Yikes
Thursday, Jun 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
Civil lawsuits can be such great fodder.
Antoin “Tony” Rezko has long been one of Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s top fundraisers and closest confidants, even recommending candidates for Cabinet directors and state boards and commissions.
But newly obtained public records, including lawsuit documents, show a close circle of Rezko business investors and their relatives received jobs and appointments to influential state posts. The records show Rezko’s ties with the Blagojevich administration are far more extensive than were previously known.
The new documents show, for example, that Blagojevich appointed three Rezko business investors to a controversial board that oversees hospital projects. The board was replaced amid an ongoing federal kickback investigation that led to the indictment of the board’s vice chairman.
The state’s business development agency, run by a former Rezko company executive, employs the daughters of two other business partners, including a man who is a fugitive on federal tax charges.
Another Rezko partner got a loan for pizza franchises through a California businessman whose firm won a $83 million contract for redeveloping the Illinois Tollway’s restaurant oases. The loan came after an introduction from Rezko. […]
The names of the Rezko food company shareholders emerged recently amid a spate of civil lawsuits from former partners, including one filed in Cook County in April by Dr. Fortunee Massuda. […]
In 2003, Blagojevich appointed Massuda to the state’s Health Facilities Planning Board, along with Drs. Michel Malek and Imad Almanaseer. The Tribune previously reported Massuda and Malek each gave Blagojevich’s campaign $25,000 just weeks before being appointed, but their roles as shareholders in Rezko pizza businesses had not been previously disclosed. […]
The three Rezko associates and the other hospital board members were dismissed in 2004. The board was revamped that year after it came under federal scrutiny in part for its approval of Mercy Health System’s plans to build a $49 million hospital in Crystal Lake. As described in federal kickback charges against former board vice chairman Stuart Levine, Almanaseer changed his vote on the Mercy project after Levine whispered in his ear. Massuda and Malek also voted for the project.
Levine and Rezko go way back and have some mutual friends. Rezko not only raised a half mil for the governor’s ‘02 campaign, he provided 10 percent of the governor’s total family income in 2004.
Read the whole thing.
24 Comments
|
Question of the day
Thursday, Jun 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
First, the latest poll numbers.
Illinoisans don’t want the state or U.S. constitutions rewritten to ban gay marriage, according to a new poll released Wednesday.
While the majority of Illinois voters — 51 percent — said they oppose gay marriage, only 40 percent support asking state lawmakers for a constitutional amendment to ban it, according to a poll by the Chicago-based Glengariff Group. Fifty percent were opposed and 10 percent were undecided.
There is less support for amending the U.S. Constitution with 62 percent opposed, the poll showed.
Gay marriage opponents hope to get a measure on the Illinois ballot this November that would ask voters if the state should amend its constitution. […]
The Illinois poll also tested voters’ appetite on other gay rights issues, including civil unions. Fifty percent of people supported such unions that would give gay couples the legal benefits of marriage without calling it marriage.
There was 50 percent or more support on other issues, including adoption, inheritance rights and health benefits.
QUESTION: Assume that the anti-gay marriage folks get their question on the ballot this fall, and assume for the sake of argument that these poll results are close to reality. Will the referendum pass, and how much of a bind will this put pro gay rights Republican Judy Baar Topinka in?
40 Comments
|
“Don’t blame Blagojevich”
Thursday, Jun 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
I missed this yesterday. Truth be told, I don’t read the Post-Dispatch editorial page much, especially since they flip-flopped on tort reform - firing up the reform argument in 2004 and flip-flopping a few months later when a medical malpractice reform bill appeared close to passage. Anyway, this was blogged on Illinoize yesterday, but I thought it would be worth a post here.
Blagojevich for the condition of the state’s economy makes only slightly more sense than blaming him for the weather. In truth, no governor has much influence over a state’s prosperity during a single term in office.
Economies don’t turn on a dime.
Things that a governor really can influence — the quality of schools, job training, public health and transportation infrastructure — take years to produce results in terms of increased business, new jobs and higher wages. […]
The real influence of state government is on long-term prosperity. Improving children’s health and education today will bring rewards in years to come: a healthier, better-educated work force, more higher-paying jobs, higher per-capita income and less spending on crime, welfare and social programs. Investing in transportation improvements pays economic dividends over decades; that’s why a new bridge over the Mississippi River is critical to southern Illinois’ economic future.
By those measures, Gov. Blagojevich has made the right calls.
Your thoughts?
42 Comments
|
Win some, lose some
Thursday, Jun 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
ABATE both won and lost yesterday.
A Downstate judge Wednesday issued an order temporarily blocking the Blagojevich administration from transferring about $350,000 from two special-purpose funds into the state’s main checking account.
The order by Sangamon County Circuit Judge Leo J. Zappa Jr. stemmed from a newly filed lawsuit by a group known as ABATE of Illinois, which is challenging the governor’s diversion of funds set up to benefit motorcycle enthusiasts.
But the ruling could have implications for hundreds of other special-purpose funds that collect fees for designated purposes, such as the road fund, which receives money from the motor fuel tax and the vehicle registration fee.
Zappa’s order prohibiting the administration from shifting revenues from a cycle rider’s training fund and a fund dedicated to the upkeep of off-road motorcycle trails extends until July 10, when the case is next set for hearing.
ABATE was seeking an order from Zappa blocking the governor’s diversion of revenue from 77 funds, few having anything to do with motorcyclists. The money in play in those particular funds totaled more than $30 million..
The judge wouldn’t block the transfers of other state fund monies, so that was the loss part.
3 Comments
|
Tollway stories
Thursday, Jun 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
Three tollway stories today. First, Speaker Madigan has some questions.
Breaking months of silence on the landmark issue, House Speaker Michael Madigan has raised more than a dozen questions about a potential tollway lease deal in a letter to lawmakers overseeing hearings on the matter.
Madigan says the questions, which range from how tolls would increase to what would happen to the oases, need to be answered before the plan is given serious thought.
The letter resembled one he sent earlier this month to state House members regarding another lease plan — Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s proposal to lease the state lottery for $10 billion to fund education initiatives.
Then there’s this story in the Southtown about a tollway sale/lease hearing earlier this week.
If a system of toll roads built on the backs of suburban commuters is sold or leased, the windfall better wind up in the suburbs.
That was the message given Tuesday to an Illinois Senate committee that’s looking into privatizing the state’s tollway system.
“This is where the needs are,” Will County Executive Larry Walsh told the committee at a hearing in Joliet. […]
State Sen. Christine Radogno (R-LaGrange) noted more than 70 percent of traffic on the tollways is generated by commuters, and most of those vehicles are moving from suburb to suburb to get to work.
“We’ve paid into the system over the last 40 years. Our paying into it gives the system value for someone to come in and buy it,” Radogno said. “Does the money stay in these communities? I think that is a legitimate question.”
And the I-Team follows up on an earlier story.
Was an Illinois Tollway worker fired for refusing to pay off a politically-connected contractor? Two powerful Illinois state senators are formally requesting that the attorney general look into new allegations of corruption at tollway headquarters.
On Monday, the ABC7 I-Team first reported that a tollway worker claimed he was terminated after refusing the give a $100,000 gift to a state contractor. Now, there is new information about which politician allegedly wanted the contractor paid off.
As a middle manager at the Illinois Tollway, Jim Fragackis did not expect to get a call with instructions from a state senator.
The matter has been referred to the attorney general.
13 Comments
|
Morning shorts
Thursday, Jun 15, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
· Sen. Bill Brady may have been reading the comments here, because yesterday a commenter pointed out that a Sun-Times story about this week’s devastating audit of DHS reported that the state was paying more than $550,000 to buy 109 shredders. That seemed excessive, and I think shortly thereafter Brady sent out a press release wondering what the heck was going on.
· Was a real estate deal by US House Speaker Denny Hastert corrupt or just a sweet and fortuitous arrangement among old friends investing in a rapidly booming county?
· Daley won’t wait for state
· Sorry, alderman, but that was a lame excuse
· Cook County bumbles beetle battle
· Witness claims Sorich ordered files erased
· Kadner: Crete Mayor Michael Einhorn lies.
· “The Supreme Court of Illinois ordered Wednesday that lawyers in this state must report how many hours they spend helping poor clients every year.”
· Now, here’s a threesome that you don’t often see on the same page: Lauzen, Schmitz and Blagojevich.
· Apparently, Frank Watson prefers diplomacy over my war plans. Good for him, but it would’ve been a grand adventure. Then again, maybe there’s still hope.
· Interesting story, good human interest, but no chance.
· Illinois Legislators Lambaste Governor’s Subsidy Plan
· The Southern has a great piece on my old buddy John Reilly.
After more than four decades in the hotel and restaurant business, it would seem that John Reilly might be looking for a slower pace and a lower gear.
Instead, it’s quite the contrary for the personable Reilly, who goes about his daily duties at Rend Lake Resort and Conference Center as general manager and acts as a one-person tourism committee by continually singing the praises of Rend Lake and all of Southern Illinois. […]
Reilly said he will continue to be a goodwill ambassador for Southern Illinois at every opportunity.
“I don’t want to hear people say that Rend Lake is the best kept secret in the state,” Reilly said. “I wish that I would have gotten to this point quicker than I did but we’re certainly not finished. I don’t think I’ll ever be totally satisfied until everybody knows what we have to offer here in Southern Illinois.”
If you haven’t been to the resort, you really ought to go. I had an amazingly good time when I was last there. This article makes me want to head down to Rend Lake today, but I can’t. Maybe next weekend. You can find a lot more info here.
9 Comments
|
Question of the day
Wednesday, Jun 14, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
General rule of thumb: When a campaign proposes a debate via press release, it’s all for show and an easy press pop. If either side were truly interested in debating, they’d be accepting offers from the 20 or so groups and news organizations that have already been submitted. Or they’d be negotiating with each other. That’s how the Dick Kay debate was handled.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s campaign said Tuesday he wants another debate with his GOP opponent, state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, before the Fourth of July. But the Topinka camp said any more debates should wait until later when voters are paying more attention.
The Blagojevich campaign said the governor wants to debate Topinka in the next few weeks on ethics and health care, but her campaign said a series of 12 debates should be held between Labor Day and Election Day in November.
Labor Day is the traditional start of the fall campaign season.
“We believe this series of debates should be held when voters are able to focus their greatest attention,” said a statement from Topinka spokesman John McGovern.
But Blagojevich campaign spokesman Sheila Nix said that was too late to get started.
QUESTION: How about y’all propose debate formats, topics, moderators etc. in comments. Get creative. It could be fun.
53 Comments
|
The Stroger beat goes on
Wednesday, Jun 14, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
The back and forth has swung backwards again.
Three months to the day after Cook County Board President John Stroger suffered a stroke, board members appear in no rush to name an “interim president.” They may not challenge Stroger’s right to hold his job until Election Day or beyond.
Most commissioners interviewed by the Chicago Sun-Times this week said legal hurdles to creating new rules or procedures for an “interim president” make such action impossible before November. […]
Sean Howard, spokesman for Bishop Larry Trotter, said Tuesday that Stroger is expected to be released from the hospital this morning after treatment for a possible mild infection.
I wonder if Stroger could still beat Peraica even if he never shows his face before election day?
38 Comments
|
Bundled outrages
Wednesday, Jun 14, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
There are just too many stories today about the Blagojevich administration to blog them all individually. So, I’ve bundled them for you here in one, super-long post.
· The governor’s office won’t say how many kids have been signed up for the AllKids plan, but they have said that the taxpayers are spending $3.2 million on TV advertising to promote the program during an election year.
Rep. Rosemary Mulligan, R-Des Plaines, said a constituent complained to her that TV ads for the All Kids program were running in close proximity to Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s campaign ads attacking his GOP opponent in the November election, state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka.
Mulligan said she saw the ads running in tandem and said it amounts to taxpayer dollars being used to expand the governor’s campaign fund. Health care is a major campaign issue for Blagojevich. […]
HFS spokeswoman Kathleen Strand said after the meeting that the state agency has no control over the timing of the All Kids ads because that’s up to the TV stations that run them.
· But that’s not all, campers. There was also a mass mailer.
Last month, Barry Maram, the director of the Healthcare and Family Services agency, sent out a letter to thousands of community leaders and health-care providers across the state to promote “Governor Blagojevich’s All Kids Training Tour” to “learn about programs that can help people with whom you work, worship and live.”
In addition to listing other Blagojevich health-care initiatives, Maram’s five-paragraph letter featured the governor’s name four times, including within the official logo for the program “Governor Blagojevich’s All Kids.”
· The Belleville News-Democrat has had enough.
Gov. Rod Blagojevich is getting all the political mileage he can out of All Kids, the universal health insurance program that starts July 1. Blagojevich’s letter on the Web site for All Kids reads like a campaign ad — which is exactly what was intended. Blagojevich and Democratic lawmakers rushed through the program without any meaningful discussion or debate, with an eye toward having it running before the November election.
· And that brings us to the latest audit of the Department of Human Services and this little tidbit buried way down deep in the AP’s story.
Auditors also learned the department spent $48,000 for the Team Illinois program, promoted by Gov. Rod Blagojevich to target revitalization for four economically depressed communities. That money came from leftover grants provided in the 1990s by the Annie E. Casey Foundation to DHS.
About $3,300 of that was spent on a covered wagon, dancers and entertainment to promote Team Illinois in a Chicago parade, auditors discovered. The audit said there was no evidence the grant money was intended to be used that way.
· Oh, and did I mention the records? No, I guess I didn’t.
Payroll records containing Social Security numbers of government workers were found in a state recycling Dumpster accessible to the public, Illinois’ auditor general disclosed Tuesday.
The discovery came as a team of auditors hired by Auditor General William Holland toured the Springfield headquarters of the Department of Human Services and came upon the discarded data.
The paper recycling Dumpster in an open loading dock area contained payroll voucher reports with employee names and Social Security numbers, technical computer information and other confidential information.
“The fact it wasn’t properly destroyed was significant,” Holland said. “The unknown is whether any of this information was lifted from that Dumpster.”
· And then there’s this inconvenient little audit finding.
The cost of caring for mentally ill and developmentally disabled residents in Illinois has risen at all but four of the state’s 20 institutions, according to state documents released Tuesday.
Auditor General William Holland, in a study covering two years, found that caring for a resident at the John J. Madden Mental Health Center near Chicago topped $21,000 per month in fiscal year 2004. That’s up from nearly $16,000 per month in 2002.
Similarly, at the Jacksonville Developmental Center, the average cost of caring for a developmentally disabled resident was $13,029 per month, up from $12,621 in 2002.
Those examples lend credence to claims by advocacy groups that the state’s developmental centers be closed, said Don Moss, executive director United Cerebral Palsy of Illinois.
· And this:
Auditors said the agency appeared to be circumventing rules designed to make sure taxpayers get the lowest price when buying goods.
· Finally, there’s this fascinating bit of insight that I forgot to mention earlier this week.
The Democratic governor also said Topinka only criticizes his ideas and never comes up with any of her own, likening her to President Herbert Hoover and himself to President Franklin Roosevelt during the Depression.
“A new guy comes in, Franklin Roosevelt, and he’s got ideas and approaches and he tried a whole bunch of things. A lot of it worked, some of it didn’t,” Blagojevich said. “But he kept getting up everyday to try to do something to make a difference and improve people’s lives. Ultimately he led our country out of that Great Depression and had Herbert Hoover had his way, nothing would have been done.”
The most memorable quote from FDR’s second inaugural address was “Better the occasional faults of a government that lives in a spirit of charity than the consistent omissions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.” The operative word being “occasional.”
UPDATE: I forgot one. This is what happens when a governor - any governor - takes total control of the State Board of Education.
The Chairman of the State Board of Education sees no need for public hearings on the Governor’s education plan.
Rod Blagojevich wants to lease or sell the state lottery and push $10 billion in proceeds to Illinois schools. And while one state senator is calling for public hearings, Chairman Jesse Ruiz says regular state board meetings offer plenty of opportunity for the public to ask questions.
Ruiz also says the campaign season will help by offering robust debate on the plan.
38 Comments
|
Mess with the bull, get the horn
Wednesday, Jun 14, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
There’s a not-so-old but almost universally acknowledged rule in Springfield: Never, ever EVER mess with the bikers. The governor apparently likes to break rules.
Illinois motorcyclists, tipped off by state Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, sought Tuesday to block Gov. Rod Blagojevich from using biker safety funds to bolster the state budget.
An aide to Topinka, Blagojevich’s Republican challenger, acknowledged alerting the biker group ABATE of Illinois and other organizations last week that the governor intended to transfer specially earmarked money to the state’s general bank account.
ABATE went to Sangamon County Circuit Court to prevent the Democratic governor from transferring money in the funds set aside for biker safety and training. Money in those funds comes from motorcycle registration fees and other surcharges paid by bikers. The group argued the governor lacks the constitutional authority to transfer the funds.
Aides to the governor said state lawmakers approved the fund transfers, which gave Blagojevich the authority to move the money. A lawyer for the state told the court the money is needed to pay bills.
“If those assertions are true, that the state would not be able to make payroll without this money, then the state is in more dire financial straits than anyone imagined,” said Todd Vandermyde, a lobbyist for ABATE, an acronym for A Brotherhood Aimed Toward Education.
The attorney general’s office eventually backed off that statement. There’s a lot more to this story, and I’ll have more soon.
UPDATE: Finke has a very good story.
Although the group initially challenged just the transfers from funds affecting motorcyclists, it is now asking Zappa to stop transfers from dozens of other funds set up for specific programs and financed with fees paid by specific groups of people. About $35 million is in those funds.
“What we are attempting to do is convince the court that there is a whole class of individuals who are being harmed by these unconstitutional transfers of private money into a large slush fund to be whimsically used by the governor,” said George Tinkham, an attorney representing ABATE. “The state cannot engage in politically attractive programs using other people’s money.”
“We want to stop the transfer of our funds, but we think that the whole concept is against the Constitution of the state of Illinois, and we went for the whole enchilada,” said Todd Vandermyde, a lobbyist for ABATE.
However, Attorney General Lisa Madigan’s office, which is representing the state in the case, said ABATE can’t simply come into court and ask that all fund transfers be halted.
“Our position is, as to the majority of funds at issue in this case, the plaintiffs have not shown that they have standing to seek injunctive relief,” said Terence Corrigan of Madigan’s office.
Corrigan said ABATE will have to prove how motorcycle riders will be hurt if the state transfers money out of funds that don’t affect them. According to court documents filed by Madigan’s office, those funds include the Explosives Regulatory Fund, the Illinois State Pharmacy Disciplinary Fund and the Agricultural Premium Fund.
22 Comments
|
Congress stuff
Wednesday, Jun 14, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
Stem cells become issue in the 6th.
The question of using embryonic stem cells for medical research is proving another litmus test in the 6th Congressional District.
At a news conference Tuesday, Democratic candidate Tammy Duckworth called for action on a measure in Congress loosening restrictions on federal funding for embryonic stem cell studies.
“Science and hope are two things I believe in strongly. Unfortunately, they’re in shorter supply than they should be,†said Duckworth, an Iraq war veteran from Hoffman Estates.
Her Republican opponent, state Sen. Peter Roskam, opposes using embryonic stem cells, arguing that scientific investigations using adult stem cells have yielded better results.
“It is my intention to focus on this type of research in Congress which is producing results for Americans who are afflicted with these diseases,†the Wheaton resident said.
“We cannot leave our moral obligations at the laboratory door and take one human life and cast it aside for the benefit of another.â€
Paperwork becomes an issue in the 17th.
The State Board of Elections’ list of latest candidate filings now includes Phil Hare in Congressional District 17.
No objection to the filing is listed, which I take to mean there hasn’t been one. (Some of the filings listed include a notation that an objection is pending.)
Meanwhile, the Federal Election Commission website does not list a Phil Hare campaign committee, which I take to mean he hasn’t yet filed organizational papers, which I further take to mean he hasn’t yet raised the $5,000 that triggers the requirement to file.
Hare has also been blasted for not properly reading the House rules.
This is a congressional elections open thread, but try to stick to Illinois races, please. Although, on a side note and completely off topic, I will say that Sen. Lieberman’s plight reminds me of Alan Dixon’s losing race in 1992. Dixon, you will recall, broke with party ranks one too many times when he voted to confirm Clarence Thomas and he lost the Democratic primary. The lesson there is, you have to win a primary before you can be crowned in the general. Dixon “voted like a Republican” and was sent to the private sector. Lieberman seems to have the same problem.
13 Comments
|
Morning shorts
Wednesday, Jun 14, 2006 - Posted by Rich Miller
· Soldier’s wife sues utility over gas cutoff
· Funeral for Marine killed in Iraq is not disturbed by anti-gay protesters, who are kept at a distance from military rites by a new law
· The bizarre fight over who wrote an anti-Peotone e-mail still rages on
· Another airport-related story: Chicago-to-Marion Air Service Take-Off Delayed
· Headline: Exelon begins work to clean up tritium leaks… Lede: Exelon Corp. hosted their third Community Information Night on Tuesday to discuss the recently approved plan to clean up the tritium spills at the Braidwood Nuclear Plant. The Tuesday meeting was held to comply with a recent court order to make the public more aware of what is happening at the power plant.
· Governor creates penalty for failing to report abuse
· Preschool for all?
· Drive-in gets thumbs-down
· For the first time in a long time, I’m actually beginning to feel a little sorry for Cub fans. It’s not that they deserve better, because they don’t care whether their team wins or not. It’s just that the team is so bad this year that making fun of their fans feels like picking on the hopelessly and cluelessly downtrodden.
· And, finally, this heartbreaking story from the Post-Dispatch:
At a private group home in central Illinois, bath time turned violent on Jan. 24, 2003.
A mentally retarded resident didn’t want a bath, so a worker stripped him naked while he sat in the living room, grabbed him by the leg, and dragged him 30 feet across carpet to his bedroom.
To the internal state investigators called to the Mason City home, the large rug burn left indisputable evidence of physical abuse. The state’s inspector general substantiated the charge, but didn’t do one thing the law requires in any case of a possible crime: call the police.
“We should have been called,†said Mason City Assistant Chief Kenneth W. Beard. “We want to know about these things.â€
5 Comments
|
|
Support CapitolFax.com Visit our advertisers...
...............
...............
...............
...............
|
|
Hosted by MCS |
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax |
Advertise Here |
Mobile Version |
Contact Rich Miller
|