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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WCIA

The Illinois FOP Labor Council decided against pursuing reinstatement of the former Sangamon County Sheriff’s Deputy accused of murdering Sonya Massey.

Sangamon County officials confirmed Friday they had received a grievance form from the FOP union to reinstate Sean Grayson, the Sangamon County Deputy who shot Sonya Massey in the head earlier this month. While the union initially defended the grievance as part of their standard procedure, after finalizing their internal process, they announced they will not continue with the grievance.

“We have arrived at that final stage of the process where a determination can be made regarding whether or not to proceed with Sean Grayson’s grievance,” the labor council said in the statement. “The Union has determined that it will NOT be proceeding any further.”

“Our obligations under the collective bargaining agreement and to our members do not take away from the sympathy we feel for the family and loved ones of Sonya Massey,” the statement continues. “Our thoughts and prayers are with them and with all those impacted by this tragedy.” […]

The FOP state lodge criticized the Illinois FOP labor union for filing the grievance.

* Governor JB Pritzker…

Governor JB Pritzker today signed into law Senate Bill 3646, the Child Labor Law of 2024, which updates child labor regulations to the 21st century by repealing the existing statute and replacing it with a modern framework.

“While neighboring states weaken their child labor laws, in Illinois we’re modernizing our regulatory framework to further protect minors from unscrupulous employers,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Minors should be able to experience safe, age-appropriate work in an educational setting, and I’m proud of the added protections my administration and the General Assembly advanced through this bill.”

SB 3646 is intended to provide a structure for minors to engage in safe, age-appropriate work, while protecting their health and access to education. The bill sets standards for working conditions for children aged 15 and younger, including limiting hours of work and updating the list of jobs that minors cannot hold. The Illinois Child Labor Law has long required school officials to review a minor’s work opportunity and, with the permission of the minor’s parent or guardian, issue an employment certificate to the minor before they can lawfully work.

“My office will continue to work with the Illinois Department of Labor to protect minors from exploitation and from dangerous working conditions,” said Attorney General Kwame Raoul. “I will use all tools available to ensure minors are not subjected to unlawful labor practices.”

The bill updates the school certification process by:

    - Requiring the issuing officer to consider the “health, welfare, and education” of the minor when assessing an employment certificate application, including consideration of past reports of death/injury of a minor at that workplace.
    - Requiring that a minor’s work permit include the minor’s school schedule.
    - Clarifying the certification process for minors who are experiencing homelessness or who do not have a birth certificate.

SB 3646 also provides the Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) with new tools to enforce the law and protect youth workers. To deter egregious violations, the bill updates penalty amounts and adds a multiplier in cases of a minor’s death, injury, or illness. Additionally, employers will now be required to report to the minor’s school if they are injured or killed at work.

* Lee Enterprises’ Brenden Moore keeping us up to date on the numbers


* SJ-R

Ahead of the start of the Illinois State Fair next week, state officials are once again touting major improvements and renovations to the fairgrounds.

Through the Rebuild Illinois Infrastructure Program — Gov. JB Pritzker’s 2019 capital improvements plan — $85.3 million has been allocated towards the Springfield fairgrounds as part of a multi-year and ongoing upgrades and repair plan.

So far, Illinois Department of Agriculture director Jerry Costello said more than $65 million has been spent on renovations plus another $8.3 million in improvements completed by the building and grounds staff over the last five years. Fairgoers, he said, will particularly notice improved roads and roofs and a modernized Coliseum. […]

“When people get on the grounds, I’m telling you, I think it looks better than it’s looked in decades,” Costello added.

* Click here for an accurate representation of me watching this clip

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Study: Illinois students still struggle with post-pandemic learning loss: A new study from the University of Illinois System says only about one-fourth of all public-school students are back to pre-pandemic performance levels in English language arts while even fewer have returned to pre-pandemic levels in math. Learning recovery has been especially slow at the high school level, where test scores have been declining, the study found. And recovery in math scores has lagged English language arts scores across grade levels.

* WMBD | Boys & Girls Clubs receives state funding to expand in Illinois: According to a news release from the Boys & Girls Clubs, it will receive $4 million in state funding that was secured with help from State Rep. Jehan Gordon Booth (D-Peoria) and State Sen. Elgie R. Sims (D-Chicago). “Throughout Illinois, Boys & Girls Clubs provide vital youth development opportunities that contribute to academic success, enhance social-emotional growth, teach important life lessons and promote healthy outcomes,” Gordon-Booth said. “It’s critical that our state invests in smart community programs that prioritize our children and make a strong, positive difference that can last a lifetime.”

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Family of Sonya Massey is in Chicago for a rally after “rough” listening session in Springfield: Sonya Massey’s family members will be in Chicago Tuesday evening for a rally on the city’s West Side hosted by Black clergy leaders. The rally is called “Remembering Sonya Massey.” The 36-year-old unarmed Black woman was fatally shot by white Sheriff’s Deputy Sean Grayson after she called law enforcement to her Springfield home.

* WaPo | Black journalists group announces Trump interview, sparking backlash: Karen Attiah, the 2019 NABJ journalist of the year, announced Tuesday she would step down as convention co-chair. “While my decision was influenced by a variety of factors, I was not involved or consulted with in any way with the decision to platform Trump in such a format,” she wrote on social media. (Attiah is a Washington Post columnist who works for the Opinions division of The Post, which operates separately from its news coverage.) Other journalists raised objections as well. TheGrio’s April Ryan — who clashed repeatedly with the then-president during her time as a White House correspondent — wrote that the invitation was “a slap in the face to the Black women journalists” who were verbally attacked by Trump.

* Block Club | Alderman’s Englewood Campout Gave Violent Block Relief. Neighbors Say They Need Help To Make Peace Last: Ald. David Moore (17th) camped out on 73rd Place between Ada Street and Racine Avenue for a week last month, pledging not to leave until he saw a positive turn in what he called an “open-air drug market.” The alderman stayed on the block for several nights, including the days following a nearby shooting broadcast on his Facebook Live channel. He ended his camp-out June 21. The alderman and two neighbors told Block Club Moore’s effort had a positive effect. It brought attention to the market, drew the Police Department to host a roll call on 73rd Place and prompted neighbors and community leaders to show support, they said. Neighbors came out on their porches and watered their grass while children played on the block during the alderman’s camp-out.

* Crain’s | U.S. Soccer to sell $200M of debt to finance Chicago-to-Atlanta HQ move: This will be the federation’s first national training center to operate fully under its control and it will serve as the home of 27 men’s and women’s US soccer teams, spanning various age groups. USSF has most recently been training at facilities owned by MLS’s Los Angeles Galaxy and Sporting Kansas City, while most of its roughly 1,400 staff have been based in Chicago. The vast majority of US Soccer staff will move to the new center, according to USSF.

* Block Club | Chicago’s Best Italian Beef? TikTok Star Keith Lee Weighs In: After one bite, Lee said [Al’s Italian Beef] sandwich was a “win in my opinion. It’s not even close.” “It’s spicy, it’s flavorful, it’s saucy,” he said. “I don’t even need to try the cheese sauce. This by itself is an 8.5 out of 10, and in my opinion, wins the Al’s versus Portillo’s war. In my opinion, the meat is way better, the bread is better, the sauce that it’s dipped in is better, the peppers are spicier.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville police make 20th gun-related arrest at Topgolf parking lot in just under a year: According to Naperville police Cmdr. Rick Krakow, the officer was walking the Topgolf lot when they observed a black handgun in the rear passenger seat pocket of a vehicle. Officers set up surveillance on the vehicle and waited for its occupants to return, Krakow said. […] Online court records show the firearm that police spotted was a loaded Taurus 9mm Millennium G2 for which Cobbins did not have a valid Firearm Owner Identification card.

* ABC Chicago | Cook County treasurer introduces free Payment Plan Calculator for property taxes: The calculator is designed to help taxpayers manage incremental payments over time, so that their tax bill is fully paid before the Annual Tax Sale. Last year, the Illinois General Assembly created a task force to recommend payment options to prevent tax-delinquent owner-occupied homes in Cook County from being sold at the Annual Tax Sale. The tool launches Aug. 2, the day after property taxes are due. The tool will be available at cookcountytreasurer.com.

* Daily Herald | ‘You’re going to see me everywhere’: New Glen Ellyn Dist. 41 superintendent shares priorities: Jeffrey McHugh, the new superintendent of Glen Ellyn Elementary District 41, officially took the helm on July 1, but he’s already a familiar face. McHugh has been on a districtwide listening tour over the last six months. He’s met individually with principals and school board members. He’s visited all five of the district’s schools, spending about a half-day at each. And McHugh has plans to create advisory councils, one involving students and another comprised of both parents and households who don’t have children in the school system.

* Tribune | The water that raised her: US sailor Maggie Shea of Wilmette set her Olympic course on Lake Michigan: This is the lake that raised her, that taught her how to sail in unpredictable waters and provided some of her happiest childhood memories. It’s where the Wilmette native sat with her grandpa and listened to him explain racing strategy. It’s where she first competed against rival sailor Stephanie Roble, who would later become her teammate and close friend. And it’s where, when Shea and Roble needed money to fund their Olympic dream, the Chicago Yacht Club Foundation stepped in to help.

*** Downstate ***

* Tribune | Deere reports 300 more layoffs, this time of salaried workers: Deere & Co said it will lay off nearly 300 employees at its Moline headquarters in a notice filed with the state Monday. The batch of layoffs comes after the tractor giant said earlier this month it would lay off nearly 600 workers across two factories in Iowa and one in Moline. Deere confirmed the layoffs in a statement to the Tribune, noting the new batch of layoffs were of salaried employees and not production workers.

* SJ-R | Former UIS golfer confirms story from anonymous report, claims coach dismissed mental health concerns: A former member of the University of Illinois Springfield women’s golf team confirmed one of the anonymous allegations published this month against coach Michael Leotta and believes the only solution is to dismiss him. Lily Stanton competed last fall as a freshman for the Prairie Stars but said she left the team before the spring season due to Leotta’s conduct. The allegations were published by website 2aDays on July 9. She described the coach’s behavior as overwhelming and traumatic in a recent phone interview with The State Journal-Register.

* WCIA | Power restored for thousands in Springfield after severe storms: Many of the power outages left by severe storms Tuesday morning in Springfield were restored, City Water, Light and Power announced shortly before noon. As of 11:40 a.m., only 315 customers are still experiencing power outages. The area with the majority of those outages is north of Lanphier High School from N 11th St. to N 19th St. between E Watch Avenue and E Converse Street. CWLP added that this outage was caused by a downed tree damaging power poles.

* KFVS | Humane Society of Southern Illinois announces it is closing: In a news release, the shelter said there are several reasons leading to their closure, such as evolving community needs, operational challenges, increasing costs, lack of appropriate funding and continuing staffing needs. The shelter in Carbondale will stop taking in animals starting Wednesday, August 1, but HSSI hopes to find homes for the animals currently in their care through adoption or rescue groups.

*** National ***

* Wired | Zombie Alt-Weeklies Are Stuffed With AI Slop About OnlyFans: “We’re seeing an ever-increasing part of old media be reborn as AI-generated new media,” says Reality Defender cofounder and CTO Ali Shahriyari. “Unfortunately, this means way less informational and newsworthy content and more SEO-focused ‘slop’ that really just wastes people’s time and attention. Tracking these kinds of publications isn’t even part of our day to day, yet we’re seeing them pop up more and more.” LA Weekly laid off or offered buyouts to the majority of its staff in March 2024, while the Riverfront Times laid off its entire staff in May 2024 after it was sold by parent company Big Lou Media to an unnamed buyer.

  6 Comments      


What happens to schools when the pandemic money runs out?

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’ve talked about this topic before. Capitol News Illinois

To help schools throughout the country deal with the effects of the pandemic, Congress approved three separate federal relief packages that included billions of dollars in emergency education funds known as Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief, or ESSER funds.

Illinois’ share of that aid totaled just over $7.8 billion.

The flow of those funds, however, will come to an end when the current federal fiscal year ends Sept. 30, meaning programs and services that have been funded with those federal dollars will either come to an end, or schools will have to fund them through other means.

According to the state’s ESSER Spending Dashboard, about one-third of the money that came to Illinois, or nearly $2.4 billion, went toward salaries for teachers, substitutes, paraprofessionals, and other school personnel, including those who ran summer and after-school learning programs.

“We saw just about over a thousand expenses on what we would call a full-time teacher,” [Illinois Workforce and Education Research Collaborative Director Meg Bates] said. “So we do expect there to be some difficulties this fall with teachers.”

She said she expects a bigger loss in staffing for after-school, summer school and tutoring programs.

“That’s where we expect to see a real cliff, these extended opportunities. We suspect schools will find ways to keep their teacher core relatively intact,” she said.

* In Chicago, the amount of pandemic money spent on salaries was about 50 percent. You may recall my recent newspaper column

I told Pritzker that I assumed other school districts also put temporary federal money into their permanent spending bases and would also be demanding more state aide. “I don’t think that that’s the job of Springfield, to rescue the school districts that might have been irresponsible with the one-time money they received.”

“Poor fiscal management on the part of a local government is not necessarily the responsibility of Springfield,” he added.

Is CPS poorly fiscally managed? Pritzker at first hedged, then, when pressed, said he’d like to answer the question his own way.

“One-time money shouldn’t be spent for ongoing operations.”

  14 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is the best drill-down into a pretextual stop I think I’ve ever seen in print. The piece, by Farrah Anderson and Sam Stecklow, looks into the background of former Sangamon County Sheriff Deputy Sean Grayson, who’s been indicted on three counts of murder in the fatal shooting of Sonya Massey

The first sign of trouble in Logan County came just months after his hiring. According to department records, while on patrol around 1:41 a.m. on Sept. 22, 2022, Grayson spotted a woman in a parked truck, who seemingly crouched down in the driver’s seat in an attempt to avoid being seen by him.

When the woman drove away, Grayson followed her and eventually attempted to pull her over for allegedly rolling through a stop sign — prompting Grayson to initiate a high speed chase during which he struck a deer. In reviewing the incident, department officials found that, in a number of instances, the details of Grayson’s written report did not match the dash camera footage from his vehicle and that had violated a number of policies during the chase.

In the interview, Grayson appears to admit to initiating the traffic pursuit, which reached speeds of 110 miles per hour, for potentially illegal reasons, claiming that the woman who he attempted to pull over looked suspicious. His supervisors ultimately recommended he receive training for “high-stress decision making.”

In a lengthy interview about the chase in November 2022, Logan County Chief Deputy Nathan Miller and another department supervisor made clear that Grayson had not been operating up to their expectations and that they were aware of issues with arrests he had made while at his previous departments — issues that pointed to questions about Grayson’s accuracy and honesty in writing reports. […]

As the interview continued, Miller brought up concerns with Grayson’s professionalism and honesty, and revisited the September chase.

“What was the stop for?” Miller asked.

“Well, initially it was just for rolling the stop sign,” Grayson said. “It was a simple little traffic thing. My initial, what I was gonna stop ‘em for, was the behavior in the vehicle, was what originally caught my attention. I just needed to wait for them to start the vehicle.”

“You were gonna stop them for just their behavior in the vehicle?” Miller asked.

“No, I mean, I was gonna wait for a traffic violation, but in my mind, that was the whole reason why I was gonna see what they were doing, was the reaction of the female in the truck,” Grayson said.

According to Craig Futterman, a University of Chicago law professor who directs the school’s Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project, this was a “classic pretext stop” — one without any other reason to exist other than to pull the person over.

“Seeing someone look at you and then slouch doesn’t create reasonable, articulable suspicion that the person has committed a crime, so there’s not a legal or lawful basis to stop. He does admit his plan was, ‘I’m going to follow and then stop her as soon as I can find any reason to do so,’” Futterman said. “It’s the classic, there will be some traffic violation I can come up with that will provide a basis to stop after the fact.”

After asking Grayson whether he had checked his report about the chase for accuracy, Miller went over the locations in Google Maps, showing the officer that he had in fact been on a different street during the incident than he had written in his report — and that it would have been impossible for him to have seen the woman in the truck based on where he had written they were both sitting.

If that last paragraph sounds familiar to you, you’re not alone.

Lots more in that story, so go read the whole thing.

  18 Comments      


Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Tuesday, Jul 30, 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.

  Comments Off      


A local dive into the national numbers

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* New York Times

In the early days of the pandemic in 2020, traffic stops by the police plummeted around the country, as fewer cars were on the road and as agencies instructed officers to avoid nonessential contact with the public.

But in the months and years that followed, a distinct pattern formed in many cities: The cars came back in full force, but the traffic enforcement didn’t.

By the end of 2023, the police in Baltimore, New Orleans and San Francisco were making fewer than half the traffic stops they did prepandemic. In other police departments that don’t publicly track stops, like in Seattle and New York, the citations given during stops dropped off, too. The downturn appears even among some state agencies that monitor road safety on highways, like the Texas Highway Patrol and Connecticut State Police.

* Not so in Chicago, however…

Whew.

* According to the data, 202 people were stopped out of every thousand Chicagoans…

One of the story’s authors tweeted that the Chicago Police Department “broke our scale” and has been “behaving unlike just about every other city we show.”

* Likely a ton of pretextual stops because road deaths shot up by more than a third…

* And this is how the Illinois State Police compares to our neighbors…


  18 Comments      


CTU seeks to lower its property taxes, while union president escalates conflict with Gov. Pritzker

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fox 32

The Chicago Teachers Union Foundation is seeking to significantly reduce the property tax bill for its West Loop headquarters, according to documents from the Cook County Assessor’s Office obtained by FOX 32 Chicago.

The Assessor recently reappraised the value of the CTU’s building, estimating its fair market value at $19 million. However, the CTU is appealing this assessment and has hired a private appraiser who argues that the building’s value should be reduced by more than half, to $9.2 million.

Based on the county’s appraisal, the CTU would owe approximately $1 million in property taxes. According to the Cook County Clerk’s office, 55% of Chicago’s property tax revenue is allocated to the Chicago Board of Education. This means about $550,000 of the CTU’s tax bill would fund Chicago Public Schools. If the CTU’s appeal is successful, it would cut that contribution by more than half, depriving the school district of approximately $275,000.

The school district will get its money because reductions like these are offset by other taxpayers.

* The broadcast version of the story includes commentary from the Illinois Policy Institute

The CTU right now is asking for more than a billion dollars from Springfield. They’re asking for higher taxes on Chicago residents, and they’re saying that everybody else needs to pay their fair share. What this appeal shows is that that is all just rhetoric, and that they themselves are trying to reduce their property tax bills.

People and organizations have the right to contest their property taxes. Lots of politicians even help their constituents object without having to hire a lawyer. And if you click here, you’ll see that the CTU routinely files property tax appeals.

* Meanwhile, as we discussed yesterday, Gov. Pritzker responded to this tweet by the CTU’s president…


Pritzker

Look, I think that they’re in the middle of a negotiation, and so I think they’re going to say things that they think are going to, you know, will advance their cause. I think I’ve been clear, I want to fully fund education, public education, in the state of Illinois. I have worked hard during my term in office to do that. Billions of dollars more have gone into education, public education, for our state. I want to do even more.

We’re taking every resource that’s available to us for education and putting it there. So I know that there are people who would like more, I’m one of them, and so let’s go do that. But that is not something that can happen immediately during their negotiation.

It is something that I think we should be working on every single year, and I’ve done that. Again, almost half a billion dollars more has gone into public education every single year since I took office. And again, I will do everything I can to meet the needs of our students and make sure that we’re paying our teachers properly. But you know, criticism at this moment isn’t helpful. I think, you know, they came to Springfield, they talked to the legislature. We, in fact, did provide a significant amount more money for public schools, and we’ll continue to do it every year I’m in office.

* Fox 32 then followed up with Stacy Davis Gates

CTU President Stacy Davis Gates clapped back at Pritzker in a statement, alluding to governors of neighboring states who might be on a short list to be Kamala Harris’s vice presidential nominee. ‘We’re glad the presumptive nominee’s list includes governors in other states who have taxed the rich, placed social workers in every school from a central budget and aggressively leaned into investing in education.’ Davis Gates says Governor Pritzker should see those as examples to follow.

Discuss.

  27 Comments      


DPI rolling out campaign plan to focus on down-ballot races

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Daily Line

The party will announce the Organize Illinois 2024 campaign on Tuesday as the Democratic Party of Illinois’ (DPI) plan for winning races in Congress, the General Assembly and local government in November. The party has their eyes set on expanding the record-sized super majority in the state legislature as well as protecting Democrat-held congressional seats in addition to putting more resources into campaigns for local offices. […]

DPI will be targeting resources toward two members of Congress who are most at risk of being beat by Republicans this fall: U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen of Moline and U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski of Springfield. Both are freshmen lawmakers but represent districts that have historically been on the fence between the parties. Sorensen is viewed as the most vulnerable candidate with the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) dumping resources into the race to back Joe McGraw. […]

The state party will also coordinate with Speaker Chris Welch (D-Hillside) and President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) to support House and Senate candidates.

The new coordination by the state Democratic Party will include regular regional meetings to discuss messaging, support, voter protection efforts and updates on paid media campaigns. A data team will also be assembled to provide insight on voter mobilization and to support campaigns with field volunteers. The party also plans to open field offices to boost coordination with county parties.

* Democratic Party of Illinois

* WGLT

Joe McGraw will be getting extra help from national Republicans heading into the fall as he looks to unseat Democrat Eric Sorensen in the 17th Congressional District.

The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) is naming McGraw, a retired judge, to its Young Guns program. It provides mentorship and other support to candidates in districts deemed competitive. […]

Sorensen has heavily outraised and outspent McGraw in his re-election bid.

New federal elections data show Sorensen’s campaign has raised $3.5 million through the second quarter which ended in June. His campaign has spent just over $1 million.

McGraw’s campaign has raised about $850,000, about one-fourth the total of Sorensen’s campaign, and has spent close to $375,000.

US Rep. Nikki Budzinski raised $650,361 in the second quarter and ended with $2,093,508 cash on hand. Her opponent, Joshua Loyd raised $8,215 and had $2,883 cash on hand at the end of the second quarter.

  17 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Sheriff asks for forgiveness, declines to resign following Sonya Massey shooting. SJ-R

    - Sangamon County Sheriff Jack Campbell said Monday his department “failed the community” and Sonya Massey.
    - Responding to calls for his resignation, Campbell said he would “not abandon the sheriff’s office at this most critical moment.”
    - Campbell next stands for election in 2026.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Feds swat argument that Supreme Court saves Madigan: ‘This dog will not hunt’: Prosecutors wrote that “Madigan accepted a stream of more than $700,000 in benefits from ComEd over the course of eight years, knowing the payments were made to influence and reward Madigan’s official action with regard to legislation that impacted ComEd’s financial interests.” They wrote that the Supreme Court’s Snyder decision “did not discuss, and certainly does not disturb, the continued viability of bribery prosecutions that target ‘schemes that involve a stream of benefits over time, not just singly negotiated deals,’ where the government can establish an intent to engage in a quid pro quo.”

Click here to read the full 113 page filing.

* Crain’s | Illinois expects even more abortion seekers as six-week ban goes live in Iowa: Planned Parenthood of Illinois reported on the second anniversary of the federal Supreme Court ruling that its clinics have seen a threefold increase in patients traveling from Iowa for abortion care. Before the six-week ban, Iowa already had Targeted Restrictions on Abortion Providers, or TRAP, laws in place, such as a 24-hour waiting period for an abortion and parental notification for minors.

* ProPublica | Federal Law Thwarted Chicago’s Attempt to Sue Gun Makers. But Now It Has a New Strategy.: Chicago’s suit reflects not just concern over a stubborn public safety issue but also a shift in legal efforts against the gun industry. Cities, shooting survivors and the families of shooting victims are taking on the gun industry in new ways. The claims in these newer lawsuits show plaintiffs are not trying to take on the whole of the industry but instead are “trying to find the right pathway within the law,” said Andrew Willinger, executive director of the Duke Center for Firearms Law.

*** Statehouse News ***

* The Trace | Illinois State Legislators Introduced Three Violence Prevention Bills. Why Didn’t They Vote on Them?: Gun violence prevention advocates and bill sponsors are hopeful that the setback is just a delay, and that they’ll be heard and signed during the fall veto session, but they plan on keeping pressure on officials until then. It’s common for bills to be delayed, said Democratic State Representative Kam Buckner. Sometimes, he added, it takes time to finalize and pass legislation, regardless of the issue. “It’s just the way that Springfield works,” he said. “But we got to stay on it and do all we can to get it over the finish line.”

* Tribune | Gov. J.B. Pritzker says it would be ‘near impossible’ to get Bears stadium deal done this fall: “I made it clear to the Bears leadership that it would be near impossible to get anything done — if there was a proposal put on the table that could get done, you couldn’t actually get it done, probably, during the veto session and would have to wait until next spring,” Pritzker said, referring to the year’s final legislative session in November, during an unrelated news conference in Chicago. “But in reality, there isn’t a proposal on the table right now that would be acceptable to anyone that I know in the legislature,” he continued.

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker signs birth equity initiative into law, celebrates Medicaid expansion: The law requires insurers that provide state-regulated health care plans to cover pregnancy and postpartum services for covered individuals, including midwife services, doula visits, and lactation consultants for up to 12 months after the end of a pregnancy. Licensed or certified midwives will need to be covered by insurance providers starting 2025, while all other outlined services must be covered by January 2026.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Federal government gives Illinois $430 million to fight climate change: The money comes from the Climate Pollution Reduction Grant program, which awarded $4.3 billion federal funds to a mix of 25 state, local and tribal entities. It’s funded through President Joe Biden’s climate legislation. Illinois was awarded the full amount requested, which it will receive over the next five years. Illinois has already made progress on some of the goals in part through the 2021 Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA). The sweeping statewide legislation effectively tied Illinois’ clean energy targets to the Paris Climate Agreement — which means Illinois will be fully powered by clean energy by 2050.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Donald Trump to attend national Black journalists convention in Chicago on Wednesday: The event will be moderated by Rachel Scott, senior congressional correspondent for ABC News; Harris Faulkner, anchor of “The Faulkner Focus” and co-host of “Outnumbered” on Fox News; and Kadia Goba, politics reporter at Semafor. Trump decided to appear at the NABJ annual gathering in the wake of a 2024 presidential campaign that has been upended since President Joe Biden announced on July 21 that he would not seek another term. Trump is making the stop at the convention as part of his bid for Black votes.

* Block Club | DNC In Chicago: United Center Neighbors Brace For Restricted Access, Traffic, Police — And Confusion: Officials hosted meetings and canvassed the Near West Side to prep neighbors, but confusion remains, with some mistakenly believing they won’t be able to enter or leave their homes during the convention.

* ABC Chicago | El Chapo’s son Joaquin Guzman Lopez to appear in Chicago court, El Mayo still held in Texas: Zambada’s attorney claimed over the weekend that his client was tricked into flying into the country, saying he was “forcibly kidnapped” by Guzman Lopez. El Mayo, as he is known, was already a wanted fugitive in Chicago with a $15 million bounty on his head. Allegedly, Guzman Lopez convinced the elder cartel boss to board a plane for an airstrip inspection in northern Mexico. Instead, they kept flying into the U.S, where they were arrested by drug agents.

* Sun-Times | ‘Ring of fire’ conditions expected as heat, humidity create weather like ‘air you can wear’: Chicago will once again face a “ring of fire” pattern of storms this week, though it’s less likely to be as severe as the one that spawned more than two dozen tornadoes earlier in the month, the National Weather Service said. Heat indices of more than 100 degrees are also expected later in the week.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Oak Park moving to be a ‘certified’ welcoming town for immigrants, residents: At a recent Village Board meeting, trustees heard a presentation from Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer Danielle Walker, who outlined steps she and her team have taken since March when they were notified that the village was selected by Welcoming America to participate in the nonprofit certification group’s tailored program. According to the organization’s website, Welcoming America, which started in 2009, helps provide communities with “the roadmap they need to create welcoming policies and share new approaches to inclusion to create an environment where everyone can thrive.”

* Tribune | Lion Electric’s Joliet plant operating significantly below capacity as US and Canadian subsidies lag: Lion Electric executives won’t say how many workers the Saint-Jerome, Quebec-based company employs in Joliet or how many buses it is building. But after three companywide layoffs, they say the plant is operating significantly below the 200-bus-per-month capacity they advertise on their website. In an interview, they attribute the slowdown to the complex and still-incomplete rollout of government subsidy programs in the United States and Canada.

* Daily Herald | Lawmaker suggests “bad faith diversion” by township leaders on mental health funding: State Rep. Daniel Didech said he is willing to explore additional legislation to validate a referendum Wheeling Township voters passed in 2022 to fund mental health services. […] “Five townships and one county (that) approved referenda at the same time in the same way are all successfully levying the tax,” the Buffalo Grove Democrat said. “So, this is likely more bad faith diversion from them.”

*** Downstate ***

* Herald-Review | 17th District challenger Joe McGraw named ‘Young Gun’ by national GOP: The party’s congressional campaign arm on Monday announced that their candidate in the northwestern Illinois-based district, retired judge Joe McGraw, was one of more than two-dozen selected for their “Young Gun” program. The program mentors and supports candidates across the country and provides them with “the necessary tools to run successful, winning campaigns against their Democratic opponents.”

* WAND | IL FOP says other organization responsible for deputy’s grievance in Sonya Massey case: ILFOP State Lodge President Chris Southwood has issued the following statement regarding the labor contract grievance that was filed by a separate organization, not the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police: “We are the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police, strictly a fraternal organization. The Illinois Fraternal Order of Police State Lodge is not the labor organization that filed the grievance on behalf of the former deputy who is jailed on murder charges. That dubious distinction rests with the Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council, which is a completely separate organization with different leadership, a different organizational structure and a different mission. The Illinois Fraternal Order of Police State Lodge had zero involvement in this grievance and yet we are bearing the brunt of the public outcry and hate communication for that action just because we share a common first name with the FOP Labor Council.”

* TSPR | ‘He was a ball of light:’ Mother seeks justice in Macomb police shooting of four-year-old child: Anthony George, 57, and Terrell Miller, 4, were killed by single shot as police responded to a violent domestic dispute in the 900 block of North Charles Street on March 16. But a lawyer for the child’s mother is asking for the Appellate decision to be reviewed and plans to take civil action against the Macomb Police Department. “We intend to hold the Macomb Police Department accountable for or Terrell’s tragic death,” said Marleena Menendez Suarez of Fairmont City at a press conference Monday outside the Macomb Police Department.

* PJ Star | Video shows moments before man, boy killed by officer responding to stabbing in Illinois: George, a knife visible in his left hand, refuses to comply with requests to drop his weapons, according to police. The video then shows him lunge out of sight and return holding a knife in each hand, including one to the throat of a 4-year-old boy, later identified as Terrell Miller, son of the stabbing victim. An officer discharged his firearm once, killing both George and Miller.

* KHQA | Protesters gather at Macomb Police Department following fatal officer-involved incident: After the protest, around 2:00 p.m., KHQA went to the front office of the Macomb Police Department for a comment but was asked to contact Chief Jef Hamer. Over an hour later, at 4:00 p.m., the Macomb Police Department shared in part quote: “While the decision to release this footage is supported by our commitment to transparency, our hearts and thoughts remain with the families affected by this tragedy. We will provide further updates at regular intervals until the internal investigation is complete.”

* WCIA | Correctional officer accused of ‘inflammatory’ Facebook comments arrested on weapons charge: Records from the Sangamon County Jail and Circuit Clerk show that Thomas Angeli was booked into the jail Sunday on a misdemeanor charge. That charge was formally filed against Angeli by the State’s Attorney’s Office the following day. He is accused of possessing a gun with an expired FOID card, a Class A misdemeanor. Records also show Angeli residing in Sherman, Ill.

* Herald-Review | Judge will decide if lawsuit against Decatur police continues: It’s up to a judge to decide whether a jury will ever see a lawsuit claiming Decatur Police Department officers acted unreasonably and unconstitutionally when they pulled over Quartus Stitt and ordered him out of his car and detained him at gunpoint. Lawyers for the police and city of Decatur have filed to have the federal civil rights case dismissed. A jury trial in the U.S. District Court in Urbana had been penciled in to start this week but that’s now on hold while Judge Colin S. Bruce considers whether to grant summary judgment against Stitt.

* Illinois Times | Downtown’s festival dilemma: Downtown Springfield has been facing some difficult hurdles lately. In addition to the devastating fire which damaged several businesses on Adams Street in June, the Jaycees’ annual Fourth of July Capital City Celebration, with its popular downtown fireworks display, didn’t happen for the second year in a row (the derecho nixed it in 2023). AbeFest, a downtown festival held in July to highlight both local and national music acts, has also canceled for a second time. The Legacy of Giving Music Festival reported low turnout last month and may or may not be returning in the future. More recently, it was announced that the popular Old Capitol Blues & BBQ festival won’t be providing Springfieldians with its usual combination of sweet grooves and tasty ribs next month.

* Tribune | Several hundred U of I students trade in dorm contracts for incentives amid campus housing shortage: According to UIUC University Housing spokesperson Chris Axtman-Barker, “several hundred” students have opted to trade-in their campus housing contracts for an incentive package of $2,000 and 100 free meals that the university is continuing to offer eligible students for each cancellation. “While we normally have a small number of contracted students without housing assignments in July, this year we have more students than normal without an assigned space,” Axtman-Barker, said in an emailed statement Monday.

*** Sports ***


* Tribune | ‘Why can’t that be me?’ Chicago-area native Paul Juda shines in Olympic debut for Team USA gymnastics: Paul Juda’s story begins with his father, Jozef, who grew up one of six kids on a small farm in southern Poland. With steady, decent-paying jobs hard to find, he decided to move to Chicago, a city with a vibrant Polish population and a reputation for welcoming Eastern European immigrants. […] “Paul did not make it by himself and he knows this,” his mother said. “He’s not at the Olympics because we moved to the United States. He’s at the Olympics because we moved to the United States and met wonderful, wonderful people who helped us.”

* BND | Here’s how Erick Fedde and Tommy Pham can boost the St. Louis Cardinals: The St. Louis Cardinals made a major move to reshape their starting rotation for this and next season as well as shore up their right-handed outfield depth on Monday, acquiring right-hander Erick Fedde and outfielder and returning Cardinal Tommy Pham from the Chicago White Sox in a three-team trade which saw injured utility ace and former Gold Glove winner Tommy Edman sent to the Los Angeles Dodgers, the teams announced.

* Block Club | Track & Field Center In Pullman Helped 2 Chicagoans On Path To Paris Olympics: The $54 million athletic center in Pullman opened in 2021 and has already helped level the playing field for the city’s budding track athletes, and it has turned the Far South Side into a national track and field hub. Two Chicagoans at the 2024 Paris Olympics — triple jumper Tori Franklin and hurdler Shamier Little — have trained at Gately, Collins said. The Olympics’ track and field events start Aug 1.

*** National ***

* Press Release | U.S. Chamber of Commerce Hires Former Congressman Rodney Davis to Lead Government Affairs: “As a five-term member of Congress, Rodney Davis earned a reputation as a champion of free enterprise and pro-growth policies and effective legislator who was deeply respected on both sides of the aisle,” said U.S. Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Suzanne P. Clark. “His deep relationships, policy expertise, and proven track record as a consensus builder around the toughest issues will be invaluable as the Chamber continues to advocate for businesses and for a growth and opportunity agenda that benefits all Americans.”

* Rolling Stone | These Swing State Election Officials Are Pro-Trump Election Deniers: In the swing states of Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania, Rolling Stone and American Doom identified at least 70 pro-Trump election conspiracists currently working as county election officials who have questioned the validity of elections or delayed or refused to certify results. At least 22 of these county election officials have refused or delayed certification in recent years.

* NPR | Washington Post CEO accused in court of deceiving police about U.K. hacking scandal: In court, the lawyers submitted a statement arguing that Lewis “fabricated a fake security threat” in January 2011 to justify the deletion of millions of emails dating from the start of 2008 through the end of 2010 — an act that those suing the company suggest is part of a wider coverup. The Murdoch newspaper company, now called News UK, denies those claims. Lewis has broadly denied any wrongdoing but declined to comment to NPR today.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Jul 30, 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)

Tuesday, Jul 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Indivior, a company that makes treatments for opioid use disorder, actually contributed to the opioid crisis by catering to the very physicians that fueled overuse of prescription opioids, according to the attorneys general of 16 states.

Those state officials, including Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, announced on July 26 that they reached an $86 million settlement in principle with Indivior “for its role in driving the spread of deadly opioid addictions,” a press release from Raoul’s office said. […]

The settlement in principle was negotiated by Raoul and the attorneys general of New York, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia in coordination with an executive committee consisting of the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon and Vermont.

“This settlement builds on our progress, through multiple settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors, to ultimately help families get their loved [ones] access to the treatment and recovery resources they deserve,” Raoul said in the release.

* Governor JB Pritzker

On July 2, 2024, the State of Illinois received federal approval of its proposed Healthcare Transformation 1115 Demonstration waiver that will allow the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) to begin nation-leading work to expand Medicaid coverage. Assistance will soon address root causes of health disparities, such as housing and food insecurity, and help individuals transitioning from incarceration.

“Here in Illinois, the 1115 waiver is the cornerstone of our broader strategy to address health-related social needs,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “We are using it to direct Medicaid resources toward initiatives that address the root causes of health inequalities such as housing, food insecurity, unemployment, violence prevention, re-entry from prison settings, substance use treatment, and more. Illinois is leading the way in this work and once again setting the nationwide standard for what equitable, effective, and people-centric healthcare should look like.” […]

The federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) approved Illinois’ application to amend and extend for five years an existing 1115 waiver to include services newly-eligible for federal Medicaid match. These programs were designed to specifically address health-related social needs and improve health outcomes statewide, with a focus on housing support, medical respite and food and nutrition.

Coverage for pre-release services for individuals leaving carceral settings is also included, reflecting a major policy shift in the Medicaid program, as well as highly-innovative services to address community firearm violence. Expanded home- and community-based services, including non-medical transportation and expanded employment services will also be covered.

Services additionally include substance use disorder (SUD) assistance as well as coverage of Violence Prevention and Intervention services for Medicaid beneficiaries impacted by violence. […]

Some other items contained in the extension application continue to be under review. The state prioritized health-related social needs and reentry for initial approval and will continue discussions with the federal authorities on other components of its request.

*** Statehouse News ***

* SLPR | What will a new push for nuclear energy look like in Missouri and Illinois?: While Missouri just has Callaway, Illinois has more nuclear plants than any other state. A recent Illinois law repealed a nuclear moratorium, which could clear the way for new nuclear plants in the form of small modular reactors. “There’s a lot of excitement in Illinois about the future of nuclear,” Huff said. “But that moratorium that had been in place was keeping any real possibilities from being tangible.”

* Sun-Times | Tons of plastic trash litters Great Lakes beaches. Why not hold manufacturers responsible?: Fortunately, states can help solve this challenge. The Alliance for the Great Lakes is calling for implementing extended producer responsibility policies — holding producers responsible across the life cycle of their products and packaging, from design and materials to end-of-life management. And momentum is building in the Great Lakes region. Our friends in Minnesota became the fifth state in the U.S. to establish extended producer responsibility legislation for packaging, joining our bi-national Great Lakes partners in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec, which have been implementing extended producer responsibility policies for years. More recently, extended producer responsibility laws have passed in Maine, California, Oregon and Colorado.

* NFIB | NFIB Illinois PAC Endorses Pro-Small Business Candidates: The endorsed candidates completed a candidate questionnaire regarding issues important to small-business owners across Illinois. The NFIB IL PAC Board—comprised of small-business owners from across the state—considers and approves state legislative endorsements. NFIB represents over 10,000 small and independent businesses throughout Illinois.

*** Statewide ***

* Patch | Strong Geomagnetic Storm Could Bring Northern Lights To IL This Week: Conditions appear favorable for residents in Illinois to see the northern lights through Wednesday after an Earth-directed solar storm created what scientists call a “cannibal CME.” The aurora borealis may be seen deep into the nation’s midsection if weather conditions allow. The aurora forecast for Monday night and early Tuesday morning calls for a G3-level storm with a Kp Index of 7, a measure of auroral strength. The chances of seeing the northern lights are best with a Kp index of at least five.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | CTA’s Red Line extension gets new financial help from the feds: According to U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Chicago, the Federal Transit Administration has decided to speed up funding for the 5.6-mile extension, providing a projected $1.973 billion over seven years rather than 10. That means the feds will provide twice as much as was expected in the first year of construction: $746 million. That in turn will reduce local financing costs by more than $200 million, since more of the cash needed for the project will be available upfront, rather than having to be financed locally, mostly by a transit tax-increment financing tax on real estate.

* Block Club | DNC In Chicago: United Center Neighbors Brace For Restricted Access, Traffic, Police — And Confusion: The vehicle screening perimeter will allow ride-sharing services and delivery drivers to pass through at a designated checkpoint. Bicyclists can also pass through this area and are not required to undergo a screening process, officials said. While there are few homes within the security footprint, dozens of neighbors will be affected. Officials have held community meetings and canvassed the area to try to reach neighbors and talk to them about how to prepare for life during the convention.

* Tribune | Cooling centers open as heat, humidity and storms loom; city monitoring forecast ahead of Lollapalooza: Through Friday, 256 cooling centers will be open across the city to provide vulnerable residents with relief from the heat. A map of hours and locations, which include public libraries and community service centers, can be found here. The heat index is anticipated to exceed 100 degrees at times on Wednesday and Thursday, according to the National Weather Service. An extreme heat warning will be issued if the heat index is expected to exceed 105-110 degrees for at least two consecutive days.

* Crain’s | Media veteran Steve Edwards takes on civic engagement role at Chicago Fed: Starting Aug. 13, Edwards will become executive vice president for external affairs and civic engagement and will serve as a member of the bank’s executive committee, the Chicago Fed announced today. “Edwards brings wide-ranging experience at mission-driven organizations to this newly created role,” the Fed’s press release notes.

* Chicago Mag | Looking for Al Capone: “The details of Al Capone’s first three or four years in Chicago are somewhat minimal, with little mention of him in the press,” Chicago mob historian John J. Binder wrote in his 2017 book Al Capone’s Beer Wars: A Complete History of Organized Crime in Chicago During Prohibition. As Binder pointed out, a man using the name Al Brown was arrested in January 1921. Capone often used Al Brown as an alias — as late as 1927, the Tribune would still refer to him by this name — so there’s a strong possibility that this was Al Capone, who’d just turned 22. Of course, it could’ve been someone actually named Al Brown — or another criminal hiding behind the same alias. It was a lot easier to get away with using an alias in 1921 than it is today.

* Sun-Times | Organizers of Chicago River open swim event appeal city’s permit denial: The organizers of the event, which benefits ALS research and swimming lessons for Chicago kids, filed an appeal July 17 with the city after its permit application was denied by the Department of Transportation for safety concerns. The transportation department offered an alternate route from Ohio Street Beach to Oak Street, but organizers with A Long Swim are hoping their original plan can come to fruition. Their desired route is in the Main Stem of the Chicago River, essentially along the Riverwalk from Wabash to Lake Street.

* AP | Museums closed Native American exhibits 6 months ago. Tribes are still waiting to get items back: In Chicago, the Field Museum has established a Center for Repatriation after covering up several cases in its halls dedicated to ancient America and the peoples of the coastal Northwest and Arctic. The museum has also since returned four items back to tribes, with another three pending, through efforts that were underway before the new regulations, according to spokesperson Bridgette Russell.

* Sun-Times | White Sox trade Erick Fedde and Tommy Pham to Cardinals, Michael Kopech to Dodgers: The White Sox have agreed to a trade sending right-handers Erick Fedde to the Cardinals and Michael Kopech to the Dodgers in a three-team deal, a source told the Sun-Times. The Sox are receiving left fielder Miguel Vargas and infield prospects Jaral Perez and Alexander Albertus from the Dodgers in return. Outfielder Tommy Pham is going from the Sox to the Cardinals along with Fedde, and infielder Tommy Edman goes from the Cardinals to Los Angeles, according to a source.

* Block Club | Gator Watch In Lincoln Park? No, It’s A Turtle On A Log, City Says: On Thursday, Block Club reporters saw what appeared at first to be the head of an alligator briefly crest above the water before disappearing below, leaving a murky shadow in the water. After a few hours spent monitoring the shadow, no movement was detected. Photos from the incident were sent to Chicago Animal Care and Control and to Frank Robb, who famously trapped Chance the Snapper. The verdict came in quickly: It’s “100% not a gator,” Robb, a gator expert, said. The photos instead looked to him like a snapping turtle and a log, he said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | Cook County man pleads guilty, sentenced for threatening court officials: Prosecutors alleged that on Dec. 1, 2023, Christian called the DeKalb County State’s Attorney’s Office more than a dozen times, made threats to commit a school shooting or bombing, made threats to shoot a local circuit judge, and made threats against an Illinois Supreme Court justice and the president, according to court records.

* Daily Herald | Citing safety and building height, Arlington Heights panel rejects affordable housing plan: Citing concerns ranging from crime and tenant vetting to building height and compatibility with the neighborhood, the Arlington Heights plan commission has rejected revised plans for a 3-story, 25-unit permanent supportive housing development for people with disabilities and veterans on South Arlington Heights Road. But the 5-2 vote late Wednesday from the advisory panel is only a recommendation. The final decision rests with the nine-member village board, the majority of whom supported earlier iterations of the plan.

* Daily Herald | With promise of $47 million in public funding, Schaumburg all in on The District: Schaumburg has pledged $47 million in public funding for The District at Veridian, clearing the way for construction to begin on the $185 million, 30-acre mixed-use development on the former Motorola campus. The first of four phases of the long-awaited “Main Street”-style project will bring 65,000 square feet of retail space, including a grocery store, and more than 300 high-end apartments to the southwest corner of Algonquin and Meacham roads.

* Daily Southtown | Patrick Rea, longtime Tinley Park official, dies at 84, remembered for devotion to village: “He truly loved Tinley more than anyone I’ve ever met,” said Mayor Michael Glotz, who asked Rea to speak at his inauguration ceremony. “He was there for everybody but himself.” […] Rea was a village trustee for 37 years, starting in 1971, then was village clerk from 2009 until 2017. He served in the U.S. Army, either in active duty or the Reserves, for more than 20 years and left the military with the rank of brigadier general. Tinley Park’s Veterans Memorial near the south entrance to the 80th Avenue Metra station was named in his honor.

* Daily | Smoke on the water: Fox Lake dispensary touted as Illinois’ 1st dockside marijuana shop: The dispensary is located in a former barbecue joint at 44 Route 12 and celebrated its opening day Friday. A ribbon-cutting is scheduled for Tuesday. As for the waterside location that provides access to boaters, the company said in a statement that “we wanted to create an experience that allows a convenient and unique way for customers to access our services directly from their boats, enhancing their experience in a very scenic location.”

*** Downstate ***

* AP | Wind power can be a major source of tax revenue, but officials struggle to get communities on board: An Associated Press analysis of county tax data from local governments in Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska — states either with many wind farms or a high potential for wind power — found wind companies rank among the biggest taxpayers in many rural communities, with their total tax bills at times outstripping that of large farms, power plants and other major businesses. While that tax income from wind power does not represent a significant percent of counties’ budgets, it totals millions of dollars some local leaders say has translated into meaningful change. But the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University, which tallies local opposition to wind power, finds efforts to block wind projects are “widespread and growing.”

* QC Times | John Deere lays off more than 300 in Moline and East Moline in latest round of cuts: The agriculture giant notified the state of Illinois via both email and certified mail 298 workers at John Deere’s Headquarters in Moline were laid off July 24, according to a letter sent to the state July 25. The total employment at headquarters now stands at 1,993. John Deere included a list of all jobs cut which included accountants, chief of staff and a variety of people in management and senior positions. In a second letter to the state sent that same day, an additional 21 employees at John Deere’s East Moline Harvester Works were being laid off.

* Pantagraph | Illinois State solar car team takes third in 2 summer races: ISU’s team entered the car into the ASC’s single-occupancy vehicle class and was the third to cross the road race finish line in its class Saturday in Casper. Before it could hit the road for the latter cross-county event, the team of around 16 students first qualified at the Formula Sun Grand Prix, undergoing “scrutineering” inspections to ensure technical standards are met, and then racing on the NCM’s 3.15-mile Grand Full Course — a race track used by General Motors for Corvette testing. ISU’s solar car made 149 laps on the course, covering 469 miles in the three-day race from July 16-18 and placing third.

* Effingham Daily News | 5 graduate from Effingham County Problem Solving Court: The ceremony was led by Judge Ericka Sanders, who explained that most people lack the ability or drive to make it through the program and stay sober. “They do what most people can’t, change, and they changed despite every unimaginable obstacle in their way,” Sanders said. “You are the definition of success in anyone’s book.” […] In a video played during the ceremony, it was revealed that it costs $46,743 to incarcerate someone, while it only costs $6,000 to put a resident through the Effingham County Problem Solving Court program, which began in 2006.

* News-Gazette | UI offers $2,000 to students to cancel housing contracts due to large incoming class: An email which informed resident advisers they will have first-year students as temporary roommates attributed this change to a “larger than anticipated number of new students.” [Mari Anne Brocker Curry, director of housing information] did not say what caused this situation and, due to university policy, cannot share information on the size of the incoming class until official counts are finalized on the 10th day of classes.

* BND | Bear seen in Illinois likely swam across Ohio River from Kentucky, wildlife official says: Also, since the bear went unseen for 48 hours, then showed up in Missouri on Wednesday, it’s likely it swam across the Mississippi River too, according to John Hast, the bear and elk program coordinator for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources.

* Tribune | Kamala Harris has little-known childhood connection to Illinois; family friend recounts memories from her year in Champaign-Urbana: Urbana resident Diane Gottheil, now 85, recalled fondly her friendship with Harris’ parents during their year in Illinois. Gottheil was finishing up her Ph.D. in political science when they joined the university’s community in 1966, bringing a 2-year-old Harris in tow. Gottheil said that she viewed Harris’ mother Shyamala Gopalan as a major role model, admiring both her work as a medical researcher and her passion for civil rights.

*** National ***

* Neil Steinberg | Google can pull the plug at any time: Poking around Google, I found a laundry list of misdeeds Google suggests might earn banishment, beginning with: “Account hacking or hijacking” and including “Child sexual abuse and exploitation,” “Harassment, bullying & threats” and “Terrorist content.” Only I hadn’t done any of these. The only thing I could think of is, my account was deleted exactly at midnight, and my blog posts automatically at midnight. Thursday’s was fairly benign: A reader cc’d me a letter sent to City Lit, the Logan Square bookstore that created international headlines by booting a writer off its reading club list for the author’s Zionist leanings.

* Law & Crime | ‘Violates free speech rights’: Part of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Stop W.O.K.E Act dies with permanent injunction by federal judge: Judge Mark Walker of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida issued a permanent injunction, saying the law that bans diversity training in private workplaces “violates free speech rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.” The ruling follows a three-judge appeals court panel’s March decision that upheld Walker’s original injunction. The State of Florida did not oppose the motion to make the ruling permanent.

* NYT | Overlooked No More: Willy de Bruyn, Cycling Champion Who Broke Gender Boundaries: In early 1936, a Belgian cyclist, Willy de Bruyn, read an article in the Flemish newspaper De Dag that would change his life. He learned that a Czech sprinter who had been assigned female at birth was transitioning and would begin living as a man. It was just the spark de Bruyn needed. He went to see a local doctor and soon announced that he, too, wanted to live the balance of his life as a man.

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National stuff

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico reporter…



Pritzker’s campaign responded…

In case you missed it, a new “scoop” from POLITICO reveals how Gov. JB Pritzker has used his influence as Governor of Illinois to implement new regulations against harmful e-cigarettes and call out the industry, even as his first cousin once removed serves as a board member for Juul. What’s more, Gov. Pritzker didn’t even profit from his first cousin once removed’s actions and frankly thinks first cousin once removed is a pretty distant relative to be involved in this story at all.

These new details highlight what was long suspected: Gov. Pritzker is beholden to the Illinois families he was elected to serve, not anyone else.

“Just when you think you know who someone is,” said JB for Governor communications director Christina Amestoy. “He turns around and proves you exactly right.”

Also



Click here for Schuba’s 2018 story.

* Meanwhile, Pritzker was on “This Week with George Stephanopoulos” yesterday

Look, the electorate is energized. Democrats are ready to go. You’ve seen hundreds of thousands of people signing up to volunteer. Plus, our candidate is the Energizer Bunny. She’s been everywhere all the time over the last several days, and we’re excited about that, to get to see her in the battleground states and all over the country.

And her message is one that I think resonates with people. One of those things, of course, is pointing out the differences between these two candidates.

I mean, on the other side, they’re just weird. I mean, they really are. The things that they stand for — Donald Trump, of course, is afraid of windmills and, you know, he talks about all kinds of crazy stuff. You know, his running mate, as you probably have heard, is, you know, getting known for his obsession with couches, and — and somebody who is hiding his views on a woman’s right to choose. And then just broadly, the attack on people who are childless and saying that we ought to raise taxes on childless people and calling them “cat ladies,” I think, you know, he apologized to cats, but he hasn’t apologized to women.

* This morning, Pritzker was asked about how Democrats were lately calling some top Republicans “weird” and if he embraced the move

I actually talked about it yesterday. The truth is, there are a lot of very weird, strange things coming out of both the Republican nominee and the vice presidential nominee on the Republican side. I mean, there’s this consistent kind of talk about Donald Trump’s fear of sharks. I’m not sure why that’s relevant to becoming president of the United States. There’s the talk about couches and dolphins in the vice presidential candidate’s case, and and it’s just, you know, I don’t understand. We should be talking about the issues that are important to working families across the United States. That’s what Kamala Harris is talking about. That’s what all of us ought to be focused on.

* Pritzker did not mention sharks, couches or dolphins in his afternoon Q and A, but he was asked about some confusion over whether he said he was being vetted or not. It was impossible to hear much of the question, but this is how he responded

I’ll correct your timeline. I think I said no on Tuesday morning that I had not received vetting documents, and then subsequently I was asked the question, just so you can go back and look at your records. And what I’ve said repeatedly since then is that, you know, I’m not going to talk about the conversations that I’ve had with the vice president or with her campaign, other than to say that I have committed myself to Kamala Harris, that I will go out and work my heart out for her to win this election, because we must. Because we cannot have Donald Trump as President of the United States.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

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About that prediction of 25,000 migrants by convention time…

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the governor’s press conference this morning

Mary Ann Ahern: Can we talk about migrants, and are you prepared if Governor Abbott does send 25,000 migrants here before the DNC or during it?

Governor Pritzker: As you know, we have a partnership with Cook County and with the City of Chicago. There was an awful lot of planning that went into effect back in the early part of this year. And we’re excited about the Democratic National Convention coming. We’re also excited to have this partnership in place, as you know, and you can go to the City of Chicago’s website to see how many beds are currently occupied, how many beds are available, and also that we have a plan for expanding that if necessary.

So far, we have not seen the influx that we might have expected. And one of the reasons for that is because, despite the fact that Donald Trump told Republicans to walk away from an immigration bill that would have helped us actually secure the border, that the President has nevertheless put in place a series of agreements with countries throughout Central America and North America, including Mexico, to make sure that that we’ve stemmed the tide of border crossings.

And so actually, we’ve seen some of the lowest numbers of border crossings in the last two years, over the last several months. And I check on that weekly, talk to the White House and others, to make sure that that’s still the case.

MAA: Are your sources [that have been] talking back and forth, is Abbott just a threat or might that really happen?

Pritzker: Well, of course, we have a governor in Texas who cares nothing for the human beings who are have crossed the border, who are in his state. He frankly, ships them all across the country, including to Chicago. Threatened to do it again when he was at the RNC, but we have not seen any evidence of him increasing the numbers that have been sent to the City of Chicago.

I asked Pritzker about that not long ago and he said mostly the same thing. I would also note that the logistics of busing 25,000 people here in the next few weeks would be difficult. The convention will end 25 days from now, so that’s 1,000 people a day, every day, which is well beyond anything the city has ever before seen.

* Also, the city’s predictions haven’t always turned out to be accurate. This is from the end of January

Looking to the future, [Beatriz Ponce de Leon, deputy mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights] said the city is projecting another 800 people arriving per week, based on historical data. As summer approaches, those numbers could go up to 1,200 arrivals a week, which the city has experienced before, she said.

That didn’t happen. Not even close. The shelter census last week was 5,621, down from 14,900 at the end of December.

The city currently has 5,000 empty beds, according to the Tribune.

* Not saying it won’t happen, not saying it can’t happen. Just saying.

…Adding… And, just to be clear, this is what I wrote in comments…

Oh, I figure he’ll pull some sort of stunt next month. I’m just not convinced that he can pull off 25k people.

  4 Comments      


Corrections officer in hot water for mocking Sonya Massey online busted by cops yesterday

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. The governor’s office has confirmed that a Logan Correctional Center employee who was put on administrative leave last week for mocking a murder victim online is the same Thomas Angeli who was arrested in Sangamon County yesterday

Scroll down, and it says this, however

Charge 1: FOID Card Required - Acq/Possess Firearm
Statute: Possess Firearms - Expired FOID -Class A
Counts: 1

* Angeli, you’ll recall, posted this…


And, as we noted last week, this wasn’t the first time, either

The Illinois Department of Corrections has specific rules that prohibit employees from disclosing information related to offender’s records.

In response to a post from April [2019], correctional officer Thomas Angeli, who goes by Tommy Angeli on Facebook, commented about transgender woman Janiah Monroe, who had recently been transferred to a women’s facility. “Saw her in healthcare when she first came in…dude looks nothing like a girl..a tall n skinny guy,” Angeli wrote. Later the officer expressed expectations that the inmate would have “something feminine” by way of sexual organs, but did not.

…Adding… MrJM in comments…

Why did Logan Correctional Center ever employ a goon whose knuckle tattoos say “PURE HATE”?

Ugh…

  18 Comments      


Today’s quotable: ‘I made it clear to the Bears’ leadership that it would be near impossible to get anything done’

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s first of two public appearances today

Reporter: So you met with the Bears CEO a couple weeks ago. Any movement there in terms of a public financing deal? And also, have you called other mayors or governors in other states about maybe the best practices they have done that hasn’t worked?

Pritzker: Well, I’ve done a lot of research on this topic, but let me be clear, there isn’t much change. I mean, I made it clear to the Bears’ leadership that it would be near impossible to get anything done. If there was a proposal put on the table by them that could get done, you couldn’t actually get it done probably during the veto session and would have to wait until next spring. But in reality, there isn’t a proposal on the table right now that would be acceptable to anyone that I know in the legislature.

  11 Comments      


Pritzker responds to CTU president’s claim that he’s denying funding for ‘Black, brown, working class and immigrant kids’ in Chicago

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NBC 5’s Mary Ann Ahern at today’s Pritzker presser

Governor, can I ask you about the CPS bailout? Have you noticed the CTU President’s remarks claiming that you are denying funding for Black/Brown or working-class immigrant children? And she’s somewhat- well she’s outright lobbying against you as a possible VP candidate.

* The tweet…


SDG’s page is full of praise for Minnesota Tim Walz, who is considered one of the few very real possibilities for VP.

* Pritzker’s response

Look, I think that they’re in the middle of a negotiation, and so I think they’re going to say things that they think are going to, you know, will advance their cause. I think I’ve been clear, I want to fully fund education, public education, in the state of Illinois. I have worked hard during my term in office to do that. Billions of dollars more have gone into education, public education, for our state. I want to do even more.

We’re taking every resource that’s available to us for education and putting it there. So I know that there are people who would like more, I’m one of them, and so let’s go do that. But that is not something that can happen immediately during their negotiation.

It is something that I think we should be working on every single year, and I’ve done that. Again, almost half a billion dollars more has gone into public education every single year since I took office. And again, I will do everything I can to meet the needs of our students and make sure that we’re paying our teachers properly. But you know, criticism at this moment isn’t helpful. I think, you know, they came to Springfield, they talked to the legislature. We, in fact, did provide a significant amount more money for public schools, and we’ll continue to do it every year I’m in office.

  21 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WGN

The Illinois lottery, celebrating its 50th anniversary this month, has enduring appeal for one reason, if you ask longtime host of the live drawing, Linda Kollmeyer: “Dreams do come true with the Illinois lottery.” […]

The first Illinois Lottery drawing happened on July 1, 1974.

The first drawing on WGN was in 1975 – with Ray Rayner hosting, standing with former governor Dan Walker.

That first year, the lottery sold 100 million tickets – garnering nearly $130 million in sales. […]

Profits initially went to the state’s general fund. But in 1985, state lawmakers decided those profits should be specifically set aside for education.

Today the Illinois Lottery generates $3 billion a year, nearly a third of which goes to the Illinois common school fund.

* The Question: How often do you buy Lottery tickets? Also, let us know how you’ve fared over the years.

  34 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Jul 29, 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 Barbara, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


Pritzker wants ‘a’ Karina’s Bill, but not necessarily ‘this’ bill

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

“I support Karina’s Law,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker emphatically told me. It’s the strongest statement he’s made about the bill that stalled in the Senate last spring. The proposal would mandate that police remove firearms from a person who has been served with a domestic violence order of protection.

But there still appear to be some Pritzker caveats.

Pritzker has previously said that the bill would put big strains on local and state police because it could require as many as four officers to remove those firearms from each of the offenders, and there are thousands of people who would fall under the law’s jurisdiction here.

“What I’m trying to highlight about it,” Pritzker said, “is the resources don’t currently exist to do in the timely fashion that it’s required under the law to accomplish it.” Local police agencies, “don’t have the manpower. It’s just a fact,” he said. “There aren’t enough sworn officers to carry out what’s being asked here.”

“So, having said that, should we try?” Pritzker continued. “Well, yeah,” he said. “Is there a way to organize this law, to effectuate what everybody wants, and also do it within the manpower that exists? I think maybe. But we have a lot of laws where enforcement falls short, partly because when the law is going through the legislature, they’re not considering what it actually takes to effectuate the law. And I don’t want that to happen here.”

Is the law, then, a giant unfunded mandate?

“I appreciate the angle which you’re approaching it, but the reality is that we have laws on the books that say that you should be arrested and when you’re convicted of murder, you have to spend a certain number [of years in prison]. Is that an unfunded mandate when they pass a law in Springfield that says that murder is a criminal activity? I mean, that’s the job of police officers, but, you know, all I’m doing is you’re putting some recognition on the idea that you know that we need to consider the challenge for local and state police in carrying it out. It’s not, you know, should we do it? We absolutely should try to do it.”

Does he have any ballpark idea of what the bill would cost?

“I don’t know what it would cost, because it’s the number of going forward, the number of people who get, particularly on Karina’s Law, the number of people, we don’t know the number of people who will have to have their weapons removed, as opposed to those who would turn them in. We just don’t know.

“But here’s the thing, I think we need to continue to have conversations about this. Obviously, I’ve been an advocate for gun safety my entire adult life, and so I am very much in favor of what I think we all want to have effectuated here. I just know that what law enforcement would tell you is it is hard to find the manpower to do everything.”

So, is it fair to say he wants “a” bill, but not necessarily “this” bill?

“I believe there may need to be more conversations,” the governor said. “ ’A bill’ should pass, yes.” He did not elaborate further.

The day after I told subscribers about Pritzker’s remarks, the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence released its annual Domestic Violence Homicide Report for 2023, months ahead of its usual October release.

The group’s consultant said that the coalition hoped an early release of the numbers, which showed that domestic violence deaths rose by 110% last year, would increase the urgency of passing Karina’s Bill.

While it stalled in the Senate last spring, Senate President Don Harmon has since told me he is “eager” to pass the bill after a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling appeared to open the door to its constitutionality.

To my eyes, Pritzker appears torn. He is a longtime gun control advocate who supports the bill’s concept, but fears that law enforcement won’t be able to carry out the bill’s sweeping mandate.

So it appears to me that, since the Illinois State Police would also be involved with this task, at least some of those failures would reflect directly back on the governor, which is likely making him antsy.

Pritzker will have to work out an acceptable solution with legislators before the General Assembly decides to pass something on its own. It would be almost politically impossible for Pritzker to veto a bill that he wasn’t comfortable with, so some sort of deal is a must for him — but not so much for legislators.

  7 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Grayson’s behavior in Logan County led superior to ask, ‘How are you still employed with us?’ Capitol News Illinois

Before former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy Sean Grayson was accused of shooting Sonya Massey after she called police to investigate a prowler, he had a rocky, one-year tenure with the Logan County Sheriff’s Department.

Personnel records show that Grayson’s time there was fraught, though he was not fired by the department. Grayson’s file from Logan County shows he continued a high-speed pursuit of a traffic offender even after his supervisor ordered him to terminate it, a woman filed a complaint claiming Grayson tried to watch as she was strip searched, and her fiancé, who was in Logan County jail, claimed Grayson questioned him in front of other inmates as retaliation for his girlfriend’s complaint.

Logan County Chief Deputy Nathan Miller wrote in a November 2022 report that Grayson needed “extensive” training after failing to listen to his superiors. He wrote Grayson needed field training, along with “additional traffic stop training, report writing training, high-stress decision making process classes, and needs to read, discuss and understand issued Logan County Sheriff’s Department policies.”

“Seven months on. How are you still employed by us?” Miller asked Grayson during a recorded meeting to discuss Grayson’s actions.

“I don’t know,” Grayson responded.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will sign birth equity legislation at 11 am. At 1 pm, the governor will celebrate Illinois’ Medicaid waiver expansion at the Greater Chicago Food Depository’s Volunteer Orientation Hall. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | First lawsuit under new Illinois Fertility Fraud Act illustrates challenges in proving claims, crafting legislation: It wasn’t until almost a half-century after conception that the mother and daughter learned new information that shocked them both: A commercially available genetic test in 2022 revealed that Culver’s DNA matched with the DNA of a granddaughter of [Dr. Bradley D. Adams of Christie Clinic], according to a lawsuit filed by Paula Duvall and Culver in Champaign County in February. […] The case was believed to be the first filed under the Illinois Fertility Fraud Act, which went into effect in January. The law states that “the assisted reproductive treatment of a patient using the health care provider’s own human reproductive material without the patient’s informed written consent has caused significant harm and had a severe negative impact” on Illinois residents, including fertility patients and their children. But a Champaign County judge in late June dismissed Christie Clinic from the lawsuit, in part because the law “does not allow health care facilities like Christie” to be named as defendants, according to court documents.

* WGLT | Going to bat: Logan County correctional staff advocate for keeping facility local: On Friday, staff from Logan and other regional correctional centers held a charity softball tournament that served both to raise money for the Lincoln food bank, and to spotlight efforts to keep the prison in Logan County. A state report has determined the facility in poor condition and that it needs to be replaced. The state government looks poised to build a new prison in Will County, which it contends will better serve the 43% of inmates who hail from the Chicago area.

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | Lead feet in Illinois? 50% of crash deaths tied to speeding, so why does it persist?: In Illinois last year, 1,241 people were killed in vehicle crashes, and 55% of those deaths were speeding-related, ISP said. Who are these scofflaws? Significant segments are younger and male. In 2022, nearly one-quarter of drivers involved in fatal crashes between ages 18 and 44 were speeding. Also, 35% of male drivers ages 15 to 20, and 32% of male drivers ages 21 to 24 involved in fatal crashes were speeding, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s political campaign paid a firm for fundraising help while it lobbied City Hall, spurring calls for reform: Mercury Public Affairs, a New York City-based political strategy firm, has been lobbying Johnson since July 2023 on economic and labor causes, according to a Tribune examination of city lobbyist registration records. But starting this year, the company’s consulting division also worked for Johnson’s political fund, state campaign finance records show. Wearing both hats, though uncommon, is not a violation of state or city ethics codes. But it is a dynamic that good government watchdogs said raises concerns about the appearance of a conflict of interest for a firm seeking to influence the mayor’s office while also working to raise money for him.

* Sun-Times | Who’s paying for Chicago’s DNC? Voters won’t have the full picture till it’s long over: Once subsidized by taxpayers, major-party national conventions are now almost fully funded by uber-wealthy donors, massive corporations, labor unions and other influential big-money groups. […] A handful of major party backers confirmed to the Sun-Times that they’ve ponied up for the Democrats’ presidential election-year extravaganza, the four-day affair kicking off Aug. 19 that’s mostly funded through unlimited contributions to a non-profit host committee.

* Streetsblog Chicago | New RTA Report recommends income-based fare programs: The RTA report recommends addressing that challenge by creating an income-based reduced fare program called Regional Access. It also calls full state funding of ADA Paratransit and Regional Access, which would help reduce the $730 million budget gap. Lastly, it proposes unlocking collaborative pricing policies across the region by investing in technology and funding reform.

* Crain’s | Jewel, Mariano’s parents put merger on ice to fight Colorado challenge: Kroger and Albertsons, two supermarket operator giants and parent companies of Chicago grocers Mariano’s Fresh Markets and Jewel-Osco, have agreed to delay closing their $24.6 billion merger as a challenge from the Colorado attorney general goes to court. At a hearing yesterday in Denver, Judge Andrew Luxen granted a preliminary injunction halting the deal and canceled a hearing that was scheduled for Aug. 12. Instead, Luxen will oversee a two-week trial on the merits of the proposed tie-up beginning on Sept. 30.

* Sun-Times | Against all odds, piping plovers keep making history in Illinois: The viral saga began when Monty and Rose tried to nest in a Waukegan parking lot in 2018, which Semel said was “a terrible spot with drag racing, and the city wasn’t responsive to closing off the area.” Much changed quickly. This year Waukegan made piping plover the city bird the day before piping plovers returned to a restricted beach there. In 2019, Monty and Rose nested at Montrose, the first in Cook County since 1948.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County property tax late fees could be used for tax relief for low-income homeowners: The median tax bill south suburban taxpayers received this year went up about 20%, according to the county treasurer, the biggest increase in the last 29 years. The year before, the median residential tax bill for the north and northwest suburbs jumped 15.7%, the biggest percent increase in the last 30 years. Now, 13 of the board’s 17 members are calling for a hearing to create a new property tax relief rebate program. They want to pay for it with fees the Cook County treasurer collects from people who pay their bills late.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton former and current elected officials announce campaigns against Tiffany Henyard: Trustee Jason House, who became an outspoken advocate for launching an investigation into Henyard’s spending of village tax dollars, formally announced his run for mayor. Former Trustee Edward Steave, who lost a bid for reelection last year, is running for trustee and incumbent Trustees Kiana Belcher and Brittney Norwood and Village Clerk Alison Key will seek reelection.

* ABC Chicago | Dolton Trustee Jason House announces campaign for mayor in bid to unseat Tiffany Henyard: Dolton Senior Village Trustee Jason House’s candidacy is part of a team effort of former and current trustees all running in opposition to incumbent Mayor Tiffany Henyard. Former and current elected leaders are hoping to change the tide of Dolton politics by launching a joint effort against current Henyard under the slogan, “Clean House 2025.”

* Daily Herald | Virtual reality: Local college football players thrilled to be in video game: EA stopped producing NCAA games in 2014 after a federal court ruled the NCAA broke federal antitrust laws by not paying players for allowing their images and likenesses to be used. Now, in the age of Name, Image and Likeness (NIL), players receive $600 and a copy of the new game for the console of their choice as compensation. “It’s a very surreal, full circle feeling,” said Jaden Dolphin, a former Maine West linebacker who tallied 62 total tackles last season for Northern Illinois University.

*** Downstate ***

* Shaw Local | La Salle County GOP to host former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker at annual dinner: The La Salle County Republican Central Committee announced it will host its annual Reagan Day Dinner, featuring the former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker. The event will take place on Friday, Aug. 2, at the Pitstick Pavilion, on Route 23, north of Ottawa. Walker is celebrated for his transformative conservative leadership and impactful policies during his tenure, the La Salle County Republicans said in a news release. Some of his notable achievements include:

* Pantagraph | Central Illinois political parties energized by Harris, united under Trump: “I think she’s going to bring out some new voters, some new people, and honestly, I’m looking forward to seeing a career prosecutor … run against a felon,” said Patrick Cortesi, chairman of the McLean County Democrats, referring to Harris’ legal background and Trump’s felony convictions. Livingston County GOP Chairman Dave Rice said his party focuses more on policy positions than individual candidates, and in that respect, Harris would represent a continuation of the 81-year-old incumbent’s work.

* SJ-R | Big Lincoln: How Illinois is using lifelike Abraham Lincoln to help tourists, businesses: The Illinois Office of Tourism partnered with Matador in early June to release the first U.S. state AI travel guide to help people learn and explore Illinois from their phone. Meet “Big Lincoln,” the handheld 16th President of the United States, who’s now telling you the best place to eat in town. The AI president shares the same bobblehead look and name as Illinois’ official mascot, which has been featured in international mascot competitions in the past.

* WSIU | SIU-Carbondale Chancellor Austin Lane talks about enrollment, bonuses and administrative stability: WSIU’s Brad Palmer caught up with SIU-Carbondale Chancellor Austin Lane last week. Chancellor Lane updated the SIU Board of Trustees earlier this month on the enrollment picture for the campus, which he said includes a 14% increase currently in new students. He starts out talking about the 3.4% increase in summer enrollment.

* WCIA | Elevator explodes at Decatur ADM complex: A spokesperson from ADM said a “potential smoldering event” was found at an elevator in the building around 6:30 a.m. Upon investigation, surrounding operations were shut down and the complex was evacuated. The Decatur Fire Department was called to the scene. The elevator exploded an hour later at 7:30 a.m. The spokesperson said no one was hurt in the incident. However, the elevator did withstand some structural damage.

  25 Comments      


Live coverage

Monday, Jul 29, 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.

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Jul 29, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Do better
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts (Updated)
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

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