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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

*WBEZ

Chicago Public Schools dove headlong out of the tech dark ages without strong tracking systems and has failed to upgrade them in recent years. Now, CPS’ inspector general says as many as 77,000 devices — worth more than $23 million — were marked as lost or stolen in just one year.

Some of those devices didn’t actually disappear but were simply sitting on shelves or in desk drawers unaccounted for, CPS IG William Fletcher said in his 2023 annual report, blaming the district’s flawed inventory system that he said needs “serious overhaul.” And CPS rarely used a tracking system to find its computers despite spending $3 million on it.

This echoes findings by WBEZ and Chalkbeat Chicago in December 2022 that the school district lacked a reliable way to track devices.

In a school district as large as CPS some attrition is expected, but Fletcher said 11% of devices were marked as lost or stolen during the 2021-2022 school year. An expert cited by the inspector general called that an “alarming” amount. In the 2020-21 school year, 8% of the district’s technology assets were listed as lost, up from 3% in 2018-19, the Sun-Times reported. Those assets also included things like air purifiers and projectors.

* WBEZ and the Investigative Project on Race and Equality explored racial profiling by police in the US and France. They’re holding a virtual conference on Jan 10th. Click here to sign up, it’s free…

An analysis of 42.5 million traffic-stop records by the Investigative Project on Race and Equity and WBEZ Chicago found that, in recent years, the share of Black drivers involved in Illinois traffic stops has reached the highest level on record.

French journalist and activist Rokhaya Diallo wrote a piece in The Washington Post about the brutal death of 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk, a French-born youth of Algerian and Moroccan descent. He was shot last summer by a police officer at a traffic stop in a suburb of Paris, triggering a tidal wave of protests that in some cases turned violent. France has been facing police brutality against minorities for decades, a problem that has worsened with time.

Between Two Worlds will highlight how these issues coalesce and what they mean for people across the world as issues of equity and race continue to be front and center in the public discourse.

* Cool, but Oscar Mayer can’t spring more than $35,600? NBC

Oscar Mayer announced on Monday it’s taking applications for the next class of “hotdoggers,” a yearlong opportunity to drive across the country in the iconic 27-foot-long Wienermobile as the brand’s spokesperson.

The meat and cold cuts company, a subsidiary of food giant Kraft Heinz, says in the job listing that the lucky wieners will get paid $35,600.

The average hotdogger travels 20,000 miles and visits at least 40 cities to host popup events, appear on local media and create content for TikTok and Instagram.

* Here’s the rest…

    * Block Club | Bally’s Casino Made $3.1 Million For Chicago Last Year — Almost $10 Million Short Of City’s Goal: Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration projected the city would earn $12.8 million in gaming tax revenue from Bally’s in 2023, with the casino slated to open in June. But after opening weeks later than scheduled, the casino earned $3.1 million for the city last year despite increasing Chicago’s share every month, according to recently released figures.

    * WCIA | New Illinois law allows 16-year-olds to pre-register to vote: But that’s not the only thing teens can do when they go to get their license. Now, 16-year-olds in Illinois can prepare to exercise their civic duty and pre-register to vote because of a new state law that went into effect Jan. 1.

    * Robin Steans | How do we address the educator shortage in Illinois? We have powerful tools to do so.: First, some good news. The mass exodus of teachers from the profession that many predicted has not come to pass. Instead, our state has significantly increased its educator workforce since 2018, adding more than 5,800 teaching positions, a much greater rate than other states. That said, Illinois posts a 2.6% teacher vacancy rate. Worse, this overall average hides disparities by region — urban and rural areas are more likely to face vacancies; by position type — vacancy rates in special education and bilingual stand at 5% and 3.9%, respectively; and most tragically, by student population — with Black and Latino students and students from low-income households dramatically more likely to be in districts with vacancy rates more than twice the state average.

    * WTTW | $23 Million in Missing Devices, Criminal Charges and Sexual Abuse Investigations Detailed in CPS Watchdog’s Annual Report: “During this period, the (Office of Inspector General) received over 2,000 complaints of misconduct, waste, fraud, financial mismanagement, and adult-on-student sexual misconduct,” Fletcher’s office said in a statement. “The allegations ranged from relatively minor violations of Chicago Public Schools policies to criminal acts.” Those cases included an assistant principal who was charged after allegedly stealing close to $275,000, numerous employees accused of fraudulently obtaining Paycheck Protection Program loans, eight cases of substantiated adult-on-student sexual assault, as well as the missing tech equipment.

    * Daily Herald | ‘A new rebirth’: Bloomingdale moves to complete acquisition of Stratford Square Mall: Trustees on Monday unanimously approved a resolution to settle the lawsuit against mall owner Namdar Realty Group. The village will pay $8.75 million. It expects to close the deal next week.

    * Daily Herald | ‘One of the most important infrastructure projects in the country’: What’s next with I-490, Route 390: In the coming months, the tollway plans “to start the next phase, which is moving east, building bridges over the (Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific) railroads and York Road,” he said.

    * WAND | University of Illinois files notice of removal in response to Shannon Jr.’s restraining order: According to the Champaign County Clerk, the University of Illinois filed a notice of removal to have the case heard in the U.S. District Court and not in the Champaign County Court, on Tuesday. The University’s response comes after Terrence Shannon Jr. filed a temporary restraining order on Monday. A hearing date has yet to be scheduled on the petition for the temporary restraining order.

    * AP | Terrence Shannon Jr., the suspended Illinois basketball star, files a restraining order seeking reinstatement: Illinois suspended Shannon on Dec. 28 after authorities in Kansas charged him with rape. The school suspended Shannon from “all team activities, effective immediately,” a day after the Douglas County District Attorney issued a warrant for his arrest. Sutter said at the time Shannon is innocent.

    * Penn Carey Law | Guilty Until Proven Innocent: Field Drug Tests and Wrongful Convictions: This report provides the first-ever comprehensive analysis of presumptive drug field test usage across law enforcement agencies in the United States. Inexpensive and fast, these tests have become a tool of choice for law enforcement agencies. Unfortunately, they are notoriously imprecise and are known to produce “false positives,” leading to frequent wrongful arrests and wrongful convictions.

    * WBEZ | A Chicago-area family lied to get their children into a top CPS school, inspector general finds: From May 2014 until August 2020, the family violated CPS’s student residency requirements by enrolling their kids at Decatur Classical Elementary in West Rogers Park, investigators found. The school sits a few blocks from neighboring suburb Lincolnwood, where the family lived. The parents owned several residential properties in Chicago through their real estate company and used those city addresses in CPS enrollment materials to lie about where they lived, the IG’s office said.

    * BND | These metro-east school districts are getting electric buses through EPA grants: Cahokia Unit School District 187 and Granite City Community Unit School District 9 will each get 10 buses and East St. Louis School District 189 will get 25. The districts are among 38 others in Illinois to get buses through the EPA’s Clean School Bus Program. Funding for the program is provided through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that was passed in 2021 and authorized $5 billion over five years for clean school buses.

    * Rockford Register Star | Rosecrance’s Griffin Williamson campus in Rockford will shift to serve more adults: Rosecrance’s Griffin Williamson Campus, which has served more than 15,000 teens in the past 20 years, will soon start serving more adults. Rosecrance President and CEO David Gomel said the demand for residential services among youth has decreased while the need for youth outpatient services has increased in recent years.

    * South Side Weekly | The Healthcare System Failed Me After Getting Shot: More than two years later, I’m still healing from my injuries. I’ll never be the same. My journey to recovery, which started with so many mishaps in the hospital, has been long and excruciating. It has shown me the heavy burden society places on survivors of gun violence to heal themselves. In a city with thousands of gun violence victims, and over 7,000 hospital beds, I felt failed by the healthcare system. It’s hard to believe that the standard of care is so low for survivors.

    * The New Yorker | Did an Abortion Ban Cost a Young Texas Woman Her Life?: The hospital’s labor-and-delivery unit closed years ago, and there is no ob-gyn on site. The women in Yeni’s family, like most women in Luling, were used to travelling to Kyle, thirty miles northwest, or to Austin, for routine care. But sometimes a pregnancy-related crisis is too urgent to allow for travel time, and the Luling emergency room—with four beds and one doctor—is the only place to go.

    * NYT | New York Begins Evicting Migrant Families Who Hit a Shelter Time Limit: The first wave of evictions coincided with an unexpected and significant hurdle. City officials announced that they would temporarily evacuate 1,900 migrants currently housed in a tented shelter site in southeast Brooklyn because of a rainstorm headed for the city on Tuesday night.

    * WGN | First Lady Jill Biden, Halle Berry to visit University of Illinois Chicago: According to the White House, the First Lady is scheduled to visit the University of Illinois Chicago alongside actress and women’s health advocate, Halle Berry. The White House said during her visit, the First Lady will highlight the importance of advancing research on menopause and women’s health, as part of the White House Initiative on Women’s Health Research.

    * WTHI | Illinois state legislator collecting valentines for seniors: People can now make cards for the Valentines for Seniors program. Bryant is asking students, scout groups, churches, and other groups to create homemade cards that will be delivered to nursing homes, assisted-living facilities, and other long-term care facilities throughout the 58th Senate District.

    * WaPo | Violent political threats surge as 2024 begins, haunting American democracy: Bomb threats last week caused evacuations at state capitol buildings across the country. Federal authorities arrested and charged a man with threatening to kill a congressman and his children, while other members of Congress dealt with swatting incidents. The Maine secretary of state and the Colorado Supreme Court, both of which recently deemed Donald Trump ineligible to run for the presidency because he engaged in an insurrection, received a surge of threats after being castigated by Trump in speeches and social media posts.

    * BND | ‘Mystery’ dog illness reported in Illinois, but is your pet at risk? What to know: Canine medical experts are researching the “mysterious” disease, but much remains unknown at this time. While a “mystery” canine respiratory illness has been at least anecdotally reported in Illinois, a new, specific canine respiratory virus has yet to be identified in the state or anywhere in the U.S.

    * The Messenger | Elon Musk’s X Suspends Prominent Journalists and Influencers: The accounts of several prominent journalists and progressive-leaning influencers were suspended by Elon Musk’s X platform on Tuesday for apparently violating X’s rules. The accounts appeared to be being reinstated hours later, as of 12:15 p.m. Eastern.

    * LA Times | Researchers discover thousands of nanoplastic bits in bottles of drinking water: Using sophisticated imaging technology, scientists at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty laboratory examined water samples from three popular brands (they won’t say which ones) and found hundreds of thousands of bits of plastic per liter of water. Ninety percent of those plastics were small enough to qualify as nanoplastics: microscopic flecks so small that they can be absorbed into human cells and tissue, as well as cross the blood-brain barrier.

    * NYT | NASA Delays Artemis Astronaut Moon Missions: Officials at the space agency announced on Tuesday that Artemis II, the first American mission to send astronauts close to the moon in more than 50 years, will not take place late this year, as had been scheduled. They set a September 2025 date for the mission, which will take astronauts around the moon without landing there.

    * Sun-Times | Ed Smith, former downstate Illinois union leader, had ‘clear mission in life’ to help workers: Ed Smith was well known and universally respected. His southern Illinois drawl gave him local cred, and his family history in the labor movement was legendary. I’m not sure Ed ever gave a “civil rights” speech in his life. But when it came to helping workers get fair treatment, Ed didn’t care about the color of your skin. The barbecue made that clear. Seated at the tables and rising to greet this candidate from Chicago were dozens of workers, Black and white, who were all friends of Ed Smith.

    * WSIL | Ed Smith, former leader of Laborers’ International Union, passes away: Local residents have a lot to thank Smith for, as well. He helped aid the Therapy Center in Carterville and the Shawnee College Foundation in Ullin. He also gave sums to the Connell F. Smith Homer Brown Scholarship Fund in Marion. Many lives were affected by Smith’s work for laborers. Ullico hopes his work lives on through his positive impact on society and believes his passion for the job will inspire others.

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The city’s Texas bus crackdown is only making things worse

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The City of Chicago told alderpersons on Friday that zero buses carrying asylum-seekers had arrived from Texas in the previous seven days, down from around 25-30 buses a week in December.

Of course, that doesn’t mean nobody showed up. As we’ve discussed before, the bus companies hired by Texas are avoiding the city because of Chicago’s recent rules cracking down on when and where they can drop off migrants and imposing penalties, up to and including vehicle impoundment.

So, instead they’re dumping migrants in the suburbs, and the asylum-seekers are catching Metra trains into the city from there. From the Journal & Topics

In a Friday, Jan. 5 meeting of regional municipal managers, led by the Northwest Municipal Conference, community leaders shared their experiences with migrant charter buses arriving in their towns.

Village officials said charter bus drivers are being told directly from the emergency management agency in Texas to disembark passengers in suburban communities.

* From the Daily Herald

Scott Buziecki, [Kane County’s] director of emergency management, informed county board members that 150 buses have transported migrants into the suburbs since Dec. 1.

And non-home rule units are particularly vulnerable

Elburn received one of the 10 buses [arriving in Kane County] carrying a total of 300 migrants after that Chicago ordinance took effect. It responded by also threatening the bus companies with fines. Local Republicans want the county to follow that example with their own fines, but Kane County Assistant State’s Attorney John Frank said neither Kane County nor Elburn has the legal standing to impose such fines.

“Non-home rule entities cannot take these sort of actions,” Frank told the county board. “You are very hamstrung in what you can do.”

But, despite the local uproar, it’s really been no big deal for the locals

Buziecki said the migrants have committed no crimes during their 15- to 30-minute stays in the county while awaiting trains to Chicago.

Even so, the city needs to consider dumping or at least changing its rules. They’ve made things worse for everyone involved and sowed division across the region.

And the state should probably step up with its own new law if it can.

* Meanwhile, this little factoid was included in New York City’s lawsuit against the Texas bus companies

According to public reporting based on data obtained under the Texas Public Information Act, the Defendants receive roughly $1,650 per person on chartered buses compared to $291 for a single one-way ticket.

They may receive a bit less to bus them to Illinois, but you can clearly see that those bus companies are really making bank.

* By the way, that NYC lawsuit cites a relevant state statute

New York has a law to address just this kind of conduct. Section 149 of the New York Social Services Law requires that “[a]ny person who kno wingly brings, or causes to be brought a needy person from out of state into this state for the purpose of making him a public charge… shall be obligated to convey such person out of state or support him at his own expense.”

Illinois, as far as I can tell, has no such statute on its books.

* Isabel’s coverage roundup…

    * Pioneer Press | Mayor: Migrants no cause for concern in Burr Ridge: The topic came up Monday at the village board meeting as an item of general discussion. No one from the community spoke on the issue and board members seemed to agree with the mayor. On Sunday, the Chicago Tribune reported a busload of migrants arrived by bus to Glen Ellyn. They arrived Friday, early in the morning, at the Metra station with the plan to take the train to the city, but they missed the train as it was leaving and were left stranded for hours, hungry in freezing temperatures clad in T-shirts and sandals.

    * WGLT | McLean County to consider ban on taxpayer funds for migrants:Republican Chuck Erickson of Bloomington, who drafted the proposal, said the county can’t be sure that all of the people who may be delivered to McLean County are seeking political asylum and added they could pose a safety threat. “I am sure that some of these people are good people, but I’m not certain that all of them are good people and we just don’t know that,” Erickson said, and likened it to letting a stranger into your home.

    * Block Club Chicago | Hundreds Of Migrants Sleeping In CTA Buses As City Braces For Winter Storm: Over 500 migrants slept in CTA buses at the city’s designated landing zone for new arrivals Monday — a record as Texas officials double down on busing people to Chicago and city leaders scramble to find enough housing with snow and freezing cold coming. As of Monday morning, 537 asylum seekers were at the landing zone at Desplaines and Polk streets, waiting to be placed at shelters, according to data from the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications. Dozens of people were walking around the area Monday, some throwing around a football for the first time. Many people were seen huddled inside CTA buses labeled “warming bus.”

    * CBS Chicago | Chicago uses warming buses for migrants for winter storm: Right next to the landing zone, the state was working to construct its intake center. That included six heated tents meant not for housing but to provide placement and other services to migrants as they arrive.

    * Evanston Round Table | Evanston plans to direct migrants to Chicago: ”Additionally, for months, the City of Evanston has actively sought suitable local shelter options for migrants. Unfortunately, given the density of our community, finding a safe and workable space has proven challenging. Nevertheless, we continue to explore providing shelter assistance and will leave no stone unturned as long as the crisis persists.”

    * Journal & Topics | New Ordinance Addresses Migrants Coming To Mount Prospect: Mount Prospect trustees are expected at tonight’s (Tuesday) village board meeting to adopt an ordinance outlining the village’s role in ensuring any migrants who find themselves dropped off in the community are taken to a safe location.

    * WGN | Concerns rise for migrant safety as severe weather approaches Chicagoland: Community leaders are concerned about Chicago’s migrant intake center in the city’s South Loop as severe weather approaches. The Pilsen Food Pantry workers are sounding the alarm on Monday after hungry and sick migrants are struggling to stay warm as they wait for increasingly scarce shelter space.

  15 Comments      


More good news for the state’s fiscal, economic outlook

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Census adjustment wasn’t the only good news for Illinois during the holiday break. From COGFA

FY 2024 revenues through December continue to be well ahead of last fiscal year’s pace. Overall, revenues deposited into the State’s General Funds are $753 million higher than last year’s levels through the first half of the fiscal year. When accounting for “one-time” revenues in both FY 2023 and FY 2024 related to Federal deposits, reimbursements, and this December’s transfer of excess P.A. 102-0700 funding, the “base” growth through the first six months of the fiscal year is a very respectable +$736 million.

The Personal Income Tax continues to see the largest revenue gains this fiscal year. Through December, these tax receipts are up $855 million (or +$704 million on a net basis). Again, part of the reason for the strong performance is because of the inclusion of two “true-up” installments totaling $431 million. Without these reallocations, year-to-date growth would be reduced, but still at a solid +$424 million or 3.5% above last year’s pace. Conversely, Corporate Income Tax receipts are $233 million lower (or -$171 million net). However, when accounting for the $104 million in negative reallocation adjustments so far, this fiscal year, the gross declines would be at a more respectable -$129 million, which is only 4.0% behind last year’s healthy pace. In other words, each of the income tax revenue sources have performed quite well through the first half of FY 2024, especially when considering the economic uncertainty heading into the fiscal year.

While the growth in Sales Tax receipts remains positive, it continues to slow as compared to last year’s levels. Through December, revenues are $94 million or +1.6% higher than FY 2023. On a net basis, the six-month growth is +$39 million or +0.7%, which is markedly lower than FY 2023’s pace of +2.1%. A primary factor for this slowdown is falling inflation levels. While inflation evoked many long-term economic concerns, it resulted in creating higher priced goods, which led to corresponding strong levels of Sales Tax revenues in recent years. As inflation rates subside, the growth in Sales Tax receipts has weakened and will likely continue to moderate absent a significant rise in the amount of products sold.

Despite its overall drop in December, a continued bright spot in FY 2024 revenues continues to come from All Other State Sources, which is up a combined $143 million through the first half of the fiscal year. This growth comes primarily from two areas: Interest on State Funds & Investments [+$194 million] and the Inheritance Tax [+$68 million]. The performance of these two revenue sources has easily offset overall declines in Insurance Taxes [-$35 million]; Public Utility Taxes [-$30 million]; Other Sources [-$27 million]; the Cigarette Tax [-$16 million]; the Corporate Franchise Tax [-$9 million]; and the Liquor Tax [-$2 million].

* Bond Buyer

Illinois saw an uptick in its fiscal fortunes in the past fiscal year, one of the few times the state’s net position has improved since that figure swung from black to red in 2002.

The net position includes tax collections and government services and measures the state’s assets relative to its total obligations. For the second year in a row, Illinois managed to move its net position in a positive direction, according to an interim Annual Comprehensive Financial Report published this month by State Comptroller Susana Mendoza.

At negative $163.1 billion when the fiscal year ended June 30, the state’s net position improved by $18.1 billion, 10% better than fiscal 2022’s negative $181.2 billion. That represented Illinois’ best net position in six years, but it was still among the worst of all states relative to the size of Illinois’ expenses.

* The Daily Herald reported that the Taxpayers’ Federation of Illinois is seeing at least some improvement on pensions

The Edgar Ramp, coupled with other legislative decisions that widened the funding gap over the past two decades, created more debt for future taxpayers, experts said. Only recently has noticeable progress been made.

“We’re obviously still a long ways away from the target amount, and both returns on investments as well as any changes to benefits put that at risk,” said Carol Portman, president of the Taxpayers’ Federation of Illinois. “Still, I don’t think it’s as dire as it was a couple years ago.”

* From the University of Illinois’ Institute of Government and Public Affairs

The U of I Flash Index for December 2023 increased slightly to 102.8 from its 102.6 reading in November. The index for calendar 2023 remained in a tight range around the 103 level—reflecting stability in a period of overall turmoil.

“Uncharacteristically, the Illinois and U. S. economies were remarkably steady amid troubling events including the attacks in Gaza and the aftermath, the continuing war in Ukraine, the unresolved border crisis in the U. S., and the political woes of a dysfunctional Congress and the prospect of another divisive presidential election.”

* Crain’s reported on JPMorgan Chase’s 2024 Business Leaders Outlook survey

Pessimism about the state of the economy writ large has tempered in recent months, and business leaders in Illinois are particularly bullish about the year ahead relative to their counterparts in other regions of the country. […]

Leaders in Illinois have a particularly positive outlook toward the state’s local economy. Sixty-one percent of the Illinois respondents reported feeling optimistic about business in the region, compared to 46% of respondents nationwide.

Illinois business leaders also tend to be more optimistic about the national and global economies than folks elsewhere. Fifty-nine percent of respondents from Illinois are optimistic about the national economy, compared to the overall average of 43%.

* And the governor crowed about another bit of good news this week…


More here.

* Also, from Crain’s

Gov. J.B. Pritzker and his staff have spoken with United Airlines officials who have assured them the company isn’t planning to leave Illinois.

United’s purchase of a large chunk of land in Denver for a flight-training facility — and its recently filed plans that also include the prospect of a large corporate campus — set off alarms that the company’s headquarters might be in play. […]

United declined to comment beyond its previous statement that “we have been here in Chicago for decades and have thousands of employees here. The land in Denver gives us options for the future as we implement our big plans to grow.” The company didn’t address the specific question of its corporate headquarters.

From Jordan Abudayyeh…

Both the Governor and members of his administration have had conversations with United regarding their plans for a campus in Colorado and United assured the Governor’s Office they have no intentions of moving out of state. The Governor recently had a conversation with senior leadership at United within the last month and they once again assured the Governor they are committed to Illinois and have no plans to leave the state.

  18 Comments      


Fight brews over ICC rulings

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My most recent syndicated newspaper column ran during the holiday break

Three of Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s appointees to the Illinois Commerce Commission have not yet been confirmed by the Illinois Senate, including the chair, Doug Scott.

All three unconfirmed appointees have recently voted against the stated interests of trade unions.

Senate President Don Harmon has assiduously courted trade union support and has raised millions of campaign dollars from them.

So, right off the bat, the legislative math is pretty clear, even though Harmon’s office opted not to comment for this column.

Operating Engineers Union Local 150 is one of the most politically engaged trade unions in Illinois. The union blasted an ICC vote in November that “paused” $265 million in natural gas pipeline replacement work next year by Peoples Gas, calling it “a troubling example of political overreach” by “unconfirmed appointees” who are “playing games with peoples’ jobs, heat, and safety as we head toward the holidays and the cold of winter.”

“The war on gas stoves is here,” Local 150 exclaimed in dramatic fashion.

Peoples Gas then asked the ICC to reconsider its decision and restore half of the project money to pay for “critical safety and reliability work,” including finishing up ongoing projects, but the commission declined.

Mark Poulos, Local 150’s top lobbyist, told me last week the ICC’s decision will cost his union members 1.5 million person-hours of work next year, and he’s furiously warning the ICC commissioners’ confirmation hearings might not go so well in the Senate.

Poulos said the ICC’s rulings were part of its “overzealous” quest for “decarbonization” and moving away from the use of natural gas. “They are basically saying ‘F**k you, this system will be obsolete in the next generation,’ ” Poulos claimed, while warning the future may not play out as the commissioners hope.

Citizens Utility Board Executive Director Sarah Moskowitz recently appeared with Poulos on WTTW’s Chicago Tonight program and noted the ICC had granted Peoples Gas a record rate hike after the company reported record profits for six straight years, and that existing state statutes mandate the utility continue emergency and safety maintenance projects.

“They’re kicking and screaming about the fact that they just got a record rate hike but it’s not enough,” Moskowitz said. “When is enough enough?”

Even so, the president of the Chicago Federation of Labor and the president of the Illinois AFL-CIO recently co-wrote an op-ed demanding the legislature consider restarting the pipeline program if the ICC doesn’t reverse itself.

Other labor unions are not taking such a public approach. For instance, Bill Niesman is the business manager of IBEW Local 9, which does a lot of ComEd work, but he politely side-stepped questions about an ICC ruling that rejected ComEd’s proposed rate hike and ordered it to return to the commission within three months with a new plan.

The ICC explained its ruling via press release: “Specifically, the Commission’s decisions found that both utilities failed to sufficiently incorporate customer affordability into their proposals.” The vote was 4-1, with former AFL-CIO President Mike Carrigan voting no.

Niesman said his union is taking a wait-and-see approach, but said the ICC’s low rate of return on equity for ComEd would mean less money for building up the region’s electrical grid. Other union leaders are saying privately that a big Senate confirmation process fight is indeed brewing.

The union leaders aren’t alone. The president of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce co-wrote a recent op-ed with ComEd’s CEO about the need for more electrical infrastructure spending, and the Illinois Manufacturers Association supported ComEd’s ICC filing. They’re all worried about insufficiencies with the region’s electrical grid.

Gov. Rod Blagojevich backed down from a fight after he tried to appoint CUB’s then-executive director as the ICC chair, but you don’t get that vibe when talking with Pritzker’s people these days. Just the opposite.

This is Doug Scott’s second stint as ICC chair. He worked in the Pritzker administration to pass the massive Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. His appointment to the ICC in June was seen as a continuation of that mission.

So, it’s doubtful Pritzker will back down. If the Senate decides to side with the unions on the appointments, Pritzker can play a cat-and-mouse game by withdrawing the appointments before the Senate can act, then quickly reappointing them.

The bottom line is that organized labor and the business community are demanding far more robust infrastructure spending, while the governor’s people point to very real cost considerations for consumers. The Pritzker folks believe they will win that political fight.

The column was edited because it was Blagojevich and not Pat Quinn who tried to install the CUB leader at the ICC.

Anyway, your thoughts?

  21 Comments      


Thanks!

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I checked in with Lutheran Social Services of Illinois yesterday to see how its overall fundraising went last year to raise money for Christmas presents for its foster kids. Here’s their update…

LSSI is thrilled to announce that our Christmas giving initiative, Project Room at the Inn, raised an incredible $63,000! We are grateful to each person who chose to participate in this initiative and help make a difference in the lives of children in our care.

LSSI would like to extend a special thanks to Rich Miller who created a fundraiser to support this effort and raised over $57,000, exceeding his already generous goal. We are grateful for his commitment to LSSI’s mission and his efforts to make a difference in the lives of those we serve.

We would also like to thank everyone who chose to make a donation to his fundraiser and helped create this incredible collective impact. With these funds, we were able to provide a holiday gift for each child in our care. Your generosity has brought smiles to the faces of many children and made their holiday season brighter. And in doing so, you also showed your appreciation to our amazing foster parents.

The impact of your kindness and generosity is reflected in the words of this foster parent who said, “When children come into care they arrive with so little, they lose not only their family but most of their personal possessions. Some children come from homes where they had little to no personal items at all. Providing children with a loving home is the teamwork between LSSI and the foster parents.” Thank you for being a part of that team this holiday season through your donation to Project Room at the Inn.

LSSI is proud to offer a range of services to support the community, including foster care, behavioral health services, programs for adults with intellectual disabilities, services for aging adults, and more. Thank you for participating in this important work through your support of LSSI.

Basically all I did was tell y’all about it and then gently hound you every day. You folks really stepped up in a big way and made a big difference in the lives of children who really needed that help.

* They also sent along a couple of photos from a party “hosted by LSSI foster care staff for the children and their foster parents. The kids received presents, did some crafts and decorated cookies, and got to meet Santa”…

Many, many thanks.

  5 Comments      


After state request, Census Bureau admits it missed 46,400 people in 2020 count

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Another development during the break. From Crain’s last week

Illinois got positive news Wednesday, as the U.S. Census Bureau agreed to add over 46,000 people to state population totals during its annual reviews for the rest of the decade.

The Census Bureau accepted a state of Illinois request to review its population living in congregate settings and found it previously missed 46,400 people. Those residents will be added to the state’s annual estimated population totals for the rest of this decade, according to a press release from Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office.

Illinois officials have cried foul since the official census totals were released in 2020 and have claimed that census workers undercounted state residents. A decline of 18,000 people from 2010 through 2020 was announced alongside the official total in 2020.

* Tribune

Illinois may not be losing population after all.

An undercount in the 2020 census missed 46,400 Illinois residents living in group homes, an adjustment to the population base that will be incorporated in future surveys, the state announced Wednesday. […]

“I’m pleased that the Census Bureau has recognized the undercounting that I and many members of Illinois’ congressional delegation have worked to remedy since the 2020 census results were first released,” Gov. J.B. Pritzker said in a news release. “This correction will bring in millions in additional federal funding for crucial programs and help to ensure future counts reflect the true number of Illinois residents.”

State legislators have been calling for a recount of the 2020 census since its initial release, which showed a population of 12,812,508, a decrease of 18,000 people over a decade — the first such decline since Illinois joined the union. A 2022 follow-up survey found the state’s population figures had likely been undercounted.

* US Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi…

“For the last two years, I have partnered with the Governor in calling for a fair census count to guarantee our state and our citizens receive the requisite federal funding we deserve. The updated Census data show that Illinois’ population grew to a record high last decade, but we know we need to continue to do everything we can to attract more businesses and people to Illinois. I will continue to work with Governor Pritzker and the other leaders of our state to work on that mission and to help Illinoisans achieve their full social and economic potential.”

* From Pritzker’s Press release

Following the release of initial census results in 2020, a Census Bureau survey designed to estimate overcount and undercount rates within states revealed that Illinois had in fact gained population in the prior decade contrary to reported population declines. Governor Pritzker, alongside members of the Illinois Congressional Delegation, called repeatedly for the U.S. Census Bureau to ensure that Illinois receives its fair share of federal funding reflective of the updated, accurate numbers that show Illinois is growing. In September of this year, the state requested an official Post-Census Group Quarters Review (PCGQR) to account for inaccuracies in census data, which was granted this week.

The review found that 733 Group Quarters were missed or undercounted in the 2020 Census Group Quarters Operation, along with a corresponding population of 46,400 people. The PCGQR submitted by the state identified 40,512 people residing in group quarter facilities such as care homes or senior living facilities who were missed in initial counts. The state also identified 123 dormitory settings where the population was undercounted for an additional 5,888 people.

Although the 46,400 identified people will not be added Illinois’s official 2020 census numbers, the adjustment is crucial for the state as annual population estimates are produced over the next six years before the 2030 census. The updated group quarters population is added to the Census Bureau’s Population Estimates Program where they will be included in the baseline data used to produce upcoming annual population estimates. Those figures are used when determining the distribution of over $675 billion in state and federal programs. The state will continue to challenge population undercounts and plans to participate in additional opportunities for appeal and review to make further adjustments to the state’s count.

* Meanwhile, from the AP

Four years after the last census, almost a dozen small communities in the Midwest are going to be counted again in hopes of getting a new grocery store or more state funding to build roads, fire stations and parks.

Eleven small cities in Illinois and Iowa are the only municipalities so far to have signed agreements with the U.S. Census Bureau for a second count of their residents in 2024 and 2025, in a repeat of what happened during the 2020 census. The first year in which the special censuses can be conducted is 2024.

With one exception, city officials don’t think the numbers from the original count were inaccurate. It’s just that their populations have grown so fast in three years that officials believe they are leaving state funding for roads and other items on the table by not adding the extra growth to their population totals. Some also believe that new results from a second count will open up their community to new businesses by showing they have crossed a population threshold.

* NBC Chicago

Several cities in Illinois are seeking updated counts of their populations in 2024, the first year that communities are eligible to request such recounts. Pingree Grove and Warrenville, both Chicago suburbs, are seeking new counts this year, which would be undertaken at their expense, according to the Census Bureau.

Both communities hold that they’ve added significant population in 2020, and are hoping to bring in extra state and federal revenues as a result.

Urbana has also requested a recount of its population. The community, home of the University of Illinois’ flagship campus, believes it was undercounted during the 2020 Census because its population is so heavily-reliant on student housing, which was gutted during the COVID pandemic.

* And here’s another way of looking at things from the New York Times

An analysis in 2022 by economists at the University of North Carolina, the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago of data gleaned from LinkedIn showed how states with dynamic economic centers are luring college graduates from more rural states. Iowa loses 34.2 percent of its college graduates, worse than 40 of the 50 states, just below North Dakota, which loses 31.6 percent. Illinois, by contrast, gains 20 percent more college graduates than it produces. Minnesota has about 8 percent more than it produces.

[Isabel Miller contributed to this post.]

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Coverage roundup: Madigan trial postponement

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* This happened during the break, but we need to catch up. Sun-Times

A federal judge agreed Wednesday to delay the racketeering trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan for six months while the Supreme Court considers a Northwest Indiana corruption case revolving around a key statute at play in Madigan’s case.

U.S. District Judge John Blakey rescheduled Madigan’s highly anticipated trial for Oct. 8. He cited the risk of a retrial if he pushed ahead before the high court rules. And he said that result would be unfair to all parties, including the “unsung” hero jurors who would end up sitting through a lengthy trial all for naught.

“I don’t do this lightly,” Blakey said. “I do it reluctantly, I’ll say that. But it’s better to do it right than to do it twice.” […]

The trials last year largely went the feds’ way. But the Supreme Court has now slowed their momentum — and delayed the biggest Chicago corruption trial since former Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s — by picking up the case of James Snyder, a former mayor of Portage, Indiana.

The high court’s ruling in the Snyder case is unlikely to seriously damage the case against Madigan. Still, Blakey said even a nuanced decision could have some effect.

* Capitol News Illinois

The case at issue on the Supreme Court’s docket is a review of a 2021 conviction of a northwest Indiana mayor who accepted $13,000 from a company that had recently won contracts to sell garbage trucks to the city. The high court accepted the case last month and is expected to clarify whether “gratuities” are the same as bribes, even if there’s no quid pro quo agreement in place.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu pointed out that prosecutors in the Northern District of Illinois are overseeing that case, which stems from Portage, Indiana, about 20 miles east of the Illinois border.

“When you corruptly solicit a payment…an actual quid pro quo isn’t required,” Bhachu maintained during Wednesday’s hearing.

But Federal appeals courts have split on the issue, and Madigan has already attempted to have the case dismissed on similar grounds, though Blakey has yet to rule on that motion from last year.

* Tribune

Bhachu argued Wednesday that whatever the Supreme Court winds up doing, “They’re not going to delete the word ‘reward’ from the statute.” He also said the “legislative history is clear as a bell that the statute is meant to include gratuities.”

Blakey, however, sided with the defense, saying it would be “fool’s errand to figure out what the Supreme Court’s going to do” in the Indiana case, and that holding a trial without knowing what the rules were going to be would be unfair.

“It would be like starting a football game and then halfway though announcing we’re going to play baseball,” Blakey said, apologizing for the somewhat shaky analogy.

The judge also said that the Madigan case has proceeded toward trial at a fairly normal pace, even though the public might have the impression from movies and television that “a guy gets arrested and the next scene is the trial.”

* More…

    * WTTW | Michael Madigan Makes First In-Person Court Appearance as Federal Racketeering Trial Pushed Back to October: “It’s impossible to prepare a defense if I don’t know what the elements are,” Cotter said. Blakey agreed. “They have to know what the rules are,” the judge said, comparing the situation to that of football teams being forced to switch to baseball halfway through the game. In responding to Madigan’s motion, Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu noted — as he did when the ComEd Four bribery defendants sought a similar delay — that the Northern District of Illinois ranks near the bottom in terms of the time it takes to resolve federal criminal cases. He argued that the public has “a strong interest in a prompt resolution to this case.” But Blakey rejected that arguement. “There is no excess delay currently,” Blakey said, noting that court proceedings are not like a movie where someone is arrested and their trial begins in the next scene. “That’s not how things work in real life and there’s a lot that goes into the process.” He pointed out that this is “not your average case,” and that the Northern District of Illinois is “not your average district,” when it comes to the complexity of the cases heard there. Madigan’s defense team is still pouring over millions of pages of documents and countless recorded conversations — made by disgraced former Chicago Ald. Danny Solis — that have been turned over by the feds during the discovery process.

    * ABC Chicago | Mike Madigan’s motion to delay federal bribery trial to October approved by judge: “Some Courts have held you need some sort of quid pro-quo understanding the statute to apply, other courts including the federal appellate that covers Chicago, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin says that no this statute covers gratuities that are paid to officials as a reward,” Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Dylan Smith said. It will be up the Supreme Court to define the federal bribery statute that is widely used by prosecutors in public corruption case. Several of the charges against Madigan involve the statute. “It is really pretty standard in the federal prosecutors tool kit, what the Supreme Court rules about the federal statute will apply for the whole country,” Smith said.

    * Fox Chicago | Mike Madigan’s corruption trial delayed until fall: Following the news of the delay, House Minority Leader Tony McCombie issued the following statement: “It is disappointing to wait for justice to be served to Mike Madigan and his corrupt associates. Speaker Welch and Democratic leaders: Pass ethics reform now.”

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Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: National Association of Realtors president resigns, blames blackmail threat. Sun-Times

    - Kasper “recently received a threat to disclose a past personal, non-financial matter unless she compromised her position at NAR.”
    - She reported the threat to law enforcement, but “felt that, in the circumstances, it was best for the organization that she step down.
    - President-elect Kevin Sears will step into the role of NAR president, effective immediately.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Tribune | State’s attorney candidate rips opponent for prosecuting 11-year-old in murder case: Since the A.M. prosecution became an issue in the race last month, O’Neill Burke has said the boy’s confession was “compelling evidence” and that she would “never prosecute any case if I doubted the evidence or there were ‘red flags.’ That was true then, and it is true now.” […] A cadre of Black elected officials, including Preckwinkle; former U.S. Senators Carol Moseley Braun and Roland Burris; Rep. Robin Kelly; Cook County Commissioners Monica Gordon, Bill Lowry and Stanley Moore; as well as several state representatives and aldermen signed on to an open letter urging voters to back Harris in the March primary.

    * WCBU | Peoria-area policymakers will ask state legislators to streamline creation of new ‘mega sites’: Gotion made headlines when the Chinese company closed a deal with the state last September promising a new $2 billion electric vehicle battery gigafactory and 2,600 jobs to Kankakee County. That’s just the type of headline leaders in Peoria and Peoria County want to see here, too. Peoria County administrator Scott Sorrel said there’s plenty of interest from businesses, as the regular inquries made to the Greater Peoria Economic Council might attest. He said the challenge comes from logistical hindrances in creating the so-called “mega sites” that major manufacturers often need

    * WGLT | ISU study: Lawmakers’ gender matters on gun laws: The study looked at 30 years of gun laws in all 50 states. Retired Illinois State University professor Rajeev Goel said as the percentage of women lawmakers has increased since the 1980s, so did gun laws. Societal changes prompted a lot of firearm legislation. But the presence of women had an effect on gun law passage that’s higher than the amount of growth in the number of women lawmakers, according to the study.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

    * Tribune | Harvey leadership still investigating viral videos showing residents boarded up inside homes: Clark and Biddings confirmed the city is beginning an investigation into the events and the state’s attorney and attorney general may conduct investigations of their own. While Bennett said Harvey police were on the scene when his uncle was boarded inside his home, police officers were not boarding up the homes.

    * Shaw Local | State Rep. Matt Hanson pleads guilty to DUI: Hanson is to be on court supervision for 12 months, until Dec. 19, 2024, perform 100 hours of community service at any nonprofit organization, pay a fine of $3,555, be evaluated, attend counseling and receive treatment, according to court records. Also as terms of his supervision, Hanson is not to drive without a valid license, not to have any other traffic or similar criminal violations and he is to attend a victim impact panel.

    * Evanston Round Table | Inside the state Legislature with Rep. Gabel and Sen. Fine: Robyn Gabel: One of the most important things we’ve done in the Legislature the past few years is balance the budget. I really do want people to understand that we were left after the [former Gov. Bruce] Rauner years terribly in debt and with an almost nonfunctional budget. It was a true crisis. Since that time, we have been able to pay down our debts. We’ve also been able to establish a rainy day fund.

    * Crain’s | Bally’s Chicago sees continued growth, but not enough to meet city budget projections: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2024 budget plan anticipates $35 million in local tax revenue from Bally’s temporary casino in the former Medinah Temple, which would mean nearly $3 million per month. The Chicago casino brought in only $864,646 in local tax revenue last month, totaling $3.1 million since its opening in September, according to the Illinois Gaming Board. The casino has averaged $776,582 in local tax revenue the past four months, on pace to generate only $9.3 million for the city by the end of 2024.

    * Fox | Another Chicago suburb approves restricting unscheduled buses amid migrant surge: New Lenox has joined the growing list of Chicago suburbs in cracking down on migrant buses. Last month, Mayor Tim Baldermann signed an executive order prohibiting unscheduled buses in the southwest suburb. The village board voted on the ordinance Monday night and passed the resolution unanimously

    * Bond Buyer | Illinois to issue new Build Illinois bonds next week: The state of Illinois is preparing to issue $600 million in new Build Illinois junior sales tax revenue bonds — 2024 Series A, B and C — in a competitive auction next week.

    * WGLT | Bloomington’s John Kim is the first downstate lawyer to serve as Illinois Supreme Court’s chief civility czar: Kim succeeds Martin Sinclair, who chaired the commission for four years. Filling Kim’s now vacant vice-chair position is Justice Sharon Johnson from the Illinois First District Appellate Court. Commissioners are charged with providing mentorship and training for early-career lawyers, judges and courts, and promoting civility and professionalism throughout the legal profession.

    * Crain’s | Mag Mile property owners want to tax themselves — but want more control of the revenue: Legislation set to be introduced in Springfield would allow for the creation of Business Improvement Districts, or BIDs, across Illinois. The districts are similar to an existing economic development tool available to the city but could raise millions more in revenue and provide more control over how the money is spent to those who pay the local assessments added to their annual property tax bill.

    * CBS Chicago | Environmental group warns about impact of road salt on waterways: The company also supplies several villages with what are known as organics. Chicago Salt Company owner Leon Benish blends a molasses-based solution inside tanks at the company headquarters, and the solution is then typically sprayed on roads before a big snowfall.

    * Tribune | Cannabis companies drop controversial plan for weed shop at site of former Rainforest Cafe: State regulators had rejected a previous proposal by Progressive Treatment Solutions LLC, or PTS Corp., to move its Consume dispensary from Norwood Park to the old Rainforest Cafe at Clark and Ohio streets. The site is within 1,500 feet of three existing dispensaries, in violation of state law.

    * Crain’s | Art Institute remains lone holdout in push to return disputed Holocaust-era artworks: Today, a New York judge granted an application to officially turn over two of the remaining three Schiele drawings under investigation to the heirs of Fritz Grünbaum, who was killed in a concentration camp in 1941. […] The last remaining piece, entitled “Russian War Prisoner,” is still in place at the Art Institute of Chicago following a warrant issued by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office in September. The issue over its provenance will now be fought in court — with oral arguments expected to begin in April, according to a spokesperson for the Manhattan DA’s office — the Art Institute confirmed.

    * Bloomberg | Boeing issues Max 9 inspection memo in first step to ungrounding jets: Boeing shares fell 7% as of 12:16 p.m. in New York after an earlier decline of as much as 9.3%. Supplier Spirit AeroSystems Holdings Inc. lost 7.9% after sliding as much as 16%.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago announces dates for 2024 summer festivals, Air and Water Show moved for Democratic convention: The Air and Water Show is running Aug. 10-11, one week earlier than usual this year, due to the Democratic National Convention Aug. 19-22 at the United Center. This year’s lineup also includes a celebration of the 20th anniversary of the opening of Millennium Park via a four-day festival July 18-21 in the lakefront park, which will feature new public art, dance performances, family fun and concerts. (Headliners to be announced.)

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Jan 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news the way we’ve done since Twitter stopped ScribbleLive from working…

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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Hey, why no periods in Vance's name? (Update)
* Former AT&T president says no quid pro quo, no unlawful intent means Madigan-related charges should be dismissed
* Groups ramp up ahead of Iowa's 6-week abortion ban
* Biz types launch new PAC, 501c4 'One Future Illinois' (Updated)
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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