Pritzker: “There’s nobody going after anybody”
Thursday, May 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Center Square…
Illinois Republicans say Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration entrapped citizens who bought certain semi-automatic firearms during the six-day window when the state’s gun ban was blocked by a federal court.
State Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, said when the Southern District of Illinois federal court enjoined the state from enforcing the law, the Pritzker administration didn’t put out any guidance.
Six days later, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the injunction. Illinois State Police said after consulting with the attorney general, certain semi-automatic firearms purchased during that time are illegal.
“If the purchase of a firearm or firearm attachment banned under PICA was initiated and completed between the date of the Southern District of Illinois’ Order on April 28, 2023, until the stay of such Order by the U.S. Appellate Court on May 4, 2023, the possession of such weapon will be unlawful beginning January 1, 2024, pursuant to 720 ILCS 5/24-1.9(c),” a public information officer for Illinois State Police told The Center Square in an email Friday.
Wednesday, Plummer decried that.
“This is, I believe, an intentional effort by the governor and the attorney general to entrap Illinoisans, law-abiding citizens, and turn them into felons and I think it’s punitive and egregious,” Plummer said during a news conference.
Ah, but here’s the rest of what the ISP said…
Persons who possess a banned firearm or firearm attachment are required to endorse an affidavit by January 1, 2024, stating that any banned firearm or firearm attachments were possessed prior to the enactment of PICA (January 10, 2023) pursuant to 720 ILCS 5/24-1.9(d).
So, if they file an affidavit like everyone else, then they’re in compliance, according to the governor…
“What the law says is that as of Jan. 1 of 2024, that people will need to fill out the affidavit that they have one of those guns,” Pritzker said at an unrelated event. “That’s really all it is. There’s nobody going after anybody, but that’s really what the law says.”
…Adding… From comments…
Ok but the affidavit is that those arms were owned prior to PICA being signed January 10, 2023. So to do what the Governor said would mean lying on the affidavit. Lying and since the purchase includes ATF 4073 forms a lie that can be followed up on.
Just my 2c but it would make more sense to modify the affidavit to include the injunction periods. I don’t think anyone is out to get anybody
It would definitely make sense to modify the affidavit just to be absolutely sure. But that would have to be done through the legislature. And there are a lot of twists and turns to go before January 1.
…Adding… Press release…
State Senator Jason Plummer (R-Edwardsville) is seeking to protect gun owners across Illinois, who recently made legal firearm purchases, from facing unjust criminal prosecution in the future. […]
To rectify the issue and to prevent law-abiding citizens from being turned into criminals, Sen. Plummer filed legislation, Amendment 1 to Senate Bill 1073, which updates the affidavit requirements to include firearms purchased during a period in which a court issued an injunction on the law. This would allow individuals who purchased “banned firearms” during this recent injunction or any future ones, to be able to legally keep and possess them.
* The press conference was mainly aimed at the attorney general…
“The attorney general had an opportunity to urge caution and express the consequences of what may or may not happen down the road to people that are exercising their constitutional right during that six-day period of time, but he neglected to do it,” GOP state Sen. Jason Plummer of Edwardsville said Wednesday during a statehouse news conference. “Now, today, the attorney general is saying that those transactions were illegal.”
Plummer accused Raoul and Pritzker of engaging in “an intentional effort … to entrap Illinoisans, law-abiding citizens, and turn them into felons.”
But this is from the AG’s spokesperson Annie Thompson…
Consistent with our handling of any rapidly-evolving litigation being handled by the Attorney General’s office, our office has not issued formal guidance related to the Protect Illinois Communities Act as the matter goes through the court system.
Any insinuation that the Attorney General’s office would intentionally mislead or “entrap” law-abiding Illinois residents is, at best, laughable. At worst, it is dangerous.
* Back to the Tribune…
Also on Wednesday, lawyers for Naperville gun shop owner Robert Bevis, who sued the city and the state over the gun restrictions, said in a U.S. Supreme Court filing that Raoul’s office is “spitting on the Constitution” in its arguments to uphold the law.
The attorney general’s response to the Supreme Court filing is here.
46 Comments
|
Public health emergency ends today
Thursday, May 11, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Press release…
As the state of Illinois and the nation reach a major milestone and end the COVID-related Public Health Emergency (PHE) declarations that have been in place since the beginning of the pandemic, Governor JB Pritzker today declared May 11 “Illinois Public Health & Health Care Hero Day.” The Governor formally issued the proclamation at a worker appreciation event at the Sangamon County Health Department in Springfield alongside the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) Director Dr. Sameer Vohra and other leaders of the state’s public health and healthcare community.
“With the heroic efforts of our healthcare workers and institutions, the perseverance and grit of the people of Illinois, and with 26 million vaccine doses administered, I couldn’t be happier to announce today that all national and state COVID-19 related emergency declarations have finally come to an end,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Although today marks the official end of our state’s emergency declarations, we are taking this moment to ensure that we learn lessons from the pandemic experience so we can prepare for the future and save lives in the years ahead. And we are especially grateful to our healthcare heroes who made this milestone possible. We owe them our everlasting respect and gratitude, and so many of us owe them our lives.”
“Our public health and health care workers are first in our hearts for their dedication and the support that they provide to others while doing their job day in and day out,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “Throughout the COVID-19 crisis, they sacrificed and served to keep Illinois residents safe. Healthcare is core to all our lives, and it is the people who provide it that work hard to ensure we can live and be well. They are truly our heroes.”
Governor Pritzker aligned the conclusion of the state’s disaster proclamation with the conclusion of the federal government’s COVID-19 public health emergency, to ensure enhanced federal benefits in SNAP and Medicaid remained in place for vulnerable families for as long as possible.
Since March of 2020, state and local partners benefitted from a disaster proclamation in the following ways:
• Federal reimbursement for state response costs.
• Illinois residents were able to collect additional SNAP benefits, more than 1.4 million children received Pandemic EBT (nutrition) support, and Medicaid expansion ensured access to telehealth options and the resources Illinoisans needed to stay healthy.
• Use of State Disaster Relief Fund, covering direct state costs and reimbursements to Illinois National Guard and mutual aid groups.
• Use of the state’s mutual aid network, groups of public safety response professionals — including hundreds of health care providers and management professionals, law enforcement officers, fire fighters, emergency medical technicians and disaster response professionals — that are available to deploy to areas of shortage.
• Authorizing the Governor to activate Illinois National Guard reservists, some of whom were doctors and nurses and served on the front lines of the pandemic response.
• Allowing expedited procurement should it be necessary.
• Authorizing additional executive actions as needed to protect public health and safety.
The Governor issued the initial emergency proclamation on March 9, 2020 as the state and nation were bracing for an unprecedented, global public health emergency. The pandemic went on to last more than three years, causing more than 4 million COVID-19 cases and 36,000 deaths in Illinois. With case rates remaining at low levels in recent months, including last week’s announcement that no Illinois counties are at an elevated community level for COVID-19, the tools provided by the PHE are no longer necessary to fight the virus.
“It is fitting today as we formally end the Public Health Emergency that we pause to reflect on the truly heroic efforts of the thousands of public health workers, including those at IDPH and in our local health departments, as well as the healthcare workers in our hospitals and clinics,” said Dr. Vohra. “Their bravery and fortitude in the face of this overwhelming public health crisis is a gift to cherish and appreciate. As we write the next chapters in the story of public health in Illinois, we look forward to their continued leadership and guidance to help address inequities and promote health throughout our great State.”
The proclamation, signed at the onset of the pandemic, leveraged federal funding and formalized emergency procedures by activating the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC), bringing together decision-makers from every state agency and the state’s highly qualified mutual aid network to deploy critical resources for healthcare staffing, testing, vaccinations, and therapeutics as necessary during the public health threat.
Officials were able to mobilize resources to conduct millions of COVID-19 tests throughout the state at community testing sites as well as through Test to Stay programs in schools and colleges, allowing children to remain safely in school. When vaccines became widely available in late 2021, Illinois launched a massive vaccination program that spanned across the state and has to date delivered more than 26 million doses.
Maintaining the PHE allowed for federal mandates covering healthcare costs to remain in place, supporting testing and other services that were critical during the recent winter surge. Funding also allowed for thousands of healthcare staff to be deployed to hospitals during staffing crises through state contracts.
The end of the PHE means the federal government is expected to phase out providing tests, vaccines, and treatment directly to states. However, these efforts will not end immediately, but over the coming months. The state of Illinois is continuing to offer at-home rapid tests to households in economically disadvantaged communities through June 30, through a partnership with the Rockefeller Foundation’s Project ACT.
With the national and state Public Health Emergencies for COVID-19 expiring on May 11, there will also be changes to data collection and reporting on the virus. After May 11, the CDC has announced it will stop tracking and reporting COVID-19 cases at the community level, as it has been doing since April 2022. Hospitals will no longer be required to report the number of COVID-19 patients in hospital beds or in the ICU or on ventilators. However, data on COVID-19 and the flu in Illinois will continue to be reported via the Illinois Wastewater Surveillance System dashboard.
IDPH will continue to report general COVID-19 data and will also track a variety of other metrics to monitor disease spread and severity including lab data, genomic sequencing, and wastewater surveillance data.
Dr. Vohra stressed that even as the PHE is expiring, IDPH will remain focused on prevention and treatment of COVID-19 and will use lessons learned from the pandemic to address other public health challenges including chronic diseases, the opioid epidemic, and health disparities.
For those covered by the Medicaid program, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) has launched the Ready to Renew campaign to ensure that Illinoisans who are enrolled in Medicaid do not lose coverage due to the expiration of the automatic renewal provisions that were in place during the Public Health Emergency.
In Illinois, there will not be a “coverage cliff,” where everyone loses coverage at one time. Rather, redeterminations will happen on a rolling basis through mid-2024. HFS is reminding Medicaid customers to keep a close eye on their mailboxes for notices about when they need to take action to renew their coverage. For more information about Medicaid Renewals, click HERE.
The U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) has announced it is launching the HHS Bridge Access Program For COVID-19 Vaccines and Treatments for those who are uninsured. The program will create a $1.1 billion public-private partnership to help maintain uninsured individuals’ access to COVID-19 care at their local pharmacies, through existing public health infrastructure, and at their local health centers.
Finally, services such as telemedicine through the Test to Treat program offered through the SIU School of Medicine is expected to continue into Spring of 2024 and address the Covid-19 treatment needs for all Illinois residents during the next respiratory season.
IDPH is encouraging local health department partners around the state to mark the end of the PHE by hosting events to thank their employees and encourage local residents to show their appreciation for public health and health care heroes.
…Adding… Senate President Don Harmon…
I want to thank the entire public health and health care community for all the work you’ve done over the past few years.
As someone who’s had COVID, … not once, but twice, … been fully vaccinated and drooled countless times into SHIELD test tubes, I know that it is the public health and health care professionals on the front lines and behind the scenes all across this great state who worked to keep all of us safe.
I want to extend a sincere, heartfelt thank you to all of you for all that you have done.
· To the lab techs working around the clock to process samples …
· To the nurses and doctors caring for the infected …
· To the staff who set up and ran testing and vaccination sites …
· To the public health workers who tracked cases to help prevent disease spread …
You are the ones who sacrificed your time, your family, … your diets … in the name of public health and safety.
You ate pizza after pizza at the emergency command posts and testing tents.
You missed family events to staff clinics and care for patients.
You worked around the clock and calendar to try to stay ahead of the curve.
You saved lives.
And you can never be thanked or appreciated enough for what you have done.
And so I want to say: thank you.
Thank you on behalf of myself, my family, the Illinois Senate and the nearly 13 million people who call Illinois home.
Thank you for your sacrifices, your work and your commitment.
You are all true heroes.
9 Comments
|
Question of the day
Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Former Gov. Pat Quinn had his own ethical issues with the Neighborhood Recovery Initiative and hiring at IDOT and crafting a new job for Madigan crony Patrick Ward and being accused by Dick Durbin of having been a ghost payroller under Dan Walker. But those days are long-forgotten and he held a press conference today to demand that Gov. JB Pritzker call an immediate special session on ethics. His proposals…
(1) Amending Article XIV, Section 3 of the Illinois Constitution to allow voters to enact stricter ethics laws directly by initiative petition and binding referendum;
(2) Enacting a mandatory conflict of interest law to prevent legislators from voting or taking official action on matters involving personal, family, or financial interests;
(3) Prohibiting taxpayer-paid pensions for legislators and former legislators convicted of public integrity felonies;
(4) Strengthening the office and powers of the Legislative Inspector General including subpoena powers to help perform thorough investigations and root out misconduct;
(5) Prohibiting legislators from doubledipping by being on two public payrolls while in office;
(6) Restrictions on the campaign contributions and charitable donations of regulated utilities and monopolies;
(7) Stronger revolving door prohibitions on legislators leaving the General Assembly and joining the payroll of an entity with a lobbying interest; and
(8) Robust income tax disclosure requirements for statewide constitutional offices and legislative leaders.
We did this with the House GOP proposals, so let’s try it again.
* The Question: Which, if any, of these ideas do you support the most and which, if any, do you oppose? Make sure to explain your answers, please. Thanks.
…Adding… From Senate President Don Harmon’s spokesperson John Patterson…
We appreciate Mr. Quinn’s input and look forward to reviewing his letter.
At the end of the day, the people in the ComEd Four trial were convicted because what they did was already, and always has been, illegal.
Senate President Harmon will continue to be a champion of ethics. The point he has been trying to drive home is that what we need in public service are good people focused on the state’s welfare rather than their own self-interests.
42 Comments
|
Comments Off
|
bp Is Investing In Illinois
Tuesday, May 9, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department
[The following is a paid advertisement.]
Comments Off
|
The rest of the story
Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From about 13 months ago…
A veteran police officer in Illinois resigned Tuesday after researchers connected him to a deluge of violent and bigoted social media posts that glorified Adolf Hitler and hate crimes.
The resignation of Springfield Police Department Officer Aaron Paul Nichols, 46, came shortly after his department announced an investigation into the posts, first surfaced by Anonymous Comrades Collective (ACC), a group of anti-fascist researchers.
“If I found a genie and I had one wish? The Jews would be a distant memory in 72 hours,” one of the posts allegedly written by Nichols reads.
The Springfield Police Department said on Friday that it had launched an investigation into Nichols’ “racist comments,” and that his “police powers had been removed.” On Tuesday, the department told HuffPost in a statement that Nichols, who joined the department in 2004, resigned instead of meeting with investigators.
* Washington Post reporter Hannah Allam followed up…
After the meeting, [Springfield Police Chief Ken Scarlette] said it was frustrating that he could not yet deliver an ending for the saga. His biggest play was decertification, a formal request for the revocation of Nichols’s ability to work elsewhere as a law enforcement officer, an option that had not been available in Illinois until the governor introduced it as part of recent criminal justice reforms.
The process was so new, Scarlette said, that when he sent the request — just four days after learning of Nichols’s online posts — his contact at the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board, known as ILETSB, told him there were no personnel to consider the issue and likened the office to “flying a plane in the air that has not been put together.”
Twelve months later, ILETSB still had not officially ruled on the matter. Officials there did not respond to a phone message or email seeking comment.
The move might not be monumental, Scarlette said, but it would be an answer to the question that still comes up in every meeting, one concrete win in his year-long fight against hate.
“You don’t get to just resign and this whole thing goes away,” he said. “Because it’s not going away for me as chief. It’s not going away for this agency. It’s not going away for the city.”
The whole thing is worth a read, but the WaPo reporter wasn’t able to reach the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board for whatever reason [Adding: An ILETSB official says the board never received a call or message from anyone at the Washington Post].
I contacted the ILETSB today and was told that because the resignation happened before July 1 of last year, when the decertification statute took effect, the board had no legal means of proceeding with a discretionary decertification.
But, I was told, former officer Nichols is now in a state database, so if he applies for another police job in Illinois, he’ll be flagged as having a misconduct violation when another police agency contacts the ILETSB as required. Also, it will now be essentially impossible for Nichols to be recertified by the ILETSB.
11 Comments
|
Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, May 8, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* Sun-Times | Mayor-elect Johnson forges ‘Unity Plan’ to reorganize the new City Council: Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson has forged a compromise to shrink the number of City Council committees from 28 to 20 and replace Finance Committee Chairman Scott Waguespack (32nd) with Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd), whose endorsement of Johnson was a turning point of his mayoral campaign. The plan will also install Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th), chair of the City Council’s Democratic-Socialist caucus, as chair of the powerful Zoning Committee. … The plan shrinks the number of Council panels from 28 to 20. … “There was a lot of push back on the 28 committees. A lot of push back on the sustainability and viability of that broad of a committee structure. When it was clear to everybody involved that the committee structure had to be reduced, it’s a game of musical chairs, unfortunately,” said a source familiar with the negotiations. [Adding: Committee chairs are here.]
* WBEZ | Illinois isn’t reimbursing allegedly stolen SNAP benefits: Torres discovered that someone allegedly spent more than $3,000 of her food benefits at a small corner store she says she’s never been to about four miles from her home in South Lawndale on the West Side. […] But in Illinois, advocates that include Legal Council for Health Justice and the Shriver Center on Poverty Law in Chicago say Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration has not agreed to replace stolen funds. And now SNAP recipients are also losing a bump in benefits they received during the COVID-19 pandemic.
* Tribune | An Illinois law required schools to test water for lead. They found it all over the state.: According to a Tribune analysis of state data, more than 1,800 of the roughly 2,100 public schools that submitted test results identified some amount of lead in their drinking water. That includes more than 1,350 schools where at least one water sample had lead levels exceeding 5 parts per billion, the threshold where parental notification is required.
* Tribune | Did your Illinois public school find lead in its water? Look up results here: If a district found a lead level above 5 parts per billion at any fixture, the law required officials to notify parents but didn’t mandate that schools work to reduce lead. To find out what public schools did after finding high lead levels, the Tribune spoke with officials, sent surveys or filed records requests to those districts. The state data for the most part does not include results of voluntary retesting.
* ABC Chicago | Chicago volunteers plead for resources to handle migrant influx as Title 42 set to expire this week: For some migrant families who have arrived in Chicago, their front yard is the entrance to 8th District Police Station. The only place they have to sleep is the station’s lobby floor. “Some of these families have traveled for over a year to get here,” said 8th District Police Response Team lead volunteer coordinator Erika Villegas. “By foot, through jungles, through trains, through so much trauma.”
* Sun-Times | Off-duty Chicago police officer killed in Avalon Park always wanted to be a cop, father says: Preston described his daughter as a “beautiful soul” who “always saw the best in people” and had long wanted to be a police officer. He said her calling had seemed like destiny, recalling that he and his ex-wife had a police escort to the hospital before she was born.
* Tribune | Following ‘ComEd Four’ convictions, US Rep. Sean Casten calls for Michael Madigan to resign remaining Democratic post: “Mr. Madigan will have his day in court, but the corruption has come too close to his office for him to claim ignorance. Public service is a sacred trust. For the good of our democracy and the Democratic Party, he should step down at once,” Casten said in a statement.
* WGN | Teamsters oust suburban board after more than $1M in questionable expenses: A letter sent by Teamsters general president Sean O’Brien to local members said an audit found Local 731’s board gave itself nearly $304,000 in bonuses over five years without the required approval of membership. Auditors also questioned nearly $66,000 in spending they said was excessive or unrelated to union business. It includes two visits to Gibsons Bar and Steakhouse that racked up a total tab of $37,000, including nearly $16,000 in alcohol. The audit also questioned $924,000 in donations and contributions the union made in recent years without membership approval.
* Tribune | Aurora City Council considers civility pledge:The pledge says: “In the interest of civility, I pledge to promote civility by listening, being respectful of others, acknowledging that we are all striving to support and improve our community and understanding that we each may have different ideas for achieving that objective.”
* Tribune | Evanston’s groundbreaking reparations plan was stumbling. A brother and sister pushed it forward.: Last year, Kenneth and Shelia, 75, were given the option to become first-time homeowners after they were picked as two of the first 16 Evanstonians to each receive $25,000 in what’s considered the first attempt by a U.S. city to pay reparations to its Black residents. But when their randomly assigned numbers were plucked from a bingo cage on that momentous January day, the Widemans inadvertently exposed a flaw in the fledgling program.
* Sun-Times | Judge sets sentencing dates for ComEd conspirators: On Friday, a federal judge set McClain’s sentencing for Jan. 11, making him the first of the ComEd defendants to be sentenced. Pramaggiore’s sentencing is set for Jan. 16, Hooker’s Jan. 25 and Doherty’s Jan. 30.
* SJ-R | Buscher sworn in as mayor, saying she stands ’shoulder to shoulder’ with new city council: Quoting U.S. women’s soccer star Abby Wambach, who said she “never scored a goal…without getting a pass from someone else,” Buscher said she and council members would make “many goals, together, (for the city).”
* The Intelligencer | Constitution Day bill heads to Pritzker: “Currently, Constitution Day is recognized federally but not by our state and so this legislation ensures that our schools are honoring this commemorative holiday and providing our students with an educational opportunity to learn more about their fundamental rights and our government,” said Harriss.
* Daily Herald | Where did the Arlington Park regulars go? Many ended up at a Prospect Heights OTB: But for a group of local horseplayers, the back patio at a Prospect Heights sports bar/OTB has become their regular meeting spot since the closure of Arlington Park in 2021. It’s where they still get together to play the ponies, share memories, and debate all that went wrong and what could have happened differently to keep their favorite racetrack open.
* Fox 2 | Five victims identified from deadly dust storm crashes in Illinois: The victims identified Saturday include… Joseph Bates, 73, of Crystal Lake, Illinois; Donna Bates, 71, of Crystal Lake, Illinois; Earl LeGrand, 64, of Florissant, Missouri; Michael Zinchuk, 55, of Champaign, Illinois; Amy Zinchuk, 54, of Champaign, Illinois
16 Comments
|
|
Support CapitolFax.com Visit our advertisers...
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
...............
|
|
Hosted by MCS
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax
Advertise Here
Mobile Version
Contact Rich Miller
|