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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Former Pritzker communications staffers launch Abudayyeh Rubin Communications Strategies…

Jordan Abudayyeh and Jason Rubin announce the launch of Abudayyeh Rubin Communications Strategies (ARC Strategies), a cutting-edge communications firm designed to transform how clients tell their stories. From corporate boardrooms to the legislative arena, ARC Strategies is poised to assist companies and organizations in raising their profiles, ensuring the right messages reach the right audiences, and navigating through crises as they arise.

ARC Strategies offers a comprehensive suite of services including crisis communications, public relations, media training, and speechwriting. Founded by a team of seasoned communications professionals with deep experience in media, government, and national and state politics, the firm’s mission is to provide tailored, results-driven solutions that meet clients’ needs and anticipate challenges in an evolving media landscape.

“Building on a record of success in reshaping the communications narrative for the state of Illinois, we are thrilled to launch ARC Strategies and ready to get to work on behalf of businesses and organizations of all sizes,” said Jordan Abudayyeh and Jason Rubin, founders of ARC Strategies. “We’re excited to utilize our extensive skillsets, homegrown in one of the toughest political environments in the nation, to provide strategic counsel to clients. From driving a successful message in Springfield, to navigating through a crisis, to carrying a message in a high-profile interview - ARC Strategies will be a full-service communications partner, helping clients tell their stories.”

Jordan Abudayyeh and Jason Rubin have over twenty years of combined experience working in politics, government, and media. They most recently served as Deputy Chiefs of Staff for Communications in Gov. JB Pritzker’s office where they led the Governor’s communications through major economic development announcements, transformative legislative efforts, and crises ranging from day-to-day government operations to the COVID-19 pandemic.

ARC Strategies’ launch comes at a time when effective communication is more crucial than ever. As organizations seek to connect with their audiences in an ever-changing media landscape, ARC Strategies provides the expertise and strategy needed to stand out in a crowded marketplace.

* Tribune

A day and a half of intensive questioning yielded no new jurors by midday Wednesday in the corruption trial of Michael Madigan, as the already sluggish pace of jury selection slowed to a crawl.

From Tuesday morning to midday Wednesday, 18 prospective jurors were questioned, some of whom were on the witness stand for 45 minutes or longer. The majority of them were rejected from consideration due to apparent bias or hardship.

The handful remaining were kicked off the panel by peremptory strikes, for which attorneys do not have to articulate a reason.

Eleven jurors have already been chosen over the course of jury selection, which began Oct. 8 with prospective jurors filling out a written questionnaire. Attorneys still must select one final person for the regular jury as well as six alternates.

* Democratic Party of Illinois…

Ahead of Election Day, the Democratic Party of Illinois is excited to host a Day of Action this Sunday in Lake County in support of U.S. Representative Brad Schneider (IL-10), Maria Peterson for State Representative (IL-52), Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart, Hilary Winiarz for Lake County Board District 2, and down-ballot Democrats. Through rallying, canvassing and door-knocking, Chair Lisa Hernandez, Governor JB Pritzker, candidates, and volunteers will mobilize their communities to get out the vote.

WHO: Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Lisa Hernandez, Governor JB Pritzker, U.S. Representative Brad Schneider (IL-10), Maria Peterson for State Representative (IL-52), Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart, Hilary Winiarz for Lake County Board District 2, and Lake County Dems

WHAT: Rallying, canvassing and door-knocking for county-wide Democratic candidates
Governor Pritzker and Chair Hernandez to speak around 10:50 AM

WHEN: Sunday, October 20, 2024, 10:30 AM-3 PM

WHERE: 454 Sheridan Rd., Highwood, IL 60040

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | In final public transit hearing, downstate operators join chorus for more state funding: “We are approaching a similar fiscal cliff to the northeast region,” Karl Gnadt, managing director of the Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District, said. Gnadt said CUMTD is expanding to a point where the state may not be able to cover necessary costs. The state funds up to 65% of downstate transit agencies’ yearly costs through the “Downstate Operating Assistance Program,” but transit agency heads say the program is underfunded and can’t keep up with planned expansions.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | Panel discusses proposals to shore up Illinois’ unfunded pension liability: Among the issues discussed were how Tier II pensions, or benefit plans for public employees in Illinois hired after 2011, may need to be addressed because it may not comply with Social Security rules. State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, was part of the panel. “Regardless of what plan comes out that’s agreed upon, that’s fiscally responsible for the state, No. 1, and equally respectful of the job that our employees do,” Kifowit said. “We need to acknowledge that it needs to be fixed.”

* SJ-R | Illinois prison employees to picket for safer working conditions: Members of the AFSCME Could 31 union will hold an informational picket from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday. Members will be outside the Pontiac Correctional Center and other prisons throughout the state, according to local AFSCME President William Lee. A flyer advertising the event states “Safety Matters” followed by the words ‘Say no to drug smuggling,’ ‘Say no to assaults on staff’ and ‘Join the picket line.’

* Press Release | Governor Pritzker Temporarily Suspends IFTA/MFUT Requirements Due to Hurricanes Milton & Helene: Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) have temporarily waived the International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) registration and motor fuel use tax (MFUT) single trip permitting for qualified motor vehicles engaged in interstate disaster relief efforts as a result of Hurricanes Milton & Helene. The suspension, pursuant to 35 ILCS 505/13a.4 and 13a.5, is effective from October 11, 2024, through November 09, 2024.

*** Chicago ***

* Bloomberg | Johnson-CPS drama has credit assessors on alert: Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson appointed a new slate of board members earlier this month after all seven prior designees resigned from their seats. While the management changes alone don’t represent a “material” shift in credit quality, the new board may undertake policies that could change the district’s financial operations,” Moody’s analysts led by David Levett said in a report on Tuesday.

* Chalkbeat | Chicago Public Schools sees enrollment bump for second year in a row: As of the 20th day of school this year, CPS had enrolled 325,305 students compared to 323,251 students this time last year, according to district data. That’s less than a 1% increase from last year. The district uses the 20th day of school as the official date to take stock of enrollment and demographics each year. Officials hinted at the slight bump last month, when by the 15th day of school 2,800 more students had enrolled compared to that day last year.

* Block Club | Should City Pay For New Bears Stadium? West Side Voters Can Weigh In On November Ballot: Voters in parts of the 29th Ward, including portions of Austin, Galewood and Montclare, have a referendum question on their ballots that asks, “Shall the people of Chicago provide any taxpayer subsidy to the Chicago Bears to build a new stadium?” The question was put on certain West Side ballots by former Gov. Pat Quinn with the help of Jacob Drews, a former intern to U.S. Rep. Danny Davis, records show. It will appear on ballots for voters in the 29th Ward’s 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15 and 17 precincts.

* Sun-Times | Chicago-based True Value hardware files for bankruptcy, agrees to sell to Do it Best: True Value, the hardware retailer based in Chicago, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and agreed to sell itself for $153 million to Do it Best Corp., the home improvement company based in Fort Wayne, Indiana, according to court filings.

* Block Club | Busted Sidewalk In Pilsen Unfixed For Over A Year, Stranding Neighbor In Wheelchair: Hernandez said he and his family have reported the sidewalk’s condition to Ald. Byron Sigcho Lopez’s (25th) office several times and made city requests over the past year — requests that remained open until Block Club brought the issue to the city’s attention last week. “The government of the city does not remember us at all, except when they collect the taxes and our alderman is the worst that we ever had,” Hernandez said.

* Sun-Times | What a La Niña winter could mean for the Chicago area: La Niña has around a 60% chance of emerging through the end of November and could last until March, according to projections from the National Weather Service. This year, La Niña is forecast to be weaker than normal, making weather predictions this far in advance tricky, according to National Weather Service meteorologist Zachary Yack.

* Chicago Reader | Mazdaznan’s enlightened grifter: In late-1800s Chicago, a charismatic eccentric built a religious cult following. : The first time Otoman Zar-Adusht Hanish caught significant press attention was in 1904, when Emma Reusse—or Eloise, as she was sometimes called—was seen running from his temple shrieking and pulling out her hair. She was committed to an Elgin sanitarium after the guru and self-described doctor had advised her to juice fast for 40 days to spiritually and physically “perfect” herself. Two weeks later, she died.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Press Release | Illinois Man Sentenced to Prison for Assaulting Law Enforcement During Jan. 6 Capitol Breach: Robin Lee Reierson, 69, of Schiller Park, Illinois, was sentenced to 18 months in prison, 36 months of supervised release, and ordered to pay $7,000 in restitution and fines by U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton. […] At approximately 2:06 p.m., Reierson used his back and body to push against a bike rack barrier and into the line of assembled officers. The police line began to fall at approximately 2:25 p.m., and, minutes later, at approximately 2:30 p.m., Reierson physically pushed against police officers using both of his hands and by lowering his shoulder into officers. Reierson also attempted to take hold of an MPD officer’s baton.

* Daily Herald | Verna Clayton, ‘a pioneer leader’ in Buffalo Grove, guided village through period of growth: A housewife in Buffalo Grove’s Strathmore subdivision, Verna Clayton didn’t initially seek a career in politics. But her dissatisfaction with the village board led her to a political career that saw her rise to Buffalo Grove village president and ultimately a state representative. Today, the village’s municipal campus bears her name. Clayton died Oct. 8 in Anderson, Indiana at 87.


*** Downstate ***

* Fox Chicago | Illinois trooper honored with Medal of Honor after suffering injuries in Will County crash: An Illinois State Police (ISP) trooper was awarded the Illinois Law Enforcement Medal of Honor on Tuesday after he suffered incapacitating injuries in a Will County crash in 2021. The award was presented to ISP Trooper Brian Frank by Gov. JB Pritzker and ISP Director Brendan Kelly.

* BND | Well-known Madison County attorney, gun rights advocate could lose his law license — again: An attorney from a prominent legal family in Madison County who’s known for representing clients in Illinois gun-rights cases may get his law license suspended for the second time in five years. A hearing board for the Attorney Registration & Disciplinary Commission is recommending that the Illinois Supreme Court suspend Wood River-based Thomas Maag for two years.

* WGLT | With an open seat, east Bloomington voters to choose between two candidates for McLean County Board: Voting is underway, and Bloomington’s east side must select a new McLean County Board representative for District 10. Republican Chuck Erickson served the area for over a decade but is vacating the seat, opening the door for one of two new candidates to fill the role. Republican Mark Clauss and Democrat Erica Larkin are battling it out on the ballot to represent the district. Both are new to politics and said they will rely on experts to steer policy decisions.

* KWQC | Deere laying off hundreds more: Deere confirmed about 287 will lose jobs at Harvester Works in East Moline, 80 at Davenport Works and seven in Moline Seeding. Employees were being alerted on Wednesday. The layoffs are the latest in a global workforce reduction happening at Deere.

* Journal Gazette | Vice Chair Bennett steps down from Shelby County Board following Chair Orman’s resignation: Bennett wrote, “For which in the last four years the audits have disclosed procedures and policies with which need to be followed and an unwillingness by many of those employed by Shelby County, as well as the public, to accept these changes. The Constitution comes first and foremost.”"Bobby Orman was a great chairman for Shelby County. Thank you, Bobby, and many of my colleagues,” Bennett wrote. He added,” Harassment has no place in our day-to-day representation as a board member. I encourage all people to educate themselves on the Constitution.”

* WCIA | State Comptroller honors three Illinoisans for Hispanic Heritage Month: Mendoza’s office held a ceremony celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month. The three who were honored included Héctor Javier Maymí-Sugrañes, the Dean of Libraries and General Studies at Western Illinois University, Yolanda Alonso, a blogger for Latinos en BloNo, and Carolina Huser, the Visionary Society & Development Manager for the Peoria Riverfront Museum.

* WCIA | Springfield’s Lincoln Library celebrating 20th anniversary: On Oct. 16, the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum (ALPLM) will host a reception to honor its 20th anniversary. It’s been 20 years since the library section of the ALPLM started serving the public in Oct. 2004. The museum opening came just a few months after in April 2005.

* WICS | $5 million for biomanufacturing research at U of I: The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign will receive a $5 million National Science Foundation grant to support groundbreaking biomanufacturing research and advance the future of sustainable production. This funding will support research to develop more reliable biomanufacturing processes that can be scaled up and replicated to facilitate commercial production in industries at the forefront of the growing bioeconomy, such as pharmaceuticals and biofuels.

* Smile Politely | After 30+ years, Cafe Kopi is closing in December: “We are very grateful to the wonderful customers who have supported us through the years. You are what made Cafe Kopi such a special place. Coffeehouses are not just businesses; they are communities where lasting connections are made, and lifelong friendships are forged,” says Cafe Kopi owner, Douglas McCarver. “Cafe Kopi holds a special place in the hearts of many, and while we are saddened by this chapter’s end, we believe that all good things must come to a close. Serving generations of patrons has been both an honor and privilege.”

*** National ***

* AP | Listeria recall grows to 12 million pounds of meat and poultry, some of it sent to US schools: The updated recall includes prepared salads, burritos and other foods sold at stores including Costco, Trader Joe’s, Target, Walmart and Kroger. The meat used in those products was processed at a Durant, Oklahoma, manufacturing plant operated by BrucePac. The Woodburn, Oregon-based company sells precooked meat and poultry to industrial, foodservice and retail companies across the country.

* WTTW | Are People Loving Monarch Butterflies to Death? New Study Suggests ‘Helpful’ Human Interventions Contributing to Decline: Researchers at the University of Georgia combed through 17 years’ worth of observational data on roost sizes during monarchs’ annual fall migration to Mexico. What they found was a stable breeding population in the north, but then a consistent decrease in roost size as the butterflies make their way south — falling off by as much as 80% — indicating something is going awry along the route. Davis and his fellow researchers identified two likely culprits. One is the misguided planting of non-native tropical milkweed (Asclepias curassavica), milkweed being the only plant on which monarchs lay their eggs and that monarch caterpillars feed on.

* Press Release | Federal Trade Commission Announces Final “Click-to-Cancel” Rule Making It Easier for Consumers to End Recurring Subscriptions and Memberships: “Too often, businesses make people jump through endless hoops just to cancel a subscription,” said Commission Chair Lina M. Khan. “The FTC’s rule will end these tricks and traps, saving Americans time and money. Nobody should be stuck paying for a service they no longer want.”

* Politico | Crypto has quietly become one of the biggest electoral players. You wouldn’t know it from their ads: The industry’s ads are about trying to help their preferred candidates win elections — not making cryptocurrency a campaign issue. That reflects a reality acknowledged by several candidates: Cryptocurrency is hardly top-of-mind for most voters. The ads from the various industry-linked super PACs are instead universally positive spots about their candidates, often biographical or hitting on hot-button issues such as the border, the economy and access to IVF.

* WSJ | The Death of Main Streets Across America—and the People Trying to Save Them:There was a time when the main streets in small towns were the lifeblood of small businesses. The hardware store, the candy counter, the dress shop—this was where the locals gathered and where entrepreneurs thrived. But that hasn’t been the story for a long time. Across the country, many small towns have been reeling, as local industries close down, and people move to find jobs. Main streets have lost out to the convenience of online shopping, as well as to nearby malls, where chains and big-box stores offer lower prices and a greater variety of goods. Meanwhile, credit can be hard to obtain for entrepreneurs, and inflation has driven up costs.

  16 Comments      


There isn’t much the locals can do without the state, and the state can’t do much without more money

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s really easy to understand the popularity of the state legislature killing off the 1 percent local grocery tax. It’s popular. Just about everyone is campaigning on the move this fall. But the repeal once again narrows an already too-narrow taxing base - a serious problem here. And, as locals are finding out, municipalities just don’t have a whole lot of other taxing options. From the Peoria Journal Star

Councilmember Mike Vespa said he believed the governor and legislators in Springfield are well-intentioned in ending the grocery tax, but he was concerned with what Peoria will be able to do about the $4 million the city will lose when the tax ends and said the city will have to lobby Springfield to repeal the repeal.

“It is a pass through, and it does hurt us and it hurts municipalities across the state, and having to make a tough decision to pass a tax to replace it — and there’s not an easy decision when it comes to making it progressive, making it more onerous on the rich than the poor,” Vespa said. “We can’t do income taxes. There’s only so much we can do. Luxury taxes, alcohol taxes, and I don’t know if we can make up that $4 million, unfortunately, without just instituting our own grocery tax.”

The state ain’t repealing the repeal. That horse has left the barn. Peoria is just gonna have to do its own grocery tax. Not ideal, but not much can be done about it now.

* Crain’s

Mayor Brandon Johnson should consider every option to avoid raising property taxes to close a $982 million budget gap for 2025, including hiking sin taxes, raising fees on garbage collection, implementing employee furloughs and putting a pause on making an advanced pension payment, according to the Civic Federation.

Without specifically endorsing every revenue or cost-cutting measure available to the mayor, the Civic Federation, led by former Chicago Inspector General Joe Ferguson, released the report detailing the options available to Johnson and the City Council two weeks before the mayor will announce his plan to bridge the shortfall for next year and close a $223 million 2024 deficit.

“While we applaud the assertion that ‘everything is on the table,’ the main course does not need to be and should not be property taxes,” Ferguson said in a press release.

“This report maps out a host of options whose consideration and implementation we hope will precede a historically reflexive recourse to property taxes, especially at a time of rising assessments and the looming, likely call for increased levies by other units of government, foremost CPS,” he said.

More details are here, including a bit about reinstating the grocery tax to plug an $80 million hole.

* Meanwhile, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez testified to the city council today. From a Chalkbeat Chicago reporter…


True, but the state finally has its own fiscal house in order. Without additional revenues, there can be no major local government/school bailouts…


But hardly any progressive legislators, let alone everyone else, are currently making a strong case for more revenues. They’re mostly about more spending, like everyone else.

* Also, from Republican Sen. Seth Lewis

At about the same time Johnson said Springfield needed to cough up billions for a Bears stadium, the mayor announced that the state “owed” Chicago Public Schools $1 billion. Despite pushback from leaders in the Senate and House, Johnson continues to insist he needs more money than is currently provided through the evidence-based funding formula (EBF), the system through which all Illinois public schools are funded based on need.

The passage of EBF was heavily negotiated and included input from CPS. In fact, the formula already gives Chicago a leg up with financial benefits and carve-outs that are not available to other school districts. For example, when EBF passed, CPS received a $203 million allocation (formerly the Chicago Block Grant) built into its base funding minimum. No other school district received this sweetener in its base funding minimum.

CPS has also benefited from legislation that allows the district to circumvent property tax limitation laws and receive a guaranteed minimum 37% of the state’s annual Early Childhood Block Grants regardless of CPS’ declining enrollment. CPS is also able to claim a legacy pension credit worth hundreds of millions of dollars annually that is not included in CPS’ EBF calculation. This makes the school district look less wealthy than it actually is.

There are students throughout the state attending schools with even greater need than CPS for more state resources. Chicago schools cannot jump the line to take a larger share because the needs of students in Chicago are not more important than the needs of other students across the state.

Every time the mayor and the CTU leadership make this stuff about them, they weaken the case for everyone else, including the state.

  20 Comments      


Rate McGraw’s new ad

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel posted this earlier today…


This is a swingy district. Pritzker won it by two points in 2022, but Alexi Giannoulias lost it by 5 that same year. Joe Biden won it by 7.6 percentage points four years ago.

* McGraw’s new ad

Script

I’m Judge Joe McGraw and I approve this message. Take away the weatherman Eric Sorensen’s green screen, and there’s a darker side. Sorensen supports exposing minors to life-altering sex changes, hosting drag events that exposed children to adult sexual content, telling adults to bring cash to tip child performers.

‘Congressman Sorensen, do you regret hosting drag shows for children?’

‘No.’

Eric Sorensen. Look beyond the green screen, and you’ll see his values are not our values.

Also, note the uniformed county sheriff who appears in the ad.

  17 Comments      


Greyhound plans to stay at its Chicago station for now

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NBC Chicago in August

This Labor Day travel holiday could be the last for Chicago’s intercity Greyhound bus station.

The Greyhound bus line has been sold to German operator Flixbus, but much of its real estate has not and could soon be sold to a developer.

The possible closure of the terminal located in the 600 block of West Harrison Street could make Chicago the largest city in the Northern Hemisphere without an intercity bus terminal, according to a new report from the Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development at DePaul University.

“We may be down to the last few weeks with the station. No real plan has been formed to save it,” Chaddick’s director Joe Schwieterman said. “That’s all bad for lower income and disabled communities. We need a fix.”

Although advocates have been sounding the alarm about a possible closure for more than a year, efforts to address the situation have only picked up in the last few months. Chicago’s Chief Operating Officer, John Roberson, said in a statement that the Johnson administration is continuing to work with Greyhound and other stakeholders to “find a viable solution for intercity bus services and its passengers in downtown Chicago.”

* The Sun-Times yesterday

Greyhound Bus won’t be leaving its West Loop station just yet, its parent company FlixBus announced Tuesday.

The bus operator said it is finalizing a lease extension with the new property owner that will allow it to continue operating buses at 630 W. Harrison St. after Sunday, when its lease was set to end.

“Our team is finalizing a month-to-month lease extension with Twenty Lake [Holdings], and our operations will continue without disruption,” a FlixBus spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

“This is a temporary solution, and we remain actively engaged with the city and other stakeholders to secure a long-term home for intercity bus service in Chicago,” the statement said.

The spokesperson said the lease extension had not yet been signed and could not share more details about the potential arrangement.

* Tribune

Advocates have been sounding alarm bells about the possible closure of the downtown Chicago bus station for more than a year, saying such a move would have repercussions for the many low-income travelers who rely on Greyhound, residents of communities without easy access to train or airline service, and others who rely on buses to travel between cities, as well as Chicago’s status as a transportation hub. […]

Greyhound stations in other cities have already been relocated, in some cases moved miles outside the city center or shifted to only curbside pickup and drop-off locations, with no indoor waiting areas. For example, in Knoxville, Tennessee, riders have reported waiting hours outside in the heat and cold for sometimes delayed buses, with no access to food, water, restrooms or a station building, according to local reporting.

Joseph Schwieterman, director of DePaul University’s Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development, who has been a proponent of a dedicated bus station, said the lease extension offered a temporary reprieve, but Chicago still needed to resolve what kind of station the city would provide travelers.

“Hopefully, public agencies will feel the need to deepen their involvement to avoid a meltdown that could hurt a critical travel sector,” he said.

* Crain’s

The city attempted to acquire the site to keep it a transportation hub, but the funds were not available, Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa, 35th, said at a virtual meeting in August. He said it would cost the city around $25 million to buy the station.

If it loses the station, Chicago, would become the largest city in the Northern Hemisphere without an intercity bus terminal, joining Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Nairobi, Kenya, as the only three of the 130 largest global cities to have no intercity terminal, according to a study by DePaul University.

Flix had been eyeing alternatives after failing to reach an agreement for an extension of its lease at the Harrison Street terminal, looking instead to the traffic lane across the street from Union Station. The Jackson Boulevard location was strongly considered, in part, because there is a Greyhound ticket counter nearby.

However, having a pickup and drop-off location there would mean buses could not operate during peak hours and services would be cut. The proposal also received pushback from Amtrak, which owns Union Station and is concerned about congestion and safety.

  16 Comments      


Please, watch this video

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From earlier this month…


We’re going to Greece! And the donation only cost me an arm and a leg. Whatever. You can’t take it with you.

* LSSI sent me a video yesterday which was played during the event. Marnie Jameson is an extraordinary person and you should definitely watch it. Also, please remember this video when we start our fundraising drive to buy Christmas presents for foster kids

“There’s nothing more awesome than having a kid that you didn’t birth call you ‘Mom.’ Because that’s a special thing that they share with their birth parents that now they’re willing to give you, put you in that role. It tells me I did something right.”

We play a very narrow, yet quite special role in helping foster parents like Ms. Jameson every year. It definitely keeps me going. Thanks!

  8 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  21 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois voters asked to weigh in on IVF coverage, taxing high-earners in statewide ballot questions. Tribune

Illinois residents heading to the polls in November to register their choices for president and a host of lower offices will also have the option to weigh in directly on three policy issues.

Voters will be asked if millionaires should help fund property tax relief, whether insurance should cover in vitro fertilization and if there should be civil penalties for candidates who interfere with election workers.

“All three of the issues that we’re talking about have been at the forefront of political discourse and discussion,” said Democratic state Rep. Jay Hoffman of Swansea, who sponsored the legislation to get the advisory questions on the ballot.

The results of the three referendums are nonbinding and do not carry the power of law. But, in addition to potentially driving election turnout, they could show district-by-district support for specific policies and, if passed overwhelmingly, provide more firepower behind policies promoted by the General Assembly’s Democratic supermajority. A 2014 ballot question on minimum wage, for example, preceded 2019 legislation that ramped up the rate and will bring it to $15 an hour at the start of next year.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | City Hall may have disqualified itself from getting millions in federal housing dollars: Since 2018, the city has been engaged in a legal fight with Access Living, a disability rights group. Access Living alleges the city ignores federal requirements that it confirm a portion of the affordable housing that gets built in the city with federal funds is designed according to disability-access standards. The litigation may disqualify Chicago’s application under HUD rules issued in July that said cities would be ineligible to receive new discretionary funds from the agency if they have “with “unresolved civil rights matters” that the US Department of Justice has taken a role in.

* Capitol News Illinois | A mentally ill man was restrained in a chair for 68 hours at Franklin County Jail, violating policies, report says: Franklin County Jail restrained two mentally ill men in chairs for prolonged periods, in violation of state standards and county policies, a new report from an Illinois disability rights watchdog group found. The jail provided inadequate medical and mental health care and improperly restrained Travis Wade Braden for 68 hours in 2022, as well as another man for 27 hours, said the report from the Human Rights Authority of the Illinois Guardianship and Advocacy Commission, a state agency.

* NBC Chicago | Deadline to submit Illinois flag designs rapidly approaching: According to the Illinois Flag Commission, the public submission deadline for designs is Friday, Oct. 18. The commission will look through the designs submitted, and will chose a total of 10 to be put up for a public online vote, which is set to take place in January.

*** Madigan Trial ***


* Tribune | No jurors picked in landmark Madigan corruption case Tuesday as painstaking selection process enters second week: A total of 13 people were interviewed, but no final decisions were made on who might serve on the panel because there are still more prospective jurors in their group who did not get a chance to be questioned. That means that seven panel members — one regular juror and six alternates — still need to be selected before the trial can begin in earnest with opening statements.

*** Statehouse News ***

* SJ-R | Illinois lawmakers pushing for more stringent gun storage laws. What you need to know: The Safe Firearm Storage Act, filed under Senate Bill 3971 and House Bill 5891, would prohibit the possession of a firearm outside its owner’s “immediate possession or control” and increases the age to 18 from 13 where safe storage in homes are required. In the case of a lost or stolen firearm, Senate Bill 3973 and House Bill 5888 would require the owner to report it with local law enforcement within 48 hours instead of the original 72. It comes after reports show that approximately 380,000 guns are stolen per year nationwide.

* Center Square | Final hearing held in a series on Illinois’ public transit systems: State Sen. Don DeWitte, R-St. Charles, said providing reliable mass transit should not be exclusive to the Chicago area. “I think this state has to make mass transit, across the state, a priority,” said DeWitte. “Getting people from point A to point B, to work, school, to the hospital, a doctor’s appointment, is critical.”

*** Statewide ***

* Midwest Books to Prisoners | IDOC Shouldn’t Ban Mail and Books in Prisons: Facing pressure from Republican legislators, the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) is considering draconian new restrictions on incoming mail and books, including banning all mail pending a transition to controversial privatized mail digitization services. We are organizing to stop this egregious censorship attempt that undermines education, rehabilitation and community connection. To the IDOC and the IL general assembly: do not ban people from accessing physical letters and books through the mail, do not concede to easily disproved right-wing drug war copaganda—invest in resources, not restrictions!

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Inspector General asks state regulators to ban some CPD officers from law enforcement: Since Jan. 6, 2021, more than a dozen CPD officers have been tagged as members of radical, sometimes violent groups, even as they deny it and remain on the job. […] “In order to serve as a police officer in any department in Illinois, a person must be certified as eligible to do so by the state of Illinois,” said Chicago Inspector General Deborah Witzburg. Witzburg is recommending that the state de-certify a number of CPD officers and has sent the names and alleged misdeeds of those officers to the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board headquartered in Springfield.

* Sun-Times | Former Business Affairs and Consumer Protection official accused of creating hostile work environment: A former high-ranking official at the city’s Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection accused of creating a hostile work environment by using “prolonged verbal abuse and discrimination” to underlings so shaken by the treatment, many of them quit, then lied to investigators when questioned about it. A Chicago Public library clerk who used access to personal information to sexually harass library patrons on social media.

* Sun-Times | Bally’s Chicago casino enters 2nd year on the rise, but behind projections in loaded Illinois market: Bally’s finally put to bed questions about financing their permanent $1.34 billion entertainment complex, remapped their site plan at Chicago Avenue and Halsted Street after old water pipes forced them back to the drawing board — and saw steadily increasing returns from their temporary operation in River North. But the money still isn’t flowing like city budget officials initially hoped, and in a new report released this month, state revenue forecasters say they have questions about how many more dollars can be squeezed from a crowded and ever-growing Illinois gambling market.

* Sun-Times | Blackhawks chairman Danny Wirtz ‘disappointed’ by Chicago Sports Network’s lack of carriage: One week into the Blackhawks’ season, the team’s new TV network has yet to reach a carriage agreement with Comcast. That appears unlikely to change before the home opener Thursday. That scenario would’ve been tough to imagine a year ago, but the difficulties that Chicago Sports Network — which launched Oct. 1 as the new home of the Hawks, Bulls and White Sox — has encountered in negotiations with the area’s dominant cable provider has made it a reality.

* WTTW | New Comet Is ‘Living Up to the Hype’ and Chicagoans Could Get a Glimpse in Coming Days: Michelle Nichols, director of public observing at Adler Planetarium, knows Chicagoans are skeptical about being able to see space phenomena, having been burned plenty of times by light pollution. “It’s living up to the hype,” Nichols said of the comet’s brightness.

* WGN | Lincoln Square restaurant spearheads campaign to end 117-year alcohol ban: The ban was originally put in place in 1907, which wasn’t a bad year overall for the City of Chicago. An economic boom fueled the city’s industrial sector, while the Chicago Cubs swept the Detroit Tigers to win their first-ever World Series. […] It was a little-known law unbeknownst to Lucia Herrejon, owner of XOchimilco Mexican Restaurant on the north side of Montrose, until they discovered it accidentally as a part of a 2023 city inspection. “Last year, June 2023, we applied for a liquor license,” Herrejon said. “Every thing went well. We had inspectors come out … We found out that day this was boarded dry in 1907.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Leaking Chicago Bears Arlington Heights tax appeal information earns Cook County official a slap on the wrist: County Inspector General Tirrell Paxton’s report did not name any officials. But the facts of the case match allegations in a whistleblower lawsuit filed against Board of Review Commissioner Samantha Steele this summer, dealing with the wrangling between local school districts and the Bears, who bought the former Arlington racetrack property and set their sights on building a new stadium there. The team has since focused on staying on Chicago’s lakefront, though officials have said the suburban location remains a possibility. The IG’s finding does not carry a penalty, only a recommendation that Steele take ethics training for violating the board’s ethics policy and the state’s property tax code by leaking confidential information about the pending Bears’ appeal of their property assessment and exhibiting bias against the team in comments to the media.

* Daily Herald | Gun violence, public corruption top issues for Cook County state’s attorney candidates: Prosecutors will file detention petitions “each and every time someone is caught with an assault weapon, including guns that have switches and extended magazines,” Burke said during a recent Daily Herald endorsement interview. Prosecutors also will ask “for detention each and every time someone is charged with forcible felony with a gun, knife or some type of weapon,” she said. And they will request detention for individuals charged with a forcible felony in sexual assault cases and individuals charged with committing a violent crime on public transit.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights country club where Ray Kroc made business deals turns 100: Much has changed at Rolling Green Country Club, the Arlington Heights golf course celebrating its 100th anniversary this year, and where a members-only black-tie gala was held Saturday night. Its textured history is detailed in a new 113-page coffee table book by Larry Bruck, a board member and unofficial club historian who spent the last year combing through thousands of articles in the Daily Herald and other newspapers, county records, board meeting notes and genealogy documents at the Arlington Heights Memorial Library. Bruck also reached out to a long list of current and past members and employees to gain their insights and recollections.

*** Downstate ***

* Journal Courier | Jacksonville schools take stance against teacher mistreatment; NAACP says handling of past incidents contributed to climate: The superintendent of Jacksonville schools is taking on what he says is mistreatment of teachers by some students and parents. While his call that “enough is enough” is getting plenty of backing, the message is also drawing heat from places such as the Jacksonville NAACP, which said some of the attitudes he targets are the result of how the administration has handled problems in the past. […] The letter was inspired by an incident between a parent and a teacher that occurred in the same week the letter was published. According to Ptacek, the teacher changed a seating arrangement in response to concerns about how a student was behaving toward others. The parent of the student then contacted the teacher and threatened them with physical violence.

* WCIA | Housing project planned for a growing Paxton: Developer Joe Warner originally put the plan in motion, but now his daughter and brother are building on his foundation. The first phase plans to provide 35 single-family homes and 11 duplexes. The site will also have a half-acre park in the middle to be used as a green space.

* WAND | Advocates say central Illinois communities deserve more bus service, funding: Experts say 30% of the population can’t drive, leaving many people with unsafe and inadequate options to get them where they need to go. Champaign-Urbana transit planner Cynthia Hoyle told the Senate Transportation Committee that people in small central Illinois communities desperately need rides.

* Pantagraph | Heartland starts equity tax levy talks, hears from Lincoln campus director: Heartland Community College is continuing to use the state’s equity tax provision to levy additional revenue from property in the district. In a meeting at the college’s Lincoln campus on Tuesday, trustees adopted an equity tax resolution for taxes payable in 2025. Under state law, Heartland can to levy the additional property tax to bring its revenue in line with other community college districts throughout the state, said Noah Lamb, vice president of finance and administration.

* PJ Star | Bernie Sanders in Belvidere: Climate change is real. Electric vehicles can help: Before firing up the crowd at last week’s “Rally with the Working Class to End Trump’s NAFTA 2.0″ in Belvidere, U.S. Sen Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, sat down with Register Star reporter Jeff Kolkey to talk about his views on the auto industry, electric vehicle production, free trade and climate change.

* SJ-R | Central Illinois microbrewery debuting new beer supporting Hurricane Helene relief efforts: Obed & Isaac’s Microbrewery & Eatery at 500 S. Sixth St. announced sales from its new Appalachia Strong IPA will support the relief efforts following the devastating impacts of Hurricane Helene. […] The central Illinois brewery has partnered with the North Carolina Brewers Guild to help displaced people from Hurricane Helene, alongside eight to 10 other brewers across the Prairie State. Through the Pouring for Neighbors initiative, Obed & Isaac’s aims to rally the central Illinois community to contribute to the rebuilding efforts.

* WCIA | ‘That place should be rocking’ Bielema asking for crazy crowd vs Michigan: The game versus Michigan is already sold out, but the Illini head coach wants more than just a full house. “We haven’t lost a game [at home] this year,” Bielema said on Monday. “That place should be rocking. That place should be going crazy. To have two ranked teams, that’s what I want to hear… When we go to Michigan we have to prepare for crowd noise there. I would really like for someone to have to prepare for crowd noise here. That’s when we’ve arrived.”

* WAND | Illinois apple farmer sees decreased harvest after cicadas: It’s been a year of ups and downs for apple farmers in central Illinois. On top of an early bloom, many trees were devastated by the influx in cicadas this spring and summer. Mike Mitchell, who owns Okaw Valley Orchards, said his yield has dropped by about 60% since last year. Because the cicadas laid their eggs on the key branches apples grow on, the trees weren’t able to provide the necessary nutrients for fruit to thrive.

*** National ***

* WSJ | This AI Pioneer Thinks AI Is Dumber Than a Cat: Yann LeCun helped give birth to today’s artificial-intelligence boom. But he thinks many experts are exaggerating its power and peril, and he wants people to know it. While a chorus of prominent technologists tell us that we are close to having computers that surpass human intelligence—and may even supplant it—LeCun has aggressively carved out a place as the AI boom’s best-credentialed skeptic.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Wednesday, Oct 16, 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 Linda, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Oct 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

Jury selection in the landmark corruption trial of former Democratic political powerhouse Michael Madigan resumed Tuesday after a long holiday weekend, with seven panel members still needed to be selected before the opening statements begin. […]

U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey had initially planned to have opening statements Tuesday, but the unexpectedly slow pace of jury selection has put proceedings about a week behind schedule. Opening statements may not be given until Monday.

A pool of more than 150 potential jurors from all over northern Illinois was called into the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse last week for the case, and attorneys are questioning each member of the panel individually to weed out potential bias. They are being referred to in court only by their juror numbers to protect their privacy.

* Shaw Local

In July, a DeKalb man was arrested and charged after police allege he threatened to assassinate state Rep. Jeff Keicher at an event planned at DeKalb High School, according to court records

Forrest R. Brandon, 58, pleaded guilty to one count of threatening a public official, a Class 3 felony, on Sept. 18. […]

Now more than two months removed from the threat, Keicher, whose districts falls into parts of DeKalb, Kane and McHenry counties, said the situation has caused him to step back and ask “is this all worth it,” particularly as those close to him asked him to reconsider his time in office.

“I’ve had multiple people tell me that ‘for your safety you should just consider being done,’” Keicher said. “We can’t let people threatening other people be the victors in a situation like this, and looking at what it means for our area to have the successes that I’ve had has recommitted me to making sure that we are doing right by all of the citizens of the 70th district.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | House 52nd candidates debate immigration, state finances: Republican incumbent and former Barrington Hills Village President Martin McLaughlin said spending is out of control. McLaughlin, who was first elected in 2020, said in his term in office he has seen spending climb from $39 billion to $54 billion. […] Democratic challenger Maria Peterson, a retired labor attorney, said her family knows what it means to tighten their belts and survive financially. She said they did just that during the financial crisis in 2008, when she and her husband faced mortgage and car payments and were raising a young son. At that time, her husband had finished graduate school and she was attending law school.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Illinois officials battle misinformation to protect integrity of November election: Russian influence and false claims of a rigged election plagued the last two presidential elections. This time, Illinois election officials said disinformation poses the biggest threat to the integrity of the vote. Bad actors both domestically and abroad “[a]re trying to get into the minds of voters, and they’re trying to pit voters against each other,” said Matt Dietrich, spokesman for the Illinois State Board of Elections.

* WFIW | Illinois State Police Welcomes 35 New Troopers from Cadet Class 148: Cadet Class 148 completed a rigorous 28-week academy program that included both physical training and classroom instruction. The curriculum covered a wide range of topics, such as Cultural Diversity, Procedural Justice, Domestic Violence, Critical Incident Response, De-escalation Tactics, Firearms training, First Responder Certification, Control and Arrest Tactics, the Illinois Vehicle Code, Criminal Law, Motor Carrier Safety, Juvenile Law, and more.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | As Greyhound Bus Station Lease Expires, Alderman Proposes Move To Migrant Landing Zone: Asked by a Block Club reporter last week about the station’s status, Mayor Brandon Johnson said his administration was still “looking at all options.” […] “The Mayor’s Office has been helping us identify a suitable Downtown location for pick-ups and drop-offs,” Flixbus spokesperson Merrill Leedom said in a statement. “We are encouraged by their efforts and the potential for a solution that meets the needs of our passengers, including features like a dedicated bus lane, basic shelter from the elements and proximity to local transit options.

* Crain’s | Discover hits Chatham workforce goal of 1,000 employees: “This milestone is a testament to our commitment to the Chatham community and the promises we made,” Dan Capozzi, executive vice president and president of consumer banking at Discover, said in a statement. “When the goal was set, we knew it was ambitious, but the hard work of our team and the overwhelming support of the community helped us achieve our vision.”

* Block Club | Rogers Park Church Finds Way To Build A Parking Lot Despite Alderwoman’s Opposition: “Without the community and my support, the church found another legal pathway to create the parking lot by having the entire property resurveyed and consolidated into one lot,” Hadden said. “The underlying zoning for the existing property and current allowed use of the church permits them to create the parking lot that they’ve wanted.” Hadden denied the church’s request to reconsider the proposal and take into account non-residents’ opinions as much as residents’ opinions, she said.

* Sun-Times | Mag Mile offices would become residences under developer’s proposal: Commonwealth Development Partners will present its vision for 500 N. Michigan Ave. — which includes adding more than 300 apartments to the 24-story office tower — at the Chicago Plan Commission’s meeting Thursday. The project could help bring more foot traffic to the city’s premier retail corridor as it continues efforts to bounce back after the pandemic. It also comes as office vacancies on the Magnificent Mile continue to rise this year, approaching 20%.

* Tribune | Billionaire Ken Griffin has found a buyer for the Gold Coast condo he listed for $11M in July: Billionaire Ken Griffin has found a buyer for his top-floor condominium on the 38th floor of the building at 9 W. Walton St., a unit he has had on the market since July for $11 million. On Monday, his real estate agents updated his listing for the unit to reflect that a contract has been signed with an undisclosed buyer for a still-undisclosed amount. The unit has 16-foot windows, two terraces and private in-unit elevator access to a private rooftop pool and a private 39th-floor interior space.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WGN | Orland Park latest suburb to fail to file audits: Illinois’ comptroller is threatening southwest suburban Orland Park with losing some state reimbursements for failing to file financial audits in 2022 and 2023. “Reports not filed in a timely manner are delinquent, and consequently subject to fines and forced audit,” the comptroller’s September letter stated. Village officials blame staff turnover, a new computer system and the village’s former external auditors for the missed deadlines.

* Elgin Courier-News | Dam removal coupled with drought causing Fox River levels to be dramatically low in Carpentersville: “This is the lowest I’ve seen the river,” said Carpentersville Village President John Skilman, who has lived in the village most of his life. “It’s been so dry. Pretty much since August, it’s been so dry.” Skillman said he thought the river would drop as the dam was being removed, but this is far lower than he anticipated. “It could be a combination of the drought and the dam being removed,” he said. “Let’s wait and see if this works like they told us it would. They’re the professionals.”

* WTTW | Incarcerated Classmates Separated as Stateville Closure Continues, Leaving Future of Some Educational Programs in Question: Stateville had robust higher educational programs, partnering with five Chicago-area universities. Located about 38 miles from the city, the prison was able to bring in instructors from Northwestern University, North Park University and others. After the transfers, some students have been split from their classmates and are now hundreds of miles away from each other. Those divisions and distances now make it difficult for educators to reach students.

* Naperville Sun | Overwhelmed by Illinois judicial candidates on the ballot? Naperville North student created website to help: Sarah, 16, is the developer of the Know Your State Judges website, in which she researched judicial candidates from across Illinois, outside of Cook County, to compile a nonpartisan look at how judges are elected and retained. She began her project last summer in preparation for the 2024 primary election and has continued to update the website for the Nov. 5 general election. In addition to her website, she’s set up Facebook, Instagram and X pages and is conducting interviews with media throughout the state to promote the page.

* Daily Herald | Palatine rescue has Hurricane Helene dogs ready for adoption: By looking at the spunky pups frolicking in the yard behind the Palatine dog day care Baxter & Beasley, you might not suspect the ordeal they’ve been through over the past several days. While they share a common saga, they now also share a common hope. All were transferred from a large shelter in Florida, where they were sent after being displaced by Hurricane Helene in North Carolina. Now they await adoption.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Macon Co. Sheriff’s Deputy arrested in Indiana after driving under the influence: The Macon County Sheriff’s Office confirmed Todd Choatie, an employee since 1998, was arrested in Putnam County, Ind. on Thursday. He’s been charged with operating a vehicle while intoxicated (Indiana’s version of driving under the influence) and possession of a controlled substance. A Sheriff’s Office spokesperson added that Deputy Choatie is currently on vacation status. Once he returns, he will be placed on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation within the Macon County Sheriff’s Office.

* WSIL | John A Logan College set to launch new Security Guard Training Program: The course begins on Thursday, October 24, and will run every Wednesday and Thursday evening from 6 - 9 p.m. through November 21st. The classes will be held on the JALC campus, with the first course called “Unarmed’. The cost of the class is $250 per student, which is roughly about $12 per hour in the classroom. Participants who complete the course successfully will get credentials and 1.5 vocational credit.

* WCIA | Monticello non-profit spreading the word about domestic violence: Willow Tree Missions in Monticello has different events planned all month long. On Monday, families came in to volunteer their services by sorting through household items so they can prepare for donation. On Thursday they’re asking the community to wear purple to show their support for domestic violence victims.

* SJ-R | Springfield getting early taste of winter with freeze warning for Wednesday: The National Weather Service issued a freeze warning from 1 to 8 a.m. Wednesday morning. Residents can expect to see frost on the grass as temperatures will reach the mid 30s overnight. After the brisk morning, temperatures are expected to reach near 60 degrees on Wednesday.

* KFVS | 50th annual Fort Massac Encampment returns to Metropolis: Event times are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday and 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Sunday at Fort Massac State Park. Organizers say the popular event draws thousands of visitors to southern Illinois every fall. Since 1974, the encampment has shown visitors what life was like at Fort Massac in the 18th and early 19th centuries. The fort served as a frontier outpost along the Ohio River for France, Britain and the United States’ early years from 1757 to 1814.

*** National ***

* Dr. Christopher D. Connolly | Why am I prescribing accessible parking if developers sell it to those without disabilities?: The sale of accessible spaces to non-disabled individuals effectively eliminates crucial aspects of accessible housing and has resulted in Department of Housing and Urban Development complaints and lawsuits in the Chicagoland area like Jafri v. Chandler LLC. The costs of such litigation can be lofty for developers and condo associations as demonstrated by a recent $9.25 million verdict for a paraplegic who was denied accessible parking at her Long Beach, California, condominium.

* AP | Walgreens to close 1,200 US stores as chain attempts to steady operations at home: Walgreens will close about 1,200 locations over the next three years as the drugstore chain seeks to turnaround a struggling U.S. business that contributed to a $3 billion quarterly loss. The company said Tuesday that about 500 store closures will come in the current fiscal year and should immediately support adjusted earnings and free cash flow. Walgreens didn’t say where the store closings would take place.

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Endangered caracal captured without injury

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It is currently a Class C misdemeanor in Illinois for private individuals to possess a lion, tiger, leopard, ocelot, jaguar, cheetah, margay, mountain lion, lynx, bobcat, jaguarundi, bear, hyena, wolf or coyote.

Among other things, Rep. Dan Didech’s House Bill 4446 would add servals, caracals, kangaroos, wallabies, “or any hybrid, intergrade, cross thereof” to that list.

The bill passed the House, but never moved in the Senate.

* NBC 5

Police in suburban Hoffman Estates are asking the public for help in locating a caracal that has been spotted within the village in recent days.

According to authorities, the large cat has been seen in the area of Della Drive and the Hilldale Golf Course.

It is unknown at this time where the animal came from. Caracals are native to Africa and Asia and typically are not seen in the United States, according to the San Diego Zoo, though some individuals keep them as pets.

If residents encounter the animal, they are encouraged to call police immediately.

* The animal, which is an endangered species, was caught today

The Hoffman Estates Police Department said officers assisted with the capture of the cat, which was then “taken into custody.”

“The cat was hiding under a resident’s deck and is unharmed,” the update, posted to Facebook said. The update went on to say that employees of The Valley of the Kings Sanctuary and Retreat in Sharon, Wisconsin were headed to the scene to pick up the cat, “where we are sure he will have a healthy and happy life far away from Hoffman Estates.”

Video…


* Last year, an exotic cat died after its capture

Officials say an African serval cat who escaped and began roaming Vernon Hills for three hours Saturday has died after it was injured during its capture.

* And a few years ago, a caracal attacked two people in Bloomington

A woman and her child are reportedly in the hospital Sunday morning after being attacked by an exotic cat. […]

Residents said the large cat was walking down the sidewalk when it attacked the child. The child’s mother intervened and was able to distract the animal. A police sergeant on the scene says the cat is a Caracal.

Residents tell us the caracal, which is similar to a lynx, escaped from a nearby home. Police located the owner and issued multiple ordinance violations.

Officials on the scene say the animal lunged at animal control and police, who put the cat down with a single shot.

As noted above, it’s already illegal to possess a lynx.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Mayor Johnson appears to change tune on Springfield

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Mayor Brandon Johnson in Politico

“I don’t know anyone in Springfield that believes that we’ve done enough for education for our state. …That’s why the state needs to be here for us. I believe they know what their responsibilities are. They don’t need a reminder from me.”

Let’s see how long that lasts.

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Energy Storage And Clean Energy!

Tuesday, Oct 15, 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.

Springfield must pass legislation that will jumpstart building energy storage—learn more about the bill here.

Paid for by Counterspark.

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A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Big Jim was a pro-choice Republican governor who was endorsed for his fourth term by both the Illinois AFL-CIO and the Illinois Chamber…


* Gov. Jim Thompson barely won his 1982 reelection, mainly because the state was in a severe recession which was blamed on President Reagan. He went on to win his fourth term by 13 points. But here are Thompson’s county victory maps in 1978 (top) and 1976 (bottom) against Democrats Michael Bakalis and Michael Howlett, respectively…

* On a related topic, I gave a speech last week and was asked about the current state of the Republican Party in DuPage County. The resulting back and forth led me to look up DuPage County’s general election results for president and governor going back to 1980. Here they are with Democratic winners in italics…

    1980 – Reagan 64-24-10

    1982 – Thompson 71-27

    1984 – Reagan 76-24

    1986 – Thompson – 73-23

    1988 – HW Bush 69-30

    1990 – Edgar 68-31

    1992 – HW Bush 48-31-21

    1994 – Edgar 79-20

    1996 – Dole 51-40-8

    1998 – Ryan 70-28

    2000 – W Bush 55-42

    2002 – J Ryan 63-34

    2004 - W Bush 55-45 (Obama 64-32-4)

    2006 – Topinka 51-39

    2008 – Obama 55-44

    2010 – Brady 54-39

    2012 – Obama 50-49

    2014 – Rauner 61-37

    2016 – H Clinton 54-39

    2018 – Pritzker 48-46-3-2

    2020 – Biden 58-40

    2022 – Pritzker 56-41

Discuss.

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Question of the day (Updated)

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC 7

Tech experts at the website Hostingadvice.com say a new study shows that 43% of Americans have had their password hacked or compromised.

The reason? Mostly laziness. Experts say that more than 25% of people use the password 1,2,3,4 and almost a third of people don’t change passwords when they are prompted.

Always use strong, original passwords with numbers and characters.

Find a sentence that is special to you and add characters.

* The Question: Have any of your passwords ever been hacked? Tell us about it.

…Adding… Yikes…

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Today’s must-read

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Please click here and read it all. You’ll learn some things. I definitely did…


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We have the receipts, Mr. Mayor

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Last week, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson repeatedly slammed Statehouse legislators.

“Some of the same individuals who claim to support an elected representative school board only got the gospel once I became mayor of Chicago,” Mayor Johnson told reporters during one of the most combative and counter-productive press conferences I have ever seen.

No.

Lori Lightfoot campaigned for mayor supporting an elected school board, then did everything she could to stop it. But a bill was passed in Springfield and then signed into law in 2021 over her opposition. One victory she did manage was stripping out a proposal to require city council confirmation of all school board appointees.

After Johnson was elected, he and the Chicago Teachers Union first demanded (under a lawsuit threat made by the union during a Senate hearing), then suddenly opposed a fully elected school board. They ended up demanding a temporary hybrid board. So, similar to the bill passed in 2021, half the board and the board President will be appointed by the mayor for two-year terms, and the other half will be elected by voters.

Let’s continue with the mayor’s remarks: “These are the same individuals in Springfield that did not fight for adequate funding, that when massive school closings were taking place, none of them stood up in that moment to say, ‘You know what, maybe the authority of the mayor is too much?’”

Just 47 current state legislators (by my quick count) were in office back in 2013 when Mayor Rahm Emanuel closed those schools. That’s barely a quarter of the legislature’s 177 members. The mayor is fighting with ghosts.

Anyway, the CTU pushed legislation at the time to reverse then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s 2013 school closings. House Bill 3283 had 32 House sponsors, and one of those sponsors is now House Speaker Chris Welch.

A similar Senate bill (SB1571) made it out of committee. But the two Democratic legislative leaders blocked the bills. Even so, the CTU shortly thereafter contributed to both their campaign funds.

More Johnson: “Now you actually have a mayor who recognizes democracy, has given the people exactly what they asked for, what they voted for. And all of a sudden, they want to rehash the policies of Bruce Rauner, who called for state control and takeover. So, we’re not going down that route.”

That Rauner proposal was laughed out of the General Assembly. It would have put a state authority in charge of the school district and allowed the district to declare bankruptcy. Nothing even remotely close to that is being considered by normal-thinking legislators. The only item kicking around right now might be requiring city council approval of his appointments, but even that’s doubtful. Could there be some guardrails? Sure. Could the mayor provoke a state takeover by deliberately tanking the district’s finances? We’ll see.

Mayor Johnson also told reporters that he, as a CTU staffer, helped pass the evidence-based school funding bill in 2017. But the reality is that the CTU hotly opposed the bill which actually passed.

The Sunday before the bill was voted on, the CTU held a conference call with several Democratic legislators and I managed to obtain the call-in number and code and then listened in.

The compromises made to reach a veto-proof majority on that bill included adding the Invest in Kids tax credit program. But that “voucher” plan was “not something that we can live with,” CTU Vice President Jesse Sharkey told legislators on the conference call. The compromise was, “the language of our enemies,” CTU President Karen Lewis said on the call. Rep. Chris Welch pointed out during the call that if this deal was the only way the House could find a three-fifths super-majority to pass something at risk of a threatened Rauner veto, “then why shouldn’t we support it?” As I wrote back then, President Lewis’ retort to Welch was blunt: “Quite frankly, you’re destroying public education” by supporting the compromise. “We’d rather have no deal,” and no additional state money included in the legislation than agree to the compromise, VP Sharkey said.

“The Illinois Democratic Party has crossed a line which no spin or talk of ‘compromise’ can ever erase,” the union thundered after the House passed the bill.

Does that sound like they helped pass the bill?

And more Johnson: “This [school] board and the people of Chicago, my administration, will continue to advocate in Springfield for more.”

Once again, with feeling, the mayor has yet to ask the governor or the legislative leaders for the billion dollars he claims the state owes the school district.

Thoughts?

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Open thread

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  6 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Restaurants come out in favor of Illinois changes to credit card swipe fees. Crain’s

    - “Swipe fees are the third-largest cost to restaurants beyond food and labor,” Sam Toia, president of the Illinois Restaurant Association said.
    - Illinois’ Interchange Fee Prohibition Act, the first of its kind and signed into law in June, reduces the fees merchants pay credit card processors by exempting state and local taxes and tips from the calculation.
    - Arguments for and against the measure have been pouring into Chicago federal court ahead of oral arguments scheduled for Oct. 30 on the banks’ bid for a preliminary injunction blocking implementation of the law.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WTTW | Future of Chicago-Area Public Transit Hangs in Balance as State Lawmakers Wrap Up Hearings on Agency Funding, Oversight: “We cannot shy away from the scale of the funding needs our transit system faces,” city of Chicago COO John Roberson said at the news conference where the report was unveiled. “It is significant, but the value transit provides for the city and for our region is immeasurable.” One of the options in the report calls for a strengthened RTA with new powers to coordinate service, fare policy and more among CTA, Metra and Pace. But the second, far bolder option — one that some saw as too ambitious for lawmakers to touch — proposed doing away with the current hodgepodge of structures and creating a new, single agency to oversee all transit in the Chicago region.

* Sun-Times | Michael Madigan’s friendship with alleged fixer could be tested during their corruption trial: When Michael McClain retired from lobbying in 2015, he told then-House Speaker Madigan he was “at the bridge with my musket standing with and for the Madigan family.” McClain’s fealty to Madigan will soon come into sharp focus as they face a federal jury together.

* Tribune | Amid false claims, Illinois elections officials push integrity, transparency — and maybe body armor: The roughly 100 men and women who oversee elections in Illinois — both Democrats and Republicans — have launched a voter integrity campaign to help debunk falsehoods being fed in large part by lies from former President Donald Trump and his allies that the 2020 election was stolen. But even as the elections officials open their offices for tours and make themselves available for questions about the voting process and the equipment they are using to count ballots for the Nov. 5 election, the head of their state association said he is considering purchasing body armor amid fears the conspiracy theories will turn physical.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Safe storage, lost and stolen bill a ‘hot mess,’ Illinois rifle association says: In a news release, the Gun Violence Prevention PAC, G-PAC, said when legislators are in session, they should act on a package of bills making gun storage and lost and stolen reporting laws more strict. “The Safe At Home legislation will address the sobering realities that today, there are more guns in our country than people, and every one in three children lives in a home with a gun,” a statement from G-PAC President and CEO Kathleen Sances says. “There is mounting evidence that the risk of unintentional shootings, mass shootings and suicide can be significantly reduced if we make simple changes in our laws to keep us all Safe At Home.”

* WMBD | State Rep. Sharon Chung and Desi Anderson battle for Illinois 91st House District: State Representative Chung said two years is not enough to get everything on her agenda done. She said she’s proud of the work she’s done thus far concerning the state’s fiscal health. “We’ve had nine straight credit upgrades, we’ve put money into our rainy day fund, we are paying back our bills on time,” said Chung. “That’s something I’m really proud of that we’ve been able to come out of that.”

* Daily Southtown | Illinois House 36th District candidates say public safety is a top priority: Both candidates seeking to replace former state Rep. Kelly Burke in the 36th District say public safety is a top priority to address in a district that encompasses multiple southwest suburbs. Rick Ryan, 58, of Evergreen Park, has Burke’s endorsement and is facing Christine Shanahan McGovern, 54, of Oak Lawn, in the November election. Ryan was one of two candidates in the Democratic Primary in March while Shanahan McGovern ran unopposed on the Republican side.

* WGLT | State Sen. Dave Koehler, challenger Sally Owens talk housing, guns, ethics and more at candidate forum: Koehler, the assistant majority Leader, has been serving in the Illinois Senate since 2006. Owens said that’s too long for any lawmaker to be in office. “You have to kind of question the guy who’s been in there for almost 20 years in the same job,” she said. Owens said term limits would limit political corruption. Koehler replied that experience matters in Springfield. […] Koehler said it’s hard to stop a lawmaker who is truly corrupt, adding he supported recent changes that limit legislative leadership posts to 10 years. Owens wants that cap for all lawmakers.

* Medium | Linda Robertson, candidate for IL House of Representatives, District 65: She Votes Illinois is pleased to feature Linda Robertson, running for IL House of Representatives, District 65. Follow our series, She Runs Illinois 2024, leading up to election day as we showcase and uplift the voices of Illinois women running for public office in the upcoming election, November 5, 2024.

* WAND | Treasurer Frerichs honors Illinois LGBTQ+ leaders during LGBTQ+ History Month: Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs honored leaders from across the state for their work to lift up the LGBTQ+ community this week. Frerichs is a strong advocate for LGBTQ+ rights and is committed to investments for equality. Illinois is a national leaders in LGBTQ+ rights, and Frerichs voted for civil unions while serving as a senator in 2011. He also voted in favor of marriage equality two years later.

* WAND | Indigenous Peoples Day: Illinois laws honoring Native American ancestry: Lawmakers have created strong relationships with Native American leaders determined to address wrongs of the past and improve lives for the future. A 2023 law required the Illinois State Museum and federally recognized tribes to return native remains and artifacts for proper burial. It also allowed the state to create a cemetery for unidentifiable remains.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | 82 cannabis stores opened in Illinois, but social equity owners remain on the margins: Eighty-two new cannabis stores opened in Illinois in the past fiscal year, marking “explosive growth” in sales outlets for an industry that surpassed $2 billion in sales, the state reported. State regulators boasted in the 2024 annual report that “social equity” marijuana business owners, those who come from poor areas or who were most impacted by the war on drugs, now own nearly half of the 220 dispensaries statewide. But social equity owners say they remain largely on the fringe of the industry, because the state favors previously existing big businesses. A state disparity report showed social equity businesses collected only 12% of statewide revenues in the past year.

* WGN | Illinois letter carriers demand safety improvements amidst rise in attacks: In the latest round of contract negotiations, measures to improve safety are among the top demands being made. Union leaders even said their letter carriers feel under-appreciated, working without a contract since May 2023. “They don’t understand what we face in our day. Each and every day as we go out there in fear!” Elise Foster with the Illinois State Association of Letter Carriers said at a rally at Chicago’s Federal Plaza.

* WSIL | Illinois Fire Engine Strike Teams Demobilized from Hurricane Relief Efforts, Return to Illinois: All strike teams were scheduled back to Illinois by Sunday night. This includes 68 fire personnel with 34 fire agencies who supported and responded from across Illinois, MABAS-Illinois reported.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Chicago Board of Education Committee Meeting Postponed Amid Member Turnover: While Johnson has sole authority to appoint members to the board, he said last week that those six remained nominees while they continued undergoing a vetting process before they could be officially appointed to the board. The mayor said the plan was to have them all in place before the board’s regular monthly meeting on Oct. 24.

* Triibe | Architects of Chicago police oversight commission applaud success in eliminating gang database, Shotspotter and more: Since the passage of the ECPS ordinance, the CCPSA has taken on several key responsibilities, including responding to community concerns about public safety, conducting outreach, and making recommendations on police policy. Notably, the commission nominated Larry Snelling as the new CPD superintendent, eliminated the department’s gang database, and held public hearings on ShotSpotter and pretextual traffic stops, two issues some organizers, residents and police district councilors have voiced their opposition to at the hearings.

* Tribune | As 7 charter schools plan to close, Chicago Teachers Union asks district to step in: Thousands of students and hundreds of teachers were left in a lurch Wednesday after the Acero Charter Schools Board of Directors voted unanimously to close seven of Acero’s 15 schools, the latest turn of events during a week of turmoil for Chicago Public Schools. Helena Stangle, Acero’s chief culture officer, said the board of directors’ decision to “consolidate their school system” did not come lightly. Several factors informed the board’s decision, including insufficient funds due to a lack of federal and state dollars and CPS’ budget shortfall; declining enrollment; changes in the neighborhoods the schools serve; and inadequate spaces to ensure compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, Stangle said.

* Streetsblog | NIMBYs win: Ald. Knudsen, CDOT have removed Dickens Greenway plaza, enabling dangerous cut-through driving in Lincoln Park again: With little warning, it appears a Chicago Department of Transportation crew scraped out about half the green and tan paint on the road, and removed many of the flexible plastic posts that helped keep drivers out of the space. According to CDOT, the Dickens Greenway, including the plaza, were funded by about $1 million in Divvy bike-share revenue, i.e. by bicycle riders. The department has not yet answered the question of how much this removal will cost, and who is footing the bill.

* Daily Herald | The state of Union Station: Eye-catching art amid construction and a megaproject low on cash: For months, Metra and Amtrak riders have powered through a maze of scaffolding at Union Station as, above them, Canal Street is rebuilt. That drab landscape was hit with a kaleidoscope last week when Amtrak debuted three public art installations, which will be on display through summer 2025. Here’s a look at the exhibits, a construction update and what’s happening with an underfunded megaproject to upgrade the 100-year rail hub.

* WGN | ‘Everyone loves a dog:’ Meet the Chicago Lighthouse Guide Dogs: “The Chicago Lighthouse has been 118 years in the making,” said Janet Szlyk, the president and CEO of the Chicago Lighthouse. The Chicago Lighthouse is a social service agency that helps the blind and visually impaired navigate life in the city.

* NBC Chicago | Chicago Bears’ record holds strong in tough NFC North race: It’s a rare sight to see a team with a 4-2 record be in last place in their division, but for the Chicago Bears, this season has been far from ordinary in the NFC North standings. The Bears are indeed in the last spot in the division, with the Minnesota Vikings, Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions all off to strong starts to the season.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | ‘We were all stabbed:’ Community marks a year since the death of 6-year-old Palestinian boy: Wadee Alfayoumi, 6, and his mother were living in unincorporated Plainfield Township last fall when their landlord, Joseph Czuba, allegedly attacked them with a knife, killing the boy and leaving his mother Shahin with serious injuries. Wadee’s death drew national attention and highlighted the spike in Islamaphobia that accompanied the war’s outbreak, which has also brought a rise in anti-semitism. Will County prosecutors said later that Czuba had become “heavily interested” in the Israel-Hamas war through conservative talk radio and had become convinced that his Palestinian and Muslim tenants would hurt him and asked them to move out before he allegedly stabbed the pair.

* WGN | Wild cat is on the loose in the northwest suburbs, police say: Hoffman Estates police personnel took to social media on Monday to confirm that department officials had been informed of the wild cat sighting. Police added that neighbors spotted the large cat in the area of Della Drive and the Hilldale Golf Course. “The cat has been identified as a caracal,” police said. “This cat is a native species to Asia and not common to the United States.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ADM fire at Decatur facility contained with ‘no injuries’: A fire Monday afternoon at the ADM facility led to an evacuation, but no one was injured, according to an ADM representative. “This afternoon at approximately 3:10 p.m., a fire occurred at the Sorbitol production department in ADM’s Decatur complex. There were no injuries, and no other areas of the processing plant were impacted by the fire,” the ADM spokesperson said.

* WTVO | Firefighters booed at South Beloit homecoming parade: Residents booed firefighters during a South Beloit homecoming parade and football game this weekend after the city entered a staffing agreement with a firehouse across the Wisconsin border, according to the fire department. According to city administrators, staffing issues at the South Beloit Firehouse, at 429 Gardner Street, forced the city to make a deal with the Town of Beloit Fire Department to provide a rotation of full-time employees.

* Crain’s | NIU receives largest donation ever to fund new health-tech hub: Northern Illinois University just landed the largest gift in its history to help fund a new $87 million health care and technology-focused hub for students across disciplines. The Baustert Family Foundation, founded by James and Theo (Bahwell) Baustert, philanthropists who donate throughout Illinois, Minnesota and beyond, gifted $40 million to the state school in DeKalb, NIU announced yesterday.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford area animal shelter runs at-capacity, celebrates $2.4 million renovation: “It’s a great day for Winnebago County to have this expansion officially open.” said Joe Chiarelli, chairman of the Winnebago County Board. “It’s increased by 4,000 square feet, which I learned today is already at full capacity. It’s a constant need. We have a lot of animals that come in here for care.”

* PJ Star | The last two months have been very good for Peoria’s airport: Peoria’s airport had two record-setting months in 2024, bringing more passengers to the airport than ever before during the months of August and September. This year marks the first time the airport has set a monthly record since before the COVID-19 pandemic began. General Wayne A. Downing Peoria International Airport in August served 57,353 passengers across 400 commercial flights, a 1.3% uptick from the previous August high of 56, 639 passengers, set in 2019.

*** National ***

* Tech Xplore | Google used influence, ultimatum to cut deal on California news: Google was negotiating to spend $110 million to support California’s struggling journalism industry, but the search giant had a demand: taxpayers would need to contribute tens of millions of dollars as well. State Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks, the Oakland Democrat discussing a deal with Google, called California Governor Gavin Newsom’s office to secure his support for $70 million from taxpayers, even as the state faced a challenging budget deficit. The pact that Google, the governor and Wicks settled on in late August was a handshake agreement, according to Wicks’ staff. Weeks later, while there is now a written framework for the deal, some of the key provisions have yet to be worked out.

* The Verge | The Optimus robots at Tesla’s Cybercab event were humans in disguise: Attendee Robert Scoble posted that he’d learned humans were “remote assisting” the robots, later clarifying that an engineer had told him the robots used AI to walk, spotted Electrek. Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas wrote that the robots “relied on tele-ops (human intervention)” in a note, the outlet reports. There are obvious tells to back those claims up, like the fact that the robots all have different voices or that their responses were immediate, with gesticulation to match.

* Texas Monthly | The Border Crisis Won’t Be Solved at the Border: Whenever Texas politicians threaten to pass laws that would make it harder for businesses to employ undocumented workers, phones in the Capitol start ringing. Stuck with the need to show their base that they’re cracking down on migrants, politicians, including Abbott, have instead found a middle ground: They keep up their bombast regarding the border, but they avoid stringing any razor wire between undocumented immigrants and jobs in the state’s interior. Today, Texas is home to some 1.6 million undocumented immigrants, according to a Pew Research Center study of 2022 census data. No industry in the state employs a greater number of unauthorized workers than construction, the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute found. Since 2000, Texas’s population has grown by around 10 million, with many new arrivals chasing the “Texas Miracle”—a fast-growing economy that’s the envy of other states. Construction workers lacking legal status have laid the foundations for this miracle. They erected the work camps housing pipe fitters and roughnecks out in the oil fields. They rebuilt Houston after Hurricane Harvey. And they built thousands of apartment complexes and homes, helping Texas avoid the worst of the affordable-housing shortage that is crippling other states.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Oct 15, 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 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Oct 15, 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 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3)
* Reader comments closed for Independence Day
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some fiscal news
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Groups warn about plan that doesn't appear to be in the works
* SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
* Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid's large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch
* Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)
* Roundup: Pritzker taps Christian Mitchell for LG
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Trump admin freezes $240 million in grants for Illinois K-12 schools
* Yesterday's stories

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