Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Saw these folks last weekend at the Salt Shed. They still have it… Entertaining passers-by
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times | UAW strike spreads to GM, Stellantis parts sites in Bolingbrook, Naperville: Two auto parts distribution sites in the Chicago suburbs are striking Friday, after the president of the United Auto Workers expanded its action against major automakers by walking out of 38 General Motors and Stellantis parts centers in 20 states. Ford was spared additional strikes because the company has met some of the union’s demands during negotiations over the past week, said UAW President Shawn Fain. As a result, Ford’s Chicago operations are not included in the new walkouts. * Tribune | Blood suppliers warn of potential rationing at hospitals if donors don’t step up: ‘We need it now’: “We don’t ever want to be in a situation where we have to start making a decision on who does and doesn’t get blood,” said Versiti’s area vice president, Amy Smith. “We need it now.” Versiti seeks to have 10,000 units of blood in its inventory. Instead, inventory has dropped to 2,800 units for the nonprofit, which supplies blood to 85 nearby hospitals, including Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Edward-Elmhurst Health and Silver Cross Hospital. * WCIA | Scherer files bill to give Dennis Lab students their summer back, but at a cost: Dennis Lab students started the school year two weeks late. The two Dennis Lab buildings in Decatur were found to be structurally unsafe this past summer and the district set up modular classrooms for students. But they were not ready by the official start of the school year. Since they started two weeks late, the students are also scheduled to go two weeks longer in this summer. * Press Release | Governor Pritzker joins U of I System board in roundtable discussion: “Affordability really matters,” Pritzker said. “Scholarship money and financial aid is the most important thing, at least from the General Assembly and the governor, that we can do for you.” U of I System President Tim Killeen said the governor’s participation in the meeting was a reflection of the state government’s extensive commitment to and support of higher education, as well as the role that the system plays in the state’s overall well-being. * WTTW | Debate Continues Over Plan to Raise Real Estate Taxes on High-Priced Homes to Fight Homelessness in Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson recently announced a new proposal dubbed “Bring Chicago Home,” which would raise about $100 million dollars to fight homelessness by raising taxes on all sales above $1 million, and then an additional hike on sales of more than $1.5 million dollars. The proposal would also slash the transfer tax on real estate that sells below $1 million. * WCIA | Drug company announces move into Decatur using former Akorn building: Rising Pharmaceuticals, based in New Jersey, announced its move in the community earlier this week. Company officials said they plan to use the former Akorn building to make and package sterile products. Back in February, Akorn announced that it was filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and laying off its hundreds of workers. It sparked outrage from local politicians and prompted a state investigation. […] Rising Pharmaceuticals said the move into Decatur is expected to improve the company’s portfolio and boost the country’s supply chain. * CBS Chicago | Hundreds turn out in Chicago suburb’s municipal court to pay tickets they didn’t know they had: “At first, I thought it was $50 – and then I had to put my glasses on,” said Elizabeth Watson. Watson quickly saw an extra zero for a total sum of $500 – if she did stand in the line to appear in court. * Crain’s | Chicago’s hospitality business hasn’t seen this bullish an outlook since 2019: Travel and hospitality in Chicago continue to make a comeback from the depths of the COVID pandemic, when at a point in 2020 hotel occupancies sank to a low of 26%. Travel industry consultant HVS, employing research from STR Inc. as well as its own surveys of hotels and restaurants, recently released its most bullish assessment of the Chicago market since 2019. * STLPR | Barges are very efficient. Does that make them a good climate alternative for shipping?: It would take more than 1,000 semitrucks to carry the same load as 15 barges and a single tow boat, the standard for this part of the Mississippi River, he said. That’s significant given that the transportation sector accounts for about 28% of the greenhouse gas emissions in the United States. But only about 2% of that sector is ships and boats, Rohde said. * Block Club | The Voice Of The CTA Hits 25-Year Milestone Of Telling Us Where We Are: The polished voice actor, now 64, drives down to Chicago two or three times a year to record updates to the transit system. Most recently Crooks told Chicagoans about detours due to the Blue Line’s West Side rebuild, laid down sharper recordings for the new 7000-series trains and gave folks a reminder to give up their seats to “people who are pregnant.” * SJ-R | Sangamon County home prices rose 8.2% in August, with houses listed at a median of $194,800: Sangamon County’s median home was 1,885 square feet, listed at $108 per square foot. The price per square foot of homes for sale is up 4.5% from August 2022. * SJ-R | A memorial service for trailblazing SIU physician to be held on Saturday: Robinson-McNeese was best known for his work in diversity and inclusion initiatives at SIU, helping to found the Office of Diversity, Multicultural and Minority Affairs, serving as the system’s executive director of diversity initiatives, and for collaborating with Springfield Public Schools District #186 to create the Physician Pipeline Preparatory Program (P4). * Daily Southtown | Homer Glen mayor nixes parade request as strife between village, township mounts: The village of Homer Glen has declined Homer Township’s application to conduct its annual Independence Day parade as political tensions between some local leaders were heightened during meetings this month. Homer Glen Mayor Christina Neitzke-Troike said she felt the parade, which usually takes place in late June in conjunction with HomerFest, has become too political when she and village staff declined the township’s request to use village streets. The application was not voted on by the Village Board. * Commercial-News | Tilton cannabis dispensary now open; cultivation center construction underway: It had a soft opening Friday and Saturday. An official grand opening will be Saturday for the dispensary and the two other businesses of the 14,500-square feet building. The site also includes Molly’s Joint, cannabis consumption lounge with couches and tables and chairs; and a bar/restaurant area with video gaming machines and an outdoor patio and grass area for bands and food trucks. * WTTW | Lin-Manuel Miranda Talks Chicago, His PBS Roots and the Return of ‘Hamilton’: Lin-Manuel Miranda made a stop in Chicago to commemorate the official return of “Hamilton.” Arts Correspondent Angel Idowu sat down with Miranda to get his take on why the show’s return to Chicago is so special.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Another supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Question of the day
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * We’ve all seen the amusing back and forth over the US Senate’s relaxing of its attire rule. But the Illinois Senate also has a rule…
It’s generally defined as “business attire.” Men must wear a jacket and tie, for example. Masks are considered to be “attire,” and that’s how they enforced their mandate during the pandemic. * The Question: Should the Illinois Senate drop its attire rule? Make sure to explain your answer and stick to Illinois, please. Thanks.
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Illinois State Library closed after emailed bomb threat
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Illinois Secretary of State’s office…
…Adding… I’m told there are no suspects as of now. But the incident “will be investigated and the FBI will be notified.”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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*** UPDATED x1 *** Illinois *not* spared from expanded UAW strike
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Illinois has just 5,621 UAW members in the auto industry, according to a recent analysis by Fitch Ratings. All those members work for Ford. The Stellantis plant has been at least temporarily shuttered. From the AP today…
* Meanwhile, Fitch also looked at the effects of a UAW strike on state budgets…
*** UPDATE *** Welp, turns out Illinois wasn’t spared after all. The headline has been changed as a result. From the Illinois AFL-CIO…
* From ABC 7, the impact is pretty small…
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Bailey back to his election-denying ways
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Darren Bailey on Nov. 10, 2020…
* After Bailey won the Republican gubernatorial primary with Trump’s help, he moved away from the former POTUS. From an October, 2022 Sun-Times editorial…
* Now that he’s running for Congress…
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Today’s quotable
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Craig Wall at ABC 7…
There’s more, so go read the whole thing. * It would also be nice to know why the Inspector General didn’t do anything about this for years. I reached out to former IG Joe Ferguson several days ago, but have not yet heard back.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Open thread
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * It’s Friday! What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* Inside Climate News | Pritzker’s signature climate law has seen slow progress on clean energy, green jobs promises: Today, renewable sources make up only 10.5% of power. That includes not only current projects but also others planned with promises they will soon come online. On the promised new “equitable” jobs in clean energy industries, the state has yet to train or help place even one worker, though training programs are being set up to be in place by next year. * WIFR | Trial over Illinois abortion referral law begins in Rockford: Attorneys are arguing the 2016 an amendment to the Illinois Health Care Right of Conscience Act that requires medical and counseling personnel to promote abortion regardless of their ethical or moral views. The act became law seven years ago but it’s not in effect because it’s hung up in court. Lawyers who are trying to stop it say requiring someone to go against their personal and religious beliefs violates the First Amendment of the Constitution * Tribune | National Association of Realtors takes additional steps to address alleged workplace issues: A new member task force will work with outside legal counsel, whose attorneys will conduct an independent assessment of company policies and practices and then make recommendations “to improve our procedures, trainings, and systems to prevent inappropriate behavior, encourage reporting of alleged misconduct, and promote an environment of transparency and accountability,” according to Goldberg’s email. * Daily Southtown | Indicted Orland Park pastor requests to have case severed from Trump, other defendants: Lee’s legal team, led by Illinois-based lawyer David Shestokas, has similarly filed a severance request and is waiting to hear back, Shestokas confirmed“We are of the opinion that, on a couple of levels, Pastor Lee will be prejudiced by having his trial take place with everybody else,” Shestokas said. Shestokas is working on the case with Georgia-based lawyer David Oles. * Chicago Daily Law Bulletin | Illinois Supreme Court disbars 12 attorneys, suspends 11: The Illinois Supreme Court disbarred 12 attorneys and suspended 11, including former ComEd CEO Anne R. Pramaggiore and lobbyist Michael McClain, in lawyer disciplinary orders since its last term. * ABC Chicago | Chicago treasurer denies wrongdoing in exclusive interview after IG launches ethics investigation: Conyears-Ervin repeatedly evaded questions about whether she engaged in such activity. “According to the allegations, employees were doing personal errands on city’s time. That did not occur,” Conyears-Ervin said. “Craig, I am going to speak to the allegations, and the allegation spoke to employees doing work for me on city’s time; that did not occur.” * WCIA | New dispensary planning for future changes to state’s marijuana law: Constructing a business plan is all about planning for the future, but what if your plans are illegal in the present? The owners of Share. — Springfield’s newest dispensary — don’t think that’s a problem.[…] The owners are already building a drive through window on the building. Drive throughs are not allowed by law now, but lawmakers have already considered the change in the past. * WBEZ | ‘A good place:’ Queer youth seek acceptance at state’s first foster home for LGBTQ+ teens: Nationally, about one-third of foster care youth identify as LGBTQ+, and according to researchers, they are at significantly higher risk of experiencing homelessness, physical harm and exchanging sex to meet basic needs. “It’s important that they’re doing this,” said Charles Golbert, a court-appointed lawyer who advocates for children in DCFS custody and a vocal critic of the department. But now, Golbert said, “it needs to be expanded for more than just five beds.” * Sun-Times | My fault Sox game not stopped after stadium shooting, interim police superintendent says: Interim Chicago Police Supt. Fred Waller told the Sun-Times the game was allowed to continue without interruption due to “miscommunication” on the protocol for notifying Major League Baseball. That issue has been addressed and won’t happen again, he said. * WBEZ | Johnson administration defends contract with private defense firm to prop up migrant ‘base camps’: In a brief interview with WBEZ, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas said the city had limited options as it seeks to move people out of police stations as quickly as possible. “There’s not many companies that have this type of capability of literally standing up prefabricated structures driving 50 foot poles, creating flooring, and then staffing 24/7,” Pacione-Zayas said. * Tribune | Cook County chips in to help buy hotels in Evanston and Oak Park for people who are homeless; also approves water bill relief: The board voted to award a $7 million, no-interest, fully forgivable 30-year loan to Connections for the Homeless Inc. so the nonprofit can buy the Margarita Inn in Evanston. It also approved a similar $6.5 million loan to Housing Forward LLC and the Oak Park Residence Corp. for the purchase of the Write Inn in Oak Park. * Tribune | Chicago Plan Commission approves Fulton Market apartment tower that will reserve 30% of its units as affordable: The original plan called for reserving 20% of the units as affordable housing to comply with the city’s Affordable Requirements Ordinance, but after a last-minute push by 27th Ward Ald. Walter Burnett, city planners hammered out a new agreement with the developers, boosting that to 30% using tax increment financing dollars from the local TIF district. * Sateline | States and cities eye stronger protections for gig workers: Roughly 1 in 6 American adults have engaged in gig work for platforms such as Uber, Lyft and DoorDash, according to a 2021 report by the Pew Research Center. But while those jobs promise flexibility and a low barrier to entry, they often pay less on an hourly basis than the prevailing minimum wage and lack basic protections such as overtime, sick pay and unemployment insurance. * Crain’s | Oscar Mayer is renaming its hot dog vehicles, again: Just four months after rebranding as the “Frankmobile,” Oscar Mayer is calling its iconic six-car fleet of hot dog-shaped vehicles the “Wienermobile” once again. “It was a franktastic summer celebrating our 100% Beef Franks with the Frankmobile from coast to coast,” Oscar Mayer Associate Director Kelsey Rice said in a statement. “Though, like many of you, we miss our original icon. Starting this week, we’re welcoming back the Wienermobile.” * Sun-Times | Acorns galore: ‘Mast year’ for oak trees means massive seed production across Chicago: An abundance in acorns this fall is the result of a “mast seeding event,” a phenomenon that only happens once every few years, when oak trees produce a much larger amount of acorns than normal. * Crain’s | Portillo’s expansion plans just got even more aggressive: Portillo’s is boosting its growth goals by more than half, aiming to open at least 920 restaurants around the country in about 20 years. It’s the first time the Oak Brook-based hot dog and Italian beef chain has updated its growth goals since going public in 2021, when it was targeting 600 restaurants in 25 years. Portillo’s also increased its annual growth target to 12% to 15% annually from 10%.
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Live coverage
Friday, Sep 22, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated)
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * IDES | Jobs Up in Most Metro Areas in August: Over-the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in eleven metropolitan areas, decreased in two and was unchanged in one for the year ending August 2023, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). Over-the-year, the unemployment rate increased in thirteen metropolitan areas and decreased in one. * WICS | ACLU meets with Springfield Police Department about Pre-Trial Fairness Act: The meeting also gave the police department a chance to explain what new training was involved and how paperwork would be filled out when it comes to citations. […] “People were afraid that the doors to the jail were going to be open and all kinds of violent offenders were going to be released. That’s not the case at all. If a violent offender is arrested we’ll be in contact with the state’s attorney’s office to let them know why we feel the subject needs detained,” Commander Sara Pickford said. * ABC | Illinois man pleads guilty to trying to burn down planned abortion clinic: Philip J. Buyno of Prophetstown, Illinois, entered the plea Tuesday to a federal charge of attempting to use fire to damage a building used in interstate commerce. Buyno admitted that, on May 20, he brought several containers filled with gasoline with him and used his car to breach the front entrance to a commercial building in Danville to burn it down before it could be used as a reproductive health clinic, prosecutors said. * Capitol News Illinois | Former Illinois State Police trooper who pleaded guilty in relation to deadly crash postpones hearing: Henry Haupt, a spokesperson for Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, said in an email that the hearing had been postponed until Nov. 1 at Mitchell’s request. Mitchell pleaded guilty to two counts of reckless homicide and two counts of aggravated reckless driving in connection with a crash the day after Thanksgiving in 2007 on Interstate 64 east in St. Clair County. That conviction triggered the revocation of his driver’s license. He has tried five times in the past to have his license reinstated. * WAND | IDHA grant provides millions in neighborhood revitalization: The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) Board approved $19 million to support affordable housing and community revitalization efforts across Illinois. The grants are being awarded under the Strong Communities Program (SCP), the initiative will provide funding to 68 units of local governments and land bank authorities for the acquisition, maintenance, rehabilitation, and demolition of abandoned residential properties in their communities. * WSIL | Perry County Steelworkers could go on strike soon if good faith negotiations don’t resume: Eaton’s final offer consisted of a 4 percent increase in wages over the first year and a 3 1/2 percent increase each of the next two years. It was rather appalling to the membership for what they were asking for,” said Dodds. * WTTW | Chicago Sues Monsanto for Polluting City’s Air, Water, Soil with Toxic Chemicals: “Monsanto knew for decades that its commercial PCB formulations were highly toxic and would inevitably produce precisely the contamination and human health risks that have occurred, perpetuating the environmental abuse and stark inequities so many of Chicago’s neighborhoods have long suffered from,” Johnson said in a statement. * Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s team will scrap INVEST South/West name, but not its aims: While Johnson’s team is still evaluating the program, they may take “a very different path” toward investing in the South and West sides, and a forthcoming approach won’t be dubbed INVEST South/West, according to Johnson’s Deputy Mayor of Business and Neighborhood Development, Kenya Merritt. […] But Merritt would not say what exactly Johnson’s new approach will look like. When asked what needs to change about the program, Merritt said Johnson wants to see results. * Crain’s | Chicago-area home prices growing at twice the speed of the nation’s: The median price of homes sold in the nine-county Chicago metro area rose to $339,900 in August, up 9.6% from the same time a year ago, according to data released this morning by Illinois Realtors. Nationally, the median price increased 3.9% to $407,100, according to a separate report from the National Association of Realtors. * CBS Chicago | No threat found after Chicago area school evacuated over bomb threat: North Shore School District 112 said Red Oak Elementary School was evacuated Thursday morning and students were safely relocated to Sherwood Elementary School, after a call of a bomb threat. Shortly before 10:30 a.m., police and school district officials confirmed a thorough search of the building found no credible threat. The school was set to resume normal operations at 11:30 a.m., with all bus routes running at 11 a.m. * AP | Biden uses executive power to create a New Deal-style American Climate Corps: In an announcement Wednesday, the White House said the program will employ more than 20,000 young adults who will build trails, plant trees, help install solar panels and do other work to boost conservation and help prevent catastrophic wildfires. * Tribune | Rupert Murdoch, whose creation of Fox News made him a force in American politics, is stepping down: Rupert Murdoch, the 92-year-old Australian media magnate whose creation of Fox News made him a force in American politics, is stepping down as leader of both Fox’s parent company and his News Corp. media holdings. Fox said Thursday that Murdoch would become chairman emeritus of both companies, effective at board meetings in November. His son, Lachlan, will become News Corp. chairman and continue as chief executive officer of Fox Corp. * AP | 4 free COVID-19 tests per household will be available Monday — how to get them: Orders can be placed online starting Monday via COVIDtests.gov — and the tests will be delivered for free by the U.S. Postal Service, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. * USA Today | Paying for X? Elon Musk considers charging all users a monthly fee to combat ‘armies of bots’: Musk said X will come out with a “lower-tier pricing” than the existing cost for current X premium subscribers. He did not specify what the pricing could be. “We want it to be a small amount of money,” Musk said. “This is a longer discussion, but in my view, this is actually the only defense against the vast armies of bots.” * NYT | Mexico Feels Pressure of Relentless Migration From South America: In Mexico, people coming from South America are outpacing those from Central America for the first time since data has been collected. Mexican officials recorded 140,671 migrants from South American countries the first seven months of the year, compared to 102,106 from Central America, with record numbers coming from Venezuela and Ecuador. * MediaIte | Project Veritas Suspends All Operations Amid Devastating Layoffs and Fundraising Struggles: Six staffers were laid off from the embattled organization this week, sources said, including all remaining journalists and one development associate. One former Project Veritas staffer said just 11 people remain on the non-profit’s payroll, including CEO Hannah Giles. Kiyak wrote in the letter that the group cannot “carry the present staff count any longer” and reminded those being laid off of their nondisclosure agreements. * Tribune | ‘I’m a little bit of everything’: Margarito Flores opens up in exclusive interview about twins’ rise to top of Chicago drug trade, new law enforcement seminar: Chicago-born Margarito Flores Jr. was around eight years old when his father started taking him and his twin brother Pedro on car rides to Mexico. It was mostly business for his father, a hard-scrapping immigrant making ends meet by hauling drugs across the border.
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Caption contest!
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * The man has moves…
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It’s just a bill
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rep. Dan Ugaste…
* Here’s the House Resolution from Rep. Ugaste…
* WAND…
* WAND…
* Rep Nabeela Syed filed HB4142…
* WTTW…
* Rep. Dave Vella filed HB4143 yesterday…
* HR409…
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Bears in disarray
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * The full Fields quote is here. Patrick Finley at the Sun-Times…
Fields then walked it back, but he was right the first time. The coaching is awful. The Bears have ruined countless quarterbacks. It’s been fashionable to express dreams about what could’ve happened if the Bears had taken Patrick Mahomes in the draft, but the Bears probably would’ve ruined him, too. * Speaking of coaches, here’s Mark Potash at the Sun-Times…
Attorney Andrew Stroth’s full comment…
* SB Nation’s James Dator…
* Ugh…
* Leaving this here…
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A little context, please
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * This WBBM Radio story is completely devoid of context…
Nobody remembers cash bail? It was the law of the land until the end of this past weekend. But that long history is already being shoved down the memory hole. People were released after posting bond and then quite often committed other crimes. The cash just didn’t matter. * A quick Google search would find this June story about McHenry County…
* Here’s one from May…
* Last month…
I could go on, but you get the gist.
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Question of the day
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * The last time I posted something like this, one of my readers applied and accepted a legislative staff position. So, even though it’s late notice, let’s try it again…
It’s obviously not going to be easy to recruit a new Research & Appropriations Director because a majority of the staff is trying to form a union. Anyway… * The Question: Did you or a family member ever work on legislative staff? Tell us about it. …Adding… Senate Democratic job openings are here.
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Trib wrings hands over zombie threat
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Leigh Giangreco at Crain’s has a solid story today on the hunt for revenues to fund the upcoming Chicago budget…
Emphasis added for obvious reasons. Notice that nowhere did Giangreco’s story mention a financial transaction tax, which would also require legislative approval. As you have known for months, the governor and the two Democratic legislative leaders flatly oppose a financial transaction tax. * And that brings us to today’s Tribune editorial…
And then it goes on and on about the threat of a transaction tax without mentioning the formidable current and longtime Statehouse opposition, which was reported by the board’s own newspaper. I mean, the editorial didn’t even mention that the state government would have to approve such a tax. Also, too, wasn’t that kind of an abrupt dismissal by the board of the scandal that led to Tilly’s ouster?…
Seems kind of important.
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Open thread
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* Crain’s | Contractor that moved migrants from Florida wins contract to build their tents here: The city of Chicago partnered with the state of Illinois last week to quietly award an up to $29 million contract to erect large tents to serve as “base camps” in an effort to “expeditiously” move migrants from the city’s police stations before winter. The contract was awarded just a few days after Mayor Brandon Johnson announced plans to “move with expediency” to transfer the nearly 1,600 migrants currently living in the city’s police stations and airports to base camps before winter. * Oak Park Journal | Libraries on edge as bomb threats grow: “We’re all really relieved that these threats have turned out to be false, but, at the end of the day, they’re still threats and those aren’t designed to make people feel comfortable or safe,” said Vicki Rakowski, director of the Forest Park Public Library. * Daily Herald | Murphy honored for support of people with various disabilities: State Senate Assistant Majority Leader Laura Murphy (Des Plaines) was presented the 2023 Illinois Association of Rehabilitation Facilities’ Champion Award by Josh Evans, president and CEO, during the association’s 2023 IARF Educational Conference & Expo at the East Peoria Embassy Suites. * WBBM | Suburban prosecutor says end of cash bail in Illinois is already backfiring on public safety: State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally offered two examples of people he would like to have seen put in jail, pending trial, but who instead were freed because judges had no choice. * WMBD | Washington mayor running for state senate: Washington Mayor Gary Manier announced Wednesday that he will seek to become an Illinois state senator as a Republican in the next election. According to Manier, he will be running for the 53rd district seat which is currently held by Tom Bennett, a Morris Republican. * Herald-Whig | Frese announces he will not seek reelection: “It has been both an honor and a privilege to represent the fine people of West-Central Illinois for the past eight and a half years,” Frese said. “The job I have been elected to is both quite challenging and very rewarding.” * NBC Chicago | Chicago takes another step toward raising subminimum wage for tipped workers: The move isn’t complete just yet, however. The proposal now heads to the full City Council for a vote, which is expected in two weeks. The change would mean raising the minimum wage for tipped workers from $9 to $15.80 per hour, though such employees could still get tips. Under the guidelines, the $9 hourly wage would rise by 8% for five years until it reaches the $15.80 total. * Crain’s | City Council has its own budget wish list for Johnson: The Johnson administration also has nixed the idea of instituting a service tax, at least for the 2024 budget. In 2019, former Mayor Lori Lightfoot floated a tax on professional services like attorneys and accountants as a way to shore up the city’s pension payments, but the measure requires approval from the Illinois General Assembly, which is now entering its fall veto session. * WBEZ | Midwives could help prevent more deaths. Why don’t more Chicago-area hospitals have them?: Despite research that shows midwives tend to have low C-section rates and better outcomes for both parent and child, WBEZ found many hospitals across the Chicago area are not investing in midwives — or, they’re cutting back. The latest example is Swedish Hospital on the North Side, which has been a training ground for other midwives and a destination for pregnant people who sought out the hands-on care the midwives were known for. * Tribune | Without busing, CPS parents tell board of ed, they’re commuting for hours and risking their jobs: Jha was among the scores of Chicago Public Schools parents who received a three-week notice that their children wouldn’t have bus transportation to and from school this year. For Jha, not only will winter affect the long stretches of walking and waiting outdoors for buses during their daily travel, but costs are adding up, totaling about $400 a month. * Week 25 | Group forms to stop CO2 pipeline project in Central Illinois: Berg and more than 1,900 other people have joined the Tazewell County: Stop the CO2 Pipeline Facebook group. Their main concerns were the safety and property values of their homes. Group spokesman Elton Rocke says many people they speak with don’t initially know about the pipeline proposal. * NBC | White House told U.S. ambassador to Japan to stop taunting China on social media: Officials at the National Security Council told Emanuel’s staff in recent days that his comments risk undermining the administration’s efforts to mend deeply strained relations with China, including with a possible meeting this fall between Biden and Xi, according to the officials. * Sun-Times | Bears coordinator Alan Williams resigns after bizarre day at Halas Hall: Williams, who was in his second season as defensive coordinator, left the team last week after a 38-20 loss to the Packers on Sept. 10. His absence and the lack of clarity regarding it led to internet and social-media speculation, including a report that Williams’ home and Halas Hall were “raided” as part of an investigation into presumed wrongdoing. * IEA | Former president of Illinois Education Association dies, fondly remembered: Bob Haisman, who served as president of the Illinois Education Association, from 1993 to 1999 and who was an ardent supporter of public education in Illinois, passed away at age 77 on Sat., Sept. 2 at his home. * Daily Herald | Metra dubious about idea of merging with Pace and CTA: “The cost of action is greater than the cost of inaction,” CMAP’s Laura Wilkison told the board. The key is “not only to go back to where we were (before COVID-19), but to make it better.” * Sun-Times | James Hoge, Sun-Times editor who oversaw era of audacious investigations and 6 Pulitzers, dies at 87: Former Sun-Times Editor James Hoge helped usher in a golden age of Chicago journalism by hiring young talent and signing off on audacious investigative projects, including the Mirage Tavern undercover sting. The newspaper would win six Pulitzer Prizes under his watch.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Sep 21, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.
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*** UPDATED x2 *** Pritzker praises Biden for granting employment authorization to Venezuelan migrants who arrived before August
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for a Biden administration fact sheet. Homeland Security press release excerpt…
Above my pay grade about what’ll happen to anyone who got here starting in August. I’ll update tomorrow. * Gov. Pritzker…
*** UPDATE 1 *** Tribune…
*** UPDATE 2 *** Missed this last night from Mayor Johnson…
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City quietly awarded migrant tent contract
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
The contract is here. It was awarded on September 12th, which is eight days ago. * There’s some chatter online about this item in the contract…
It doesn’t say what happens when ambient temps fall below zero.
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Afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * From today’s Metra board meeting…
All heavy lifts, some more than others. * AG Raoul…
* IDFPR…
* IHDA…
* Rep. Ugaste…
* Isabel’s roundup… * Tribune | After 2 months, COPA unable to find witnesses in CPD Ogden District migrant sex misconduct investigation, council member says: Kiisha Smith, the chair of the Ogden District Council, said during the police council’s monthly meeting on Tuesday that a COPA representative gave her the update last Friday. “Really, nothing’s changed,” Smith told the 30 or so meeting attendees. “They (COPA) stated that they still haven’t found the complaining asylum-seekers, so they still don’t have names, they say they don’t know where they are. I offered to advise them of where the locations were … like if they didn’t know we would provide the information for them to use in the investigation. They claim they knew, but nobody was speaking up.” * Harvard Political Review | Spearheading Progressive Legislation : An Interview with Governor J.B. Pritzker: HPR: This January, you signed the Protect Illinois Communities Act which banned assault rifles and high capacity magazines in the state of Illinois. Yet, there is still a major gun crisis both in your state and across the country. What more needs to be done in order to ensure that both Illinoisans and all Americans are safe from the gun crisis? J.B. Pritzker: Well, let’s start with we should make that national. We should have a national ban on assault weapons. We should have a national ban on switches — that’s something we also banned in Illinois — and high capacity magazines. Switches are what turns your non-automatic weapon into an automatic weapon. So these are things that ought to happen at a federal level. Obviously, the politics of that are more difficult nationally than they are in Illinois. But there’s much more that needs to be done. * Tribune | Cook County Board to consider $300,000 settlement for former commissioner’s aide over being fired after raising harassment claims: The decision must still be approved by the full County Board Thursday but if it is OK’d it would cap off off a yearslong saga first brought to light in 2021 when Cook County’s inspector general determined an elected official that sources identified as Sims retaliated against an employee who complained that Sims’ male chief of staff sent her unwanted, sexually explicit texts and touched her inappropriately. * Crain’s | Illinois police pension fund plans to start investing in loans and private credit: The Illinois Police Officers’ Pension Investment Fund aims to allocate about $300 million into leveraged loans, moving the money from junk bond index funds, according to a document. The fund’s staff will recommend a manager and the allocation to the board in December, said Kent Custer, chief investment officer for the fund. * Crain’s | Proposal to eliminate tipped wage breezes through committee: Originally introduced with a two-year phaseout, Mayor Brandon Johnson and his City Council allies reached a compromise with the Illinois Restaurant Association over the weekend to expand the time restaurants have to pay their employees the city’s full minimum wage to five years. * Tribune | O’Hare, Midway rank low in J.D. Power airport survey, as passengers wait on construction and new dining options: Among the challenges Chicago’s airports face in further improving their satisfaction scores could be getting construction started on a key phase of an overhaul of O’Hare, and improving local food and shopping options, said Mike Taylor, managing director of travel, hospitality and retail at J.D. Power. And that could have broader repercussions, as J.D. Power found more satisfied passengers are likely to spend more money at the airport. * WTTW | Ride Along With a Task Force Working to Reduce Car Jackings in Chicago: The Cook County Sheriff’s Office estimates up to 1,600 carjackings will be committed this year. In response, a multi-agency effort is in place to try and stop and find carjackers before the vehicle is used to commit other crimes. * Block Club Chicago | Old Town Weed Dispensary Rejected By Ald. Brian Hopkins: “While popular opinion is not the only factor I consider when evaluating zoning change requests, the clear survey result combined with the numerous comments received by my office made it apparent that I must deny this zoning change request,” Hopkins said. * Crain’s | Lolla funds new pickleball and tennis courts at Grant Park: Sixteen new pickleball courts and six new tennis courts are now open to the public at Grant Park thanks in part to a $500,000 grant from Lollapalooza. The courts were built with funds from Lolla as well as $41,000 raised by the Grant Park Advisory Council, Block Club Chicago reported. The advisory council began to raise money for new courts after hearing complaints that tennis and pickleball players were clashing over the shared spaces. * Bloomberg | Home insurance ‘bubble’ closer to popping as climate risks mount: First Street estimates that 39 million U.S. homes are insured at artificially suppressed prices compared with the risk they actually face. Of those, nearly 6.8 million homes are covered by state-backed “insurer of last resort” policies. Until now, state regulations that cap increases in insurance premiums and subsidized insurer-of-last-resort programs have hidden the magnitude of the problem, the report’s authors say. But as the number of disasters and the related damages keep rising, they predict, the insurance market will undergo a major adjustment and rates will surge, popping what the nonprofit calls a climate insurance bubble. * Sun-Times | Alan Williams’ status as Bears’ defensive coordinator getting murky: Williams missed last week because of a personal issue. Bears coach Matt Eberflus refused comment to any question about Williams’ status Wednesday, including whether or not he was still the team’s defensive coordinator. “I don’t have any update right now.” * SJ-R | ‘A living testament:’ Segregated firehouse to be restored in Springfield: Engine House No. 5, formerly known as the city’s “colored firehouse,” will be restored to its former condition, complete with a façade. “Those firefighters fought fires that were set during the 1908 race riots so it’s historical for the resilience of Black people and the city,” said ACLU president Kenneth Page. A reception will be held at 5 p.m. on Thursday at the firehouse, located at 1310 E. Adams St., to share its history and restoration plan. * ABC Chicago | 2 West Nile Virus deaths confirmed in DuPage County: The first death was an Addison resident in their 70s. The second was a West Chicago resident in their 60s. Health officials said they both fell ill in late August. So far in 2023 there have been six human cases of West Nile Virus reported in DuPage County. * SJ-R | ‘I feel like I’m coming back home’: Springfield City Council approves new library director: Gwendolyn Harrison started working at Lincoln Library in Springfield as a 16-year-old page. It is where she got her first professional job after earning her master’s degree in library science, working there from 1983 to 1999. On Tuesday, Harrison was unanimously approved by the Springfield City Council as library director.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in… (Updated)
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Meanwhile… In Opposite Land
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Houston Chronicle…
* Moving on to Georgia via the AP…
* The Hill…
* Florida, New Hampshire, Oklahoma via Rolling Stone…
* The Guardian…
* Idaho and Tennessee…
* The Hill…
* AP…
* Indiana…
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Reports: Stellantis may transform Belvidere plant into logistics ‘mega hub’ or EV battery components manufacturer
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Jeff Kolkey at the Rockford Register Star…
* CNBC…
* WTVO…
* Crain’s…
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* The Question: How often do you buy lottery tickets, and have you ever won anything substantial?
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SAFE-T Act to the rescue?
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Edwardsville Intelligencer from September 8th…
* Scott Holland referenced that story in his latest column…
* And now, the Madison County state’s attorney is using the SAFE-T Act to try and put that Troy man back in jail…
* Related…
* Some downstate counties struggled as bail reform took hold this week; one didn’t even try applying the new law: In the McLean County courthouse in Bloomington, three people had pretrial hearings on Monday. The hearings happened in a packed courtroom, with four judges and State’s Attorney Erika Reynolds watching from the gallery. Reynolds was one of several state’s attorneys who joined a failed legal bid to stop the abolition of bail. In an example of Monday’s confusion over the new law’s implementation, the judge, prosecutor and defense attorney debated whether a man arrested Saturday on gun charges was eligible for cash bail under the old system or if he should be processed under the new system. Unlike what played out in Sangamon County, the man’s attorney argued he should be eligible for the old cash bail system, hoping to get his client out of jail. Ultimately, the judge sided with prosecutors, and McLean County had its first hearing on a petition to detain under the new system. Prosecutors successfully argued that the defendant — a 24-year-old accused of possessing a gun as a felon — posed a risk to public safety.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Open thread
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* Capitol News Illinois | As SAFE-T Act goes live, murder suspects previously eligible to post bond are held in jail: In St. Clair County Circuit Court, where nearly 2,000 felony cases and more than 3,400 misdemeanors are filed annually, at least one person was released from jail to await trial on the second day the SAFE-T Act’s bail reform provisions were in effect. A woman accused of aggravated domestic battery for hitting her partner with a piece of wood was released on Tuesday morning. A mother of a newborn, she was released after a detention hearing found she was not a flight risk or a threat to the public or a specific person. * Shaw Local | Downstate prosecutors allow murder suspect to leave jail before his trial: Without cash bail as an option, the suspect would’ve spent the last two weeks in county lockup, and he’d generally be there outside of court appearances as the criminal trial proceeds. Instead, he found the money to buy time at home. That’s the system proponents fought to preserve, including the Madison County state’s attorney who helped the ultimately unsuccessful legal challenge seeking to block the reform. “Accused killer pays $100,000 to leave county jail” isn’t the whole story, but it’s enough information to question how the old system stacks the legal deck – and in whose favor. * Sun-Times | Christy George, top Pritzker aide, named executive director of Chicago DNC host committee: Christy George, Pritzker’s first assistant deputy governor for budget and economy, will serve as the host committee’s permanent executive director effective Sept. 25, the committee announced on Wednesday. The host committee is tasked with raising between $80 and $100 million for the presidential convention, taking place Aug. 19-22. A spokesperson from the host committee described fundraising as “impressive” thus far, but would not disclose a number. * WGN | ‘Dobbs decision just made me angry:’ Pritzker, Democrats return focus to reproductive rights ahead of next election season: “Every state around us in Illinois is an anti-choice state now,” Pritzker added. “And that means that we’ve had a massive increase in the number of women who are seeking just to exercise their fundamental rights, their reproductive rights.” * WBBM | State lawmaker pushes for bill that aims to protect kids from harmful effects of social media: “We’re seeing increase in mental health problems in our minors,” said State Senator Sue Rezin. […] Rezin said the Bill’s objectives are simple and aim to “put protections into place that protect minors from the algorithms, protect minors’ data and protect minors on these social media platforms.” * Sun-Times | Duckworth blasts ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ senator for blocking vote to confirm U.S. attorney in Chicago: Every senator has the ability to put a hold on a nominee. “It is an important tool for senators,” said Duckworth, an Illinois Democrat. But when it goes too far, Duckworth said, it is an abuse of power. […] No senator, Duckworth said, “has abused” the hold power of a single senator “the way Tuberville has.” * The Daily Egyptian | Former Illinois congresswoman Cheri Bustos reflects on her career in Morton-Kenney lecture: Bustos spoke about her upbringing and the political environment that she was surrounded by even as a young child. “We’d have people like [late Illinois Senator] Paul Simon, and just wonderful people over at our house growing up. And what was so great about our household, is never, not once in my entire childhood did my dad ever say ‘go away a little girl, this is an adult conversation,’ so I can sit there and listen to just these amazing stories and these amazing conversations until it is time to go to bed,” she said. “So, it was politics, sports, family/beer, but that was the Callahan household.” * Chalkbeat | Chicago Public Schools enrollment is stable for first time in more than a decade: New preliminary numbers for this school year show just over 322,500 students are registered at CPS schools. The data represents enrollment as of the end of the day Monday, the 20th day of the school year, when the district traditionally takes its official count. On the 20th day of last school year, 322,106 students were enrolled according to official data. CPS enrollment has been in decline for 12 years, so this year’s shift is significant. * WBEZ | Chicago elected officials get a pay bump. But the mayor’s administration won’t say yet who accepted it.: “Details of each elected official’s selection will be made available in the budget to be released by the Mayor to City Council in mid-October,” a spokesperson said in a statement. “Just like all items in the Mayor’s budget recommendation, City Council members have the opportunity to propose amendments for consideration by the full body, with salary and wage determinations made final once the budget is passed and appropriated.” * ABC Chicago | Chicago real estate transfer tax proposal from Mayor Brandon Johnson already faces pushback: The current transfer tax is a flat rate of 0.75% on all property sales in Chicago. The Johnson administration’s revised plans increases the rate to 2% for properties above $1 million and 3% for properties $1.5 million andabove, but Ald. Ramirez Rosa, who is a sponsor of the resolution ,said the selling point to voters is that the rate will decrease for all properties under $1 million. * Fox Chicago | Illinois legislation sets new standard for drug education in schools: Louie’s Law is a mandate for the Illinois Board of Education to create and recommend a comprehensive drug education curriculum because currently there isn’t one. “There’s no mandated curriculums or standards. There’s the school code. The school code is enshrined into law about what public schools have to teach regarding health, regarding art, you know, whatever the subject is. So this was an amendment to the school code,” said Chelsea Laliberte-Barnes, co-chair of the Illinois Harm Reduction and Recovery Coalition. * Poynter | A reporter made sure a retired police chief’s death didn’t go uncovered. Then social media attacked her: When retired police chief Andreas Probst was killed in a hit-and-run last month, Las Vegas Review-Journal crime reporter Sabrina Schnur was the first journalist to arrive on the scene. […] But despite her work documenting Probst’s death, Schnur became the target of anti-Semitic attacks and death wishes over the weekend as social media users questioned why the “media” wasn’t properly covering the attack. Screenshots of the month-old obituary’s headline sparked outrage among readers who falsely assumed the Review-Journal was downplaying Probst’s death. * Tribune | From homebodies to prolific swimmers, researchers track Chicago River fish to find out where they are going and why: Under the muddy surface of the Chicago River, a bluegill swam miles upon miles, back and forth from one end of the river system to another. […] This kind of fish is not known for being a traveler. So the strikingly different behaviors have intrigued researchers from the Shedd Aquarium, Purdue University and the Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant, who are tracking the movements of 80 individual fish in the Chicago River system. * Sun-Times | ‘King Rudy’ walks free after helping feds nab ex-state Sen. Martin Sandoval, dozens of others: A federal judge handed a time-served sentence Tuesday to a longtime Chicago-area drug dealer who pushed “off the charts” amounts of narcotics but then spent seven years helping prosecutors secure charges against dozens of people, including the late state Sen. Martin Sandoval. * NBC Chicago | Illinois man immediately retires after $2M scratch-off lottery win: “When I told my boss the news of my retirement, he wasn’t happy,” the winner said in the release. “He asked me – ‘What’s it going to take to get you to stay?’ I chuckled and said, ‘$2 million dollars!’” * Crain’s | Chicago architect eyes restart of long-stalled tallest tower in the world: Adrian Smith & Gordon Gill Architecture designed what is now known as Jeddah Tower to be the first kilometer-tall building, at more than twice the height of the Willis Tower. Construction began in 2013 but ground to a halt by 2018 about a third of the way up at the 62nd or 63rd story.
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Sep 20, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.
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Afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s…
* Crain’s…
* From the Illinois Education Association…
* This is a pretty easy endorsement because Katz Muhl has already pushed the incumbent (Rep. Jonathan Carroll) into retirement…
* Politico…
As subscribers know, Morgan will likely have a primary opponent. * Commuters Take Action op-ed in the Chicago Tribune…
* Also…
* Isabel’s roundup… * WAND | Illinois clean energy jobs grew 3% in 2022: Clean energy businesses in Illinois added more than 3,600 workers in 2022, now employing 123,799 people in Illinois. That is according to a new study of employment data released by the national business group E2 (Environmental Entrepreneurs and Evergreen Climate Innovations. * WBEZ | CPS math scores still lag pre-pandemic levels, while English has recovered. Here’s a model CPS says can help: Overall, only 17.5% of Chicago Public Schools elementary students met or exceeded math standards on the 2023 state test, according to scores released Tuesday. That is slightly better than 14.9% in 2022, but still less than 23.6% in 2019 before the pandemic. * Chalkbeat | In Chicago’s early state test results, encouraging gains and some areas of concern: Overall, 26% of students who took the reading test this year met or exceeded state standards — just two percentage points lower than results on the 2019 test, the last one before COVID upended learning. In math, 17% of students scored proficient, compared with 24% in 2019. * NPR Illinois | One woman’s abortion story: ”I remember somebody on the same day as me. She said she already had five kids and just could not couldn’t handle any more kids. She knew having an abortion was going to be what was best for her because then she wouldn’t be taking anything away from her other children. But she still, she just felt so bad and was crying like the entire day. And then had to be outside with those other people. And I just felt so bad for her, too, because she really only had that one option to go with, and then she’s being berated for it walking in and out of the clinic.” * Rockford Register Star | Most Rockford area defendants go free on first day of no cash bail in Illinois: Over five hours, Paccagnini presided over 26 defendant appearances ranging from domestic battery to endangering the life of a child. Of those, Winnebago County State’s Attorney J. Hanley asked Paccagnini to detain nine defendants after an arrest over the weekend. Paccagnini declined to detain all but two saying that measures like “no contact orders” and other pretrial release conditions should be sufficient to protect the community. * Crain’s | Lolla gave Chicago economy a $422 million jolt, study says: According to a report commissioned by Lollapalooza promoter C3 Presents and conducted by Texas-based research group AngelouEconomics, Lollapalooza generated more than $422 million for Chicago’s economy, compared to $336 million last year. * Crain’s | A Chicago union struggles as Hollywood strikes drag on: IATSE Local 476 Chicago Studio Mechanics is the foundation of Illinois’ burgeoning entertainment industry, supplying the sets, lighting and makeup for your favorite local shows, from “Chicago P.D.” to “The Bear.” But as writers and actors remain on strike, the behind-the-scenes crew workers are struggling as the absence of work forces some into food insecurity and health insurance plans near a breaking point. * SJ-R | Hospital, clinic websites, other functions are again functioning after cyber attack: Kelly Barbeau, Illinois Division director of marketing/communications for HSHS, did not respond to an email seeking clarification regarding what systems are still out. HSHS representatives said “federal law enforcement” was investigating the attack. Rebecca Cramblit, a public affairs officer for FBI Springfield, would not confirm or deny an investigation. * WICS | EMS workers charged with first-degree murder appear back in court: “I don’t think there’s any remorse it is a very nuanced and involved process right now and in fact, as a judge from the bench described it this morning we are entering a brave new world,” Scott Hanken, Finley’s attorney, said. said there are new documents and discoveries by the state. Both Finley and Cadigan will appear back in court on Nov. 27. * Sun-Times | Latinos are making economic gains in Chicago suburbs and deserve more political power: Latino population growth brings critical contributions to local suburban economies and to our regional economy as a whole. Latinos have the highest labor force participation rate of any racial or ethnic group in the region, and they represent the fastest-growing segment of spending power — a total of $68 billion in Illinois. * ABC Chicago | Some Kia drivers say missed software update notices result in engine failure: “They said there was an update that I didn’t do and that I received a notice in 2018,” she said. “I never received the notice, so I contacted Kia, they said sorry we can’t help you, you didn’t do the update.” She said after calling the manufacturer, Kia emailed her a software update letter dated July 26, 2018. * SJ-R | Breeze Airways bringing new service to Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport: Springfield Airport Authority and Springfield Sangamon County Growth Alliance officials announced Tuesday that Breeze Airways will begin service from Springfield to Orlando on Dec. 1 and to Tampa on Dec. 4. * WICS | City officials discuss IEPA moving their headquarters to White Oaks Mall: Ward 7 Alderman Brad Carlson said about 40% of the work has been finished with project completion set for spring. Carlson feels the new headquarters is necessary due to IEPA’s current home sitting on the path of planned improvements to Springfield’s 9th Street rail corridor. * Daily Herald | ‘Inundated with interest:’ Utah-based pickleball company plans major expansion in suburbs: The company plans to repurpose vacant big-box retail spaces in Mundelein, Naperville and Villa Park with openings anticipated in December. * NYT | The Kids on the Night Shift: The morning after Marcos’s injury, workers in Dreamland began talking about a child whose arm had been nearly torn off at the plant. Word soon spread through town. There were reasons that supervisors, teachers, federal inspectors and even police officers had said nothing for years about children working at the slaughterhouses. Everyone understood that the children were under extraordinary pressure to earn money to pay off their travel debts and help their families back home. They were living on a remote stretch of peninsula with few job options — if the plants shut down because of a labor scandal, the local economy could collapse. Now, with an eighth grader in the hospital, many wondered if they had been wrong to keep quiet. * Kansas City Star | Republican candidate for Missouri governor vows to burn books after viral flamethrower video: A Republican candidate for Missouri governor on Monday vowed to burn books if elected after he was criticized for a video showing him burning cardboard boxes with a flamethrower. […] “In the video, I am taking a flame thrower to cardboard boxes representing what I am going to do to the leftist policies and RINO corruption of the Jeff City swamp,” Eigel said in a statement to The Star on Monday. “But let’s be clear, you bring those woke pornographic books to Missouri schools to try to brainwash our kids, and I’ll burn those too - on the front lawn of the governor’s mansion.” * The Triibe | Chicago ballers like David Jasson are hoping the Windy City Bulls tryout opens the door to the NBA: On Sept. 16, hundreds of aspiring NBA G League players took their best shot at earning a Windy City Bulls training camp invitation at the team’s annual open tryout at the Wintrust Sports Complex in Bedford Park, Ill. The Windy City Bulls have hosted training camps every year prior to the start of their regular seasons since the team debuted for the 2016-17 season. * CNBC | FTX sues Sam Bankman-Fried’s parents, aims to claw back some of the $26 million in gifts and property: Fried is also accused of encouraging her son and others within the company to avoid, if not violate, federal campaign finance disclosure rules by “engaging in straw donations or otherwise concealing the FTX Group as the source of the contributions.”
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And it begins
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * WTTW…
* Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran…
Are we assuming she wouldn’t have been offered bail under the old system? …Adding… Will has covered bond court for years, so he knows whereof he speaks…
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Rep. Anthony DeLuca filed HB4135 yesterday…
* Rep. Kevin Schmidt filed HB4134 last week…
* Rep. Sue Scherer’s HB4136…
* A bullying prevention bill from Rep. Margaret Croke…
* HR405 from Rep. Joyce Mason…
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More like this, please
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Last week, Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa suggested that the restaurants take a five-year phase-in of the elimination of the subminimum wage…
Guess what happened. A five-year phase-in…
Just because you have the votes for something, doesn’t mean you should pass it as-is. Get some buy-in from the other side. It’s a lesson more people could learn.
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Fun with numbers
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Fox 32…
The complete failure to ask an obvious follow-up question intrigued me, so I reached out to Lopez and asked him for the $600 million list of Lightfoot programs. His response…
I asked for that and then asked for the program list. Ald. Lopez never produced a list of programs that could be cut in order to save $600 million. Click here for the list of vacancies. Lopez said those vacancies account for “roughly $550-600″ million. There are 4,599 total vacancies on that list. At $100K per vacancy, that works out to about $460 million. But here’s the real problem. The Chicago Police Department has 36 percent of those vacancies: 1,669 openings, which is by far the largest. Think a majority of the city council is gonna vote to defund all or even most of those positions? Next highest? The Department of Public Health, with 500 vacancies. * Two caveats. 1) This list is a year old. Several positions may have already been filled. 2) Not all of the remainder of those unfilled positions will be filled in the coming year. Likely not even close to all. Local governments everywhere are having a tough time recruiting employees. So, yeah, the proclaimed $538 million city budget deficit is way off the mark (and in more ways than just this). * Let’s move on to another bit of fun with numbers. KSDK TV…
* Center Square…
* From that Civic Federation task force report…
Three percent of $83.1 million equals $2.5 million in restitution payments. That’s not a heavy local burden. And here are restitution payment numbers for the counties in Sen. Bryant’s district… ![]() Total restitution for those counties was $199,947 out of $6,377,158, or 3 percent.
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Zenna Ramos will be sworn in Thursday
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here and here if you need it. From the Village of Riverside’s Director of Public Safety Matt Buckley…
I don’t understand the process at the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board. Why are staff members empowered to make these decertification decisions? Why is it now up to a recently created review committee to make sure the proper staff actions were taken in the first place? These potentially career-ending decisions should be made by the board itself, the same way it’s done at the Illinois Commerce Commission and the Illinois State Board of Elections. Staff does the research, makes recommendations, and the boards then hold hearings and take public votes.
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Senate Republicans take credit, but Senate Democrats blamed for pushing PRB changes
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller * The Illinois Prisoner Review Board took heavy fire from Senate Republicans the last couple of years. But it wasn’t until the super-majority Senate Democrats sided with the SGOPs that anything started to change. From March of last year…
* And now the Tribune reports that the PRB went from approving the parole of about 40 percent of prisoners it reviewed in 2021, to 15 percent of a similar number of cases in the ensuing 20 months. Republicans are taking credit…
* Emily Miller, Senior Advisor to the Governor for Policy and Legislative Affairs and an old friend of this website, rightly pointed at the Senate Democrats, who are, after all, firmly in charge of their chamber…
Your thoughts?
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Roundup: How Illinois navigated its first day of no cash bail
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Starting off in Lake County…
* More from that Lake County case…
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
* More…
* Daily Herald | ‘It went well’: As cashless bail starts in suburban courts, who was detained, who wasn’t: Of six first-appearance hearings — formerly known as bond hearings — held in Kane County, one defendant was detained on a domestic violence charge and another was detained on a stalking charge, Hull said. * Naperville Sun | Thanks to a low amount of cases and a lot of ‘pregame work,’ Kane County says it had successful first day of cashless bail system: Kane County Associate Judge Salvatore LoPiccolo, tasked with presiding over pretrial hearings Monday through Friday, saw six cases Monday. Four people were released without bail and two had detention hearings in the afternoon. Of the two, only one person was detained. * KSDK | Illinois enters new era without cash bail: In St. Clair County, the chief judge ordered staff to convert one courtroom into a space for detention hearings. […] The first day of preliminary hearings was merely a preview of the heavier lifting that begins on Tuesday when the sheriff’s deputies will transport defendants to the court to appear at their detention hearings in person and defense attorneys will help them make their case to go home. * WCIA | The SAFE-T Act is now in effect, and Central Illinois counties are navigating changes in courts, jails: In the Champaign County courtroom on Monday, Judge Brett Olmstead started arraignment by addressing the new cash bail system and explaining it to defendants. In one of the cases, the suspect was issued a bond over the weekend but was in court the day the SAFE-T Act went into effect. “It was a timing issue because we had one individual who was arrested over the weekend and the cash bond was set in weekend court, so there was a bit of confusion about what to do with him,” Julia Rietz, the Champaign County State’s Attorney, said. * WMBD | A new era dawns in Peoria County as No Cash Bail comes to local courtrooms: The other case, the second man, was more gray. Here, Assistant Public Defender Steve Glancy was able to argue that the crime, harassment through an electronic device, didn’t rise to the level of being a detainable offense. In the past, Glancy would have argued for a lower bond but not whether his client was held without bond pending trial. […] All of which convinced Donahue to release him but even then, there was confusion as Donahue, a long-time veteran of Peoria County courts, both as a judge and as a defense attorney, sought to put conditions on the man’s release such as electronic monitoring, a curfew and to check in with county probation officials. But unlike in the past, he had to put those in a written order. * KWQC | Confusion in Rock Island County courtroom as no-cash bail takes effect: One case involved Jason Wright. He’s been held for months on gun and drug charges. […] [His wife, Rebecka] watched each case for hints about what might happen to her husband. And while some high-level defendants were let go today, most were detained – including Jason Wright. The judge said he had about a quarter pound of cocaine and a “virtual arsenal” of guns in his house. * CBS Chicago | Illinois becomes first state to end cash bail: One of the first hearings in what was once bond court Monday was the case of Cortez Murphy. Prosecutors said Murphy, who was on an electronic ankle monitor for a burglary charge, damaged the monitor last week and fled from police as his bracelet siren activated. […] With those factors at play, the judge Murphy was a “high-level flight risk,” and his release was denied. Details, not dollars, determined that Murphy will stay locked up. * Herald Review | No-cash bail has its first day in Macon County court: The first arraignment case to be heard in Macon County Circuit Court under the new no-cash bail law turned out to be a Decatur teenager accused of an ambush stabbing murder. And a judge decided that particular defendant wasn’t going anywhere and had to remain in custody. But for most of the rest of the docket, heard over the course of an hour Monday afternoon, it was a different story: of the 12 cases in all that came up, Judge Lindsey Shelton found grounds to release nine defendants on charges ranging from domestic violence to battering police officers. * WCBU | First day of no-cash bail sees split decisions in Peoria County court: In Peoria, the first day saw only two hearings come before Circuit Court Judge Sean Donahue. In both instances, the State’s Attorney’s office filed petitions seeking to have the defendant detained until trial. […] Donahue sided with the defense and denied the petition to detain the defendant. However, he did impose pretrial conditions, including electronic monitoring, no contact with the victim and the victim’s family, a 7 p.m.-7 a.m. curfew, no possession of any weapons and no out-of-state travel without permission from pretrial services. * KFVS | Southern Ill. law enforcement raise concerns as state becomes first to end cash bail: [ Williamson County Sheriff Jeff Diederich] began releasing inmates on Friday, in order to comply with the new law. As of Monday afternoon, he says a total of 40 inmates have been released since Friday evening. * WSPD | Local police chief, state’s attorney say they’re uncertain about outcomes after Illinois ends cash bail: Metropolis Police Chief Harry Masse said it’s his job to enforce the law, but he is concerned about the possible negative outcomes the SAFE-T Act could have on his community. “I hope I’m wrong. I’m hoping that you’ll come back next year and I’ll see nothing change. We haven’t had any offenders that we released on cashless bail do something more serious while they were awaiting trial,” he said. * BND | St. Clair County sets 1st hearings to decide whether defendants stay in jail before trial: Three detention hearings are scheduled in St. Clair County and one is scheduled in Madison County on Tuesday. No hearings were scheduled on Monday. * SJ-R | Cash bail ends in Illinois but further reform is still a possibility: The hearing requirement has some counties, particularly those downstate, concerned they lack the staff to meet demands. To account for an expected increased demand on public defenders, the state invested $10 million to create the Public Defender Fund where all counties outside of Cook County receive anywhere from $77,000 up to $147,555.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* Tribune | House Democrats drop PR firm that helped Madigan on #MeToo allegations while also working with accuser: While working with Madigan, SKDK had hired a private contractor to help provide Hampton and other survivors with public relations support in a deal paid for by Time’s Up Legal Defense Fund, a women’s advocacy group. SKDK told the Tribune in August that this work was “wholly separate from any work helping Speaker Madigan address systemic cultural problems within his office.” * Sun-Times | Gov. Pritzker heads to New York to speak on abortion rights panel with Hillary Clinton : The Clinton Global Initiative panel, called “Women’s Rights are Human Rights: How to Provide Abortion Care in a Post-Dobbs World,” also includes Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, former White House press secretary Jen Psaki and model and philanthropist Karlie Kloss. The event will be livestreamed at 12:30 p.m. * SLPD | U.S. Steel to idle only operating blast furnace at Granite City plant, citing auto strike: U.S. Steel plans to temporarily idle one of the blast furnaces at its Granite City plant and shift some work to other facilities, citing softening demand from the automotive industry during the United Auto Workers strike. That furnace is the only one currently operating at the plant. A local United Steelworkers representative said Monday that about one-third of the union employees there work in the areas that will be affected, where the plant converts ore and pellets into metal slabs. * Labor Tribune | Pritzker praises Labor unions at Southwestern Illinois Central Labor Council awards dinner: Pritzker also said he was amused that frustrated drivers sometimes complain about all the orange construction cones that can slow traffic on the state’s road and bridge projects. “I want to say sorry, (but) not sorry,” he said. The more orange cones there are, the more that prevailing wage work is getting done, he said. * Tribune | Chicago inspector general’s office seizes computers from city treasurer’s office: The move by Inspector General Deborah Witzburg’s staff comes after the release late last month of a 2020 letter that laid out a series of accusations by two aides Conyears-Ervin had fired who said the treasurer misused taxpayer resources and abused the powers of her office. * Crain’s | UAW to unveil next wave of striking plants Friday: The UAW will expand its strike against the Detroit 3 on Friday if negotiations this week stall, President Shawn Fain said. “If we don’t make serious progress by noon on Friday, Sept. 22, more locals will be called on to stand up and join the strike,” Fain said in a video posted by the union Monday evening. “Autoworkers have waited long enough to make things right at the Big 3. We’re not waiting around and we’re not messing around.” * Sun-Times | Johnson unveils city reforms to fight environmental racism: The proposals include new policies for city departments that include better response times to environmental complaints, air monitoring and measures to reduce air pollution, public engagement around planning and development, and investments in so-called environmental justice communities, areas that receive a disproportionate share of pollution. * Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson OKs compromise giving restaurants 5 years to phase in higher pay for tipped workers: It calls for tipped workers — currently paid 60% of Chicago’s minimum wage — to receive 8% annual increases beginning on July 1, 2024, until they reach 100% parity on July 1, 2028. * Sun-Times | 40 years ago, Illinois recognized the collective bargaining rights of teachers: Republican Gov. Jim Thompson led the way for the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act in 1983. The law requires school districts to recognize and bargain with education labor unions, the head of the Illinois Education Association writes. * News Gazette | Danville casino still waiting to get approval for sportsbook: Despite assurances from casino officials in March that the sportsbook would be open in time for kickoff of the NFL season — if not sooner — the facility is still awaiting approval from the state, General Manager Juris Basens said Monday. * Hyde Park Herald | Local CPS students work on social-emotional learning: In the program, which meets after school four days a week, Tinubu, a visual arts and photography student, said he found ways to express himself that helped build his emotional resilience. “Art, in a way, could be like a comfort,” Tinubu said. “Art works with emotions. As you look at the art it gives you a warm emotion. You envision yourself in it.” Overall, he said the program helps him gain more control of his emotions to form stronger interpersonal connections with his peers and parents. * Crain’s | Illinois has a new best university in revamped U.S. News college rankings: The University of Chicago is no longer Illinois’ best university, according to the much-watched new rankings from U.S. News & World Report. Long ranked the most prestigious higher education institution in the state, U of C fell from No. 6 last year to No. 12 in this year’s report. * Tribune | No such thing as too much Bozo for Elgin man whose massive memorabilia collection memorializes the TV clown: “It all started with my mom buying me a Bozo Lakeside Bendy (bendable figure) when I was five. I have so many Bozo-related items now, my friends say I should contact the Guinness Book of World Records about it being the largest collection of its kind,” Holbrook, 59, said. * Tribune | Ferrero opens downtown innovation lab, marking a return of chocolate-making to Marshall Field building: Details of the new operation are closely guarded. The Tribune was allowed to enter the labs where food scientists will research the development of new cookie products, but not its chocolate labs or the innovation center, where a team will conduct long-term research in support of products that could hit shelves a decade from now. Nor was the Tribune permitted to view the “sensorial” or “analytical” facilities, where workers will participate in blind taste tests of new products and evaluate their properties down to the gram. * SJ-R | Announcement expected about new service coming to Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport: Springfield Airport Authority and Springfield Sangamon County Growth Alliance officials will make a joint announcement today at 10:30 a.m., according to a press release from the groups. SSGA executive board chairman Ed Curtis, Springfield Mayor Misty Buscher, SSGA chief executive and president Ryan McCrady, and SAA executive director Mark Hanna are expected to speak.
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Sep 19, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.
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