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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rolling Stone

In early March of last year, Casey was nearly done with her opening shift at a McDonald’s in DeLand, Florida, when she saw an alert pop up on her screen. It was a text from a friend with reports of a new proposed state law, an early draft of what would become Senate Bill 254. The bill aimed, among other restrictions, to further restrict access to gender-affirming care. As Casey read, a wave of panic took hold. This was the news she had feared most. […]

Over the next two months, Casey put her plan in place. She took on extra hours at work and listed their house on the market. The couple sold what they could — a camper, two canoes. When they learned the bill had been approved on Thursday, May 4, Casey didn’t hesitate. “I figured [Gov. Ron DeSantis] would sign it by 5 p.m. on Friday, so my goal was to be on the road by then,” she recalls. […]

While American’s today don’t typically uproot to protect their personal freedoms — taxes, sure — a wave of laws restricting interventions for transgender youth and limiting access to health care for adults has driven more people across the country to seek shelter in states with LGBTQ-friendly policies. A recent KFF/Washington Post survey, for example, shows that one in four transgender adults have relocated for a more accepting environment. “Calling this a new class of refugees is not overly dramatic,” says Abbie Goldberg, the director of women’s and gender studies at Clark University, who has spent years surveying American LGBTQ families. “We know people’s sense of safety, value, and basic citizenship are profoundly impacted by legislative change. It feels like an explicit relegation to second-class citizenship.”

“I’ve heard this phenomenon referred to as an uncountable diaspora,” says Kelly Cassidy, an Illinois state representative and vocal advocate for both abortion access and transgender rights. In the past several years, Rep. Cassidy helped push through the Reproductive Care Act, which ensures the right to have an abortion in Illinois and protects providers and patients coming from out of state. She has also stood behind a conversion-therapy ban, expanded coverage for transgender medical care, and proposed a tax credit for those fleeing more restrictive states for Illinois. “The impact is so broad,” she says, “it’s impossible to really count and quantify. It’s a little overwhelming to contemplate.” […]

But while some lawmakers are determined to restrict Americans’ access to medical care, those in Illinois, Minnesota, and Maryland, among others, have declared their states health care safe havens.

* Block Club

The CTA didn’t engage in a competitive bidding process for the [Zero Eyes AI gun-detection] pilot, and the agency failed to hold an open discussion with its own governing board about the AI gun-detection program. CTA officials have refused to answer questions about key features of the program or their decision to pay the tech firm to launch a pilot with no clear end date. […]

The CTA has not provided a full copy of the contract as Block Club requested. But the portion shared by the agency includes a strict confidentiality clause that prevents the CTA from speaking about certain terms of the pilot. Also, “any modifications or extensions” to the agreement are confidential information. The records shared with Block Club don’t include a dollar amount or the dates when services began and are set to end. […]

State Rep. Kam Buckner, a state leader on transportation issues, said the CTA should have provided more information to the public before starting the pilot. […]

“Unfortunately, this type of opacity is typical of late within CTA,” Buckner said. “I would urge the CTA and other public agencies to prioritize transparency and public involvement when exploring technologies that can affect the lives of the people we are supposed to be serving.” […]

Carter had been in contact with ZeroEyes since at least the summer of 2023, when he attended a four-hour “Lunch and Learn for ZeroEyes” at Navy Pier, according to copies of his schedule reviewed by Block Club. The Zero Eyes technology has been used at Navy Pier for the past two years.

*** La Schiazza Trial ***

* Tribune | Jury resumes deliberations in trial of AT&T boss accused of bribing Speaker Michael Madigan: Shortly after returning, the jury sent the judge their first note, which read: “The government indicates that for a bribe there only needs to be ‘intent’ and no exchange. Is this consistent with the law?” This question seemed to hit at the heart of the case. U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman called the jury back out and reread several pages of the jury instructions dealing with the elements of the bribery counts, then urged them to read it again back in the jury room. The instructions define bribery as a person giving or offering something of value to another person “with the intent to influence or reward an agents of state government in exchange for an official act.” Gettleman told the lawyers he’s not surprised by the confusion because the issue is complicated

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | New Bears lakefront stadium would only be a ‘playground’ for the rich, opponents say: Leaders from Friends of the Parks, Landmarks Illinois and People for Community Recovery voiced their opposition outside Soldier Field, arguing the plan would intensify an existing gap in development throughout the city and use public money in a way opposed by many taxpayers. “Ensuring Chicago’s lakefront remains forever open, clear and free is not the responsibility of one but the work of many,” Friends of the Parks interim executive director said Gin Kilgore, interim executive director of the influential Friends of the Parks. “With all the issues of inequity in Chicago, we cannot take our eyes off the real goal of accessible health care, addressing food deserts, affordable housing and abundant amenities in all of our parks for everyone to enjoy.”

* Block Club | West Loop’s Ald. Walter Burnett Appointed To Zoning Committee Chair: Ald. Walter Burnett (27th), Chicago’s vice mayor and longest-serving alderman, is now chairperson of City Council’s powerful zoning committee. The appointment ends a months-long saga after Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th) resigned as zoning chair and as the mayor’s floor leader following an alleged physical confrontation with Ald. Emma Mitts (37th) at City Hall.

* Chalkbeat | Chicago Board of Education adopts new 5-year plan prioritizing neighborhood public schools: The plan, revealed publicly for the first time on Monday and approved by the board Wednesday, does not include CPS policy changes. But it sets out a slew of priorities and goals, including reducing chronic absenteeism, increasing state reading and math scores, and reducing teacher vacancies.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s new ‘Brown Belt’ is populated by Mexican residents who help fuel the area economy, report says: Chicago’s Mexican residents — who are now the dominant group in 15 community areas — undergird the region’s low-wage workforce and make significant contributions to its economy and culture, argues a new report released this week. The findings were highlighted Tuesday at the Latino Research Initiative 2024 Summit, organized by the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois Chicago.

* Crain’s | Medline triples office footprint at Merchandise Mart: In a move that bucks the trend of companies embracing the remote work movement and slashing their office footprints, the Northfield-based company today announced it has inked a new long-term lease for 161,000 square feet at the Merchandise Mart. The new workspace adds 110,000 square feet to the office it has leased in the building since 2021 and makes the company one of the largest tenants in the hulking riverfront property.

* Tribune | As the Morton Salt complex was given a new life, a photographer captured the transformation: She never intended to become a photographer but that is what Sandra Steinbrecher is and in her new book “The Salt Shed: The Transformation of a Chicago Landmark,” she shows herself to be an extraordinary one. “There is not a day, not one day over the last three years that I have not thought about this place, whether I was on site or not,” she says. “From the first photo, it seemed momentous to me. But I never imagined how much work it would be. This is a Chicago story, but I think it could, or should, resonate with other cities, as all communities have to figure out how to manage their empty or abandoned buildings”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Suburban mental health center owners get prison time for $2.5M Medicaid fraud: Summer Matheson and Terrence Ewing, co-managers of Matteson-based Laynie Foundation, along with foundation employee Richard Grundy, each pleaded guilty last year to a federal health care fraud charge and were indicted on crimes back in 2019, according to a statement today from the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Northern District of Illinois. On Sept. 12, U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey sentenced Matheson, 46, to six years in federal prison, and Ewing, 62, to four and a half years, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

* Daily Herald | Lawsuit filed by family of Barrington teen killed when hit by Metra train: “Marin’s death was entirely preventable,” attorney James Pullos said in an announcement of the lawsuit. “Marin merely attempted to cross over the sidewalk on her way to school after the first train passed through the crossing. Without any warnings to alert her that an inbound train was coming from the opposite direction and without notice that this inbound track was what is sometimes called a ‘hot rail,’ Marin was unaware there was a second train approaching.”

* WSPY | Aurora Mayor and Kane County Sheriff clash over 2023 K9 Hudson incident: Meanwhile, the Kane County State’s Attorney’s Office says the incident remains under investigation by the Kane County Major Crimes Task Force. State’s Attorney Mosser says in a statement that she disagrees with Hain’s comments and does not blame Aurora PD for the outcome of the incident.

* Daily Herald | Hanover Township Emergency Services receives recertification from Cook County: The recertification process required township staff and officials to work through an emergency scenario that could extend for days, such as severe flooding, a winter storm, or a tornado touchdown. Township personnel developed plans for evacuating residents to safe locations and disbursing supplies while keeping buildings open to serve as shelters. Emergency Services officers identified damaged areas and needed resources that the township could provide to assist in initial response activities. The exercise also allowed for Emergency Services to demonstrate their communications in working with command level personnel in impacted communities.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘Feels like home’: Urbana Mayor reflects on time in office, community involvement: City of Urbana Mayor Diane Marlin is not running for re-election in the spring, but she’ll remain involved in the community she’s called “home” for decades. “I’ve lived in Urbana for over 50 years,” Marlin said. “I came here as a freshman (at the U of I) many years ago, and what I love about it — even back then — it is a very welcoming community and feels like home.”

*** National ***

* AP | Fed chops key interest rate by a sizable half-point, turns focus to more jobs: The Federal Reserve on Wednesday cut its benchmark interest rate by an unusually large half-point, a dramatic shift after more than two years of high rates that helped tame inflation but also made borrowing painfully expensive for American consumers.

* DNYUZ | Study Reveals Bird-Migration Mystery: Scientists have long assumed that a basic trade-off made migration worth the gamble: Once birds arrived at their wintering grounds, they wouldn’t need to work so hard to stay warm, saving substantial amounts of energy. “But nobody ever tested this,” said Nils Linek, a behavioral ecologist at the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior in Germany. Now, Dr. Linek and his colleagues have done so. Their findings, based on a partially migratory population of German blackbirds, challenge the conventional wisdom. Even in the depths of winter, blackbirds basking in balmy southern Europe or northern Africa did not spend any less energy than those riding out the cold in Germany, the scientists found.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Rate McGraw’s first TV ad

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Brenden Moore

After two weeks of having the central and northwestern Illinois airwaves to himself, Democratic Rep. Eric Sorensen, D-Moline, has some competition for his district’s eyes and ears.

Retired Judge Joe McGraw, Sorensen’s Republican challenger in Illinois’ 17th Congressional District, launched his first television ad of the general campaign on Wednesday, honing in on the issue of crime while casting himself as the law-and-order candidate in the race. […]

McGraw’s ad, which will appear on television and digital platforms in the Rockford, Quad Cities and Peoria/Bloomington-Normal media markets, starts by featuring pictures of New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with a voiceover stating that “Washington politicians coddle criminals and blame victims.”

The ad then alleges that “it’s why crime is soaring in Illinois” while criminals are “released on cashless bail,” the latter a reference to the Pretrial Fairness Act, a provision in the larger SAFE-T Act that eliminated cash bail in Illinois. The 2021 law was championed by Democrats while universally opposed by Republicans.

Recent data compiled by Loyola University Chicago’s Center for Criminal Justice Research, however, showed that violent and property crime in Illinois decreased year-over-year from the first six months of 2023 to the first six months of 2024. Cash bail was eliminated in Illinois on Sept. 18, 2023.

* The ad

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Speaker Welch on White Sox, transit (Updated)

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW

Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said he “couldn’t miss the opportunity to see what this diamond looked like,” when the White Sox and developer Related Midwest invited lawmakers Monday night to visit a temporary baseball field on the site of what they hope will be the new Sox stadium.

All-star athletes including Bo Jackson, Ron Kittle, Harold Baines and Ozzie Guillen were there, too, Welch said — not playing, but to take part in a panel presentation about what a new stadium could mean for the team and the city.

But even though Welch called it a “beautiful baseball field with a great view,” he told a full room at City Club on Tuesday that it wasn’t enough to change his mind that Illinois won’t provide big bucks to make it happen.

“The reality is, we still represent the taxpayers of the state of Illinois,” Welch said. “How do you pay for it?”

Related Midwest is developing a formerly vacant lot it calls The 78 in the South Loop — between Roosevelt, Clark and the Chicago River — and the Sox want to move there. The team also wants the state’s help with building a stadium with a skyline view.

* Tribune

The White Sox proposal for taxpayer money is a tall order for a team that has lost 100 games for the second straight season, and comes at a time when the Chicago Bears have also appealed for help from lawmakers to pay for a new football stadium that would cost more than $3 billion before infrastructure costs.

In addition, some lawmakers have said any conversation on public funding for pro sports stadiums has to include financing for women’s teams, such as the Red Stars, which rents space in suburban Bridgeview’s publicly funded SeatGeek Stadium. And lawmakers said several budgetary issues heading into 2025, including public pension reform and school and mass transit funding, need to be addressed first.

“What I’m hearing out there when I talk to people is they’re worried about their grocery bill. They’re worried about paying their mortgage. They’re talking about the things that impact folks at their kitchen tables. They’re not talking about stadiums,” Welch, a Hillside Democrat, said during a City Club of Chicago event Tuesday at a downtown restaurant. “It was a beautiful baseball field with a great view. But again, that doesn’t change the conversation about who pays for it.”

Welch, who played baseball at Northwestern University, acknowledged a new Sox stadium on The 78 site would be great for economic development in the city, but said developers should spend more time considering what private investment options would look like for the venue.

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker said today that there has been “no movement” on any sort of state funding whatsoever.

* On to legislation to address mass transit subsidies and governance

Welch: We have a working group on that, and they’re really just beginning their work. And I honestly think we have to let the process play out. We have to talk to all of the the advocates, and, you know, listen to to the folks that are going to be impacted by this. This is, this is a big deal, and we have some great leaders that are going to be running our working group around that space in Eva-Dina Delgado and Kam Buckner. They are experts in this issue. I really trust them around this issue, and I do believe we’re going to get it right, because we’re going to listen to everyone.

Q: So probably not in veto, but maybe in the spring.

Welch: Oh gosh, definitely not in veto.

Q: Okay.

Welch: This is, this is probably an end of May issue.

Somebody reported today that Welch is the one who said “probably not in veto,” but that was said by the questioner. No way is that happening in November.

* Also

Q: What makes it different being a Black speaker than not a Black speaker? [tittering from crowd]

Welch: I mean, I think race in America matters. I think..

Q: I’m asking just, you know, how you, how people approach you. Do you feel it’s different than if it was somebody else in that position, like, do you notice the racial dynamics as a Black speaker?

Welch: I think there’s racism in America. Racism still exists in this country. And you know, I tell you that there are times when, you know, I think that race has come come into play, but that’s been the story of my life as a Black man in America.

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Does ShotSpotter slow down response to 911 calls?

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ’s Chip Mitchell interviewed economist Michael Topper of the Social Science Research Council, who helped draft a study of ShotSpotter, which you can read by clicking here. From the interview

The stated purpose of ShotSpotter is to get police to the scene of gunfire faster. But your research has found that the technology slows down police response times to 911 calls. Please explain.

911 calls are very different from a ShotSpotter alert. We can think of a 911 call as a citizen in distress calling for police help, whereas a ShotSpotter alert is going to be driven by its machine learning technology. So, what our paper finds is that this introduction of ShotSpotter technology is going to start reallocating police resources away from these 911 calls over to these ShotSpotter alerts. Now, in most cases, this sounds like it could be OK — if you have enough police resources to actually respond to both of these things decently. However, what we’re finding is that CPD is a very resource-scarce department and, in effect, this reallocation is causing 911 calls to essentially suffer in terms of response times. Police officers are taking about two minutes longer to reach the scene. The slower response time is going to result in fewer arrests at these 911 calls.

The case for Chicago to keep ShotSpotter has shifted over the years. It’s gone from helping cops solve crimes to helping gunshot victims get first aid faster. Did you find out anything about response times for gunshot victims?

If a shooting victim was detected through ShotSpotter, we can’t really say too much about this, just because of limitations of getting data involving this private company. But what we can say is that these 911 calls for emergency medical services are getting slower response times and this possibly is affecting the quickness of the treatment that these victims are getting.

There’s more, including a question about a University of Chicago Crime Lab analysis that shows ShotSpotter “likely saves roughly 85 lives per year in Chicago.” So, go read the rest.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

Determined to hold onto the Chicago market, ShotSpotter offered Wednesday to cut its price by 48% for the next 15 months — from $1.2 million per month to $626,012 — to give the city time to evaluate gunshot detection options in an open competition the company plans to join.

The system now embedded in 12 of Chicago’s 22 most violent police districts is scheduled to be turned off on Sunday. Mayor Brandon Johnson canceled the city’s contract with SoundThinking, ShotSpotter’s parent company, honoring a campaign promise.

* And ahead of a possible city council vote…


Comptroller Mendoza has been tweeting a lot about city stuff this summer.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

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 Tresa, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: UAW president announces strike vote against Stellantis. Washington Post

    - UAW President Shawn Fain announced plans to hold a strike authorization vote against Stellantis.

    - Fain told union members that Stellantis breached the terms of the contract that was reached after last year’s six-week strike.

    - Following the strike last year, the union won historic wage gains along with a commitment from Stellantis to reopen its idled assembly plant in Belvidere, Ill. Fain said Tuesday that Stellantis did not honor that commitments among others — which had prompted the UAW to recently file grievances against the company.

    - Fain also said Stellantis confirmed last week that it is planning to move Dodge Durango production from Detroit to Canada, another contract violation.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will be at the Merchandise Mart at 11:45 am to take part in a panel discussion at Climate Tech Week. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | US EPA investigates whether carbon dioxide leak at ADM storage complex in Decatur violated water regulations: In an Aug. 14 notice of violation, the EPA said that “the information currently available” suggests the ADM facility in Decatur violated the Safe Drinking Water Act as well as carbon storage regulations and an EPA permit. The EPA alleges that CO2, which ADM injects deep underground to prevent global warming, was allowed to move into “unauthorized zones,” that ADM failed to monitor a CO2 well in the required manner, and that ADM failed to follow the proper emergency response and remediation plan.

* Capitol News Illinois | Testimony continues in 2nd Amendment challenge to Illinois’ assault weapons ban: An engineer who spent decades designing weapons for one of the world’s leading gun manufacturers testified Tuesday that the assault-style weapons now banned in Illinois are intended only for civilian use and cannot be easily converted into military-grade firearms. James Ronkainen, a former engineer for the Remington Firearms, said the AR-style rifles and many other weapons that are now heavily restricted under the Protect Illinois Communities Act, are classified in the industry as “modern sporting rifles,” or MSRs, and he said ordinary users of such weapons cannot easily convert them into fully automatic weapons.

* Stateville Prison is closing. Here’s how men incarcerated there will remember it:” Once I got on the bus and found out I was going to Stateville, I was happy, because I knew I had potential to educate myself and also work better on my case than I could in Menard prison. So, yeah, certain things worked out good, but under the conditions I had to live through… I’m forever traumatized. Like I need to drink bottled water. I like filtered water, I have to see it. It’s things that you shouldn’t have to go through, that you go through, that I wouldn’t want nobody else to go through. I risked me dying in Stateville to get out of prison.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTTW | Chicago-Area Transit Agencies Won’t Be Getting More Financial Help Any Time Soon, Illinois House Speaker Says: Speaking at a City Club event Tuesday, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said any financial assistance is likely at least eight months from resolution. […] “I do believe we’re going to get it right,” Welch said, but he noted that probably won’t be until the end of May, just before the legislature adjourns its session next year.

* WTTW | White Sox Should Seek Private Funding for New Stadium — Not Taxpayer Money, Illinois House Speaker Says: But even though Welch called it a “beautiful baseball field with a great view,” he told a full room at City Club on Tuesday that it wasn’t enough to change his mind that Illinois won’t provide big bucks to make it happen. “The reality is, we still represent the taxpayers of the state of Illinois,” Welch said. “How do you pay for it?”

* Tribune | Legislators say they’re still skeptical about public funding for new White Sox stadium after team-sponsored cruise: While some lawmakers acknowledged being impressed by the presentation and the site, where team groundskeeper Roger Bossard’s crew has carved out a makeshift diamond, several said they remain skeptical about the use of public money for such a project. “We say ‘no’ because we all want a shiny new car,” said state Rep. Marcus Evans, a Democrat from Chicago’s South Side who is part of House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch’s leadership team. “Shiny new cars don’t move me. It’s all about the finance.”

*** La Schiazza Trial ***

* Sun-Times | Jurors begin deliberations in trial of former AT&T chief accused of bribing Michael Madigan: The jury of eight women and four men began deliberating at about 2:40 p.m. Tuesday in the case of Paul La Schiazza, the former head of AT&T Illinois. They will resume at 9 a.m. Wednesday.

* Tribune | Jury now weighing whether former AT&T exec accused of bribing Madigan played politics or committed crime: But all the wheeling and dealing left just one constituency in the lurch, Assistant U.S. Attorney Sushma Raju said Tuesday in her closing argument in La Schiazza’s bribery trial. “It shorted the people of Illinois, who deserved a fair, transparent and honest legislative process,” Raju said. “What we got instead was a legislative process that was tainted by this defendant, who paid for the result he wanted. It was not lobbying … it was a crime and Paul La Schiazza knew it.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago police detective faces firing over ‘hundreds’ of racist, transphobic social media posts: The report includes screenshots of around 20 offensive X posts, including an image Popow admitted creating that showed a Black man in a coffin with the text: “THAT FACE YOU MAKE WHEN YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND WHAT ‘STOP RESISTING’ MEANS.” Popow said the meme was “intended to point out the potentially fatal consequences of not obeying lawful police orders,” according to COPA. […] The report states that when interviewed by COPA investigators, Popow denied any racist or other bigoted beliefs, and claimed he did not recall making some of the posts because of memory problems related to a medical condition.

* WTTW | ‘What’s the Plan?’ Alderpeople Demand Answers as Cost of Police Misconduct Soars: ld. Daniel LaSpata (1st Ward) said city officials must reform the Chicago Police Department to stop the payouts. “They stem from the culture in the Chicago Police Department,” LaSpata said. The Chicago Police Department is in full compliance with approximately 7% of the 2019 federal court order known as the consent decree, which requires CPD to change the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers.

* Crain’s | Chicago biotech incubator tapped by feds as health care accelerator hub: As part of the designation, Matter landed a $2 million contract with the Biomedical Advanced Research & Development Authority, or BARDA, a division of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services’ Administration for Strategic Preparedness & Response. The money will be used to help cover the operating costs of participating in the program, dubbed the BARDA Accelerator Network.

* Block Club | Ramova Theater Landmarking, Six Corners Peoples Gas Project Secure Key City Approval: The clock was ticking on the zoning change. If the project had not been approved, it would have been considered denied on Oct. 9, according to city code. A sticking point with the project came as Ald. Jim Gardiner’s (45th) office insisted on a project labor agreement, Goltz previously said.

* Crain’s | United Center owners detail apartments, hotel vision for 1901 Project: The owners of the United Center have revealed more details of their $7 billion plan to redevelop the arena’s surroundings, seeking city approval for nearly 9,500 apartments, more than 1,300 hotel rooms and a residential high-rise that would dwarf buildings in the surrounding area.

* Tribune | Illinois Supreme Court hears arguments in Jussie Smollett case: On Tuesday, Supreme Court justices fired questions at attorneys for both Smollett and the state, digging into the matter of what constitutes an agreement with prosecutors. “Prosecutorial agreements that induce a defendant’s specific performance should be enforced irrespective of how unpopular a defendant is in the public eye,” Smollett’s attorney Nenye Uche said during the proceeding in the state capital. “In essence, we harken back to the age-long principal of a deal is a deal.”

* WGN | The historic operation that placed dozens of unaccompanied migrant children in Chicago: In the 1960s, Chicago played a pivotal role in a secret operation known as Pedro Pan or Peter Pan. The project removed thousands of children from Communist Cuba and brought them to the U.S. where they were placed with temporary foster families. Operation Pedro Pan is believed to be one of the largest exodus operations of unaccompanied minors in history. By 1962, more than 14,000 minors had been sent to the U.S by their parents.

* Tribune | How many more losses do the Chicago White Sox need to match the modern-day record?: The ’62 expansion Mets went 40-120 in their first season. The Sox are 36-116 — four shy of tying the mark. Those 116 losses are a franchise record. The Sox need to go 7-3 in their final 10 games to avoid drawing even with the Mets.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin strikes back at comments by Kane County sheriff: On Tuesday, Irvin called a press conference with the Aurora police command staff to say Hain “selfishly and recklessly” turned the memorial last week into “a platform” for himself. Irvin drew attention to statements made after the memorial by Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser, who was standing next to Hain during the event, who said, “I respectfully disagree with the statements made by the Kane County sheriff …”

* Daily Herald | With incentive deal reached, redevelopment of Arlington Heights gateway set to begin: A developer will get $17.8 million in tax increment financing incentives from Arlington Heights to help fund its $130 million residential and retail redevelopment at the south gateway to the village. Approval of public subsidies — through agreements inked by the village board this week — is seen by developer Bradford Allen as the last hurdle to getting shovels in the ground at the southeast corner of Arlington Heights and Algonquin roads.

* WGN | Mayor of south suburban Steger dies: A spokesperson for the Village of Steger announced Tuesday that Mayor Kenneth A. Peterson Jr. died on Monday, leaving behind his wife, four children and a grandchild. […] Peterson also coached the Steger Recreational Basketball team and was involved in the Boy Scouts of America and Steger Kiwanis.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Southern Illinois University’s Day of Giving is on Wednesday: The Southern Illinois University’s Day of Giving is happening on September 18. This is one of the biggest fundraisers of the year for the university. The event allows people to give to the university, but also indicate what programs they want to support with their donation. At the time of this article, more than 130 have already donated with a total of more than $26,000, and growing.

* STLPR | Chief judge in St. Clair County says Illinois is safer after a year without cash bail: In the year since Illinois got rid of cash bail, St. Clair County’s chief judge says the new system is working — and it’s making the Metro East county safer. “Those who perhaps were dangerous had the ability to bond out — if they had enough money — and many of those people did,” said Judge Andrew Gleeson, chief judge of Illinois’ 20th Circuit based at the Belleville courthouse. “They actually got to be on the streets, making our community less safe.”

* WCIA | U of I granted over $135k for specialty crop research: The grant will focus on improving specialty crops, including fruits, vegetables and herbs, and crops that help to make Illinois agriculture healthier and more diverse. U of I researchers will work to develop rapid agricultural water testing to identify and reduce microbial contamination in specialty crops.

* Pantagraph | Heartland Community College OKs $44.76M operating budget, up $5.3M from 2024: Heartland Community College’s operating budget for fiscal 2025 of almost $44.76 million is more than 10% higher than last year’s with officials citing higher salaries and increases in other expenses. The college’s board of trustees voted Tuesday for the budget, which is $5.3 million higher than last year’s and more than $3 million more than the tentative version presented in June. The district has the revenue to balance the spending plan for the fiscal year that began July 1, however, officials told the board.

* WAND | Central Illinois manufacturing leaders prove women drive industry innovation: TCCI and DCC hosted the IMA’s third edition of the 2023 women makers series in TCCI’s future electric vehicle innovative hub Tuesday. Rivian has 8,000 manufacturing workers in Normal, Illinois. Public policy manager Maura Freeman said many women are leaving traditionally feminine roles to work on electric vehicles. Freeman has seen homemakers, nurses and teachers become great assembly line workers.

* WICS | Rep. Mike Coffey hosts pizza party for successful young readers in 95th District: State Representative Mike Coffey hosted a Pizza Party for students who successfully completed his Summer Reading Program. Rep. Coffey encouraged students in the 95th District to read eight books over the summer to improve their reading skills.

* WIFR | Neighborhood rallies to keep playground as Rockford Park District equipment expires: Of the Rockford Park District’s (RPD) nearly 80 playgrounds, about 27 face impending expirations – one of those includes Alpine Meadows, reaching 30 years old in 2024. According to Laura Gibbs-Green, RPD’s communications manager, upgrading and replacing each play area isn’t financially possible – Alpine Meadows alone could cost up to $300,000.

* BND | Who was ‘Mother’ Jones and why is this southwest Illinois town dedicated to her memory?: Many travelers through the metro-east can recall a large, hand-painted white sign with crudely sketched words signaling a historic monument near Mount Olive. Few know that the sign directed them to the grave of the person who coined the phrase “pray for the dead, and fight like hell for the living.” More official-looking signs now lead the way to the memorial and final resting place of “Mother” Mary G. Harris Jones, a woman once dubbed the “most dangerous woman in America” and one of the nation’s first prominent labor organizers and activists.

*** National ***

* Investing | US Retail Sales Show Slight Increase, Defying Negative Forecast: When compared with the previous retail sales data, the 0.1% increase is a slowdown from the 1.1% growth seen previously. This indicates a deceleration in the pace of consumer spending, which could potentially signal caution among consumers. However, the fact that retail sales have remained in positive territory despite this slowdown is a reassuring sign for the economy.

* The Atlantic | Leonard Cohen’s battle against shameless male egoism: For Cohen, worldly maturity ushered in an altogether different woundedness, a mesmeric—and distinctly not adolescent—sadness, deep-seated and temperamental but intensified by crippling doubts about his gifts, about his singing especially. “I hated the sound of my own voice. I thought it was weak and full of self-pity,” he said later. He enjoyed celebrity status in England and parts of Europe, but his wasn’t a traditionally radio-friendly voice, which meant relative obscurity in America, the largest commercial market for recorded music. As the decade came to an end, Cohen would not have disputed the judgment that he was yet another spent force of the 1960s.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to keep up with the La Schiazza trial. 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, Sep 18, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* House Speaker Chris Welch on the mass transit fiscal cliff


* WAND

A former Springfield Police Department lieutenant will be named Sangamon County Sheriff, according to a statement by Sangamon County Board Chairman Andy Van Meter.

Paula Crouch is expected to be confirmed as the new sheriff at Wednesday’s board meeting. She will lead the embattled department after former Sheriff Jack Campbell retired last month following the police shooting death of Sonya Massey.

Crouch, if approved by the board, will serve out the remainder of Campbell’s term which ends in December 2026. […]

Crouch started with the Springfield Police Department in 1999 after first serving as a 911 dispatcher, according to a statement by Van Meter. She retired in 2023 from law enforcement but has most recently served as the Chief Deputy of Administration in the Sangamon County Circuit Clerk’s Office.

* Block Club

Crews made quick work Monday of flattening an unsanctioned skate park under a state expressway in Bridgeport after South Siders tried for months to get a meeting so they could make their case to keep it.

A bulldozer knocked down the community skate park at the Stevenson Expressway underpass intersecting with South Loomis Street — dubbed “Irish Banks” — about 9 a.m. Monday. As local skaters looked on, crews with the Illinois Department of Transportation cleared away the last bits of rubble from a 20,000-pound concrete quarter pipe the skaters poured themselves. […]

State Rep. Theresa Mah got IDOT to delay a previous demolition date as she looked to broker a meeting between officials and skaters. Ald. Nicole Lee (11th) also threw her support behind the skate park, saying she might “give it a try” on a scooter.

Mah said Monday she “didn’t know anything about” the demolition despite ongoing talks with IDOT. […]

Mah said she will keep lobbying IDOT to permit the skate park for use by the Park District, similar to a model that formalized a skate park under the state-owned Kennedy Expressway in Logan Square. But the “crux of the issue” was that the Logan Square skate park had “movable structures,” unlike Irish Banks, Mah said.

*** La Schiazza Trial ***

* Tribune | A crime or just political jostling? Jury hears arguments in former AT&T exec’s bribery trial: In the end, after all the sweating by AT&T President Paul La Schiazza over House Speaker Michael Madigan’s power to block favorable legislation and all the handwringing over secretly hiring a Madigan ally to win the speaker’s influence, it wound up being a “pretty successful” bribery scheme, a federal prosecutor told a jury Tuesday. AT&T got its bill to end mandated landline service, a national priority that stood to save the phone giant hundreds of millions of dollars. La Schiazza got the “white whale” he’d spent years chasing, backslaps from superiors and a nice little $85,000 bonus. And former state Rep. Eddie Acevedo got his $22,500 payday, in the form of a do-nothing “consulting” contract, the prosecutor said.

* Sun-Times | Feds say AT&T president bribed Michael Madigan to land his ‘white whale’: Assistant U.S. Attorney Sushma Raju delivered a 90-minute closing argument at the end of the trial of former utility head Paul La Schiazza, laying out the evidence in Chicago’s latest corruption trial. And to show the exchange between AT&T Illinois and Madigan, she pointed to emails sent less than two weeks after the utility finally secured its legislative priority — and after it arranged $22,500 for ex-state Rep. Edward “Eddie” Acevedo.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | CPS looks to improve neighborhood schools, backs off changes at selective enrollments and charters: Avoiding the thorniest topics around selective enrollment, magnet and charter schools is likely to go over well with critics of Mayor Brandon Johnson and his appointed school board following a board resolution last year that vowed to favor neighborhood schools.

* Tribune | Illinois Supreme Court hears arguments in Jussie Smollett case: Largely at issue throughout the appeal has been a decision by the Cook County state’s attorney’s office to drop charges against Smollett, a move that at the time embroiled State’s Attorney Kim Foxx and her office in controversy. On Tuesday, Supreme Court justices fired questions at attorneys for both Smollett and the state, digging into the matter of what constitutes an agreement with prosecutors.

* WTTW | Key City Panel OKs 6 of Mayor’s 7 Picks to Serve on Chicago Police Oversight Board: The City Council’s Police and Fire Committee unanimously advanced the nominations of Anthony Driver Jr., Remel Terry, Aaron Gottlieb, Abierre Minor, Kelly Presley and Sandra Wortham to serve four-year terms on the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability. Driver, a South Side resident, serves as president of the interim commission, which is designed to give Chicagoans real control of the police department as part of an effort to build trust in officers and police brass and put an end to repeated allegations of misconduct.

* Tribune | Could Chicago lower its citywide speed limit? Aldermen weigh drop from 30 mph to 25 mph: The effort got its first look in the City Council Wednesday during a Pedestrian and Traffic Safety Committee subject matter hearing where experts praised the potential shift. They lauded the impact small decreases in speed could have to reduce crash deaths. No legislative effort to lower the limit has yet been made, and Ald. Daniel La Spata, the committee chair, promised there was no ordinance “sitting under the table.”

* Crain’s | Chicago Sun-Times columnist Lee Bey joins ABC7 Chicago as architecture critic: During a conversation with anchors Rob Elgas and Cheryl Burton, Bey discussed designs for the Obama Presidential Center in Jackson Park, Bally’s permanent casino at the former Freedom Center printing plant in River West and a proposal for a new Chicago Bears stadium along the lakefront. Bey has written numerous works on architecture, including the book “Southern Exposure: The Overlooked Architecture of Chicago’s South Side.” In addition to his writing, he previously served as chief of staff for architecture and urban planning in the Mayor Richard M. Daley administration.

* Tribune | Can we engineer our way out of the climate crisis? U. of C. hopes to find out: Could clouds be brightened so they reflect more sunlight back into outer space? If lab-grown seaweed is sunk into the ocean, how much carbon dioxide could it absorb? Would drilling holes into glaciers extract enough heat to slow sea level rise? The University of Chicago positioned itself as a leader in this emergent field — known as geoengineering — after recruiting renowned physicist David Keith to build out a climate engineering program with 10 tenure-track faculty hires and several young researchers.

* Crain’s | Florida firm nears discount deal for distressed Loop office tower: No deal has been completed and the discussions could still fall apart at a precarious time for landing financing for office purchases, sources said. But a sale at roughly $70 per square foot for the 1.4 million-square-foot tower would be a fraction of the $375 million that a joint venture of Chicago-based real estate firms Hearn and GEM Realty Capital and San Francisco-based Farallon Capital Management paid for the building in 2014, according to Cook County property records.

* Block Club | Chicago Needs A Shower: Why The City Smells So Bad Right Now: From Edgewater to Roscoe Village to Beverly, Chicagoans have said they’ve been smelling similar wafts of sewage this month. Online, a Reddit user said they were getting “gross, fishy wafts of stank” outside of a West Loop McDonald’s last week. The culprit: Lack of rainfall, said Megan Vidis, a spokeswoman for the Chicago Department of Water Management.

* ABC Chicago | How the ‘Salsa King of Chicago’ turned his family tradition into a business: Salsa King of Chicago owner Marty Garcia grew up watching his mother make homemade salsa. Eventually, he and his brothers made it. […] “It wasn’t my vision to be on grocery store shelves. It wasn’t my vision to be in stores all over Illinois and Wisconsin and Wrigley Field,” Garcia said. But he is. Four years ago, Garcia was working in a downtown office, making salsa for lunch. His co-workers loved it so much that they helped convince him to start selling it.

* ESPN | How White Sox clubhouse is coping as worst team in MLB history: Last week, hours after the Chicago White Sox’s latest attempt to win a baseball game fell apart in typically absurd fashion, Davis Martin could only chuckle. Every White Sox player has found a coping mechanism to endure the 2024 season, and Martin’s is laughter. Unlike much of the sports world, he’s not snickering at the team, but rather at how every day seems to invite something more farcical than the previous. Martin was the starting pitcher in that game, looking to secure Chicago’s first win at Guaranteed Rate Field in a month. Going winless at home for so long is almost impossible for a Major League Baseball team. The White Sox seem to specialize in acts of futility: Sometime in the next 10 days, they could lose their 121st game and pass the 1962 New York Mets for the most losses in an MLB season since the dawn of the 20th century. Never in baseball’s modern history has the game witnessed a team like the 2024 White Sox, whose commitment to the bit of playing a positively wretched brand of baseball has not waned even as the season has.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Lake Zurich facility set to become suburbs’ second DMV+: As part of the work, a confusing design with separate driver and vehicle services will be changed so customers can get a license and sticker, for example, at one counter rather than waiting at separate spots for assistance. At the single service counter, customers will be able to renew a driver’s license or state ID; apply for a REAL ID; register or renew vehicle registration and get vehicle stickers; convert a temporary driver’s license to a standard one; order a new license plate; register to vote; and join the Illinois Organ and Tissue Donor Registry.

* Daily Herald | Hanover Park parks board president cited over verbal assault of teen referee: According to a partially redacted police report, which cited video footage of a U-14 soccer game between teams from the Hanover Park and Streamwood park districts, [Hanover Park Park District board President Mark Elkins] is accused of running onto the field during the second half and yelling at the referee for not giving a foul call. […] “I needed to make a show so that he knows I’m calling him out for not calling the game properly,” Elkins is quoted as saying in the report.

* Daily Herald | Michael Jordan finally finds buyer for his Highland Park mansion: Basketball legend Michael Jordan has found a buyer for his ultra custom mansion in Highland Park and is on track to end his years-long saga to sell one of the most iconic homes in the area. The home in the affluent suburb went into contract on Sunday, according to Katherine Malkin of Compass Inc., the listing agent, who declined to provide further information about the deal.

* Daily Herald | Pickleball boom continues with three new Picklr openings: Pickleball continues to be the fastest-growing sport in America. Participation grew 51.8% between 2022-23, according to the Sports & Fitness Industry Association, and 223.5% in three years. New pickleball clubs in Mount Prospect, Mundelein and Villa Park will help meet the surging demand.

*** Downstate ***

* PJ Star | Why Morton decided to remove its fire chief after 25 years: The trustees voted unanimously to remove Joe Kelley as director of fire and emergency services after he moved outside village limits last month. He also had not been driving his village-assigned vehicle, which was also a violation of the municipal code. Village President Jeffrey Kaufman made the decision to remove Kelley on Aug. 29 and announced his decision at their Sept. 3 board meeting. A yes-no vote on reinstatement, required to complete the state-mandated, two-step process for removal or reinstatement of municipal officials, was tabled until Monday’s meeting. All six trustees voted no to Kelley’s reinstatement.

* WCIA | DACC president on leave after investigation into mayor’s complaints: The board recommended job termination for DACC President Stephen Nacco. It came after a three-hour discussion period behind closed doors. […] The investigation began in August following a complaint to the Board of Trustees from Danville Mayor Rickey Williams Jr. It started when the mayor claimed Nacco used abusive language in text and during in-person communication exchanges — including claims Nacco called Mayor Williams “boy,” which Williams said is historically associated with racial slurs.

* Capitol City Now | Budget process “bugs” D-186 president: A frustrated board president Micah Miller presided over Monday’s District 186 school board meeting, at which the board passed a deficit budget. “What kind of bugs me about this process,” said Miller, “and having had four different budget directors in the past five years, and then having had $107 million worth of ESSER money that’s been sprinkled into the mix, and all those nuances, is it gets really hard to keep track – apples to apples – each year, and also to assign any accountability when you are trying to look back at different years and where we are in this year.”

* SJ-R | ‘Your hurting — we’ve heard it.’ Massey Commission holds first listening session: Several people expressed concern about the proposed makeup and representation of the 12-member Massey Commission as it held its first public listening session at Union Baptist Church Monday. While the full slate is expected to be announced later this week, one of the co-chairs of the commission, the Rev. T. Ray McJunkins acknowledged that nine people have already affirmed that they have agreed to serve, including a family member of Sonya Massey, the namesake of the commission, who was fatally shot in her home in an unincorporated part of Woodside Township after reporting a possible intruder on July 6.

* Tribune | BrightFarms opens second Illinois greenhouse, plots nationwide expansion of hydroponic salad greens it sells in grocery stores: Hydroponic grower BrightFarms has opened a new greenhouse in Yorkville, about 50 miles outside Chicago, as part of a nationwide expansion it says will eventually increase its growing capacity seven times over. The greenhouse is the second in Illinois for BrightFarms, which grows leafy greens sold in grocery stores including Mariano’s and Jewel-Osco.

*** National ***

* Vox | Are Americans generous?: For 20 years, experts have sounded the alarm on the decline of charitable giving in the US. Then came the pandemic, which led to a wave of new donations and volunteers to nonprofits. For some leaders, this was a sign that perhaps the retreat from philanthropy was reversing course. But it’s clear now, according to a substantial new report released today by a group of nearly 200 philanthropic leaders, that Covid-19 did not bring about any lasting reversal of declining charitable giving — and many of the trends identified in the 2010s have only since accelerated.

* AP | Suspicious packages sent to election officials in at least 6 states: Powder-containing packages were sent to secretaries of state and state election offices in Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, Tennessee, Wyoming and Oklahoma, officials in those states confirmed. The FBI and U.S. Postal Service were investigating. It marked the second time in the past year that suspicious packages were mailed to election officials in multiple state offices. […] Several of the states reported a white powder substance found in envelopes sent to election officials. In most cases, the material was found to be harmless. Oklahoma officials said the material sent to the election office there contained flour. Wyoming officials have not yet said if the material sent there was hazardous.

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The Republican Party’s problem in the suburbs summed up by one article

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* There are simply too many preposterous claims and ridiculous projections being made in a Daily Herald article about a debate in the 6th Congressional District to sum up on this website. So, go read the whole thing

“Everything I stated has been documented and reported, and I stated no falsehoods,” she said. “His accusing me of doing so just underscores the narrative that he and his party are pushing and the misinformation they are pushing out to the public.”

There’s even more in the video.

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Caption contest! (Updated x3)

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Isabel posted this Sun-Times story earlier

The Chicago White Sox and mega-developer Related Midwest put on a South Loop fantasy camp Monday in their latest pitch to state lawmakers who so far aren’t swinging on public funding for a new stadium. […]

“Everyone knows this would be awesome. That doesn’t mean taxpayers should put up a dime for it,” the representative said, asking not to be named.

Lawmakers across the state have uniformly bristled at White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf’s push for about $1 billion in public funding for the project, including a tax-increment financing district, an extension of the 2% hotel tax increase used to renovate Soldier Field and a new sales tax overlay district around The 78. The team Reinsdorf is currently fielding at Guaranteed Rate Field is closing in on the modern-day Major League Baseball record for most losses in a season.

* Somebody I know took a pic as the boat went by…

Not exactly a huge turnout.

…Adding… Yep…


…Adding… Republican Senator from Springfield…

…Adding… House Speaker Chris Welch said today that he attended the event…

I couldn’t miss the opportunity to see what this diamond looked like… I was there. It was a beautiful baseball field. What a great view. But again, that doesn’t change the conversation about who pays for it. You know, it’s certainly something I think would be a great economic development project for the city of Chicago to have, a 78th neighborhood. I think 78 is great, by the way. A 78th neighborhood would be great for Chicago. But again, I think when it comes to a baseball stadium, that might be something private investors might want to look at.

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Millions of Illinois election records were exposed by contractor’s unsecured databases

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WIRED last month

Databases containing sensitive voter information from multiple counties in Illinois were openly accessible on the internet, revealing 4.6 million records that included driver’s license numbers as well as full and partial Social Security Numbers and documents like death certificates. Longtime security researcher Jeremiah Fowler stumbled upon one of the databases that appeared to contain information from DeKalb County, Illinois, and subsequently discovered another 12 exposed databases. None were password protected nor required any type of authentication to access. […]

“I’ve found voter databases in the past, so I kind of know if it’s a low-level marketing outreach database that someone has purchased,” Fowler tells WIRED. “But here I saw voter applications— there were actually scans of documents, and then screenshots of online applications. I saw voter rolls for active voters, absentee voters with email addresses, some of them military email addresses. And when I saw Social Security numbers and driver’s license numbers and death certificates I was like, ‘OK, those shouldn’t be there.’”

Through public records, Fowler determined that all of the counties appear to contract with an Illinois-based election management service called Platinum Technology Resource, which provides voter registration software and other digital tools along with services like ballot printing. Many counties in Illinois use Platinum Technology Resource as an election services provider, including DeKalb, which confirmed its relationship with Platinum to WIRED.

Fowler reported the unprotected databases to Platinum on July 18, but he says he didn’t receive a response and the databases remained exposed. As Fowler dug deeper into public records, he realized that Platinum works with the Illinois-based managed services provider Magenium, so he sent a disclosure to this company as well on July 19. Again, he says he did not receive a response, but shortly after the databases were secured, pulling them from public view. Platinum and Magenium did not return WIRED’s multiple requests for comment.

* Capitol News Illinois today

Fowler identified 15 unsecure databases before contacting several county clerks and eventually a technology vendor that is contracted to provide services for those counties.

Fowler told Capitol News Illinois that the list of counties affected include Alexander, Boone, Champaign, DeKalb, Effingham, Gallatin, Hamilton, Henry, Jefferson, Ogle, Pike, Sangamon, St. Clair, Williamson and Winnebago.

He traced the issue to Platinum Technology Resource, an elections technology company based in Batavia. It is unclear if anyone other than Fowler accessed the information, although Platinum has denied that any voter registration forms were “leaked or stolen.”

Capitol News Illinois contacted county clerks in all of the counties Fowler identified. All but one, Alexander County, responded and indicated they had been in communication with Platinum about the issue. One other county, Henry, denied that they were affected by the incident. […]

Platinum’s website indicates it currently contracts with 20 election authorities around Illinois. A Capitol News Illinois review of 12 of its contracts showed they had a cumulative value of more than $1.7 million of annual license fees ranging from about $4,500 to $58,000.

  11 Comments      


Energy Storage Now!

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald story on the one-year anniversary of the end of cash bail

Some remain unconvinced of cashless bail’s merit. Describing the law as “failed and flawed,” Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain says it put more people into custody and strained the court system by increasing caseloads. […]

— The Lake County Sheriff’s Office reported a total of 639 individuals in custody at the jail on Sept. 10, 2023, with 98 on electronic monitoring, and 604 individuals in custody on Sept. 10, 2024, with 84 on electronic monitoring.

— Conversely, according to Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain, jail population increased from a daily average of 270 in 2023 to 320 in 2024.

  32 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  6 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Developer mum on what pols, White Sox greats attended South Loop stadium pitch. Sun-Times

Legislators, business leaders and other VIPs were invited on a downtown riverboat tour that docked at the undeveloped parcel known as The 78, near Roosevelt Road and Clark Street, where longtime Sox groundskeeper Roger Bossard has manicured a pop-up field of the team’s future dreams.

Attendees then got to “round the bases and shag ground balls on The Diamond with White Sox Greats and Hall of Famers,” according to an invitation for the event, which was closed to press and billed to “celebrate the spirit of America’s pastime, and embrace the future of Chicago’s legacy.” […]

A Related Midwest spokesperson wouldn’t say how many lawmakers were invited Monday, who made the trip or which Sox greats were enlisted for the cause.

One suburban state representative told the Sun-Times they passed on the invite “because I don’t need a tour to know it would be awesome with that outfield skyline.”

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* The Trace | More Than a Thousand Felons Have Challenged Their Gun Bans Since the Supreme Court’s Bruen Decision: The Trace reviewed more than 2,000 federal court decisions that cited Bruen over the past two years. More than 1,600 of them answered challenges to a wide variety of federal, state, and local gun laws — from assault weapons restrictions to bans on guns at the U.S. Post Office. The majority — some 1,100 — of the decisions included a challenge to the felon gun ban, making it the single most frequently contested statute by far.

* Crain’s | Ty Fahner, former Illinois attorney general who mentored Lori Lightfoot at Mayer Brown, dies at 81: Fahner was president of the Commercial Club of Chicago and its Civic Committee from 2010 to 2017, when it wrestled with the still unsolved challenges of public pension deficits and other fiscal woes. He was an apostle of the late Gov. Jim Thompson, dating to their days in the U.S. attorney’s office 50 years ago.

* Chicago Reader | ‘No new revenue without reform’: The CTA, Metra, and Pace leaders have all opposed merging their agencies and instead want more state funding. At the first of six public hearings held by the Illinois Senate Transportation Committee, CTA president Dorval Carter argued that “the governance model is not the problem here”—chronic underfunding is. Metra and Pace executives also argued against consolidation, saying the issues of suburban and collar county riders would go ignored under a single board.

*** La Schiazza Trial ***

* Sun-Times | Madigan’s ‘bandits’ comment barred from trial again: The judge made his ruling during a hearing that lasted more than six hours Monday. U.S. District Judge John Blakey, prosecutors and defense attorneys reviewed logistics and evidence for the Oct. 8 trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan and his longtime confidant, Michael McClain.

* Sun-Times | Ex-AT&T Illinois chief declines to testify in his corruption trial — closing arguments expected Tuesday: The trial over whether the payments to Acevedo amounted to a bribe has played out just weeks ahead of Madigan’s own trial, which is set for Oct. 8. In fact, Madigan spent much of the day Monday in a pretrial hearing five floors below the La Schiazza courtroom.

* Capitol News Illinois | Prosecutors rest case against former AT&T Illinois boss accused of bribing Madigan: After years of pushing in Springfield, AT&T Illinois’ executive team was thrilled when the Illinois General Assembly in 2017 passed legislation that would get the company out from under expensive obligations to maintain its aging copper landline wires in Illinois. “Game over. We win,” AT&T Illinois President Paul La Schiazza wrote to a colleague after the final vote to override then-Gov. Bruce Rauner’s veto of the legislation on July 1, 2017. “I am very proud of our team persevering through the most difficult of circumstances.”

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Chicago Budget Director on Anticipated Shortfall, Hiring Freeze and City Services: On anticipating the deficit: “In January, beginning this year, we started to look at our expenditures, to better understand where our expenditures were going, as well as where our revenues were coming in. As we saw our revenues come in a little softer this year we started to contract on our expenditures. One thing that we didn’t anticipate that came to us a little bit later in the year was the non-receipt of a very critical revenue source that we use to support our pension obligations.”

* Tribune | Mayor Johnson dismisses criticism after staff changes, controversy: The mayor defended former progressive organizer Kennedy Bartley, whose appointment to head up his intergovernmental affairs office set off the controversy. “Here’s someone who has apologized. She has sought atonement,” Johnson said. “I mean, isn’t that what this is about? Being able to have the grace of God, where, even when we say things that are harmful, that we can recognize those who seek atonement and then ask for grace and for forgiveness?”

* Tribune | ShotSpotter fight continues as detection system’s days in Chicago dwindle: Wednesday’s meeting could offer two chances for the City Council to voice its support for ShotSpotter. The first is being led by South Side Ald. David Moore, 17th, who has signaled he will use a parliamentary maneuver to force a vote on an ordinance compelling the police superintendent to extend the contract. Meanwhile, members of the council’s informal pro-police caucus called for a separate special vote immediately following the regular City Council meeting on a measure allowing the head of the city’s Office of Public Safety Administration to extend that same contract.

* Jinx Press | “SheepdogCPD” Detective Shawn Popow faces termination: People’s Fabric and Jinx Press first reported on Officer Shawn Popow’s social media posts in November 2023. The South Side Chicago Police detective with more than twenty years on the force should be fired over dozens of social media posts disparaging “African Americans, migrants, Muslims, the LGBTQ+ community, and people who are disabled,” wrote investigators with the Civilian Office of Police Accountability in their full summary report.

* Sun-Times | CPD slammed for ‘complete failure’ at traffic checkpoints during Mexican Independence Day revelry: The city promised to make sure area residents could get home and medical employees could get to work at Northwestern and Lurie Children’s Hospital. But that didn’t happen, said Ald. Brian Hopkins, and one resident said they slept in the car after being turned away by police on the way home.

* Crain’s | Chicago morning news wars heat up as TV viewership declines: Local morning news stations are on a mission to attract and keep viewers in the face of decreasing ratings and economic challenges. Glen Dacy is stepping into the role of vice president of news content and streaming for Fox’s Chicago stations, WFLD and WPWR, with the aim of bringing fresh energy to the morning news landscape. He replaces Matt Piacente, who left the station earlier this year after eight years.

* Sun-Times | Rules Committee backs Burnett as chair of City Council’s Zoning Committee: Ald. Walter Burnett, the Council’s vice mayor and longest-serving member, offered to “take one for the team” and accept the Zoning job after Mayor Brandon Johnson was unable to get the votes for his first choice, progressive firebrand Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s National Public Housing Museum to co-present conversation on race events with Smithsonian: Before opening its new building on the Near West Side, the National Public Housing Museum will partner with the Smithsonian and other organizations to host the latest installment of the “National Conversation on Race” in Chicago. The nationwide series was created as part of a Smithsonian initiative, “Our Shared Future: Reckoning with Our Racial Past,” which examines the history of racism while working toward an equitable future.

* ABC Chicago | Illinois Supreme Court to hear Jussie Smollett appeal Tuesday: In 2021, the former Empire TV star was convicted of faking a racist an homophobic attack in 2019 and then lying to police about it. His attorneys appealed arguing Smollett should not have been punished for the same crime twice. In 2019, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx reached a plea agreement with Smollett to drop the charges against him in exchange for a 10-thousand dollar bond and community service.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | Chicago area center for homeless residents transformed with help of community: When CBS News Chicago first met Township Supervisor Bonnie Kahn Ognisanti last year, she gave out some hard facts about homelessness. “You don’t have choices,” Ognisanti said. “Where you’re going to sleep, what you’re going to eat, how you’re going to be treated, where you can rest, and if you don’t have these very simple things, it exacerbates everything else.” That’s why she founded the Niles Township Respite Center in 2022 in the basement of St. Paul Lutheran Church in Skokie. It’s a daytime space for people experiencing homelessness.

* FOX Chicago | Dixmoor aims to end years of water woes with major water main upgrade: Officials announced the completion of the Dixmoor water main infrastructure improvement project Monday. In 2021, multiple water main breaks led to a system failure. Since then, the village has not had a reliable water supply, leading to multiple water main breaks

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Sonya Massey Commission holds first listening session, lays out roadmap: The commission was created by Sangamon County Board Chairman Andy Van Meter and Democratic State Senator Doris Turner to discuss, research and eventually propose policy changes for at both the local and state level in response to Massey’s death. “We wanted to look at systematic change throughout all of the systems within our community,” Sen. Turner (D-Springfield) said. “I know that in this situation and in a lot of situations, we focus on law enforcement. But there are so many other sectors that are involved that usually culminate with law enforcement or an instance with law enforcement. But we want to look at all of those different sectors and really focus and channel it into real change.”

* WCBU | East Peoria Mayor Kahl discusses push for a new TIF district to spark future development on riverfront: “I call it visionary leadership. I look at TIF districts (creating) Town Centre I, Town Centre II,” said Kahl, referencing the shopping centers at the intersection of Main and Washington streets. “Back in the day, when I grew up in East Peoria, you had the old-style, four corners, and a lot of those buildings were dilapidated and some were vacant. […] The proposed area for what would be East Peoria’s fourth TIF district is east of Interstate 74 and along Illinois Route 116. Kahl says plans to have these properties developed have been in the works for a long time.

* 25 News Now | Stark County starts 911 service, the last Illinois county to do so: “Stark County has finally reached the 21st Century with our 911… When you call 911, it’s going to show up on our map. We’re going to know right where you’re at. Where before, we didn’t have that. We had to be transferred from a different county,” said Stark County Sheriff Steve Sloan. It was an effort that took about 100 meetings over two years. Now, Stark County’s 911 service isn’t just online, it wound up with a next generation system with Geographic Information System Location and other enhanced call data. Illinois State Police hope to eventually bring this technology statewide.

* WSIL | 14th Annual “Our Stories, Our Lives” African American Women’s Conference focuses on medical issues Black women face in Healthcare: Dozens of African American women traveled to Ullin, Illinois, to advocate for their health care needs. Lynne Chambers is the executive director of Legacy Training Incorporated and says they started the conference in 2010. “14 years ago we focused on HIV, cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes. So we’ve still kind of kept those themes throughout the years,” Chambers said.

* WCIA | Tuscola fertilizer plant nears construction after more than a decade: The company behind it, Cronus Chemicals LLC, has gained the approval of necessary air permits. That should be one of the last steps in making the ammonia production plant come to life. “Economic development is a long road, and the bigger the project, the longer the road can often be,” Brian Moody, Douglas County economic development corporation executive director, said.

*** National ***

* AP | Postal Service insists it’s ready for a flood of mail-in ballots: U.S. Postmaster General Louis DeJoy assured state election officials in a letter released Monday that he’ll work with them to handle their warnings of problems with election mail delivery during the primary season, while insisting that the Postal Service will be ready for the flood of mail-in ballots ahead of the November election. The Postal Service already dealt with most concerns raised by election officials, he said, after they warned that properly addressed election mail was returned — a problem that can cause voters to be automatically placed on inactive status — and that mail-in ballots were postmarked on time but arrived after election deadlines.

* WaPo | Scientists just figured out how many chemicals enter our bodies from food packaging: These are just a few types of food packaging that surround humans every day. And a new study released Monday shows the chemical toll of all that wrapping — and how it might affect the human body. Researchers from Switzerland and other countries discovered that of the roughly 14,000 known chemicals in food packaging, 3,601 — or about 25 percent — have been found in the human body, whether in samples of blood, hair or breast milk.

* ProPublica | Abortion Bans Have Delayed Emergency Medical Care. In Georgia, Experts Say This Mother’s Death Was Preventable: The most restrictive state laws, experts predicted, would pit doctors’ fears of prosecution against their patients’ health needs, requiring providers to make sure their patient was inarguably on the brink of death or facing “irreversible” harm when they intervened with procedures like a D&C. “They would feel the need to wait for a higher blood pressure, wait for a higher fever — really got to justify this one — bleed a little bit more,” Dr. Melissa Kottke, an OB-GYN at Emory, warned lawmakers in 2019 during one of the hearings over Georgia’s ban.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and the fundraiser list

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. Click here to keep up with the La Schiazza trial. 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, Sep 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

A nurse inside Stateville Correctional Center called 911 on June 19 over an individual in custody who was unresponsive and in and out of consciousness.

In the 911 call audio obtained by WTTW News, the nurse tells the dispatcher that “it’s a possible overdose, probably possible heat stroke.”

The dispatcher asked how long the individual had been outside if there’s a chance he had a heat stroke.

“No, he’s been in his cell, but it’s like 100 and something degrees in here,” the nurse replied.

That nurse was calling about Michael Broadway, a 51-year-old man who died in custody that day.

Broadway’s death is due to bronchial asthma, with hypertensive cardiovascular disease and heat stress as “significant contributing conditions,” according to an autopsy report from the Will County Coroner’s Office that was provided to WTTW News.

* WBEZ

An attorney representing gun dealers and owners on Monday said in court Monday that an Illinois law banning semi-automatic guns like the AR-15 violates the right of many “law abiding citizens throughout the state” to shoot recreationally, hunt and defend themselves.

He made the argument as part of opening statements at the start of a week-long federal trial in East Saint Louis over Illinois’ assault weapons ban, in which U.S. District Judge Stephen McGlynn will decide whether the nearly two-year-old law violates the Second Amendment right to bear arms.

In his opening statement, Christopher Wells with the Illinois Attorney General’s office recalled the 2022 Highland Park mass shooting, where the suspected gunman used an AR-15-style weapon to shoot into a Fourth of July Parade, killing four and wounding dozens more. […]

But in his opening statement, attorney representing the plaintiffs Andrew Lothson said these guns are not exclusively, nor predominantly used in military contexts. Lothson, who practices out of Chicago, said the law bans many popular shotguns, “including those used right here in Southern Illinois for duck hunting.”

Wells, however, pointed to the 7th Circuit Court ruling, which said the AR-15 is not materially different from the M-16 fully-automatic rifle, commonly used in the military. A 2008 decision from the U.S. Supreme Court in the landmark Heller case found that states can restrict citizens from owning guns used in the military. Wells also said a gun’s popularity in sales “tells us nothing about Americans’ actual self defense needs.”

*** La Schiazza Trial ***

* Tribune | ‘We are on the friends and family plan now’: Jury sees emails from Speaker Madigan’s son in bribery trial of ex-AT&T boss: In his donation request, Andrew Madigan made clear that “our good friend Mike McClain” had suggested he reach out to AT&T. McClain, according to prosecutors, was at the center of a scheme to have AT&T funnel payments to former state Rep. Eddie Acevedo, a Madigan ally, to help win the speaker’s support. In the email exchange shown to jurors, Barry told La Schiazza: “We are…and there is a sensitivity in that office about us going away now that we got COLR. That is something to keep in mind in rest (of) 17 and in 18 regarding budget and profile with the Speakers office.”

* Tribune | Former Madigan aide to face cross-examination in bribery trial as Madigan due in court for pretrial conference: Longtime Springfield insider Tom Cullen will face cross-examination Monday in the trial of a former AT&T Illinois boss accused of bribing House Speaker Michael Madigan by funneling payments the speaker’s ally through Cullen’s lobbying firm. As Cullen is testifying, a pretrial conference is scheduled in Madigan’s own racketeering case in another courtroom at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Electric bill savings will be lower for some new Illinois rooftop solar owners starting in 2025: Starting next year, some new Illinois rooftop solar owners will see lower savings on their electric bills than those who got their solar panels earlier. The long-expected change — required under the state’s 2021 climate law — essentially trims a generous introductory offer, but ComEd and the nonprofit consumer watchdog Citizens Utility Board say that residential rooftop solar will remain a very good deal for customers. “You can still save an awful lot of money on your electricity bill by deploying solar,” said Scott Vogt, ComEd vice president of strategy and energy policy.

* Crain’s | Illinois nursing home associations merging: The Health Care Council of Illinois, or HCCI, and the Illinois Health Care Association, IHCA, announced their plan to merge today. The combined organization will be called the Health Care Council of Illinois and become the Illinois affiliate of the American Health Care Association. The two parties have signed a memorandum of understanding to merge, according to a statement. The plan is still subject to due diligence and detail finalization.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Onetime COPA supervisor slams agency leadership in whistleblower lawsuit: Matthew Haynam filed the lawsuit against the city last week, alleging that COPA chief administrator Andrea Kersten fired him in late August “in retaliation for Plaintiff’s good faith disclosure of Kersten’s outrageous misconduct to both the Office of the Inspector General for the City of Chicago and Civilian Commission on Public Safety and Accountability.” Haynam’s suit accuses Kersten of repeatedly tainting the public’s perception of still-ongoing police misconduct investigations. What’s more, Haynam alleges, COPA investigators have a practice of disregarding Chicago Police training materials that are critical in determining if an officer engaged in misconduct.


* Chalkbeat | Explaining Chicago Public Schools: The students: The vast majority are students of color, with 47% identifying as Hispanic, 35% as Black, 11% as white, and 4.5% as Asian American. About 70% come from low-income households, 16% are students with disabilities, and 24% are learning English. These demographics shifted over the past decade — as Black families left Chicago, birth rates declined, and new immigrants arrived.

* WBEZ | More arts classes in CPS schools is an easy sell. Paying for it and finding teachers is the real feat.: In Chicago, arts education is determined by a school’s size and, critically, by how much an individual principal prioritizes it. But leaders are questioning whether it should be this way. As the school year starts, district leaders and the Chicago Teachers Union are putting a spotlight on arts education. In ongoing union contract negotiations “more art teachers” is a rallying cry. At the same time, CPS’ director of arts education is spearheading a new plan to replace the existing 12-year-old blueprint.

* Tribune | Ex-National Association of Realtors employee files lawsuit alleging sexual harassment, discrimination: An ex-employee of the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors has filed a federal lawsuit against the trade association alleging a hostile work environment that included sexual harassment and discrimination, as well as retaliation after she was fired. Roshani Sheth, a former product manager for Realtors Information Network, a subsidiary of NAR, worked at company headquarters from 2014 to 2019 and was the only woman and person of color on her team, according to the amended lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on Sept. 10. Sheth was repeatedly subjected to comments about her body and other derogatory language, as well as sexual advances, by male supervisors, the suit alleges.

* Daily Herald | ‘I wouldn’t wish that on anybody’: ’62 Mets hurler has sympathy for White Sox: As the White Sox appear destined to shatter the 1962 New York Mets’ modern-day record for losses in a baseball season, a suburban native who pitched for that infamous Mets squad has empathy — and encouragement — for the South Siders. “As I said many, many times, I wouldn’t wish that on anybody,” said Jay Hook, who grew up in Grayslake before going on to an eight-year Major League Baseball career. “I’m surprised I’m still talking about the ‘62 season.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Huntley chosen for stop on new Chicago-to-Rockford train line. But where will the station go?: Last year, Huntley was announced as one of the municipalities that would be getting a stop on the proposed Chicago-to-Rockford Metra line. The service is expected to launch in 2027, have maximum speeds of 79 mph and take about two hours from Rockford to Chicago, according to a presentation from the Illinois Department of Transportation to the Huntley Village Board.

* ABC Chicago | Threat forces schools in Joliet, Plainfield to switch to remote learning: Disclosing the threats over the weekend, Joliet police said they surfaced online, adding that while there doesn’t appear to be any credible evidence to support them, additional security measures would be taken. Joliet Public School District 86 reverted to e-learning for Monday. As did Plainfield’s Troy Community Consolidated School District 30-C.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Mahomet president not re-running, endorses board member: Sean Widener has served the community in different positions since 2006. First with planning and zoning, then on the board of trustees, and finally as the president starting in 2015. But now, he knows it’s time to focus on his day job at Clark Dietz overseeing engineering in Chicago, suburban Oakbrook and Champaign.

* WCIA | Central Illinois airports improving infrastructure with FAA money: Officials said the money is being used to improve terminals to handle more passengers, modernize technology and improve the integrity of taxiways. Rantoul Airport used their $2.4 million to improve their north-south runway. “The runways are graded by a company called applied payment technology,” said Carson Vericker, the airport manager. “And they put a grade on what their asphalt is and the degrade that come off of runway 1836 was very poor.”

*** National ***

* NBC | Cut up and leased out, the bodies of the poor suffer a final indignity in Texas: In the name of scientific advancement, clinical education and fiscal expediency, the bodies of the destitute in the Dallas-Fort Worth region have been routinely collected from hospital beds, nursing homes and homeless encampments and used for training or research without their consent — and often without the approval of any survivors, an NBC News investigation found.

* WGN | REO Speedwagon to cease touring in 2025, citing ‘irreconcilable differences’: “To our fans: Bruce has intended to be Back On the Road Again by now. If it were up to just him, he’d be back on tour… but it’s not up to just him. The consensus opinion was that he had not recovered sufficiently to be able to perform at the level the fans have come to expect. Bruce respected that opinion and is grateful that Matt has been around to keep the Wagon rolling through the summer tour. Bruce never had any intention of retiring or walking away from the band, fans, and crew he has loved for almost 50 years.”

* Tallahassee Democrat | Florida school board pays over $100K to defend ban on book about same-sex penguin pair: “The question is: Is that what you want your school district spending money on, which could go to providing services or books or hiring staff, rather than defending a decision to keep people from reading a book that some people don’t like,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, director of American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

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 Tresa, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Question of the day

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As the late state Sen. Vince Demuzio said, “Yard signs don’t vote,” but campaigns do rely on them. From The Hill

Studies have shown that when it comes to down-ballot races — usually non-presidential, like school board or a county-level representative — it’s important for the candidate to build name recognition. Yard signs can do that, even if the candidate is not real, one study found.

In that study, researchers placed signs for a fictitious candidate in a Nashville yard, near an elementary school, months before the actual election. Three days later, parents were surveyed and asked to rank their top three choices for the open seats. Of the parents believed to have seen the fictitious signs, nearly a quarter selected the fake candidate.

That may not always be the case, though. It’s possible the community may already be familiar with someone running for a local office, and the signs can help “reinforce” that they are “the right candidate,” Dr. Patricia Crouse, a Professor of Public Administration and Political Science at the University of New Haven, told Nexstar. […]

Putting out a yard sign at all may have a bigger impact on you than the election. Having a sign (or signs) is like flying a flag for your favorite sports team. Everyone knows who you root for, and you may encourage other like-minded fans to put out their own flag. You may also spark a neighbor to fly the rival team’s flag.

Regardless, it’s all about expression, which Makse, a co-author of “Politics on Display: Yard Signs and the Politicization of Social Spaces,” called “the most important motive for displaying a sign.” Crouse explained that yard signs may allow someone who doesn’t “get deeply involved in any sort of campaigning” to not only express their opinion but feel involved in the election.

* The Question: Do you regularly/occasionally put up campaign yard/window signs? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


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2024 Illinois State Fair breaks attendance record

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Press release

Today, Governor JB Pritzker announced record-breaking attendance totals for the 2024 Illinois State Fair. More than 773,000 people attended the 11-day event, the highest number on record since industry standards were enacted.

“Each year, the hardworking team at the Illinois Department of Agriculture manages to improve the Illinois State Fair with innovative new offerings, bigger and more diverse entertainment options, and an unwavering commitment to spotlighting Illinois agriculture,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Grandstand artists like the Jonas Brothers, Keith Urban and Miranda Lambert drew big crowds. We were especially excited to have Lil Wayne break the Grandstand attendance record by selling more than 15,000 tickets.”

The 2024 state fair attendance figure exceeded 2023 by nearly 66,000.

“While it’s gratifying to break attendance records, our real aim is to create an event that highlights all the things that make Illinois special, especially agriculture, our number one industry,” said IDOA Director Jerry Costello II. “The numbers are proof that the Illinois State Fair is a summer destination for families and second to none in the nation.”

New this year on Governor’s Day at the Illinois State Fair was a naturalization ceremony where Governor Pritzker welcomed nearly 200 new citizens to the United States from 49 countries around the world. The ceremony finalized the process to integrate into American society and accept the rights and responsibilities of U.S. citizenship.

In addition to a robust Grandstand lineup, events such as horse and auto races, truck and tractor pulls, a circus, rodeo and demolition derby contributed to the success of the fair this year. Carnival revenue was also up significantly over 2023.

“Some of the credit goes to mother nature for the cool, dry weather, but that’s only part of the story. We worked purposefully to offer something for everyone at the Illinois State Fair. Promotions and discounts made the fair more budget friendly for families with expanded free entertainment options as well,” said Illinois State Fair Manager Rebecca Clark. “Planning is already underway for the 2025 Illinois State Fair with an emphasis on introducing new elements while maintaining the traditions people expect and love.”

The Governor’s Sale of Champions posted record-breaking sales. The Grand Champion Steer sold for a combined $110,000, and the Land of Lincoln Grand Champion Steer sold for $65,000.

2024 State Fair Impact:

    - Estimated local/regional economic impact of more than $86 million*
    - Sales tax revenue of $2.6 million*
    - $323,775 raised at Governor’s Sale of Champions to support youth in agriculture
    - 62 charities volunteered more than 20,000 service hours at the Illinois State Fair
    - Illinois state agencies partnered to provide the following community services:
    - Illinois Secretary of State issued 273 driver’s licenses; 58 ID cards; 17 REAL IDs; 219 license plate stickers
    - Illinois Department of Natural Resources issued 440 licenses and permits

* Source: Regional Economics Applications Laboratory at University of Illinois

Governor Pritzker and the legislature invested more than $85 million in infrastructure improvements to address years of deferred maintenance throughout the fairgrounds.

Updates included repairs to roofs, sidewalks and a pedestrian tunnel, parking lot paving and tuck pointing. The Coliseum, considered the crown jewel of the fairgrounds, benefitted from an electrical overhaul, underground plumbing, new seating, new restrooms, an elevator and an HVAC system that allows for year-round use.

Planning is now underway for the 2025 Illinois State Fair, which will run August 7-17.

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Is this a war declaration?

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

It’s been an open secret for weeks that at least some members of Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson’s Intergovernmental Affairs staff would be leaving after the Democratic National Convention, including its director, Sydney Holman.

That happened last week. Holman quit and two others were forced out of the IGA office, which is a liaison with the City Council and the Illinois General Assembly.

Holman is well-known to state legislators. She started on the House Democratic staff and did a stint as Gov. JB Pritzker’s House liaison. She’s well-liked, even though the mayor isn’t exactly popular at the Statehouse.

Holman leaves as the city is gearing up to face what is estimated as at least a $982.4 million budget deficit next fiscal year.

But the city has long known this massive deficit was coming. Almost a year ago, the city released a two-year budget forecast with a “base outlook” that projected a $986 million deficit in fiscal year 2025, which is only a few million dollars away from the current city projection. The city’s 2023 budget report predicted a “negative outlook” of a $1.14 billion deficit by 2025.

And now the city is apparently hoping to convince the General Assembly to help it out. One outlet reported the other day that city officials are “talking to state lawmakers about its budget concerns,” although I personally couldn’t find anyone who has had any serious talks with the city. Pritzker said the city hasn’t spoken with him, either.
Let’s count the bailouts Johnson wants

A Chicago-only bailout is just not in the cards, and a broader bailout of municipalities would cost exponentially more than the billion dollars that Chicago needs.

Chicago is already asking for an immediate increase of about $5 billion for statewide and Chicago-specific school funding, and $2.5 billion in state help to build a new Chicago Bears stadium. So, we’re talking about a total ask of $8.5 billion, not including money for every other municipality, which would have to be included if Chicago got any more cash, and not including the $730 million mass transit bailout for next year, which will eventually rise to $1.32 billion.

Good luck with all that.

Holman was superseded by Kennedy Bartley, who was hired by the mayor earlier this year as a liaison to progressive groups and unions. Crain’s Chicago Business reported last week that the mayor’s office had circulated an organizational chart showing that Holman and her staff would report to Bartley. Holman, as long expected, did not want to work for Bartley, so she left.

Bartley comes from United Working Families, a progressive group that is closely allied with the Chicago Teachers Union.

Bartley spent quite a bit of time organizing on behalf of the “defund the police” movement. Two days after the terror group Hamas attacked Israel, Bartley tweeted, “From the river to the sea Palestine will be free. Amen!” which is considered by many to be a call to eliminate Israel as a nation. Bartley also called police “f-ing pigs” in a 2021 interview

In other words, Bartley may have some problems lobbying the Illinois Legislature.

While most of the people stepping up to criticize Johnson for elevating Bartley are the usual Johnson critics, state Sen. Rob Martwick (D-Chicago) is a longtime Johnson friend, is very tight with the Chicago Teachers Union (where the mayor worked) and endorsed the mayor’s election last year. Martwick sent out a critical press release last week which focused on the “f-ing pigs” comment.

“The comments made by Kennedy Bartley serve only to disparage our valued public servants and diminish the progress that we have made,” Martwick said in the release. “Our government leaders should be working toward a greater sense of safety through unity, not chaos through division and insults. I condemn these comments, and I implore our Mayor to ensure accountability for the harm they have caused.”

That doesn’t portend well.

Johnson’s elevation of Bartley could also be seen as a sort of war declaration. The CTU and the mayor have strongly indicated that they plan to blame Pritzker and the General Assembly if they cannot achieve the union’s contract goals. And Johnson, who comes from the CTU, may be wanting the same bogeyman to justify his own deficit problems. Bartley would likely be a good fit for that sort of role, even though that confrontational path will undoubtedly lead to no good end.

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Open thread

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Downstate federal trial poses latest test for Illinois gun ban. Tribune

    - Legal wrangling over Illinois’ sweeping gun ban is set to resume Monday in East St. Louis, where a federal judge will consider a challenge to the constitutionality of a law that is almost two years old and has so far withstood a barrage of challenges from gun rights advocates.
    - The state’s ban prohibits the delivery, sale, import and purchase of more than 100 high-powered guns including semiautomatic rifles, shotguns and handguns.
    -The bench trial is before U.S. District Judge Stephen McGlynn, who said last year the law was likely unconstitutional following a hearing over a request by plaintiffs seeking to temporarily block the ban from being enforced.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | ‘People who should be held are being held’: Pretrial Fairness Act marks first year this week: Supporters include Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart, who said cashless bail has not resulted in the release of accused murderers and rapists, as opponents predicted. “We are holding more sex offenders and all murderers under the new system,” Rinehart said, adding “crime is down in Lake County at a steeper rate of decline than the national average.”

* Capitol News Illinois | ADM carbon sequestration project violated Safe Drinking Water Act, per EPA: Agribusiness giant ADM violated federal regulations, a federal permit and the Safe Drinking Water Act earlier this year when a monitoring well at their carbon sequestration site in Decatur leaked liquified carbon dioxide into “unauthorized zones,” according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In an August notice, the federal regulatory agency also alleged the company failed to follow proper emergency response and remediation plans after it identified the leak.

* ABC Chicago | Increasing diversity in Illinois’ adult use cannabis industry: In July, a study by the Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Office found that 60% of all cannabis business licenses went to minority or women-owned businesses. […] However, not one dollar of sales was documented going to Black or Brown owners when the study ended in 2023. Instead, white male owners took in 78% of recreational dispensary sales and 91% of grower sales.

* Tribune | ‘People are desperate’: Illinois harm reduction organizations await settlement funding in effort to reduce opioid overdoses: Now, groups in Illinois providing harm reduction services are set to receive at least $15 million from settlements between states and prescription drug companies. Providers across the state say they could do much more with additional funding, but getting money from the remediation fund is complicated. “Unrestricted settlement dollars could really — I mean, there needs to be an investment in harm reduction supplies across the state of Illinois. People are desperate for them,” John Werning, executive director of the Chicago Recovery Alliance, said.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Gov. Pritzker Announces James Jennings as Next Director of Illinois Environmental Protection Agency: Today, Governor JB Pritzker announced his appointment of James Jennings, environment professional and policy expert, as the next director of the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) pending Senate approval. James Jennings began serving as Interim Director in July. […] Before he was appointed Interim Director, Jennings served as Deputy Director of the IEPA, overseeing policy implementation and regulatory enforcement, as well as working in tandem with the federal EPA on initiatives impacting Illinois and surrounding states.

* SJ-R | Former state board of ed superintendent who worked in the Bush Administration dead at 82: Ted Sanders, who served as superintendent of the Illinois State Board of Education and worked in the education department in the President George H.W. Bush administration, died Sunday, Sept. 8. He was 82. […] A towering figure, literally, at 6-foot-8-inches tall, and figuratively, Ted Sanders also served as the chief education officer in Ohio and Nevada and was president of the Southern Illinois University System.

*** La Schiazza Trial ***

* Sun-Times | Ex-lawmaker became ‘borderline unprofessional’ when AT&T offered him money, jurors hear at corruption trial: Prosecutors are nearing the end of their case against AT&T Illinois President Paul La Schiazza. Attorneys say it could be in the hands of the jury by the end of next week.

* Capitol News Illinois | In bribery trial, AT&T lobbyists detail contentious meeting with Madigan ally: On an afternoon in late April 2017, recently retired state Rep. Eddie Acevedo was called to a meeting in the state Capitol in Springfield. The 20-year veteran lawmaker had joined his sons’ lobbying firm and was looking for work. Meeting with a trio of lobbyists for telecommunications giant AT&T Illinois was a major step forward in Acevedo’s new lobbying career. But Acevedo grew agitated when the lobbyists offered him $2,500 per month, raising his voice to express that he was worth more, according to testimony Friday in the federal bribery trial of former AT&T Illinois president Paul La Schiazza.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | City Closes Gold Coast Homeless Shelter Used To House Tent City Residents During DNC: The Tremont Hotel shelter closed for good Sunday, Department of Family and Support Services spokesperson Brian Berg said in a statement. Prior to the closure, shelter staff worked to “slowly place remaining Tremont residents who have not yet moved to housing into other available shelter beds,” he said. “The Tremont shelter was a temporary operation, originally designed to expand shelter bed capacity during the winter months,” Berg said.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s nonprofit leaders saw their pay surge in our latest ranking: Despite retiring from the Big Ten Conference in 2020, James Delany still managed to earn nearly $5.9 million in 2022, according to the organization’s most recent 990 tax filing. The former commissioner holds the No. 1 spot on Crain’s list of the highest-paid nonprofit executives in the Chicago area. The list, which excludes university and hospital executives, ranks 25 leaders by 2022 total compensation, which for most nonprofits is the most recent available data. These executives saw 2022 median compensation swell by 20% to $906,243.

* Block Club | Muslim Families Outraged After Headstones Removed From Bohemian National Cemetery With No Notice: Last Sunday, Ayman Halim took his wife, his mother and his 8-month-old son to the Bohemian National Cemetery to commemorate his late father’s 77th birthday. It was his son’s first time visiting the gravesite of his grandfather, who died five years ago, Halim said. When they arrived, Halim found that his father’s headstone and dozens of others were missing. Returning to the cemetery a few days later, he discovered a pile of Muslim grave markers left beside a dumpster. Now, he and his family want answers.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Evanston has paid out just over $5 million in reparations so far: The committee met in September to approve records regarding how the first round of reparations has been spent. Of the $5.03 million distributed to 141 people directly affected by unfair housing practices, which the program calls ancestors, and 71 people who are descendants of those who did, $1.36 million will be spent on home improvement projects, mortgage assistance, or be used in the down payment for a home. The remaining $3.69 million will be spent on direct cash benefits, with recipients eligible to receive a $25,000 check from the city of Evanston. Recipients will not need to pay taxes on the benefit, according to 2nd Ward Councilmember Krissie Harris.

* Sun-Times | At event honoring K-9 killed in deadly 2023 shooting, Kane County sheriff rips Aurora police: Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain essentially blamed his agency’s strained relationship with Aurora police for the incident that killed a police dog and a carjacking suspect. Aurora’s mayor called the remarks ‘laughingly incredible and absolutely wrong,’ and the area’s top prosecutor says she, too, disagrees with Sheriff Hain.

* WBBM | Replacement likely for historic Cenacle Bridge in DuPage County forest preserve: The bridge once led to the Cenacle Sisters commune near Warrenville. The retreat center was demolished years ago, but the bridge has remained in use by hikers and bikers as part of a trail system within the Blackwell Forest Preserve. At a recent planning meeting, commissioners weighed whether it would be best to repair the aging bridge or to replace it completely. The bridge features some visually striking elements, including large stone pillars and white handrails, but Forest Preserve District Civil Engineer Chris Welch said those elements actually present a few issues.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Massey family meets with Congressional Black Caucus for police reform push: The families were joined by renowned civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who expressed frustration with the slow pace of change. A bill known as the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, introduced in 2021, remains stalled in Congress.

* BND | Video of traffic backup in O’Fallon goes viral, prompts member of Congress to intervene: A viral TikTok video has gotten the attention of an Illinois congresswoman because it shows a “massive threat to motorists’ safety” on the Interstate 64 exit ramp to O’Fallon and Shiloh, according to the lawmaker. O’Fallon resident Tisha Crawley’s Aug. 15 video shows a line of cars on the Exit 16 ramp so long that it is spilling onto the interstate. More than 40 million TicTok users have seen it, including U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski. […] The Illinois Department of Transportation is aware of the problem, and the agency has plans to add additional lanes to the area to address it. But construction is years away, according to the agency’s project timeline published online.

* PJ Star | Referendum on ranked-choice voting in Illinois: Voters in Peoria Township will make their voices heard on whether or not the state of Illinois should opt for ranked-choice voting in future elections. A non-binding referendum will be on the Nov. 5 ballot asking voters if the state should use the system, which is designed to prevent spoilers and allow a more accurate representation of voters’ preferences.

* BND | ‘Politics’ by Belleville mayor threatens future of Art on the Square, directors say: Developments in the past few weeks have prompted the co-directors to speak out for the first time about a problem they say they’ve been dealing with for three years: Hostility from Belleville Mayor Patty Gregory, who co-founded the show and formerly served as executive director for 20 years. Gregory wanted to continue running the show after being elected mayor in 2021, but board members rejected that idea due to ethical, legal and practical concerns, according to Bartle and Dorris. “We had created our own little monster because none of us went up against (Gregory),” Dorris said this week. “We didn’t challenge her. She was used to getting her way.”

* WSIL | The Jackson County State’s Attorney Office announces a new video camera doorbell program: Starting on October 1st victims and witnesses of violent crimes will be eligible to get a free video camera doorbell from the Jackson County State’s Attorney’s Victims Advocate’s Office. “Upon application, we can get these video doorbells out to individuals in the community to make them feel safer,” Jackson County State’s Attorney Joseph Cervantez said.

* WAND | 13-year-old charged after making false threats in Jacksonville: Jacksonville concluded their investigation after speaking with all parties involved after finding the teen did not posses a gun at the time, nor did the teen have access to weapons at their home. […] The threats were shared across multiple social media sites. Shortly after the threats were reported, the Statewide Terrorism and Intelligence Center was able to deem them not credible. They say the online threats reported on the 11th were unrelated to the arrest of the teen for disorderly conduct.

* WSIL | Two 11-Year-Olds Charged in School Threat Investigation in Southern Illinois: Two 11-year-olds face legal trouble in relation to an investigation of threats made at a Centralia school on Wednesday. The Centralia Police Department said they were informed by an school resource officer about a threat made at the Centralia Junior High School on September 11.

*** National ***

* Nextstar | Do campaign yard signs even make a difference?: Studies have shown that when it comes to down-ballot races — usually non-presidential, like school board or a county-level representative — it’s important for the candidate to build name recognition. Yard signs can do that, even if the candidate is not real, one study found.

* Nieman Lab | An AI chatbot helped Americans who believe in conspiracy theories “exit the rabbit hole”: The uncle who believes 9/11 never happened. The next-door neighbor who thinks Biden stole the 2020 election. The Nieman Lab editor who’s been known to wonder if aliens really do exist and the U.S. government is covering them up. You probably don’t want to talk to these people and convince them that they are wrong. But what if an AI chatbot could do it for you? That’s exactly what a group of researchers just did. In their peer-reviewed article “Durably reducing conspiracy beliefs through dialogues with AI,” featured on the cover of Science this week, Thomas Costello of American University, Gordon Pennycook of Cornell, and David Rand of MIT explain how they put 2,190 conspiracy-believing Americans in brief but detailed conversation with the large language model GPT-4 Turbo.

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