Afternoon roundup
Monday, Jul 17, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Decatur Herald & Review…
Property records show that a New Jersey-based company, Rising Newco LLC, spent $1.25 million buying the Decatur manufacturing facilities of bankrupt Akorn Pharmaceuticals. […]
Rising representatives did not immediately return calls seeking comment, but documents list an address that is the same as Rising Pharmaceuticals, which markets and distributes generic prescription products and medicines. […]
The arrival of Rising would appear to be good news for the empty Akorn buildings in Decatur, which shut down suddenly in February. More than 400 employees were abruptly thrown out of work as a result of the Akorn bankruptcy filing.
* SA Foxx press release…
Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx today announced the release of a public “Do Not Call List” of law enforcement officers who will not be called to give testimony under oath as a witness in criminal cases. The release of the “Do Not Call List,” is part of the State’s Attorney’s commitment to transparency and the broader modernization of the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office’s (CCSAO) Brady Giglio policy which outlines the procedures that prosecutors must follow when disclosing information that could question the credibility of government witnesses.
“The culture that allowed disreputable law enforcement officers to testify in court propelled Cook County’s reputation as the wrongful conviction capital of the country,” said State’s Attorney Foxx. “Releasing our “Do Not Call List” and updating our internal policy regarding witness disclosure are necessary steps to improve the office’s prosecutorial integrity and help rebuild public trust in our criminal justice system.”
“Brady Giglio” is named after two landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases - Brady v. Maryland and United States v. Giglio. The Supreme Court’s rulings in these cases established a prosecutor’s constitutional obligation to disclose impeachment information to the defense.
The list is here.
* There’s just way too much “fittin’ to get ready” in government…
(T)here was optimism in the air two years ago when then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot brought the media to an outdoor event in North Lawndale to announce full-throated city backing for 250 new single-family homes. Intended to be priced for working-class buyers, they would be put on city-owned vacant lots, numbering about 950 in North Lawndale. […]
Lightfoot is now out of office, and Novara, highly regarded by housing advocates, is leaving her city job later this month. So how are those homes coming?
[Richard Townsell, executive director of Lawndale Christian Development Corp.] doesn’t mince words. While he said he’d like to have 200 homes started by now, only 18 are in various stages of construction, with two sold and contracts on four others. They are mostly around 16th Street and Avers Avenue and 18th Street and Sawyer Avenue.
He said the hold up is from all types of municipal red tape over the properties, even though the transfer of city-owned land should be easier than private-market dealings for parcels with liens and back taxes. […]
While he won’t blame individuals, he clearly has problems with people in top-level city jobs. “The city is spending too much time on fluffy things — issues of design and policy,” he said. “It is not built around production. It is built around policy wonk ideas, and as a result nothing gets done.”
And…
The Chicago Housing Authority has revived a long-dormant plan to build hundreds of homes on the site of the former Cabrini-Green housing project, another step in a neighborhood transformation that has been underway for more than two decades. […]
The CHA picked the project’s development team back in 2017, raising expectations that construction on the site would get underway soon. But years passed without any visible progress on the parcel — or on other vacant Cabrini-Green sites nearby, including a key property at the corner of Division and Halsted streets. […]
“It’s been over 20 years for me and Cabrini,” Ald. Walter Burnett, 27th, who represents the neighborhood, said in 2021. “I’ve been trying to encourage (the CHA) to hurry up and get started.”
* Press release…
Friends of the Chicago River and Sierra Club Illinois have served a Notice of Intent (NOI) to sue Trump International for additional violations of the federal Clean Water Act and the facility’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. For over a decade, Trump Tower Chicago has underreported the rate at which it withdraws water from the Chicago River in reports required by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA), resulting in an underreporting of its withdrawals by approximately 44%.
IEPA requires that flow rate data be submitted in gallons per day, but Trump International reports a gallons per minute number that it multiplies by 1,000 and labels as gallons per day. Of course, there are not 1,000 minutes in a day—the conversion should be 60 minutes per hour x 24 hours per day; there are 1,440 minutes in a day. This misreporting dates back as far as February 28, 2013.
“Trump International’s persistent and systemic misrepresentation of its flow rates and violations of the Clean Water Act cannot be allowed to continue,” said Friends of the Chicago River Executive Director Margaret Frisbie. “Friends of the Chicago River and Sierra Club are filing a second suit because the amount of intake water actually being used is much higher than Trump International reports, and the damage to fish and other aquatic life is commensurate. Trump International’s egregious mis-reporting is not in line with the significant public investments that have dramatically improved the health of the Chicago River over the past several decades, and we cannot allow Trump International to endanger that critical progress.”
* From the UK…
Today, Governor JB Pritzker continued the delegation phase of his trade mission to the United Kingdom with meetings with government and education leaders as well as a meeting with U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom.
The Governor and President of the University of Illinois system, Dr. Timothy Killeen, met with Sir Gerry McCormac, Principal and Vice Chancellor of the University of Stirling, and Sir Peter Mathieson, the Principal and Vice Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh. In addition to his leadership at the University of Stirling, Sir Gerry McCormac currently serves as the international policy lead for Universities UK, a collective of 140 universities.
The Governor discussed opportunities to strengthen the transatlantic connection between post-secondary institutions in the United Kingdom and Illinois. In particular, they discussed expanding mobility of distinguished researchers and students from the United Kingdom to Illinois, allowing for increased funding for researchers in the United Kingdom and increased flow of talent to Illinois.
The day continued with a tour of the Palace of Westminster led by Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office David Rutley, followed by a private lunch at Carlton Gardens. During this meeting, the Governor and fellow delegation members discussed trade and investment between the United States and United Kingdom.
Immediately following this lunch, the Governor attended a meeting with Jane Hartley, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom. In this meeting the two discussed why Illinois is an ideal location for United Kingdom companies and ways to further strengthen the United States and United Kingdom’s economic relationship.
Lastly, the Governor attended the United States Embassy Reception with the Illinois delegation, United Kingdom company executives, and representatives from the United States and United Kingdom Embassy. This reception is the kickoff to a week full of meetings with United Kingdom business and government leaders. Over the coming days, the Governor will discuss economic cooperation related to manufacturing, clean energy and technology, quantum, hospitality and real estate.
* The Kennedy family appears horrified at RFK, Jr…
Maybe Paul Vallas can run his Illinois campaign /s
…Adding… Two new tollway board members…
Melissa Neddermeyer will serve as a Director on the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority.* Melissa Neddermeyer is the Sole Practitioner and Owner of Neddermeyer Law Offices and has been a practicing attorney for nearly twenty years. She serves as Village President for the Village of Willow Springs, where she has significantly lowered the Village debt, increased services to residents and numbers of community events, enhanced infrastructures and road systems, and strengthened relationships with neighboring communities. Prior to being elected Village President, she served as Village Trustee. Committed to public service and collaboration, she is an active member of the Southwest Conference of Mayors and the West Central Municipal Conference. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from DePaul University and a Juris Doctor from Chicago Kent College of Law.
Mark Wright will serve as a Director on the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority.* Mark Wright is Founder, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Diverse Facility Solutions (DFS). Since January 2002, he has guided the company to new heights in facility management, janitorial services, project and construction management, and consulting. Under his leadership, DFS has emerged as a prominent player in the janitorial industry. Notably, DFS stands as a minority-owned and MBE certified corporation, proudly headquartered in Chicago while operating in multiple states. Prior to his tenure at DFS, Mark was the Director of Operations at Midway Airlines’ Terminal Consortium (MATCO) from 2001 to 2003, and he played an instrumental role in the monumental $793 million-dollar Midway Airport Development Project the Naperville Planning and Zoning Commission, Naperville Development Partnership (NDP), SOS Children’s Village, and the College of DuPage Foundation.
Neddermeyer replaces Alice Gallagher and Wright replaces Stephen Davis.
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* Tribune | Bribery count against ComEd dismissed three years after agreement blew Michael Madigan probe wide open: The proceedings in court Monday were a formality, since U.S. District Judge John Kness had already accepted the terms of the agreement to defer prosecution, which required ComEd paid a record $200 million fine and cooperated in the probe of its lobbying practices in Springfield.
* Labor Tribune | New Illinois law requires prevailing wage for solar project workers: Under the new law, developers who apply to the Illinois Solar for All program are required to pay the prevailing wage on solar projects that receive renewable energy credits. The law provides exemptions for residential buildings and small projects on houses of worship.
* Tribune | United Airlines agrees to give union pilots big pay raises: United Airlines and the union representing its pilots said Saturday they reached agreement on a contract that will raise pilot pay by up to 40% over four years.
* WGN | CPS center opens program for newly arrived migrant children: The center will be apart of a ‘one-stop-shop’ for recent arrivals. Children who will be attending Chicago Public Schools will be able to get language screenings, health screenings and be placed in the proper programs within Chicago Public Schools.
* Patch | Civil Rights Attorney Crump To Represent 8 Northwestern Hazing Victims: Civil rights attorney Ben Crump will represent the players and said in a news release on Sunday that he expects more players will join the suit in the coming days. The legal action is also expected to expand beyond Northwestern’s program and will, Crump said, expose “extreme and abusive hazing in other college athletic programs as well.
* Crain’s | Nonprofit hospitals more than offset the city services they get: For more than 100 years, the Illinois court system has held that nonprofit hospitals should receive property tax exemption when they provide valuable charitable and community services. Aside from life-saving medical care, in fiscal years 2021 and 2022, Chicago’s nonprofit hospitals provided more than $2.6 billion in various community benefits, including nearly $200 million in direct charity care. Most important, they provide emergency medical care to anyone who walks through their doors, seven days a week, 24 hours a day, regardless of any patient’s ability to pay.
* NPR Illinois | Forum on CO2 pipeline set for Monday night: Both sides will be represented at the hearing at 5:30 p.m. Monday at the BOS Center in downtown Springfield. Navigator Heartland Greenway will make a presentation. Also, members of the Coalition to Stop CO2 Pipelines will lay out objections and concerns.
* Crain’s | Chan Zuckerberg biohub will move to new space in Fulton Market: The bioresearch hub, which was announced in March, quickly leased 25,698 square feet in a lab building at 1375 W. Fulton St. But now it’s looking to occupy 28,200 square feet of space at 400 N. Aberdeen St.
* Block Club | West Siders Struggle With Flood Cleanup As Local Officials Say Resources Are On The Way: Neighbors said they haven’t received much help from the government yet. Local officials expect more resources will begin to trickle in in the coming weeks, including a temporary site where people can get cleaning supplies, federal funding for grants and small business loans, Rep. Ford said.
* Block Club | North Park Marines Building Could Become Migrant Shelter: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office said in a statement the building is “one of many locations” being considered as a migrant shelter but that “no official confirmation has been made regarding its activation.”
* Tribune | Chicago aims to turn Diplomat Motel into ‘healthy housing’ for homeless people — with much more than a roof overhead: The City Council is slated to vote Wednesday on the $2.9 million purchase of the Diplomat Motel. That’s where the city plans to test a new “stabilization” shelter model whose goal is to transition homeless people into permanent housing by giving them their own rooms, as well as a host of medical and casework services. Next, the property will require a special-use zoning permit and modest renovations, with the aim to start the program in the first half of next year.
* Tribune | Antioch festival’s carnival shut down after child thrown from ride, police say: A 10-year-old boy was airlifted to Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge after Antioch Police and Fire departments responded to calls about the injury around 2:40 p.m., the police wrote in a news release.
* Sun-Times | Blackhawks sign Connor Bedard to entry-level contract on 18th birthday: The Hawks signed Connor Bedard on Monday — his 18th birthday — to a standard three-year entry-level contract carrying the predetermined maximum salary-cap hit of $950,000.
* Tribune | Workers launch union effort at world’s largest Starbucks, downtown Chicago’s Michigan Avenue roastery: The prospective bargaining unit includes about 230 baristas and mixologists who serve elaborate coffee-based drinks and cocktails, bakers who make pastries in-house, and operations leads who work in retail and customer service at the five-story caffeine emporium, according to the workers’ union filing.
* Eater | The Definitive Guide to Restaurants Featured in ‘The Bear’: Superdawg is one of the most iconic places to get a Chicago dog, retaining its retro style and rooftop mascots Flaurie and Maurie since 1948. The restaurant can be spotted in the montage that opens Episode 7 of Season 1 and its hot dogs and fries are seen in their signature boxes at the party in Episode 5 of Season 2. The restaurant also has an outpost in suburban Wheeling.
* Malwarebytes | Proposed Massachusetts law to ban sale of your mobile location data: As the American Civil Liberties Union Massachusetts (ACLU) notes, the buying and selling of this data is unregulated and can impact on all manner of privacy and safety issues. Domestic abusers can track ex-partners. Foreign governments can use data for intelligence and tracking purposes. Employers can track and discriminate against employees. A variety of health and abortion access situations could lead to prosecution or harassment.
* Triibe | White Sox’s 17U baseball showcase honors Chicago’s rich Negro Leagues history: The Double Duty Classic (DDC) is an annual two-day baseball developmental experience featuring more than 30 top 17U high school players from across the U.S., hosted by the Chicago White Sox. Each of the players invited to participate in this year’s DDC will receive skill evaluations from collegiate scouts and coaches, a Negro Leagues edition of viral TikTok historian Shermann Dilla Thomas’s Chicago Mahogany Bus Tour, and an invitation to play a baseball game recreating the Negro Leagues’ East-West All-Star Game at Guaranteed Rate Field. Former Negro League player Dennis Biddle will be throwing the ceremonial first pitch.
* Sun-Times | A summer crappie big enough to draw a mention of palming a basketball: Jon Reith, who caught a true surprise of an allgator gar two years ago, caught the surprise of a crappe so big that he thought it was a bass to earn Fish of the Week.
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* More in a bit…
…Adding… Sun-Times…
A federal judge agreed Monday to dismiss the federal bribery charge against ComEd that has loomed over the utility since 2020 for its role in a scheme that helped lead to the indictment of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan.
While significant, the dismissal of the criminal charge against ComEd is not surprising. Under the terms of a deferred prosecution agreement between prosecutors and the utility, the feds agreed to seek dismissal as long as ComEd held up its end of the three-year deal. […]
The dismissal means ComEd no longer faces criminal charges and will avoid conviction, while others have faced prison time as a result of the aggressive investigation that targeted Madigan. Though ComEd has admitted to the conduct at the heart of the feds’ probe, its lawyers have insisted on pleading not guilty in court. […]
Meanwhile, Madigan faces trial in April on a racketeering indictment that alleges he also participated in the illegal ComEd conduct. McClain is set to go to trial again alongside Madigan on additional charges. AT&T Illinois and its former president Paul La Schiazza, have also been charged as a result of the investigation.
*** UPDATE *** ComEd…
ComEd today issued the following statement on behalf of CEO Gil Quiniones after a federal judge dismissed the charge against the company, noting ComEd has fully complied with the deferred prosecution agreement (DPA):
“With the completion of the DPA and dismissal of the charge, ComEd remains committed, at all levels of the company, to the highest standards of integrity and ethical behavior for our business, and to continuing to build the trust of our customers. And, as the state transitions to a cleaner energy future, all of our more than 6,300 employees, who work hard to keep the lights on each day, remain focused on continuing to deliver highly reliable, resilient, and increasingly clean power to more than 9 million residents across northern Illinois.”
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* Gubernatorial candidate JB Pritzker in 2018…
“I’m opposed to that $75 million tax credit, that [Invest in Kids] school voucher system [that Bruce Rauner has] created, and we should as soon as possible do away with it. What I oppose is taking money out of the public schools, and that’s what happened here.”
* His first year in office…
The Illinois General Assembly made some major moves on education issues this [2019] legislative session that ended on Sunday, including boosting spending on schools, tackling the state’s teacher shortage and weakening charter schools. Gov. JB Pritzker also retained a private school scholarship program even though he had vowed to end it. […]
The Invest In Kids Act is a five-year pilot that allows people to donate up to $1.3 million to special scholarship funds and in return get a 75% tax credit. Then, students from low- or middle-income families apply for a scholarship to a private school. Of the 7,000 scholarships awarded since 2018, nearly 5,000 winners were low income, the state’s annual report shows. Critics of the program say it diverts taxpayer dollars that could be going to public schools.
Pritzker had originally proposed capping the tax credit program at $50 million dollars during the three-year phase-out, down from $100 million. But late last week, after negotiations, Pritzker agreed to keep the program as long as the state funnels at least $350 million in new dollars into K-12 funding each year.
* From Pritzker’s budget proposal in 2021…
Pritzker requested tax deductions for donations to the Invest in Kids Tax Credit Scholarship program be reduced from 75% to 40% to save the state $14 million as the state faces a tight budget year after COVID-19 slowed revenue.
* From the coverage of the budget that passed in 2021…
After back-and-forth over whether the state should continue a tax credit scholarship program called Invest in Kids — an earlier proposal from the governor cut the program considerably, down to 40% — legislators agreed to keep the program intact in the final deal they passed. Under the plan, taxpayers will continue to receive an income tax credit for 75% of a qualified donation as in previous years. Republican House leader Jim Durkin called that a victory on Tuesday even as he criticized the last-minute nature of the process.
* 2022…
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill yesterday that amends Illinois’ Invest in Kids Tax Credit Scholarship program to protect already-enrolled students. It is effective immediately. […]
Bill 4126, sponsored by state Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, grants super-priority status to current recipients of the Invest in Kids scholarship, providing assurance to families in the program that if students receive a scholarship one year, they will be first in line for a scholarship the next year. The legislation also gives schools greater flexibility to offer more partial scholarships. […]
“We’re pleased to see this bill signed into law as these scholarships can be life-changing for low-income families who wish to provide their children an education that fits their unique needs,” said Amy Korte, executive vice president for the Illinois Policy Institute. “The next step is ensuring the program will last beyond another year and can be there for the long term for students in need.”
* Gov. Pritzker on the 2022 campaign trail…
My main focus with respect to K-12 education is ensuring that there is sufficient funding for all children to receive a quality education, regardless of their zip code. That’s why I’ve dedicated an additional $1.3 billion toward public education during my term. With assurance from the advocates for Invest in Kids that they will support increased public school funding, my budgets have ultimately included the relatively small Invest in Kids Scholarship Program.
* Gov. Pritzker last month…
I think we should have tax credits that support education and other things in state government, but we also have the federal government willing to cover about 40% of the cost. Why have we created a program in which we’re paying for 75% of it and not having the rest of the country essentially paying 40 percent. This is a problem in the fundamental makeup of it. And I’ve suggested to the General Assembly if they decide to renew Invest in Kids, let’s alleviate the burden on Illinois taxpayers and make sure that, frankly, as other states do, let’s let other states pay in part for the benefit that we get.
* Gov. Pritzker this month…
Legislators didn’t lift the end-of-year sunset on the Invest in Kids program before they adjourned spring session. Last week, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said discussions continue.
“I’m willing to work with the program if it gets extended or to figure out how we would wind down the program if it doesn’t get extended,” Pritzker said.
The program is funded with private donations in exchange for a 75% state income tax credit. More than 41,000 students have benefited since the program was started nearly 5 years ago.
Pritzker said “nobody is trying to shut anything down.” […]
“People who say, ‘well, actually it’s not costing taxpayers anything,’ Actually, it’s costing taxpayers 75% of the total amount that gets raised,” Pritzker said. “And so that’s something that I think some people who are budget conscious are paying attention to as well.”
He went from wanting to kill it, to proposing a cap, to fully funding it, to wanting to limit it, to saying he’d keep it and calling it “relatively small,” to saying “some people who are budget conscious” are paying attention to the costs.
I really gotta find a chiropractor.
…Adding… Empower Illinois…
Empower Illinois and the thousands of families and students who rely on the Illinois Tax Credit Scholarship Program for their education are deeply concerned by Governor J.B. Pritzker’s recent remarks stating, ‘I am willing to work with the (tax credit scholarship) program or figure out how to wind down the program if it’s not extended.’
We hope it was only a misstatement from the Governor and not a softening on his commitment to support Illinois’ most vulnerable families.
Governor Pritzker’s inclusion of an option to “wind down” such an impactful program is a departure from his previous statements in late May where he said, ‘If the legislature passes something, I will sign it.’ Ending the Tax Credit Scholarship Program means ripping scholarships away from the most vulnerable, poor, and working-class children and their families. Black and Brown students will be disproportionally impacted if the Tax Credit Scholarship Program is killed by inaction as the Governor suggested, and that is unacceptable.
Announcing any burial plans for a program that has been immensely successful for Illinois children would be beyond premature. We expect lawmakers to do what’s right by children–extend the program, with no cuts, no wind down.
We urge Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly to act this fall during Veto Session to immediately extend the Invest in Kids Act Tax Credit Scholarship Program, providing Illinois kids and families with the reassurance and support they so rightly deserve.
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* Tribune…
Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease eight years ago, is stepping down from the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, the influential Chicago-based civil rights organization he founded through its predecessor, Operation PUSH, more than 50 years ago.
After ceding day-to-day operations last year, Jackson, 81, is formally handing the reins to a successor who is expected to be announced this weekend at the annual Rainbow/PUSH convention, sources close to the organization said Friday.
Headquartered in a former temple in the Kenwood neighborhood on the South Side, the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition has long been Jackson’s national advocacy platform to promote economic, educational and political change, including two groundbreaking campaigns for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 1980s.
Now the organization’s mission, and its future, will be vested in new hands.
* Sun-Times…
One of his sons, Rep. Jonathan Jackson, D-Ill., said Friday there “is a determination made that in his current health and condition that he has appointed a successor and will formally announce it Sunday.” […]
The representative said his father “has forever been on the scene of justice and has never stopped fighting for civil rights” and that will be “his mark upon history.” […]
Jackson’s public activism began decades ago, when he was one of the “Greenville Eight,” a group of Black students (Jackson was a college freshman at North Carolina A&T) protesting at the whites-only public library in Greenville, South Carolina, where Jackson grew up.
In the years since, he remained active in the movement, formed Operation PUSH in 1971, ran for president twice and has, multiple times, successfully negotiated for the release of U.S. citizens being held hostage abroad. The Rainbow Coalition, which grew out of his 1984 presidential campaign, merged with PUSH in 1996.
* The Crusader…
Jackson, who was first diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2017, made the announcement on the weekly PUSH broadcast and afterward to volunteers working on the 57th annual convention, being held from July 15 to July 19. The theme of the international convention is “The Perilous Journey From Freedom to Equality.”
During the convention on Monday, July 17, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Jackson will receive the highest civilian award from the country of Colombia. Two years ago he received a similar award from France. The award presentation will take place at the University of Chicago’s David Rubinstein Forum, 1201 E. 60th St.
“It is quite impactful to have nations to reward Reverend Jackson for his global work. It is a testament to his day-to-day tenacity,” said Bishop Tavis Grant, acting national executive director of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. […]
On Friday, July 14, at 6 p.m., and Saturday, July 15, at the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, Jackson will be honored for his 1984 and 1988 presidential campaigns from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. “Delegates from around the country are coming, and we’re excited,” said Grant, who in 1984 was a student organizer. In 1988, Grant participated in the “Jackson Action” campaign run by Jesse Jackson, Jr.
On Saturday, Grant said, “There will be a reunion of campaign workers, people who through sweat, energy and commitment believed in the campaign of Reverend Jackson and the Jackson doctrine we call progressive politics today.”
* Fox Chicago…
The news of Jackson’s resignation comes as the Rainbow PUSH Coalition prepares to host their annual international convention at the University of Chicago’s David Rubinstein Forum this weekend.
The 81-year-old said he plans to announce the new president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition within the next few weeks.
* CBS Chicago…
Jackson created Operation PUSH in 1971 in an effort to improve the economic and political lives of Black Americans.
Jackson went on to found the National Rainbow Coalition in 1984, after his first run for president. The group was formed to seek equal rights for all Americans, and to demand social programs, voting rights, and affirmative action for minorities left out by “Reaganomics,” according to the Rainbow/PUSH website.
The two nonprofits merged in 1996 with Jackson at the helm.
…Adding… Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson…
“The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson is an architect of the soul of Chicago. Through decades of service, he has led the Rainbow PUSH Coalition at the forefront of the struggle for civil rights and social justice. His faith, his perseverance, his love, and his relentless dedication to people inspire all of us to keep pushing for a better tomorrow.
The reverend is a mentor, and a friend, and I thank him for all he has done for the people of our city, and our country.”
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