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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

In another set of sweeping lawsuits, former residents of juvenile detention centers have alleged widespread sexual abuse in youth prisons across Illinois and are calling on state officials to reform the system.

Two complaints brought by dozens of plaintiffs — one by male detainees and another by females — accuse the Illinois Department of Correction and Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice of failing to protect vulnerable young people against known sexual abuse at the hands of state employees.

The complaints build on allegations brought in another suit filed in May, bringing the number of people making abuse claims to about 200. The plaintiffs, who detail specific acts of abuse, are listed by their initials to protect their identities.

In a statement, the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice said it cannot comment on active litigation, but that it “takes seriously the safety of youth in the care of the department” and has enacted policies and procedures to identify possible instances of abuse or misconduct.

* ProPublica

Two national civil rights groups accused Illinois’ third-largest school district on Tuesday of relying on police to handle school discipline, unlawfully targeting Black students with tickets, arrests and other discipline.

In a 25-page complaint against Rockford Public Schools, filed with the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights, the National Center for Youth Law and the MacArthur Justice Center said that Rockford police officers have been “addressing minor behaviors that should be handled as an educational matter by parents, teachers, and school leaders — and not as a law enforcement matter by police officers.” […]

The groups, which shared a copy of the complaint with ProPublica, asked the Education Department to find that the district violated federal law prohibiting discrimination and to order it to change its discipline practices and reliance on police. Using data obtained from the Rockford district and the Rockford Police Department, the groups argue that the district’s partnership with police funnels Black students — but not their white peers — into the justice system, even for the same infractions at school.

Click here to view the complaint.

* Citizen Action Illinois…

Citizen Action/Illinois, the state’s largest progressive coalition, proudly announces the release of its 2024 Legislative Scorecard. The comprehensive scorecard serves as a valuable resource for Illinoisans, shedding light on elected officials’ voting records on crucial issues in the areas of healthcare affordability, workers’ rights, consumer protections, LGBTQ+ rights, economic justice, and the environment. The bills featured in the scorecard reflect the priorities of the coalition’s advisory committee called the Policy Council.

“The Legislative Scorecard is a powerful tool for Illinoisans who want to hold their elected officials accountable and stay informed about the decisions that impact their lives,” said Julie Sampson, Executive Director of Citizen Action/Illinois. “With thousands of bills being filed each legislative session, we’ve narrowed-in on those that we believe best demonstrate a legislator’s commitment to serving the public interest and social and economic justice. This scorecard gives constituents the information needed to thank their elected officials or hold them accountable for their votes.”

The complete scorecard is here.

* Politico

Illinois is poised to become the first state to spotlight the diversity of nonprofit organization boards, according to proponents of the idea.

Gov. JB Pritzker supports Senate Bill 2930, just passed by the General Assembly, which calls for Illinois-based nonprofit organizations that distribute $1 million or more to charitable groups to report their board make-up — race, gender and sexual orientation — on their web sites each year.

The goal is to nudge foundations and big nonprofits to diversify their boards, said state Sen. Adriane Johnson who carried the bill along with state Rep. Edgar Gonzalez Jr.

“We are taking vital steps to support diversity and inclusion in the nonprofit sector,” Johnson told Playbook. “We are creating these spaces where people can show up as their true, unassimilated and authentic selves.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* WBEZ | For the third time, Illinois lawmakers fail to pass Karina’s Bill: Despite a coalition of over 40 advocacy groups leading the charge for this bill on the grassroots level, and buy-in from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers, the bill failed to pass for the third time in a row, leaving advocates “disappointed” and forced to once again look forward to the next legislative session.

* WGEM | Illinois comptroller pleased with ‘vanilla’ budget: Mendoza wishes state agencies and her fellow constitutional officers looked for ways they could trim their budgets. “Where do we have bloat? Where are we paying too much for a contract that we can get a better deal on,” she said.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Illinois residents can claim bigger state tax credit next year under new budget: The 2025 spending plan to which the Illinois House gave final legislative approval last week includes funding for once again tying the standard exemption to inflation, meaning the exemption that individuals can claim for tax year 2024 will grow from $2,425 to $2,775. That translates to tax savings for a family of four of more than $69, according to WBEZ calculations.

* Riverbender | Sara M. Salger Of Gori Firm Installed As President Of Illinois Trial Lawyers Association: Sara M. Salger, managing partner at The Gori Law Firm in Edwardsville, Illinois, will be installed as the 71st president of the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association (ITLA) on Friday, June 7, 2024, at its annual convention at the Sheraton Grand in Chicago, Illinois. Salger, 40, received her undergraduate degree in 2004 from Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, graduating cum laude. In 2008, she graduated from Saint Louis University School of Law where she received an International Law Certificate and litigation focus. She is licensed to practice law in Illinois and Missouri.

* WTTW | As Locksmith License Requirements Set to Expire, Will Illinois Become the ‘Wild West’ Some Critics Fear?: The state law that currently mandates licensing requirements for locksmiths is expected to sunset in January 2029, thanks to legislation passed in Springfield. Illinois is currently one of only 13 states that require locksmiths to be licensed and is one of the strictest states when it comes to licensing requirements, according to Bill Gibson, executive director at Associated Locksmiths of America (ALOA).

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Kim Foxx’s proposal to not charge felonies from certain traffic stops has had success elsewhere: [John Choi, the top prosecutor of Ramsey County, which covers St. Paul, Minnesota] said he used to believe such stops were beneficial for police investigations but said he couldn’t ignore that less than 2% resulted in charges and that Black drivers were being stopped at four times the rate of other drivers in St. Paul. “For the longest time, we’ve been policing in a way that is going after that 2% but not recognizing the harm that has been done to communities,” he said when he announced the policy.

* Tribune | CPD stresses readiness for Democratic National Convention as Secret Service boss visits Chicago: “With two months left until the convention, we’re finalizing plans and making sure all of our operations are safe,” CPD Superintendent Larry Snelling told reporters ahead of a meeting with Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle. “Make no mistake, we are ready. The partnership, collaboration and open communication between everyone involved is why we are ready.” […] The Secret Service will be in charge of security at the United Center and McCormick Place, where the official DNC events will be held. CPD will retain its jurisdiction across the city and be tasked with handling the expected protests. Other law enforcement agencies — FBI, ATF, Illinois State Police, Cook County sheriff’s police — will also assist.

* Sun-Times | $158,234 has been raised so far by all candidates for Chicago’s new elected school board: Candidates have until June 24 to file petitions to get on the ballot in one of 10 districts across the city. The Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ are tracking candidate contributions as they come in. For now, we are only tallying all reported individual contributions over $150 to each candidate in every district. Small donations and in-kind contributions are not included in the total. After the filing deadline, come back for a more granular look at who’s influencing these elections.

* Sun-Time | Augustinian Catholic order paid $2 million settlement over rape accusations against priest but left his name off sex abuser list: After hiding the names of sexually abusive priests and religious brothers for years, the Augustinian Catholic order has posted its first public listing of clergy members in its Chicago province deemed to have been child predators, listing five men. The list doesn’t include the Rev. Richard McGrath, who was the longtime head of Providence Catholic High School in New Lenox until he was ousted in 2017 after a student reported seeing a nude image of a boy on the priest’s cell phone while he was a spectator at a wrestling match.

* Sun-Times | Priest says he’s OK after run-in with would-be thieves near St. Ignatius: ‘I’m praying for the person who shot at me’: The Rev. Jeremiah Lynch, 73, was in his home about 6 a.m. in the 1000 block of West Taylor Street when he heard noises from a nearby parking lot. When he opened the door to check on what was happening, he saw two males attempting to steal a catalytic converter from a parked car. Lynch asked what they were doing, and one pulled out a gun and fired three shots at him before fleeing, the Chicago police and a spokesperson for St. Ignatius College Prep said. Lynch, who is a priest at the Cook County Jail, suffered a graze wound on the forehead but said he was otherwise OK.

* Chicago Mag | The Making of Millennium Park: To mark the 20th anniversary of what has been hailed as “America’s most dazzling urban park,” Chicago spoke with organizers, artists, architects, builders, benefactors, and political insiders who played key roles in its often arduous, sometimes controversial, and ultimately triumphant creation.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Lake County forest preserves wants to borrow $155 million for habit restoration, land acquisition: Commissioners, during a joint meeting of the forest board’s operations, planning and finance committees, recommended asking voters whether the district should borrow not more than $155 million by issuing general obligation bonds. A tax increase to pay the bonds would cost the owner of home valued at $300,000 about $33 per year, according to the forest preserve district.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Springfield restaurant closing after less than one year being open: An up-and-coming Springfield restaurant is shutting its doors for good.After opening in October 2023, the upscale diner Twisted Fork announced the final day of operation at the restaurant would be on June 5. Owners Amanda and Jered Sandner thanked the community for the restaurant’s support while it was open and made references to future ventures on a Facebook post announcing the closure May 31.

* NBC Chicago | More than 1 million chickens dead after massive southern Illinois fire: State Rep. Blaine Wilhour confirmed on his Facebook page that more than one million birds were killed in the fire, which devasted the free-range Farina Farms chicken facility. The cause of the fire remains under investigation by the Illinois State Fire Marshal. No injuries were reported during the massive response.

* WCIA | Urbana asks for special census after 7% population decrease: Mayor Diane Marlin said the 2020 census was 7% lower than the previous population count ten years ago. She said many of the areas that saw population loss were edging U of I’s campus during the pandemic when students were learning remotely. “The reason this is important is because many types of federal and state programs fund and funnel dollars to your community based on population,” Marlin said, “like our share of the state motor fuel tax, our share of the state income tax, federal programs.”

*** National ***

* The Sporting News | Angel Reese deserves better: Sky rookie’s Caitlin Clark comment went viral for all the wrong reasons: Reese’s full answer filled with praise for her teammates and the rest of the league wouldn’t fit into her neat narrative as a selfish villain. It was abruptly edited out. Predictably, her haters ate it up. Reese went on to explain the double standard that she and her teammates face. “My teammates have shared experiences where they’ve gotten their nose broken. This has been going on for a long time,” Reese explained.

  12 Comments      


A look at the cuts that Rep. Crespo proposed

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

Increased taxes are ahead with Illinois’ fiscal year that begins July 1, if Gov. J.B. Pritzker enacts the state budget legislators approved this week. But there was bipartisan opposition.

When the tax revenue measure came up for a vote the first time early Wednesday morning, state Rep. Fred Crespo, D-Hoffman Estates, said he sought cuts in the budget without success.

Rep. Crespo ended up voting against the revenue omnibus.

* I went back and pulled up the video of House Appropriations-General Services Committee Chair Crespo’s floor comments from last week and turned them into bullet points. My additions are italicized…

    * 10 percent cut to operations expenses: “We mirrored that off the letter that the governor sent to his agencies, asking that they consider a 10 percent cut.” [The letter actually advised agencies to prepare for a possible $800 million cut, and they were asked to “please focus on grant programs and other discretionary spending that has increased in recent years.”]

    * Hiring freeze for one year: “As was mirrored after California, where Governor Newsom says they’re facing a fiscal issue, suggested and proposed that they freeze their vacancies for a year.” [California’s budget deficit was $45 billion. Several Illinois agencies, including DCFS, IDFPR, IDOC etc., etc. are trying to ramp up employment after years of stagnation.]

    * “Address the weight loss drug coverage that was introduced in the BIMP language a year ago.” [As we previously discussed, last year’s expansion “will only account for a fraction of the total new cost increase.”]

    * 5 percent reserve on all discretionary GRF lines: “Agencies can use up to 95% of what they’re budgeted, come back in May, and if they needed the 5% then we would consider it if revenues were available. And we could do that without impacting the higher ed, MAP, Medicaid, the courts or constitutional officers. We did that in Fiscal Year 10. We did that in Fiscal Year 11. It’s not a novel concept.”

Rep. Crespo said all of that totaled about a billion dollars.

Discuss.

  22 Comments      


Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’re gonna give this a try to see if people find it useful…

  1 Comment      


Liberty Justice Center lawsuit claims Illinois is operating an unconstitutional ’system of dragnet surveillance’

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

A lawsuit accuses Illinois State Police and state officials of operating an unconstitutional “system of dragnet surveillance” through license plate-reading cameras that track motorist’s whereabouts.

The suit, filed last week by Cook County residents Stephanie Scholl and Frank Bednarz, names the state police, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Attorney General Kwame Raoul as defendants. […]

According to the suit, the images taken by state police cameras are stored in the Motorola Law Enforcement Archival Reporting Network for 90 days, but that retention limit can be changed at any time.

“Defendants could therefore extend the retention of such data indefinitely at their discretion,” the suit states. “ISP is tracking the movements of millions of citizens, including plaintiffs, and just holding onto that mass surveillance data in case one day some police officer decides to target plaintiffs for specific investigation — warranted or unwarranted.” […]

In 2021, state police were awarded more than $12 million in grant money to expand their network of high-definition surveillance cameras after a surge in expressway shootings.

The grant came a year after Pritzker signed the Tamara Clayton Expressway Camera Act, which required the state to install new cameras on expressways. The act was named for a postal worker who was shot and killed on her way to work on Interstate 57 in 2019.

* Liberty Justice Center is behind the lawsuit. It’s affiliated with the Illinois Policy Institute. From ABC Chicago

Retired Chicago Police First Deputy Anthony Riccio says the readers are a very effective tool for police.

“It alerts an officer who is in a vehicle that a vehicle is wanted or if a vehicle has been stolen and really allows an immediate follow up by officers,” Riccio said. […]

Calling it dragnet surveillance, the Liberty Justice Center says if law enforcement wants to use license plate readers constitutionally, a warrant should be required. […]

The Liberty Justice Center plans to file similar lawsuits in others states that use the technology.

* Center Square

In January of this year, ISP said they were increasing the use of technology to “target and track criminal activity.”

“Automated License Plate Readers (ALPRs) capture a visual of vehicle license plates and anytime a wanted or suspected vehicle is detected by an ALPR, an alert is issued and law enforcement are better able to locate and track the vehicle,” the agency said.

Pritzker said then that the ALPRs around Chicago are “another step to enhance public safety for residents of and visitors to the nation’s third-largest city.”

By the end of 2022, ISP said 289 ALPRs were installed in the Chicago area. In 2023, 139 additional ALRPs were installed in Cook, St. Claire, Champaign and Morgan counties. For 2024, the agency said it planned installations in Macon, Madison, Peoria, Bureau, Lake and Winnebago counties with additional camera in Boon, DeKalb, DuPage, Grundy, Henry, Kane, Kendall, LaSalle, McHenry, Rock Island, Sangamon and Will counties as well along Lake Shore Drive in Chicago.

* From the suit

Defendants are tracking anyone who drives to work in Cook County—or to school, or a grocery store, or a doctor’s office, or a pharmacy, or a political rally, or a romantic encounter, or family gathering—every day, without any reason to suspect anyone of anything, and are holding onto those whereabouts just in case they decide in the future that some citizen might be an appropriate target of law enforcement. […]

Plaintiffs, Cook County residents and drivers, challenge the warrantless, suspicionless, and entirely unreasonable tracking of their movements as an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. […]

WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully request that this Court grant the following relief:

    A. Enjoin the implementation of the operative version of the Tamera Clayton Expressway Camera Act, 605 ILCS 140/1 et seq.,

    B. Enjoin Defendants from operating the existing system of ALPRs to track Plaintiffs.

    C. Enjoin Defendants from installing additional ALPRs that would track Plaintiffs if they continues to drive cars in Illinois.

    D. Award Plaintiffs their reasonable costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees pursuant to any applicable law; and

    E. Award Plaintiffs any additional relief the Court deems just and proper.

[Rich Miller contributed to this post.]

  32 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for more background on Governor Pritzker’s sports betting tax rate increase. Hannah Meisel of Capitol News Illinois breaks it all down

In order to boost infrastructure spending and avoid a projected fiscal cliff facing the state in the next couple of years, Democrats who control state government are betting on two of its most rapidly growing revenue sources: sports wagering and video gambling. […]

Organized labor, a top funder and ally for Democrats, balked at the plan to deposit the extra tax dollars from sportsbooks into GRF instead of dedicating it to infrastructure projects, where current sports betting revenues are directed. And major sportsbook operators threatened to stop advertising or even withdraw from the state as the legislature’s scheduled adjournment date drew near last week. […]

Despite other states taking similar steps to Illinois, the companies threatened to push the nuclear button in the final days of session, with a source close to DraftKings and FanDuel telling Capitol News Illinois that “all options are on the table, including withdrawing from the state.”

But skeptics say the companies are making more from Illinois’ market than they let on, especially as parlay bets – multiple wagers bundled together into one bet – have overtaken any other sort of bet in popularity, upending models that were used to arrive at Illinois’ 15 percent tax rate during negotiations five years ago. Parlay bets made up more than 60 percent of all sports wagers made in fiscal year 2023, according to state records.

Because bettors are more likely to lose their parlay bets than straight bets like on the outcome of one game or a point spread, the sportsbooks earn much more from these riskier bets. Sportsbooks also promote parlay bets, often enticing bettors with offers to make the parlays. […]

Like in many other states, DraftKings and FanDuel have cornered roughly three-quarters of Illinois’ sports betting market. … Though the law that legalized sports betting in Illinois had intended for casinos to get an 18-month head start in the sports betting market before big online operators like DraftKings and FanDuel became licensed, those companies got around the law by partnering with downstate casinos to operate their sportsbooks.

* Illinois’ tax will be lower than four other states



Go read the rest.

  10 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Dani, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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The House almost went off the rails last week (Updated)

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch gave added meaning to the phrase “winning ugly” during Wednesday’s early morning hours.

I’ve never seen anything like it, so let’s take a look.

House members were told to be in their seats by noon on Tuesday after the Senate had easily passed the entire budget package on Sunday.

But the House session was delayed for endless hours as rumors swirled about a “mini revolt” against the budget deal struck by Gov. J.B. Pritzker, Senate President Don Harmon and Welch. Some of the more fiscally moderate Democrats objected to the budget’s level of spending and particularly the revenue proposals, much of which they did not support as stand-alone proposals.

The House speaker has an unwritten rule that no bill can move forward without 60 House Democratic votes. But many of the revenue-enhancing proposals Welch agreed to with Pritzker and Harmon did not have that level of support. So some of the “mods” were quite grumpy.

The appropriations bill passed with 65 House Democratic votes, with seven Democrats voting against it. The budget implementation bill passed with a more narrow 62-vote margin with eight Democrats voting against it and two progressives taking a walk.

After a bill eliminating the grocery tax passed with 86 votes and three Democrats voting “No,” the time came for what turned out to be the main attraction: the revenue omnibus bill.

Democratic Rep. Fred Crespo, who had earlier voted for the spending bill, warned his colleagues about massive spending pressures next year. “We have a moral obligation to look after taxpayers,” Crespo said, telling members to “vote your conscience.” He voted against it.

At one point during the debate, the Republicans requested a verification of the roll call, meaning that all members who voted for the bill had to be in the chamber. That request clearly caught the super-majority by surprise. Several Democrats were against this bill, and the House Dems were missing five people, two of whom were members of Welch’s leadership team, and one of those, Rep. Aaron Ortiz, had skipped town without telling anyone. Plus, they had some political targets to protect from a potentially controversial tax hike vote.

“Well, it is 3:36 in the morning in the last week of May,” sponsoring Rep. Kelly Burke, D-Evergreen Park, who is retiring at the end of her term, said during her closing remarks after a grueling hour of debate. “And I gotta tell ya, I’m not gonna miss this.”

Little did she know.

Burke’s concurrence motion received 60 votes, with 12 House Democrats voting against it (including Crespo). That’s when everyone realized Ortiz had left town, so he was verified off the roll call, and the bill didn’t have enough votes to pass.

Over strenuous Republican objections, Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, who had voted “no,” moved to reconsider the vote. That motion carried with 67 votes. (These parliamentary votes generally rely heavily on party unity.) The second try at a concurrence motion received 60 votes, but the Republicans played the old fake-out game and had one of their own, Rep. Randy Frese, vote “yes.”

Numerous sources said Democratic Rep. Larry Walsh was supposed to vote for the bill, but he apparently saw the total hit 60 on the big board and stayed at “no.”

Oops.

After much delay, Frese was verified off the roll call and the motion failed again. House rules barred any more motions. Two concurrence motions are the limit. The bill should’ve been dead. But the Democrats then decided to just go ahead and suspend their own rule. Republicans were incensed, but Gong-Gershowitz again moved to reconsider the vote, which passed 62-42. And then Walsh finally voted for the third concurrence motion and it passed 60-47, more than two hours after debate began at 4:30 in the morning.

House Republican Floor Leader Patrick Windhorst is probably the most even-keeled person in the House, but he let loose. “I think it should be clear to everyone in this state what this super-majority is willing to do to ram a tax increase down the throats of the citizens of Illinois at 4:30 in the morning,” Windhorst said, his voice eventually rising to a shout. “Three votes! Three votes!”

Give Welch credit for persistence. He was duty-bound to pass this package. Failure could’ve been catastrophic for him. But you really gotta wonder if he could’ve possibly mollified a few more of his members before he locked in that budget deal.

Speaker Welch has granted three interviews since the session ended, but he has yet to explain what really happened that night.

…Adding… I posted this on the blog last week, but it might’ve been buried…

State Representative Larry Walsh Jr (D-Elwood) has made the following statement regarding his votes on the budget bills that came before the Illinois House of Representatives on Wednesday.  

“Last night was certainly not my preferred solution for moving Illinois forward, but with the full framework of the budget passed and faced with the immediate threat of the state returning to the Rauner years of unbalanced budgets and broken promises, I made the incredibly difficult choice to support Governor Pritzker’s revenue enhancements. 

“While I have significant concerns about the path this budget sets us on, I could not in good conscience vote to jeopardize public safety, cause chaos for our public service providers, or allow uncertainty to derail the work my colleagues and I have done to rebuild Illinois’ fiscal house. The cost of inaction was simply too great to stand by and allow the budget to become unbalanced. 

“Over the coming months I will be engaging with leadership in both chambers, the Governor, and the other members of my caucus that have legitimate concerns with how this budget was constructed to make it clear that we cannot allow a budget process like we saw early this morning to happen again.”

* Also, from Rep. Terra Costa Howard’s constituent newsletter…

Wow. It’s been less than 24 hours since I left Springfield, after a marathon final session that ended in the wee hours on Wednesday.

I’m going to have a LOT to say about this year’s budget process over the next couple of weeks, but I think I’ll wait until I’ve had a good night’s sleep before I tackle this crucial subject. Stay tuned!

She has not sent an update.

  24 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Judge considering whether slated candidates can appear on November ballot. Capitol News Illinois

A Sangamon County judge is weighing whether to block a new state law that bans the long-practiced tradition of political parties slating candidates for a general election after sitting out of a primary race.

Democrats who control the General Assembly pushed the measure through the legislative process and Gov. JB Pritzker signed it into law in a matter of days last month, arguing that slating is unfair to voters who didn’t get a say in a primary contest. Several would-be Republican candidates then sued over the law, claiming it’s unfair to ban the practice in the middle of an election cycle.

Now, the dispute is in the hands of Sangamon County Judge Gail Noll, who heard two hours of arguments over the case on Monday, which was also the last day slated candidates were able to file their nominating petitions under the old law. Noll last week ordered the State Board of Elections to keep accepting the petitions while the case plays out, which the board had already been doing.

During Monday’s hearing, attorney Jeffrey Schwab said his clients – four Republican candidates from Chicago and its suburbs – weren’t arguing that the law itself is unconstitutional, but that its application to the current election cycle is. […]

Though the lawsuit was only filed against the Board of Elections and Attorney General Kwame Raoul, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch sought to intervene in the case. Democratic election law attorney Mike Kasper argued on Welch’s behalf that the law was a boon to democracy because candidates used the slating process to escape a tough primary battle.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WTTW | Illinois House Speaker Emphatic That Bears, Sox Won’t Get Public Funding for Stadiums: “As we’ve said to the Bears over and over again, to the White Sox, and also to the Chicago Red Stars, there’s just no appetite to use taxpayer funding to fund stadiums for billionaires,” House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch told WTTW News in an interview Monday. “Even after the election.” Those four words — “even after the election” — send a strong signal that the teams don’t stand much of a chance. That’s because the post-election period is when lawmakers traditionally take their most risky votes because they’re either lame ducks not returning to public office, or at least further away from asking voters to be reelected.

* Tribune | Dolton trustees override Mayor Tiffany Henyard’s veto, solidifying the hiring of Lori Lightfoot as special investigator: Trustee Jason House requested for the board to allow Lightfoot, who was present at the meeting, to make remarks after the vote. However, Henyard denied the request, which she called “political grandstanding” and encouraged a quick adjournment, angering many in the audience. Lightfoot still got up to the podium and managed to briefly address those in attendance before her microphone was shut off by village staff. She later released a statement commending the board’s decision to override the veto and stating her intention to complete a fair and thorough investigation.

* Tribune | Bill aimed at assisting public defenders falls short this spring, backers say they’ll try again in fall: A measure to create a statewide office to assist under-resourced public defenders stalled in the Illinois General Assembly this spring, but the bill’s backers say they will try again when the legislature reconvenes in the fall. “We are going to try to filter as many new ideas or as many new perspectives through the committee process as possible so that we have a really good bill when it’s all said and done,” state Rep. Dave Vella, a Rockford Democrat and former Winnebago County assistant public defender, said Monday.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch sued by staffers who say he thwarted their efforts to form union: About 20 House staff members have pressured Welch, a Democrat from Hillside, to recognize their efforts to form a union for more than a year, leading the speaker to sponsor a measure that would allow legislative staffers working at the state Capitol to organize. The measure passed through the House last year but has since stalled in the Senate. “We will not be put off, ignored or gaslit any longer,” the Illinois Legislative Staff Association said in a statement announcing the lawsuit.

* Tribune | Legislation now before Gov. J.B. Pritzker: Mobile driver’s licenses, medical debt relief and a new state mushroom: Residents would be able to keep digitial versions of their driver’s licenses and other state IDs in their cellphones under legislation pushed by Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias. […] If Pritzker signs the bill, Giannoulias’ office will need to work out more details about how his office will implement and enforce mobile IDs. The secretary said he doesn’t have a timeline for when they will become available to the public.

* Sen. John Curran | Gov. J.B. Pritzker should embrace instead of fight reforms to the Prisoner Review Board: A budget is a concrete list of priorities. And in this budget, and in his own words, the governor is saying that public safety is not a priority. We cannot continue to allow Pritzker and his activist Prisoner Review Board to continue their reckless ideological campaign at the expense of victims throughout our state. We must hold the governor accountable for his actions and push through reforms of the Prisoner Review Board before another family has to wonder, what if?

*** Statewide ***

* NBC Chicago | Illinois Secretary of State office impacted by data breach: In a statement to NBC 5 Responds, the Illinois Secretary of State’s office clarified that while their e-mail system was infiltrated, none of the agency’s databases, including those containing driver and vehicle records, were compromised. The office added that they’re strengthening their data security framework to protect against any future attacks.

* Sun-Times | Illinois’ use of cameras that read license plates amounts to ‘dragnet surveillance,’ lawsuit alleges: The suit, filed last week by Cook County residents Stephanie Scholl and Frank Bednarz, names the state police, Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Attorney General Kwame Raoul as defendants. “Defendants are tracking anyone who drives to work in Cook County — or to school, or a grocery store, or a doctor’s office, or a pharmacy, or a political rally, or a romantic encounter, or family gathering — every day, without any reason to suspect anyone of anything, and are holding onto those whereabouts just in case they decide in the future that some citizen might be an appropriate target of law enforcement,” the suit said.

* Center Square | Bill allowing IL drivers 3 unpaid tickets before suspension headed for governor: “HB277 is designed to modernize our procedures for people who receive tickets, minor traffic offenses, and fail to appear in court,” said [Rep. Justin Slaughter]. “Current law grants our judges the power to suspend an individual’s driver’s license if he or she fails to appear in court. From a fairness and equity perspective, this current process is creating a significant challenge for individuals at risk as they seek to hold onto their jobs.”

* Daily Herald | Crate-free pork is on the rise in some Illinois grocery chains, but not everywhere: “Most people are totally disconnected to the story of the animals that feed us. They go into a grocery store and they see a shrink-wrapped package of pork,” said Jess Chipkin, founder of nonprofit Crate Free USA. “That’s why one of our goals is to spread awareness of how these animals are fed, how they live their lives — and there are other options.” […] Chipkin, who lives in Huntley, formed the organization in 2015 as Crate Free Illinois before expanding nationwide. The group leads campaigns to petition grocers including Aldi and Trader Joe’s to phase out gestation crates from their supply chains.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | IBM eyes a quantum computing play in Chicago: The company won’t detail exactly what it has in mind. “At IBM, we are excited to see continuously growing interest and investment in quantum computing across Chicago and the state of Illinois,” Jay Gambetta, vice president of IBM Quantum, says in a statement. “We are working with partners such as the University of Chicago, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and members of The Bloch Quantum Tech Hub on several projects to advance our timeline of bringing useful quantum computing to the world, and are looking forward to being a part of other significant developments soon.”

* Invisible Institute | What a new state task force can and can’t do — plus, police reform, city policy and community solutions: While the task force cannot enforce its own recommendations, which will be shared with the Illinois General Assembly and Gov. J.B. Pritzker by the end of 2024 (and on a yearly basis after), these recommendations could be the basis of future legislation. “All we can do is put information into legislation requiring [the Chicago Police Department] to do this and requiring them to do that,” Hunter says. Ultimately, enforcement would fall to the Illinois Attorney General’s office, says Hunter.

* AP | Unusual mix of possible candidates line up for Chicago’s first school board elections this fall: “This is not a political race, this is a movement,” said rapper Che “Rhymefest” Smith, who is among dozens of hopefuls who filed fundraising paperwork. “Everyone in this city has a responsibility to the children who are going to be served.” Potential candidates are circulating petitions while educating voters about the inaugural contests. Many are parents, advocates and former educators making their first foray into politics, navigating a steep learning curve with little name recognition or cash.

* Sun-Times | Columbia College Chicago lays off 70 staff members amid budget deficit: Columbia College Chicago announced this week it is laying off 70 staff members to reposition itself as a decline in enrollment has led to a growing budget shortfall. Another 32 vacant positions will be eliminated, a school spokesperson said in a statement. The school’s budget deficit has ballooned to an expected $38 million from about $20 million last year.

* Crain’s | WBEZ union files unfair labor charge against Chicago Public Media: SAG-AFTRA, the union representing staff at WBEZ-FM, has filed an unfair labor practice charge against the parent company of the radio station Chicago Public Media today alleging that the organization refused “to provide information necessary (for them) to represent (their) members and enforce the union contract.” The union announced news of the filing on X today, adding that it marks the first time the union has filed a ULP charge against Chicago Public Media since the union was formed in 2013.

* WGN | The reason Chicago’s lead pipe replacement plan is taking longer than expected: Dr. Deborah Carroll, director of the government finance research center at the University of Illinois at Chicago, joins Lisa Dent to explain why the City of Chicago has been slow with replacing lead service lines and what residents need to do if think their lines need to be replaced.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Aurora mayor says Kane County sheriff’s decisions before police shooting led to ‘unfortunate loss of life’: Mayor Richard Irvin was referring to Sheriff Ron Hain’s order to seize the suspect’s car the night before the fatal shooting, “compromising” an undercover Aurora police operation to arrest the man safely. Hain called Irvin’s comments “reckless and inappropriate.”

* Daily Herald | Suburbs face new dilemma with fate of grocery tax in their hands: Hanover Park Mayor Rod Craig, the vice president of the municipal conference and its next president, said he is unsure if his town will enact a grocery tax. “I don’t know if I can do that,” Craig said. “I’ve been trying to keep our taxes low. It’s going to look like if I pass a tax, that’s a negative. If I pass the tax and others around us do not, it’s going to drive business to other communities.”

* ABC Chicago | Waukegan City Council censures alderman for posting Facebook photo of severed arm found at beach: Alderman Keith Turner posted a photo on Facebook, showing a severed arm recently found at a Waukegan beach. […] Turner’s fellow alderpersons demanded Turner apologize to that missing woman’s family. But he said he feels he’s being targeted as a candidate for mayor. Mayor Ann Taylor did not respond directly to those allegations tonight.

* Tribune | Burbank man pleads guilty to dousing police officers with hornet spray during Jan. 6 US Capitol attack: William Lewis, 57, of Burbank, entered his plea to a count of assaulting police officers during a hearing before U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras in Washington, D.C., court records show. Preliminary sentencing guidelines call for 51-63 months in prison, according to Lewis’ plea agreement with prosecutors. Contreras is scheduled to sentence Lewis on Dec. 16.

* ESPN | Bears chairman George McCaskey’s amazing side gig: One of the umpires that day would have more on his mind than calling balls and strikes. Chicago Bears chairman George McCaskey has been officiating youth sports since his football coach at Notre Dame College Prep in Niles, Illinois, asked if any players wanted to ref Pop Warner football. About 50 years later, McCaskey was working home plate for a high school baseball game in a small town a little over an hour west of Chicago. But McCaskey had something else going on that morning: It was the third day of the NFL draft.

*** Downstate ***

* Tribune | A young mother’s murder horrified central Illinois. Decades later, the family convicted in her death says DNA proves they’re innocent: Macon County prosecutors built a case entirely on circumstantial evidence, some of it considered at the time to be cutting-edge forensics — dog hair DNA analysis and comparisons of concrete and cinder samples. In the end, they convinced a jury that the elder Slovers murdered their former daughter-in-law, with their son’s tacit approval, to stop her from taking her 3-year-old son and moving out of state. In the two decades since the Slovers were sent to prison, the salacious details of their case have become fodder for the burgeoning true-crime entertainment industry. All the while, the Slovers have insisted they’re innocent and fought in court to clear their names.

*** National ***

* Huff Post | Teamsters Memo Signals Rift Between Major Unions: Teamsters President Sean O’Brien sent a memo to the union’s officers and organizers on May 23 informing them he had nullified their “no-raid” agreement with the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM), according to a copy of the memo obtained by HuffPost. No-raid agreements forbid unions from trying to organize one another’s members so that they defect to the other union. The AFL-CIO has a long-standing policy that bars raiding among its member groups, but the Teamsters are not part of the 60-union labor federation, only the IAM is.

* The Atlantic | The One Downside of Gender Equality in Sports: The arrival of a dynamite WNBA rookie class, headlined by the sensational Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese, has prompted an explosion of coverage of women’s basketball. But—and perhaps I should have anticipated this—the surge in popularity has come at a cost. Ill-informed male sports analysts are suddenly chiming in about the league and its players, offering narratives untethered to facts and occasionally making me long for the days when the WNBA largely flew under the radar.

  10 Comments      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Jun 4, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Reader comments closed until Tuesday

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have officially put the Minack Theatre on my bucket list after watching this video. This Is The Kit will play us out

As the game begins
We are found again

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGN

WGN is suing the Village of Dolton in Cook County Circuit Court for refusing to release spending records and other documents related to Mayor Tiffany Henyard’s perks and pay. […]

Last November, WGN Investigates sent Dolton a public records request, seeking copies of the agency’s credit card statements, as well as records relating to Henyard’s compensation and the cost of her taxpayer-funded vehicle.

But Dolton declined to release the records, in an apparent violation of state open records laws. […]

In a rare binding opinion, dated Feb. 9, the attorney general ordered Dolton to release the credit card statements, along with the other requested documents.

The village had until March 15 to comply. But it still has not released the records.

* Lynn Sweet


*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | School cops, migrant students, funding shortfall: How CPS fared in Springfield: A late-developing bill that came in response to a sexual abuse lawsuit against CPS passed unanimously in the Illinois House and is expected to be taken up by the Senate in the fall veto session. The bill would prevent courts from considering “contributory fault” in child sex abuse cases. That practice limits the damages a plaintiff can seek in a personal injury case if they were considered partially at fault. The bill would also establish that all sexual abuse of children is traumatic, and victims would no longer need to provide evidence that they were harmed. Instead they could provide evidence showing the extent of their harm. State Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, introduced the bill after he criticized CPS for its handling of a former student’s lawsuit claiming she was sexually assaulted by a former teacher. He has called on the district to fire its top attorney.

* WBEZ | Illinois legislative staff union sues Speaker Welch demanding recognition: General Assembly employees are among a small number of groups carved out of state labor laws – agricultural workers and independent contractors are also in this category. That means they do not fall under the jurisdiction of the ILRB, which oversees the election unions must hold to be certified and recognized. ILSA tried to work around this. In 2023, organizers said 70% of its 35 potential unit members signed petition cards saying they supported the efforts, a percentage they believed signaled an election was unnecessary. But the Speaker’s office replied that it would be undemocratic to forgo an election.

* WTTW | Lawmakers Greenlight State-Level Child Tax Credit in Illinois Budget, Pending Pritzker’s Approval: Illinois lawmakers on Wednesday morning finalized a $53.1 billion state budget for the upcoming fiscal year that designates $50 million in funding for a new child tax credit. […] Upon final budget approval from Gov. J.B. Pritzker, working parents who are at or below the state median income of $75,000 for joint tax filers and $50,000 for single parents, will be eligible to receive an average tax credit between $300 and $600 per household for children under the age of 12.

* Chicago Reader | Recapping the Illinois General Assembly’s spring legislative session: Efforts to generate additional revenue will be used to fund a $50 million child tax credit program for low-income families with children younger than 12 years old. The state budget also scraps a 1 percent tax on grocery sales, a move Pritzker and state lawmakers made permanent after suspending the tax at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. (Local governments can still vote to impose their own 1 percent tax in its stead.) And it includes an additional $182 million to care for people seeking asylum in Illinois, as well as $440 million for health care for undocumented residents.

* Center Square | Measure to allow more electric scooters in Illinois headed to governor: Senate Bill 1960 also states that low-speed electric scooters can only be used in municipalities or park districts if authorized, and that they cannot be operated on highways with a speed limit over 35 mph. “It is an opt-in, you don’t have to do this, but if you want to regulate electric scooters in your community or your park district then this is the way to do it,” said the bill’s sponsor, state Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Prosecutors in ‘Walking Man’ murder case allege defendant was involved in prior attack: On May 10, records show, a CTA operator reported that a young man had tossed liquid on him after asking a question about a train stop. The attack at the Oak Park Green Line station was captured on video, and court records show the operator later picked Guardia out of a photo lineup. Prosecutors did not charge Guardia in the CTA incident. But the state’s attorney’s office is seeking to use evidence of his alleged involvement to help prove intent or state of mind in the later attack against Kromelis, according to a recent court filing.

* WTTW | Mayor Brandon Johnson Unveils Plan to Test Whether City Crews Should Clear Sidewalks of Snow and Ice: Mayor Brandon Johnson unveiled a plan Friday to test whether city crews should be responsible for clearing not just Chicago’s roads but also its sidewalks of snow and ice during winter storms. But the plan — which will cost between $1.1 million and $3.5 million per year — isn’t slated to clear its first shovel-full of snow until the winter of 2025-26, and must be approved and funded by the Chicago City Council.

* Chicago Park District | A Great Lakes Piping Plover Nest & Egg Have Been Spotted at Montrose Beach Dunes!: The egg is the product of the recent pair bond between native-born Piping Plover Imani, who hatched at Montrose in 2021, and Searocket, one of the 5-week-old captive-reared Piping Plover chicks that were released back into the wild at Montrose in July 2023. This release marked the first-time piping plovers were released outside Michigan in an effort to achieve the recovery goal of 50 pairs of plovers outside Michigan.

* Sun-Times | Soldier Field ready to combat homophobic slurs at Mexico national team soccer match: In a statement to the Sun-Times, the Chicago Park District said ticket holders have been advised of Soldier Field’s code of conduct, which will be broadcast at the stadium on the day of the event. The code includes policies on prohibited acts, such as discriminatory chants, and consequences for violations, which could end up with civil and/or criminal action.

* Sun-Times | Elaine Pierce, who opened her Oak Park home to migrants, has died at 69: Elaine Pierce, an Oak Park resident who opened her home to South American migrants last summer while coping with terminal cancer, died May 26. She was 69. Ms. Pierce initially took in two families — six people — who’d been staying temporarily at a West Side police station. “I only wish I could do more,” she told the Chicago Sun-Times last October.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Mayor: Sheriff interfered in Aurora investigation of man shot to death by deputies: Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin has criticized Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain, accusing the sheriff of interfering in an Aurora police investigation that ultimately led to deputies shooting a man to death a day later. The mayor made his remarks at Tuesday’s city council meeting in reaction to what Hain said in a Chicago Sun-Times article about the death of James J. Moriarty, 38, of Aurora, on May 24, 2023, on the Geneva-Batavia border. The death may have been prevented, according to Irvin, if deputies had not interfered with Aurora police’s plan to arrest Moriarty the day before.

* Daily Herald | How a suburban well-being check cracked an international ‘suicide drug’ operation: In March 2016, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents working in Kentucky intercepted a package shipped from Mexico and addressed to a long-term stay hotel in Libertyville, authorities say. Tests conducted on the contents determined it to be a drug commonly used to euthanize animals, court records show. The investigation was turned over to U.S. Department of Homeland Security agents based in Chicago. Those agents accompanied local law enforcement officers making a well-being check on the intended recipient, a Lake Villa man staying at the Libertyville hotel, officials said.

* Tribune | Northwestern University unveils what temporary lakefront football stadium will look like: Northwestern University has released a new concept plan of its temporary lakeside football complex along with seating and sideline details as it works to rebuild Ryan Field for the 2026 football season. Seating will be along all four sides of the field with a majority placed beyond the end zones on the north and south ends. The south side structure will include semi-private suites and club seating, which will feature all-inclusive food and beverage options, along with field lodge seating with tables and swivel chairs for up to four people. Typical stadium seating will also be available on the south structure.

* Daily Herald | ‘Push positivity’: Elgin’s second Pride Parade and Festival kicks off Pride Month in suburbs: After a successful inaugural event, bigger is the operative word for the second year of the Elgin Pride Parade and Festival on Saturday. Presented by ELGbtq+, the event that drew between 4,000 and 5,000 people last year will feature twice as many parade entries and twice as many vendors. It also will use all of Festival Park for the post-parade fest as opposed to half last year.

*** Downstate ***

* PJ Star | Peoria police will get new drones, surveillance camera software. Here’s how it works: Grant money totaling $220,000 was approved by the Peoria City Council on Tuesday night to be spent by the Peoria Police Department for the purchase of three new drones to add to its fleet and the purchase of a Fusus software intelligence program that will help the police department tackle retail and property crimes. The camera software system would allow the police department — with permission — to monitor in real time security cameras at businesses, license plate readers, police body cameras, ShotSpotter software and in-squad cameras as incidents of crime occur.

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House Dem leaders Ortiz, Evans apologize for their absence

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From the House Democrats…

Should the apology be accepted?

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The jury angle

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ILGOP…

Following the verdict in the New York trial of President Trump, Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy released the following statement:

“Let’s call this trial what it really is: a political prosecution the likes of which occurs in banana republics but not previously in these United States. Democrat activist investigators and prosecutors have relentlessly hounded President Trump for years. First, they challenged the legitimacy of his election in 2016 thru the Russian collusion hoax. Then, they strove to defeat his re-election in 2020 thru impeachments and the Hunter Biden laptop coverup. Then, they indicted him and his supporters to tarnish his legacy in an effort to re-elect President Biden. This weaponization of the judicial system has weakened our country here and in the eyes of the world, which I’m sure President Biden will savor while he vacations in Delaware as his handlers make critical decisions for the country.”

I followed up by asking if all the jurors were in on it, too. I never heard back.

* The Illinois Freedom Caucus sent out a similar email…

“This is a sad day for our nation. Regardless of one’s view of President Donald Trump, every person accused under our laws deserves a fair trial and a fair legal process. The case against President Trump was rigged from the outset. The prosecutor Alvin Bragg ran a campaign promising to prosecute President Trump. The judge in the case is a Democrat and has a daughter directly involved in Democratic party politics. Throughout the entire process, the judge refused to allow key witnesses for the defense and allowed the prosecution to do virtually whatever they wanted to do. The judge clearly had his thumbs on the scales of justice.

President Trump will be vindicated on appeal but what happened here is the sanctioning of political persecution. This trial, this verdict, this manipulation of our justice system is the new face of leftist tyranny. The unhinged left may be celebrating now, but they will not win the war. The American people will see through this sham trial and they will elect Donald Trump President of the United States in November. The only verdict we the people care about is the one coming on November 5th.”

I asked the same question about the jurors. But, in this instance, I did get a response…

If JB Pritzker were tried in Clay County do you seriously think that would be a fair trial? JB received about the same percentage of the vote Trump got in that area of New York.

But beyond that - the jury can only act on the information and instructions they are given. The judge did everything possible to ensure this outcome. It won’t stand on appeal but that is not the point of the case in the first place.

And finally, do you really think this is the direction we need to go in our country where the courts are weaponized to go after political enemies? This is a terrible precedent.

I responded: “Are you saying that the jury system doesn’t work?”…

In this case, the biased judge and prosecutor manipulated it.

* Along those same lines, here is Center Square

U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, a southern Illinois Republican, posted to X, formerly Twitter, that she sat in the courtroom for a day.

“[And] it was a complete SHAM,” Miller posted. “The Democrat’ judge’ instructed the jury to find President Trump guilty if only 4 out of 12 of them agreed on a crime. The anti-Trump witnesses admitted to lying under oath. The corrupt prosecutor was sent by the Biden DOJ!”

NBC News debunks

That’s not true. Merchan instructed the jurors Wednesday that they “must conclude unanimously that a defendant conspired to promote or prevent the election of any person to a public office by unlawful means,” adding that they “need not be unanimous as to what those unlawful means were.”

That means that jurors have to agree unanimously that Trump committed a crime by engaging in a criminal conspiracy to falsify records with the intent to commit one or more other crimes to convict him. But jurors can choose from three options about what those other crimes were: violations of the Federal Election Campaign Act, falsification of other business records or violation of tax laws. Those “unlawful means” aren’t charges themselves, and they wouldn’t result in separate convictions, so jurors don’t have to unanimously agree on them.

* Meanwhile, this photo was taken earlier today in Homer Township…

Homer Township Supervisor Steve Balich has been organizing monthly pro-Trump rallies. I was told he was the one who ordered the flag to be flown upside-down. So, I called him.

“The flag is flying the correct way now,” Balich told me.

Asked why he ordered the flag to fly upside-down, Balich said, ” I considered the whole United States under extreme distress.”

The verdict, he said, “is only part of it. I’m just saying we don’t have the rule of law anymore.”

Asked about the 12 jurors who unanimously agreed to convict the former president on all 34 counts, Balich said, “It wasn’t about the verdict of 12 people that I don’t agree with. They can do whatever they want, they’re the jurors.” Instead, he said, it was “not a fair trial.”

Balich said he reversed his decision after talking to the attorney general’s staff and his own private lawyer, who said, “It’s best if I just put it up the right way.”

“Do I want to do that? No. If it was up to me I’d leave it up until Trump is elected president.”

* More…

    * ‘Trump will never be 47′: Pritzker sounds off after hush money guilty verdict: “After facing a jury of his peers, Donald Trump is exposed as the liar and fraud that he is. Trump evaded the law to deceive voters and today, the law caught up with him. Donald Trump is a racist, a homophobe, a grifter, and a threat to this country. He can now add one more title to his list - a felon. But let me be clear, Donald Trump will never be 47.”

OK, take at least four deep breaths before commenting.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Chamber speaks up about ‘interchange’ bill

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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House Democratic staff union filing lawsuit against Speaker Welch (Updated x2)

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Legislative Staff Association…

We are the Organizing Committee of the Illinois Legislative Staff Association.

Due to the failure of House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch to deal with his staff in good faith, in spite of numerous good faith attempts on our part since November of 2022, we have come to the conclusion that any further attempts to resolve this dispute amicably would be a waste of time.

Speaker Welch says he was “proud” to stand with us back in October—while the cameras were rolling and the people were watching. Unfortunately, he was also too proud to sit down and work with us once his publicity stunt was over.

The Speaker’s press secretary says his record is clear, and it is—but that’s the whole problem. We are where we are today precisely because the Speaker’s record is clear. Since November of 2022, he and his aides have continually doubled down on obstruction, stonewalling, insincere engagement, political theater and gaslighting. The empty platitudes issued in response to our last release are, in our experience over the last 18 months, par for the course.

We are done waiting for Speaker Welch to take responsibility for the lack of action on the part of himself and his aides. We are done waiting for him to take the initiative to do what is best for his caucus and the people of Illinois. We are done waiting for something more than reluctant half-measures and poorly written messaging bills. Enough is enough.

The people of Illinois deserve a Speaker of the House who lives by his stated values, deals with others in good faith, and has the morals, courage and integrity to do the right thing. Our experiences over the last year and a half have forced us to question whether, in Speaker Welch, Illinois truly has that.

Therefore, we are filing suit to resolve this issue once and for all. As we indicated in our previous release, a legislative staff union has been formed and will negotiate on behalf of willing employees of the Illinois General Assembly. We will not be put off, ignored or gaslit any longer.

We have said that we intend to exercise our right to form a union and today’s action is the next step on that path.

* What plaintiffs are asking from the court

A. Declare that, by the acts set forth above, the Defendant Speaker has deprived Plaintiff Burden, Plaintiff ILSA, and the individual members of the Plaintiff ILSA represented by Plaintiff ILSA here in an associational capacity of their constitutional rights to engage in collective bargaining, as guaranteed by Article 1, Section 25 of the Illinois Constitution, and in doing so the Defendant Speaker has failed to perform the lawful business of the State and acted beyond his lawful authority.

B. Grant such other relief including injunctive relief as may be appropriate against the Defendant Speaker in his individual capacity including but not limited to appointment of a mediator to confer with the parties and assist them in the process of collective bargaining and grant other injunctive relief to bar Defendant Speaker from any act to forestall bargaining with the purpose or intent of depriving them of the constitutional rights guaranteed by Section 25.

C. Grant such other relief as may be appropriate, including an order to Defendant Speaker to post or mail to members of the Defendant Speaker’s staff recognizing and assuring protection of their right under Section 25 of the Illinois Constitution to engage in collective bargaining without reprisal.

Thoughts?

…Adding… The filed version, which has some minor corrections, is here.

…Adding… From the WBEZ story

Whether the bill moves again or not, Burden and other ILSA members want to use what they see as their constitutionally protected right to collectively bargain for wages and benefits.

“Come to the table, man. That’s all we’ve wanted,” he said. “Like, literally, for a year and a half, we’ve been asking you to sit down and talk to your staff. Come talk to us when it’s not a PR opportunity for you, when there aren’t cameras.”

  35 Comments      


Illinois public defenders’ push for legislation to address funding, oversight falls short

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can find backgroundhere. Tribune

Senate President Don Harmon, a Democrat from Oak Park, filed the initial bill to create an Office of Public Defense Trial Support last month, but the two-page proposal provided scant details about how a statewide system would work. In addition, public defenders balked at whether the office could operate independently since the bill was an initiative of the Illinois Supreme Court.

Harmon pulled his bill and supporters went back to the drawing board, coming up with a 42-page bill that was filed Monday. The measure lays out in much greater detail how a statewide public defender would be selected and how the office would assist county public defenders throughout Illinois, although a source of funding still has not been identified. […]

The House bill was filed by state Rep. Dave Vella, a Rockford Democrat who once worked as an assistant public defender in Winnebago County. He said the state Supreme Court did a good thing by wanting to give more resources to public defenders, but the problem with the initial bill was that it didn’t resolve issues of judicial oversight of public defenders from the high court and from chief county judges, who appoint those positions. […]

The fact that county public defenders are appointed by judges is a dynamic that can give the judiciary too much control over public defense, Vella said.

* Courthouse News

In a phone interview, Vella said he planned to introduce another such reform in the near future. He said he’ll use the coming months to hone details of the bill. “We want to have subject-matter hearings in the fall and maybe bring it up in the veto session in October,” he said.

* More…

    * Stephanie Kollmann | Illinois legislators should create a statewide system for public defense: According to the National Registry of Exonerations, Illinois leads the U.S. in wrongful convictions. But these cases, terrible as they are, are the tip of the iceberg, illustrating a much more sizable threat lurking below the surface. Illinois has, for too long, failed to safeguard the rights of people accused of a crime, regardless of their access to money. The new pretrial system that launched with the SAFE-T Act was a critical step toward addressing this problem. A fully funded public defense system accountable to the public — not to local politicians and judges — is the next needed reform for this session.

    * WTTW | New Bill Aims to Create Statewide Public Defender Office in Illinois: Stephanie Kollmann, policy director at Northwestern University’s Children and Family Justice Center, said it’s likely going to be quite costly for the state to implement new standards for public defense. “Illinois is short about 900 public defense attorneys, and even more than that in terms of investigators and support staff,” Kollmann said.

    * Sun-Times | Statewide public defense office would help Illinois counties in need of support: We’d have to go further back in time — to 1949 — for the last time Illinois changed its public defense structure. An upgrade is overdue, especially when 60% of the state’s 102 counties do not have a full-time public defender. In many of those mostly rural counties, it is a judge who appoints a local private practice attorney, typically using flat-fee contracts to represent someone who doesn’t have the means to hire a lawyer.

  2 Comments      


Today’s quotable (Updated)

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

In an interview, [Senate President Don Harmon] said comments he made earlier this spring urging the two teams to work together were misread as a sign he would bless any deal they jointly pitch. “My overall observation would be that the two are fighting over the same pot of (subsidy) money that neither is entitled to,” Harmon said. “I have yet to hear a compelling argument as to why taxpayer money should be put into the hands of wealthy sports franchises.”

…Adding… As I pointed out in comments, this is not really a walkback. Some reporters simply read too much into what the teams claimed Harmon said. But he was pretty clear way back in February. From Crain’s

State Senate President Don Harmon specifically has told both teams there is little appetite in the General Assembly to approve separate stadium legislation.

“I’m not planning to referee fights between billion-dollar sports franchises,” Harmon told Crain’s in a statement. “I hope the teams took heed of the governor’s expression of reluctance to use tax dollars to subsidize new stadiums.”

And here is the statement Harmon’s spokesperson gave me

“I share the governor’s reluctance to spend taxpayer dollars to subsidize private stadiums. I’m not going to referee fights between billion-dollar sports franchises.”

He wasn’t directing them to work out a deal that would then be rubber-stamped.

  19 Comments      


Post-session press releases (Live updates)

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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Open thread

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Despite lackluster response to his Springfield agenda, Mayor Brandon Johnson vows: ‘We keep demanding’. Tribune

When Brandon Johnson visited the Illinois State Capitol as mayor-elect, he emphatically rejected the notion that Chicago and Springfield had competing agendas.

“They’ve told us that this is a zero-sum game. And if something is good for Chicago, well, that means we’re taking something away from Peoria,” Johnson said in a joint address to the House and Senate. “It is a false choice.”

A little over a year later, the mayor has learned Illinois lawmakers still regard those choices as true.

He saw the state legislature reject his biggest agenda items during the session that concluded this week: more than $1 billion in state funding for Chicago Public Schools, and a nearly $5 billion proposal for a new Chicago Bears stadium.

Governor Pritzker will be at the Executive Mansion in Springfield at 2 pm to give remarks at the Special Olympics Illinois Rally. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* NBC Chicago | Illinois budget includes $20M aimed at repairing cuts to sexual assault crisis services: Of the more than 21,000 sex crimes reported to Chicago police between 2018 and 2023, an NBC 5 Investigates’ analysis found authorities made fewer than 1,600 arrests. All told, our investigation found just 1.5 percent of all reported sex crimes resulted in sex crime convictions with prison time.

* 21st Show | A recap of the Illinois General Assembly: Today, we will talk with a couple of the reporters who worked into the night and the morning to cover what happened. We are joined by Alex Degman, a statehouse reporter who covers state government for public radio stations across Illinois, and Jerry Nowicki, the editor-in-chief of Capitol News Illinois.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Ban on ‘captive audience’ meetings, AI regulations among 466 bills to pass this session: A bill banning what unions refer to as employer-sponsored “captive audience” meetings about religion and politics has cleared both chambers of the General Assembly. It was one of 466 measures to do so during the Illinois legislature’s recently concluded spring session, including measures targeting artificial intelligence and allowing for digital driver’s licenses. A Capitol News Illinois analysis shows 287 of the bills passed in the session’s final two weeks.

* Capitol City Now | IL Chamber rains on guv’s parade: Illinois Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Lou Sandoval (pictured) used Crespo’s warning as a jumping-off point to criticize the legislature and especially Gov. JB Pritzker. “As rosy as the governor may want to make it sound, it’s almost a flippant response to Fred Crespo’s comments,” Sandoval said, citing the governor’s reaction of “oh, yeah, every year the Republicans talk about hitting the wall, and we always seem to do okay.

*** Statewide ***

* Politico | Illinois set to adopt ‘nation-leading’ carbon pipeline, storage rules: Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker is set to sign legislation to enact sweeping regulations for carbon dioxide storage and transportation, including a pause on approvals of CO2 pipelines for up to two years. The Illinois Legislature on Sunday passed a 104-page “SAFE CCS Act” meant to create standards for the burgeoning carbon capture and storage (CCS) industry. The legislation includes a pause on carbon pipelines until July 2026 or until the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration updates its safety rules.

* Sen. Tammy Duckworth | Capturing carbon emissions can have major positive economic impact in Illinois: Illinois is already a leader in research and early deployment of this technology. And now, our state has an opportunity to go further thanks to legislation passed by the Illinois House and Senate. This legislation recognizes the role CCS can play in growing our state’s economy and the importance of safety by establishing a comprehensive regulatory framework that provides certainty to investors and stronger rights for landowners. It also rightly presses pause on new carbon pipelines until federal regulators finalize updated safety rules.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson unveils plans to reopen mental health clinic in Roseland: This year the city plans to re-open the Roseland Mental Health Clinic and add mental health services at the city’s Pilsen clinic and at the Legler Regional Library in West Garfield Park. These neighborhoods were picked based on need, and the city says Legler is one of the busiest distribution sites for the overdose-reversing nasal spray Narcan. […] “Our city went from 19 mental health centers to a mere five. And we began relying heavily on our police and fire departments to respond to behavioral health crises. But that trend ends today,” Johnson said standing in front of the red brick building that formerly housed the Roseland clinic, later adding: “I’ll continue to keep my brother Leon front and center”

* Sun-Times | Bears keep stadium focus on lakefront despite Springfield funding shutout: As the Chicago Bears gear up this summer for their upcoming season on the field, they’ll be refining their business pitch off the field after state lawmakers concluded their spring legislative session this week without acting on the team’s request for public dollars to help build a new lakefront stadium. That pushes their drive for a dome to the fall veto session, when the Bears will try to avoid going three-and-out in their Springfield stadium efforts. They came up empty-handed in a push last year for a change in state law to freeze property taxes on land they bought in Arlington Heights to make a potential suburban move more palatable.

* Tribune | Peoples Gas loses funding bid for pipeline replacement projects in progress: State regulators rejected most of an additional $7.9 million rate increase proposed by Peoples Gas, which was seeking to charge consumers to complete unfinished work in the paused pipeline replacement program. Instead, the Illinois Commerce Commission approved a $1.6 million rate increase for emergency work “out of an abundance of caution,” Chair Doug Scott said during an open meeting in Springfield Thursday.

* Sun-Times | Northern lights could be visible again in Chicago, but less illuminating than last display: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicts a moderate geomagnetic storm in the Northern Hemisphere late Friday night and early Saturday, causing the aurora borealis to stretch farther south than usual again, possibly just reaching the edge of northern Illinois.

* Sun-Times | Russian propaganda push expected in Chicago for Democratic National Convention, experts say: When the Democratic National Convention hits Chicago in August, demonstrators are expected to take to the streets to draw attention to a wide range of causes — immigration, police misconduct, abortion, the wars in Gaza and Ukraine. What they might never know is how much Russia and other nations will have been aiming to influence the marches and demonstrations near the United Center and McCormick Place convention sites, experts on disinformation say.

* Tribune | Chicago watchdog warns Police Department crowd management training ‘insufficient’ ahead of DNC: While the report from Inspector General Deborah Witzburg acknowledged several of the department’s strides — improving its written policies and procedures after the fumbled response to unrest in 2020 — it highlighted a lack of community input in those policies and “outdated concepts and tactics” in CPD’s plans to manage crowds.

* NBC Chicago | Chicago Air and Water Show dates shift due to Democratic National Convention: The Chicago Air and Water Show will once again put on incredible displays in the skies and waters of Lake Michigan, but the dates were moved due to one of the biggest political events on the calendar. With Chicago hosting the Democratic National Convention for the first time since 1996, the Air and Water Show will take place one week earlier than normal, according to city officials.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk controversy prompts push for change in state law: DuPage County Board Chair Deborah Conroy enlisted the help of state lawmakers to make it clear that countywide elected officials, such as the county clerk, need to follow state bidding laws and seek county board approval for certain budget transfers. During a Tuesday evening county board meeting, Conroy announced lawmakers approved changes providing the “highest level of clarity” regarding competitive bidding and budget transfer regulations as they relate to countywide elected officials.

* Tribune | Morton Grove to OK video gaming for ‘legacy restaurants’: Morton Grove’s legacy restaurant program would allow longtime family-owned restaurants to receive a $5,000 facade grant or a video gaming license, if they qualify. The Village Board, which reviewed proposed changes to Morton Grove’s video gaming ordinance to accommodate the legacy program at its May 14 meeting, is expected to approve the program and the amendments at its May 28 meeting.

*** National ***

* Sun-Times | Amid presidential chatter, Gov. Pritzker will address Wisconsin Democrats at annual convention: The party plans to host Pritzker as a keynote speaker for its annual state convention in Milwaukee on Saturday, June 8. Other Democratic speakers at the two-day convention include Wisconsin’s U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers, U.S. Reps. Mark Pocan, D-Wisc., and Gwen Moore, D-Wisc., and Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison.

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Live coverage

Friday, May 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Feds, Illinois partner to bring DARPA quantum-testing facility to the Chicago area
* Pritzker, Durbin talk about Trump, Vance
* Napo's campaign spending questioned
* Illinois react: Trump’s VP pick J.D. Vance
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Live coverage
* Yesterday's stories

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