to his judge ahead of his sentencing hearing. Click here to read it.
* Isabel’s roundup…
* Sun-Times | Illinois Senator Invites South Siders To Auburn Gresham Town Hall To Discuss Migrant Crisis: Preston will host the town hall 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at Auburn Gresham’s Healthy Lifestyle Hub, 839 W. 79th St. Neighbors can share their feedback and learn more about “this predominant issue,” Preston’s office said in a news release.
* Block Club | Man Charged With Shooting Migrants Outside Police Station: Anthony Evans, 25, was arrested at the scene and charged with eight felony counts, including two for aggravated battery and two for aggravated DUI, police said.
* Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson gives budget address — here’s what to know on how he’ll spend on migrants, crime, mental health: The $16.6 billion 2024 city budget Mayor Brandon Johnson unveiled Wednesday will “begin the critical investments necessary” to deliver on his campaign slogan to “build a better, stronger Chicago.” Supporters also must wait to shift the tax burden to businesses and wealthy Chicagoans.
* Scott Holland | Walgreens debit card receipt at center of larger legal question: When is a crime a crime: When a law is broken? When the act is proven? When there is a victim? These and other big picture questions loom over a case heading to the Illinois Supreme Court. The litigation in question exemplifies how one person’s concerns can balloon until they influence or alter statewide policy.
* Crain’s | NASCAR, city still negotiating second street race deal: Mayor Brandon Johnson announced a new and improved deal with NASCAR last week to host the second Street Race event in downtown Chicago next July, but neither party has signed an agreement yet. The city would have gone public once it finalized negotiations, but NASCAR wanted to announce its racing schedule, according to a city official. The news came on the heels of an economic impact report on the event, conducted by the Sports Industry Research Center at Temple University and commissioned by the city’s tourism bureau, that found the race generated $108.9 million for the city. That’s about one-fourth of a Lollapalooza and below NASCAR’s own projected economic impact of $113.8 million.
* WCIA | Springfield Fire Dept. welcomes first Black female firefighter: When Springfield Fire Chief Ed Canny told Jackson, she didn’t believe it. Once it settled in, she thought about why it could be the case. Jackson said that barriers don’t exist within the department itself, and that it’s the perception built over years.
* Sun-Times | South Side cancer rates are among Chicago’s highest. The community needs more care options.: UChicago Medicine recently announced an $815 million project to build a state-of-the-art cancer facility. South Siders need more health care institutions to pay attention to Black patients’ needs.
* WJOL | Will County EMA Director Appointed to Lead State Advisory Committee: Allison Anderson, Will County Emergency Management Agency (EMA) Director, has been appointed Co-Chair of the State of Illinois Homeland Security Advisory Council’s Emergency Management Committee. In her role, she will be collaborating with experts to shape emergency preparedness strategies at the state and local level.
* WREX | Stateline Judge Joe McGraw Will Run For Illinois’ 17th Congressional District: In a statement to 13 WREX he said, “I’ve dedicated my life to law and order and serving the people of Illinois. I can no longer sit by and watch our country and our state go in the wrong direction. There’s something wrong when big-city liberals would rather demonize honest cops than crack down on criminals, when politicians in Washington care more about illegal immigrants than the safety and security of our own citizens, and when the exporting of good manufacturing jobs, combined with record inflation, crushes families’ economic viability. Eric Sorensen is part of the problem; he votes with Biden’s failed agenda nearly 100% of the time. In Congress, I’ll fight for our hardworking families and stand up to the out-of-touch Biden agenda.”
* Crain’s | Lori Lightfoot joins board of national LGBTQ PAC: The Washington, D.C.,-based group works to put more LGBTQ-identifying people in public leadership roles. According to the organization’s website, the board of directors oversees operations and guides its mission.
* Bloomberg | Walgreens names health care vet as next CEO: Tim Wentworth, the former CEO of pharmacy-benefits manager Express Scripts who led its 2018 merger with Cigna Group, succeeds Rosalind Brewer, a longtime retail executive whose 2 1/2-year tenure saw the shares lose half their value. Alongside restocking a depleted C-suite, Wentworth will take on managing initiatives such as Walgreens’ move to open hundreds of doctors’ offices in its stores. The appointment will take effect Oct. 23, when Wentworth will also join the company’s board.
* WMBD | Central Illinois Ameren linemen to compete in international competition: “The rodeo is all about our lineworkers competing to the best of their abilities in a safe manner,” said Craig Gilson, vice president of electric operations for Ameren Illinois. “It also gives family members an up-close look at what it takes to do this type of work on an everyday basis.”
* SJ-R | City gets sizable federal grant to plant trees in wake of storm; SPD promotes three: The city of Springfield won a federal grant of nearly $890,000 from the U.S. Forest Service to plant 1,000 trees and to hire a community outreach arborist and three student-worker arborists during the summer months, all over a five-year period. […] City arborist Jeff Reim told The State Journal-Register in July that 300 or more trees on city property alone were damaged by the June 29 derecho. In terms of tree damage alone, Reim believed the storms were worse than 2006, when a pair of tornadoes ripped through the capital city.
* Norman Reports | Six Months Ago NPR Left Twitter. The Effects Have Been Negligible: Last April, the company gave NPR a reason to quit — it labeled the network “U.S. state-affiliated media,” a designation that was at odds with Twitter’s own definition of the term. NPR stopped posting from its account on April 4. A week later, it posted its last update — a series of tweets directing users to NPR’s newsletters, app, and other social media accounts. Many member stations across the country, including KUOW in Seattle, LAist in Los Angeles, and Minnesota Public Radio, followed suit.
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* Tribune…
Police have arrested a suspect for making numerous bomb threats to public libraries, businesses, suburban governments and at least one police station during approximately the past seven weeks, according to information from the Niles, Morton Grove and Skokie police departments.
Jacob N. Spiro, 23, of the 4600 block of Davis Street, Skokie, was arrested Monday in Niles by Niles police with the assistance of Morton Grove police and the FBI Joint Terrorist Task Force, police said in statements. […]
Niles police said 11 threats occurred in Niles and Morton Grove police said 12 occurred in Morton Grove, including some directed at the Morton Grove Library, the Village of Morton Grove and businesses.
Skokie police said in a statement that 16 threats were made in Skokie.
During the investigation, detectives linked the suspect to all these incidents and identified him through digital forensics, police said.
* WGN…
Jacob Spiro, 23, of Skokie, is facing two counts of falsely making a terrorist threat and one count of disorderly conduct. […]
Throughout the area this year, several schools and libraries have been the targets of phony bomb threat calls.
Skokie police told WGN News the charges are connected to schools an additional charges for “other locations” are pending.
Niles police said 11 of the incidents took place in their community. He is also facing charges related to incidents in Morton Grove and Glenview.
* Patch…
Spiro, of Skokie, is due to make his first appearance in court Wednesday afternoon, and he is expected to face additional charges after prosecutors present the evidence against him to a grand jury.
Police said Spiro was arrested Monday at the Wendy’s in the Golf Milwaukee Plaza in Niles, where he was taken into custody by Niles officers with assistance from Morton Grove police and the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force.
Spiro had threatened the Wendy’s, 8309 Golf Road, shortly before his arrest, according to Nick Zakula, deputy chief of the Niles Police Department.
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It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Rep. La Shawn Ford filed HB4161…
Amends the Industrial Hemp Act. Changes the short title of the Act to the Hemp Act. Permits the wholesale and retail sale of cannabinoids, hemp concentrate, or any other intermediate hemp cannabinoid products. Provides that no person shall offer or sell cannabinoid products, particularly packaged hemp products, to consumers in the State unless the person applies for and holds a hemp retailer license issued by the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. Provides that no person shall sell ready-to-eat hemp products to end consumers without applying for and holding a hemp food establishment license issued by the Department of Public Health. Provides that no person shall sell cannabinoid product to any person under the age of 21 unless the person is a medical cardholder registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act. Provides that the Department of Agriculture may not limit the number of hemp farm licenses. Provides that no person shall cultivate or grow hemp for commercial purposes unless licensed by the Department of Agriculture and subject to the rules of the Department. Provides that hemp farms may not create hemp extractions without a processor license. Provides that hemp farms may not engage in retail sales without a hemp retailer license. Provides that hemp farms may not create hemp extractions without a processor license. Provides that hemp farms may not engage in retail sales without a hemp retailer license. Creates in the State treasury a special fund known as the Hemp Social Equity Fund. Provides that 25% of all moneys deposited into the Hemp Regulatory Fund shall be transferred into the Hemp Social Equity Fund. Provides that, beginning on July 1, 2024, a tax is imposed upon purchases of all hemp cannabinoid products (hemp cannabinoid products for inhalation, hemp cannabinoid products for ingestion, and ready-to-eat hemp cannabinoid products) at a rate of 5% of the purchase price of the cannabinoid products. Defines terms. Preempts home rule powers. Amends the State Finance Act, Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act, the Illinois Noxious Weed Law, the Cannabis Control Act, the Use Tax Act, the Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, and the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act to make conforming changes. Effective immediately.
The Sun-Times published an interesting article on how hemp could help Illinois go green. Click here to read it!
* Here’s another bill from Rep. Ford…
Amends the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. Provides that by January 1, 2024, the Department of Agriculture shall adopt emergency rules and begin accepting applications for the conversion of transporting organization licenses to third-party transporting organization licenses. Provides that there shall be no applicable fees for the conversion application process, and the Department shall process these applications and convert qualifying transporting organization licenses to third-party transporting organization licenses within 60 days after application submission. Provides that third-party transporting organizations are subject to the same standards and requirements for transporting organizations under the Act. Provides that a cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or infuser agent shall not transport cannabis or cannabis-infused products and shall use third-party transporting organizations for all transports authorized under the Act, unless (1) the licensee possesses a transporting organization license, (2) the licensee requires delivery within 36 hours, and (3) the licensee has offered a right of first refusal to all third-party transporting organizations and confirmed there are no available third-party transporting organizations to complete the delivery. Amends the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to make a conforming change. Effective immediately.
* HB676 may get a redo in veto…
On Thursday, October 12 at 10:00 AM, domestic violence and gun violence prevention advocates will hold a press conference in Chicago urging passage of Karina’s Bill, legislation that would strengthen state law to protect domestic violence survivors from firearms.
Karina’s Bill would require a firearm to be removed from a home when a survivor is granted an order of protection with the firearm remedy from a judge. Advocates hope to pass the bill during the Illinois General Assembly’s fall veto session beginning in late October, which is also Domestic Violence Awareness Month.
The legislation is named in honor of Karina Gonzalez, who was shot and killed in July along with her 15-year-old daughter Daniela by Karina’s husband even though she was granted an order of protection that could have led to the removal of his firearm by law enforcement.
WHO: Expected speakers include:
State Rep. Maura Hirschauer (D-Batavia)
Amanda Pyron, Executive Director, The Network
Yolanda Androzzo, Executive Director, One Aim Illinois
Maria Ruiz, Executive Director, Un Nuevo Despertar
Pastor Brenda Mitchell, State Chapter Co-Leader for Mom’s Demand Action in Illinois and a Fellow with the Everytown Survivor Network
John Bouman, Director, Legal Action Chicago
* G-PAC…
Today, the Gun Violence Prevention PAC (G-PAC) was joined by national gun safety organizations Brady United, GIFFORDS and Everytown in expressing support for Karina’s Bill, a new measure which would clarify and strengthen the Illinois Domestic Violence Act and the Firearm Restraining Order Act to require guns be removed when domestic violence survivors are granted firearm remedies in an order of protection. The groups are standing with The Network, a coalition of organizations dedicated to improving the lives of those impacted by gender-based violence, to call on lawmakers in Springfield to immediately pass this measure.
“Full stop: women and children deserve to live free from the threat of domestic violence,” said Kathleen Sances, President and CEO of G-PAC. “By passing Karina’s Bill, we will keep firearms out of the hands of abusers, save lives, and continue to send a message to the gun lobby that in our state public safety comes first. The time to act is now.”
The proposed legislation aims to address the alarming rates of gun-related domestic violence injuries and fatalities in Illinois, and prioritize the wellbeing of survivors. According to The Network, in 2022, there were 106 total domestic violence-related homicides in Illinois, with more than 60 taking place in Chicago alone. Additionally, last year witnessed an increase in domestic violence-related homicides, specifically those committed with a firearm.
What’s more, the risk of intimate partner homicide taking place increases by 500 percent when abusers have access to a gun, especially when survivors file an order of protection with the courts. In addition to having guns removed from a home once an order of protection is filed, Karina’s Bill would also add intimate partners as petitioners in the Firearm Restraining Orders Act and close a loophole that would otherwise allow transfer of firearm ownership instead of removal per a relevant order of protection.
“Karina Gonzalez and her daughter, Daniela, should still be here today. Gaps in our gun laws have robbed us of their lives and so many more. A perpetrator’s direct access to a gun during a domestic violence incident increases the likelihood of a female victim’s homicide compared to other acts of violence elevenfold. Right now, Illinois’ current protections are not enough to protect survivors from abuse and retaliation, and Karina’s bill updates these statutes to save lives. Brady is grateful to our domestic violence prevention partners for their work fighting for these vital changes, and we urge lawmakers to do the right thing and swiftly pass Karina’s Bill.” – Kris Brown, President of Brady
“When domestic abusers have access to guns, the effects can be and often are deadly – a gun in a domestic violence situation makes it five times more likely that the woman will be killed. Domestic gun violence is a crisis, particularly for Black, American Indian/Alaska Native women, and Latinas, who experience the highest rates of intimate partner gun homicide,” said Pastor Brenda Mitchell, Survivor Fellow with the Everytown Survivor Network and Co-Lead of the Illinois Chapter of Moms Demand Action. “As we mark domestic violence awareness month, we look forward to supporting Illinois lawmakers as they strengthen our state’s efforts to disarm domestic abusers and stop this deadly cycle of abuse”
“Closing loopholes that allow abusive partners to access firearms must be a top priority for Illinois lawmakers,” said Sean Holihan, GIFFORDS State Legislative Director. “When it comes to the safety of women and children in abusive homes, every second counts. It’s common sense: People under domestic violence restraining orders should not be able to own a gun. Lawmakers in Springfield must pass Karina’s Bill swiftly.”
* Rep. Margaret Croke’s HB4156…
Appropriates $500,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity for a grant to the Chicago Children’s Museum for its Museum for All program. Effective July 1, 2024.
* Rep. Maurice West filed HB4162 yesterday…
Amends the Open Meetings Act. Provides that, except as otherwise provided in the Act or any other Illinois statute (rather than except as otherwise provided in the Act), a quorum of members of a public body must be physically present at the location of an open meeting or present by video or audio conference at the open meeting (now, members must be physically present at the meeting). Provides that a member is present by video or audio conference at an open meeting if the member can hear and be heard by all other members of the body who are participating in the meeting. Specifies that, if a member wishes to attend a meeting by video or audio conference, the member must notify the recording secretary or clerk of the public body before the meeting, unless providing that advance notice is impractical for the member. Repeals existing provisions concerning the participation of public body members in open meetings by video conference or other means.
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* Chicago’s constant flailing is quite evident to anyone half paying attention, so people see that and understandably fear that it will happen to their communities. But there are ways of getting things done and there are ways that make things worse. Joliet Township’s leadership essentially killed what could’ve been a decent idea…
Residents of Joliet Township packed Tuesday night’s board meeting after the township received the State of Illinois Asylum Seeker Grant.
Some of the residents were outraged and angered over what some said was a lack of involvement.
The $8.6 million grant issued to Joliet Township helps fund municipalities that are welcoming asylum seekers.
* If this truly was about helping people who were already there, then the township should’ve made that clear from the get-go. Instead, they tried to sneak it into existence and spectacularly failed…
Attendees did not mince words as they addressed concerns over the money.
“I don’t believe you’re fixing a problem, you’re creating a problem,” one speaker said.
“We need to take care of our own. We have issues here. We need to strengthen our foundation,” said another.
“The purpose of this grant was to help our community partners who serve individuals beyond the county township and city boundaries,” said Supervisor Angel Contreras. “This is a reactive request grant to address current issues, it was not intended to bring more people to our areas.”
* Rarely do you see such a total botch…
Some speakers supported the township on the grant and supported assistance for asylum seekers.
“Give them a chance to be part of your community, and you’d be surprised,” one said.
Another was virtually booed away from the microphone as she spoke in support of the grant. […]
The Joliet Park District rescinded a pending lease with the township for its Hartman Recreation Center located at 511 Collins St. after learning last week that the building had been proposed as a welcome center. A park official said the township had indicated it planned to use the space for office space and community activities.
Likewise, a spokeswoman for Duly Health & Care said the medical group did not know that its medical office building had been included as a potential welcome center or clinic in the grant application.
* Yeah, this is how to speak to people. Right…
Township Clerk Alicia Morales has claimed “the process was handled in the appropriate manner, nothing was violated.”
“People just don’t understand how government works,” Morales added.
*Facepalm*
* But some of the comments were just so over the top…
During nearly three hours of public comment, hundreds of people showed up both in support and opposition to the proposal, with township officials warning people would be asked to leave if they were disruptive during the meeting.
“We are seeking asylum from crime, from drugs, from gang activity, from homelessness. We have been asylum seekers,” one woman said. […]
The controversy has become so intense, a Joliet City Council member said there has been a threat made against a local social service agency that supports migrants.
And…
Joliet resident Brian Beck said that if the township wanted to come up with solutions, it needed to find solutions of “how to move these people out of here.” […]
Other residents said township officials had gone “out of their bounds” to invite asylum-seekers to Joliet and said that township trustees have no right to dictate where taxpayer money is spent.
Rev. Larry Ellis, a retired deacon from St. Mark CME Church, told trustees that residents were misled about the intentions surrounding the purchase of the Peter Claver Center. He said that he understood the meeting was for community outreach programs but that the “whispers in the neighborhood” said it was instead being used by asylum seekers.
“I’m upset, I’m p*ssed off simply because we have not been told – first of all, we weren’t told about the grant,” he said. “Second of all, we weren’t told about who was coming into our neighborhoods, and I think that’s disgraceful.”
Thanks, reverend.
…Adding… A buddy of mine took a photo outside the event yesterday…
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* Sun-Times…
An administrative law judge has recommended that state regulators approve a smaller rate increase for Peoples Gas than the utility asked for — but the increase would still add up to the biggest hike customers have ever seen in Illinois.
The proposed order filed Friday by Glennon Dolan, an administrative law judge for the Illinois Commerce Commission, recommended the panel vote to approve rate increases totaling about $350 million for Peoples Gas, which is seeking a record-high increase of $402 million.
Consumer advocates want to see the proposed hike slashed below $290 million, which would still top the state’s previous all-time high increase of $240 million approved for Nicor in 2021. […]
A $402 million increase would raise the average monthly residential bill by about $11.83 starting next year, a cost Peoples Gas says it expects to be offset by falling natural gas prices.
The proposed order’s $350 million increase would come out to an extra $10 per month.
While the commission has often followed proposed orders from its administrative law judges, Sarah Moskowitz, executive director of the Citizens Utility Board, said she’s not sure what to expect from the panel this year. Gov. J.B. Pritzker has appointed three new members since March, including chairman Doug Scott.
The draft decision is here.
* Illinois PIRG…
The newly constituted [ICC] has demonstrated on multiple occasions this year that it is prepared to take a more proactive, pro-consumer approach, ordering Peoples Gas to issue a $15 million refund to its customers in May and rejecting $31 million of infrastructure spending by suburban utility Nicor Gas in June. In both instances, the Commission overruled the judge’s Proposed Order.
The rate hike comes as the “QIP” law that has fueled large gas utility rate increases and shielded Peoples Gas from accountability expires at the end of 2023.
Among many other issues being litigated in the case, the Proposed Order:
• Does nothing to immediately address the failing Peoples Gas pipe replacement program, the budget for which has ballooned from up to $2 billion to $11 billion. Consumer and environmental advocates, along with the Office of the Attorney General, are calling on the Commission to enact immediate reforms, while also launching an in-depth investigation of the troubled program. Instead, the Proposed Order would require Commission staff to draft a report with recommendations within 6 months.
• Does nothing to rein in unnecessary and wasteful Peoples Gas spending going forward — the very spending that has led to this historic rate hike. Consumer and environmental advocates, along with the Office of the Attorney General and the City of Chicago, proposed a number of policies that would bring Peoples Gas spending under more scrutiny going forward. Instead of considering those specific policy proposals, the Proposed Order postpones consideration of them until an upcoming “future of gas” proceeding.
• Rejects almost all of the proposals made by the Office of the Attorney General to disallow tens of millions of dollars of unjustified Peoples Gas spending.
In more positive outcomes for consumers, the Proposed Order adopts a slightly lower profit rate than that proposed by Peoples Gas. The slightly lower profit rate is the primary reason the Proposed Order drops the rate hike from just over $400 million to $350 million. The Proposed Order also rejects the utility’s proposal to raise its fixed monthly charge to about $45 per customer. Instead, the order maintains the current fixed monthly charge of about $31, despite arguments from many parties that it should be even lower. High fixed charges discourage energy efficiency and conservation and increase affordability burdens.
Discuss.
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Do The Right Thing – Extend The Tax Credit Scholarship
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department
[The following is a paid advertisement.]
If the General Assembly fails to take action to save the Tax Credit Scholarship Program, then over 9,500 students from low-income families will lose their scholarships, causing many to leave their best-fit schools.
The kids who stand to lose opportunities are 20% Black and 30% Hispanic – proportions considerably higher than demographic populations in Illinois — and 100% of these students are from families with demonstrated financial need. Additionally, 26,000 more students from low-income and working-class families sit anxiously on the waitlist hoping to receive the same opportunities as some of their peers.
This program is an investment in poverty reduction and economic acceleration, so lawmakers should do the right thing: Extend the Tax Credit Scholarship Program.
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‘I don’t see any method at all, sir’
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Sun-Times editorial…
More than 17,000 asylum seekers have been sent to Chicago from the country’s southern border since the summer of 2022.
About half of the arrivals are housed in temporary shelters run by the city. But at least 2,500 are living — if you can call it that — in police station lobbies and floor space at O’Hare and Midway airports.
Given the pace of the arrivals, we can understand if the city was caught flat-footed momentarily and had to scramble for space while a larger plan was being developed.
But we see no evidence of a solid, workable plan forthcoming from the five-month-old Johnson administration. The Fifth Floor’s big idea so far is awarding a $29 million contract to private security firm GardaWorld to create and manage tent camps this winter for up to 1,400 migrants.
Tent camps in a Chicago winter are a bad idea on its face, but that’s not the only problem. GardaWorld had been in line for a $40 million contract to build a similar camp in Denver, but officials there gave the company the boot last May, citing abuse allegations against the corporation and its thin experience with housing migrant populations.
And as the Sun-Times’ David Roeder wrote Monday, the city seems to have left the Roman Catholic archdiocese and other religious organizations — many of which own scores of properties that likely could be converted into housing — idling on the sidelines.
Tents are now going up outside police stations to handle the overflow.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Gregory Royal Pratt at the Tribune…
In an extraordinary departure from usual practices at City Hall, the city’s $100,000 settlement agreement with whistleblowers who were fired by Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin prohibits them from publicly discussing their negative experiences in her office, records show.
Of more than three dozen settlements reached with city workers over the past five years, the deal that Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration reached with the treasurer’s ex-employees was the only one that contained what amounts to a gag order, the Tribune found. In a handful of cases, former employees agreed not to discuss the terms of their settlements, but they could still speak freely about their time in city government.
For the whistleblowers who had alleged that Conyears-Ervin used public resources for personal gain, the terms of the deal’s non-disparagement clause were so restrictive that they specifically included a ban on giving any “false and disparaging” statements to the media. […]
[The treasurer’s spouse, Ald. Jason Ervin] led furious battles against Lightfoot over legal marijuana sales in late 2019 and emergency contracting during the COVID-19 pandemic. But he slowly evolved into an ally and surprised colleagues when he delivered an early endorsement for Lightfoot’s reelection campaign in September 2021. The city signed the settlement agreement a month later.
* The Question: Should the state consider passing a law to bar state and local governments from entering into non-disparagement lawsuit settlements? Explain.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* ICYMI: The Quincy City Council denied a controversial ordiance that would have made the town a ‘Sanctuary City for the Unborn.’ WGEM…
- The ordiance failed 7-5 with two aldermen absent.
- Public coment lasted for more than two hours.
* ACLU of Illinois…
We applaud the majority of the Quincy City Council who this evening recognized that the ordinance aimed at limiting access to abortion care was unlawful and unenforceable. The vote came after Quincy residents – some of whom had never attended a City Council meeting – spoke up and urged the Council to reject the fantasies of anti-abortion activists, and focus on the needs of their community. Public participation at the local level clearly still matters.
* Related stories…
* Isabel’s top picks…
- SJ-R | Navigator drops CO2 pipeline for second time this year, plans to refile: For the second time this year, Navigator Heartland Greenway LLC has withdrawn its application with the Illinois Commerce Commission to construct a carbon dioxide pipeline through central Illinois. Navigator, a Nebraska-based company, filed its motion on Tuesday but does plan on reinitiating its application later with ICC after completing a full evaluation.
- Crain’s | NASCAR, city still negotiating second street race deal: The Johnson administration is still working toward a final agreement but has commitments from NASCAR to reimburse the city for costs at future races, according to the city official. However, the latest deal still leaves the city holding the bag from the 2023 race, which incurred $2.1 million in street repairs and another $1.1 million in police overtime, according to South Side Weekly.
- Tribune | Manteno EV battery plant promises 2,600 jobs. But far-right legislators are stoking fears over Chinese influence: “I really feel that all of you that think it is OK to have a Communist Chinese company here did not do your homework,” Manteno resident Amelia Cahill said at a recent village board meeting. “You are willing to jeopardize the health of everybody in Manteno and also surrounding areas.”
* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…
* WTTW | State Lawmakers Seeking Community Input on Chicago’s Elected School Board Map. Here’s What to Know: Valerie Leonard, co-founder of Illinois African Americans for Equitable Redistricting, said her group’s proposed map will align city resources with CPS resources to support student outcomes. For Jessica Cañas, senior community engagement manager at Kids First Chicago, the issue with the Senate’s proposed maps is the lack of Latino representation. The maps are based on Chicago’s overall population, meaning fewer majority Latino districts.
* Sun-Times | Unveiling of city’s 2024 budget will be 2nd big test of Brandon Johnson’s leadership: Johnson will stand before the Chicago City Council and disclose how he plans to deliver on his campaign promise to make $1 billion worth of “investments in people” bankrolled by $800 million in new or increased taxes on businesses and wealthy Chicagoans.
* WBEZ | Boosting the wages of Chicago’s tipped workers could lift thousands out of poverty: To gain a snapshot of some of the region’s tipped workers and to get a sense of how the measure might impact those among them who work in the city, WBEZ analyzed data on wages and other variables from the U.S. Census Bureau 2021 American Community Survey prepared by the University of Minnesota. The numbers are the most recent data we could find that allows us to zoom in close enough to get a glance at tipped workers.
* Shaw Local | Tollway system looking ahead to billions more in construction projects: Although consisting only of 294 centerline miles, the Illinois Tollway system’s five roads span 12 counties and carry more than 1.5 million daily drivers. Other figures from the agency’s 2022 annual report reveal just how much happens on those 294 miles: Almost 80 million toll transactions each month – an average of 2.62 million per day.
* Tribune | Neighborhoods around the city are asked to house more migrants as number surpasses 18,000: Ald. Chris Taliaferro, 29th, said the proposed shelter at the Amundsen Park field house in Galewood was “fundamentally wrong” and that the decision by Mayor Brandon Johnson — who lives in the Austin neighborhood — to delay the move-in of asylum-seekers shows his commitment to listening and responding to the concerns of Chicagoans.
* Block Club | Austin Migrant Shelter Plans ‘On Hold’ After Fierce Neighbor Backlash, Alderman Says: Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th) announced Monday that plans to use Amundsen’s indoor facility at 6200 W. Bloomingdale Ave as a migrant shelter have been put “on hold” as the city works to determine if a nearby office and warehouse would be a more suitable site for a shelter.
* Sun-Times | Venezuelan migrant shot while holding her son outside South Side police station: Romero, 28, a Venezuelan asylum-seeker who has been living temporarily at the South Side police station, was wounded in the buttocks. A man, also a migrant from Venezuela, got hit in his right thigh, police said. Romero said she’d been in Chicago for only a week when she was shot Saturday afternoon.
* Crain’s | Sheriff’s office turns to old-school tactics to combat Mag Mile retail theft: “We wanted to create high visibility,” said Lt. Michael Rivers, who watched as his fellow officers apprehended a shoplifter after the manager at the Walgreens in the Wrigley Building called them. “And not just high visibility, we wanted interactions with the businesses up and down Michigan and Oak Street.”
* Tribune | City settlement deal demands silence from whistleblowers fired by Chicago Treasurer Conyears-Ervin: Of more than three dozen settlements reached with city workers over the past five years, the deal that Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration reached with the treasurer’s ex-employees was the only one that contained what amounts to a gag order, the Tribune found. In a handful of cases, former employees agreed not to discuss the terms of their settlements, but they could still speak freely about their time in city government.
* Sun-Times | Cut recommended to Peoples Gas’ $402M rate increase request, but it’s still a record hike: Consumer advocates want to see the proposed hike slashed below $290 million, which would still top the state’s previous all-time high increase of $240 million approved for Nicor in 2021.
* Crain’s | Northwestern’s Kellogg gets $25 million in memory of Sam Zell: Zell, one of Chicago’s best-known entrepreneurs, initially funded the Zell Fellows Program at Kellogg a decade ago. Nearly 200 second-year MBA students have participated in the program, launching 127 ventures, Kellogg says.
* AP | ‘Ring of fire’ solar eclipse will slice across Americas on Saturday with millions along path: It’s a prelude to the total solar eclipse that will sweep across Mexico, the eastern half of the U.S. and Canada, in six months. Unlike Saturday, when the moon is too far from Earth to completely cover the sun from our perspective, the moon will be at the perfect distance on April 8, 2024.
* Tribune | A ‘Seinfeld’ reunion? Jerry Seinfeld hints that divisive finale might get a redo: “Something is going to happen that has to do with that ending. It hasn’t happened yet,” Seinfeld said to big cheers. “Just what you are thinking about, Larry [David] and I have also been thinking about. So, you’ll see.”
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Oct 11, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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