Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * See you next week!…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
* Daily Herald…
* WTTW…
Click here to read the full letter. * Daily Herald | ‘An entire life of pensions and six-figure incomes’: Officials tout $8 million grant for apprenticeship programs: Roughly $8 million in federal funding will help Illinois high schools train students for positions operating heavy machinery and secure high-paying careers in fields facing critical workforce shortages. U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi visited South Elgin High School on Thursday to announce the grant provided through the Apprenticeships Build America program. Representatives of industry groups and a national apprenticeship program joined local school officials for the announcement in an automotive shop classroom. * WBEZ | CTA’s high violent crime rate keeps away what’s needed to ward off crime: passengers: The number of violent crime victimizations per CTA passenger trip nearly quadrupled between 2015 and 2021 and remains elevated today, according to the analysis. Violent crimes on buses, trains and other CTA properties during this year’s first eight months totaled 656. All but 19 of those crimes were robberies, aggravated batteries and aggravated assaults that didn’t get much public attention. But homicides have also increased since the start of the pandemic, despite steps by CTA and the Chicago Police Department to boost security. * Crain’s | Target for the O’Hare terminal revamp quietly slips to 2034: The timetable for completing O’Hare’s massive $8.5 billion terminal overhaul and expansion has been pushed out another two years. Previously, the Department of Aviation had predicted it would complete the project in 2032. When the terminal project was first announced in 2018, the completion date was expected to be 2026. The project is expected to be completed by 2034, according to a timeline published in connection with a new $1 billion bond offering. * WTTW | Chicago Fair Trade Museum Aims to Highlight Overlooked Stories Behind the Products We Use Every Day: The Chicago Fair Trade Museum opened its first permanent location in Uptown this summer with the aim of educating more people about common exploitative and unsustainable trade practices behind the items we use and consume daily. “Every single day when we wake up, when we figure out what clothing we’re going to wear or what we’re going to eat for breakfast, there’s a chance for us to try to find out what we’re consuming and consume better,” said Katherine Bissell Córdova, executive director of Chicago Fair Trade. * Crain’s | Chicago federal judge on broker commission cases replaced for conflict of interest: On Sept. 4, Andrea Wood, a judge in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, withdrew herself from the cases known as Moehrl, Batton (I and II) and Sawbill. The cases all relate to claims that the National Association of Realtors and brokerages have colluded over the years to keep real estate agents’ commissions high and thus cost buyers and sellers more than they should. Wood recused herself, she wrote, because a distant family connection to a defendant’s attorney “has come to my attention.” According to Wood, “the spouse of a person related to me within the third degree of relationship is a partner in a law firm representing” the Moehrl case. * Sun-Times | How right-wing podcaster from Chicago landed at center of federal probe into Russian meddling: Tim Pool, a Chicago high school dropout who became an alt-right media superstar, was apparently paid $100,000 per episode by a covert propaganda campaign funded by Russia, according to a new federal indictment. * Block Club | West Garfield Park Is No Longer A Food Desert After Save A Lot Grocery Store Reopens: The West Side grocery store is the first of six Save A Lot stores owned and operated by Yellow Banana scheduled to reopen this year. The Ohio-based company, which operates grocery stores under the Save A Lot name, is planning to reopen locations before Thanksgiving in West Pullman, 10700 S. Halsted St.; South Shore, 7240 S. Stony Island Ave.; South Chicago, 2858 E. 83rd St.; Auburn Gresham, 7909 S. Halsted St.; and West Lawn, 4439 W. 63rd St., CEO Joe Canfield said. * Sun-Times | Reputed Chicago Outfit figure Peter DiFronzo faced, ah, dogged surveillance, FBI files show: The FBI released 220 pages of records on the reputed onetime boss of the mob’s Elmwood Park street crew, whose brother John “No Nose” DiFronzo was suspected of running the Outfit. Observations include DiFronzo shoveling snow and walking a dog. * Sun-Times | Hazmat suits and headlamps: Subterranean salvaging at the Music Box Theatre: It’s an infrequent occurrence, maybe once a month. And Carr is one of the few staff members who will go into the basement, climb a ladder, enter a small hatch and crawl into the vents beneath the seats to retrieve lost items for customers. They are called plenum vents — used for heating and cooling — and you don’t see them like this modern theaters. * WGN | Chicago priest asked to step down from parish, school due to child molestation allegations: “I write you with difficult news. The Archdiocese has been notified that the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services has opened an investigation into allegations they termed child exploitation and child molestation during a public penance service against Father Martin Nyberg,” archbishop Blase Cupich wrote in a letter. He went on to say Nyberg “strenuously” denies the allegations and is cooperating after being asked to step aside from ministry. * Triibe | Cook County residents push for lasting programs as American Rescue Plan funding winds down: The meeting was part of a series of “Community Voices Events” hosted by the Cook County government. The meeting was led by Mykel Selph, Cook County’s deputy chief of staff of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. She helped facilitate the meeting, which ran nearly two hours and featured participants gathering in intimate groups where they were able to give recommendations and voice concerns as the dollars from the program dwindle. * Daily Herald | Former DCFS caseworker convicted in AJ Freund case is released from jail: A former employee of Illinois’ child welfare agency convicted of mishandling the AJ Freund case months before the Crystal Lake boy was killed by his mother completed his jail term this week. Carlos Acosta, 58, was convicted in October of two counts of child endangerment. He was sentenced to six months in jail along with fines, 30 months of probation and 200 hours of public service, a sentencing order filed in the McHenry County court said. * Sun-Times | Ex-Gangster Disciples leader says he wants justice in son’s killing in Dolton: When he was shot to death by masked gunmen in a restaurant parking lot in the south suburbs last year, James Yates Jr., the son of a onetime Chicago gang leader, became the Cook County medical examiner’s office’s case No. ME2023-03844. He was the sixth of 11 homicide victims last year in Dolton, population 20,000. More than a year later, his parents say they want the Dolton Police Department to treat their 29-year-old son as something more than just another number. Since a face-to-face meeting with police a few months after the killing, they say they haven’t heard anything from the department — no calls, emails, texts or meetings. * Capitol News Illinois | East St. Louis forum to tackle persistent childhood poverty: Illinois has the potential to eradicate childhood poverty, but it will require a concentrated, sustained effort in partnership with families and disadvantaged communities, says Tasha Green Cruzat, president of Children’s Advocates for Change, a Chicago-based nonprofit focused on childhood wellbeing. This hope drives the focus of the policy forum her organization is hosting in East St. Louis next week. The event will bring together social service providers, educators, health officials, and lawmakers to address the barriers to lifting families out of poverty in one of the nation’s most disadvantaged cities. * WGLT | Illinois State University enrolls largest incoming class: The annual enrollment report following the 10th day of classes showed nearly 4,285 first-year students came to campus for classes. That’s up 3%. Total enrollment is also up by 2.7% at 21,546. Executive Director of Admissions and Recruitment Marketing Jeff Mavros said the entire campus community makes intentional recruitment and retention efforts. * WCBU | Sheriff Watkins: Options for Peoria County Jail upgrades coming soon: Peoria County Sheriff Chris Watkins says an analysis of options to upgrade the jail facility is nearly complete. Last year, the jail addressed some of its exterior infrastructure issues and roof replacement work. But Watkins says they’re looking at more long-term needs. “For the last six months, we’ve been working on a jail master study with a consultant, and that study is almost finished,” said Watkins. “It should be presented with the next month or two to our county board to give them options of what to do: Build a new jail, do an addition, or just revamp what we have.” * Rockford Register Star | Rockford area veterans clash with Winnebago County Board over funding: Services like health care transportation and assistance for homeless vets could be cut in the coming year if the Winnebago County Board declines to fund the Veterans Assistance Commission of Winnebago County’s largest ever funding request. Commissioners approved a $1.6 million budget for 2025 so it can provide its nine employees with health benefits in accordance with a new state law and give them raises in an effort to retain accredited veteran service officers, said VAC Superintendent Jesus Pereira, a retired U.S. Army veteran. […] A county committee proposed $1.3 million, 15% more than last year’s $1 million in funding. * PJ Star | Suspect in Macomb police shooting taken into custody after 20-hour standoff, police say: A suspect who shot two police officers in Macomb was taken into custody without incident, according to the Macomb Police Department. Macomb police said Shaiking M. Mathis, 38, of Macomb peacefully surrendered at about 2:10 p.m. Thursday after 20 hours of extensive negotiations. He was transported to the McDonough County Jail and has been charged with four counts of aggravated battery to a police officer, one county of aggravated discharge of a firearm. Additional charges are pending. * WCIA | Flesor’s Candy Kitchen celebrates 20th anniversary of reopening, mural completion: Flesor’s Candy Kitchen recently wrapped up a project to modernize the 150-year-old building it’s housed in. Part of those renovations include the Coca-Cola mural on the side of the building. The business worked with Cola-Cola on the project, getting access to the soda company’s original painting guidelines from the 1920s, which the original painters used 100 years ago. * The Athletic | Peak Honey Deuce season at the U.S. Open means more drinks than ever before: Last year, approximately 460,000 Honey Deuces were sold, according to Chris Studley, the USTA’s managing director of event services. At $22 per drink, that’s $10.1 million in sales. The drink’s price was raised by a dollar this year to $23, the sixth time the price has gone up in the last 12 years. Studley said the tournament is on pace to sell more than 500,000 Honey Deuces at this year’s tournament. That would push sales to $11.5 million, well over $1 million more in additional revenue compared with last year.
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Court preserves provision of the Illinois Reproductive Health Act
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for some background. Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
The suit sought to have the Illinois Reproductive Health Act, which requires health insurance plans in Illinois which provide pregnancy-related benefits must also provide coverage for abortion ruled unconstitutional.
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Illinois school district that called police on students “every other day” agrees to reform disciplinary practices
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ProPublica in 2022…
* Today from ProPublica…
* From the agreement…
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A closer look at the money: Chicago’s school board elections
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Chicago’s school board elections
$553,230 has been raised by all candidates for Chicago’s elected school board. * Tribune…
Click here for Chalkbeat Chicago’s updated list of Chicago school board candidates.
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Meet the athletes representing Illinois at the 2024 Paralympics
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * CBS…
* Tribune…
* WSIL…
* WCIA…
* Fox Chicago…
* More…
* 2 Houston | Rice swimmer Ahalya Lettenberger heads to Paralympics: Lettenberger, who was born with arthrogryposis amyoplasia, a muscular skeletal disorder that affects her lower limbs, plans to swim 200 meters and 400 meters this year, the latter event being her favorite. She races in the SM7 category, which is for swimmers with movement affected from a low to moderate level in the arms, trunk and legs, moderately down one side, those with short stature, or the absence of limbs. All these swimmers have to work harder at stroke timing or getting hold of the water, according to LEXI - an explainer of Parasport classifications. […] Lettenberger, a Chicago area native also relishes the opportunity to represent Team USA again. * 21st Show | Marco De La Rosa: A Vet, a Hero, and a Paralympian: The 2024 Paralympics are underway in Paris. Marco De La Rosa, originally from Chicago, now based in San Antonio, Texas is a para-shooter who competes professionally in the 10-meter Air Pistol category. He will make his second Paralympic appearance at the 2024 games after previously competing in the Rio 2016 games. * IPM Newsroom | Local athlete heads to Paris for his fourth Paralympic Games: Brian Siemann, a local resident, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign graduate, and four-time Paralympian, will compete in the 100m, 400m, 800m, 5,000m, and marathon events for the US Paralympic Track and Field Team. Morning Edition host Kimberly Schofield, who has Siemann since 2008, recently interviewed him about the upcoming games and his journey to becoming athlete. * NAU Athletics | Keegan Knott Earns Roster Spot for 2024 Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games: Following the Paralympic trials in Minnesota this weekend, NAU’s Keegan Knott has been officially announced the U.S. Paralympic roster for the Paris games. The Illinois native will be returning as a Paralympian for Team USA after previously competing in her first-ever games in Tokyo as the youngest on the 2021 roster. Knott will be chasing her first Paralympic podium finish in Paris.
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Cynical, practical, or no big deal?
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * WGN TV…
* Sen. Andrew Chesney (R-Freeport) wrote a provacative “How the sausage is made” op-ed about the bill last month…
Sen. Chesney was one of just 17 “No” votes in the Senate. * Since this law was in the news again, I reached out to the Illinois Hotel & Lodging Association for comment about Sen. Chesney’s claims…
* The Illinois Environmental Council pushed the bill and included it in its candidate ratings. So, I also reached out to them…
The IEC’s original press release is here. Thoughts?
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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.
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Clever
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * I saw this Illinois Republican Party email earlier this week and thought it was quite clever… ![]() I ran into the party’s new executive director last night at the Illinois vs. Missouri softball game in St. Louis and he said the email got a huge response. Thoughts?
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Open thread
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois legislators dominated their Missouri counterparts in the annual Greater St. Louis Inc. Bi-State Softball Showdown played at Busch Stadium since the series began in 2019…
* Sun-Times | ‘Everything is on the table’ to eliminate $982.4 million budget shortfall, top mayoral aide says: Budget Director Annette Guzman said options range from layoffs and pay cuts on the expense side to a property tax increase, video gaming and volume-based garbage collection fees on the revenue end. * Crain’s | Chicago Sun-Times knocked down its paywall. Now it’s putting up fences: Two years after eliminating its paywall and giving people access to articles with just an email registration, readers today were met with a message inviting them to sign up for recurring donations or watch a video with advertisements. It appears to be a light reversal of one of the bigger changes to the Sun-Times since its acquisition by WBEZ parent Chicago Public Media in 2022. * Patch | IARF Names Four Legislators Champions for Supporting Wage Increases: The state association representing community providers of services for this disabled is publicly praising four legislators for stepping up to improve care. The Illinois Association of Rehabilitation Facilities has honored the four legislators for their support of funding to hire workers to provide high-quality care. * Daily Herald | Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza to talk about fair pay and economic equity for women: Illinois Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza will speak about the status of “Fair Pay and Economic Equity for Women in the state of Illinois” on Wednesday, Oct. 2. This program is sponsored by the AAUW Elmhurst Branch, League of Women Voters Elmhurst, and the Elmhurst Public Library, * WSIU | A south-central Illinois lawmaker launches a petition drive to halt the Illinois flag redesign: Republican State Representative Adam Niemerg from Dieterich says the effort to change the Illinois flag is a blatant attempt to infuse far-left ideology onto the state’s flag and he is calling on Illinois citizens to join him in opposing the redesign efforts. says he’s concerned about the direction of the flag redesign after Governor JB Pritzker said it may be time to create a new flag that exemplifies the values of Illinois. * WSIL | Giannoulias Announces Libraries Receiving Grants: Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announces more than $496,000 in grant funding to improve local library services. Library districts will receive funding to help ensure all residents have access to quality resources and programming. Libraries throughout the 58th Senate District, serving over 126,000 people, receive a combined $496,783 in grants. * Sun-Times | Ahead of the DNC, City Hall spent $814,000 on a fence to lock out homeless: The massive barrier was part of an “emergency” effort to permanently lock out unhoused people from the location near the United Center, where the convention was held, the records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times show. The Johnson administration had refused to say how much taxpayer money went toward blocking off the green strip of land between the 1100 block of South Desplaines Street and the Dan Ryan Expressway just north of Roosevelt Road until after the nationally televised gathering was over. The Sun-Times has been asking for those records, which should be public under state law, since July, when that tent city was cleared of its residents, the tents and the items they left behind. * Crain’s | Brandon Johnson facing potential labor fight as spending cuts set to begin: Without easy revenue sources, Johnson has said more drastic personnel options are on the table, including eliminating vacancies, furloughs for city workers and, if all else fails, what one member of the City Council described as the “L word”: layoffs. “The L-word is a bad word. Layoffs, that’s a very, very bad word,” said Ald. Michael Rodriguez, 22nd, who chairs the Workforce Development Committee. “Not on the back of city workers do we balance this budget.” * WBEZ | Chicago school board elections see big ’school choice’ cash, including from billionaires: Two groups that support “school choice” and charter schools and are critical of the Chicago Teachers Union have amassed $3.6 million from prominent business leaders — including a few billionaires — looking to shape the city’s first-ever school board elections. […] One of the independent expenditure committees, Urban Center Action, was formed earlier this summer by Juan Rangel, who recently worked for a private school tax credit program and previously was fired amid controversy from UNO Charter Schools, a large network he founded. Paul Vallas, the former Chicago Public Schools CEO who lost against Mayor Brandon Johnson in last year’s mayoral election, is also affiliated. The group has raked in $671,000 in less than two months, state election records show. * Tribune | With CTU and school choice proponents investing in elected school board races, do ‘independent’ candidates stand a chance?: Since filing their nomination paperwork in June, 15 candidates have fallen out of the running in Chicago’s historic school board election this November. With the exception of one candidate, each of the hopefuls either withdrew their names or were knocked off the ballot during the objections process. Challenging the validity of the constituent signatures that every candidate running for office in Illinois is required to file, the more than 40 objections to school board candidates were filed by only a handful of nine lawyers whose ranks include high-profile political operatives and lobbyists. * NBC Chicago | Bears CEO says team is open to working with White Sox on stadium funding bid: Chicago Bears CEO Kevin Warren said that the team would still prefer to build a new stadium within city limits, and expressed a willingness to work with another team in securing funding for the project. Speaking at the Economic Club of Chicago, Warren said that he’s aware of “how difficult” projects like the proposed stadium can be, but that the benefits would far outweigh the drawbacks, bringing marquee events and new jobs to the city. * Block Club | Workers Leave Gaping Hole On South Side Block — And For Months, No One Has Fixed It: Little work has been done at the site since early June, Green said. The street is still largely inaccessible, and the hole in the middle of the street has become a repository for trash, with people tossing empty fast food bags, bottles and dog waste into it. Steel planks put on the ground to cover it have instead started to shift away from the hole, leaving it exposed. Residents are at the end of their rope, with some ready to leave the block altogether. * NBC Chicago | Bronzeville child care center closes due to lack of teaching staff: Low-income families that met certain requirements could send their children, ranging from 6 weeks to 5 years of age, to the center for free before its closure earlier this month. According to the non-profit’s CEO, staffing has struggled as workers have left the facility for jobs with better wages. “We have tried to get additional funding so we can have competitive wages. The main issue is, we are competing for staff. And we cannot afford to compete,” Center for New Horizons CEO Lakisha McFadden said. * Crain’s | Long-awaited O’Hare concessions contracts put out for bid: The city of Chicago is finally putting out for bid the concessions contract for O’Hare’s domestic terminals, one of the most lucrative deals at the airport. But the management and operation of more than 100 restaurants and shops in Terminals 1 and 3 will look very different. Today those deals are largely held by just two vendors — HMSHost and Hudson Group. But a Department of Aviation website shows 20 individual contracts up for bid, as well as another deal to operate duty-free shops. * Sun-Times | 2 Chicago cops, including deputy chief, charged in tire-slashing incident, sources say: Deputy Chief Roberto Nieves, 53, and Officer Jacob Gies, 26, were both charged with misdemeanor counts of criminal damage to property, police said in a statement. They surrendered to police at the Central District, 1718 S. State St., according to an internal police alert. They have both been relieved of their policing powers, and Nieves was demoted to captain, police said. * Sun-Times | Evanston shelter mourns former resident killed in Blue Line shooting: ‘Nobody’s really OK’ : Connections for the Homeless helped Margaret Miller Johnson secure housing in 2020. They do not know how she ended up on the Blue Line but said her death is a painful reminder: “Our society can and should do better.” * Daily Herald | A green resting place: Palatine Catholic cemetery embraces natural burial trend: Run by the Archdiocese of Chicago, the Meadows of St. Kateri, a new section at St. Michael the Archangel Cemetery, now caters to green burials. “Natural burial has been becoming more and more prevalent in society. The requests from families for natural burial have continuously increased every year,” said Ted Ratajczyk, executive director of Catholic Cemeteries of the Archdiocese of Chicago. * Tribune | Feds flag Chicago-area business magnate over alleged tax fraud involving NFL players: A search warrant recently unsealed in U.S. District Court alleged John Burgess, 75, of North Barrington, directed a scheme to “aid and assist” dozens of National Football League clients in filing false returns that reported hundreds of thousands of dollars in phony charitable contributions and business losses, dramatically altering the players’ tax due. The investigation began in 2017 and centers on two Burgess-owned companies: Valuation Advisory Services, a tax preparation business; and Entertainment Tax Advisors LLC, a consulting services firm that at one point counted around 50 professional athletes as clients, according to the sworn affidavit from a special agent with the IRS criminal investigation division. * WCBU | Peoria County Board of Health ends efforts to implement Cure Violence: The unanimously-passed motion to terminate the health department’s contract, effective immediately, followed an almost two-hour executive session at a special meeting of the Peoria County Board of Health Thursday night. Board of health secretary Ben Brewer told WCBU the entire discussion was held in an executive session because terminating a contract opens the possibility of potential litigation. He said an additional motion, to have an audit performed on the department’s business with Cure Violence, is typical of any contract termination. * Madison Record | Class action over $180 million Casino Queen pension wipeout settles: Former owners of Casino Queen settled a claim that they deliberately sold the casino to employees on terms that nearly wiped out their $180 million pension plan. Ryan Wheeler of Washington D.C., one of eight lawyers representing pension plan participants, reported the settlement to U.S. District Judge David Dugan on Sept. 3. * Pantagraph | Rivian moves toward potential expansion across the street from Normal plant: The company’s plans to subdivide the property, designating two 90-acre parcels for future development, earned a positive recommendation from the Normal Planning Commission on Thursday. The Normal Town Council has the final say on the plans, which also call for an extension of College Avenue. * WCIA | Lincoln fire under control, building likely a total loss: Aaron Johnson, the Chief of the Lincoln Fire Department, said the fire is under control but the building that burned is likely a total loss. He added that there isn’t much holding the building up. Caution tape has been set up to keep people away from the unstable ruins. * Bloomberg | How Local Governments Got Hooked on One Company’s Janky Software: Clerks and lawyers were worried, to put it mildly, about North Carolina’s $100 million-plus software upgrade. After more than three years of custom development, the state was finally ready to introduce Odyssey, a digital suite that promised to streamline trial date scheduling, court document sharing, fine collection and communication among divisions. But within the first few months that four counties adopted Odyssey early last year, state administrators discovered 573 defects. Users complained about the “wheel of death” that spun interminably when they tried to load cases. There were reports of glitches resulting in erroneous court summons, inaccurate speeding tickets and even wrongful arrests.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel 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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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Sep 6, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Shaw Local…
* A lot going on in Downstate today…
* NBC Chicago…
* Freedom From Religion Foundation…
* Illinois State Rifle Association…
* Tribune | City sees modest improvement in violence figures over the summer: Chicago recorded 186 homicides between June 1 and Aug. 31, data show. Another 764 people suffered nonfatal gunshot wounds in that span. Summer 2023 saw 190 homicides while 747 others were shot and wounded. A year earlier, in 2022, the city recorded 207 homicides with another 957 shot over the summer. * Sun-Times | Logan Square art gallery founder calls arrest, citations harassment — and neighbors agree: Trejon D’Angelo Williams said he created the gallery at 2334 N. Milwaukee Ave. to highlight marginalized artists, but he says he has been hindered due to harassment by Chicago police. He said police have been a constant presence at the venue, which showcases provocative art — most recently an exhibit about the war in Gaza and police violence. Ald. Daniel La Spata (1st) said Chicago police told him they were not proactively checking on Williams, but responding to 911 calls when they visited Aug. 21. They claimed they arrested Williams after he shoved officers, which resulted in injuries, La Spata said. * Sun-Times | Humboldt Park ‘basement’ comedy club shut down after Instagram video goes viral: For five years, the Humboldt Jungle was the cool kids club, an underground comedy and music venue inside a residential basement that provided a space for local performers and audience members in the know. Humboldt Park resident Nathan Weil operated the secret space out of his home. Potted plants adorned the basement venue to give it a jungle feel, and patrons could bring their own alcohol. The shows had become popular enough to attract the attention of the popular Best Date Food Instagram page, which posted a video of the space in late August. * Daily Northwestern | University administration rolls out new demonstration, discrimination policies: The updated Demonstration policy will enforce new requirements, barring overnight demonstration and adding limitations on what the University considers “activity that disrupts classes and other functions of the University, including prohibiting demonstrations at the Rock before 3 p.m. on weekdays and the use of amplified sound in that area before 5 p.m.” * Tribune | Former assistant state’s attorney who headed wrongful conviction unit amid scrutiny sues Kim Foxx alleging discrimination: Nancy Adduci, who began her career at the Cook County state’s attorney’s office in 1996, filed a federal lawsuit last month that accuses Foxx and the office of demoting and firing her due to her age and race. Adduci, who is white, said in the complaint that Foxx’s deputies in October 2023 demoted her from her position supervising the Conviction Integrity Unit, now called the Conviction Review Unit, telling her they sought someone “more representative of the community” for the role. * Daily Herald | How many officers does a suburban police department need? Answers vary: “You really need to know what your officers’ workload is and when the peaks and valleys are,” said Leonard Matarese, the managing partner at the Center for Public Safety Management at the International City/County Management Association. “You’ve got to really dig into the details, but that’s not something many police departments are equipped to do.” After keeping its police staffing level steady at about 108 sworn officers for the better part of a decade, Palatine is one of those suburbs ready to increase its ranks. The shift comes after officials identified a greater need for neighborhood-based policing and community services. * Daily Southtown | Summit Hill District 161 calls for quick changes to ‘inexcusable’ school bus service: The CEO and founder of Safeway Transportation Services Corp. took full responsibility Wednesday for the bus problems that disrupted the start of school at Summit Hill Elementary District 161 in Frankfort. Meanwhile, the District 161 School Board and administration demanded the bus company improve its services as quickly as possible. […] [Board member John Winters] said he was disturbed hearing about kindergarten students riding the bus for two hours in the afternoon and having bathroom accidents during the long ride. * News-Gazette | Siblings to be honored as grand marshals of Arcola Broomcorn Festival: For many years, Terry and Angie Thornton have let people attending the Arcola Broomcorn Festival know what is going on during the festivities. This year, they will be part of what’s going on. The brother-sister Arcola natives will serve as grand marshals of the 53rd broomcorn festival parade. * Pantagraph | Illinois State, Wesleyan universities safe after false reports of threats connected to WIU shooting: No active shooter and no credible threats were found, according to statements from ISUPD and BPD. The departments noted the rumors about a threat in Bloomington-Normal came at the same time as a shooting near Western Illinois University, almost two hours west of the Twin Cities. * WAND | Man who escaped Sangamon Co. jail arrested by marshals in Springfield: The sheriff’s office said that Chane L. Jones, 42, had been booked on Tuesday for burglary and theft and was able to “mingle with three other inmates, who were administratively released from custody” Jones was arrested by sheriff’s deputies and US Marshals in the 1100 block of North 5th Street in Springfield. He is back in custody and faces additional charges. * WCIA | ‘It left a lasting impact on our family’: Central IL woman urges more Nurse Honor Guard volunteers: When a nurse passes away after a career of serving his or her patients, the care doesn’t stop. The Nurse Honor Guard program aims to remember them even at the end of their lives. Phyllis Rogers called Carle Hospital in Urbana her office for many years. She started in family medicine and eventually switched to a management role. But Ali Boatright, her daughter, said her stethoscope was always close by. * NYT | Republicans Seize on False Theories About Immigrant Voting: There is no indication that noncitizens are voting in large numbers. And yet the notion that they will flood the polls — and vote overwhelmingly for Democrats — is animating a sprawling network of Republicans who mobilized around former President Donald J. Trump’s false claims of a rigged election in 2020 and are now preparing for the next one.
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And now for something a little different
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * NY Times…
* Michigan AFL-CIO chief of staff…
Heh.
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Sean Grayson’s history of credibility issues includes bringing charges with no evidence
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here is Grayson admitting he had no evidence against Adkins… * The transcript…
* Back to the story…
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small. We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Gillian, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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What in the heck is going on at TopGolf?
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * NCTV…
* Make that 24 arrests. Naperville Sun…
* The Naperville Sun in April…
* More from the Sun…
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What’s going on at Menard?
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Southern…
* From the Illinois Department of Corrections…
Menard was still on a Level One lockdown when Sen. Bryant attempted to gain access last Friday. Also, I’m told that St. Clair Emergency Special Services refused to respond to a third call from the prison because they hadn’t found anything at all on the two prior trips.
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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In less than one year, a new law will create credit card chaos for millions of Illinois consumers, small business owners and workers who rely on tips. The law changes how your credit card is processed and has never been done anywhere in the world. The end result is windfall for corporate mega-stores paid for through costly operational hurdles for small businesses and a loss of convenience and privacy for consumers who could have to pay tax and gratuity with cash. There’s still time to protect Illinois small business owners, consumers and workers by repealing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act now! For more information, visit guardyourcard.com/Illinois.
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Open thread
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune | Experts say anti-immigrant rhetoric led to viral — and incorrect — allegations of a migrant takeover: Immigration experts — who pointed to similar incidents that have unfolded across the country in recent days — said some people are spreading misleading content about migrants on social media to sway voters for anti-immigrant candidates and causes. Panic over the emergence of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua spread in Colorado last week after Fox News in Denver aired a surveillance video. The footage, which also went viral, showed a group of men armed with semi-automatic long guns and pistols in an apartment complex in the city of Aurora. * WTTW | Illinois Doesn’t Have Parole. A Group of Incarcerated Men is Working to Change That: At 46 years old, Raúl Dorado is 26 years into a life sentence at Stateville Correctional Center. […] “All of us who formed this nonprofit, we all either had a life without parole sentence or we had a de facto life sentence, or virtual life, which means you have so much time, you can’t outlive your sentence,” he said before his Prison + Neighborhood Arts/Education Project (PNAP) class in Stateville’s education building. * Fox 2 Now | Illinois to soon ban mini shampoo bottles in hotel rooms: The law goes into effect beginning July 1, 2025, for hotels with 50 rooms or more and beginning Jan. 1, 2026, for hotels with less than 50 rooms. […] However, the law says a hotel may still provide personal-care products in small, single-use plastic bottles at no charge to a person, but only upon request at a place other than a room or public bathroom. * KHQA | Union leaders demand overhaul of Illinois job posting system amid vacancies: Representatives from the local AFSCME took to the streets to let their voices be heard about the frustrations with the Illinois Central Management Services. The Illinois CMS posts job openings for state workers, but has seen some issues in the recent months. Since February, CMShas failed to post job openings for union related positions. * WICS | Doctors scramble for solutions amid mental health worker shortage: “The whole mental health system suffers, and the whole healthcare suffers when you don’t have access to psychiatrists,” said Dr. Kari Wolf, Chair of Psychiatry for the SIU School of Medicine. Many doctors have been feeling the impact of not having enough mental health professionals, which has been declining since before the pandemic. “Other professionals are left trying to manage psychiatric conditions,” Wolf said, “and they just don’t have the training or expertise.” * Sun-Times | Zone offense? Cardona says he has votes to become Zoning Committee chair — with or without mayor’s support: Business and labor leaders opposed to the mayor’s choice, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, drafted Ald. Felix Cardona to run as a compromise candidate. The Northwest Side alderperson is so confident he has enough support, he’s advising Mayor Brandon Johnson to back off or risk an embarrassing defeat. Sigcho-Lopez is not so sure. * Sun-Times | City Council’s Budget Committee chair to summon CPS CEO Martinez to explain pension defiance: Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) called it borderline “malfeasance” for Schools CEO Pedro Martinez to push through a $9.9 billion school budget that does not include the pension payment the city had absorbed until then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot shifted the cost to CPS. * Tribune | Safe Passage workers honored for protecting CPS students on walks to and from school: Glenda Rivera’s teenage son was shot while walking just across the street from his high school in Hermosa. Rivera’s son survived. But eight years later, when her daughter enrolled in the same school, Rivera felt that she needed to do something to protect the children in her neighborhood from violence on their way to get an education. So she joined her local Safe Passage team, donning a neon vest and standing guard every morning and afternoon as local students walked to and from class. She has now worked for Chicago Public Schools’ Safe Passage program for seven years and counting, she said. * Sun-Times | Pace, CPS paratransit drivers reach tentative contract deal, potentially ending weekslong strike: Nearly 800 drivers walked off the job Aug. 16 in protest of what they said were unfair wages. After reaching a tentative deal with SCR Medical Transportation, they could be back at work by the end of the week if they vote to ratify the contract Thursday. […] Chicago Public Schools said it is “encouraged” that a new deal could soon be reached. * Tribune | Obama Foundation fundraising slows; new museum teaser video released: The foundation raised $129 million in 2023, its lowest sum of the last seven years, according to IRS Form 990 filings, which are required annually from nonprofits. The year before, it raised $311 million, though the bulk of that sum came from tech titans Jeff Bezos and Brian Chesky. The development team raised $1.5 billion through the end of 2023, foundation spokeswoman Gloria Nlewedim told the Tribune in a statement, but “we saw fewer gifts of $25M+ than in previous years, which led to slightly below-average results,” last year. * Block Club | Chicago’s Getting A Picture-Perfect Weekend With Sunny Skies, Cooler Temperatures: Thursday is expected to be mostly sunny and warm, with a high near 85 degrees, while Friday will top out at 69 degrees and could see isolated showers, according to the National Weather Service. But the good weather really kicks in Saturday, when the skies are expected to be sunny and temperatures will hit 65 degrees, according to the National Weather Service. * WBEZ | What’s That Building? Old Town School of Folk Music: In the 1990s, a Chicago public library building that had sat unused for a decade got a second life. Or maybe, because of the traditions at the Old Town School of Folk Music, which took over the Art Deco building, it’s more accurate to say it got a Second Half. The building is now a fine place to watch live music — or make some. In the main auditorium, 450-seat Maurer Hall, nobody’s more than 45 feet from the stage, and over that stage hangs a mural from the WPA era. * Sun-Times | White Sox top Orioles, halt 12-game losing streak: Producing a formula not seen in weeks — three homers, a strong effort from the starting pitcher, scoreless relief pitching and two excellent defensive plays — the Sox improved to 5-38 since the All-Star break. At 32-109, they need to finish 11-10 in their last 21 games against the Red Sox, Guardians, Athletics, Angels, Padres and Tigers to avoid the 1962 Mets’ record of 120 losses. * Daily Southtown | Attorney for embattled Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard labels trustees corrupt, says she has ‘not committed any crimes’: At what was to have been a regularly scheduled Village Board meeting, Beau Brindley, an attorney hired some weeks ago by Henyard, said trustees who are at odds with her have “taken it upon themselves to try to take away the power of the mayor,” and labeled it “political corruption of the worst kind.” Brindley said that Henyard “is under attack by a corrupt board of trustees that believe they can subvert the will of the people.” * Fox Chicago | Dolton’s new Village Administrator faces scrutiny over past allegations: The latest appointment by Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard has sparked significant controversy, as newly hired Village Administrator Michael A. Smith faces questions about his past legal troubles, including allegations of sexual harassment involving a 15-year-old girl and a history of multiple criminal charges. * WGN | Tiffany Henyard’s party goes on, despite trustees’ efforts to stop it: “Let me make sure I’m crystal clear about this: I ain’t never took a goddam thing in my life,” Henyard told Facebook viewers during a livestream from the outdoor gathering. The event was promoted as the “Friends of Tiffany A. Henyard Picnic,” which immediately set off alarm bells among her opponents, who noted that “Friends of Tiffany A. Henyard” is also the name of the embattled politician’s campaign fund. * Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk sued in dispute over how her bills are paid: The DuPage County state’s attorney’s office has asked a judge to order DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek to comply with county regulations regarding the payment of her bills so vendors can be paid in a timely manner. The lawsuit, called a writ of mandamus, was filed Wednesday. It claims the clerk is breaking state law when she refuses to indicate from where in her budget a bill should be paid when the budget line item for the expense does not have enough money for the payment. * Daily Herald | Kane County free speech zone questioned by board members, public: Kane County Board Chairman Corinne Pierog said Wednesday that a First Amendment zone was created at the Kane County Government Center to ensure people had a place to speak — not to prohibit them from doing so anywhere else on the campus. But people who have been handing out leaflets at the county campus in Geneva say Pierog established the zone last week because the materials criticized her. * Daily Herald | Fox River to flow freely through Carpentersville with dam removal: The Fox River will soon flow freely from Algonquin to Elgin. Crews will begin work on a $1.2 million project to remove the Carpentersville Dam this month. The project, which will be finished in November, will create a 10.2-mile unimpeded flow of the Fox River — the longest free-flowing stretch through Kane County. “May this be the model and lead domino in a movement that carries river restoration efforts progressively downstream,” said Friends of the Fox River President Gary Swick at a ribbon-tying event Wednesday to celebrate the start of the project. * Daily Herald | How a nonprofit is tackling math anxiety in girls: Now Mission:MathMinds has entered into a partnership with the Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund and the Herman + Rasiej Mathematics Initiative to further its mission and support innovative programs addressing math anxiety in girls. Programs include mentoring, scholar camps, national conferences, a global literacy campaign, and STEM kit donations to schools, as well as working with partners around the globe. * KWQC | East Moline mayor helps save veteran’s life after heart attack: Mayor Freeman says he was attending the Rock Island County Democrats Labor Day Picnic at Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council in East Moline. His friend, who is a 76-year-old Navy veteran was also in attendance and collapsed after he had a heart attack. Mayor Freeman’s friend’s grandson alerted him that his grandfather was having a heart attack, and that’s when he jumped in to perform CPR. * WCIA | ‘We have made no progress on the issues that we organized around:’ UIS non-tenured faculty union file deamand for federal mediation: The non-tenured faculty union at UIS is fairly new, forming at the beginning of the year. Now, they’re hoping to create a more productive conversation to get a new contract. “Many of our non-tenured faculty were suddenly given contracts that asked them to teach additional classes without any additional compensation,” Fenton said. * Pantagraph | Illinois State University rally denounces discrimination after hate crime report: ozens of students, faculty, staff and others at Illinois State University demonstrated Wednesday afternoon against discrimination of queer students on the Redbird campus. The rally came 10 days after the ISU Police Department issued an advisory on Facebook stating that four suspects confronted a student and knocked him off his scooter in the early morning hours of Aug. 24 outside the Bone Student Center. Investigators said the student was repeatedly punched in the face and called offensive, homophobic terms, prompting the police department to investigate the incident as a hate crime. * Journal Gazette | Charleston, Mattoon wastewater treatment plants getting solar power: The cities of Charleston and Mattoon are pursuing the construction of solar arrays at their wastewater treatment plants with the goal of helping save money on powering these facilities. In Charleston, construction is underway for the array across from the wastewater treatment plant at 1200 W. Madison Ave. In Mattoon, the City Council voted Tuesday night to approve a power purchase agreement for the planned array at the 820 S. Fifth Place plant. Both cities are working with Renewable Energy Evolution and Commercial Electric Inc. of Lake Forest on these projects. * WSIL | Low water levels in the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers impact local businesses: With lower water levels, Golcanda’s Marina Manager Keith Collier says they could see fewer people stopping by. “We have a lot of visitors, river traffic, pleasure crafts that come from the Evansville area down here regularly. So if they’re having issues north of us or south of us, it could affect us,” Collier said. * AP | Right-wing influencers were duped to work for covert Russian influence operation, US says: An indictment filed Wednesday alleges a media company linked to six conservative influencers — including well-known personalities Tim Pool, Dave Rubin and Benny Johnson — was secretly funded by Russian state media employees to churn out English-language videos that were “often consistent” with the Kremlin’s “interest in amplifying U.S. domestic divisions in order to weaken U.S. opposition” to Russian interests, like its war in Ukraine.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel 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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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Sep 5, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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