Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WCIA…
* ABC Chicago…
* Americans for Prosperity-Illinois…
* Center Square | Illinois veto session set for week after election: Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he has a legislative agenda, but doesn’t expect much until the new General Assembly is seated in January. “Lots of agenda. Not necessarily for the veto session,” Pritzker said at the Governor’s Mansion in Springfield Monday. Typically, veto session is where legislators consider acting on vetoes from the governor, to which there haven’t been any this year of the 469 bills legislators approved.
* Block Club | Changes Underway At CHA As Board Taps Chair As Interim CEO: The agency’s board of commissioners voted unanimously Thursday to appoint Angela Hurlock as the interim replacement for outgoing CEO Tracey Scott until a permanent leader can be found. Hurlock recused herself from the vote. Vice chair Matthew Brewer will now lead the board, at least temporarily. Hurlock was appointed to the CHA board in 2019. She also serves as executive director of Claretian Associates, a South Chicago community group that develops affordable housing and offers programs for homebuyers and others on violence prevention. * Block Club | Prepare Yourselves: It Will Be Dark Before 5 PM Starting Sunday: The end of daylight savings time in Chicago is Sunday — paving the way for pre-5 p.m. sunsets. Clocks roll back an hour starting 2 a.m. Sunday, and the sunset for that day is set for 4:43 p.m., according to SunriseSunset. The city will continue to lose precious minutes of daylight each day after Sunday for over two weeks, on a slow march to its earliest sunsets of the year: 4:19 p.m Dec. 6-11.
* Block Club | Uptown’s XMarket Vegan Food Hall Closing After 1 Year In Business: “We poured our hearts into creating a space for the vegan community, but the challenges have been real,” the post read. “It breaks our hearts to be here, but in order to keep our other missions alive—running the two largest vegan platforms online—we need to shift our focus.” Ahead of the closure, everything inside the grocery-style bodega is 50 percent off, XMarket said. * Tribune | For Chicago-area witches and pagans, Halloween ushers in a season of reflection on mortality: Though it’s hard to find a definite count of how many people practice witchcraft in Chicago, one minister whose congregation serves northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin estimated that the Chicago area is home to between 20,000 and 27,000 pagans, whose religions are anchored in the Earth’s rhythms and may employ witchcraft as part of their spiritual practice. * Daily Herald | School expansion and pension reform: Here’s what’s on the ballot in the Northwest suburbs : Barrington Area Unit District 220 is seeking a $64 million tax hike that would help build a new high school auditorium, fund security improvements across the district and enhance the science, math and arts curriculum. If voters approve the plan, the owners of a $500,000 home would see an increase of about $235 a year on the district’s portion of property tax bills, officials said. * Daily Herald | Marter alleges fraud in U.S. elections, but Underwood insists they’re secure: Democratic U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood of Naperville and the Republican challenger for her 14th District seat, James Marter of Oswego, strongly disagree about whether American elections are secure. In a recent joint candidate interview, Marter claimed election fraud is rampant and “comes in many forms.” Underwood, who has served the 14th District since 2018 and is seeking a fourth term, insisted elections in the U.S. are secure “without a doubt.” But she also said voters remain vulnerable to election misinformation spread electronically by adversarial nations. * Daily Herald | GOP congressional candidate says terrorism is ‘fundamental’ to Palestinian society: During a discussion about Israel and the war in Gaza, Republican congressional candidate Seth Cohen called terrorism a core part of Palestinian society. “It’s just fundamental to the Palestinian life right now,” said Cohen, a Chicagoan trying to unseat longtime U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky in the largely suburban 9th District. Schakowsky and Cohen, both of whom are Jewish, differ on how best to bring lasting peace to the region. Schakowsky, of Evanston, supports establishing a Palestinian nation alongside Israel. Cohen, of Chicago, opposes the two-state solution. * Tribune | Oak Park and River Forest students to represent at board meetings: Come January there will be a student at the table during meetings of the Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200 Board of Education after the board unanimously approved a pilot project to include student delegates. While there will be eight student delegates in all, two from each class, only one student, a senior, will sit at the board table during meetings. That student will be able to participate in board discussions but will not, as is required by state law, have a vote. Students will also not participate in closed sessions of the school board and not have access to closed session materials. * Daily Southtown | Thornton Township bills paid after month-long standoff between Supervisor Tiffany Henyard and trustees: The township continues to operate without a budget, with Henyard’s proposal listed repeatedly on meeting agendas failing to receive adequate support. But after the past two meetings were canceled due to disagreements over meeting location and safety protocols, the board approved bill payments and employee insurance updates. “By (trustees) not paying bills, they have been hurting a lot of department heads, which are here today,” Henyard told attendees after the meeting. “Their board members have not shown up to take care of the business, which is up for vote every two weeks.” * WGN | ‘We’re giving away $2.2 million’: Trustee walks out ahead of Henyard’s 100% homeowner tax refund proposal: “The business got done,” Gonzalez said. “The bills were paid. The employees will have insurance.” The next items on the agenda are employee bonuses and a 100% tax refund for all homeowners. “We’re giving away $2.2 million to the residents of Thornton Township,” Henyard said. * WMBD | Peoria County Coroner’s office holding service and burial for unclaimed descendants: Fifty-eight people will, at long last, go to their final resting place. The Peoria County Coroner’s Office will bury 58 cremains of people who were not claimed by relatives or friends this Friday at Springdale Cemetery. * WCIA | Crews battle ravine fire at Fox Ridge State Park overnight: Ashmore Fire Chief Clay Berner told WCIA he and about 12 to 15 of his firefighters responded, along with the same number from Hutton, at around 9 p.m. A caller reported smelling smoke in the park and firefighters arrived to find a ravine on fire. Berner said the fire’s cause is unknown, but he did say prevailing drought conditions played a role. Firefighters were on both sides of the ravine trying to fight the fire, in dark conditions on the sides of a steep drop-off. * KSDK | ‘Beautiful and sensitive’: Endangered coral are being grown in southern Illinois, for a cause: “Scientists at SIU’s Center for Fisheries, Aquaculture, and Aquatic Sciences came up with the idea to grow coral, an invertebrate animal, about a decade ago, just as construction was beginning on the initial phase of the Saluki Aquarium in 2012,” the press release said. The aquarium currently houses about 10,000 gallons of research and display tanks, with officials hoping to add another 9,000-gallon marine display and teaching aquarium soon. * PJ Star | Hollywood star John Travolta shows up at restaurant in small Illinois town: The Uptown Grill has been a mainstay of great food and service for nearly 40 years in La Salle. But over the years they’ve had something else on the menu, too: Celebrity visits. John Travolta, the A-lister with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, also showed up and took a seat in the Uptown Grill for dinner Saturday. * WIRED | Workers Say They Were Tricked and Threatened as Part of Elon Musk’s Get-Out-the-Vote Effort: In Michigan, canvassers and paid door knockers for the former president, contracted by a firm associated with America PAC, have been subjected to poor working conditions: A number of them have been driven around in the back of a seatless U-Haul van, according to video obtained by WIRED, and threatened that their lodging at a local motel wouldn’t be paid for if they didn’t meet canvassing quotas. One door knocker alleges that they didn’t even know they were signing up for anything having to do with Musk or Trump.
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Caption contest!
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Great shot…
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Pritzker calls on new CPS president to resign, citing ‘antisemitism, misogyny, fringe conspiracy theories’ (Resignation reported)
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Gov. JB Pritzker…
…Adding… He gone…
From the story…
…Adding… From the mayor…
As Isabel just noted to me, this tone is far different from yesterday’s. * Let’s look at some background from yesterday… ![]() * Missing from that story’s context is incendiary stuff we already knew, like this… ![]() * Also missing was stuff most of us didn’t know about yesterday… ![]() * His disbarment is detailed here…
* ABC7…
…Adding… The pile-on is gonna be huge… ![]() WGN…
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Happy Halloween!
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Happy Halloween! But did you know it’s also Bat Week?…
* The New York Times detailed how Nerds Gummy Clusters were developed in Forest Park…
* USDA…
* Something I didn’t know…
* A throwback to when John Candy visited Carbondale in 1980. When Halloween was official…
* More history…
* If you’re wondering what to do with your pumpkin, see if there’s a pumpkin smash near you…
For a full list of pumpkin smashes in Illinois, click here. * Speaking of pumpkins…
* Aren’t we skipping something?…
* More… * NBC Chicago | Boo! Some of Halloween’s scariest movie characters are from Illinois and the Midwest: The question comes about like clockwork during the spookiest time of year: where is Haddonfield, Illinois? It’s the place where Michael Myers embarked on a reign of terror in the long-running horror franchise “Halloween,” more than a decade after killing his 15-year-old sister Judith Myers — when he was just six years old — on a chilly Halloween night in 1963. Michael returned 15 years later, terrorizing the quaint community with numerous killings over decades. * Block Club | South Shore’s HallowHood Night Aims To Spread Spooky Spirit — And Build Lasting Connections: Even as a collection of South Shore community groups prepares a night of horrors and haunts, they are banding together to tell their neighbors: “Don’t be scurred” to trick-or-treat in the neighborhood this Halloween. The HallowHood community crawl takes place 3-9 p.m. Thursday along the 71st Street corridor in South Shore. More than a dozen neighborhood groups will host a day of activities. * PJ Star | Illinois teen artist crafts intricate Nirvana-inspired Halloween costume by hand: Leggins, a 15-year-old artist and musician from Glasford, achieved viral status on TikTok this month after she created a wearable version of the cover of Nirvana’s album “In Utero.” The 1993 album is well-known for its cover featuring a Transparent Anatomical Manikin with exposed muscles and organs and angel wings sprouting from its shoulders.
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Roundup: Madigan corruption trial
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WGN…
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
* More…
* ABC Chicago | Defense attorneys argue jury being unfairly tainted: For nearly an hour, defense attorneys argued that the jury was being unfairly tainted, as the government tried to paint a picture of an all-powerful speaker, who could withhold campaign contributions to specific House members if they did not vote a certain way. This came as prosecutors tried to convince jurors that Madigan, through McClain, solicited bribes, along with no-work jobs and contracts from ComEd and others in exchange for favorable legislation.
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Question of the day
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Your Halloween plans? Also, just for “fun,” make sure to take a look at the replies to this White Sox tweet…
Oof. For some real fun, click here to check out a story on Halloween in Ravenswood Manor.
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The word ‘voters’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting in these ‘voter confidence’ stories
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Two recent nothing-burger stories about a few minor errors from the Center Square…
* Voter confidence rattled after voting machines malfunction across Illinois: Voter confidence has been shaken with voting machines malfunctioning in several Illinois jurisdictions. The first story is about a mistake involving a Libertarian candidate that effected 300 out of 160,000 mail-in ballots in one Cook County precinct. The ballots were already remailed. The story also includes a minor glitch reported by McLean County GOP Chair Dennis Grundler that was corrected within a day. Just one ballot was mailed to the wrong address. The second story is about McLean County GOP Chair Dennis Grundler reporting a minor glitch with a voting machine, causing people to put 34 ballots into lockboxes until the machine could be fixed. The piece also rehashes a minor suburban story from earlier this month. The main take-away appears to be: “Voters = McLean County GOP Chair Dennis Grundler.”
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Thursday, Oct 31, 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 Dana, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Open thread
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Happy Halloween! What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson unveils $17.3 billion city budget, proposes steep property tax increase. Sun-Times…
* Related stories…
∙ ABC Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson calls for $300M property tax hike in Chicago budget proposal ∙ Block Club: Mayor Proposes Property Tax Hike To Close Budget Gap, Breaking Major Campaign Promise * Tribune | Local abortion providers predict out-of-state ballot measures won’t quell the surge in patients traveling to Illinois: Dr. Allison Cowett, medical director of the Chicago abortion provider Family Planning Associates, said she’s optimistic voters will generally support abortion rights. In previous ballot measures in seven states — California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana, Ohio and Vermont — voters have favored reproductive health freedoms. “I do feel hopeful that the ballot measures will send a message that the majority of Americans want abortion to be available close to home,” she said. But Cowett noted that abortion rights don’t always translate into access to reproductive care. She cautioned that even if voters support pro-reproductive rights measures in these states, that doesn’t mean abortion will actually be available and accessible there, at least in the short term. * Release | Advance Illinois Statement on the 2024 Illinois Report Card: There is good news and bad news in the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE)’s 2024 Illinois Report Card. It is encouraging to see improvements in student learning, growth, and achievement, with some measures exceeding pre-pandemic levels. However, recovery from the pandemic and disparities among underrepresented student groups across the K-12 continuum persist and will require ongoing attention and effort. * Daily Herald | Ugaste faces rematch from Democrat Robertson in 65th House District: Robertson, a scientist from St. Charles, said she believes the district isn’t being represented in the Democrat-majority House. “I don’t believe the incumbent has a voice at the table,” she said. “I would be able to have that voice.” For his part, Ugaste said he’s helped pass bills with bipartisan support and has been able to work across the aisle on issues that are important to the district. * NBC Chicago | Why are most Illinois schools closed on Election Day?: Under provisions of an amendment to Illinois’ school code, Election Day is an official state holiday for the 2024 election season, meaning that children in K-12 public schools will not be required to attend classes. The law also holds that any school that doesn’t have instruction on Election Day can be used by local authorities as a polling place.
* Crain’s | Johnson’s $17.3 billion budget faces pushback in City Council, with a close ally in the opposition: Pilsen Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, said no thanks. “I cannot support a property tax increase,” Sigcho-Lopez said. Sigcho-Lopez is instead calling for the mayor to withhold a $272 million advance pension payment that helps stabilize the city’s four beleaguered pension funds but is above what’s statutorily required. * CBS | “Extraordinary” amount of money spent in Chicago school board election, experts say: Two education experts who spoke to CBS News Chicago said that nearly $7 million is a lot of money for a school board election, and that kind of money, along with turnout, will make a difference. “That’s an extraordinary amount of money to see put into a school board race, and it’s very atypical,” said Michael Hartney, a research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. * Tribune | Former Dunbar Career Academy student sues Chicago Board of Ed, alleging it failed to protect him from sexual abuse by security guard: When the teenager was asked if he wanted to share a statement at a court hearing for a former security guard at Dunbar Vocational Career Academy who pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting him when he was a 15-year-old student, he worried that he wouldn’t be able to express his emotions in detail using his voice. So, instead, he wrote a poem — an “alternative route,” he called it. “From poor self-esteem to no sleep, you brought all of this upon me,” the poem said. “Please don’t take me out of another classroom. I hope you feel the deceit, and I hope you don’t have any more access to hurt me.” * NYT | What Happened When Chicago’s Mayor Followed a Teachers’ Union Playbook: Chicago is in the midst of a radically different experiment: What would happen if one of the nation’s feistiest teachers’ unions was able to elevate the mayor of its choice, who then embraced the union’s agenda almost unequivocally? * Block Club | Historical Garfield Park Women’s Shelter To Become A Community Center After City Council Vote: onstructed in 1892, the Crittenton Anchorage took over the building in 1949, turning it into a place of housing and respite for single women and their children. Later known as the Living Center for Girls, the complex remained a haven for young women until closing in 1973. It remained vacant for years and was in jeopardy of being demolished when it was purchased last year by Samantha Walton, the wife of Lukas Walton, the billionaire grandson of Walmart founder Sam Walton. * ABC Chicago | Walgreens announces over 250 layoffs in Chicago: The cuts are not at Walgreens stores; 256 support center positions are being eliminated. The Deerfield-based drugstore chain is also cutting more than 200 open positions. Walgreens has struggled financially in recent years. This is the fourth round of corporate job cuts for the company in the last year and a half. * Sun-Times | New Google rendering gives an early glimpse of former Thompson Center atrium’s future: Google will refashion the ground floors of the former Thompson Center atrium into a hotel lobby-like space with restaurants, retail, seating and greenery, according to a new rendering obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times. The image shows the building’s main concourse and lower level being turned into an almost single bi-level space linked by open stairs, bleacher seating and overlooks. * Block Club | 5 Transit Board Appointees Advance, But Some Bristle At Another Pastor With No Transit Experience: Most of the new nominees were lauded for their experience in transit or related fields. All passed through the committee unanimously except Jarixon Medina — a pastor with New Life Covenant Church’s Spanish-speaking campus in Humboldt Park — who was questioned like Acree for having no bonafides in professional transit roles. * Crain’s | The Jean Banchet Awards are terrified to name the best pizza in Chicago: The Banchet Awards for Culinary Excellence tried last year to introduce a new pizza-specific category to their annual honors of Chicago-area restaurants. It did not go well. “Friendships were ruined,” said Michael Muser, organizer of the awards. The judging panel, made up of food journalists and industry experts, was unrelentingly divided. “It was just the craziest thing. Everybody got frustrated.” They decided to kick the can. * Block Club | Nonstop Christmas Music Is Back On 93.9 LITE FM Starting Friday: “93.9 LITE FM listeners have spoken year after year — once Halloween ends, they are ready for Christmas music on 93.9 LITE FM,” Mick Lee, 93.9 LITE FM program director and host, said in the news release. “We’re thrilled to celebrate our 24th year as Chicago’s Christmas station, spreading cheer, unity and warmth all season long!” * Daily Southtown | Indicted Riverdale Mayor Lawrence Jackson seeks reelection, faces 2 primary challengers: Riverdale Mayor Lawrence Jackson filed petitions Monday to run for reelection in the February Democratic primary, but will face two challengers. Three trustees also filed for reelection but face challenges in the Village Board race. Michael Airhart and Rena Poulos will challenge Jackson, who was charged last year with perjury and obstruction of justice in U.S. District Court for allegedly lying in a civil deposition about accepting secret funding for his trucking business from a clout-heavy waste hauling firm. * Daily Herald | Suburban students make significant gains in English language arts proficiency, report card data shows: Schools across the suburbs have made notable strides in improving English language arts proficiency, mirroring a statewide trend seen in the 2024 Illinois School Report Card data released Wednesday. Statewide, students in third through eighth grades achieved an ELA proficiency rate of 40.9% — the highest ever since they began taking the Illinois Assessment of Readiness in 2019, according to report card data. * NBC Chicago | First physical Google store in Midwest opening at suburban mall Friday: The first-ever physical Google retail store in the Midwestern U.S. is opening this weekend, with a popular suburban mall serving as the site. Google Store Oakbrook, located at the Oakbrook Center shopping mall, will open its doors for the first time at 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 1. * SJ-R | Rhetoric ratchets up in election for Sangamon County Recorder: The idea of merging the Sangamon County Recorder’s office with the county clerk has become a hot button campaign issue between incumbent recorder Josh Langfelder and challenger Frank Lesko in the Nov. 5 election. Those aren’t the only sparks flying. Fallout from a contentious 2023 mayoral campaign, involving Josh Langfelder’s brother, Jim Langfelder, still may be lingering. * Pantagraph | McLean County voters weigh future of auditor’s office: In June, the McLean County Board voted to introduce a referendum asking voters whether the elected office of county auditor, which has been held by Michelle Anderson since 2007, should be eliminated. A similar measure is also on the ballot in Champaign County. * WSIL | Burn bans across the region: On Wednesday, October 30, several fire departments alerted the public of burn bans and fire dangers. The Franklin County Emergency Management Agency issued a burn ban for Franklin County on Wednesday due to the elevated fire danger. Residents are refrained from burning until further notice. * WCIA | Bement Public Library puts Narcan box outside to prevent overdose: “We’re hoping to do what we can to prevent deaths,” Bement Public Library Director Donna Techau said. The Bement Public Library has partnered with Piatt County Mental Health to provide boxes with free Naloxone, a medicine that reverses overdoses. Four years ago, the library started carrying it in their bathrooms. Yesterday they took it a step further.
* WCIA | U of I freshman sings national anthem at World Series: Pearle Peterson performed The Star-Spangled Banner in front of 52,000 fans before Game 2 of the World Series on Saturday, Oct. 26. On the field, she represented the Boys and Girls Club of America as a National Youth Talent Ambassador. Peterson said her favorite part about performing at Dodger Stadium was the support from her loved ones and the deeper meaning the song holds. * Brennan Center for Justice | On Fertile Ground: How Racial Resentment Primes White Americans to Believe Fraud Accusations: In a survey experiment, show that racially resentful white Americans are especially likely to believe accusations of fraud when these accusations are racialized. At a time when America’s multiracial democracy appears fragile, groups poised to lose power draw on rote narratives linking race and criminality to legitimize their own denial of free and fair elections. * ProPublica | A Woman Died After Being Told It Would Be a “Crime” to Intervene in Her Miscarriage at a Texas Hospital: Barnica is one of at least two Texas women who ProPublica found lost their lives after doctors delayed treating miscarriages, which fall into a gray area under the state’s strict abortion laws that prohibit doctors from ending the heartbeat of a fetus. Neither had wanted an abortion, but that didn’t matter. Though proponents insist that the laws protect both the life of the fetus and the person carrying it, in practice, doctors have hesitated to provide care under threat of prosecution, prison time and professional ruin. * WaPo | GOP leaders in some states move to block Justice Dept. election monitors: The U.S. government has regularly dispatched hundreds of monitors to voting locations in blue, red and swing states, aiming to protect ballot access, discourage improper partisan influence and act as a moderating force on political campaigns. While the Justice Department has the legal right to request access to polling sites, inflamed partisanship and ideological extremism have contributed to greater resistance to such activities in some GOP-controlled states, legal experts said. Those states have attempted to politicize the process and cast federal monitors as partisans from the Biden administration who cannot be trusted.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Daily Herald…
* Capitol News Illinois | By the numbers: Unions lead the way on funding state elections in Illinois: This year in Illinois, there are no statewide elections. There are no fights over a Supreme Court seat. There are no constitutional amendments. At the Statehouse, more than half of general election races are uncontested. And yet, political campaigns in Illinois raised about $600 million in itemized individual contributions, according to a Capitol News Illinois analysis of state campaign finance data. Accounting for loans, transfers between political committees and other contributions, more than $1 billion changed hands among Illinois’ political organizations between Nov. 9, 2022, and Oct. 15, 2024 – the final required disclosure deadline before the election. * Rich Miller | The Next Person Who Tries to Sell Ram Villivalam on Transit Funding without Reform Will Get Run Over by Him: “I have said from the beginning that we need to provide adequate funding for public transit,” Senator Villivalam told me. “It is good for our local economy, public health, quality of life, mitigating climate impact, and much more.” However, Villivalam continued, “With that said, I have heard from colleague after colleague. The appetite to vote on this unprecedented amount of funding without reform is just not there. Period.” * Chalkbeat | Mayor Johnson’s budget would send Chicago Public Schools $300 million – less than what CPS wants: Facing a nearly $1 billion deficit next year, Mayor Brandon Johnson proposed a city budget Wednesday that would send roughly $300 million to Chicago Public Schools. That’s nearly $140 million more than what CPS already budgeted to receive from the city. But it’s still roughly $190 million short of what CPS wants to help cover critical upcoming costs that have been at the heart of leadership conflicts between the mayor’s office and CPS. * Sun-Times | City’s record $300 million proposal for CPS budget deficit would still leave shortfall: To fill the CPS budget hole, Martinez asked Johnson for $484 million in TIF funds this year, a request that was always unlikely to be granted because it would have required declaring a more than a $900 million total surplus. That would be politically challenging since City Council members rely on that money to attract development to their wards. * Tribune | Mailers for school board race go negative — from Project 2025 to attacks on the mayor: “If Trump Republicans and out-of-state billionaires get their candidate — Ellen Rosenfeld — elected,” reads one pamphlet paid for by a CTU Local 1 Political Action Committee. Then, in smaller lettering: “Donald Trump’s 2025 agenda will crush our public schools.” Charter proponents and CTU have been longtime enemies and now their Board of Education fights are spilling into people’s living rooms in the form of these mailers. As all of them are likely Democrats, the labels paint a bizarre picture of the people running for school board seats. * Crain’s | Chicago’s first apartment building designed for the blind opens in Illinois Medical District: Printed on walls in a new nine-story apartment building on Wood Street are the words peace, joy, family, community and hope, but not everyone can read them. The words are printed in Braille, legible only to those who know this tactile printed language for people who are blind or visually impaired. The wallpaper lines elevator vestibules in a new $47 million building, called the Foglia Residences at the Chicago Lighthouse. It’s the first apartment building in the city designed expressly for people who are blind or visually impaired and living independently * CBS | How an 1884 painting at Chicago’s Art Institute saved Bill Murray’s life: “I think it’s called ‘The Song of the Lark,’ and it’s a woman working in a field and there’s a sunrise behind her,” Murray said in the clip. Murray said it was early on in his career and he was feeling hopeless after a performance. So CBS News Chicago’s Marie Saavedra went looking for that painting. * Tribune | Verna Clayton, former Buffalo Grove village president and state legislator, dies at 87 : According to Clayton’s daughter, one of the achievements that she was proudest of was bringing Lake Michigan water to Buffalo Grove through the creation of the Northwest Water Commission, which was formed to build a pipeline to carry water to four northwest suburbs. Lake water began flowing to Buffalo Grove in early 1985. While village president, Clayton also served for a time as the first female president of the Illinois Municipal League. * Crain’s | Developers try again to remake Highland Park’s former Solo Cup factory: For the third time in six years, the long-vacant 28-acre site of a former Solo Cup factory in Highland Park is in a developer’s sights, this time for residential development that would be half as dense as a plan that dissolved in 2018. The Habitat Co. is in the early stages of proposing a total of 262 units in townhouses and two-flats, with about 11.7 acres of existing trees and wetlands preserved on two sides of the property, which is at Old Deerfield and Ridge roads west of U.S. Highway 41. * Daily Southtown | Blue Island considers plan to bring a Cook County Fair to former landfill site: Blue Island officials are considering a proposal to convert the long-vacant site of a former landfill into a venue for hosting a Cook County Fair. Former Cook County Deputy Clerk John Mirkovic outlined his plans this month for the multiacre property at 119th Street and Vincennes Road in Blue Island. “I’ve been out there, I’ve looked at it. I think that it is large enough and it’s really great for something of this scale,” Mirkovic told the Blue Island City Council. * FOX | A look at local election security as 600K Cook County voters have already cast ballots: Around 600,000 Chicago and suburban Cook County residents have cast their ballots early. Chicago Board of Elections spokesman Max Bever says each machine tabulates the numbers at the end of the day, but they are kept secret until the polls close on Election Day. “So they’re going to a secret server – all the voting machines are never connected to the internet – so that’s why we don’t have live voting updates in real time,” Bever said. “We have to take those memory cards and we have to take those paper ballots at the end of each night and put those paper ballots under lock and key in our warehouse.” * Daily Herald | ‘Vivid creatures’ will be taking over Morton Aboretum next year: Construction already is in progress at the BeGaetz workshop and studio in Portland, Oregon. The pieces — the tallest is 24 feet high — will be made from recycled steel and fiber-reinforced cement and painted with acrylic so the five “Vivid Creatures” can withstand Midwestern weather. “Eighty percent of the steel that they use has been recycled at least once, and steel actually has a lower carbon footprint than most other materials that are used in large-scale sculptures,” Scott said. * BND | Former employee admits embezzling from Dupo School District activities fund: Linda J. Johnson, 58, of Waterloo, faced three counts of theft from Dupo Community Unit School District 196, where she worked. “Stealing funds from student activities directly deprives children of opportunities within their extracurriculars,” said U.S. Attorney Rachelle Aud Crowe. “Although the defendant tried to conceal her crime from school officials by preparing two sets of records, her deceit was discovered, and she will be held accountable.” The loss to the school district is $135,566.80. * WMBD | Program working to fix childcare shortages in Peoria County: Peoria County is one of 15 counties within the area that has the attention of the Women’s Business Development Center which is working with local leaders to expand its virtual no-cost programs to empower women to run as well as inspire them to open new childcare businesses. According to the center, there are more than 23,000 children under the age of 10 in Peoria County, but the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services says there are only 96 state-licensed childcare facilities. This averages out to 239 kids per facility, which they say is unrealistic. * SJ-R | Franklin’s Bergschneider elected National FFA president: Thaddeus Bergschneider, who grew up on a fourth-generation farm in Franklin in Morgan County, was elected National FFA President at its conventional and expo in Indianapolis last week. The Illinois FFA State President, Bergschneider is a freshman at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where he is pursuing a degree in agricultural and consumer economics in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences (ACES). * Today | McDonald’s may finally have a fix for its broken ice cream machine epidemic: McDonald’s often maligned, seemingly perennially-broken ice cream machines could soon become a thing of the past. On Oct. 25, the United States Copyright Office granted a copyright exemption that gives restaurants like McDonald’s the “right to repair” broken machines by circumventing digital locks that prevent them from being fixed by anyone other than its manufacturer. * AP | 2 New York Yankees fans who were ejected have been banned from Game 5 of World Series: The league and club released a statement saying the two fans who were involved in a ball being pried from Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts’ glove would not be permitted at the game. “Last night two fans were ejected from Yankee Stadium for egregious and unacceptable physical contact with Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts,” the statement reads. “The safety and security of players, fans and Stadium staff is the foundational element of every event held at Yankee Stadium, and it cannot be compromised. * WaPo | Musk’s plan to cut $2 trillion in U.S. spending could bring economic turmoil: Musk first outlined his highly aggressive target at a raucous campaign rally in New York last weekend, promising to identify “at least $2 trillion in cuts” as part of a formal review of federal agencies that he would conduct if Trump wins next week’s election. But the audacious pledge, which drew rapt applause, belied a harsh fiscal reality: Slashing the budget that steeply would require decimating an array of government services, including food, health care and housing aid — and it could erode funding for programs that lawmakers in both parties say they want to protect, from defense to Social Security.
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IDFPR launches new online licensing system, but only for clinical psychologists, music therapists and nail technicians (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for some additional background. WAND last year…
* WCIA in May…
* Today from the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation…
…Adding… Rep. Bob Morgan…
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I don’t get it
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
One favorite tactic with groups like this is to just throw everything imaginable at the wall to see what sticks. But there’s zero evidence that lawmakers would use that money for pensions, including in the above “analysis.” As former Gov. Pat Quinn has noted, the state has a law on the books creating the Property Tax Relief Fund. That’s where the money from the tax hike would go, he says. And the state of Illinois doesn’t have a “growing pension crisis.” The percentage of the state budget going to pensions has leveled off for years. * But, even if all the money was used to bring down pension costs, the IPI itself essentially acknowledges that such a move would reduce pressures on the property tax…
🤷♂️
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Pritzker asked about new city property tax hike proposal, doesn’t exactly respond (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the mayor’s official budget recommendation briefing. Click here for the mayor’s budget address as prepared. Tribune…
His own budget forecast published a year ago predicted the coming deficit almost to the dollar. Instead of mitigating the upcoming damage, he waited several months to do things like impose a hiring freeze that was nowhere near freezing levels. * More…
But keep this in mind…
If you click here and scroll through, you can look up the property tax bills of comparably priced homes in Naperville. Those taxes are far higher. * NBC 5…
More from that poll…
Whew. * Gov. Pritzker was asked about this topic today. Prepare yourself for a very long answer…
…Adding… Predictable…
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Pritzker: ‘More vetting should’ve been done’ on new CPS Board President
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the story. Reps. Morgan and Didech and Sen. Feigenholtz…
* Gov. Pritzker was asked about this today…
Please pardon any transcription errors.
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Oops
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Deleted a post because I screwed up. Sorry about that.
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News coverage roundup: Madigan corruption trial
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* WGN…
* More…
* Fox Chicago | Mike Madigan trial: Former ComEd exec testifies on utility rate hikes, political favors: On the witness stand, O’Neill answered questions about internal ComEd emails, and the passage of legislation linked to utility rate hikes in exchange for an upgraded power grid system. Dozens of pages of emails were presented to the jury, including conversations regarding the Smart Grid bill and the Future Energy Jobs Act (FEJA) of 2016, which provided ComEd with financial stability, according to O’Neill.
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Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I suppose
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Sangamo Club’s online bankruptcy auction ended yesterday. This giant 170×68 monstrosity was purchased for a whopping $39,050… ![]() I tried to convince the club to get rid of that drunken pilgrims painting for years so we didn’t have to look at it, but they always claimed nobody would buy it. Well, they were wrong. Bigtime. No word on who shelled out that kind of money, but I really hope it wasn’t a restaurant that I frequent. I miss that place a lot, so I bought a few keepsakes. Nothing quite as expensive as the drunken pilgrims thing, however. Not even close.
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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Report: Peoples Gas customers face onslaught of record-breaking rate hikes under disputed pipe-replacement program. Citizens Utility Board…
- Peoples customers would continue to incur charges associated with the pipe-replacement program for another 75 years – or more than six decades after the utility currently estimates it will finish revamping its system of gas mains. - The report finds that the pipe project could inflict unprecedented costs on consumers, beyond the rapid increase in heating bills they have already experienced over the last decade. * Related stories…
∙ Tribune: Peoples Gas pipeline program will cost another $12.8 billion to complete, report says, socking Chicago customers with 7% annual rate increases through 2040 At 10 am Governor Pritzker will announce a new Help Stop Hate initiative. Click here to watch. * Nieman Lab | In 2020, talk of “defunding the crime beat.” Where are we four years later? : The news industry has not, I think it’s fair to say, abolished the crime beat. Many newsrooms continue to publish unverified information from law enforcement in crime logs and the short, often single-source breaking news stories known as crime briefs. (Some legacy newspapers and local TV stations, in particular, seem to have a hard time kicking old habits.) * Bloomberg Law | Durkin Brothers Wend Through Illinois Legal, Political Worlds: Many brothers attend law school and launch legal careers in the same state, but few have attained the public successes Jim and Thomas Durkin have. Sixty-three-year-old Jim, seven years younger than Tom, was appointed to the Illinois House of Representatives about five years after graduating from law school and became House Republican leader 18 years later. * WGN | Illinois lawmakers scrutinize prescription drug pricing at hearing: * Daily Herald | Fiscal issues foremost for Villa, Brown in 25th District senate contest: Honoring pension obligations and fully funding schools are among the biggest challenges facing the Illinois General Assembly, state Sen. Karina Villa said during a Daily Herald endorsement interview. State legislators have to consider “how to bring in more money” to solve funding issues, according to the West Chicago Democrat, who is running for a second term representing the 25th District. * WMBD | State House race for 105th District: The race is between Republican incumbent Dennis Tipsword and Democratic candidate Morgan Phillips. “I decided that we had to be transparent,” said Tipsword. “We had to be open and available and try to get out and talk to our constituents on a timely matter when they needed it. I think over the last two years we have done a really good job of that. There’s always work to be done to try to make it a little quicker and a little better. But we have practices in place now.” * Advantage | Illinois AI law could have a far-reaching impact on business hiring: Effective Jan. 1, 2026, the Illinois Human Rights Act will be amended to prevent employers from using AI in a discriminatory manner, including using an individual’s ZIP code as a proxy identifier for characteristics. The law also requires notice to be sent when AI is being used in processes related to recruitment, hiring, promotion, renewal of employment, selection for training or apprenticeship, discharge or conditions of employment. * News-Gazette | After a slow start, sports gambling in Illinois has taken off: * WCIA | Illinois voters to consider advisory question on IVF coverage on November ballot: If you haven’t cast your ballot yet, you’ll see three advisory questions. One of them focuses on reproductive health care, asking voters if insurance plans should cover in vitro fertilization, or IVF, without limits on the number of treatments. “This wonderful science is out there for the taking and we should make it available to everybody because if you want a family, if you want children, you should be able to have one, not just because my plastic card looks different than your plastic card,” Rachel D’Onofrio, who has gone through IVF treatment, said. * WGN | Calls go unanswered amid continued decline in Chicago police ranks: The number of police officers is at or near record lows and Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign pledge to add 200 more detectives is unfulfilled, despite his claims to the contrary, according to a WGN Investigates analysis of police staffing numbers. As of September, Chicago had 1,662 fewer officers than it did in 2018, a decline of nearly 13 percent. * Chalkbeat | What’s at the heart of the turmoil at Chicago Public Schools? Money.: In many ways, the conflict can be traced back to pivotal decisions made five years ago. The district agreed to an ambitious new teachers union contract after a bruising 2019 strike that followed years of struggles to balance the budget. The Chicago Teachers Union successfully made the case that more staff earning higher salaries would help students in schools that lacked the resources to meet their needs. * Crain’s | UChicago researchers may have found ‘functional cure’ for Type 1 diabetes: There’s a catch-22 problem in treating Type 1 diabetes — the “standard of care” anti-rejection medicine used to try to cure diabetes is actually known to cause the same disease. UChicago Medicine researchers are hoping they’ve solved it with a new treatment. Medical researchers at UChicago have successfully transplanted pancreatic islets into three patients with Type 1 diabetes, with two achieving insulin independence and a third already decreasing insulin use by 60%. * Block Club | O’Hare Awarded $20 Million From Federal Government For Terminal 5 Overhaul: The new funds will be used to improve O’Hare’s Terminal 5. The airport has now received a total of $110 million from the federal legislation since it was signed into law in 2021. Terminal 5 includes the highest number of airlines of any terminal at the airport. Air France, American Airlines, British Airways and Air India are just four of the nearly 40 airlines that are based in Terminal 5, according to the National Airport Database.
* Sun-Times | White Sox to hire Will Venable as next manager: Venable, who turned 42 on Tuesday, is a Princeton grad who played nine seasons in the majors and was named a special assistant to Cubs president Theo Epstein in 2017. He was the Cubs’ first-base coach in 2018-19 and third-base coach in 2020. * Daily Herald | With eye on homeless people, Mundelein bans public camping: Violators will face fines ranging from $75 for a first offense to $750, as well as potential jail time. This summer, the Supreme Court found municipalities do not violate the Eighth Amendment’s “cruel and unusual punishment” prohibition by enforcing laws that ban homeless people from camping in public places. […] The ordinance applies to all public property in town. Officials will work with Mundelein Park & Recreation District officials to ensure its properties are included, Police Chief Jason Seeley said in a memo. * Tribune | In ‘weird’ Cook County state’s attorney’s race, O’Neill Burke — who progressives called a ‘de facto’ Republican — looking to defeat GOPer Fioretti: The Democratic nominee, Eileen O’Neill Burke, prevailed in the primary while pushing back against claims she’s a de facto Republican, while the Republican nominee, Bob Fioretti, was until recently a longtime Democrat who is being backed in the general election by progressive icon the Rev. Jesse Jackson. And after running a robust campaign to defeat the Cook County Democratic Party’s favored candidate in March, O’Neill Burke has made a concerted effort since to largely lay low while Fioretti is trying — and mostly failing — to raise enough money to make the race competitive. * Daily Herald | Feed producer, Mount Prospect reach interim deal on odor monitoring; parties head for trial: Details of the confidential agreement were summarized in a joint statement on Tuesday from the village, the manufacturer at 431 Lakeview Court and the City of Des Plaines, which is a party to the litigation. Under the agreement, Prestige agreed to random odor testing. If odors exceed certain monitoring standards, Prestige will temporarily halt its operations on the following shift. * Daily Herald | Safety gates at fatal Barrington crossing on steady but slow track: A Barrington official said the village remains committed to installing pedestrian safety gates at its downtown and Hillside Avenue railroad crossings. However, the village has to follow an administrative process before construction can begin, said Deputy Village Manager Marie Hansen. * WCIA | ‘I’ve never seen anything like this’; Early voting turns violent in Champaign Co.: Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons said it started when a man went to vote wearing a hat supporting former President Donald Trump. […] “He was saying he was being denied his right to vote,” Pritchard said. “All they had asked is that he remove his hat. [The election judges] said they were shaken up at the time, the other voters in line were shaken up.” * WGEM | Gov. Pritzker, Illinois leaders celebrate expansion of Voortman Steel Machinery in state: The Governor‘s Office said Voortman purchased a 27-acre property and will build a 100,000 square-foot building. Voortman plans to invest $51.4 million in the project. Pritzker said it’s possible thanks to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Development through its Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credit program. * WICS | New juvenile center wants to engage with Lincoln community: The facility comes as a result of a plan put in place by Governor JB Pritzker in 2020 that focuses on reducing the harm of incarceration of youth. Robert Vickery, the acting director of the Illinois Department of Juvenil Justice says, “At all of our locations,we really emphasize building collaborative relationships with non-profits, with faith-based groups, with higher education, like community colleges, folks that have an interest in serving our kids.” * Rolling Stone | Musk says Trump win would result in hardship for some Americans: When asked about “tackling the nation’s debt,” he mentioned changing the tax code, and then went on to say there would be some financial difficulty imposed on some Americans. “Most importantly, we have to reduce spending to live within our means,” he said, adding that these efforts will “involve some temporary hardship, but it will ensure long-term prosperity.” * WaPo | She said she had a miscarriage — then got arrested under an abortion law: Earlier that month, Frazier had shared a Facebook post about the son she lost. She had apologized to Abel, saying she was “so scarred n afraid” and “didn’t know what to do,” court records show. “Why would you be sorry?” asked Jacqueline “Jac” Mitcham, the 31-year-old deputy on Frazier’s doorstep, according to body-camera footage obtained by The Washington Post. “Why would you be sorry, Patience?”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Henyard files to run again as Dolton village president
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Southtown…
Your recommended campaign slogan(s)?
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Triibe…
* Governor JB Pritzker…
Click here to read the full letter. * Tribune | Ex-ComEd lawyer testifies about Juan Ochoa’s appointment to utility board in Madigan trial: ‘It was important that the speaker referred him’: In one of the central allegations in Madigan’s corruption case, Tom O’Neill, ComEd’s former chief lawyer, testified that the then-powerful speaker wanted Ochoa, the former chief of the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority (McPier), placed in a rare vacant seat on the company’s board in late 2017. He said CEO Anne Pramaggiore was behind the move because Ochoa’s resume came from Madigan. * Capitol News Illinois | Madigan co-defendant warned ComEd CEO not to ‘provoke a reaction from our Friend’: O’Neill, who spent nearly two decades at ComEd and its parent company Exelon, described the days and weeks leading up to the critical vote as a “very intense” time. But as the lobbyist, John Hooker, closed the door to O’Neill’s office and sat down, he wasn’t checking in on ComEd’s legislative efforts on the bill that the utility’s executives believed could turn the tide for the financially beleaguered company. * Indiana Capital Chronicle | For Indiana Woman, ‘Worst-Case Scenario’ Led Her to Illinois: But the experience, at times, left the daughter of a former Delaware County Sheriff feeling like a fugitive. She was advised to pay in cash and, should she experience complications and visit an emergency room, she was told to let health professionals believe she’d experienced another miscarriage. * Block Club | After Turbulent Tenure, CHA CEO Tracey Scott Out: ‘Residents Were Suffering In The End’: The mayor is finally making his moves, sources said. Last month, Johnson installed two longtime community activists on the board, and he’s preparing to appoint another board member, a CHA resident, later this week. “I think what you’re looking at is an overhaul of the CHA and it’s long overdue,” said housing advocate Roderick Wilson, executive director of the Lugenia Burns Hope Center. “What we’re looking at is hopefully a new day for the CHA … with more housing and better management.” * WTTW | Anjanette Young on Chicago Police Reform: ‘We Are Still Waiting for Some Tangible Action’: Anjanette Young, founder of I AM Her Foundation, joined “Chicago Tonight” to talk about police reform in Chicago. During a botched CPD raid in February 2019, Young, a social worker, was handcuffed while naked as officers searched her apartment and ignored her dozens of statements that they were at the wrong home. “Individuals like myself and other family members, who are the ones that are being harmed by this timing, is an issue. With Laquan McDonald, it’s been 10 years. For myself, it’s been five years, and yet we are still waiting for some tangible action from the consent decree.” * Unraveled | Cop who killed Anthony Alvarez training new recruits: A Chicago police officer previously recommended for firing after a deadly foot pursuit is on the job again—and this time, he’s training rookies. Officer Evan Solano, who faced termination little more than two years ago after shooting and killing 22-year-old Anthony Alvarez, was promoted to the position of Field Training Officer (FTO) this past April. He has been training probationary police officers in the Northwest Side 16th District for the past six months, according to records obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request. * Sun-Times | Jewish leaders urge hate crime charges, and patience, in shooting of man on way to Chicago synagogue: Shlomo Soroka, director of government affairs at Agudath Israel Illinois, said he has spoken to the victim of the attack, who he said is an Orthodox Jew. Soroka said Orthodox Jews are the most vulnerable to attacks because they are easily identifiable by their clothes, and since they don’t drive on the Sabbath on Saturdays, must live within walking distance of their synagogue. * WBEZ | Urban Growers Collective mixes Halloween and food education at South Chicago farm: “It’s important for kids to learn where their food comes from,” Garner-McCruder said. “There’s this disconnect between kids and the grocery store. They don’t know where their food comes from. Knowing that gives them a greater appreciation for what they have, so gratitude this time of year is important.” Mykele Deville, farm ambassador for Urban Growers Collective, was one of the many staffers helping out with farm tours and activities, which included making bouquets of flowers and a game that had kids trying to match plants with their seeds. * Crain’s | Five takeaways from the latest Chicago housing market data: Housing affordability hasn’t improved much, and buyers in the Chicago area are feeling it acutely, recent data on the local market indicates. It’s a one-two punch. One: Home prices are rising faster in the Chicago area than in most of the U.S. and have been for most of 2024. Two: Mortgage rates didn’t make the sharp U-turn some people may have hoped for after the Federal Reserve in September made its first rate cut in four years. * Block Club | Huge Hole In South Side Street Won’t Be Fixed Until At Least December, ComEd Tells Neighbors: Champlain Avenue residents have had their lives disrupted by a cavernous hole in the street since May, when ComEd workers opened a section of the street to fix a cable leak caused by previous contractors. The leak was fixed, but ComEd told neighbors more work would be necessary to remediate the surrounding soil, which required more permits. * News-Sun | US House Rep. Brad Schneider faces GOP challenger in bid for 6th term: ‘There is so much at stake’: After five terms in the U.S. House of Representatives serving much of Lake County, Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Highland Park, says he wants to continue improving the lives of the residents and his Republican opponent, Lake Forest resident Jim Carris, hopes for an opportunity to do the same. Voters in parts of Lake, Cook and McHenry counties will decide whether to return Schneider to Washington or send Carris to represent them there when they cast their ballots in the Nov. 5 general election. * Patch | Lake Forest Cop Takes On Lake County Board Chair In District 13 Candidate Forum: Sandy Hart, a member of the 19-member board for the past dozen years and its chair since Democrats gained a majority in 2018 for the first time in its history, faces a challenge from Republican Ben Grum, a Lake Forest police commander making his first foray into electoral politics in his campaign for the 13th District, which includes Lake Bluff, as well as portions of Gurnee, North Chicago and Waukegan. * Patch | Alleging Italian Slur, Ex-Will County Deputy Files Federal Lawsuit: More than two years since his employment at the Will County Sheriff’s Department ended, former Will County Sheriff’s Investigator Ross Ricobene has filed a federal lawsuit alleging his Italian heritage played a key role in his ouster by the administration of Sheriff Mike Kelley. * News-Sun | CLC officials show off technology center to business community; ‘Why waste time trying to find someone when they’re right here?’: With Lake County sitting as the second-largest manufacturing county in the state, the 170,000-square-foot facility has serious potential for employers in the region, but only if they know about it. Claire Slattery, executive director of the Lake Zurich Area Chamber of Commerce, was one of 11 area chambers of commerce that took part in Thursday’s event. Similar previous networking events hadn’t drawn nearly as many businesses, and she was pleased with the turnout. * News-Gazette | Election ‘24: Law enforcement called on voter who refused to remove Trump hat: Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons described 2024 as the “most bizarre” election he’s administered. […] A voter at the [Meadowbrook Community Church] was wearing a hat in support of former President Donald Trump, Ammons said. Election judges asked the man to remove the hat, as Illinois law forbids electioneering inside “campaign-free zone,” which extends to 100 feet outside the entrance of the polling place. According to Ammons, this includes clothing that promotes a particular candidate. […] “The voter’s actions were a disruption to the voting process and eventually led to at least two people not being able to vote that day,” he said. “Champaign police officers responded to the call from my staff, and they are currently working with the state’s attorney to further investigate this matter.” * SJ-R | After bullying, hazing investigation, Illinois high school football coach serves suspension: After allegations of hazing and bullying in his program, Rochester football coach Derek Leonard was suspended for his team’s regular-season finale Oct. 25. After an investigation from Edwardsville attorney Tueth Keeney, the Rochester school board voted 4-1 to accept recommendations, which included the one-game suspension for Leonard. Susan Nichols, the school district’s legal counsel, read from a prepared statement Thursday after the school board came out of a closed session. * WCIA | Parkland College alum leads crew of umpires officiating World Series: Mark Carlson is the crew chief of the group of umpires assigned to this year’s championship series of Major League Baseball. Born in Joliet, Carlson attended Parkland in 1987 and played baseball for the Cobras as a catcher. He is a member of the Parkland College Hall of Fame’s Class of 2016. * SIU | SIU researchers investigate technology to kill supergerms at the nano level: Researchers at Southern Illinois University Carbondale are studying how to zap antibiotic-resistant bugs using electricity on the nano scale, which could lead to fewer infection-related deaths in hospitals. Punit Kohli, professor in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular Sciences, along with researchers from the departments of chemistry, microbiology, physiology and the SIU School of Medicine, recently published a paper in the journal Science Advances outlining their work. The technology, known as “electrically polarized nanoscale metallic” or “ENM,” involves applying an electrical potential to nanoscale metallic coatings that polarizes the coatings and generates chemicals called reactive oxygenated and chlorinated species. Such substances can deactivate a wide range of harmful microorganisms. * Bloomberg | These white male CEOs got wealthier from diversity-linked pay : For all the pushback against corporate DEI programs for allegedly discriminating against white men, it turns out the policies have been lucrative for some of the most powerful among them. White men make up the majority of 28 chief executive officers who were paid bonuses for meeting their company’s diversity, equity and inclusion goals last year, according to analysis by Farient Advisors, an executive compensation consulting firm. The CEOs, whose businesses set how much of their bonuses were tied to short-term DEI goals as well as their payouts, collectively took home about $5 million. * WIRED | Facebook Is Auto-Generating Militia Group Pages as Extremists Continue to Organize in Plain Sight: Anti-government militia movements have been continuing to use Facebook to recruit, coordinate training, promote ballot box stake outs, and prepare for a civil war that many militants believe will break out after election day. And in some cases, the movement is attracting people who don’t appear to have any prior background in a militia. Meta is even doing the work for extremist movements by auto-generating some group pages on their behalf. * NBC | Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker accelerates abortion advocacy on eve of the election: The group previously donated seven figures separately in Arizona, Florida and Nevada, which all are attempting to codify abortion rights in their states. In the rest of the states, which also include Montana, the investments are in the six figures. Think Big would not provide more specifics about donation amounts; a recent filing in South Dakota revealed last week it gave $500,000. * Crain’s | Walgreens lays off about 250 workers in latest round of cuts: The struggling pharmacy chain is laying off 256 employees, or 3.6%, of its support center team,employees and cutting about 215 open and unfilled roles, Walgreens spokesman Fraser Engerman confirmed in a statement to Crain’s.
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Strong press pop for CTU, but actual solution is highly doubtful
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The CTU pushed for an elected Chicago school for years and years. And now they find themselves being outspent…
The CTU has two political action committees, although I still don’t know why they’re given this exemption to the one committee per entity law. Anyway, those two committee have contributed a bit over $2 million, mostly to school board candidates and other committees involved in those races. That link shows $2.7 million, but the union erroneously claimed a $700K in-kind contribution. It was a big typo. INCS Action, essentially the political arm of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, has spent about $2.1 million, almost all on school board candidates. Urban Center Action has spent another $723K on candidates, many of whom are also backed by INCS Action. * WGN…
Um, campaign contribution limits are most definitely in state law. It’s just that the caps have been busted in all but two of the races. Tribune…
* I discussed this with subscribers on Monday, but here’s the Tribune…
The legislature passed a bill in 2021 that barred out-of-state contributions to judicial candidates and capped contributions to independent expenditure committees in the 2022 court races at $500,000. It was tossed by a judge and wasn’t appealed.
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Have you voted yet? Early or mail? If not, what are your voting plans? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Roundup: Madigan corruption trial continues
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WGN…
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
* ABC Chicago…
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Nearly 5,000 entries received in flag redesign contest
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for some background. Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…
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Open thread
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois Democrats already hold a supermajority of state House seats. They want more. WBEZ…
- The Illinois GOP is taking the long view, trying to inch its way back to power. - “We’re not going to say we’re going to become the majority party,” McCombie said. “We’re going to do this one cycle at a time, bit by bit, and get us closer to the map in the 10-year time.” At 1 pm Governor Pritzker will join a global machinery production company to announce a new Illinois expansion. Click here to watch. * Meta | Upcoming 2024 Restriction Period for US ads about social issues, elections, or politics: [Meta] will not allow any new ads about social issues, elections or politics in the US from 12:01 AM PT on Tuesday, October 29, 2024 through 11:59 PM PT on Tuesday, November 5, 2024. In order to run ads about social issues, elections or politics in the US during the restriction period, the ads must be created with a valid disclaimer and have delivered an impression prior to 12:01 AM PT on Tuesday, October 29, 2024. * Utility Drive | 5 governors call for PJM capacity market rule changes to reduce ‘unnecessary’ consumer costs: Five governors are urging the PJM Interconnection to reform its capacity market rules and interconnection queue process to prevent “unnecessary” costs for electricity customers. PJM’s last capacity auction in July will cost consumers a “staggering” $14.7 billion, which could hurt economic development, according to a letter from the governors of Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania sent Friday to PJM. * Tribune | State legislators announce plans to introduce campaign finance reform legislation: Armed with signs of blown-up checks of billionaire investments in Chicago’s upcoming school board elections, aldermen, congressmen and parents gathered outside the Illinois Network of Charter Schools office Monday morning to denounce large donations made by out-of-state billionaires and introduce a proposal for campaign finance reform. […] Though no specific legislation language was proposed Monday morning, Kent Redfield, professor emeritus of political science at the University of Illinois Springfield, said any bill would likely be thrown out if it were to pass, citing a recent law imposing a $500,000 limit on out-of-state judicial campaign contributions that was challenged in federal court. * Windy City Times | Two LGBTQ+ incumbents are keeping seats in Illinois State Legislature: State Rep. Kelly Cassidy (14th District) and State Sen. Mike Simmons (7th District) are both running unopposed in the race to keep their seats. They are the only two out LGBTQ+ elected officials in the state legislature. Cassidy has held this role since 2011 and led efforts to ban conversion therapy, strengthen protections for those who have experienced hate crimes and protect reproductive rights. Simmons, who was appointed to the role in 2021 when former Senator Heather Steans retired, has helped pass laws protecting same-sex marriage, protecting nonbinary state employees and ensuring language in government communications is more inclusive. * Woodstock Institute | Predatory Lending Strikes Again in Illinois: The cycle of predatory lending has struck again for Kesha Thompson-Warren. In open disregard of the State’s 36% APR interest rate cap, Opportunity Financial (OppFi) is making loans in Illinois at 159.5% APR, over four times higher than Illinois’ 36% rate cap established by Illinois’ Predatory Loan Prevention Act (PLPA). The PLPA was passed in 2021 as part of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus Agenda to combat systemic racism in Illinois. * WAND | Illinois using marijuana sales tax, opioid settlement funds for behavioral health services: The Restore Reinvest Renew, or R3 program, was a critical part of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. State leaders said $127 million has been dispersed for mental health and addiction services this year. That’s compared to roughly $80 million during 2023. “CRTA allows for approaching mental health and substance use by focusing on social determinants and related concerns such as the historical overuse of the criminal justice system, concentrated poverty and violence,” said Dr. Donell Barnet, the behavioral health advisor for the Illinois Department of Human Services. * Tribune | Aldermen expecting Mayor Brandon Johnson’s budget plan to include property tax increase: Three aldermen who spoke to the Tribune on background Monday said Johnson administration officials told them in one-on-one briefings that the mayor will recommend a property tax hike as part of his plan to balance the budget. The mayor’s team did not specify how large such a tax increase would be, the aldermen said. Johnson will introduce his 2025 spending plan Wednesday. Mayoral spokeswoman Erin Connelly declined to comment Monday about the possibility he will call for a property tax hike. * WBEZ | Despite a hiring freeze, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration still made hundreds of new hires: The employment data, obtained by WBEZ through an open records request, includes 268 new hires through Oct. 21. In all, the hires and promotions total roughly $31.4 million in annual salaries – a fraction of the $223 million end-of-year deficit and $982.4 million budget gap for 2025. * Tribune | Chicago Housing Authority CEO Tracey Scott to leave her role on Friday: She will be replaced for the time being by Angela Hurlock, current chairperson of the board, as CHA searches for her replacement. Scott has served as head of the organization for four and a half years. “The CHA Board of Commissioners would like to thank Ms. Scott for her leadership during this crucial period when the demand for affordable housing is more pressing than ever,” CHA Vice Chairman Matthew Brewer said in the news release. “CHA is well-positioned for continued growth as we enter this next chapter.” * Sun-Times | Chicago heating bills could double under troubled Peoples Gas pipeline replacement program, report finds: Chicago heating bills could double over the next 15 years if state regulators allow Peoples Gas to move forward with its long-maligned pipeline replacement program, according to a report commissioned by consumer advocates. Customers would face a series of record-setting annual rate hikes every year through 2040 — and keep paying for the long-delayed project for an additional six decades, under projections released Tuesday by the Citizens Utility Board. * Crain’s | Community activists aren’t sold on quantum park’s promises just yet: “It was a good start, but it’s not enough,” NietoGomez, executive director of the Alliance of the SouthEast, an umbrella group of community organizations formed in response to various proposals to redevelop the USX site over the past decade, says of the event. The group has been raising concerns about the Illinois Quantum & Microelectronics Park since it was announced, urging elected officials to slow down the project, which could start construction by the end of the year. * Block Club | 5 Transit Board Appointees Advance, But Some Bristle At Another Pastor With No Transit Experience: Most of the new nominees were lauded for their experience in transit or related fields. All passed through the committee unanimously except Jarixon Medina — a pastor with New Life Covenant Church’s Spanish-speaking campus in Humboldt Park — who was questioned like Acree for having no bonafides in professional transit roles. * Crain’s | Union League’s Monet going up for auction next month: The club has weighed selling “Pommiers en Fleurs,” or Apple Trees in Bloom, for years to pay down debt and fund renovation costs. It tried once, approving a sale in late 2020 as the pandemic rolled on and the club’s finances deteriorated, but was later sued by an Australian art dealer who alleged the club backed out of a $7.2 million agreement. A Cook County Circuit Court judge dismissed the suit, a decision upheld on appeal. Tribune | Finalists announced for the 2025 Jean Banchet Awards, with a brand-new pizza category: Finalists in 13 categories for the coveted Jean Banchet Awards for Culinary Excellence were announced Monday, including a new, deliciously divisive category: Pizza. “The Banchet Awards are always kind of funny, we always try and poke fun at ourselves as much as possible so we thought what could be funnier than trying to name four pizza joints in Chicago,” said Michael Muser, Banchet Awards host and organizer. “We thought about theoretically, what do we want it to say, do we want it to pay homage to different styles or what … At the end of the day, the panel came up with the best list they thought represented the year for them in terms of the pizzas people are wanting.”
* Daily Herald | Korean War veteran laid to rest in Elgin: 74 years after he was killed in the Korean War, U.S. Army Cpl. Eriverto Ortiz was laid to rest at Bluff City Cemetery in Elgin Monday, Oct. 28, 2024. * Daily Herald | Aurora mayoral contest headed for a primary; more candidates join Naperville council race: For the first time since he was elected mayor of Aurora, Richard Irvin is set to face a crowded field of opponents in a primary election. Irvin and five mayoral challengers have filed to run in 2025, clearing the threshold for a primary to be held in February to narrow the field down to two candidates for the April consolidated election. Monday was the last day for candidates in Aurora, Elgin, Naperville and Wheaton to turn in their petitions to get their names on the ballot. * Daily Southtown | Midlothian Village President Gary L’ Heureux says he mistakenly took homeowner’s tax exemption on two properties: L’Heureux said he mistakenly took the exemption, that cuts the equalized assessed valuation of a home by $10,000 for a homeowner’s principal residence, for two properties almost every year since he bought his second home in 2020. He has since contacted the Cook County assessor’s office to correct the issue. * WCIA | Illinois man awarded Purple Heart, Bronze Star with Valor: Chase Wilhelm stood on stage in the Illinois Governor’s Mansion on Monday and received four honors, including a Purple Heart, a Bronze Star with Valor, the Four Chaplain’s award and an Army Commendation. Chaplain, Major Wilhelm was one of the first on the scene after a U.S. Military Base in Jordan was hit by a drone strike on January 28th, 2024. Three people died in the attack. According to the base commander for Tower 22, Wilhelm jumped into action immediately when he arrived on the scene. He helped people who were still in the wreckage following the strike. * SLPR | Bost getting little challenge from Democrat in southern Illinois congressional district: After a contentious primary, Illinois U.S. Rep. Mike Bost, R-Murphysboro, is expected to cruise to victory for Illinois’ 12th Congressional District this November. One of the most conservative districts in the state, spanning much of the southern third of the state, electoral experts have rated it a safe or solid Republican seat. On top of that, the Democrat challenging Bost, Brian Roberts of Carbondale, has not reported raising any cash this cycle to unseat him, federal records show. * PJ Star | Four people have filed to run for Peoria mayor in 2025. Here’s what we know: Four people have thrown their hats in the ring in Peoria’s mayoral race and three incumbent city councilmembers will face challengers in next year’s municipal elections. There is guaranteed to be at least one new face on the Peoria City Council. The 2nd District seat is wide open because its current representative, Chuck Grayeb, is running for mayor. * WCIA | ‘This is what farmers do’; Bellflower community lends a hand during harvest season: About 50 farmers have done just that for one of their own. Lloyd Power has been a farmer all his life, but an infection has come in the way of his harvest this year. […] “We had a discussion in the hospital, and Llloyd, at first, was reluctant,” Gibson City farmer John Leonard said. “He’s used to giving. He gives so much. And so I kind of reminded him that people want to give back.” * Daily Herald | ‘Urgent, complex challenge’: Pedestrian deaths on train tracks are escalating: In 2023, 715 people trespassing on railway property died in train collisions across the U.S., officials reported Thursday at the DuPage Railroad Safety Council’s “Prevent Tragedy on the Tracks” forum. That’s a spike compared to the 10-year average of 533 deaths. There were 494 in 1995, a year after the council was formed.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Oct 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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