Afternoon roundup
Friday, Mar 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * After the Gannett/Gatehouse merger, the company got rid of 59 percent of its employees, according to Nieman Lab…
The chain owns 16 newspapers in Illinois and prints Dan Proft’s “papers” as well as the bizarre Epoch Times. * Whoever is running this Twitter account has better political investigatory skills than most if not all political reporters in Chicago. Their oppo is almost always the goods…
More here. * Jim Dey…
I reached out to UIUC and heard back today from Vice Chancellor for Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Sean Garrick…
* IDPH…
* Press release…
…Adding… US Sen. Tammy Duckworth was interviewed by the Hollywood Reporter. Lots of talk about pop culture and then…
* Isabel’s roundup… * WICS | Pritzker administration fines Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois $605,000: Health Care Service Corporation (HCSC), the parent company of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, paid the fine and agreed to take corrective action based on the exam findings. * WAND | Pritzker announces personnel transitions at Illinois Commerce Commission: Governor JB Pritzker announced that Illinois Commerce Commission Chairman Carrie Zalewski is stepping down from her position in June. As the commission continues implementation of the Climate and Equitable Job Act and prepares for cases later this year, Pritzker also announced plans to nominate former ICC Chair Doug Scott to replace Zalewski. * Crain’s | New York joins the Walgreens-abortion pill fray: New York state has stepped into the fray surrounding national retail pharmacies and abortion pills. Gov. Kathy Hochul and Attorney General Letitia James are asking Walgreens, CVS and Rite Aid to commit to dispensing the abortion pill mifepristone in their state. * WTTW | US Rep. Darin LaHood Says FBI Wrongly Sought Surveillance Info About Him: At a hearing of the House Intelligence Committee, LaHood pressed FBI Director Chris Wray to acknowledge that his agency and others had at times violated the rules on the use of data collected through electronic snooping. * Chicago Tribune | Brandon Johnson and Paul Vallas clash at latest forum: ‘Race is an issue’: The contentious exchanges happened during a 90-minute forum hosted by the My Community Plan Foundation at the DuSable Black History Museum. For the first hour, the session was largely cordial until the two contenders, who just last week made the April 4 runoff election, were asked if they support a third airport in the Chicago area. Both said yes. * WCIA | EIU faculty and staff vote ‘yes’ to authorize strike: In a news release, EIU UPI President Jennifer Stringfellow said: “This vote sends a clear message to EIU administration that we’re all in. Our members resoundingly reject what they are offering at the table. We don’t want to strike, but we’re willing to do this to ensure EIU students get the high-quality education they deserve and that our members get a fair contract.” * Crain’s | In rebuilding Ryan Field, Northwestern needs to protect local businesses: Northwestern’s slick public relations campaign claims the new Ryan Field will “build generational wealth for Black and Brown families.” As the owner of one Central Street’s few black-owned businesses, I have my doubts. What I see, instead, is a university that wants to run a for-profit concert business at the expense of one of the country’s nicest business districts. I see powerful Evanstonians coalescing behind the plan and cynically using artificial promises of Black wealth as cover. * Center Square | Illinois again takes top spot in pumpkin production: It’s been many years since any other pumpkin growing state has beaten Illinois in pumpkin production. Raghela Scavuzzo, executive director of Illinois Specialty Growers, said Illinois produced 651.9 million pounds of pumpkins in 2021, 39% of all the pumpkins produced in the U.S. * Sun-Times | Musical based on Sufjan Stevens’ ‘Illinois’ album coming to Chicago in 2024: The show, full of songs alluding to the state’s people and places, will make its world premiere in New York State and then run at Chicago Shakespeare Theater. * Crain’s | Tonight on ‘Shark Tank’: A winner of the Chicago Innovations Awards: Pluie, a Chicago-based company that prides itself on creating the first and only self-sanitizing diaper-changing table, will make an appearance on the ABC reality TV show “Shark Tank” tonight. * Sun-Times | Corned beef OK on St. Pat’s day? For Catholics, it depends on where you live: Chicago Catholics will not be exempted from abstaining from meat on St. Patrick’s Day this year, according to the Archdiocese of Chicago. The archdiocese comprises 2.2 million Catholics and 221 parishes in Cook and Lake counties. * Sun-Times | How and why Chicago dyes the Chicago River emerald green: In the last 61 years, dyeing the river has become a world-renowned tradition, despite some pushback from environmental groups . And it’s happening again this weekend, a few hours before the start of the downtown Chicago St. Patrick’s Day parade, sponsored by Chicago Plumbers Local 130.
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*** UPDATED x1 *** That toddlin’ town roundup
Friday, Mar 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * You’ve seen this by now in the Tribune…
How long before he changes his tune and claims this account, like his Twitter account, was hacked? * But go beyond the headline about likes. The campaign did not address Vallas’ actual posts…
That “sexuality education” phrase sounds very similar to what the Awake Illinois types are saying. If he was running for a Palos school board seat, Gov. Pritzker might be targeting him for defeat. /s * Last night’s mayoral debate wasn’t televised, but you can click here for some live coverage. * Crain’s…
Johnson essentially punted the question. * The Chicago Teachers Union just transferred $500,000 in union dues to one of its political action committees. Since the day after the election, their mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson has reported raising almost $1.8 million, while Paul Vallas has reported raising a bit over $2.2 million. That CTU money could bring at least some temporary parity between the candidates. *** UPDATE *** Vallas just reported receiving about $960K in contributions. So much for parity. IBEW Illinois gave him $100K. * Mentioned briefly in Politico…
That “he could fall behind” bit is basically the pollster’s way of pleading with supporters to pony up harder for their client. * We’ve talked more than once about how Brandon Johnson’s radio show produced a treasure trove of oppo. It’s now Vallas’ turn in the barrel…
At least he didn’t claim he was hacked or that somebody else impersonated him. Also, setting aside what he said on the show, people who regularly substitute for Dan Proft are not generally considered liberals or moderates. * Shenanigans…
Keith Thornton was apparently a protester. More on him here. The Northwest Side has some weird political groups, and they’re all-in for Vallas. * Isabel’s Chicago roundup…
* Streets Blog Chicago | Asked about CTA at debate, Johnson focuses on reliability, Vallas calls for more cops: Johnson’s response mostly focused on strategies to make transit operate more efficiently and keep CTA staffing at full strength so as to avoid service gaps. “Right now our public transit system is unreliable and it’s unsafe,” he said. “This is why I’m committed to making sure we’re making critical investments, particularly for working people who overwhelmingly rely on public transportation. So we’re going to increase the number of bus-only lanes… We’re going to make sure that there are traffic signals that give preference to [buses.]” […] In contrast, Vallas’s answer focused on addressing crime through more policing. “The CTA is on the verge of financial crisis,” he accurately noted. Vallas cited a stat (apparently solely reported by the conservative website Wirepoints, in an article that called for cutting CTA service) that CTA farebox revenue is only currently accounting for 18 percent of the operating budget when, under state law, it’s normally supposed to account for 50 percent. * Block Club | Ald. Tom Tunney Goes To Bat For Paul Vallas After LGBTQ Leaders Question His Equal Rights Record: Elected officials and community members said Vallas limited LGBTQ content when he was Chicago’s schools chief, but Tunney said Vallas has fought for LGBTQ rights since the ’90s. * Block Club | Paul Vallas’ Facebook Page ‘Liked’ Comments Calling Chicago A ‘Hell Hole’ And ‘S—cago’ : The page also liked controversial comments about education, including one from Aug. 15 that said, “Shame on the ctu they don’t care about the kids lets get rid of all teachers and start from scratch.” In that same post, Vallas’ page also liked a comment in which a person wrote that “a parochial education is far superior to a public education.” * ABC Chicago | Chicago alderman candidate for 21st ward claims opponent was untruthful on resume: Dantzler, who is a Navy veteran and retired Chicago firefighter, said while cleaning up the ward is his priority, his biggest concern is his opponent’s resume. “He told some lies about graduating from Morehouse College a lie that didn’t need to be told and when you tell lies what else are you going to lie about,” he said. * Tribune | Fires continue to kill people in unsafe buildings as Chicago ignores problems with its inspection system: Chicago’s deeply flawed system for identifying and responding to life-threatening safety issues in residential buildings was exposed in a 2021 investigation by the Better Government Association and the Chicago Tribune. Reporters documented dozens of fire deaths in buildings where city regulators had been warned of potential fire hazards but failed to crack down on property owners in time. * Block Club | As Obama Center Is Built, 5th Ward Voters Overwhelmingly Back Affordable Housing Measures: About 90 percent of voters supported a South Shore community benefits agreement and “truly affordable housing” on a large, city-owned lot in Woodlawn in the Feb. 28 election. * Adam Selzer | Conspiracy theories have long been part of Chicago politics. Consider the 1899 mayoral election: That spring, the incumbent Carter Henry Harrison Jr. squared off against Sanitary Board member Zina Carter, with former Gov. John Altgeld as a third-party spoiler. The Chicago Daily Inter Ocean’s coverage made Harrison sound like a regular Batman villain, with daily stories accusing him of fraud, blackmail, kidnapping and even murder, all aided by men with names like Nobby Clark, Cocoanut Morrisey, and Tommy the Clock. For a week, their pages were dominated by headlines that screamed “Murder For Harrison,” “Mayor’s Thugs Riot,” “Vice and Crime Reign” and “Shall the Scum Triumph?” * Sun-Times | Jim Frost, who captured Mirage tavern bribes as a Sun-Times photographer, dead at 79: Posing as a repairman, Mr. Frost would carry his camera equipment in a toolbox. He’d walk in and say something like “that fuse box again?” and disappear into the back, he recalled for the book “Chicago Exposed” that was published last year.
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