Attorney General Kwame Raoul today, alongside 20 attorneys general, sent a letter to Fortune 100 companies in support of diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the workplace. The letter is in response to a letter 13 Republican attorneys general sent to the companies in an attempt to undermine efforts to reduce racial inequities in corporate America by falsely claiming that programs to address racial disparity are unlawful.
“These 13 Republican attorneys general, while cloaking their letter in a theme of colorblindness, have audaciously targeted programs aimed at helping African Americans gain access to economic opportunity,” Raoul said. “Diversity initiatives are not just laudable goals, they are also good for business. I have a deep commitment to working with private employers to help further diversity, equity and inclusion in Illinois, and I will continue to be an advocate and champion of civil rights and racial progress.”
In today’s letter, Raoul and the coalition applaud corporate efforts to recruit diverse workforces and create inclusive work environments while encouraging the companies to double-down on diversity-focused programs. The letter also reiterates that such efforts are legal and reduce corporate risk for claims of discrimination, and that:
- Corporate diversity programs are lawful and serve important public and business purposes.
-Hollow claims of unlawful discrimination against white people at Fortune 100 companies do not change the fact that women and people of color continue to face barriers in the workplace.
-The businesses and workers of America should not be intimidated into abandoning diversity goals at a time when they are more important than ever.
AG Raoul also had an opinion piece in Crain’s this morning.
A proposed change in state air pollution regulations will move forward despite an objection from a legislative oversight committee, allowing the state to avoid federal sanctions that otherwise would go into effect next month.
The change, which came from the Illinois Pollution Control Board and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, repeals existing language that allowed factories, refineries, power plants and other facilities to exceed their emission limits during shutdowns, startups, and malfunctions.
The previous rules also gave the owners of those facilities a certain level of immunity from civil lawsuits for exceeding their emission limits during those events.
The change was necessary because of recent court decisions that prompted the U.S. EPA to change its interpretation of the federal Clean Air Act, a program that is largely administered and enforced by state and local governments.
A community organization leading the charge to transform an abandoned railway line and nearby vacant land into a vibrant agro-eco district received another boost in funding Monday, pushing the nearly two-decade-long dream forward.
Grow Greater Englewood received a $3.8 million grant from the Bezos Earth Fund to continue work on the Englewood Nature Trail, a 12-foot-wide, ADA-accessible, multi-use trail. The elevated path will run behind 58th and 59th streets between Wallace and Hoyne Avenues.
Chicago-based nonprofit Blacks In Green also received $1.5 million in funding to scale its Sustainable Square Mile pilot in Woodlawn. The Black Oaks Center for Sustainable Renewable Living received $1.75 million to support local farms and farmers. A complete list of Bezos Earth Fund awardees is available here.
* If you’re looking to get caught up on today’s City Council meeting here’s Erin Hegarty thread…
After a marathon of press conferences on a steamy third floor, today’s City Council meeting has begun! This is the last meeting before an August break. https://t.co/phAn1D3oI8
Today, Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois delegation concluded their mission to the United Kingdom. Over the past several days, the Governor participated in discussions on bilateral collaborations in technology and higher education, meetings with business organizations to strengthen ties to Illinois, and announced the intent to pursue a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the UK to advance trade and economic development goals in Illinois.
The Governor hosted a “Clean Energy & Clean Technology” roundtable with Illinois and United Kingdom-based energy companies. At this meeting, the present parties signed an MOU intending to strengthen collaboration to create a net-zero energy future. Illinois has been a leader in the clean energy space and is the first state in the Midwest to require carbon free energy by 2050. The list of companies included in the MoU are Commonwealth Edison Company, Ameren Illinois Company, The Peoples Gas Light and Coke Company, North Shore Gas Company, Northern Illinois Gas Company, National Grid plc, UK Power Networks, and Energy Networks Association.
Both the Illinois and UK-based companies promise to expand the use of sustainable technologies and renewable energy to support economic growth and the creation of jobs across both the United Kingdom and the State of Illinois. During this meeting, the Governor highlighted Illinois’ clean energy benefits to businesses looking to expand in the United States. Illinois’ Climate and Equitable Jobs Act is devoting $180 million per year to workforce programming to build the clean energy workforce.
“Under the leadership of Governor Pritzker, Speaker Welch, and the General Assembly, Illinois is recognized as a national leader in the efforts to decarbonize the energy sector,” said Ameren Illinois Chairman and President Lenny Singh. “Ameren Illinois is proud to collaborate with the Governor, our utility colleagues, and our friends in the United Kingdom to accelerate this transition and bring the economic benefits to central and southern Illinois.”
“We are building a bright, sustainable future with a focus on providing customers affordable and reliable energy. Our research and investments in emerging clean energy technologies — including renewable natural gas and hydrogen — and our success significantly reducing leaks in old pipelines will help the state meet its climate goals while creating jobs and strengthening the economy,” said Torrence Hinton, president — Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas. “On behalf of our customers and the dedicated men and women of Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas, I am pleased to sign this Memorandum of Understanding.” […]
The Governor also met with major partners in the quantum computing space. Many of these members also met the day prior at an “Innovation and Technology” Roundtable at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business in London. Illinois is home to more National Quantum Science Information centers than any other state and is one of the largest contributors to the National Quantum Initiative Act. Governor Pritzker’s administration is ensuring the future of quantum computing is centered in Illinois through a $200 million investment in the Chicago Quantum Exchange
Lastly, the Governor hosted the Delegation’s Farewell Dinner to mark the end of the 2023 UK Trade Mission with the Illinois Delegation. This trade mission’s goal was the strengthening of bilateral collaboration between the UK and Illinois. Highlights of the trip include the Goodwood Festival of Speed where the Governor discussed Illinois’ commitment to electric vehicles, discussions with business and education leaders on enhancing the economic cooperation between the UK and Illinois and initiating an MoU between the United Kingdom and Illinois.
* Props to the student journalists that keep breaking major stories…
Student journalists are watchdogging America's universities. First, reporting by @TheDailyNU led to the firing of Northwestern's football coach. Now, work by the @StanfordDaily has led to the resignation of Stanford's president. https://t.co/936Jh2411V
* Crain’s | NU hazing accusers now include former softball, baseball players, attorneys say: At a Wednesday press conference, which included comments by four former Northwestern football players, Crump and Chicago attorney Steven Levin said they have not filed a lawsuit yet on behalf of any athletes but currently represent 15 people, including some former players from the baseball and softball programs. All of their clients are former players.
* WCIA | Champaign organization excited over Safe-T Act ruling, feels it will support those in jail: One Champaign organization is excited about the Safe-T Act decision. James Kilgore, an advocacy director with First Followers, said he’s been fighting about it for many years. First Followers is a re-entry program to support people who were once in jail. Kilgore wants to transform the criminal legal system.
* Crain’s | Pritzker hails ‘fantastic’ trade mission to the United Kingdom: “It’s not like you snap your fingers and things happen,” Pritzker said of the weeklong trip. Still, he added, “Illinois needs to do more on the international front.” In that vein, other trips are coming soon, the governor said, indicating that similar trips to Asia, Israel and other portions of Europe may well be among them.
* WBEZ | Drought, deluge and the climate curious farmers of central Illinois: “You can’t sit in Washington and tell people how to farm,” said Larry Dallas, who farms about 2,000 acres near Tuscola, and has used conservation practices during his 39 years in business. “There is practicality involved. The technology is out in the field.”
* Bloomberg | White House asks Walgreens, CVS, Walmart for help promoting drug-cost law: US health officials met Tuesday at the White House with leaders of CVS Health Corp., Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. and Walmart Inc., seeking help to tout the benefits of the Inflation Reduction Act, a Health and Human Services Department spokesperson said. Along with capping insulin prices and expanding access to adult vaccines, the law will allow Medicare, the US health program for the elderly, to negotiate prices of costly drugs made by some of the biggest pharmaceutical companies.
* KFVS | The Boys & Girls Club of Southern Illinois announces closure: According to a press release from the BGCSI, they will cease all operations on Friday, July 21. The release also said this decision comes from the Board of Directors after much discussion and exploration of options that would allow continued operation.
* Bloomberg | Ken Griffin purchases Palm Beach property for $83 million: — Billionaire Ken Griffin snapped up a property on Palm Beach’s Worth Avenue for $83 million, located next to a former Neiman Marcus store that his firm has planned to use as an office. With the latest purchase, Griffin now owns both properties at 125 Worth Ave. and 151 Worth Ave., according to spokesman Zia Ahmed. The seller of 125 Worth Ave. was the Frisbie Group and Dreyfuss Management, said Rob Frisbie, a principal of the Frisbie Group.
* SJ-R | Gibson, Sangamon County Courthouse facility dog, passes away: With his blue vest and photo ID card on his collar, Gibson, an eight-year-old black lab, was a familiar presence around the courthouse since 2017. Gibson accompanied people into the courtroom who had given testimony and was used at the Sangamon County Child Advocacy Center when police and prosecutors were conducting forensic interviews with children.
* WCIA | Villa Grove pushes dead tree removal to limit future storm damage: Villa Grove wants to avoid future storm damage by asking people to get rid of their dead and diseased trees. The city took to social media for some help from the community after the derecho on June 29. Villa Grove Police Chief Robert Rea said he found a village ordinance that says homeowners are responsible for dead and diseased trees.
* NPR Illinois | Services planned for Emma Shafer: The visitation will be held at First Presbyterian Church with a service to follow. The service can be viewed on Emma’s page at StaabObituary.com. Shafer has been described as a young woman intent on making a difference. She was the membership chair of the Sierra Club Sangamon Valley Group, an incoming board member for the Springfield Immigrant Advocacy Network, a former organizer with Faith Coalition for the Common Good, and an active volunteer with countless other community groups.
* Office of Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle…
Today, the Illinois Supreme Court released a strong, clear decision upholding the constitutionality of the Pretrial Fairness Act, which ends the money bond system in Illinois. The Pretrial Fairness Act was signed into law in February 2021 as part of the SAFE-T Act. It overhauls the pretrial release and detention decision-making process statewide.
Cook County Leaders remain united in our commitment to collaborative implementation of the Pretrial Fairness Act, consistent with today’s Supreme Court opinion.
“We stand united in support of our court system stakeholders as they move forward with Pretrial Fairness Act reforms, ending money bond and implementing a pretrial process rooted in equity and community safety,” said Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle. “My administration stands ready to provide resources and counsel where we can be of service as we move forward toward a more just and equitable future for all.”
Since the Pretrial Fairness Act was signed into law in February 2021, Cook County’s criminal justice agencies have been engaged in a collaborative planning process to ensure countywide preparedness for implementation of the law. As part of this process, representatives from each of the County’s criminal justice agencies have participated in consistent working groups alongside local law enforcement, advocacy groups and community representatives. In light of the Supreme Court’s decision, planning for the end of the money bond system will move forward in earnest with strong support from the stakeholders.
“With the end of money bond, Illinois becomes the first state to end a system that criminalized poverty by prioritizing access to cash over community safety. We stand on the right side of history as we work to implement these changes in Cook County,” said State’s Attorney Kim Foxx. “The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office spent over 18 months training staff for the implementation of the Pretrial Fairness Act. We were prepared on January 1 and now stand ready for September 18 when cash bail finally ends in our state.”
“Today marks a significant victory for justice across Illinois as the state takes a momentous and historical step towards ending money bond. Our office is proud to be collaborating to implement the historic reforms in Cook County, helping to bring about a more fair and equitable justice system for all residents,” said Iris Y. Martinez, Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County.
Cook County was poised to successfully implement the end of money bond on January 1, 2023 and remains committed to coordinated, successful implementation on September 18, 2023. All county agencies will continue to work together to ensure stakeholders and employees receive the training and support needed to put this historic reform into practice.
“The attorneys and staff at the Cook County Public Defender’s Office are poised and ready to implement the historic end to money bond. We have created a new Pretrial Division, which is trained and equipped to robustly represent our clients throughout the new pretrial process. We have developed the necessary policies and procedures and collaborated extensively with the county’s court system stakeholders to ensure a smooth transition,” said Cook County Public Defender Sharone R. Mitchell, Jr.
“The Pretrial Fairness Act represents a critical step forward for economic and racial justice in Cook County and Illinois,” said Avik Das, Executive Director of the Justice Advisory Council. “We will be working closely with agencies, partners and community members to ensure the reforms are thoughtfully implemented, centering the needs of justice involved individuals as well as communities.”
* IL Freedom Caucus…
“As expected, the partisan Supreme Court ruled with JB Pritzker to uphold the revocation of the cash bail provisions of the SAFE-T Act. This is another example of judicial activism.
Article 1, Section 9 of the Constitution states, ‘all persons SHALL be bailable by sufficient sureties.’ The Illinois Supreme Court contends there is no mandate in the Constitution for cash bail, but the Constitution reads ‘SHALL’ not ‘May.’ The difference between these words is the subject of extensive debate on the floor of the House and Senate. Shall denotes a requirement. May denotes discretion. The Supreme Court has put partisan politics above the law and above common sense. The idea that there is no mandate for cash bail when the word ‘shall’ is clearly used in our Constitution is absurd on its face. The Illinois Supreme Court has failed the people of Illinois and has put the lives of our citizens at risk with this partisan ruling today.”
* Rep. Adam Niemerg…
State Representative Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich) says the Illinois Supreme Court ruling today on the SAFE-T Act is reckless and will ultimately make our communities less safe.
“The political leaders in Illinois are about one thing – self-preservation,” Niemerg said. “JB Pritzker contributed millions in the last election cycle to elect Democrats to the Illinois Supreme and his reward is the mental gymnastics used to justify eradicating cash bail which is enshrined in our Constitution in the very first article. What has happened today is another example of the culture of corruption that has been the hallmark of Illinois politics for far too long.”
Niemerg said beyond the politics of the ruling, communities will be less safe as a result of the Court’s partisan actions.
“There will be more criminals put back on the street as a result of this law which will put people’s lives at risk,” Niemerg said. “It also will make it even tougher for people to cooperate with police and identify suspects. They will be less willing to ID criminals out of fear they will be targeted once the suspect is released from custody. The Illinois Supreme Court’s decision to put politics ahead of common-sense and the plain language of the Constitution has put lives at risk.”
* US Rep. Darin LaHood…
“Under Governor J.B. Pritzker, Illinois has become less safe and violent crime is on the rise. Instead of giving law enforcement the tools they need to go after criminals, Governor Pritzker’s soft-on-crime policies, like ending cash bail, hinder cops from keeping communities safe. With morale of law enforcement at an all time low in Illinois, police departments across our state are struggling to recruit officers because of policies like the SAFE-T Act. The Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling is misguided, it will harm law enforcement, and make Illinois less safe.”
* Rep. Tim Ozinga…
“Today’s ruling in favor of the SAFE-T Act is disappointing, but not surprising. The current polarization of party politics has led to the passage of extreme legislation, such as the SAFE-T Act, that ends up helping no one. While reform is necessary to our current criminal justice system, this is not the way to do it. We cannot put our citizens, families, and communities at risk by implementing a method with no results to show for itself.
“With out-of-control crime spreading from cities like Chicago into neighboring suburbs, now is not the time to take risks when legislating public safety policies. Instead, we should focus on supporting our law enforcement and protecting our communities.”
* Rep. Fritts…
“I am deeply disturbed by today’s ruling made by the Illinois Supreme Court in favor of the SAFE-T Act. This ruling is just another step in the wrong direction for Illinois. Progressive Democrats continue to push failed, pro-criminal legislation onto the people of Illinois without regard for their safety. These soft-on-crime policies continue to prioritize the wants of criminals over the needs of our communities. We will now be the first in the nation to utilize no-cash bail, all while our state’s crime rate remains one of the highest in the country.
“Further, I stand behind the law enforcement officers who have continually spoken out against the SAFE-T Act. After their effort to defund the police failed, woke progressives are now attempting to handcuff law enforcement by making their jobs as challenging as possible. This no-cash bail policy ensures that police will continue to arrest the same offenders over and over again, therefore putting their lives in further danger and wasting more taxpayer dollars.
“I condemn this vile attempt by the Democratic majority to override the Constitution in favor of political social policies aimed at destroying what is left of Illinois.”
* Rep. Wayne Rosenthal…
Today’s ruling by the Illinois Supreme Court to completely abolish cash bail for criminals does not make Illinois safer. First, the Democrats craft “gun control” legislation which attacks law abiding citizens who have the right to defend themselves and now they eliminate cash bail for criminals who will quickly be back on the street committing crimes. This is a very dangerous road that has been created for the residents of Illinois.
The Democrats’ “SAFE-T” Act was swiftly rammed through the General Assembly Lame Duck Session and was rushed to Governor Pritzker to sign into law. This law is deeply flawed, and despite being amended multiple times, it’s had zero impact on reducing crimes throughout our communities across the state. Illinois has one of the highest murder rates in the nation, and now the first state to reform a system that rewards criminals.
Our freedoms are being stripped by the progressive agenda, and we need to stand together and fight back with comprehensive solutions which protect our citizens and gives authority back to our law enforcement officers. The people of Illinois deserve to live their lives without fear. Families depend on our laws to protect them and keep them safe; abolishing cash bail does just the opposite.
* Rep. Mike Coffey…
Today the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that abolishing cash bail for criminals is constitutional. This dangerous action does not make residents safer, in fact, it will instill fear throughout the communities across the state. The so-called “SAFE-T” Act was rushed through the General Assembly and signed into law with terrible flaws. Despite being amended multiple times, this law has done nothing to reduce violent crimes.
This approach to criminal justice reform does not provide communities with protection from violent criminals. We must continue to fight for law enforcement and stand behind them as they are sworn into a position to keep our communities safe.
Illinois is the first state in the nation to proudly abolish the cash bail system, which has one of the highest murder rates. The Democrat-Stacked Illinois Supreme Court decision to allow this provision to be deemed constitutional has an effect on every resident in the state.
Illinois families deserve the right to bear arms, to be protected by law enforcement, and to feel safe in their communities. House Republicans have created and launched a Public Safety Working Group to fight back against this progressive agenda. We will fight for our freedoms and stand with those who embrace the laws that protect our families and communities.
* Rep. Jed Davis…
“Yesterday’s Illinois Supreme Court decision sadly comes as no surprise. While I had hoped that common sense and high regard for the rule of law would have prevailed, partisan politics due to gerrymandered maps have led to one of the worst Judicial decisions I have seen in my lifetime.
“To put the wants of progressive politicians at the center of criminal law is disturbing. With high crime rates and out-of-control violence seeping into Illinois from the city of Chicago, now is not the time to experiment with what could be catastrophic changes to our laws.
“This type of legislation is a perfect example of what happens when one party has complete control over a state government. When the balance of power is out of whack in a supermajority, this kind of bogus criminal justice reform gets passed into law and the people of Illinois end up losing.”
* Darren Bailey…
Pritzker’s former political opponent and now candidate for Congress @DarrenBaileyIL with a statement on today’s cash bail ruling. Bailey focused most of his campaign for governor on the SAFE-T Act, which didn’t resonate with voters #twillhttps://t.co/cKKSkftEhQpic.twitter.com/t9UKpzilKk
* Illinois Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers…
Yesterday, in Rowe v. Raoul, the Illinois Supreme Court announced a strong affirmation of the Pretrial Fairness Act and its elimination of wealth-based jailing in the State of Illinois.
The decision represents a monumental and historic day in Illinois that will have an enduring positive impact upon our residents and communities. The Court’s opinion upholds a system of pretrial release that appropriately focuses on the presumption of innocence and allows for the incarceration of an accused individual prior to trial only when the Court has made specific findings justifying detention.
The Pretrial Fairness Act ensures that the State of Illinois will no longer allow accused individuals to buy their way out of jail–a vestige of the money bail system. It aligns Illinois courts more closely with the federal and juvenile systems of pretrial release, in which the financial status of the accused is no longer the dominant factor in determining whether that person remains in jail or is released pending trial.
…Adding… Rep. Maurice West…
I am thankful that the Illinois Supreme Court upheld the Pretrial Fairness Act and affirmed the legislature's action to eliminate cash bail, which is regressive, ineffective, and discriminatory. pic.twitter.com/oZ6v5S45tM
Today at 11 am CT the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression will give away 1,791 free Chicago dogs at Clark Street Dog to mark the year the First Amendment was ratified. The address is 3040 N. Clark Street, Chicago, IL 60657.
Media are welcome to attend the “Free Chicago Dogs for Free Speech” event and should reply directly to this email with their RSVP. FIRE staff will be on-site to give away swag and do interviews. We expect supplies to last just a few hours.
This is part of FIRE’s brand-new $3.2 million Chicago free speech campaign to raise awareness and support for the First Amendment. Full details are in this press release.
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression has been one of those groups which focused almost solely on things like “cancel culture” at college campuses. From 2016…
Its major grants come from the ultraconservative Earhart, John Templeton, and Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundations; the Scaife family foundations; the Koch-linked Donors Trust, and funders that sustain a myriad of conservative campus-targeting organizations that include FIRE, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, the David Horowitz Freedom Center (whose “Academic Bill of Rights” would mandate more hiring of conservative faculty and would monitor professors’ syllabi for “balance”), and Campus Watch (which tracks and condemns liberal professors’ comments on the Middle East).
* The group now claims it has changed focus. This is from March…
In Idaho, an art exhibit was censored and teens were told they couldn’t testify in some legislative hearings. In Washington state, a lawmaker proposed a hotline so the government could track offensively biased statements, as well as hate crimes. In Florida, bloggers are fighting a bill that would force them to register with the state if they write posts criticizing public officials.
Meanwhile, bans on books and drag performances are growing increasingly common nationwide.
“We are seeing tremendous attacks on First Amendment freedoms across the country right now, at all levels of government. Censorship is proliferating, and it’s deeply troubling,” said Joe Cohn, legislative and policy director with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.
OK, but with numerous state governments enacting actual statutes outlawing public expression, FIRE’s Chicago press release highlights a video about a Boston college’s suspension of a student group for mildly criticizing China. Not trivial, but kinda small in comparison to the official governmental statutory actions happening right now across the country. Another video features a Black woman who rescued a Klansman from a beating during a protest. The rest of its videos are here. Nothing on government book bans that I saw.
* Doing what they do is fine by me. It’s a free country. I’m cool with it. But when you step forward and say you’ve broadened your portfolio and want to challenge the ACLU’s leadership in the First Amendment space, then, you know, maybe actually walk the walk.
* Semi-related…
* 2023’s Best Cities for Hot Dog Lovers: Foodie rivals New York (No. 1) and Chicago (No. 2) finish at the top alongside other big cities like Los Angeles (No. 3) and Cincinnati (No. 6).
Each year, as part of our overall assessment of state business climates, CNBC’s America’s Top States for Business study considers how welcoming each state is to workers and their families.
Life, Health and Inclusion is one of the study’s ten categories of competitiveness. And this year, with the nationwide worker shortage so severe, the category is taking on increased importance in our methodology.
We consider multiple quality of life factors, including crime rates, environmental quality, and health care. We also look at the quality and availability of childcare, which is one of the most important factors in getting parents back into the workforce.
Casting the widest possible net for workers means not turning anyone away. So we consider inclusiveness in state laws by measuring protections against discrimination, as well as voting rights. And with surveys showing a substantial percentage of women considering abortion restrictions when making a choice of where to live in the wake of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade, reproductive rights are part of this year’s equation as well.
The worst-rated states: Florida, Arkansas, Tennessee, Indiana, Missouri, Alabama/South Carolina (tied), Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas.
* This tweet received more than 200,000 views before it was finally labeled as false…
NEW: Governor Pritzker signed HB-17584 into law today, increasing consequences for vehicles parking in bike lanes.
Cars parked in bike lanes will:
- Have higher fines (up by 17%) - Be subject to a boot or towing after 15 mins - Have all damage and vandalism claims voided pic.twitter.com/NRZiZPkjIN
NEW: Governor Walz signed HB-17584 into law today, increasing consequences for vehicles parking in bike lanes.
Cars parked in bike lanes will:
- Have higher fines (up by 17%) - Be subject to a boot or towing after 15 mins - Have all damage and vandalism claims voided pic.twitter.com/0TNqreuEUH
— Soup for my Family 🥣 🧦 🤖🫐 (@soupformy_fam) July 18, 2023
Almost 49,000 views on that one, which Twitter has not yet called out for its falsehood.
* I guess there are two ways of looking at this: 1) These kids today and their Twitter pranks; 2) People will believe just about anything.
Wednesday, Jul 19, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department
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* Sun-Times | Eliminating cash bail puts Illinois firmly on road of criminal justice reform:As a Center for American Progress report from last year summed it up, because of “excessive cash bail, hundreds of thousands of people are incarcerated each year not due to any real public safety concern, but rather due to a lack of money.”Despite what some right-wing politicians and activists have tried to convey in rabid misinformation campaigns, the Pretrial Fairness Act is not intended to allow thousands of violent men and women loose on the streets like a horde of zombies in an apocalyptic disaster film.
* WCIA | 60 days until the Safe-T Act is in effect, some officials feel ready and others want more time:Julia Rietz, the Champaign County State’s Attorney, said her team is ready to go. She knows they have been since the original January 1st date. Tyler Heleine, the Coles County Chief Deputy, doesn’t think this is the right move and wants to see more work done. “I think there’s a little disappointment,” he said. “We were hoping it would go the other way.”
* WBEZ | The new Rainbow PUSH leader vows to fight recent Supreme Court decisions: Jackson said Tuesday the U.S. Supreme Court has “threatened 60 years of work,” and his successor the Rev. Dr. Frederick D. Haynes, III cited the high court’s recent decision rolling back affirmative action in higher education as one area the civil rights organization will push back on. “We’ve got to go to the Supreme Court, lie down on the steps of the Supreme Court and tell the Supreme Court that we’re going to stay right here and have our own affirmative action,” Haynes told attendees at the organization’s annual convention on the University of Chicago’s campus.
* Tribune | Chicago’s IG says Ald. Jim Gardiner hit a constituent with a phony fine. The Board of Ethics should whack him back in the wallet: Last week, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg released her findings. Though she didn’t name Gardiner in her report, the Tribune confirmed she was speaking about him. Witzburg concluded that the alderman worked with two office workers to conjure up the retaliation. Czosnyka still was cited for the weeds even though Gardiner and his people had previously been told that Czosnyka’s garden did not violate any city ordinance.
* Block Club | Police Oversight Agency Says It Can’t Find Migrants Who Were Allegedly Sexually Abused By Cops: The police oversight agency began its investigation July 6. Since then, the agency has uncovered another claim of “sexual misconduct” involving a migrant and one or more officers in the 19th Police District, Civilian Office of Police Accountability chief Andrea Kersten said. But, after nearly two weeks of investigating, the police oversight agency is still working to substantiate whether this alleged abuse in fact occurred, Kersten said.
* WTTW | How a Group of Community Leaders Worked to Choose 3 Finalists for Chicago’s Next Police Superintendent: The three finalists for the city’s top cop were selected from a total of 54 applicants by the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability (CCPSA) after unprecedented community and police input. The choice now rests with new Mayor Brandon Johnson to make what will likely be the most consequential hiring decision of his administration.
* Sun-Times | City Council members to propose 2-year timeline for eliminating ‘sub-minimum’ wage:With a progressive mayor who is a champion of the “One Fair Wage” campaign, it was never a matter of if, but when, Chicago eliminates the “sub-minimum wage” for tipped workers and how long restaurants would have to do it. The answer will come Wednesday, when Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (35th) and rookie Ald. Jessie Fuentes (26th) introduce an ordinance that would give restaurants two years — until July 2025 — to phase out the sub-minimum wage for tipped workers.
* Sun-Times | Scientists test South Side air, rain to find ways to tackle climate-related problems: Researchers at Argonne National Laboratory say they want to help South Siders understand why their communities experience perennial flooding as well as climate-related bad air quality and extreme heat. With the aim of providing the most specific information they can, scientists on Tuesday installed monitors at Chicago State University that will measure temperature, humidity, air quality and other metrics to gauge the impact of climate change.
* NBC Chicago | Who’s eligible and more: what to know about Illinois’ $68M Instagram settlement:According to a press release, the suit, filed in DuPage County, claims Instagram owner Meta violated the Illinois’ Biometric Privacy Act, which prohibits companies from collecting and storing biometric information like physical characters that can be used to identify individuals.
* Sun-Times | Illinois Democrats celebrate court decision ending cash bail: ‘Monumental change is possible’: Many Republicans argued it would put violent offenders back on the streets and would not protect victims. Illinois state’s attorneys and sheriffs also challenged the law in courts. A short statement from Pritzker — who has been in the United Kingdom on a trade mission since last week — belied the months of pummeling he and other Democrats weathered on the campaign trail last year from Republicans who tried, and mostly failed, to rally votes around on the issue.
* NYT | Illinois Supreme Court Upholds Measure Designed to End Cash Bail: The Illinois Supreme Court upheld a measure on Tuesday eliminating cash bail in the state, finding that Democratic legislators acted properly when they passed the law, which will transform the Illinois criminal justice system and limit judges’ ability to hold defendants in jail before trial.
* Sun-Times | What happens when cash bail ends in Illinois? In other states, there have been successes but the debate continues: Other states, red and blue, have tried limited versions of what Illinois is about to do. That has made it difficult to know exactly what to expect. As researchers at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government found, “There are so many different approaches to bail reform and because few jurisdictions rigorously evaluate the bail reforms they have implemented, there is not a clear blueprint for what works.”
* WGEM | Quincy police will be ready for ‘no cash bail’ changes: [Quincy Police Chief Adam Yates] Yates stated the Quincy Police Department, Adams County Sheriff’s Department and Adams County State’s Attorney’s Office met in late 2022 to prepare for the changes that were initially set to go into effect Jan 1. He stated police would work over the next 60 days to ensure they are ready for implementation on Sept. 18.
*Daily Herald | Elation, dismay from suburban leaders over state Supreme Court’s landmark bail ruling: McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally, who was among the prosecutors who sued to block the change, said his office is disheartened by the decision, He believes it will make the job of prosecutors, judges and police more difficult. “That said, we have no choice other than to accept the decision and move on,” he said, adding that his office will do everything within its power to ensure that dangerous offenders remain behind bars while awaiting trial and other measures are in place to minimize risk to the public. “As the flaws of this haphazardly enacted and poorly conceived law become immediately apparent in the form of compromised safety of communities across the state, we will also seek to work with our legislators on common-sense reforms,” Kenneally said.
* WSPY | Kendall County officials ready for SAFE-T Act implementation, again: Kendall County State’s Attorney Eric Weis was among those who filed suit against the act, delaying a January implementation of a cash free bail system. With Tuesday’s ruling, the act will now go into effect in September. […] Circuit Clerk Matt Prochaska says that his office was ready for the financial impacts of the act before it went to litigation.
* WMBD | Reaction to the Illinois Supreme Court decision on the SAFE-T Act case: State Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth, a Peoria Democrat in the Illinois General Assembly: “This decision reflects the countless hours of careful consideration that went into every component of the SAFE-T Act. Responsibly modernizing our pretrial procedures will not only create a fairer process, it will help to make our communities safer by basing release decisions on a public safety assessment instead of a defendant’s access to cash.
* BND | What public officials are saying about Illinois Supreme Court ruling on SAFE-T Act : REP. CHARLIE MEIER, R-OKAWVILLE “I voted against eliminating no-cash bail when this law passed in 2021. The Illinois Supreme Court’s decision to support the elimination of cash bail will set criminals free that should otherwise remain behind bars. I am very disappointed with the ruling made by the Illinois Supreme Court Democrat majority that was elected by Governor Pritzker.
* News Channel 20 | State lawmakers react to SAFE-T Act: State Senator Steve McClure (R-Springfield): “It’s disappointing that the Supreme Court overruled our state’s constitution and the will of the people of Illinois by upholding the SAFE-T Act. This ruling is just one more blow to the credibility of the Illinois Supreme Court, particularly after two of the justices accepted a million dollars from the main proponent of the Act—Governor JB Pritzker. This is yet another victory for the people who choose to commit crimes in our state. Where are the victories for the victims?”
* And here’s the rest…
* Tribune | COPA unable to find victims in probe of Chicago officers allegedly having sex with migrants housed at stations: Citing the public scrutiny around the allegations, COPA’s chief administrator, Andrea Kersten, held a rare news conference at the agency’s office in West Town Tuesday morning. Kersten told reporters that COPA has received a second allegation of sexual misconduct involving at least one still-unknown Chicago Police Department officer and a migrant, whose identity also wasn’t known as of Tuesday.
* Politico | The long, hot money race: If second-quarter fundraising numbers are any indication, 2024 is going to be a snoozer for most of the congressional races in Illinois. Democratic Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi (IL-08) has outpaced all of his Illinois colleagues (again). He has nearly $13.5 million cash on hand, more than most members of Congress across the country.
* Crain’s | There’s a stealth campaign to lure business away from Illinois. Lawmakers must halt it.: Today in Washington, D.C., the fourth phase of a multi-decade strategy to entice business from Illinois and other Midwest states using legislative stealth continues apace. Utilizing the “boiling frog” approach — moving sufficiently small to not draw attention until it is too late — hostile business interests work through their federal representatives to quietly nullify small advantages of Midwest commercial interests. In so doing, they cripple a critical component of regional air travel, which raises their odds of capturing high-value meetings and conference business.
* AP | Union Pacific railroad to renew push for 1-person crews: The railroad will continue using two crew members on its trains during the test, but officials say this could bolster their case in future negotiations for cutting crew size if it is successful.
* Crain’s | These Chicago execs want their fraud convictions overturned. Here’s their argument.: Rishi Shah and Shradha Agarwal are using a novel argument in asking a federal judge to throw out their April convictions on federal fraud charges or at least grant them a new trial. Shah and Agarwal, co-founders of Outcome Health, say prosecutors seized more of their assets than they should have before trial, which left the two without enough money to hire the attorneys who were their first choices.
* WCIA | Ford County reports first West Nile virus bird case: “The positive bird is an indication that West Nile Virus is circulating in our area and individuals should take appropriate preventive measures to protect their health,” said Nancy Mandamuna, Environmental Health Specialist for the FCPHD.
* Crain’s | Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Illinois looks to fill 300 jobs in Pilsen: BCBSIL, one of five insurance plans owned by Chicago-based Health Care Service Corp., plans to initially hire up to 70 people for customer service positions, with a focus on applicants who can speak both English and Spanish, according to a statement. The insurance giant will continue hiring over the coming months, and about 30 of the roles will be information technology jobs.
* Reuters | Taco Bell wins ‘Taco Tuesday’ trademark dispute with rival chain: Yum Brands’ (YUM.N) Taco Bell prevailed on Tuesday in its self-described bid to “liberate” the phrase “Taco Tuesday,” as competing fast-food chain Taco John’s told the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) it would abandon its federal “Taco Tuesday” trademark.
* Daily Herald | How some suburban parks have parted ways with pesticides: Following in the footsteps of Elgin, Naperville and Park Ridge, Lake Forest has launched a pesticide-free pilot program at Everett Park this year, using natural methods such as compost top dressing and overseeding to combat weeds without herbicide.
* WAND | Chevelle to perform at the Illinois State Fair: “We are excited to add Chevelle to an already diverse lineup,” said Illinois State Fair Manager Rebecca Clark. “From country to rock, to pop and hip hop, we feel we have built a grandstand lineup for every musical taste. We can’t wait to welcome fairgoers to the 2023 Illinois State Fair next month.”
* Crain’s | Illinois residents getting more biometric privacy settlement cash — this time from Instagram: The $68.5 million preliminary approval is the result of a class-action lawsuit in which Illinois alleged that Meta platforms violated the state’s Biometric Information Privacy Act. Instagram allegedly collected and stored biometric information — personal identifiers like fingerprints and facial recognition — without the proper requirements.
* As most of you will recall, the SAFE-T Act was revised by the General Assembly during last year’s veto session. The Civic Federation analyzed the newly revised law in December. From its section on detainable pretrial offenses…
• All non-forcible felonies that are not eligible for probation, if the defendant’s release poses a real and present threat to the safety of any person or persons or the community, based on the specific articulable facts of the case;
• All forcible felonies, if the defendant’s release poses a real and present threat to the safety of any person or persons or the community, based on the specific articulable facts of the case. This includes: treason, first degree murder, second degree murder, predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, armed robbery, aggravated robbery, robbery, burglary where there is use of force against another person, residential burglary, home invasion, vehicular invasion, aggravated arson, arson, aggravated kidnapping, kidnapping, aggravated battery resulting in great bodily harm or permanent disability or disfigurement or any other felony which involves the threat of or infliction of great bodily harm or permanent disability or disfigurement;
• The list of detainable offenses under 725 ILCS 5/110-6.1(a)(6) (which already included several gun-related offenses) is expanded to include: reckless homicide, involuntary manslaughter, residential burglary, child abduction, child endangerment, hate crimes, aggravated unlawful restraint, threatening a public official and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon other than by discharge of a firearm;
• A new section (725 ILCS 5/110-6.1(a)(6.5)) is added to include several offenses related to aggravated driving under the influence and animal cruelty; and
• Any attempt to commit the aforementioned charges if the defendant’s pretrial release poses a real and present threat to the safety of any person or persons or the community, based on the specific articulable facts of the case (725 ILCS 5/110-6.1(a)(7)).
If someone is released on a felony or class A misdemeanor, and the person commits a new felony or class A misdemeanor while on pretrial release, they are subject to revocation of pretrial release and entitled to a hearing. The revocation hearing must occur within 72 hours of the filing of the State’s petition or the court’s motion for revocation. The defendant is entitled to representation by defense counsel and an opportunity to be heard regarding the violation and evidence in mitigation. If a defendant was released on a Class B or C misdemeanor or any lower offense, and is charged with a felony or a Class A misdemeanor while on pretrial release, the pretrial release may not be revoked but the court may impose sanctions. However, the state can file a petition seeking detention in any eligible circumstance. (725 ILCS 5/110-6)
The amendment removes language from the SAFE-T Act that previously required someone to be in violation of electronic monitoring for 48 hours in order for it to be considered an escape and instead states that a person “knowingly escapes or leaves from the geographic boundaries of an electronic monitoring or home detention program with the intent to evade prosecution.” Anyone charged with a felony who escapes according to this revised criterion is guilty of a class 3 felony, and anyone charged with a misdemeanor who escapes is guilty of a class B misdemeanor. (730 ILCS 5/5-8A-4.1)
New language is also added to 730 ILCS 5/5-8A-4.15 to state that anyone charged with a felony or misdemeanor who knowingly and intentionally violates a condition of electronic monitoring or home detention without notification to the proper authority is subject to sanctions; and a person who violates a condition of the electronic monitoring or home detention program by knowingly and intentionally removing, disabling, destroying or circumventing the operation of an approved electronic monitoring device shall be subject to penalties for escape under Section 5-8A-4.1.
“Willful flight” is defined as intentional conduct with a purpose to thwart the judicial process to avoid prosecution. Isolated instances of nonappearance in court alone are not evidence of the risk of willful flight. Reoccurrence and patterns of intentional conduct to evade prosecution, along with any affirmative steps to communicate or remedy any such missed court date, may be considered as factors in assessing future intent to evade prosecution. The amendment also removes language that previously said “simple past non-appearance in court alone is not evidence of future intent to evade prosecution.” (725 ILCS 5/110-1(f))
725 ILCS 5/109-1(a-1) makes explicit the official AOIC [Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts] interpretation of the Pretrial Fairness Act (PFA): someone who is trespassing and will not stop may be arrested. Requires that a citation be used first before custodial arrest while retaining exception to allow immediate arrest based on safety of others or the accused. Clarifies that arrests are not required for class A misdemeanors or felonies. Clarifies that any officer can release someone from custody and not only “the arresting officer.” Removes requirement that people released from police custody be scheduled into court within 21 days.
In spring 2020, the Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Pretrial Practices strongly endorsed bail reform, noting that found that a defendant who can’t afford bail sees his or her life unravel within days — loss of a job, loss of child custody, health problems without access to medication.
What’s more, the commission found that it tends to generate spurious plea deals. Defendants reason that pleading to a lower-level offense gets them out of jail sooner.
In 2017, this court established the Illinois Supreme Court Commission on Pretrial Practices (Commission) and charged it with “conducting a comprehensive review of the State’s pretrial detention system” and with making recommendations on potential reforms to that system. Ill. S. Ct. Comm’n on Pretrial Practices, Preliminary Report 4 (2018), [https://perma.cc/S8VA-83S9]. In 2020, the Commission issued its final report, listing more than 50 recommendations to reform pretrial practices to “ensure defendants are not denied liberty solely due to their inability to financially secure their release from custody.” Ill. S. Ct. Comm’n on Pretrial Practices, Final Report 22 (2020), [https://perma.cc/Y4FU-GJKL]. The Commission observed that the General Assembly bore responsibility to amend the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code) (725 ILCS 5/100-1 et seq. (West 2020)) in that regard, and it urged the legislature to ensure that “conditions of release will be non- monetary, least restrictive, and considerate of the financial ability of the accused.” Ill. S. Ct. Comm’n on Pretrial Practices, Final Report 69 (2020).
The following year, such reform occurred. In 2021, the General Assembly passed, and the Governor signed, Public Act 101-652 (eff. Jan. 1, 2023), commonly known as the Safety, Accountability, Fairness and Equity-Today (SAFE-T) Act.
That court commission was rarely mentioned outside of this website, but I thought it was central to the discussion because it explained why eliminating cash bail was within the legislature’s constitutional purview by defining it this way…
Bail: The process of releasing a defendant from custody with conditions set to reasonably assure public safety and court appearance. […]
“Bail” is often used to refer to the amount of cash that a defendant must post as a condition of release. “Bond” is sometimes treated as a synonym of “bail.” Understood properly, “bail” – which literally means, “release” – is a process of releasing a defendant from custody on conditions designed to assure both public safety and the person’s appearance in court. A “bond” occurs whenever a defendant enters an agreement with the court. The agreement may, but need not necessarily, include a financial condition, but can also or instead include a variety of other conditions such as electronic monitoring, curfews, supervised visits or appointments, etc.
* OK, on to the opinion. First up, standing. It’s doubtful that the sheriffs and state’s attorneys actually had standing to sue. But, the majority opinion notes a government brief…
Standing is typically a threshold determination, but this case is anything but typical. In its opening brief, the State referred to the “unusual circumstances of this case” and acknowledged “the public interest would be served by the adjudication of [the] plaintiffs’ claims on the merits.” We turn to those claims and their merits.
The trial court agreed with the plaintiffs and held that the pretrial release provisions violate the bail clause, but the court’s reasoning is difficult to follow. The trial court acknowledged the defendants’ position that “the bail provision exists to confer a right on criminal defendants,” but it asserted the purpose of that provision is “much broader.” The court continued, “Bail exists, as it has for centuries, to balance a defendant’s rights with the requirements of the criminal justice system, assuring the defendant’s presence at trial, and the protection of the public.” Noting that the Act “eradicates monetary bail as a judicial consideration in every Illinois case,” the trial court concluded that, “under the Act, *** ‘persons are no longer bailable by sufficient sureties’ pursuant to the pretrial release provision of the Act because ‘sufficient sureties’ does involve monetary bail as one the conditions of bail which is abolished with the Act.”
We reject the trial court’s uneven reasoning for three reasons.
First, the trial court ignored the plain language of the constitution. The bail clause does not include the term “monetary,” so it did not cement the practice of monetary bail, however long-standing and prevalent across Illinois, into our constitution. “Sufficient sureties” is not limited to sufficient monetary sureties, and we cannot append or supplement the constitutional text.
Second, the trial court correctly recognized that the bail clause strikes a finely constructed balance between the interests of criminal defendants in pretrial release and the interest of the State “obtaining the greatest possible assurance” that the defendant will appear for trial (People ex rel. Gendron v. Ingram, 34 Ill. 2d 623, 626 (1966)), as well as the State’s interest in public safety, but the court incorrectly assumed that abolishing monetary bail undermines the State’s interests. The court appeared to believe that monetary bail is the only way to assure a defendant’s presence and to protect the public. In doing so, the court elevated the system of monetary bail over the plain language of the bail clause. While the clause establishes an individual constitutional right to bail, that right is not absolute (see Hemingway, 60 Ill. 2d at 80) but conditioned by “sufficient sureties” and, more importantly, by exceptions intended to keep the most serious, and potentially dangerous, offenders in custody after a hearing to establish they pose a real and present threat.
The Act’s pretrial release provisions complement the bail clause in that regard by allowing the State to seek, and the trial court to order, pretrial detention of certain criminal defendants. See 725 ILCS 5/110-2, 110-6.1 (West 2022). The Act requires the court to consider the “nature and seriousness of the real and present threat to the safety of any person or persons *** that would be posed by the defendant’s release.”
Third and relatedly, the trial court misapprehended what the drafters of the bail clause actually did. The drafters consciously chose to leave the clause largely identical to the 1870 Constitution, which was largely identical to the original 1818 Constitution. See 1 Record of Proceedings, Sixth Illinois Constitutional Convention 699 (describing the current bail clause as a “minor rephrasing” of the 1870 version, leaving “[t]he substance *** unchanged”). Thus, the historical antecedent for the meaning of “bailable by sufficient sureties” is the meaning of bail in 1818.
As the State correctly observes, “monetary bail was all but unknown at the time the 1818 Constitution was drafted.” A dictionary published that year defined bail as “the freeing or setting at liberty one arrested or imprisoned *** under security taken for his appearance” but did not mention money as the sole or even primary means of providing that security. Monetary bail emerged later in the mid-to-late nineteenth century.
The drafters were cognizant of the legislature’s foray into that area, which included section 110-8 of the Code and outlawed professional suretyship by bail bondsmen. The drafters clearly understood that Illinois’s approach to pretrial release had evolved since the State was established and clearly understood that approach would continue to evolve, and they used language that would allow that. Delegate Bernard Weisberg offered a minority proposal that would have allowed all criminal defendants to remain at large until convicted, unless there was a judicial determination that confinement or bail was necessary to assure a defendant’s presence at trial. That proposal was ultimately rejected […]
Legislative latitude in regulating pretrial release, thus, was a fundamental underpinning of the bail clause. The legislature has once again engaged in the process of bail reform, and its efforts are consistent with the drafters’ intent. The plaintiffs’ bail clause claim fails
Count IV of the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint alleges that the pretrial release provisions violate the crime victims’ rights clause. Initially adopted in 1992 and since amended, article I, section 8.1, of the Illinois Constitution sets out the constitutional rights of crime victims in Illinois and now includes 12 explicitly defined “rights” that crime victims “shall” have. Ill. Const. 1970, art. I, § 8.1. The crime victims’ enumerated rights include, inter alia, “[t]he right to have the safety of the victim and the victim’s family considered in denying or fixing the amount of bail, determining whether to release the defendant, and setting conditions of release after arrest and conviction.”
The trial court agreed with the plaintiffs. The court stated that “the plain reading” of “fixing the amount of bail *** clearly refers to the requirement that the court consider victims’ right in the setting of the amount of monetary bail.” The trial court continued that, by removing that method of ensuring victims’ safety, the legislature improperly removed the discretion constitutionally given a trial court by the clause. According to the trial court, the Act leaves a court with no “amount of bail” to fix, impairing its ability to protect victims and their families.
We reject the trial court’s reasoning for three reasons.
First, the trial court again ignored the plain language of the constitution. The crime victims’ rights clause mentions the “amount of bail,” not the amount of monetary bail. The word “amount” connotes quantity and does not only mean a quantity of money but rather, consonant with the bail clause, a quantity of sufficient sureties.
Second, the trial court appeared to forget that the pretrial release provisions of the Act expressly take crime victims into account. As we have already mentioned, those provisions require a court to consider the “nature and seriousness of the real and present threat to the safety of any person or persons that would be posed by the defendant’s release,” including crime victims and their family members, “as required under” the Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act. The provisions also require the court to give notice to crime victims before holding a pretrial release hearing, before revoking a condition of pretrial release, and in a range of other contexts. Thus, the pretrial release provisions secure, rather than contravene, the rights guaranteed by the clause, in that they require the court to consider the safety of victims at every stage at which the court determines whether and on what conditions a defendant should be released.
Third, the trial court failed to grasp that, like the bail clause, the crime victims’ rights clause is part of the bill of rights. Both are equally important and work in concert. The bail clause concerns the individual rights of criminal defendants, but in its “real and present threat” exception, it acknowledges the State’s interest in public safety. The crime victims’ rights clause, initially adopted in 1992, not only bolstered that interest but created a new and watershed structure of individual rights for crime victims. The latter clause was adopted with only one focus, victims. We believe that it would dilute the purpose of that clause to hold that it had another, tangential purpose—namely, to mandate a system of monetary bail for criminal defendants across Illinois. Nothing in the crime victims’ rights clause’s plain language indicates such an intent to upend suddenly, after 174 years, the constitutional history of bail in Illinois.
Count V of the plaintiffs’ first amended complaint alleges that the pretrial release provisions of the Act violate the separation of powers clause. Article II, section 1, of the Illinois Constitution provides, “The legislative, executive and judicial branches are separate. No branch shall exercise powers properly belonging to another.”
The trial court agreed with the plaintiffs. According to the trial court, this court has held that the legislature is expressly prohibited from exercising judicial power, and statutes that undermine traditional and inherent judicial roles violate separation of powers. Relying upon Hemingway, 60 Ill. 2d at 79, the trial court concluded that the authority to deny or revoke bail to preserve the orderly process of criminal procedure is an administrative matter inherently entrusted solely to the courts. The trial court added that, by encroaching on that authority in abolishing monetary bail, the legislature violated the separation of powers clause.
We reject the trial court’s reasoning and, particularly, its overreading of Hemingway. […]
Our conclusion is consistent with other areas of criminal procedure. For example, this court has held that sentencing is exclusively a judicial function but has also held that “ ‘the legislature may restrict the exercise of judicial discretion in sentencing, such as by providing for mandatory sentences’ ” The plaintiffs’ separation of powers claim fails.
The Illinois Constitution of 1970 does not mandate that monetary bail is the only means to ensure criminal defendants appear for trials or the only means to protect the public. Our constitution creates a balance between the individual rights of defendants and the individual rights of crime victims. The Act’s pretrial release provisions set forth procedures commensurate with that balance. For the reasons that we have stated, we reverse the circuit court’s decision to grant summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs.
On December 31, 2022, this court granted a supervisory order staying the effect of pretrial release provisions in Public Acts 101-652 and 102-1104, along with various amendments to Illinois Supreme Court rules that facilitated the implementation of those provisions. See People ex rel. Berlin v. Pritzker, No. 129249 (Ill. Dec. 31, 2022) (supervisory order). Sixty days after the filing of this opinion, on September 18, 2023, this court’s stay of pretrial release provisions in Public Acts 101-652 and 102-1104 shall be vacated. On that date, the circuit courts are directed to conduct hearings consistent with Public Acts 101-652 and 102-1104, and Illinois Supreme Court Rules implementing those pretrial release provisions shall become effective.
Justice Mary K. O’Brien concurred and wrote about the standing issue.
* Justice David K. Overstreet also addressed the standing issue, but ultimately concluded that the statute violates the Crime Victims’ Rights clause. Justice Lisa Holder White concurred.
In the end, it was 5-2. A partisan split.
I often point out that three numbers are paramount to getting anything done: 60, 30 and 1; majorities in the legislative branch and the governor’s signature. Add to that the number 4, which is a majority of the Supreme Court.
BREAKING: The Illinois Supreme Court has ruled ending cash bail is CONSTITUTIONAL, ending months of legal challenges and allowing the controversial criminal justice reform law to go into effect. It was a 5-2 vote #twill
The Illinois Supreme Court also said its stay of the SAFE-T Act's pretrial release provisions will end in two months, on Sept. 18. https://t.co/XAxEoDP7AQ
In its ruling, the court said the state’s constitution “does not mandate that monetary bail is the only means to ensure criminal defendants appear for trials or the only means to protect the public. Our constitution creates a balance between the individual rights of defendants and the individual rights of crime victims. The Act’s pretrial release provisions set forth procedures commensurate with that balance.” […]
The court’s ruling stems from a flurry of lawsuits last year brought by roughly 60 sheriffs and state’s attorneys who argued that eliminating cash bail would reduce public safety, put law enforcement in harm’s way and violate the state’s constitution.
In December, Kankakee County Chief Judge Thomas Cunnington agreed with the groups and ruled the cash bail provision unconstitutional, though his ruling would have only applied to counties that had sued.
An appeal by Attorney General Kwame Raoul sent the matter to the state Supreme Court, and the justices ordered that the entire Pretrial Fairness Act wouldn’t go into effect until further notice “in order to maintain consistent pretrial procedures throughout Illinois.”
Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis, writing the majority opinion, said, “Our constitution creates a balance between the individual rights of defendants and the individual rights of crime victims. The Act’s pretrial release provisions set forth procedures commensurate with that balance.”
Joining Theis were the other four Democrat justices on the court: Joy Cunningham, P. Scott Neville, Mary O’Brien and Elizabeth Rochford.
Republican justice David Overstreet wrote the dissent, joined by the other Republican justice, Lisa Holder White.
The majority found that the trial court ignored the “plain language of the constitution” in multiple instances and that the prosecutors challenging the law did not meet the high legal bar for overturning a state statute.
“Statutes enjoy a strong presumption of constitutionality because the legislature is principally responsible for determining the public policy of our state,” Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis wrote in the majority opinion.
The ruling means judges, prosecutors, attorneys and other court staff across the state will shift how they handle pending criminal cases. The justices gave trial courts 60 days to prepare for the new rules, with cash bail to be eliminated on Sept. 18.
Once the changes go into effect, monetary bail will no longer be a factor in whether someone is released from jail while they await trial. Instead, judges will weigh the circumstances and decide whether to release defendants with certain conditions or order them detained if the allegations meet certain thresholds.
* Senator Robert Peters…
State Senator Robert Peters released the following statement in response to the Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling on the pretrial release portions of the SAFE-T Act:
“I am extremely proud that our state’s highest court is prioritizing public safety over wealth. This historic decision is the culmination of over a decade of organizing from countless grassroots organizations that deal directly with vulnerable communities in which cash bail has affected, including groups that support survivors of gender-based violence. I would like to take this opportunity to specifically thank the Coalition to End Money Bond, the State’s Attorneys Association, the Sheriff’s Association and survivor advocates for their assistance in getting pretrial fairness across the finish line.
“In the aftermath of this historical achievement, I expect there to be backlash and calls for the reinstatement of a cash bail system in response to controversial legal cases. Let me be clear: cash bail delegitimizes criminal justice systems and transforms them into systems that violate public safety instead of upholding it. Illinois will not go back. We will only move forward with our goal of ensuring public safety for all Illinoisans, regardless of their background or financial position.”
* Sen. Elgie Sims…
State Senator Elgie R. Sims, Jr. (D-Chicago) — the chief sponsor of the SAFE-T Act — released the following statement after the Illinois Supreme Court upheld provisions of the Pretrial Fairness Act:
“Since day one, I have maintained that the cash bail system places an undue burden on poor people accused of crime and in and of itself does not adequately make our communities safe. What will make our communities safer is a focus on the totality of circumstances behind crime, holding those responsible accountable, and most importantly ensuring crime doesn’t happen in the first place.
“From the beginning, I disagreed with the plaintiff’s claim that the General Assembly exceeded its authority in this case and am glad the Illinois Supreme Court agreed. The General Assembly is charged with passing laws that will improve the quality of life in our communities and that was true in this case. By upholding this monumental legislation, the Illinois Supreme Court is providing for greater protections and more humane treatment of those who have been arrested and accused of crime.
“Change — when it comes — often faces push back from those who seek to continue to invest in the way things are, which has produced disparate outcomes and had devastating impacts on communities. The goal of the proponents of this law has always been and continues to be for the phrase “equal justice under the law,” to be more than an aspirational statement, but the reality of our criminal legal system.
“Today’s decision will allow us to continue the long-overdue step toward dismantling systemic racism and eliminating the practices which have created barriers to opportunities and obstacles to prosperity for far too long. Illinois continues to show the rest of the nation that monumental change is possible to make the criminal legal system fair, equitable and just for all.
“While we celebrate today’s outcome, our work continues.”
* Senate President Don Harmon…
Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) issued the following statement regarding the Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling that the comprehensive public safety initiative known as the SAFE-T Act is constitutional.
“The court’s decision today culminates a long and challenging journey toward fundamental fairness in our legal system that would ensure the accused stay behind bars because they are dangerous, not because they lack dollars in their pockets. The unjust foundations of our society were not built quickly and they will not be dismantled with ease. But we have taken a great step forward today, and I look forward to the road ahead.”
“With the state’s high court having found the SAFE-T Act constitutional, I look forward to this landmark law being implemented fully and fairly throughout the state of Illinois.”
* Governor JB Pritzker…
“I’m pleased that the Illinois Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the SAFE-T Act and the elimination of cash bail. We can now move forward with historic reform to ensure pre-trial detainment is determined by the danger an individual poses to the community instead of by their ability to pay their way out of jail. My thanks to Attorney General Raoul’s office and the many people who worked tirelessly over the last months to defend these important reforms. I look forward to continuing to work with the General Assembly and our many other partners as we transition to a more equitable and just Illinois.”
* Speaker Welch…
“Today the Supreme Court upheld the legislature’s promise to create a more equitable and fair criminal justice system — a system that can now better protect victims and will no longer allow violent offenders to buy their way out of jail. Today’s decision is a win for the people of this state, but also for our democracy. As duly elected representatives, we have the privilege and responsibility of creating policy that reflects our values as Illinoisans. Our state’s highest court rightfully ruled that frivolous lawsuits cannot and will not stop the legislative process.”
* DPI Chair Lisa Hernandez…
“Today’s ruling by the Illinois Supreme Court is a victory in the fight for a fairer criminal justice system. For too long, our pretrial detention system has prioritized wealth over public safety, and ending cash bail in Illinois is crucial to ending unjust criminalization of poverty. I’m grateful to the governor and attorney general for their unwavering commitment to building a more equitable Illinois for all,” said DPI Chair Lisa Hernandez.
* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
“I am pleased – although not surprised – that the Illinois Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the SAFE-T Act. The court’s decision today holds – as my office has consistently advocated – that the General Assembly had the authority to eliminate cash bail and replace it with a system in which people are detained pending trial only if they pose a threat to the public or are a flight risk. And it rejects the plaintiffs’ argument that courts must retain the authority to set cash bail free of legislative regulation – an argument that would have called into question decades of criminal justice reforms in our state.
“Someone’s experience with the criminal justice system should not vary based on their income level. The SAFE-T Act was intended to address pervasive inequalities in the criminal justice system, in particular the fact that individuals who are awaiting criminal trials – who have not been convicted of a crime and are presumed innocent – may spend extended periods of time incarcerated because they cannot afford to pay cash bail. The law ensures that the decision about whether people are detained pending trial is not based on whether they can afford to pay for their release.
“With the court’s decision today, the elimination of cash bail will soon take effect. Other parts of the act, not challenged by the plaintiffs, also remain in effect and will have a positive impact within the state. This includes my office’s authority to conduct pattern-and-practice investigations of civil rights violations by law enforcement and improvements to the police officer certification process that create uniformity for departments across the state, promote professionalism in law enforcement and increase transparency.
“Attorneys from my office have spent many months defending the SAFE-T Act’s constitutionality in courtrooms throughout Illinois against meritless challenges. I am proud of their dedication and appreciate their service to the people of Illinois.”
* Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth…
State Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth, D-Peoria, issued the following statement Tuesday after the Illinois Supreme Court’s ruling on pretrial release portions of the SAFE-T Act upheld the end of cash bail:
“This decision reflects the countless hours of careful consideration that went into every component of the SAFE-T Act. Responsibly modernizing our pretrial procedures will not only create a fairer process, it will help to make our communities safer by basing release decisions on a public safety assessment instead of a defendant’s access to cash.
“I want to thank state Rep. Justin Slaughter, state Sen. Elgie Sims, the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus and every member of the General Assembly involved with seeing this process through in a transparent and collaborative manner. Their work helped to make today a reality.
“Public safety is never a static issue, and today’s Illinois Supreme Court decision is just one part of a larger effort to make our communities safer. I will continue to regularly engage first responders, prosecutors, community advocates and area residents as we work together to comprehensively curb violence.”
* Illinois Fraternal Order of Police State Lodge President Chris Southwood…
“Today’s ruling by the Supreme Court confirms Illinois’ status as the state of lawlessness and disorder. The court ignored the pleas of nearly every prosecutor in the state of Illinois, Democrat and Republican, that the elimination of cash bail will put dangerous criminals back on the street, instead of keeping them in jail or forcing them to post cash bail as they await trial. Many of those offenders will commit crimes again within hours of their release. And who will have to arrest those offenders again and again? The police officers whose jobs have been made immeasurably more difficult by all of the new anti-law enforcement measures that are in place. Today’s ruling is a slap in the face to those who enforce our laws and the people those laws are supposed to protect.”
…Added by Rich… Sen. Robert Peters (D-Chicago) pointed out today during a press conference that the IL FOP was officially neutral on the changes made in December, as was the Chicago FOP, the Illinois Sheriffs’ Association and the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police.
* Cook County Public Defender…
The Cook County Public Defender’s Office said on Tuesday it is pleased that the Illinois Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of the Pretrial Fairness Act. The ruling is the strongest possible decision upholding the constitutional arguments for ending money bond.
Illinois can now end a great injustice that distorted the criminal legal system and move forward with removing the price tag from the presumption of innocence.
“Using money as the determining factor in whether someone goes to jail or goes home was a broken policy that often produced terrible results. By ending money bond, Illinois is now in position to make these serious decisions without stripping millions of dollars from the communities who can least afford it,” said Cook County Public Defender Sharone R. Mitchell, Jr.
Every day, the hundreds of attorneys at the Cook County Public Defender’s Office, which serves Chicago and suburbs, see the deplorable impact of money bond and pretrial jailing. They see mainly Black and Brown people punished for being poor and the mothers, grandmothers, wives, girlfriends and sisters of accused people burdened with paying cash bail for their loved ones.
Ending money bond is a matter of racial justice.
Cook County court system stakeholders, including public defenders, are poised to implement the pretrial reforms under the Pretrial Fairness Act, after years of preparation.
The law that will now take effect goes well beyond merely ending money bond and transforms the entire decision-making process around what happens to a person after arrest and before trial. The law does not end pretrial incarceration; prosecutors can still request detention in many circumstances. But decisions about detention will be made after a robust, individualized hearing, where both sides can present evidence and arguments regarding whether the accused person is a threat to community safety or a flight risk.
The road to these historic reforms took more than seven years and involved thousands of Illinoisans. After the Pretrial Fairness Act was passed, a coalition of advocacy and community groups, criminal legal system players, lawmakers and others fought bad-faith fearmongering and misinformation.
These efforts were worth it. In deciding that we can make these consequential pretrial release and detention decisions without money bond, Illinois has provided a new model for the national movement to end money bail. We are showing that it is possible to bring significant change a system that harms communities and generates false confessions and wrongful convictions for too many decades.
On this historic day, the Law Office of the Cook County Public Defender congratulates our legislative partners who championed pretrial fairness, the Attorney General’s Office that successfully defended the law, and the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice, who made this all possible.
* Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle…
Today, we celebrate a historic victory for justice across Illinois. By ending money bond, we have taken a significant step forward in dismantling a system that disproportionately impacts our Black and Brown communities. We have known for too long that the use of money bond has perpetuated systemic racial injustices and exacerbates the inequalities faced by communities of color.
Today’s ruling is a true testament to the tireless efforts of our criminal justice offices, advocacy groups, and community stakeholders who have been tremendous advocates in this fight. Together, we have engaged in an unprecedented collaborative process to prepare for this transformative moment of reform.
Cook County stands united in support of our court system stakeholders as they move forward with Pretrial Fairness Act reforms, ending money bond and implementing a pretrial process rooted in equity and community safety. My administration stands ready to provide resources and counsel where we can be of service as we move forward toward a more just and equitable future for all.
* Sen. Andrew Chesney…
“I am disappointed with the partisan Supreme Court’s ruling because the Legislature did indeed infringe upon the rights and responsibilities of the judicial branch of government when they stripped away judges’ abilities to set cash bail.
“The Democrat Party has enacted the most radical soft-on-crime policies in the country, and nobody in this state will be immune from the consequences. This pro-criminal brand of justice will put many criminals back on the streets within hours of a serious arrest. Crime victims and Illinois families will continue to feel less safe, and the State of Illinois will continue to grab national headlines for its growing crime rates.”
* Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart…
“The Supreme Court has made our communities safer and our justice system fairer by upholding the SAFE-T Act. Instead of domestic abusers, murderers, and sex offenders using their cash to obtain release, judges can finally hold dangerous individuals prior to trial.
The victim advocates closest to these issues (such as the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the Network) support this new law, and they have not been swayed by the months of misleading statements about its contents or its impact.
At the same time, our jail will no longer hold non-violent offenders simply because they do not have money to post bail. We will finally be addressing how a wealth-based system disproportionally jails Black and Brown defendants. We can finally begin to live up to the ideal that access to money should not lead to different justice systems for different defendants.
This safety-based system (as opposed to wealth-based system) has worked for decades in our federal courts and in Illinois’s juvenile courts. This past fall, many individuals were lying to the public by saying that the end of “cash bail” means the end of “pre-trial detention.” These lies failed to turn the public against the authors of the SAFE-T Act. Now, the Supreme Court has affirmed this important reform that has been shaped by law enforcement, prosecutors, victim-rights advocates, and community leaders since the Supreme Court Commission Report of April 2020.”
Let me reiterate this: we will still jail defendants prior to trial, and the defendants we do hold will be the dangerous weapon offenders, drug traffickers, child molesters, murderers, and domestic abusers who will no longer be able to use their own cash (or their accomplice’s cash) as an escape hatch from justice. Our communities will be safer because of today’s ruling.
The Safety, Accountability, Fairness and Equity-Today (SAFE-T Act) is a criminal justice reform that includes the elimination of cash bail as a method of pre-trial release, mandates use of body-worn cameras for all police departments, and calls for the preservation of police misconduct records.
The SAFE-T Act was stayed in late December 2022, prior to its January 1, 2023, effective date. Today’s ruling makes the Act effective September 18, 2023. State’s Attorney Rinehart added, “We were ready in December of 2022, and we will be ready in September of 2023.”
On the effective date, the Lake County State’s Attorney’s Office will file petitions to detain offenders who are arrested after September 18, 2023. Judges will decide whether someone is detained or not detained awaiting trial. If a judge rules for detention, those individuals arrested after the effective date will no longer be able to access cash to gain release.
* Treatment Alternatives for Safe Communities, Inc. President & CEO Joel K. Johnson…
“The Illinois Supreme Court’s SAFE-T Act ruling expands access to pretrial freedom, freedom that allows individuals to prepare their legal defense while securing community-based behavioral health care that they may need, but which is rarely found in jail. TASC is eager to work with the SAFE-T Act’s legislative champions – State Senators Elgie Sims and Robert Peters and State Representative Justin Slaughter - to ensure full implementation of a statewide community-based pretrial service network.”
* Regan Deering…
Today, the Illinois Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the pro-criminal SAFE-T Act. In response, Regan Deering, Republican Candidate for State House District 88, released the following statement.
“As a mom, I care about the safety and wellbeing of my three kids more than anything else,” said Regan Deering. “Governor Pritzker rammed through a radical remaking of Illinois’ criminal justice system – setting violent criminals free, hamstringing law enforcement, and endangering families.”
“Every family deserves to live in a safe community, that is why I am committed to supporting our law enforcement officers and keeping repeat violent offenders locked up,” pledged Regan Deering. “As today’s ruling shows, the Illinois Supreme Court will not save us from extreme policies. It is up to us. I am calling on all Illinoisans to join me in fighting this dangerous law and the corrupt political class in Springfield. Your future and your kids’ futures depend on it.”
* Rep. Tom Weber…
“I am extremely disappointed in this decision by the Illinois Supreme Court to eliminate cash bail, but unfortunately, I am not surprised. Illinoisans deserve safe communities where they can live, work and raise their families without fear, but once again we are left with an extreme progressive agenda that has chosen to side with criminals over families and the dedicated police officers trying to keep us safe.”
* Senate Republican Leader John Curran…
“The long divisive court process instigated by the Democrat’s rushed reform of our criminal justice system opposed by nearly all Illinois law enforcement officials and states attorneys has now concluded with a divided Supreme Court Ruling,” said Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove).
“The legislature should finally heed the concerns of law enforcement, judges and their communities and immediately return for a special session to properly address the SAFE-T Acts’ negative impact on the public before this ill-conceived statute goes into effect in 60 days.
“While no person should be held in jail or let free because of their economic circumstances, the SAFE-T Act handcuffs law enforcement and judges making it more difficult for them to combat violent crime.
“It is possible to reform our cash bail system while keeping our communities safe and the legislature should return immediately to ensure that public safety is in no way jeopardized by the implementation of this reckless legislation before it takes effect.”
* Rep. Lakesia Collins…
State Rep. Lakesia Collins, D-Chicago, issued this statement following the Illinois Supreme Court decision to uphold the SAFE-T Act:
“Passing the SAFE-T Act was the culmination of years of effort from Illinois lawmakers to reform our court system, make communities safer by making the system smarter and end the cash bail system that took such a terrible toll on Black and Brown communities. Illinois’ highest court has now solidified this state’s commitment to building a safer and more equitable future for all its citizens.
“I would like to thank the people who made the SAFE-T Act possible, including state Rep. Justin Slaughter, state Sen. Elgie Sims, the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, my colleagues in the General Assembly who put their support behind this landmark legislation and the many stakeholders who helped shape the policy.
“The fight for equity is far from over, but this decision sends the message loud and clear: progress will not be slowed, despite lawsuits from those who continue to cling to a less safe, less just status quo.”
* Lt. Governor Stratton…
“Today’s decision by the Illinois Supreme Court upholding the passage of the SAFE-T Act is a major step in the right direction on our journey to justice. All along, our goal has been to right the wrongs of policies that have disproportionately harmed Black, Brown and low-income Illinoisans while, at the same time, bolstering public safety by building a system that centers on accountability and fairness.
The amount of money in one’s bank account should never be the determining factor of whether they should be released or detained while awaiting trial. To do so does nothing but criminalize poverty and this disproportionately impacts marginalized communities. Today’s victory is thanks to the hard work of Governor Pritzker, Attorney General Raoul’s office, the General Assembly, and the many advocates who have been tirelessly fighting for years for true community safety. We have made great strides, and we are forging ahead.”
* Sen. Craig Wilcox…
“This is not the ruling I had hoped for in this case. The bottom line is that Illinoisans deserve to feel safe in their communities, and this decision makes our cities and towns less safe. The turnstile system of criminal justice that goes along with the elimination of cash bail will put dangerous offenders back on the streets within hours of their arrest. Judges must have the flexibility to set bail as they see fit given the circumstances of each individual case.
“In a state with alarming crime statistics, eliminating cash bail without giving judges full discretion is the last thing we should do. Until Illinois decides once and for all to get tough on crime and hold offenders accountable, this state will continue to have a serious crime problem.”
* Republican Leader Jackie Haas…
“Less than two hours before we began an entirely new General Assembly, Illinois Democrats rammed through one of the worst criminal justice reform packages that was promptly signed into law by the Governor. Even Democratic State’s Attorneys sued because of mounting public safety concerns introduced because of this act. Yet today, the Illinois Supreme Court has declared this constitutional, despite the facts that Illinois has one of the highest murder rates in the country, costs have risen for taxpayers, and our police forces are demoralized. This is a deeply upsetting day for our state and communities.”
* Kankakee County State’s Attorney Jim Rowe…
“A few moments ago the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that the Safe-T Act is constitutional and will take effect on September 18, 2023. While this ruling is disappointing and the Act terribly detrimental to public safety, we must abide by the decision and will continue to do our best to serve the people of Kankakee County.
“Despite the defeat, I could not be more proud of all who fought the good fight. The people of Illinois deserve better than bail reform that is passed under cover of darkness at 4am when all the state was sleeping; they deserve to have a voice in any constitutional amendments through the power of their vote; and they deserve to be governed by a government of, for and by the people—not by legislative or gubernatorial fiat. That was the essence of our lawsuit and we stand for those principles still today.”
* Kankakee County Sheriff Michael Downey…
“While extremely disappointed but not surprised that the opinion was down party lines, rest assured that the Sheriff’s Office will continue to work hard to keep our community safe. This opinion will embolden criminals even more which is what our Governor seems to want.”
* US Rep. Mary Miller…
“Today, the Illinois Supreme Court erased the rights of crime victims by upholding the Pritzker SAFE-T Act, which will release dangerous prisoners onto our streets and make it even harder for law enforcement to protect our communities,” Miller said.
“By ending cash bail and ordering the release of dangerous criminals, JB Pritzker has made our neighborhoods and our families less safe in his desperate attempt to make Illinois more radical than California so that he can run for President,” added Miller.
“Our state’s attorneys are warning that almost HALF of inmates currently in jail could be released under the SAFE-T Act, which is why 100 out of 102 State’s Attorneys opposed the bill. Please pray for crime victims and our police officers as they face the latest danger unleashed by JB Pritzker’s radical pro-crime agenda.”
* Assistant House Republican Leader Brad Stephens…
“The so-called ‘SAFE-T’ Act rewrote the book on everything, from allowing anonymous complaints against police officers to abolishing cash bail and letting people accused of violent felonies back on the streets. Despite the multiple pieces of follow-up legislation to address its various problems and lawsuits from even Democratic State’s Attorneys because of the mounting concerns about public safety brought on by this legislation, the Illinois Supreme Court has ruled it constitutional.
“In the midst of this ruling, our reality is clear. Illinois still has one of the highest murder rates in the country. Pressure has been put on our overburdened and demoralized police forces in the 20th District and across our state. Unfunded mandates are driving up costs for taxpayers. This decision is disappointing in so many ways. We need to work in the General Assembly to protect Illinois families and our courageous law enforcement.”
* Clayton Harris III…
Today the Supreme Court of Illinois ruled on the Pre-Trial Fairness Act, stating that the act was fully constitutional.
“Today’s historic ruling codifies that Illinois will no longer criminalize poverty. This ruling continues to enforce the detention process while emphasizing community safety,” said candidate for Cook County State’s Attorney, Clayton Harris III. “This was the right decision from the court, as it maintains accountability and continues to protect the safety of our communities.
“As State’s Attorney, I will always ensure safety and fairness and continue to work with all of our stakeholders.”
* House Republican Leader Tony McCombie…
“Politically compelled public policy has never been in the best interest of the people. The liberal court’s decision today is not surprising, and this decision will undoubtedly hurt families and businesses around the state. Anyone that is familiar with the court system knows that this is not about the ability whether an offender can post bail, but a progressive movement to decriminalize crime and promote an environment for repeat offenders.
This policy is not about bail reform, but about elevating criminals. The Illinois House Republicans will join families around the state to bring light to the failings of the liberal imbalance of the General Assembly. We know there is an approach to address comprehensive criminal justice reform, but that must start with offenders being held accountable for the crimes they commit.
I look forward to working with victim advocates and our law enforcement partners to bring forth changes that ensure safe neighborhoods, thriving business districts and most importantly protect victims of crime.”
* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson…
“Today, the Illinois Supreme Court upheld the Pretrial Fairness Act, ensuring that a person’s ability to pay cash bail does not unfairly dictate their presumption of innocence in the court system.
Cash bail does not make communities safer, and it never has; it has simply exacerbated existing inequities and disparities in the criminal legal system. Pretrial detention, as a result of the inability to pay bail, further decimates communities that have long been most impacted by mass incarceration, and the destabilization of households and families.
I am grateful that we can move forward to implement this legislation to uphold justice and equity.”
* US Rep. Delia Ramirez…
“For too long, cash bail has been a tool to criminalize poverty and offer loopholes to the wealthy. Today’s Supreme Court decision makes Illinois the first in the nation to end this inequitable practice, and provides a model for other states wanting to end the criminalization of poverty. Now, decisions about detaining defendants will be made based on direct threats to community safety, and not how much wealth someone has.
I was proud to be a sponsor of the SAFE-T Act during my time in the Illinois Legislature, but it took a coalition to get it passed. I’d like to thank Governor J.B. Pritzker, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, State Senator Robert Peters, the Illinois Black Legislative Caucus, the Coalition to End Money Bond, and violence prevention groups for their advocacy in passing and defending the SAFE-T Act. It is time to implement these critical reforms to our justice system. I remain committed to defending this historic legislation.”
* ILGOP…
“Today’s Supreme Court ruling makes it painfully clear that elections have consequences. Democrats, first led by Mike Madigan and now by JB Pritzker, spent tens of millions of dollars to elect a 5-2 majority of Democrats on the Illinois Supreme Court. It is not surprising that the Court would vote along political lines to allow Governor Pritzker and the Democrat controlled legislature to disregard constitutionally protected rights of crime victims in abolishing cash bail. This historic change in criminal justice law, combined with progressive Democrat prosecutors like Kim Foxx and Eric Rhinehart, will significantly undermine public safety by releasing from custody dangerous, violent criminals at a time when police are under attack and Illinois families and crime victims already fear for their personal safety.”
This morning, the Illinois Supreme Court found the pre-trial fairness provision of the amended Safe-T-Act constitutional. The law as originally written and passed by the General Assembly, included many glaring deficiencies, including the elimination of cash bail, which would have almost completely eliminated judicial discretion when considering a defendant’s likelihood to appear at future court hearings or if the defendant posed a danger to society. On Oct. 3, 2022, myself, Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser and Champaign County State’s Attorney Julia Rietz, accepted an invitation from Illinois Senate President Don Harmon’s deputy chief of staff to serve on a group of stakeholders that included only three state’s attorneys to remedy these deficiencies. Many of the improvements recommended by this group were passed by the General Assembly and signed into law on Dec. 6, 2022. I am very proud of the improvements advanced by this group and, as the only Republican on the panel, I am grateful to Senate President Harmon for allowing me the opportunity to work in a bi-partisan fashion to ensure the continued protection of the public. These amendments go a long way in rectifying many, but not all, of the anticipated problems and restore some measure of judicial discretion at bond hearings.
State’s attorneys and law enforcement personnel from across Illinois have stated in no uncertain terms that their work – and the ultimate safety of their communities – will be threatened by many provisions of this controversial overhaul of the state’s criminal justice system. With crime increasing across the state, eliminating cash bail just puts more criminals back on the streets. I am not surprised that the politically aligned Court would side with the Governor, but this is certainly not the ruling I had hoped for. It clearly sends yet another message that there are limited consequences for committing crimes in Illinois.
The Illinois Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the SAFE-T Act in its entirety is disappointing. While I understand the movement to reform our cash bail system, there is a way to do that fairly while also better ensuring the public safety of our communities. The SAFE-T Act, which the Majority Party negotiated, drafted and passed in the middle of the night with little-to-no input from law enforcement, state’s attorneys, and judges is a far cry from achieving that balance. Instead, counties are now faced with implementing this hastily, dangerous, and ill-conceived law, which I fear will make our state a less safe place to call home.
* Crain’s | 2 of ‘ComEd Four’ lose ability to practice law in Illinois: report: Pramaggiore had argued against suspension of her license while her appeal is ongoing, WBEZ reported last week. McClain did not attempt to contest the Attorney Registration & Disciplinary Commission’s motion to suspend his law license, according to WBEZ.
* USA Today | Eight former Northwestern players retain lawyer for possible hazing lawsuit: Crump and his co-counsel, Steven M. Levin, are “in conversations with many others,” they said Monday, adding that future legal action is “expected to expand beyond Northwestern’s football program and will expose extreme and abusive hazing in other college athletic programs as well.”
* Crain’s | Doug Scott, an architect of Illinois’ climate policy, takes gavel of ICC: Scott is the new chair of the Illinois Commerce Commission – the agency that oversees utilities and companies in other regulated industries in Illinois. He officially stepped into the role on June 20 after Gov. JB Pritzker announced his plan to replace outgoing chair Carrie Zalewski in March.
* Tribune | Moving migrants from police stations is ‘top priority,’ Mayor Johnson says on tour of new welcome center at Clemente high school: Johnson was joined by CPS CEO Pedro Martinez and other city officials inside Roberto Clemente Community Academy, where a new center dedicated to assisting young migrants in the West Town community area will debut this week, funded through CPS’ regular operating budget. The new resource hub — designed to help youth enroll in school, as well as connect with medical care, temporary housing and other social services — was pitched as a pilot program that the mayor’s administration hopes to replicate citywide.
* Crain’s | For would-be pot retailers, the lottery was the easy part: Now comes the hard part. Rasheed and the other applicants chosen in the lottery will have to prove they meet the criteria for the pot-shop licenses. They’ll also have to pull together business and operational plans, find real estate — and come up with the estimated $500,000 to $1 million or more that it could take to pay for it all.
* WGN | Few answers one month after suburban mass shooting: It’s now been one month since gunfire abruptly ended a Juneteenth gathering in unincorporated Willowbrook. Twenty-three people were shot and one person killed. No one has been charged and the lack of information from police since then is unsettling to those who were there.
* WBEZ | The link between climate change and Chicago’s bad air quality: he Illinois Environmental Protection Agency has designated Monday, Jul. 17 as another Air Pollution Action Day because of smoke from Canadian wildfires. Bad air quality has affected our region repeatedly this summer and it’s one of the many ways the impact of climate change can be felt locally. Elisabeth Moyer is an associate professor in the Department of the Geophysical Sciences at the University of Chicago.
* Play Illinois | No Cheap Trick: Hard Rock Rockford To Honor Hometown Music Heroes: Hard Rock Rockford is embracing the fact that Rockford is the hometown of famed rock band Cheap Trick. So much so, that a 90-foot tall guitar at the entrance to the casino is a replica of Cheap Trick guitarist Rick Nielsen’s famed Hamer standardbred checkerboard guitar.
* Sun-Times | Barack Obama, in TikTok starring Kankakee Public Library staffers, launches drive against book bans: Obama on Monday in an “open letter” to librarians wrote, “Today, some of the books that shaped my life — and the lives of so many others — are being challenged by people who disagree with certain ideas or perspectives. It’s no coincidence that these “banned books” are often written by or feature people of color, indigenous people, and members of the LGBTQ+ community — though there have also been unfortunate instances in which books by conservative authors or books containing “triggering” words or scenes have been targets for removal.
Property records show that a New Jersey-based company, Rising Newco LLC, spent $1.25 million buying the Decatur manufacturing facilities of bankrupt Akorn Pharmaceuticals. […]
Rising representatives did not immediately return calls seeking comment, but documents list an address that is the same as Rising Pharmaceuticals, which markets and distributes generic prescription products and medicines. […]
The arrival of Rising would appear to be good news for the empty Akorn buildings in Decatur, which shut down suddenly in February. More than 400 employees were abruptly thrown out of work as a result of the Akorn bankruptcy filing.
* SA Foxx press release…
Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx today announced the release of a public “Do Not Call List” of law enforcement officers who will not be called to give testimony under oath as a witness in criminal cases. The release of the “Do Not Call List,” is part of the State’s Attorney’s commitment to transparency and the broader modernization of the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office’s (CCSAO) Brady Giglio policy which outlines the procedures that prosecutors must follow when disclosing information that could question the credibility of government witnesses.
“The culture that allowed disreputable law enforcement officers to testify in court propelled Cook County’s reputation as the wrongful conviction capital of the country,” said State’s Attorney Foxx. “Releasing our “Do Not Call List” and updating our internal policy regarding witness disclosure are necessary steps to improve the office’s prosecutorial integrity and help rebuild public trust in our criminal justice system.”
“Brady Giglio” is named after two landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases - Brady v. Maryland and United States v. Giglio. The Supreme Court’s rulings in these cases established a prosecutor’s constitutional obligation to disclose impeachment information to the defense.
* There’s just way too much “fittin’ to get ready” in government…
(T)here was optimism in the air two years ago when then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot brought the media to an outdoor event in North Lawndale to announce full-throated city backing for 250 new single-family homes. Intended to be priced for working-class buyers, they would be put on city-owned vacant lots, numbering about 950 in North Lawndale. […]
Lightfoot is now out of office, and Novara, highly regarded by housing advocates, is leaving her city job later this month. So how are those homes coming?
[Richard Townsell, executive director of Lawndale Christian Development Corp.] doesn’t mince words. While he said he’d like to have 200 homes started by now, only 18 are in various stages of construction, with two sold and contracts on four others. They are mostly around 16th Street and Avers Avenue and 18th Street and Sawyer Avenue.
He said the hold up is from all types of municipal red tape over the properties, even though the transfer of city-owned land should be easier than private-market dealings for parcels with liens and back taxes. […]
While he won’t blame individuals, he clearly has problems with people in top-level city jobs. “The city is spending too much time on fluffy things — issues of design and policy,” he said. “It is not built around production. It is built around policy wonk ideas, and as a result nothing gets done.”
The Chicago Housing Authority has revived a long-dormant plan to build hundreds of homes on the site of the former Cabrini-Green housing project, another step in a neighborhood transformation that has been underway for more than two decades. […]
The CHA picked the project’s development team back in 2017, raising expectations that construction on the site would get underway soon. But years passed without any visible progress on the parcel — or on other vacant Cabrini-Green sites nearby, including a key property at the corner of Division and Halsted streets. […]
“It’s been over 20 years for me and Cabrini,” Ald. Walter Burnett, 27th, who represents the neighborhood, said in 2021. “I’ve been trying to encourage (the CHA) to hurry up and get started.”
* Press release…
Friends of the Chicago River and Sierra Club Illinois have served a Notice of Intent (NOI) to sue Trump International for additional violations of the federal Clean Water Act and the facility’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit. For over a decade, Trump Tower Chicago has underreported the rate at which it withdraws water from the Chicago River in reports required by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA), resulting in an underreporting of its withdrawals by approximately 44%.
IEPA requires that flow rate data be submitted in gallons per day, but Trump International reports a gallons per minute number that it multiplies by 1,000 and labels as gallons per day. Of course, there are not 1,000 minutes in a day—the conversion should be 60 minutes per hour x 24 hours per day; there are 1,440 minutes in a day. This misreporting dates back as far as February 28, 2013.
“Trump International’s persistent and systemic misrepresentation of its flow rates and violations of the Clean Water Act cannot be allowed to continue,” said Friends of the Chicago River Executive Director Margaret Frisbie. “Friends of the Chicago River and Sierra Club are filing a second suit because the amount of intake water actually being used is much higher than Trump International reports, and the damage to fish and other aquatic life is commensurate. Trump International’s egregious mis-reporting is not in line with the significant public investments that have dramatically improved the health of the Chicago River over the past several decades, and we cannot allow Trump International to endanger that critical progress.”
* From the UK…
Today, Governor JB Pritzker continued the delegation phase of his trade mission to the United Kingdom with meetings with government and education leaders as well as a meeting with U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom.
The Governor and President of the University of Illinois system, Dr. Timothy Killeen, met with Sir Gerry McCormac, Principal and Vice Chancellor of the University of Stirling, and Sir Peter Mathieson, the Principal and Vice Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh. In addition to his leadership at the University of Stirling, Sir Gerry McCormac currently serves as the international policy lead for Universities UK, a collective of 140 universities.
The Governor discussed opportunities to strengthen the transatlantic connection between post-secondary institutions in the United Kingdom and Illinois. In particular, they discussed expanding mobility of distinguished researchers and students from the United Kingdom to Illinois, allowing for increased funding for researchers in the United Kingdom and increased flow of talent to Illinois.
The day continued with a tour of the Palace of Westminster led by Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office David Rutley, followed by a private lunch at Carlton Gardens. During this meeting, the Governor and fellow delegation members discussed trade and investment between the United States and United Kingdom.
Immediately following this lunch, the Governor attended a meeting with Jane Hartley, the U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom. In this meeting the two discussed why Illinois is an ideal location for United Kingdom companies and ways to further strengthen the United States and United Kingdom’s economic relationship.
Lastly, the Governor attended the United States Embassy Reception with the Illinois delegation, United Kingdom company executives, and representatives from the United States and United Kingdom Embassy. This reception is the kickoff to a week full of meetings with United Kingdom business and government leaders. Over the coming days, the Governor will discuss economic cooperation related to manufacturing, clean energy and technology, quantum, hospitality and real estate.
* The Kennedy family appears horrified at RFK, Jr…
I STRONGLY condemn my brother's deplorable and untruthful remarks last week about Covid being engineered for ethnic targeting. https://t.co/9YCag7JtHm
Maybe Paul Vallas can run his Illinois campaign /s
…Adding… Two new tollway board members…
Melissa Neddermeyer will serve as a Director on the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority.* Melissa Neddermeyer is the Sole Practitioner and Owner of Neddermeyer Law Offices and has been a practicing attorney for nearly twenty years. She serves as Village President for the Village of Willow Springs, where she has significantly lowered the Village debt, increased services to residents and numbers of community events, enhanced infrastructures and road systems, and strengthened relationships with neighboring communities. Prior to being elected Village President, she served as Village Trustee. Committed to public service and collaboration, she is an active member of the Southwest Conference of Mayors and the West Central Municipal Conference. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from DePaul University and a Juris Doctor from Chicago Kent College of Law.
Mark Wright will serve as a Director on the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority.* Mark Wright is Founder, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Diverse Facility Solutions (DFS). Since January 2002, he has guided the company to new heights in facility management, janitorial services, project and construction management, and consulting. Under his leadership, DFS has emerged as a prominent player in the janitorial industry. Notably, DFS stands as a minority-owned and MBE certified corporation, proudly headquartered in Chicago while operating in multiple states. Prior to his tenure at DFS, Mark was the Director of Operations at Midway Airlines’ Terminal Consortium (MATCO) from 2001 to 2003, and he played an instrumental role in the monumental $793 million-dollar Midway Airport Development Project the Naperville Planning and Zoning Commission, Naperville Development Partnership (NDP), SOS Children’s Village, and the College of DuPage Foundation.
Neddermeyer replaces Alice Gallagher and Wright replaces Stephen Davis.
* Labor Tribune | New Illinois law requires prevailing wage for solar project workers: Under the new law, developers who apply to the Illinois Solar for All program are required to pay the prevailing wage on solar projects that receive renewable energy credits. The law provides exemptions for residential buildings and small projects on houses of worship.
* WGN | CPS center opens program for newly arrived migrant children: The center will be apart of a ‘one-stop-shop’ for recent arrivals. Children who will be attending Chicago Public Schools will be able to get language screenings, health screenings and be placed in the proper programs within Chicago Public Schools.
* Patch | Civil Rights Attorney Crump To Represent 8 Northwestern Hazing Victims: Civil rights attorney Ben Crump will represent the players and said in a news release on Sunday that he expects more players will join the suit in the coming days. The legal action is also expected to expand beyond Northwestern’s program and will, Crump said, expose “extreme and abusive hazing in other college athletic programs as well.
* Crain’s | Nonprofit hospitals more than offset the city services they get: For more than 100 years, the Illinois court system has held that nonprofit hospitals should receive property tax exemption when they provide valuable charitable and community services. Aside from life-saving medical care, in fiscal years 2021 and 2022, Chicago’s nonprofit hospitals provided more than $2.6 billion in various community benefits, including nearly $200 million in direct charity care. Most important, they provide emergency medical care to anyone who walks through their doors, seven days a week, 24 hours a day, regardless of any patient’s ability to pay.
* NPR Illinois | Forum on CO2 pipeline set for Monday night: Both sides will be represented at the hearing at 5:30 p.m. Monday at the BOS Center in downtown Springfield. Navigator Heartland Greenway will make a presentation. Also, members of the Coalition to Stop CO2 Pipelines will lay out objections and concerns.
* Block Club | North Park Marines Building Could Become Migrant Shelter: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office said in a statement the building is “one of many locations” being considered as a migrant shelter but that “no official confirmation has been made regarding its activation.”
* Tribune | Chicago aims to turn Diplomat Motel into ‘healthy housing’ for homeless people — with much more than a roof overhead: The City Council is slated to vote Wednesday on the $2.9 million purchase of the Diplomat Motel. That’s where the city plans to test a new “stabilization” shelter model whose goal is to transition homeless people into permanent housing by giving them their own rooms, as well as a host of medical and casework services. Next, the property will require a special-use zoning permit and modest renovations, with the aim to start the program in the first half of next year.
* Eater | The Definitive Guide to Restaurants Featured in ‘The Bear’: Superdawg is one of the most iconic places to get a Chicago dog, retaining its retro style and rooftop mascots Flaurie and Maurie since 1948. The restaurant can be spotted in the montage that opens Episode 7 of Season 1 and its hot dogs and fries are seen in their signature boxes at the party in Episode 5 of Season 2. The restaurant also has an outpost in suburban Wheeling.
* Malwarebytes | Proposed Massachusetts law to ban sale of your mobile location data: As the American Civil Liberties Union Massachusetts (ACLU) notes, the buying and selling of this data is unregulated and can impact on all manner of privacy and safety issues. Domestic abusers can track ex-partners. Foreign governments can use data for intelligence and tracking purposes. Employers can track and discriminate against employees. A variety of health and abortion access situations could lead to prosecution or harassment.
* Triibe | White Sox’s 17U baseball showcase honors Chicago’s rich Negro Leagues history: The Double Duty Classic (DDC) is an annual two-day baseball developmental experience featuring more than 30 top 17U high school players from across the U.S., hosted by the Chicago White Sox. Each of the players invited to participate in this year’s DDC will receive skill evaluations from collegiate scouts and coaches, a Negro Leagues edition of viral TikTok historian Shermann Dilla Thomas’s Chicago Mahogany Bus Tour, and an invitation to play a baseball game recreating the Negro Leagues’ East-West All-Star Game at Guaranteed Rate Field. Former Negro League player Dennis Biddle will be throwing the ceremonial first pitch.
City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin is poised to challenge Rep. Danny Davis in the March 2024 Democratic primary, changing her mind about not running if he seeks another term as Kina Collins announces a third try against Davis.
Davis, 81, a South Austin resident, has made it clear for months that he will be seeking another term in 2024. […]
She will show fundraising muscle in her first Federal Election Commission report, pulling in, according to a draft, $283,486 as of June 30.
The Davis campaign raised about $100,000 in the last quarter, a spokesperson said.
US Rep. Davis, however, reported raising significantly less than his spokesperson told the Sun-Times. Davis reported a net $64,280 raised (including $250 from Rep. La Shawn Ford). He spent about $29K and ended with $143,076.32 cash on hand and $58,954.71 in debt. He owes close to ten grand to some political consultants, $6,500 to a pollster and about $23K to himself.
Kina Collins has not yet filed a quarterly report.
In 2021, Lion Electric opened an electric bus manufacturing plant in Joliet. In 2019, Rivian Automotive moved into a former Mitsubishi plant in Normal to start building electric vehicles. But Illinois needs to build on those successes if it is to become an electric vehicle manufacturing center.
To help get there, the Legislature in 2021 passed the Reimagining Energy and Vehicles in Illinois Act, which provides incentives to lure companies in the electric vehicle supply chain and promote renewable energy. Another law passed last year will require new or renovated homes to have conduits to charge electric vehicles. […]
But Illinois ought to do more to boost the market for electric vehicles. In its latest budget, the state trimmed about $7.3 million from its electric vehicle rebate program, cutting it to about $12 million. In the previous year, $19.3 million was available for the rebates, which give $4,000 to customers who buy new or used EVs from licensed dealers. Demand was so high, the program ran out of money about halfway through the fiscal year.
More money should be made available for rebates, though perhaps better targeted, to avoid them going to people buying top-end models who could afford to buy electric cars without rebates.
Environmental groups estimate the EV rebate need for this fiscal year to be about $40 million, which is $28 million more than was actually appropriated.
* The Question: Should Illinois increase funding for its electric vehicle rebate program? Explain.
Research published earlier this month by the Journal of the American Medical Association, or JAMA, found higher maternal mortality rates in Black communities, while Native American and Alaska Native people experienced a particularly rapid rise. State median mortality rates more than tripled over the last two decades.
In Chicago, Black women have a maternal mortality rate that is nearly six times higher than white women and Latina women have a maternal mortality rate that is twice as high as white women.
“The root causes of disproportionate pregnancy complications in Black women are driven by inequality, discrimination and long-standing racism deeply rooted in the U.S. healthcare system,” Dr. Jana Richards, assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at UChicago Medicine, wrote in an article. […]
Undergirding the disparities is the disinvestment in health care systems in predominantly Black and Brown neighborhoods, where the legacy of discrimination and redlining has contributed to shorter lifespans. On Chicago’s South Side, only three hospitals offer maternity care, severely limiting residents’ options. Food and housing insecurity and chronic stress also impact birth outcomes for mother and baby, as do the lack of paid maternity leave and flexible work policies.
* Women Employed Director of Advocacy and Policy Sarah Labadie…
While there are many contributing factors to a healthy pregnancy and healthy babies, we know that maternal health is improved with paid maternity leave. Numerous studies have shown that paid leave is essential for healthy moms and babies. The National Partnership for Women & Families details the staggering benefits proven in these studies, including a reduction in preterm births and decreased chances of re-hospitalization for both mothers and babies.
And still, in Illinois, 62% of workers report not being able to take even unpaid leave, either because they are not eligible or because they cannot afford it. Nationally, 62% of workers in low-wage households reported they received no pay during leave. Black and Latino workers are also more likely to lack access to leave, both paid and unpaid, than white workers. […]
In Illinois, we are continuing to push for more protections for pregnant workers. Earlier this year, Women Employed helped champion the passage of the Paid Leave for All Workers Act. The bill provides up to 40 hours of paid time off for any reason to Illinois workers. For pregnant workers, this means paid time off to attend critical prenatal appointments without having to worry about losing a paycheck.
While groundbreaking, the law only provides time for short-term needs, like dealing with a cold or a flu. It does not offer enough time for bonding with or caring for a new child. That’s why we are looking to pass the Family & Medical Leave Insurance Act in Illinois. The law would create a state-run insurance program that allows Illinois workers to use up to 18 weeks of paid, job-protected leave a year. The program would be funded by a small contribution — less than 1% of wages.
I imagine many people would be shocked to hear that the Black infant mortality rate in Cook County today (11.4 per 1,000 live births) is no better than the Black infant mortality rate in Mississippi (11.2 per 1,000 live births). In fact, the Black infant mortality rate in Illinois in 2017-2019 (12.2 per 1,000) was worse than in Mississippi (11.2 per 1,000).
Critical review of the most recent Illinois Maternal Morbidity & Mortality Report (reporting on statewide data for 2016-2017) reveals that the rate of avoidable mortality amenable to health care among Black mothers (35 per 100,000 live births) exceeded that of non-Hispanic white mothers (2 per 100,000 live births) by a factor of more than 15 to 1. Put another way, if our maternal health system furnished timely and effective health care to Black mothers as well as it did for white mothers, the rate of pregnancy-related deaths due to medical conditions among Black mothers would decrease by more than 80%. […]
Licensed certified professional midwives are newly legal in Illinois. Like certified nurse midwives, licensed certified professional midwives, or CPMs, are trained and educated to international standards and capable of providing the essential components of maternal-newborn care needed by 90% of the childbearing population. And importantly, licensure as a CPM does not require a bachelor’s degree.
Chicago should install a direct-entry midwifery program within one of the City Colleges of Chicago and have a new cadre of licensed CPMs ready to go within three years. And because licensed CPMs specialize in working in out-of-hospital settings, there is no reason to exclude underinvested neighborhoods from program installation. The “capital intensive” resources necessary to support conventional health care education programming (e.g., hospital simulators) are not necessary for successful community midwifery programs.
JUST IN: A federal judge has dismissed the federal bribery charge related to Michael Madigan that has loomed over ComEd for the last three years. Prosecutors moved for the dismissal under the terms of their deal with the utility. Story to come. pic.twitter.com/DKRJiBcwAz
Assistant U.S. Attorney Diane MacArthur moved for U.S. District Judge John Kness to dismiss the charge, telling him that "ComEd has fully complied with the terms" of its agreement. That included paying a $200M fine. ComEd attorney Nicole Allen said the utility is "very pleased."
A federal judge agreed Monday to dismiss the federal bribery charge against ComEd that has loomed over the utility since 2020 for its role in a scheme that helped lead to the indictment of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan.
While significant, the dismissal of the criminal charge against ComEd is not surprising. Under the terms of a deferred prosecution agreement between prosecutors and the utility, the feds agreed to seek dismissal as long as ComEd held up its end of the three-year deal. […]
The dismissal means ComEd no longer faces criminal charges and will avoid conviction, while others have faced prison time as a result of the aggressive investigation that targeted Madigan. Though ComEd has admitted to the conduct at the heart of the feds’ probe, its lawyers have insisted on pleading not guilty in court. […]
Meanwhile, Madigan faces trial in April on a racketeering indictment that alleges he also participated in the illegal ComEd conduct. McClain is set to go to trial again alongside Madigan on additional charges. AT&T Illinois and its former president Paul La Schiazza, have also been charged as a result of the investigation.
*** UPDATE *** ComEd…
ComEd today issued the following statement on behalf of CEO Gil Quiniones after a federal judge dismissed the charge against the company, noting ComEd has fully complied with the deferred prosecution agreement (DPA):
“With the completion of the DPA and dismissal of the charge, ComEd remains committed, at all levels of the company, to the highest standards of integrity and ethical behavior for our business, and to continuing to build the trust of our customers. And, as the state transitions to a cleaner energy future, all of our more than 6,300 employees, who work hard to keep the lights on each day, remain focused on continuing to deliver highly reliable, resilient, and increasingly clean power to more than 9 million residents across northern Illinois.”
On January 4, 2022, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found that certain state and local air pollution control agencies failed to submit State Implementation Plan (SIP) revisions to appropriately address excess emissions during periods of startup, shutdown, and malfunction (SSM)
Illinois is one of the states currently out of compliance and faces an August 12 deadline or risk losing federal highway funds. The state has been working at least since last year to implement new administrative rules. The issue dates back decades, but a court ruled in 2008 that the US EPA’s rules were out of compliance with federal law and, in turn, the US EPA has been telling the state EPA to change its own rules since 2015. But then the feds watered down the requirement during the Trump administration. The Biden administration, however, has renewed the push.
* All of that is explained, and more, in this Capitol News Illinois story…
Illinois faces a deadline next month to either change the way it enforces air pollution emission limits on heavy industries or face federal sanctions that could eventually result in restricted access to billions of dollars in federal highway funding. […]
If the state does not come into compliance by Aug. 12, EPA will impose what are called “offset sanctions,” meaning any new or significantly modified sources of pollution for which a permit is required will come under significantly stricter emission limits.
And if the state does not comply by Feb. 11, 2024, its access to federal highway funds will be restricted to safety projects, capital programs for public transit and a select few other categories of funding.
Those sanctions would be lifted once the U.S. EPA determines the state has submitted an acceptable new SIP.
Because of the looming deadline, the rule change has been put on a “fast track” schedule, but that has irritated industry officials who say they haven’t had enough time to submit comments or try to negotiate an agreement.
* Speaking of highway funding, while road and bridge repairs are important, they’re also quite visible, which is one reason why politicians love to tout them. Sewer and water systems, however, are in dire need of repair and are often therefore neglected by governments. This Tribune story, “Costly Deep Tunnel flooding project can’t handle Chicago area’s severe storms fueled by climate change,” by Michael Hawthorne and Adriana Pérez about the recent Chicago-area flooding is definitely worth reading in its entirety, but here are a couple of excerpts…
Flood losses in the city and suburbs cost taxpayers $1.8 billion in subsidized grants, loans and insurance payments between 2004 and 2014, according to a 2019 report from the National Academy of Sciences. Only hurricane-ravaged areas of coastal Louisiana, New York and Texas received more federal flood aid during the decade.
Scientists who study flooding say the costs likely were significantly higher.
Computer models developed by the city can track down to the block level which neighborhoods are most at risk. Like so many other societal ills, the consequences hit the poorest Chicagoans the hardest. After a major storm in 2013, city officials determined the damages were concentrated in low- and middle-income census tracts on the West and South sides, similar to where many 311 calls originated after the more recent storms.
Under a legal settlement with environmental groups, the district is obligated to expand the McCook Reservoir. A neighboring hard-rock quarry will be added to the existing retention basin by 2029, increasing storage to 10 billion gallons, up from 3.5 billion gallons today.
A misplaced naval ship in California. Overlooked college students in New York City. Missed inmates in Texas.
These are some of the reasons why the two most populous states and the largest city in the U.S. filed last-minute requests for corrections to their 2020 census figures right before the deadline at the end of last month. California, Texas and New York City were joined by a dozen and a half other stragglers, including Illinois and New Orleans, that made down-to-the-deadline appeals over the numbers that help determine political power and the annual distribution of $2.8 trillion in federal funding.
In total, nearly 200 requests for corrections were filed by local, state and tribal governments through two programs started by the U.S. Census Bureau to give governments opportunities to have their population totals reviewed and corrected if need be.
* Full Gov. Pritzker press release…
Because of an inaccurate census count, the state of Illinois received inadequate federal funding for Medicare, affordable housing, homeland security, and a number of other essential programs. Census undercounts often disservice Black, Latino, and minority communities who have been historically underserved by federal resources, making the correct appropriation of these funds even more crucial. That’s why, in June, we submitted two requests for review of the 2020 census to the Census Bureau. Firstly, for the overall state population count, and secondly for the “group quarters” count, which focuses on nursing homes, college dorms, correctional facilities, etc. The Governor remains committed to advocating for an improved census calculation process and ensuring Illinois receives its fair share of federal funding based on an accurate count of our state’s population, which topped 13 million for the first time in history during this most recent census period.
* The administration sent two letters to the Census Bureau. Excerpt from one…
Dear Director Santos,
I am writing to request a 2020 Post-Census Group Quarter Review for the State of Illinois. Based on data collected from our correctional facilities, state-operated facilities for adults and youth, public and private nursing homes, college and university student housing, adult group homes and residential treatment centers, shelters for people experiencing homelessness and other institutional facilities*, we believe the total count for Illinois group quarter residents may be higher than what was reported in the 2020 Census counts.
My office is working with administrators across the various group quarters to finalize our tally of Illinois residents residing in these facilities in order to submit the required data for review. We intend to provide the Bureau of the Census with the information needed to consider our request in a timely manner.
Illinois would like to submit a request for the 2020 Census Count Question Resolution Operation. We are aware not only of the overall nearly two percent statewide undercount acknowledged by the Census Bureau, but also have been made aware by local jurisdictions of potential errors related to boundaries and housing placement.
To this end, my office would like to work with the Bureau of the Census and provide you with the information you need to review Illinois 2020 Census count and make appropriate adjustments. My office is working with subject matter experts in local and state government to gather and furnish all of the required data for your review in a timely manner.
The last time a sitting Illinois Republican congressperson faced a real primary challenge from a non-incumbent was more than seven years ago, when then-state Sen. Kyle McCarter, R-Lebanon, challenged U.S. Rep. John Shimkus, R-Collinsville. Even so, nobody really thought McCarter had much of a chance, and, as expected, he ended up losing to Shimkus by more than 20 points.
We’ve seen reapportionment-related GOP primaries between congressional incumbents — the most recent being U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis’ 2022 crushing loss to fellow U.S. Rep. Mary Miller (no relation) — but serious challenges of sitting Republican U.S. representatives are otherwise fairly rare here.
Mike Bost is now finding himself in that fairly rare territory. The four-term congressman from southern Illinois gained national renown after throwing a paper copy of an Illinois House bill into the air during an angry floor tirade against reducing public employee pensions.
Bost is now up against former state legislator Darren Bailey, who two-upped Bost by posting an online video of himself shooting a paper copy of a state budget bill with a high-powered assault rifle and then posted another video of him taking a flame-thrower to a budget bill.
Bailey is Bost-plus. He is Guns N’ Roses to Bost’s Bon Jovi. The crewcut candidate pledged undying fealty to Donald Trump on a hot, sweaty public stage when the then-president publicly endorsed him for governor last year.
He’ll run as an outsider against a career politician who has held public office for 28 years. And, just last year, well over $200 million was spent for and against Bailey in the governor’s race, some of it by the same person (Gov. J.B. Pritzker). That adds up to a whole lot of name recognition for Bailey as he enters this contest.
But Bailey is also a not great fundraiser. Bost recently claimed to have $1 million in campaign cash on hand. Bailey only raised a couple of million dollars for the 2022 general election (much of it in large contributions from his family) outside of the money he got from billionaire Richard Uihlein, who chose to spend most of his pro-Bailey money via a Dan Proft independent expenditure committee.
There were no state contribution caps in that 2022 race, but congressional contribution caps are both stringent and low, and they don’t allow family members and billionaires to dump lots of cash. Unless some rich people come in with big-time dark money, Bailey will be running a shoestring race against Bost.
Bost can also count on the National Republican Congressional Committee, which runs a well-funded incumbent protection program.
“Darren Bailey moved to a downtown Chicago penthouse to get blown out by J.B. Pritzker; now he’s back seeking another political promotion,” said NRCC spokesperson Chris Gustafson when Bailey announced against Bost. “Mike Bost is focused on delivering conservative results for Southern Illinois, and that’s why voters will re-elect him.”
Bost has also lined up about half the Republican county sheriffs in his district, plus a couple of retired sheriffs. Those folks loved Darren Bailey last year but are sticking with Bost this time around. Bost received 75% of the vote last November, compared to Bailey’s 72.5 % in the district against Pritzker. And Bost was recently endorsed by National Right to Life, which he described as “America’s oldest and largest pro-life organization.”
Bost knows how to speak to “the base,” calling out “Joe Biden and the crazy liberals in Congress,” and their “woke, radical agenda” for “causing chaos with our economy, confusion in our schools, and a crisis at our southern border,” during his reelection announcement.
Bost also said that while the district needs a fighter, “We’ve got enough show horses in Washington as it is; that’s why I remain laser focused on serving the people and delivering real results for Southern Illinois, the place I’ve proudly called home my entire life.”
Bailey did not bother delivering any results when he was in the state legislature, other than making people feel good about voting for him. But he’s extremely adept at that task, so he probably doesn’t need a whole lot of money to remain competitive. He has authentic far-right street cred coming out his ears.
Cor Strategies, which polls for Republicans, released a poll last week showing the incumbent Bost ahead of Bailey 43-37. A Bost win could help show other “work horse” conservative Republicans how to fend off “show horse” insurgents. A Bailey win would once again illustrate the party’s far-rightward lurch.
* Daily Herald | Illinois Supreme Court expected to rule on elimination of cash bail Tuesday: Illinois Supreme Court Clerk Cynthia Grant issued a notice Friday indicating that the court expects to file its ruling at 9 a.m. Tuesday deciding a lawsuit over the constitutionality of the state’s plan to eliminate cash bail, a key element of the criminal justice reform law known as the SAFE-T Act.
* Crain’s | The Week Ahead: State Supreme Court preps SAFE-T Act cash bail ruling:Just days before that was supposed to go into effect, a Kankakee County judge ruled that the cash bail provision violated the state’s separation of powers. Because that ruling applied to only about two-thirds of Illinois counties, the Illinois Supreme Court halted the cash bail elimination so it could review the challenge and apply a final decision across all counties in Illinois. Arguments were heard in March and we’ll know the final decision Tuesday. Pritzker will receive the news while overseas, on a “trade mission” to the UK.
* CST Editorial Board | Bring electric vehicle manufacturing to Illinois to help spark our economy: But Illinois ought to do more to boost the market for electric vehicles. In its latest budget, the state trimmed about $7.3 million from its electric vehicle rebate program, cutting it to about $12 million. In the previous year, $19.3 million was available for the rebates, which give $4,000 to customers who buy new or used EVs from licensed dealers. Demand was so high, the program ran out of money about halfway through the fiscal year.
* Tribune | In Chicago, Vice President Kamala Harris praises Rev. Jesse Jackson as he is ‘pivoting’ from heading Rainbow/PUSH: Harris was among several Democratic politicians who gathered at the Apostolic Church of God in the Woodlawn neighborhood for Rainbow/PUSH’s annual conference to celebrate Jackson’s more than half-century of influence on civil rights and American politics. Harris called Jackson “one of America’s greatest patriots, someone who deeply believes in the promise of our country.”
* Chicago Defender | Meet Rev. Frederick Haynes III: Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow PUSH Successor: Rev. Haynes III will serve as Rainbow PUSH’s new president, while Rev. Jackson transitions to an emeritus role over the organization he founded over 50 years ago. In Rev. Haynes III, Rainbow PUSH gets a pastor, social activist, educator, orator and author committed to social and economic justice.
* The Guardian | Progressives press Chicago mayor over pledge to end controversial policing tool: “He’s a rising star in progressive politics and we’re going to hold him accountable,” Granate Kim, campaign director at MPower Change, a Chicago-based Muslim digital advocacy organization, told a panel held at Netroots. Kim added that if Johnson did not break with ShotSpotter: “We would be very upset and take him to task nationally.”
* Tribune | As asylum-seekers struggle while waiting for work permits, Chicago businesses can’t fill jobs: For most migrants, finding work is volatile and sometimes dangerous because they lack work authorization permits. And while many migrants work under the table, leaving them vulnerable to exploitation, Illinois business owners say they have open jobs they can’t fill. Business leaders, along with Gov. J.B. Pritzker and other political leaders, have urged the federal government to expedite the process.
* Sun-Times | Chicago cops sidelined for allegedly seizing guns without making arrests, then lying about it: On March 3, two days after Brown announced he was stepping down, Andrea Kersten, COPA’s chief administrator, sent a letter to top police officials that laid bare the accusations and pushed for the officers to be benched. Her letter also raised questions over whether the officers snatched up guns, drugs and cash without turning in the evidence.
* Shaw Local | For insight on college athlete rights proposal, look west: While the sports department has comprehensive coverage of the ongoing problems with Northwestern University’s football and baseball programs, there’s a government angle as well. State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, a University of Illinois football alumnus, has made the rounds regarding plans to update his proposed College Athletes Bill of Rights.
* WBEZ | Severe weather and air pollution create more problems for Chicago’s unhoused: Koruba, who works with a nonprofit called the Night Ministry, said his team tries to take those patients to public indoor places with cleaner air, such as cooling centers or libraries. But not all their patients are able to find shelter. And when severe weather hits, Koruba said those experiencing homelessness don’t have much to protect themselves.
* Illinois Newsroom | Smoke from Canadian wildfires returns to Midwest: According to the Air Quality Index from the National Weather Service, the air over central Illinois was unhealthy for sensitive groups on Sunday, July 16. It is forecasted to upgrade to ‘moderate’ on Monday, July 17. That means the air quality is acceptable but there may be a risk to people who are sensitive to air pollution.
* Tribune | Costly Deep Tunnel flooding project can’t handle Chicago area’s severe storms fueled by climate change: “When you have a slow-moving storm that’s dumping a large amount of rainfall, it doesn’t take much to cause problems,” said Zachary Yack, a National Weather Service meteorologist who noted that up to 8 inches of rain fell in the western suburbs during the day. “That’s a lot of water to contend with in a very short period of time.”
* Sun-Times | Judge James Zagel, judge in Blagojevich case, dead at 82: Judge Zagel presided over thousands of cases during his nearly 30-year career on the bench and also kept busy outside the courtroom. He played a judge in the 1989 film “Music Box” and wrote a novel about a federal judge who robs the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
* Stacker | Counties with the lowest cost of living in Illinois: Nearly three-quarters of Americans surveyed by financial services provider Primerica at the end of 2022 said they are not able to save for their future due to rising costs. Home prices, rent, and food inflation as well as higher prices for gas in the last couple of years are making it so that each dollar earned has even less purchasing power than before. Stacker compiled a list of counties with the lowest cost of living in Illinois using 2022 rankings from Niche.
* Tribune | Pitchfork Music Festival 2023: The must-see musicians and all the entry details: In a summer and city filled with music festivals, Pitchfork Music Festival, taking place at Union Park on July 21-23, continues to set itself apart by curating an eclectic set of performers across a variety of music genres. This year is no exception, with acts as uber-popular as Bon Iver sharing space with emerging artists like Palm, and genres like reggae, hip hop, rock, electro-pop and R&B getting a chance to shine. We’re especially excited for this year’s abundance of local artists like Ric Wilson, Sen Morimoto, Deeper and Ariel Zetina, who prove Chicago artists are just as vital as any other city’s musicians to a festival focused on “what’s next.”
* WBEZ has a report on “trend” meetups in the city, which have sometimes turned violent. Here’s some of it…
[Vondale Singleton, who heads C.H.A.M.P.S] said part of the reason why young people are attracted to these events is because there isn’t a lot to do in their own neighborhoods.
“If you ask a young person on the Southwest Side, ‘Hey, do you go to your local park?’ They say, ‘… [The] reason why I don’t go [is] because I don’t feel safe,’” Singleton said.
A recent WBEZ analysis shows many places of amusement like arcades and bowling alleys in Chicago are mostly located in and around downtown.
After Seandell Holliday was fatally shot last year, the city expanded its citywide curfew hours and increased police presence downtown. But some have questioned how effective the city’s measures have been and who they protect.
Groups like C.H.A.M.P.S and My Block, My Hood, My City have been countering “trend” events with their own organized youth gatherings. And public safety experts and youth advocates have pitched ideas for how to keep the city safe.
A Northwestern Medicine study is shedding light on the impact long COVID-19 has on patients. The study looked at COVID-19 patients cared for in-person and through telehealth since May 2020. Researchers found that among those tested, 85% reported decreased quality of life and 51% said they had cognitive impairment. Long COVID occurs in about a third of COVID survivors and is now the third leading neurologic disorder in the country.
And yet.
* Press release…
Today, Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) launched $10 million in funding for the third round of the Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program. The Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program provides training opportunities, expands the talent pipeline, and boosts diversity in the construction industry and building trades. Grantees will be selected through a competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) process.
* New flaks…
Governor JB Pritzker announced the following staff transitions on his communications team.
Kamaria Morris will begin a new role as Deputy Communications Director. Morris previously served in Governor Pritzker’s office as Assistant Communications Director, a role she’s held since March of 2022. Prior to her time with the Governor’s Office, Morris was a Public Information Officer for the Illinois Capital Development Board. She also previously served as Assistant Director of Communications/PR at the Erikson Institute; Public Relations Manager at Lyric Opera of Chicago; and Media Coordinator at WCIU-TV. She is a native Chicagoan, and earned a Bachelor of Arts in Communication from the University of Missouri-Columbia, and a Master of Arts in Communication from Northern Illinois University.
Alex Gough will begin a new role as Press Secretary. Gough previously served in Governor Pritzker’s office as Senior Deputy Press Secretary, a role he had held since March of 2022. Prior to that, Gough served as member of the Illinois Senate Democratic Caucus communications team and as a member of the Illinois Senate Democratic Fund’s political team. Gough began his career in politics as a field organizer on Deputy Gov. Andy Manar’s 2018 state Senate campaign. He is a native of Quincy and graduate of Illinois State University.
Olivia Kuncio will serve as Senior Deputy Press Secretary. Kuncio is currently Deputy Press Secretary in Governor Pritzker’s office, a role she has held since March of 2022. Previously, she served as Public Relations Representative for Chicago Public Library. Kuncio is a graduate of Northwestern University’s School of Communication.
* At least he’ll be out of the gene pool for four years…
JUST IN: Kevin Lyons, of Chicago, sentenced to 51 months in prison for entering Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office on Jan. 6, stealing a staffer’s wallet and a photo of Pelosi with civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis. He texted his friends, “I took this off Pelosi’s f***ing desk!” pic.twitter.com/w2CQ3IeYix
The U.S. House on Friday approved a sweeping annual defense bill that provides an expected 5.2% pay raise for service members but strays from traditional military policy with political add-ons from Republicans to block abortion coverage, diversity initiatives at the Pentagon and transgender issues that deeply divided the chamber.
Chaser from the NRCC…
Today extreme Democrat Eric Sorensen voted against the National Defense Authorization Act, going on record to block funding for the United States military.
Voting against pay raises for our troops and the safety of our country over taxpayer funded late-term abortions and woke transgender ideology is extreme and dangerous.
“Eric Sorensen is following an extreme and dangerous agenda led by the fringe elements of his party that is entirely out of touch with the American people. He needs to answer for why he is willing to put our national security risk for his woke agenda.” — NRCC Spokesman Chris Gustafson
* Probably gonna need a kitty litter box in that laundromat…
A person was seen breaking into a laundromat in Illinois while wearing a bunny suit.
The break-in happened early Thursday at Winners Wash Laundromat in Quincy.
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* Sun-Times | Father of accused Highland Park parade shooter gets a trial date: The father of the alleged Highland Park parade shooter will go on trial Nov. 6 on charges of reckless conduct for signing his son’s application for a firearm owner’s identification card. Lawyers in the case said Friday that they expect the trial to last about one week.
* Tribune | Lingering long COVID looms even as Chicago hospital admissions decline, Northwestern research shows: The directors of the hospital system’s Comprehensive COVID-19 Center released a study Thursday on “long COVID” symptoms. It showed thousands of patients have suffered from a wide array of serious medical issues that highlight the illness’s lasting harm and the importance of a treating long COVID with a multidisciplinary approach, they said.
* Sun-Times | Lori Lightfoot, Ald. Jim Gardiner accused of ethics violations that could trigger fines: In the past 10 years, Chicago’s inspector general has asked the Board of Ethics to find probable cause of an ethics violation only 13 times. Three of those findings were in the last quarter alone. And the targets were former Mayor Lori Lightfoot, newly reelected Ald. Jim Gardiner (45th) and a member of the public who allegedly tried and failed to bribe a city inspector.
* Sun-Times | City Council committee tiptoes toward sidewalk snow removal mandate: The City Council’s Committee on Pedestrian and Traffic Safety on Friday gave a handful of city departments — led by Streets and Sanitation, Transportation, and the Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities — 60 days to create a working group to study sidewalk snow removal and determine where and how to test the new service, the cost and how to pay for the pilot.
* Crain’s | Kraft Heinz to open $400 million distribution center in DeKalb: The Chicago-based maker of Jell-O, Heinz ketchup and Oscar Mayer hot dogs said it will move into the 775,000-square-foot warehouse in the ChicagoWest Business Center, a 1,200-acre business park in DeKalb, about 65 miles west of Chicago. Expected to open in 2025, the highly automated facility, which will include rail access, will allow Kraft Heinz to speed up delivery of its products to retail and food service customers.
* WBEZ | The county’s first Black trans appointee talks public office, preserving Lake Michigan and her historic first: “I was inspired by former Commissioner Deb Shore. She’s now the Regional Director at the EPA. She was the first lesbian elected in Cook County and represented the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District for so many years. And I feel like I stand on her shoulders, as an environmentalist, as a Black trans woman, with the importance of protecting Lake Michigan, which is a part of the largest body of freshwater on Earth.”
* NYT | Education Dept. Cancels $39 Billion in Student Debt for 800,000 Borrowers: The relief will go to those who have federal loans owned directly by the Education Department and who enrolled in income-driven repayment plans or would have qualified for loan forgiveness if they had done so. Those plans cap the payments that borrowers owe to a percentage of their income. Under those plans, borrowers must make payments for a term that is typically 20 or 25 years. At the end of that period, any remaining balance is forgiven.
“I’m opposed to that $75 million tax credit, that [Invest in Kids] school voucher system [that Bruce Rauner has] created, and we should as soon as possible do away with it. What I oppose is taking money out of the public schools, and that’s what happened here.”
The Illinois General Assembly made some major moves on education issues this [2019] legislative session that ended on Sunday, including boosting spending on schools, tackling the state’s teacher shortage and weakening charter schools. Gov. JB Pritzker also retained a private school scholarship program even though he had vowed to end it. […]
The Invest In Kids Act is a five-year pilot that allows people to donate up to $1.3 million to special scholarship funds and in return get a 75% tax credit. Then, students from low- or middle-income families apply for a scholarship to a private school. Of the 7,000 scholarships awarded since 2018, nearly 5,000 winners were low income, the state’s annual report shows. Critics of the program say it diverts taxpayer dollars that could be going to public schools.
Pritzker had originally proposed capping the tax credit program at $50 million dollars during the three-year phase-out, down from $100 million. But late last week, after negotiations, Pritzker agreed to keep the program as long as the state funnels at least $350 million in new dollars into K-12 funding each year.
Pritzker requested tax deductions for donations to the Invest in Kids Tax Credit Scholarship program be reduced from 75% to 40% to save the state $14 million as the state faces a tight budget year after COVID-19 slowed revenue.
* From the coverage of the budget that passed in 2021…
After back-and-forth over whether the state should continue a tax credit scholarship program called Invest in Kids — an earlier proposal from the governor cut the program considerably, down to 40% — legislators agreed to keep the program intact in the final deal they passed. Under the plan, taxpayers will continue to receive an income tax credit for 75% of a qualified donation as in previous years. Republican House leader Jim Durkin called that a victory on Tuesday even as he criticized the last-minute nature of the process.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed a bill yesterday that amends Illinois’ Invest in Kids Tax Credit Scholarship program to protect already-enrolled students. It is effective immediately. […]
Bill 4126, sponsored by state Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, grants super-priority status to current recipients of the Invest in Kids scholarship, providing assurance to families in the program that if students receive a scholarship one year, they will be first in line for a scholarship the next year. The legislation also gives schools greater flexibility to offer more partial scholarships. […]
“We’re pleased to see this bill signed into law as these scholarships can be life-changing for low-income families who wish to provide their children an education that fits their unique needs,” said Amy Korte, executive vice president for the Illinois Policy Institute. “The next step is ensuring the program will last beyond another year and can be there for the long term for students in need.”
My main focus with respect to K-12 education is ensuring that there is sufficient funding for all children to receive a quality education, regardless of their zip code. That’s why I’ve dedicated an additional $1.3 billion toward public education during my term. With assurance from the advocates for Invest in Kids that they will support increased public school funding, my budgets have ultimately included the relatively small Invest in Kids Scholarship Program.
I think we should have tax credits that support education and other things in state government, but we also have the federal government willing to cover about 40% of the cost. Why have we created a program in which we’re paying for 75% of it and not having the rest of the country essentially paying 40 percent. This is a problem in the fundamental makeup of it. And I’ve suggested to the General Assembly if they decide to renew Invest in Kids, let’s alleviate the burden on Illinois taxpayers and make sure that, frankly, as other states do, let’s let other states pay in part for the benefit that we get.
Legislators didn’t lift the end-of-year sunset on the Invest in Kids program before they adjourned spring session. Last week, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said discussions continue.
“I’m willing to work with the program if it gets extended or to figure out how we would wind down the program if it doesn’t get extended,” Pritzker said.
The program is funded with private donations in exchange for a 75% state income tax credit. More than 41,000 students have benefited since the program was started nearly 5 years ago.
Pritzker said “nobody is trying to shut anything down.” […]
“People who say, ‘well, actually it’s not costing taxpayers anything,’ Actually, it’s costing taxpayers 75% of the total amount that gets raised,” Pritzker said. “And so that’s something that I think some people who are budget conscious are paying attention to as well.”
He went from wanting to kill it, to proposing a cap, to fully funding it, to wanting to limit it, to saying he’d keep it and calling it “relatively small,” to saying “some people who are budget conscious” are paying attention to the costs.
I really gotta find a chiropractor.
…Adding… Empower Illinois…
Empower Illinois and the thousands of families and students who rely on the Illinois Tax Credit Scholarship Program for their education are deeply concerned by Governor J.B. Pritzker’s recent remarks stating, ‘I am willing to work with the (tax credit scholarship) program or figure out how to wind down the program if it’s not extended.’
We hope it was only a misstatement from the Governor and not a softening on his commitment to support Illinois’ most vulnerable families.
Governor Pritzker’s inclusion of an option to “wind down” such an impactful program is a departure from his previous statements in late May where he said, ‘If the legislature passes something, I will sign it.’ Ending the Tax Credit Scholarship Program means ripping scholarships away from the most vulnerable, poor, and working-class children and their families. Black and Brown students will be disproportionally impacted if the Tax Credit Scholarship Program is killed by inaction as the Governor suggested, and that is unacceptable.
Announcing any burial plans for a program that has been immensely successful for Illinois children would be beyond premature. We expect lawmakers to do what’s right by children–extend the program, with no cuts, no wind down.
We urge Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly to act this fall during Veto Session to immediately extend the Invest in Kids Act Tax Credit Scholarship Program, providing Illinois kids and families with the reassurance and support they so rightly deserve.
* I admit to not following this topic very closely, but it’s generated a lot of heat in my inbox. Here’s a part of a press release from late June…
The Board of Commissioners of the Park District of Tinley Park today joined with elected officials, labor and environmental organizations, community groups, special recreation associations, local officials, and a wide array of supporters to urge Gov. JB Pritzker to sign House Bill 3743 into law. The bill, passed by the Illinois General Assembly in May, would turn over the site of the former Tinley Park Mental Health Center to the Park District to finally begin cleanup and redevelopment of the long-vacant land.
Joining the Park District Board of Commissioners at a press conference today were Sen. Michael Hastings and Reps. Robert Rita, Debbie Meyers-Martin, and Justin Slaughter, as well as representatives of the Cook County Building Trades Council, Chicago Southland Convention and Visitors Bureau, Sierra Club, Illinois Environmental Council, South Suburban Special Recreation Association, Lincolnway Special Recreation Association, Tinley Park Bulldogs, Moraine Valley Community College, local youth organizations, south suburban school boards, and south suburban area park districts.
* Jeff Vorva, who writes for the Southland edition of The Times of Northwest Indiana, finally explained it to me…
A bill awaiting the signature of Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker would sell 90 acres for $1 to the park district for a mammoth sports complex. […]
[A Pritzker spokesperson] confirmed the governor received a letter from the park district supporting the bill as well as a letter from the village asking that it be killed. […]
[Mayor Michael Glotz ] added that it only wants both parties to agree that neither the village nor the park district should own the land so residents can get a piece of a possible $8 million in real estate tax revenue.
“Without a TIF (tax-increment financing) and the way the bill was written, it can never be used for anything other than public use. It will be a financial disaster,” he said.
The park district isn’t slamming the door on an IGA.
“An IGA was possible and is still possible, but we need leadership on the village’s end to work together, not divide,” Park District Commissioner Lisa O’Donovan said via a public relations firm. O’Donovan did express disappointment that this has not happened up to this point.
So, what seems to be happening is that the legislature weighed in on the side of the park district, and the governor, by all appearances, appears to be waiting to see if the locals can work out a deal.
The mayor is claiming that the area will lose $8 million in property tax revenue if it’s sold for a dollar to the park district because the legislation says the land “shall be used for public purposes only.” If there’s no private ownership, there’s no tax revenues. But if you read the whole thing, the mayor has obviously made some enemies along the way.
…Adding… Heard from some folks involved, and, whew, this mayor has really made a whole lot of hardcore enemies. So, nevermind about the suggestion.
Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr., who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease eight years ago, is stepping down from the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, the influential Chicago-based civil rights organization he founded through its predecessor, Operation PUSH, more than 50 years ago.
After ceding day-to-day operations last year, Jackson, 81, is formally handing the reins to a successor who is expected to be announced this weekend at the annual Rainbow/PUSH convention, sources close to the organization said Friday.
Headquartered in a former temple in the Kenwood neighborhood on the South Side, the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition has long been Jackson’s national advocacy platform to promote economic, educational and political change, including two groundbreaking campaigns for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 1980s.
Now the organization’s mission, and its future, will be vested in new hands.
One of his sons, Rep. Jonathan Jackson, D-Ill., said Friday there “is a determination made that in his current health and condition that he has appointed a successor and will formally announce it Sunday.” […]
The representative said his father “has forever been on the scene of justice and has never stopped fighting for civil rights” and that will be “his mark upon history.” […]
Jackson’s public activism began decades ago, when he was one of the “Greenville Eight,” a group of Black students (Jackson was a college freshman at North Carolina A&T) protesting at the whites-only public library in Greenville, South Carolina, where Jackson grew up.
In the years since, he remained active in the movement, formed Operation PUSH in 1971, ran for president twice and has, multiple times, successfully negotiated for the release of U.S. citizens being held hostage abroad. The Rainbow Coalition, which grew out of his 1984 presidential campaign, merged with PUSH in 1996.
Jackson, who was first diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2017, made the announcement on the weekly PUSH broadcast and afterward to volunteers working on the 57th annual convention, being held from July 15 to July 19. The theme of the international convention is “The Perilous Journey From Freedom to Equality.”
During the convention on Monday, July 17, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Jackson will receive the highest civilian award from the country of Colombia. Two years ago he received a similar award from France. The award presentation will take place at the University of Chicago’s David Rubinstein Forum, 1201 E. 60th St.
“It is quite impactful to have nations to reward Reverend Jackson for his global work. It is a testament to his day-to-day tenacity,” said Bishop Tavis Grant, acting national executive director of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. […]
On Friday, July 14, at 6 p.m., and Saturday, July 15, at the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, Jackson will be honored for his 1984 and 1988 presidential campaigns from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. “Delegates from around the country are coming, and we’re excited,” said Grant, who in 1984 was a student organizer. In 1988, Grant participated in the “Jackson Action” campaign run by Jesse Jackson, Jr.
On Saturday, Grant said, “There will be a reunion of campaign workers, people who through sweat, energy and commitment believed in the campaign of Reverend Jackson and the Jackson doctrine we call progressive politics today.”
The news of Jackson’s resignation comes as the Rainbow PUSH Coalition prepares to host their annual international convention at the University of Chicago’s David Rubinstein Forum this weekend.
The 81-year-old said he plans to announce the new president of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition within the next few weeks.
Jackson created Operation PUSH in 1971 in an effort to improve the economic and political lives of Black Americans.
Jackson went on to found the National Rainbow Coalition in 1984, after his first run for president. The group was formed to seek equal rights for all Americans, and to demand social programs, voting rights, and affirmative action for minorities left out by “Reaganomics,” according to the Rainbow/PUSH website.
The two nonprofits merged in 1996 with Jackson at the helm.
…Adding… Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson…
“The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson is an architect of the soul of Chicago. Through decades of service, he has led the Rainbow PUSH Coalition at the forefront of the struggle for civil rights and social justice. His faith, his perseverance, his love, and his relentless dedication to people inspire all of us to keep pushing for a better tomorrow.
The reverend is a mentor, and a friend, and I thank him for all he has done for the people of our city, and our country.”
* Press release excerpt from NRDC, Sierra Club Illinois and the Respiratory Health Association…
Recent record-breaking spikes in dangerous air pollutants from wildfire smoke underscore the urgent need for regulations to address the outsized impacts of diesel pollution on air quality, which underpinned the unhealthy air days Illinoisans suffered in June. The health impacts of diesel pollution in Illinois are well documented. Fossil fuel-powered trucks emit fine particulate pollution (PM) and smog-forming gasses (NOx). These pollutants lead to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases—including asthma, lung cancer, heart attacks, and strokes—and can cause premature death. […]
Climate change and global warming have caused months of weather extremes across the country. In Illinois, transportation is the biggest contributor to climate change. Transportation emissions are also a leading driver of dangerous ozone and particulate matter pollution in the state, a constant threat that contributed to Chicago experiencing the worst air quality globally last month.
“Climate change exacerbates the threat of extreme heat and wildfires, both of which compound existing air quality issues here in Illinois,” said Anastasia Montgomery, a PhD Candidate of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Northwestern University. “Enacting these clean truck safeguards will increase our climate resilience while also ensuring an equitable transition to zero-emission trucks that will benefit the communities most impacted. The urgency of this work cannot be overstated. That’s why we are asking the Governor to act now.”
“Our climate cannot wait; our communities cannot wait. Governor Pritzker, you have the power to implement clean truck rules in Illinois,” said J.C. Kibbey, senior Illinois clean energy advocate at NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council). “You have the power to give us cleaner air to breathe, a healthier climate to pass to our children. We ask you today to use that power.”
California’s Advanced Clean Trucks rule would increase the percentage of new zero-emission truck sales through 2035…
Explanation of California’s Heavy-Duty Omnibus from the NRDC…
Heavy-duty vehicles are the biggest source of oxides of nitrogen (NOx) in California, emitting nearly a third of all NOx pollution, as well as over a fourth of diesel particulate matter (PM). NOx contributes to smog and secondary PM, which, along with primary PM emissions, are associated with increased risk of premature deaths, hospitalization, and ER visits. Numerous respiratory and cardiovascular diseases are linked to these pollutants such as asthma, decreased lung function, heart attacks, and lung cancer. […]
The Omnibus rule will cut NOx emissions from heavy-duty trucks by roughly 75% below current standards beginning in 2024 and 90% in 2027. In addition to cleaning up NOx, the Omnibus rule looks to institutionalize PM pollution controls and prevent backsliding by adopting a more stringent standard that aligns with current industry certifications. These reductions add up to $36 billion in statewide health benefits from 3,900 avoided premature deaths and 3,150 hospitalizations from 2022 to 2050.
Don Schaefer, executive vice president of the Mid-West Truckers Association, said modern trucks run much cleaner than in the past.
“Are we reducing emissions, we’ve reduced emissions by 90% on most diesel trucks over the last 20 years, so there is progress being made,” Schaefer told The Center Square. […]
Andrew Boyle from the American Trucking Association told a Senate Environment and Public Works Subcommittee in April that more thought needs to go into the process of mandating electric semi-trucks.
“In Illinois, a facility teed up 30 trucks for electrification, and the city of Joliet came back and said this is some kind of joke. You’re asking for more draw than the city requires,” said Boyle.
According to the ATA, a clean diesel truck can spend 15 minutes fueling anywhere in the country and then travel about 1,200 miles before fueling again. In contrast, today’s long-haul battery electric trucks have a range of about 150-330 miles and can take up to 10 hours to charge.
I couldn’t find confirmation for the claim that diesel emissions were reduced by 90 percent in the last 20 years. Maybe some of you can. Eleven years ago, the Diesel Technology Forum made the claim that emissions had already been reduced by 99 percent for NOx and 98 percent for particulate emissions in ten years.
Um, no. That website never operates “fine.” C’mon.
The server often can’t handle simple tasks like seeing all House election results on the same page or putting contributions in the order of highest to lowest. When it glitches, which is just about constantly, you get sent to the main page and have to try again. It’s totally ridiculous. No other state website is that flawed.
Also, while we’re at it, why does it give me lowest to highest contributions when I first try to sort them? Who cares about $1 contributions? If I’m sorting by amount, I want to see the highest contributions first. It makes no sense. And then when you try to re-sort them, chances are good that you’ll be sent to the home page again.
* And as long as I’m venting, what’s with the weird, decades-long commitment to javascript on links? The board did finally move away from pure javascript, but it’s still pervasive. I’ll give you an example. Click here for the election results page. Now, use the pull-down menu to access the 2022 results. Now, try to open the categories in a new tab. Doesn’t work. This is what comes up for the “Judicial” link: javascript:__doPostBack(’ctl00$ContentPlaceHolder1$lnkSenate’,'’)
*facepalm*
I have been complaining about that website since the 1990s. It’s always been janky and is too-often offline. Stop telling us that things are fine.
* And just in case somebody wants to make snarky comments about the construction of this ol’ Capitol Fax blog, I’d point out that, while it may not be the prettiest, most ultra-modern site on the planet, it works.
* Quad-City Times | Charlie Helmick to run for Illinois 72nd House District: Democratic Rep. Gregg Johnson currently represents the 72nd House District. Johnson was elected to the Illinois General Assembly in November, 2022, replacing Democratic Sen. Mike Halpin who held the house seat since 2017 before running for the Illinois 36th Senate District.
* SJ-R | Illinois Freedom Caucus rallies behind 16-year-old swimmer who claims she was kicked off team: Abbigail Wheeler of Loami said she also was banned from the YMCA after making and posting signs in the women’s locker room she was told amounted to “hate speech.” […] “No one is forced to use any space in our facility that makes them uncomfortable,” said Lou Bart, a spokesman for the YMCA. “We offer multiple options for private changing spaces and restrooms for all members.”
* SJ-R | Bailey’s back. Who else is running for Congress in Illinois?: As of Monday, there have been 40 candidates in the state’s 17 congressional districts who have filed with FEC. […] Budzinski has company with one named opponent that she’ll likely face in November 2024. Republican challenger Joshua Loyd, a 24-year-old from Carbondale, filed with the FEC in March and is centering his campaign on agriculture, maintaining social security and strengthening national security per his website.
* Sun-Times | 3 finalists picked for job of Chicago police superintendent: A civilian commission narrowed the field to Angel Novalez, Shon Barnes and Larry Snelling. Mayor Brandon Johnson now has 30 days to either choose one or reject them all and order the panel to launch another search.
* Tribune | Feds investigating possible minority-contracting fraud involving city deals worth millions: The ongoing investigation is targeting possible fraud in the minority-owned business programs in the city of Chicago and other municipalities, sources with knowledge of the probe told the Tribune. No criminal charges have been filed, but the investigation has been active in recent weeks, with several people being approached by law enforcement, the sources said.
* Crain’s | Northwestern trustees face a reckoning amid football hazing scandal: Attention now shifts to a 70-member board of trustees packed with local luminaries, underscoring Northwestern’s importance to Chicago as a global city. Trustees include retired Abbott Laboratories CEO Miles White, Rocky Wirtz of Wirtz Corp. and the Chicago Blackhawks, Baxter International CEO José Almeida, and investment honchos Michael Sacks of GCM Grosvenor and Madison Dearborn co-president Timothy Sullivan. Among 78 life trustees are megadonor Patrick Ryan of insurance broker Ryan Specialty and fellow billionaires, real estate mogul Neil Bluhm and industrialist Lester Crown.
* Crain’s | Northwestern head baseball coach Jim Foster is out: Reports surfaced on Monday that Foster, who was in his first year as coach, was the subject of a human resources investigation over accusations of abuse and bullying from former players. Three days later, he was out. “This has been an ongoing situation and many factors were considered before reaching this resolution,” Gragg said in the statement. “As the Director of Athletics, I take ownership of our head coaching hires and we will share our next steps as they unfold.”
* Crain’s | NASCAR event a mixed bag for Loop restaurants: Sam Toia, president and CEO of the Illinois Restaurant Association, said road closures kept people away from downtown — and therefore from restaurants in the area. He said a number of association members didn’t see sales increase over the race weekend, despite fans displaced by rain.
* Sun-Times | Trio of piping plover chicks released at Montrose Beach: The three chicks, named Searocket, Prickly Pear and Wild Indigo, have been exploring their new environment at Montrose Beach. Their names are a nod to the native plants in the Montrose Beach Dunes Natural Area.