Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition (Updated)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Sun-Times | Nearly 140,000 Illinois residents sent checks for unclaimed property: ‘It is not a scam,’ treasurer says: Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs on Tuesday reminded residents who receive these unclaimed property checks that it is not a scam. “All you have to do is open that envelope and cash that check.”
* ABC Chicago | Man wrongfully imprisoned for over 40 years files lawsuit against CPD, Cook County: lawyer: A man wrongfully imprisoned for over 40 years filed a lawsuit Tuesday against Chicago police, several Cook County prosecutors, Cook County and the city of Chicago, his lawyers said. James Soto was imprisoned for over 42 years for a murder he said he did not commit. […] The suit, which civil rights firm Loevy & Loevy filed, seeks damages from dozens of Chicago police officers, three Cook County assistant state’s attorneys, Cook County and the city of Chicago. * WBEZ | Ahead of Mayor Johnson’s second budget, we take a look at how far he’s come on his fiscal campaign promises: But “how we pay for that” is a question Johnson may be stumped with now as mayor. He must work to close both a $223 million deficit for this year and a $982.4 million gap for 2025, caused by an underperformance of revenue, a disputed CPS pension payment and rising pension and labor costs. Next year’s gap is the second largest the city has faced since 2002, according to a WBEZ analysis of prior budgets. * WBEZ | Chicago’s rental crisis: Is an algorithm rigging the system?: RealPage, a Texas-based real estate technology company, allegedly feeds proprietary rent-pricing data into an algorithm that generates daily rent prices for landlords and property managers across the country. […] In the Chicago metropolitan area, tens of thousands of units were priced with RealPage’s price-setting algorithm, according to the company’s own data and a class-action lawsuit filed in federal court last year. Plaintiffs in that lawsuit allege RealPage has harmed tenants and contributed to steep rent increases in the Chicago area. Among the nation’s 10 largest metropolitan areas, metro Chicago has witnessed the second highest growth in rent prices over the past year, according to data from Zillow, the real-estate marketing company. * Block Club | State Grant Helped Neighborhood Hit Hard By War On Drugs. Now, A Group It Funded Could Close As Money Runs Out: A spokeswoman for Gov. JB Pritzker’s office said the grant was never meant to be the group’s sole source of income. Instead, it was supposed to help the organization grow and become better-positioned to get other funding. But the struggles of the Hermosa Neighborhood Association are part of a broader debate over the effectiveness of the grant program, which was created with the goal of helping communities hit hardest by the war on drugs. * Chicago Mag | The Hotel for the Homeless: When I moved into the neighborhood in 2022, the Diplomat, still in operation at 5230 North Lincoln Avenue, no longer looked like the kind of building that could be on a novelty postcard. Instead, the motel was a muddy gray, its doors painted green with shocks of red trim. The windows along the sidewalk had been plastered over, a slab of nondescript brown that would press itself into your periphery when you walked past it. […] That was before the city announced, in 2023, that it was going to buy the motel. That it was going to turn the Diplomat into a transitional housing facility called the Haven on Lincoln, a chance to try something new that could maybe, just maybe, address this city’s struggles with homelessness. * Crain’s | Here’s how Fritz Kaegi feels about the Mag Mile: Magnificent Mile hotels have recovered all of their lost value from the COVID-19 pandemic and then some, if you ask Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi. That’s probably hard to buy for hoteliers along one of the city’s biggest tourist destinations. At the InterContinental Chicago hotel at 505 N. Michigan Ave., a comeback from the pain of the public health crisis has pushed the 45-story building’s assessed value to $96.2 million, newly released assessment data shows. That’s a whopping 284% higher than the property’s final assessed value last year after the owner of the 792-room inn appealed to the Cook County Board of Review. * Northwestern Medill | Writer Underwriting Writer: After the Chicago Tribune didn’t replace retiring architecture critic Blair Kamin, he funded his own successor: Kamin is paying for the Tribune’s next architecture writer out of his own pocket. Why would he do such a thing? “I’m a realist, and I realize that, given who the Tribune is owned by now and given the realities of the business model of journalism having collapsed, either somebody was going to do something, or nothing would get done,” he said. * News-Sun | Former Lake County clerk challenging incumbent circuit court clerk: Two-term incumbent Erin Cartwright Weinstein, a Democrat, is seeking another four years in office. She is facing Republican challenger Carla Wyckoff, a former Lake County clerk in the Nov. 5 election. During the forum, both agreed that the most important part of being the circuit court clerk is administering the changes to the court system, as they are revised and implemented by the state Supreme Court and the General Assembly. During the forum, Wyckoff criticized Weinstein for a lawsuit that three former circuit court clerk employees filed against Weinstein. The employees, who supported Weinstein’s opponent in the 2016 race, alleged that Weinstein fired them for political reasons. * SJ-R | Massey Commission requests for review of hiring practices, procedures of sheriff’s office: In one of its first acts, the 14-member Massey Commission voted that a formal request be sent to the U.S. Department of Justice, the Illinois Attorney General and the Illinois State Police requesting they conduct “a full review of the hiring practices (and) procedures” of the Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office. The commission, formed after the fatal shooting of Sonya Massey in her home in an unincorporated area of Woodside Township by a now-former sheriff’s deputy on July 6, held its first hearing on Monday. * WCIA | Decatur leaders going green after approving compost plan: Decatur City leaders are going green after unanimously voting yes on a new plan to help with food diversion. It’s part of their economic development plan. They’re trying to figure out how the City could make better use of green waste and how to create compost from green waste instead of putting it in the landfill. * SJ-R | ‘Project Capitol’: What we know about the proposed warehouse development in Springfield: The company which will be the end user for the warehouse has not been confirmed yet, but there have been rumors about the mecca of online stores, Amazon, as the end user to the warehouse. Caitlin Tully, the Chicago regional public relations lead at Amazon, could not confirm Amazon would be the end user of the location. “At this time, I cannot comment on our future roadmap,” Tully said. “I cannot talk about the project at all if it is or isn’t Amazon.” * KSDK | ‘They can’t simply live off this wage’: Hundreds of Eaton B-Line workers on strike in Illinois: More than 400 workers are on strike in the Metro East, bringing production at a power management company to a standstill. Union members for Eaton B-Line have been picketing since midnight, all fighting for better pay. Members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Engineers, known as IAM, walked off the job Monday at midnight. They’ve been outside of both Eaton B-Line facilities in Troy and Highland ever since and said they’ll continue all day and all night until they reach an agreement on fair wages. * WGLT | In a Bloomington district, McLean County Board incumbent faces challenge from advocate of limited government: Stevens said he doesn’t see the need to take any steps to reduce the carbon footprint. “I don’t really see any real problem with the carbon we have in the atmosphere right now,” Stevens said, adding he does not believe global warming is a concern. “I think it’s just a hyped-up problem that a lot of people use just to spend money on certain businesses and make profits.” * WCIA | Multiple Central IL counties issue burn bans: Multiple counties and cities in Central Illinois have issued burn warnings and burn bans as of Tuesday afternoon because of a high fire danger. The Danville Fire Department said that the City has issued a ban on all opening burning within city limits. * WCIA | ‘It’s like a family’: Meet the Urbana retirement community taking a bus to every Illini Volleyball game: The group has built up its own “fan club” over the years and always strives to support each woman and coach behind the team. In fact, the Finnertys and Gross agree, they’ve formed their own “family” through Illinois Volleyball. * WaPo | John Grisham poached material for new book, media outlets say: Prolific author John Grisham has written a nonfiction collection about wrongful convictions, and it looks likely to join his oeuvre of legal thriller novels as another bestseller. But the New York Times and ProPublica now say Grisham went too far in his use of their reporting on a murder case in Texas, and they want changes made to the book. * AP | Hospitals’ IV fluid shortage may impact surgeries for weeks: The federal government and medical suppliers have taken several steps to help ease the supply crunch created by Hurricane Helene, which forced Baxter International to close its North Carolina plant late last month. But experts say supplies are still choppy, and improvements will take time.
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In which I try to defend an expansion of a wildly unpopular policy
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I’m fully aware that lots of folks hate speed and red light cams. This is just one reason why they’re superior to human enforcement…
Everyone has a beef. People with some political power or savvy can often talk their way out of tickets, so they hate automated cams. As the study shows, Black people are slightly more likely to speed in the first place, so they have a reason to gripe. But the number of speeders on expressways and streets is just ridiculous. And it’s not fair to the people who drive by the rules to see these crazies never or rarely held accountable. * The study is here. From the explainer…
With all of the unsolved crimes in the region, expanding speed and red light cams to free up cops to do actual police work would be a good thing. It would also give law enforcement even more data to solve crimes. Getaway car drives too fast or runs a red light? Well, you now have evidence that could tie a suspect to the scene. * The cams are derided for being cash cows, but they do their job without bias, as long as their placement locations are not biased. I mean is it really too much to ask to stay within a reasonable margin of the posted speed limit and not brazenly run red lights? We should have more, not less. And if it brings in more money? Have a debate on what it should be used for, like safer roads or property tax rebates. And as someone who’s been caught by a couple of speed cams, I reject the “Big Brother” notion because there’s one very good way to escape the cams: Don’t violate extremely basic, well-posted and universally understood traffic laws. Also, if you have questions about the methodology or other details, click here for the study link before popping off in comments. Thanks.
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Energy Storage And Clean Energy!
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In the next few years, Illinois can expect increases in demand for electricity not seen in decades. While the state is currently experiencing a clean energy boom, the growth is not enough—which puts families and businesses at risk for higher energy bills and unreliable service. Luckily, there is legislation that would expand the use of a technology that can capture and store clean, cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day -large- and small-scale battery energy storage. Energy storage will help avoid the cost spikes ratepayers may experience due to insufficient energy capacity. The need to accelerate the adoption of energy storage is urgent. Springfield is faced with a choice: support policy that will build out clean, cost-effective energy storage or allow families and businesses to have to rely on dirty, unreliable, and expensive natural gas plants. Meanwhile, Illinoisans agree: recent polling shows 72% of Illinois residents support incentives for energy storage. Paid for by Counterspark.
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Push-back against Leader McCombie’s abortion comments (Updated)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I told subscribers about this earlier today, but I’ve received two responses, so let’s all take a look at House Republican Leader Tony McCombie’s statement…
* Personal PAC CEO Sarah Garza Resnick…
* Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago)…
Discuss. …Adding… Gov. JB Pritzker…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Final arguments filed in challenge to Illinois’ assault weapons ban
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Background is here if you need it. Center Square…
Click here and here for the final briefs. * From the state’s filing…
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Opening statements begin in Madigan trial
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Courthouse News…
* AP…
* WTTW…
Yes, he was so very altruistic /s * Tribune…
Madigan made plenty of demands. But he also didn’t need to always make those demands because people could see what had happened to those who didn’t follow the program. Also, he could pull a million strings on you if you stepped out of line. Others would make the demands for him. * Sun-Times…
ComEd and AT&T were not gigantic campaign contributors. What MJM wanted was “jobs” for his people so they had plenty of free time to work and manage campaigns, or perks (like ComEd internships) so that he could entice others into “volunteering.” He saw nothing wrong with squeezing a big corporation. The feds begged to differ. And here we are.
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Today’s quotable
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Chicago Tribune ran a story this week entitled “Mayor Brandon Johnson faces political headwinds from his progressive base.” The whole thing is definitely worth a read because the mayor comes under some sharp criticism from his left base. But check this out…
Calling lifelong, committed lefties “pseudo-progressives” ain’t gonna get him and his ever-shrinking cadre anywhere. Nobody takes these taunts and threats seriously because the mayor is so fabulously unpopular. * Maybe take a minute to read the room. Plenty of folks want to help. But the people in charge refuse to see that while they’re in bunker mode. And they’ve opened the door for folks like the Illinois Policy Institute and their ilk to step in. And if the other side win a bunch of school board seats, it’s only gonna get worse for the mayor… ![]()
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Open thread
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson to shut down migrant shelters, combine with existing homeless system in 2025. Tribune…
- Under the new Chicago setup that takes effect in January, the city will have 6,800 total beds for homeless people, whether they are new arrivals or not. - The current homeless shelter system under the city’s Department of Family and Support Services has 3,000 beds, so the city will add 2,100 while the state will fund 1,700 additional beds. * Related stories…
∙ Axios: City cracks down on migrant shelter eligibility ∙ Block Club Chicago: City Shutting Down Migrant Shelter System By End Of The Year Governor Pritzker will be at Maryville Academy at 11 am for a ribbon cutting for new DCFS facility. Click here to watch. * Sun-Times | Illinois House races to watch, where suburban challenges could affect Springfield power balance: State Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, faces a deep-pocketed challenge from Democratic nominee Maria Peterson as he vies for a third term at the helm of this far northwest suburban district that stretches north to Wauconda. * The Grist | The nation’s first commercial carbon sequestration plant is in Illinois. It leaks.: The emerging technology has become a cornerstone of government strategies to slash fossil fuel emissions and meet climate goals. Meanwhile, the Biden administration’s signature climate legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act, has supercharged industry subsidies and tax credits and set off a CCS gold rush. There are now only four carbon sequestration wells operating in the United States — two each in Illinois and Indiana — but many more are on the way. Three proposed pipelines and 22 wells are up for review by state and federal regulators in Illinois, where the geography makes the landscape especially well suited for CCS. Nationwide, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is reviewing 150 different applications. * Sun-Times | Illinois launches push to combat distracted driving: Under the new program, starting in January, teens applying for their instruction permit will have to watch a video that explains the consequences of distracted driving. In addition, the Secretary of State’s Office will partner with the state Department of Transportation to erect signs to remind drivers to pay attention to the road in areas with high rates of distracted-driving crashes. * Crain’s | Johnson’s deputy mayor for education steps aside amid CPS fight: Jen Johnson, deputy mayor for education, youth and human services, is taking an indefinite leave of absence from the Fifth Floor. […] Johnson’s leave of absence is due to health issues, according to a senior aide to the mayor, who is not permitted to speak publicly about personnel decisions. The mayor’s office did not comment on her departure. * Tribune | Chicago Public Schools halts board meetings until December amid board and mayor’s office shake-ups: CPS did not immediately respond to requests for comment about its plans in light of the canceled meeting. The district has not released how the canceled meeting will affect the activities of the newly appointed board. Chicagoans will vote for their district’s elected school board member in just two weeks, which will replace Johnson’s appointed board. The other half of the new 21-member board, plus the board president, will still be appointed by Mayor Johnson. The new board will assume their positions in January. * Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson urged to fire Chicago cops tied to Oath Keepers after ’sham’ investigation: A leading national civil rights group, more than a dozen local activist organizations and 10 elected officials sent a letter Monday to Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson urging him to fire police officers with ties to what they called “hate and extremist groups.” The letter from Color of Change and the others came one year after WBEZ and the Sun-Times identified officers whose names appeared on the membership list of the Oath Keepers, a group involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. * Sun-Times | Lowering city speed limit to 25 mph gets committee OK — but final Council vote slowed down: The ordinance to lower speed limits on all city-owned roads was approved 8-5 by the Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety, with its chairman, 1st Ward Ald. Daniel La Spata, saying the measure “sets us on the pathway to save hundreds of lives in the next decade.” Though the full Council meets Tuesday, the proposal won’t be voted on at that meeting, La Spata said, to allow time for more public conversation. He told reporters after Monday’s meeting that he plans to bring it for a vote before the end of the year. * WGEM | Gov. Pritzker celebrates Illinois’ quantum future at Chicago summit: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) spoke at the summit Monday morning. He has a lot to celebrate as he works to transform the state into a quantum hub. “Here in the Midwest, we believe that quantum science and research are on an accelerating timeline, and as governor, I want to make sure that we are focused on bringing opportunity and history-making innovations to the people of the United States and the world as soon as we can,” he said. * Crain’s | How Chicago got ahead of the curve on quantum computing: “The University of Chicago’s previous president came to see me. I had just become governor, and we’re passing a capital bill to invest in roads and bridges and other big capital investments, including things at universities,” Pritzker told a crowd at the University of Chicago’s annual quantum summit this morning in Hyde Park. “He said: ‘This is an opportunity for Illinois and for Chicago, not just the University of Chicago, to lead. If the state can help us, it will spark more investment from the federal government and private investors. Seeing the state step up will give people faith.’” * NBC Chicago | Chicago reigns as ‘America’s Rattiest City’ for 10th straight year: Chicago’s decade-long stint atop the rankings of America’s Rattiest Cities remains intact according to new research released by Orkin. […] According to the company, Chicago’s “infrastructure and environment” are appealing to rats, along with the prevalence of alleys, which allow rodents plenty of hiding places and plenty of garbage that they can eat. * Crain’s | These are Chicago’s Most Innovative Companies for 2024: * Tribune | Democrats looking for another clean sweep of Cook County races: The down-ballot races for Cook County clerk and Circuit Court clerk could spell big changes to the county’s administrative hinterlands. Each office is known either for its paper pushing, its reputation for political patronage hiring, or some combination of both. In the court clerk race, three candidates are vying to become the next head of the massive office that serves as the records manager for one of the largest court systems in the nation. The winner will succeed outgoing Clerk Iris Martinez, who lost in the Democratic primary in March. * Daily Herald | Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin to face at least two challengers in 2025 election: It’s official now: Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin is seeking a third term and will face at least two opponents in the 2025 election. He and Alderman-at-Large John Laesch and 3rd Ward Alderman Ted Mesiacos filed their petitions for the position on Monday morning, the first day candidates could submit them. * WGN | Dolton drama: Judge sides with trustees over Henyard in meeting squabble: Henyard filed a complaint after a majority of trustees moved the meetings to a Dolton Park District building to accommodate large—and sometimes raucous—crowds. […] Henyard asked a judge to invalidate decisions made at the meetings and force them to gather at village hall. The trustees say the judge has sided with them and agreed that their meetings do not violate the Open Meetings Act. * Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk countersues county officials in ongoing bill saga: DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek is suing the DuPage County Board, Auditor Bill White and county board Chair Deborah Conroy in a move to assert her right to control how she runs the clerk’s office. The lawsuit was filed earlier this month in response to a lawsuit filed in September by DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin, who is seeking a judge’s order to compel Kaczmarek to comply with county regulations regarding the payment of bills. * Fox Chicago | Suburban Chicago school district cracks down on reckless drivers with new tech: This school year, one district is gearing up to get more drivers to stop when students are getting on and off buses. Their approach is similar to using a red-light camera, but this time it’s on a school bus. […] This new camera, which sits right next to the school bus stop arm, recorded the violation of the suburban Chicago student who was nearly struck. All buses transporting District 204 students have one this year. * Sun-Times | Benet star Daniel Pauliukonis commits to Southern Illinois: Even while putting up modest numbers last season, Benet’s Daniel Pauliukonis had the look of a blossoming prospect. He emerged over the course of the spring and summer, garnering recruiting attention along the way. Now the ultra-skilled 6-9 Pauliukonis is one of the fast-rising prospects in the senior class — and one of the City/Suburban Hoops Report’s top 10 prospects in the state. * Capitol News Illinois | 17th District looms large in tight battle for U.S. House: The seat is currently held by first-term Democrat Eric Sorensen, of Moline, a former TV weatherman for a local station in Rockford. First elected in 2022, he serves on the House Agriculture Committee and the Science, Space and Technology Committee. He faces Republican Joe McGraw, of Rockford, a retired judge in the 17th Judicial Circuit. A graduate of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the Northern Illinois University College of Law, he spent nearly 20 years as presiding judge in the criminal division of the circuit court. * TSPR | Daughter seeks damages in McDonough County jail beating death: The lawsuit, filed Oct. 16 in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois in Rock Island, also claims Darrell Hocker’s constitutional and civil rights were violated when he was housed in a cell with a man known to be violent and mentally ill — a man who had not undergone a mental evaluation before he was removed from isolation. Hocker, 51, died in the early morning hours of Nov. 8, 2023, after an altercation with Timothy Smith, now 41, in a locked cell. Hocker was repeatedly struck in the head, neck and chest during the altercation. * Pantagraph | Rivian to start construction on logistics facilities near Normal plant: The Normal Town Council on Monday approved site plans for the electric vehicle maker’s proposed $200 million development that includes two buildings spanning a total of roughly 2.4 million square feet. In September, the council approved a preliminary subdivision plan called “NN2 WH” for 381 acres the company bought in 2021 across Rivian Motorway from the plant in west Normal. At the time, the plan designated two 90-acre parcels for future development. * The Southern | Congressman discusses CTE Funding Impact Expansion at JALC: Illinois Democrat congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi participated in a roundtable discussion on workforce development Monday morning at John A. Logan College. Krishnamoorthi, a key proponent of CTE, emphasized the significance of visiting communities in person to see firsthand how federal funding impacts them. […] John A. Logan College is growing its Career and Technical Education Center with help from a $4.2 million grant from the Economic Development Administration. * Herald-Whig | ‘We need vocational trades’: Tracy learns about vocational programs in QAVTC tour: alton Tournear made one thing clear to the visitors to his diesel technology class. “You learn more hands-on than you do sitting in a classroom,” Tournear said. State Sen. Jil Tracy, R-Quincy, included in his audience, readily agreed. Tracy toured Quincy Area Vocational Technical Center on Monday, hearing about available programs from students and staff. * Labor Tribune | Illinois AFL-CIO’s Devaney upbeat in Belleville appearance: Unionists at the annual awards banquet of the Southwestern Illinois Central Labor Council were urged to turn out for Democrats in the general election and told about efforts being made on workers’ behalf in the state Capital in a speech by one of Labor’s strongest proponents, Pat Devaney, secretary-treasurer of the Illinois AFL-CIO. Devaney reported that the legislature had approved a $45 billion economic development package, the biggest in the state’s history, with Labor’s support. * WSIL | Marion team wins International Lineman’s Rodeo competition: A Marion, Illinois, team finished first in the International Lineman’s Rodeo over the weekend. Ameren Illinois stated a trio of journeymen linemen, as part of the Marion Operating Center, finished first overall in the 40th International Lineman’s Rodeo in Overland Park, Kansas. They also placed second in a couple of individual competitions. * WaPo | Elon Musk targets Michigan with voter misinformation: Two weeks before the presidential election, Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson (D) accused billionaire Elon Musk of spreading “dangerous disinformation” about voting in her state after Musk, owner of X and Tesla, shared a post suggesting falsely that the state’s voter rolls, swelled by large numbers of inactive voters, were likely to result in widespread fraud. * The Atlantic | The Invasion That Wasn’t: The Haitians had come to Sylacauga by bus. Two buses—possibly even three. But certainly more than one; of this, one resident was sure. As he explained on Facebook, he’d been told by someone who’d spotted them unloading in the Walmart parking lot. The federal government had chartered their transport, locals were saying—an effort to cripple the welfare state of this small Alabama town as punishment for voting red. * Vanity Fair | Inside the Bungled Bird Flu Response, Where Profits Collide With Public Health: When dairy cows in Texas began falling ill with H5N1, alarmed veterinarians expected a fierce response to contain an outbreak with pandemic-sparking potential. Then politics—and, critics say, a key agency’s mandate to protect dairy-industry revenues—intervened.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Oct 22, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Tribune…
Click here to follow the trial.
* WTTW…
* Former Republican Rep. Dan Brady…
* Crain’s | Pritzker still unmoved by calls for a state handout to Reinsdorf: “I can just say the same challenges exist for putting public money in a private business — I mean the kind of size people are looking for. We’re always helping private businesses, I might add. Sometimes it’s just infrastructure . . . we do that kind of thing all the time. “But a billion-dollar investment for a private business that’s owned by wealthy people that’s a highly valued enterprise seems like the taxpayers rightly should say, ‘Don’t we have other uses for that capital?’” * Crain’s | Johnson and the CTU are pushing for neighborhood schools over choice. Can CPS strike a balance?: Johnson, a former teacher and CTU organizer, ran his mayoral campaign on rebalancing the inequities that have starved schools in strapped communities. Late last year his school board issued a resolution that called for a new vision, from a model that emphasizes choice to one that “prioritizes communities most impacted by past and ongoing racial and economic inequity.” […] “People felt that a very large decision was being taken away from them when they were on the precipice of an elected school board,” says Illinois state Rep. Margaret Croke, whose North Side district includes Lincoln Park and Lakeview, and who introduced a bill to forestall any changes until a fully elected board is seated. (The bill was passed in the Illinois House but held in the Senate after Johnson agreed not to enact certain changes.) * WGN | Committee OKs measure to lower Chicago speed limit, sending it to full council: The City Council’s Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety on Monday passed a measure that would lower the city’s default maximum speed limit to 25 MPH, down from the current 30. Alders passed the measure with an 8-5 vote, sending it to the full City Council. * Sun-Times | More CPS students are graduating from high school, but finishing college is still a struggle: According to the report published earlier this month, the high school graduation rate among students of all races increased from 62% in 2008 to 85% in 2023. Among young white women and men, the high school graduation rate was 93% and 90% in 2023, compared to 88% and 83% of young Latino women and men and 85% and 78% of young Black women and men. * Crain’s | Charter school supporters and CTU rivalry heats up ahead of school board elections: As of early October, $557,000 had been spent by a committee of the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, or INCS, putting the charter advocacy group at the top of special interest groups spending in Chicago’s first school board elections. This is more than double the $238,000 spent by the political action committees of the CTU and its coalition of community organizations, according to Chalkbeat Chicago. The INCS has raised funds from billionaires Helen Zell, wife of the late real estate mogul Sam Zell; Netflix co-founder and Chairman Reed Hastings; and private investor Craig Duchossois. * Block Club | City Selling Largely Vacant Rogers Park Lot — Preferably For Housing And A Community Garden: The city is selling a long-undeveloped lot on the Far North Side, hoping a builder will bring housing to the site. The 46,000-square-foot lot at the corner of Howard Street and Ashland Avenue in Rogers Park is owned by the city, and it’s been the home of a community garden for years. The city listed it for about $2 million, according to the Department of Planning and Development. […] Ald. Maria Hadden’s 49th Ward office in 2020 asked neighbors what they wanted to see at the lot to inform future requests for proposals. Things like housing and green space have seemed popular, residents have previously said. * Block Club | Pilsen Is Changing. Can A ‘Mom-And-Pop’ Landlord Make A Difference?: Longtime families have said they’ve been forced out by rising costs. Yet Bottari charges his tenants hundreds — not thousands — in monthly rent based on what they can afford. The highest rent a tenant is paying is $800. He’s charged tenants nothing when they’ve fallen on hard times. It’s all very much on purpose: He wants to support his neighbors. * Sun-Times | Can prison cause dementia? New Northwestern study explores how incarceration impacts health: The university was recently awarded a grant for a first-of-its-kind study on how incarceration affects health, age-related conditions and risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias. The grant from the National Institutes of Health totals $20 million over five years. Several studies have explored the connection between poor health and incarceration, but this study is investigating how all the conditions of prison can worsen someone’s health, said Linda Teplin, the study’s principal investigator. * SJ-R | New hearing date set for former sheriff’s deputy charged with Massey’s murder: In the less than 90-second proceeding before Presiding Circuit Judge Ryan Cadagin, Sean P. Grayson, charged with Massey’s murder, was given a new status hearing for Dec. 2. That is expected to be closer to a Fourth District Appellate Court ruling regarding Grayson’s ongoing detention in Menard County. * WAND | Former deputy accused of killing Sonya Massey appears in court, awaits decision on pre-trial release: Around thirty members of Massey’s family appeared for the hearing on Monday. Teresa Haley with Haley and Associates told reporters after the hearing that Massey’s family is “struggling, but holding on.” She said that family and community members will keep attending hearings and “coming back again and again and again and again.” * WEAI | Lesko Proposes Merger of Sangamon County Recorder and Clerk Offices: A Sangamon County elected official is proposing to merge the office with another. Current Springfield City Clerk Frank Lesko, who is running as the Republican candidate for the Sangamon County Recorder position this November, is proposing to merge the office with the Sangamon County Clerk’s office. According to a press release on Wednesday, Lesko says the merger would make the county government more accountable, efficient, and responsive to taxpayers. * WCIA | IL State Police Trooper Thompsen to be remembered in police procession: A police procession honoring a trooper who died in the line of duty will be held on Monday afternoon. […] According to St. Joseph and Stanton Fire Protection District a large police procession will move from Urbana to St. Joesph beginning around 1 p.m. The procession will move through 150 from the west to North Third Street to Freese Funeral Home in St. Joe. * WCIA | Iroquois Co. wins Roth ID kits for community: Roth ID tags are a sticker that can go on a car seat with a child’s information. In the event of an emergency, the tag can be removed from the car seat and used as a wristband. These help first responders connect young children with their parent or guardian if an accident has occurred. […] After being nominated for the giveaway, organizations throughout the United States campaigned for the most votes to win free Roth ID tags. The Iroquois County Sheriff’s Department was one of 18 teams to win. They’ll receive 100 Roth ID Kits to give away to the community. * WSJ | ‘It Feels Very Dystopian.’ Republican County Officials Brace for Election Deniers—Again: As Nov. 5 looms, the election headquarters in the most populous county in the crucial battleground state of Arizona has become a fortress. “You’d have to be a psychopath to say you enjoy this,” said Maricopa County’s top election official for voting by mail, Stephen Richer, a Republican. The building has added metal detectors and armed guards. On Election Day, as workers tabulate ballots behind new fencing and concrete barriers, drones will patrol the skies overhead, police snipers will perch on rooftops and mounted patrols will stand ready.
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small. We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Ellen and Julie, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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Caption contest!
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * It’s 361 miles from Elgin to the Saline County seat… ![]()
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Pritzker rules out immediate state action on CPS, promises more money for K-12 next year, but says past CPS spending means they’ll need to find ‘efficiencies within the budget’ (Updated)
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * From today’s Q and A with Gov. JB Pritzker…
…Adding… Washington Post…
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The Sonya Massey case was the tip of the iceberg
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * CBS News…
* More…
Not long after I first moved to Springfield, local singer/songwriter Tom Irwin wrote a song about an inmate with a history of mental illness who died in the county jail under, shall we say, questionable circumstances. That system has been bad for a very long time.
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About as lopsided as you can get
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The remap has consequences. My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
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Open thread
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Early voting expands across the suburbs Monday. Daily Herald…
- On Monday, early voting expands to include 157 locations across the suburbs. - “I’d encourage people not to wait until the last minute,” said Kane County Clerk Jack Cunningham, noting lines at early voting locations have not been too long. * Related stories…
∙ ABC Chicago: Early voting expands in Illinois, including to Chicago wards sites * SJ-R | Illinois State Police trooper killed in crash with truck driver. Here’s what we know: Corey S. Thompsen, 28, was part of a Special Operations Group and had been with the state police for nearly five years, said ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly at a news conference in Pesotum Saturday. […] A truck, driven by Helen Torres, 32, of Thomasboro, was traveling south on County Road 1300 East and stopped at the intersection at Leverett Road when she pulled into the roadway, striking Thompsen’s motorcycle. * ABC Chicago | Previously solid-red Lake County becomes battleground for Democrats and Republicans before election: “Today, we are going to get out there knock on doors, make phone calls get our voters out to win, right?” said Gov. JB Pritzker. Pritzker rallied the troops in Highwood on Sunday, focusing on some of Lake County’s tightest races. Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart is trying to hang on to the seat he won four years ago, making him the first Democrat to win it in 40 years. The governor will be at the University of Chicago David Rubenstein Forum at 10:15 am to give remarks at the Chicago Quantum Exchange Summit. Click here to watch. * Tribune | GOP leader tries to ‘sell hope’ in uphill battle to cut into Democratic stranglehold on state legislature: In a decidedly blue state, former President Donald Trump’s candidacy could hurt the GOP in legislative swing districts, said John Shaw, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. “I think there is a guilt-by-association thing going on or a guilt-by-association possibility for Republicans who are running down ballot in swing districts, and even districts that maybe trend just a little bit Republican,” Shaw said. * WGN | Make A Wish Illinois raises funds to grant wishes for children battling serious illnesses: The goal of the walk was to raise $200,000 to continue making wishes come true for children fighting critical illnesses. In the next year, Make A Wish Illinois would like to grant the wishes of another 700 Illinois children. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson faces political headwinds from his progressive base: And Johnson appeared more and more comfortable playing the role of a mayor who, under fire from once-friends and foes alike, was doubling down on the message that he alone stands at the bully pulpit of the mayor’s office. “There’s a few people that somehow forgot there was a whole election that gave me the power to transform this city,” he said before handing Jackson the ceremonial key. * Tribune | Former student protections chief Camie Pratt abused her position, according to OIG report criticizing CPS’ handling of Lincoln Park scandal: The CPS watchdog’s report casts new light on Pratt’s role in the web of sexual misconduct and retaliation allegations that embroiled Lincoln Park High School in scandal in early 2020. Since CPS accused an assortment of coaches and principals of mishandling an out-of-town trip involving allegations of misconduct among students on the boys basketball team, and a separate allegation of grooming on the girls team, multiple staffers have been reinstated. * Tribune | Judge dismisses Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez’s defamation lawsuit against opponent: Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, sued 2023 City Council candidate Aida Flores over her claim that he regularly failed to recommend projects in the ward for the $1.5 million given to aldermen to spend on capital improvements. Judge Jerry A. Esrig ruled Thursday that Flores’ comments were not defamatory. Esrig also denied a motion from Flores to label Sigcho-Lopez’s lawsuit as a strategic effort to silence criticism. Despite that decision, Flores accused the Pilsen alderman of trying to squash dissent in a statement shared with the Tribune. * Tribune | Unusual trial of two former prosecutors to restart Monday after long appeal delay: Nearly a year after a rare appeal stopped a trial in its tracks for two former Cook County assistant state’s attorneys, the case is expected to resume on Monday as special prosecutors allege wrongdoing in connection with an infamous wrongful conviction case. Nicholas Trutenko, 69, and Andrew Horvat, 48, are facing felony charges in connection with the third trial for Jackie Wilson, whose case was critical to unveiling systemic practices of torture within the Chicago Police Department. * Block Club | Ballot Questions Ask South, Southwest Side Neighbors If They Want Free Mental Health Programs: That question also asks if neighbors would support funding the programs by raising property taxes up to .025 percent for properties within the area. As part of that, the second question asks voters if they support creating a fund of $700,000 or less for the Englewood and Greater Chatham program in next year’s tax levy, or a fund up to $1.2 million for the Near Southwest Side program. * Sun-Times | More immigrants are under surveillance by ICE’s Chicago field office than ever, data analysis finds: The agency did not respond to questions about the Chicago field office and why its monitoring has grown so much. ICE says the number of people it’s monitoring across the country has decreased from 321,000 people in fiscal year 2022 to 194,427 people in fiscal year 2023. In its annual report, ICE said that decline could have been because fewer people were being placed under monitoring at the southern border and because more people are being terminated from these types of programs. * CBS | Off-duty Blue Island officer fired shot at off-duty CPD officer in road rage incident: Blue Island police officer was arrested after he allegedly fired at least one shot at a Chicago police officer during a road rage incident while both officers were off duty Saturday evening in the Back of the Yards neighborhood. Police said, shortly after 5 p.m., a 47-year old man was in a vehicle in the 4700 block of South Halsted Street, when he pulled out a gun and fired at least one shot toward another vehicle. * Block Club | South Siders Urge Slowdown On Quantum Computing Campus: In an Oct. 9 letter addressed to alderpeople and state lawmakers, members of the Alliance of the Southeast and 80 local residents requested more advance notice of developments at the site. […] In their proposed community benefits agreement, residents demanded an environmental impact study, a commitment to creating local jobs, measures to prevent displacement and community representation on the project’s governance committee as prerequisites for government funding. * Chicago Council on Global Affairs | As global cities feel the strain of overtourism, what makes Chicago immune?: Everything from urban planning to visitor habits plays a role. At the end of the day, though, leaders in Chicago and in Europe agree on one thing: that short-term rentals — an industry that has exploded in the past decade alongside growth in travel — must be regulated to maintain locals’ quality of life. * Sun-Times | Judges aiming to keep seats in November include some with questionable records: Despite tax debts, arrests and residency questions, judges running for retention in Cook County have drawn little attention and run a quiet — and at times evasive — campaign. * Daily Herald | How much of your county’s transit sales tax dollars are going to transportation? It ranges from 3% to 100%: Lake received about $41.2 million and McHenry $14 million from the sales tax. Both counties funneled 100% into transportation. DuPage’s RTA tax share was $67.9 million and officials dedicated just 2.9%, or $2 million, to transportation in fiscal year 2023. The remainder went to fund public safety. * Tribune | Mental illness put her in DuPage County Jail. 85 days later, she was dead: Advocates and attorneys who work with Illinois’ mental health and criminal court systems say Reneyda’s death appears to have been an entirely avoidable tragedy, one that exposes a confluence of long-standing failures: The continued overreliance on police as first responders in a mental health crisis. The limited community-based treatment options. The scarcity of beds tied largely to staffing shortages at state mental health hospitals. * Daily Herald | Some in Elburn unhappy with town’s new rules for fences: The biggest change to the ordinance prohibits privacy fencing, or solid fencing, which begins at ground level from being installed in the drainage/utility easements within residents’ yards. The easements are within 10 feet of the lot line in the front and back, and within five feet on the sides of the lot line. That means fences will have to be inside of 10 feet in the front and the back of the lot and inside of five feet on the sides. Fences on corner lots must also be 25 inches from any sidewalk or right of way. * Daily Herald | Tollway tentative budget released: Tri-State, I-490 construction are priorities: At a Thursday meeting, Executive Director Cassaundra Rouse called the budget: “a balanced spending plan to support customer service, safety and security, and employee investment to improve efficiency — as well as the implementation of the largest capital program in the agency’s history.” The $1.72 billion budget represents a 4.2% increase from 2024 and covers salaries, equipment, IT, debt service and ongoing maintenance. * Sun-Times | Bozo the Clown returns for a weekend at Billy Corgan’s Madame ZuZu’s in Highland Park: Generations of fans of the beloved character flock to Madame ZuZu’s for a packed weekend of sold-out events to celebrate all the nostalgia and wonder, including a Friday-night panel discussion and a Sunday-night Bob Ross-Bozo mashup painting event. * CBS | Years before a deputy killed Sonya Massey, sheriff’s office failed to police misconduct within its ranks: At least eight other deaths in the custody of Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office deputies and corrections officers have occurred under circumstances where officials’ conduct was called into question. In at least five of those cases, officers acted in ways that appeared to have violated local law enforcement policies as well as state and federal standards, according to a CBS News review of two decades’ worth of documents obtained through court records and Freedom of Information Act requests. Police in other communities who used similar tactics have sometimes been charged criminally. * SJ-R | Pastor insists he wasn’t forced off Massey Commission; denies allegations made by two women: At a Sept. 16 commission listening session, two people making public comments called for McJunkins to step aside in light of an allegation that he groped Springfield activist and community organizer Emma Shafer during a February 2023 private meeting at Union Baptist Church. McJunkins, who has spent 22 years at the church and ran for city council in 2009, denied both allegations in interviews with the SJ-R. * SJ-R | Sangamon County Juvenile Detention Center has been approved to reopen. What’s the hold up?: The reopening plan requires a set-minimum staffing level to operate the facility 24 hours a day and seven days a week, he said in a statement to the SJR. “Sangamon County like many detention centers around the state has struggled to fill openings. The Administrative Office will not approve reopening until we meet the appropriate staffing level,” Holsopple said. * 25 News Now | Top Republican leaders visit Peoria hoping to flip House seat to GOP: Two of the biggest names in the Republican Party visited Peoria Sunday afternoon hoping to raise funds for Congressional candidate Joe McGraw. Photos were posted on Facebook Sunday of Peoria County Sheriff Chris Watkins with U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana), who is second-in-line to the presidency, and U.S Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio). * WCIA | Over 10 fire departments respond to Champaign Co. fire: After investigating, the Fire Department confirmed that a camper had started the fire. A car had been towing the camper behind it. It caught on fire, and the driver unclipped it from the car. First responders said that the person left it in the road. The Broadlands-Longview Fire Protection District said it took around 15 minutes to put the camper’s fire out, but over two hours to put it out in the field. 13 Fire Departments responded to the fire. * NYT | Electric Vehicles May Be Struggling. G.M.’s Leader Is Still a Believer.: G.M. says it will start making money on battery-powered models by the end of the year — becoming the only U.S. automaker aside from Tesla to achieve that feat. Sales of G.M.’s electric vehicles are starting to take off. And the company just introduced a model that sells for less than $30,000 after a federal tax credit. * ProPublica | Who’s Mailing the Catholic Tribune? It’s Not the Church, It’s Partisan Media: A headline in the Wisconsin Catholic Tribune, and repurposed in other states’ versions, provocatively asks, “How many ‘sex change’ mutilation surgeries occurred on Wisconsin kids?” Another: “Haitian illegal aliens in America: What are Harris supporters saying?” […] Using tax documents and business filings, ProPublica traced the papers to a Chicago-based publishing network led by former TV reporter Brian Timpone. * The Atlantic | Why the oil market is not shocked: In sum, the past few weeks have been as tense and belligerent a time in the Middle East as we’ve seen in many years. And yet, when I filled up my tank again yesterday, the price of a gallon of gas was only $2.94. Once upon a time, this would have been surprising: Geopolitical turmoil, particularly in the Middle East, used to send oil prices soaring, as frantic traders—anticipating potential supply shortages—added what’s often called a “war premium” to the price of crude.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Oct 21, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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