Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Quick session update (Updated x5)
Thursday, Apr 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Tax talk (Updated)
Thursday, Apr 18, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s has a story up entitled “Jim Belushi nudges Pritzker to lower weed taxes”…
I asked Pritzker spokesperson Jordan Abudayyeh if the governor supports a cannabis tax cut. Her answer…
Here’s how cannabis taxes are distributed…
• 8% to the Local Government Distributive Fund, for prevention and training for law enforcement • 25% to the Recover, Reinvest, and Renew (3R) Program • 20% to mental health services and substance abuse programs • 10% to pay unpaid bills • 35% to the General Revenue Fund This is not your usual tax. Lots of vital local programs directly depend on it. …Adding… Belushi’s argument just doesn’t hold up…
* Meanwhile, CBS 2 has a story on sports betting taxes…
The “adjusted sports wagering revenue” tax is on industry profits. And even though New York has a 50 percent tax (way higher than the proposed 35 percent tax here), it has 9 sports betting companies. Maybe run fewer TV ads?
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Today’s must-read CTA stories, especially if you’re Gov. Pritzker (Updated)
Wednesday, Apr 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Block Club Chicago has a very good story about the death of a Chicago Transit Authority bus driver and the fact that it took the CTA an hour to figure out that she’d gone missing…
* Meanwhile, here’s another CTA story from Block Club Chicago…
* And here’s something you may not know… ![]() If Mayor Johnson won’t act, then Gov. Pritzker needs to step up. …Adding… It’s not quite half. He appoints three of seven members. Still.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated x2)
Monday, Apr 15, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Jason Meisner at the Tribune…
Another story from Jon Seidel and Dave McKinney…
More from Center Square…
…Adding… Cleanup starts at PRB…
…Adding… Leader Curran…
* STLPR…
* Here’s the rest…
* Crain’s | Urban flooding is a rising threat. What can cities do to safeguard their futures?: And here’s the rub: The cities designed and built their underground infrastructure for the kind of rainstorms they saw 50 or a 100 years ago, not for today’s increasingly more severe storms. When the rain comes tumbling down, it often has no place to flow except where it hurts humans the most: streets and basements. * Crain’s | Johnson’s $1.25 billion bond plan hits speed bump: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s $1.25 billion bond proposal was dealt a temporary blow today as a scheduled committee vote on the plan was stalled after opponents of the measure sought to water it down. The plan represents a significant shift in how the city funds affordable housing and economic projects and had been amended in recent weeks to accommodate concerns over how and where the money would be spent. * Shaw Local | La Salle County to sue over body cameras? Officials say they were overcharged: On Thursday, the La Salle County Board agreed to retain outside counsel. Whichever firm or attorney is retained will be tasked with recovering some of the $296,000 spent on 40 units from Axon Body Cameras. In the resolution, the county said the manufacturers “may have violated federal laws and regulations that were enacted to allow an open market.” * Press release | Rep. Barbara Hernandez to Hold Clinic to Spread Information on Expungement Proceedings: State Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, is holding a clinic with Kane County Circuit Clerk Theresa Barriero and other officials to teach attendees about expungment proceedings. The clinic will be held on Saturday, April 20 at the Aurora Public Library at 101 S. River Street, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. * Sun-Times | Cicero measles case marks 2nd infection reported in suburban Cook County: The first measles case in suburban Cook County was confirmed in late March and was linked to an outbreak that started at a migrant shelter in the Pilsen neighborhood. These are the first cases of measles reported in Chicago since 2019. The Cook County Department of Public Health said there is no known connection between the Cicero measles case and the Chicago migrant shelter. Statewide, there are 64 confirmed cases of measles, most of which are in Chicago. * Block Club | Native Plants Coming To Eisenhower Expressway Embankments, State Officials Say: The state’s transportation department is cleaning up the sides of the Eisenhower Expressway to bring in new greenery, officials said. Between Morgan Street and Harlem Avenue, crews with the Illinois Department of Transportation have been removing invasive and dead plants and trees, mowing and removing litter and debris to make room for new plants along the embankments of the interstate, said spokesperson Maria Castaneda. * Nieman News | The Chicago Tribune’s “Stalled Justice” wins the 2023 Taylor Family Award for Fairness in Journalism at Harvard: “Stalled Justice,” a Chicago Tribune investigation into the Cook County’s dysfunctional court system in Illinois, is the winner of the 2023 Taylor Family Award for Fairness in Journalism. Reported by Joe Mahr and Megan Crepeau, the four-part investigation exposed the massive delays and logjams that for years have plagued the Cook County courts. The reporters revealed the toll the problems have taken on both victims of crime seeking justice and defendants in jail who have waited years for trials. * Springfield Business Journal | Wm. Van Coffee Café to open April 19: The original Wm. Van’s Coffee House at the corner of Seventh and Jackson streets closed in April 2022 and 7th Street Cidery later opened in the space. At the time, owners Court and Karen Conn indicated the closure was temporary and that Wm. Van’s would reopen in the future at a new location. Conn’s Hospitality Group purchased Vinegar Hill Mall and several surrounding properties in 2021 and moved its headquarters into the Dewitt Wickliffe Smith Mansion, part of the three-acre site just south of the Capitol complex. Trish & Mary’s Public House, an English-style pub, opened in October as the first new business in the revitalized space. * Tribune | Oberweis Dairy files for bankruptcy: The family-owned dairy, which has dozens of ice cream stores and shelf space in grocery stores across the Midwest, owes more than $4 million to its 20 largest unsecured creditors, according to the bankruptcy filing Friday in Chicago. Bartlett-based Italian food service company Greco & Sons is listed as the largest unsecured creditor at more than $721,000 owed, according to the filing. Oberweis Dairy also owes the Cook County Treasurer more than $173,000. * WaPo | Tesla will shed more than 10 percent of its workforce: In a separate layoff notice obtained by The Washington Post, employees were told early Monday morning that Tesla was cutting a significant number of jobs globally after a “thorough review of the organization.” “Over the years, we have grown rapidly with multiple factories scaling around the globe,” according to the email, which was shared with The Post. “With this rapid growth, there has been duplication of roles and job functions in certain areas. As we prepare the company for our next phase of growth, it is extremely important to look at every aspect of the company for cost reductions and increasing productivity.” * Sun-Times | WNBA Draft 2024: Live updates and results for the Sky, Caitlin Clark and more: Caitlin Clark, the Iowa superstar who break countless records during her four years in Iowa City, will likely head to the Indiana Fever with the No. 1 overall pick. The Los Angeles Sparks have the No. 2 pick and could be targeted Cameron Brink, who played nearby at Stanford. The Chicago Sky have the No. 3 and No. 7 picks, setting the team up for a potentially high-impact draft night haul. LSU’s Angel Reese, South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso, Tennessee’s Rickea Jackson are among the players Sky GM Jeff Pagliocca could be targeting with those selections.
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Live coverage
Monday, Apr 15, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You can click here 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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