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Pritzker calls some of Bears proposals ‘probably non-starters,’ refuses to divert state dollars intended for other purposes (Updated)

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was asked today about the financial aspect of the Bears’ stadium plan

Oh, it is more than what they put forward. I think all of you are starting to report on that. I mean, they want infrastructure dollars on top of what they’re asking for in funding.

They’re asking to keep all of the revenue from other events that might take place at the stadium. You know, if there’s a Beyoncé concert, they want all of that revenue too, and everything else that might happen there. So yeah, I mean, there are aspects of this that are, you know, probably non-starters.

Having said that, you know, always open to a conversation but as I’ve said, the priorities of the people of Illinois are not building stadiums, right?

It’s really about for example, birth equity and building birth centers for people in Black and Brown communities, just as one example. But we have important things we need to invest in for the future of the state and again, stadiums in my mind don’t rank up in the top tier of those.

[Asked about state revenues for other purposes being used for the stadium]

You’re saying dollars that would come into the state of Illinois for other purposes and kind of making sure that those go to this? No. I mean, the truth is that if we have dollars coming in to support parks, for example, in Chicago or in the state of Illinois, it strikes me that it wasn’t contemplated that those dollars would go to a ballpark [chuckles], but rather parks for children and families and neighborhoods and making sure that the city of Chicago has beautiful places for people to go and enjoy themselves without having to spend hundreds of dollars on tickets and and other things.

[Asked about whether it would be preferable to use revenues rather than borrowing]

You mean if like manna from Heaven, a check arrived and it said ‘Give this to the Chicago Bears’ would I want to do that, is that your…?

[If there happened to be one of those funds, would that be preferable to borrowing money]

I’m unaware. If you know of one of those funds, yeah, let me know. I’m unaware of one.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

…Adding… Pritzker also had this to say when first asked about the Bears plan this afternoon…

Well, I have a few words I’d like to say like, for example, what about women’s sports? Very little has been talked about the Red Stars, for example, who asked to be heard on this subject. In addition to that, as you know, the White Sox have asked for support for a stadium for them, but the proposal that was put forward, didn’t include them and takes all the money that’s available and more just for the Bears. So, I think the proposal, again, I’m skeptical of the proposal that was put forward and and I’m even more skeptical of the ability to get enough votes for it in the General Assembly.

  34 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

In a new shot at Chicago Transit Authority management, an influential Chicago watchdog group is urging that state lawmakers abolish the CTA as an independent agency, turning its responsibilities largely over to an empowered Regional Transportation Authority.

“Citizens want and deserve guarantees that funding increases for government programs will lead to better service outcomes. They want assurances that money is going to be spent efficiently and effectively,” the Civic Federation says in a report issued today. “In the case of mass transit, this will require substantial reform of the current siloed governance and decision-making process that prioritizes the individual priorities of service boards, or transit providers, over regional priorities.”

The report comes as state lawmakers begin to take up the issue of how to avoid what the CTA, Metra and Pace say is a collective $730 million annual fiscal cliff they’ll begin to face at the end of next year, when federal COVID relief funds that have kept them financially afloat, despite ridership drops, run out.

The consolidation also would apply to Metra and Pace. But the CTA in particular wants to keep its independence and, with backing from Mayor Brandon Johnson, instead has pushed a plan to give it a larger subsidy without significant management changes.

Click here for the full report.

* A reminder!…

*** Statehouse News ***

* Shaw Local | Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs on what the office does, doesn’t do: So, it is not a surprise that with tax filing day approaching, I have been getting a lot of questions about taxes. We try our best to answer them, or refer people to the appropriate agency, but these questions have served as a reminder that many people just don’t understand my office. I would like to use this note to give you a better idea. Let me start with what we don’t do: We don’t collect taxes. That is the job of the Illinois Department of Revenue.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Influential West Loop Group Relaunches — But Keeps Who’s Behind It A Secret: But despite the group’s new look, its nonprofit status, and its commitment to transparency, it’s unknown who is running the nonprofit besides [President Julie Darling]. That’s because the board intends to remain anonymous, saying through a spokesperson the members fear “cyberbullying” from West Loop resident Moshe Tamssot, the creator of another West Loop Facebook group who has long clashed with WLCO leaders.

* Sun-Times | Dexter Reed was shot 13 times in deadly gunfight with Chicago police, autopsy shows: Dexter Reed was shot at least 13 times when he was killed in a gun battle with Chicago police during a traffic stop last month in Humboldt Park, according to a newly released autopsy report. The Civilian Office of Police Accountability, the oversight agency investigating the shooting, has reported that four officers fired nearly 100 rounds at Reed after he shot another officer in the wrist on March 21 in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand Street.

* Tribune | As Marine Leadership Academy’s embattled principal receives a promotion at CPS, parents demand accountability: Embattled Marine Leadership Academy principal Kristin Novy is resigning from her post as the head of the Logan Square school for 7-12 grade students – to take a city-wide position within Chicago Public Schools, the district said in an emailed statement Wednesday. For parents and community members who’ve been calling for Novy’s removal for months, the development can be summed up in a word, Board of Governors member Mercy Lamourt said at a meeting at the school Wednesday: “Disappointing.”

* Block Club | Imani The Piping Plover Has Returned To Montrose Beach: Imani, a male plover, was born with his sibling, Siewka, in summer 2021 and is now nearly 3. He is the son of the famed Monty and Rose, the plovers who stole the city’s hearts and inspired plovermania in Chicago starting in 2019. Imani has returned to Montrose Beach repeatedly, though he has not been joined by a female and has not been able to successfully mate.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Northwestern students set up protest encampment, call out university censorship of pro-Palestinian speech: University President Michael Schill sent a letter to students Thursday morning saying the university had enacted an “interim addendum” to the student code of conduct to prohibit tents. The letter said that protesters had been informed they were in violation of university policies and that the university was removing tents that protesters didn’t take down.

* Shaw Local | Why Kane County is taking more time to decide on new sales tax referendum: Dale Berman, chairman of the finance and budget committee, asked for the item to be removed from the committee’s agenda on Wednesday because he “sensed” members weren’t ready to decide. Berman said he wants an ad hoc committee to review the idea.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Setting a strong foundation: Habitat for Humanity director ready for retirement: After more than a decade of guiding the Habitat for Humanity to build houses and expanding its operations on critical rebuilds, Executive Director of local Habitat for Humanity Colleen Stone is retiring on June 28. […] The legacy Stone leaves will be in good hands after a decade of service to the community, giving life changing homes to first-time homeowners. Since 2013, Stone has had part in the building/renovation of 26 houses, 58 critical home repairs, installed 92 wheelchair ramps and impacted over 200 lives in the community directly.

* WCIA | Decatur brewery wins Gold in 2024 World Beer Cup: On Wednesday, Decatur’s Golden Fox Brewing earned Gold in the world’s most prestigious beer competition, the World Beer Cup. The award was given for one of 110 beer-style categories: American-Style Imperial Stout beer. Golden Fox “topped off” 59 competing entries with their winning beverage, the Furious Fox. The beverage is described as an ale that is black in color and packed with earthy flavors, including fig molasses, oak chocolate, dark fruits and light roast coffee.

* SJ-R | What to know about near $5M road construction project beginning soon in Springfield: The city of Springfield has targeted May 6 as the start of work for converting traffic on a 1.6-mile stretch of Fourth Street from one-way to two-way traffic. That will include the setup of temporary barricades to close one lane of Fourth Street from South Grand Avenue to Dodge Street, said T.J. Heavisides, the city’s chief traffic engineer.

*** National ***

* Fox Chicago | Southwest Airlines will stop flying to these airports as Boeing troubles weigh: As a result, the Texas-based carrier is closing operations at: Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Bellingham International Airport in Washington, Cozumel International Airport in Mexico and Syracuse Hancock International Airport in New York.

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Friends of the Parks responds to Bears’ lakefront stadium proposal

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NBC in December

An advocate group for Chicago parks has responded to reports that the Chicago Bears are surveying the viability of Soldier Field’s South Lot as a potential new stadium site.

The group’s board chair, Bronwyn Nichols, released the following statement Wednesday on behalf of Friends of the Parks:

“The Bears’ viability study about building a new structure on protected lakefront land absolutely should include dealing with a lawsuit. Friends of the Parks most certainly will continue in its historic role of fending off attempts to develop real estate on the people’s lakefront for private interests.” […]

“We had that period where we were focused on Arlington,” Bears CEO/President Kevin Warren told NBC’s Peter King on his podcast. “We have some issues to work on. There’s a possibility there. But one of the things I promised myself and promised the McCaskeys is that I would come in and take a fresh look at what’s the right thing to do.

* Friends of the Parks and the Bears sat down in March. Crain’s

At the meeting, Friends of the Parks continued to advocate for the Bears to instead build a stadium at the former Michael Reese hospital site, but team executives explained their concerns, including that the Reese site is too narrow and could potentially involve pushing residents out of their homes to make way for the stadium. […]

After the meeting, both parties issued statements acknowledging the meeting but did not provide specifics on what was discussed.

“The Chicago Bears met with Friends of the Parks to discuss our mutual dedication to Chicago and our deep love for our city’s parks and lakefront area. We look forward to continuing to work together to strengthen our city,” a Bears spokesman said in a statement.

“Friends of the Parks had the opportunity to sit down with the Chicago Bears and hear their vision for a new stadium. They also had an opportunity to hear our values. We look forward to future meetings and conversations with a broader group of stakeholders,” Friends of the Parks said through a spokesperson.

* Yesterday, Friends of the Parks responded to the Chicago Bears news conference…

The “Chicago Way” was on full display at the Chicago Bears news conference today. Once again, Chicago taxpayers are being told what is good for them. We are told that a new domed stadium on protected lakefront land will make Chicago a great city. We are already a great city—in large part due to our protected lakefront. As is so often the case in Chicago,the powerful and wealthy are demanding that our entire city stop and fast track their plans to expand operations on the people’s lakefront.

Meanwhile, the communities we work with who are addressing immigrant issues, homelessness, school closures, affordable housing, public safety, equitable transportation, and lack of jobs are fighting for parity–including at our Chicago Park District parks.

We are all being asked to trust the process and accept that it will, in fact, be Bear-a-dice. Yet, Chicago has a long history of, closed-door planning and rushed decision-making that does not end well for taxpayers. Just look at The Lincoln Yards, The 78, a Chicago casino, and the infamous parking meter deal. Each of these was going to make Chicago into a “world class” city and be a “win-win-win” for residents.

The questions everyone needs to ask of the Bears organization and our elected officials are:

    1.What is the actual rush? Do rushed processes in Chicago ever end well? Our city takes decades to build a grocery store in a food desert, but we are being asked to jump as high as the Bears tell us to and fast. Yet, Bronzeville, home to the former Ida B. Wells Projects, and other public housing sites that were promised replacement housing after their communities were demolished in the early 2000s, are still empty in 2024.

    2.What about the other parks in Chicago that have waited for equitable investment in their communities? Does a rushed process for an NFL team make more sense than, say, rushing the restoration of a South Side field house? Or expansion of programs to meet demands in North Lawndale? Or restoration of obsolete equipment across the city?

    3. What other sites were vetted by the Bears and the City of Chicago, and what was thespecific decision not to proceed with each of those sites? Violating the public trust doctrine should require a rigorous vetting process for alternatives.

    4.What about Soldier Field? First, its history was all but obliterated with public funds,which we are still paying off, but now it is set for demolition? What message are we sending to our veterans and their families?

    5.How does this plan demonstrate an investment in the people that Mayor Johnson promised to Chicago when he ran for office? How have the people been engaged in dialogue throughout this process? What is the process? Is it transparent? Is it inclusive? It is honest?

    6. Why does it always come down to “we want our playground on the lake, or we will go somewhere else?” Is that fair to the rest of Chicago? It’s business as usual to have wealth and power dictating public policy, but is that a best practice for Chicago to follow?

    7. It is a good business practice to trust and verify. It is sound business practice for the city of Chicago to hire independent contractors to objectively assess the economic impact the Bears have had since their bond deal in the early 2000s, which we are still paying off today. And to evaluate the return on investment if we put billions into this project directly or indirectly. What level of permanent jobs will this plan generate? Are they trade jobs with a track for career development?

    8. Does it seem reasonable that the Chicago Bears should get their wants satisfied immediately while poor neighborhoods suffer from benign neglect?

    9. We have seen no evidence of broad-based community engagement or community-led planning. We look forward to asking our questions about process to the stake-holders who participated with the Bears leadership at today’s news conference.

This is a time for some thoughtful, deliberate and civic engagement. A civil, community-driven conversation should be at the forefront of any action the city of Chicago takes regarding the lakefront.

We did not hear anything at the Bears news conference that could not take place at another Chicago location. We have too many questions to make any decision about the value of these plans. We encourage the Bears and the administration to act with “honor, integrity, transparency, wisdom and to be forward thinking and collaborative” and not repeat past mistakes.

* WTTW

A city ordinance prohibits private development east of DuSable Lake Shore Drive. But, Mayor Johnson told reporters Wednesday at Soldier Field that he is confident a new lakefront stadium would not violate that rule.

“Bringing the open space better access to the museums, providing better traffic flow, in and out, creating jobs, making opportunities for our young people, that of the vision that I have for the city of Chicago is very much tethered to Burnham ,” Johnson said. […]

Johnson was also hit with questions about the potential for lawsuits from Friends of the Parks, who previously sued to help prevent a George Lucas lakefront museum.

“What we’re preparing to do is continue to invest in people,” the mayor said. “We’re prepared to put 23,000, 24,000 people in the city of Chicago to work.”

* Daily Herald

In an email to supporters, Touchdown Arlington leaders wrote that they still believe an Arlington Heights stadium is very much on the table, since there are significant issues facing the proposed development on the lakefront. They include opposition from groups like Friends of the Parks — which successfully fended off filmmaker George Lucas’ museum on the same Soldier Field parking lot site — questions over funding, public ownership of the stadium, and a lack of public interest in contributing taxpayer dollars to the project. […]

Citing “difficulty” with the tax situation in Arlington Heights, Warren said his staff considered up to a dozen other locations for a new stadium, including the former Michael Reese Hospital property in nearby Bronzeville — which was suggested by the parks group. But Warren said that site is narrow and would have to be developed over train lines.

In response to early opposition from state leaders, Warren said he looks forward to having more conversations with them. He still hopes to get approval during the General Assembly’s current session, citing building cost estimates that could rise $150 million to $200 million “every year we wait,” he said.

* More…

    * Crain’s | Parks advocacy group blasts Bears’ stadium pitch: In its written statement, Friends of the Parks cast a skeptical eye on the ambitious architectural renderings touted today by Bears management and an array of City Hall supporters, including Mayor Brandon Johnson, questioning not only the aesthetic impact of the design itself but the economic impact claims as well as the pace at which the Bears and the Johnson administration are moving.

    * Tribune | Chicago Bears’ flashy game plan for lakefront stadium project greeted with questions: Joe Ferguson, president of the fiscal watchdog the Civic Federation, said the presentation raises the need for an independent analysis of the public costs and revenues. “It begs a lot of questions,” he said. One key question is whether the hotel tax could pay the debt, since it has not been enough to pay current stadium construction debt. The other big question is where the city would get money for transportation and lakefront improvements.

    * WTTW | Bears Ask Taxpayers for $2.4B Subsidy to Build $4.75B Domed Stadium Along Lakefront: The new Bears stadium is set to be built on the same site that former Mayor Rahm Emanuel wanted for the Lucas Museum, on what is now a parking lot south of Soldier Field. Star Wars creator George Lucas dropped his plans in 2016 in the face of unrelenting opposition and built the museum in Los Angeles.

  18 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

State lawmakers are scheduled to adjourn in a month and budget discussions are already underway. The Illinois Secretary of State and Attorney General told the Senate Appropriations Committee Wednesday that they are both prioritizing cybersecurity improvements in their budget requests.

Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias is proposing an $825 million budget for Fiscal Year 2025. Giannoulias explained his team spent $75 million to improve his office’s technology last year, but he believes there are still critical needs in cybersecurity. […]

Meanwhile, Attorney General Kwame Raoul hopes to receive an $8.5 million boost in funding for office general operations. Raoul told senators he is also requesting a $500,000 increase in general revenue funds to provide more grants for victims of violent crimes.

The Democrat noted that he is also committed to improving cybersecurity with a $1 million investment for FY25.

* Tribune

A bill now making its way through the state legislature would prohibit health insurance plans from requiring step therapy for prescription medications and procedures, among other reforms.

“With this bill, we’re putting power back in the hands of doctors and patients,” Pritzker said last week at a news conference, shortly after the bill passed the House by 81-25. The bill now moves to the Senate.

Nationwide, at least 36 states, including Illinois, have laws in place requiring health insurers to make exceptions to step therapy rules in certain situations, according to the National Psoriasis Foundation, which tracks step therapy laws. If the bill prohibiting step therapy in Illinois passes, it will apply to health insurance plans regulated by the state (rather than the federal government), plans used by state workers, local government employees and teachers, as well as Medicaid, which is a state and federally funded health insurance program for people with low-incomes and disabilities. About 20% of Illinois residents are on Medicaid, according to KFF, a health police research organization. […]

Dr. Rodney Alford said that, for primary care doctors, step therapy is the “bane of our existence.” Alford has been practicing for 40 years and is now president of the Illinois State Medical Society. […]

Insurance industry representatives, however, say that eliminating step therapy entirely could create patient safety issues. Step therapy requirements give insurers a chance to pump the brakes when a patient is pursuing a treatment or medication that might be risky for them, said Laura Minzer, president of the Illinois Life and Health Insurance Council, which opposes the bill.

* Energy News Network

An Illinois bill that started as a protection for solar-powered doorbells has developed into comprehensive proposed legislation to break down the barriers confronting rural electric cooperative members seeking to install solar.

Many residents and solar developers say the measure is sorely needed, since electric cooperative members often face arbitrary and changing interconnection, compensation and liability policies from the cooperatives.

Illinois HB5315, called a “Solar Bill of Rights” and introduced Feb. 29, would require the state’s more than 50 cooperatives and municipal utilities to allow net metering until a certain threshold of solar penetration is met, and develop “shared policy” on solar that must be approved by the Illinois Commerce Commission.

The bill would prohibit problematic requirements often reported by electric cooperative members, including complicated insurance requirements, lengthy interconnection processes and restrictions on system size, solar leases and power purchase agreements. People with solar would also continue under the same billing terms for 25 years after installing systems.

HB5315 was re-referred to the House Rules Committee this month.

* WTTW

Black and Brown communities in Illinois are up to 200% more likely to live near a distribution warehouse than the overall statewide population, according to a new report from the Environmental Defense Fund on the state’s “warehouse boom,” most of which is clustered in the greater Chicago area. […]

“Studies have shown that exposure to air pollution increases the likelihood of strokes, pulmonary disease and various cancers,” state Rep. Dagmara Avelar (D-Romeoville) said. “It also exacerbates asthma, damages lungs and leads to lower respiratory infections. The toll it takes in human lives cannot be understated … but let’s make this clear: This is not just our health that’s at stake. Air pollution wreaks havoc on the environment around us as well.”

Avelar is co-sponsoring a bill in the General Assembly that would charge the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency with greater oversight of distribution warehouses, many of which are used by mega-retailers like Amazon, Target and Walmart. Among other anti-pollution incentives and transparency measures, the bill calls on the Illinois EPA to count how many trucks use the facilities, monitor emissions and publish annual data on the warehouses — including who owns the facilities and which companies operate in them.

Advocates said that final item is key since many companies lease warehouse space rather than owning and operating their own facilities. Currently, there is no comprehensive statewide information on where warehouses are located, who owns the properties and who uses them.

HB5013 has been re-referred to the House Rules Committee. Here’s the synopsis

Amends the Environmental Protection Act. Establishes the Health and Equity Advisory Council. Provides that the Council shall make initial findings, conclusions, and recommendations regarding environmental justice to the General Assembly by no later than June 30, 2026, and shall make annual reports to the General Assembly no later than June 30 of each year thereafter. Describes the Council’s composition. Provides that the Environmental Protection Agency shall conduct truck counting and facility emissions monitoring. Provides that, no later than 12 months after the effective date of the amendatory Act, the Agency shall adopt rules providing for the facility-by-facility review of regulated facilities, along with a menu of measures to reduce the impact of air pollution. Provides guidelines for a fee and point system. Requires the Agency to disclose air pollution impacts on maternal, infant, and child health; educational attainment; and the economy. Establishes the Insights, Jobs, and Environmental Justice Grant Program. Outlines the purpose and application of the grant program. Establishes the Insights Analysis Program and details its purpose, function, and duties. Requires the Agency to conduct a public participation process in order to maintain transparency of the program’s progress. Requires the Agency to annually publish a list of warehouses and truck-attracting facilities and details the information that must be included on the list. Requires the Agency to conduct annual investigations of a random selection of at least 5% of all stationary and indirect sources in non-overburdened communities. Requires that the results of the investigation be made public and details the metrics to be included in the investigations.

* Rep. Patrick Windhorst

As of Friday’s Third Reading deadline, a total of 324 House bills had been passed. Of that total, 291 were Democrat-sponsored bills and a mere 33 were Republican-sponsored bills (10.2%).

As the House Republican Floor Leader, I am responsible for directing House Floor debate and questioning from the Republican side of the aisle. There are more than 4 million Illinoisans who are represented by House Republicans. Those Illinoisans deserve to have their voice heard and their priorities and values represented in the legislature, regardless of the party of their elected State Representative. […]

HB 5433 is another example. The bill creates a “Prairie Lawns Program” under the Department of Natural Resources. The bill would provide grant funding to individual homeowners to plant native plants in residential lawns to attract and preserve pollinating insects like bees, butterflies, moths, beetles, and flies. As the House Republican Floor Leader, I study each bill that passes, and I have a strong grasp of the important issues facing our state. A “Prairie Lawns Program” that pays people money to plant native grasses in their yards to attract bugs doesn’t belong at the top of Illinois’ legislative ‘To-Do” list.

There were a few legislative victories during last week’s action. House Bill 4241, sponsored by Republican State Representative Amy Elik ensures that school employees who commit acts of sexual conduct or sexual penetration with a student, regardless of the student’s age, are held criminally liable. The legislation protects students who are between 18 and 23 years of age against acts of sexual conduct or sexual abuse by an educator or school staff member and establishes tough penalties for anyone who violates a student in this way.

* Scott Holland

House Bill 4175 is a textbook example of legislation that can be used to advance multiple political narratives.

The House passed the proposal 79-26 April 15; it now sits in the Senate Assignments Committee. If enacted, it would amend the School Code to ban physical punishment at private schools, matching a public school rule on the books for three decades.

One possible spin is this plan represents a solution in search of a problem. That’s one thrust of recent Daily Herald reporting showing most suburban private schools already have their own corporal punishment bans in place.

But primary sponsor state Rep. Margaret Croke, D-Chicago, framed it as proactivity, or a zag countering the zigs of states like Missouri, where new laws expressly allow such punishment. That position fits in line with Gov. JB Pritzker’s broader agenda of defining what kind of state Illinois will be on his watch: if red states go one direction, he likes to double down with the blue marker.

  9 Comments      


Judge rejects state motion to move LaSalle Veterans’ Home COVID deaths lawsuit to Court of Claims

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fox 32

Legal proceedings will move forward in a LaSalle County court in connection with the deaths of three dozen veterans who died at a Veterans Affairs facility during the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than two years since they first filed suit, some of the families tell FOX 32 Chicago they still do not have closure. They also say they feel the State of Illinois has not done enough to resolve the lengthy legal battle and are asking for accountability. […]

There has been little movement in court, but now those lawsuits may finally move forward.

A judge, last month, denied the defendants’ request to move the cases into the Court of Claims.

Just this week – the last of the amended lawsuits were filed in LaSalle County.

“I think that the judge got it right, the motions were denied. The cases are going to remain pending in LaSalle County Court, and if necessary, they will be tried in front of the citizens of that county,” said Mike Bonamarte, managing partner, Levin & Perconti.

* Plaintiffs’ press release…

Mike Bonamarte, managing partner at Levin & Perconti and attorney for 31 families: “After more than two years we are finally ready to move forward with the substantive aspects of this litigation. The State’s attempt to have these cases moved to the Court of Claims has been denied. While frustrated that the State has not made a meaningful attempt to resolve these cases, our clients remain resolute and determined to get justice for the suffering and deaths of their loved ones.”

Lindsay Lamb, granddaughter of deceased veteran Richard Cieski: “Governor Pritzker called our family and left a voicemail shortly after my grandfather passed away. He expressed his condolences and said if we need anything, we should reach out to him. Well Governor, here’s what you can do, you can put this to rest and let us move on. My grandmother is 92 and the loss of my grandfather has taken such a toll on her. She is a shadow of herself. It would be nice if she could get closure and justice before she passes.”

Mary Beth Schomas, daughter of deceased veteran Bernard Schomas: “I still feel a lot of anger for what happened to my father and the other veterans. The state’s attempt to delay these cases and not allow them to be heard before a jury feels so disrespectful. The state admitted it was at fault, now it has to be accountable to the veterans who are gone and to their families. We don’t want this negligence to be buried. We want to make sure something like this never happens again.”

John Lunquist, son of deceased veteran Richard Lunquist: “The delays are very frustrating and disrespectful because there is no closure for the families. It seems like the state has put this on the backburner for some time. We are determined to see this through and get justice for our loved ones. We are grateful the Judge ruled that these cases can be heard in state court before a jury so people all across Illinois can hear the evidence.”

  2 Comments      


Learn something new every day

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I had no idea this problem existed until I received this press release…

In an effort to help Illinois residents reconnect with more of their missing money and to right a historical wrong against the Black community and other people of color, Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs and Illinois Congressman Danny K. Davis today urged the U.S. Treasury to make it easier for states to facilitate the return of mature U.S. Savings Bonds.

Davis (D-IL-07) and Frerichs said federal efforts to allow individual states to treat mature, unpaid U.S. Savings Bonds as missing money do not go far enough because proposed rules allowing states access to information about bond owners and beneficiaries would severely limit how states could use that information to find the owners of these funds.

It is estimated the federal government holds more than $30 billion in mature, unpaid savings bonds that date back to at least the 1940s. The amount includes more than $1 billion owed to Illinois residents.

Further, in a recent letter to U.S. Treasury Secretary, Janet Yellen, bipartisan Members of Congress identified resolving the backlog of unclaimed savings bonds as a matter of addressing historic injustices. “Due to state-enforced racial segregation and subsequent exclusion from traditional banking systems in the early-to-mid 20th Century, African American families and other underserved groups invested in savings bonds at higher rates. Given this fact, and that most of these matured bonds at Treasury are from the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, it would follow that African Americans represent a high percentage of unclaimed bond holders.”

As Illinois State Treasurer, Frerichs is the state’s unclaimed property administrator, a program more commonly known as missing money or I-Cash. The Illinois State Treasurer’s Office has returned more than $1.9 billion during Frerichs’ time in office, including more than $11 million to the extended family of a Chicago man, the largest individual return in the country. Further, the office’s expertise often is sought by other states when strengthening unclaimed property laws and improving operational efficiencies.

“In Illinois, we have a proven record in fighting for taxpayers and returning missing money to our residents,” Frerichs said. “We are asking for the Treasury Department to allow us to use bond information to do our job.”

“I am proud to work with Treasurer Frerichs to help return billions of dollars in missing money to Illinoisans and Americans across the country,” Davis said. “Given the tremendous success of state treasurers in returning unclaimed property to owners and beneficiaries, the Treasury Department must do more to work with states to get unclaimed savings bonds to the rightful owners.”

For generations, U.S. savings bonds have been a staple for family gifts commemorating birthdays, holidays and graduations. It effectively is a loan to the federal government. An individual purchases the bond in exchange for a fixed rate of interest over a fixed period of time. When that time expires, the savings bond ceases to earn interest. If unpaid, the federal government benefits from the initial loan as well as the unpaid interest. Values start at $25 and can increase to as much as $10,000.

Bonds that are surrendered to the state treasury, such as those found in an abandoned safe deposit box, are eligible to be reunited with their owner, and Frerichs’ office strives to do so. However, bonds not surrendered to the state that the federal government knows exists are not afforded the same protection. Unlike the state of Illinois, the federal government is not required to try to find the bond’s owner.

In 2022, Congress passed a provision in the Consolidated Appropriations Act for 2023 that requires the U.S. Treasury to provide information to states on savings bonds with owner or beneficiary addresses in the state for states to use to locate bond owners. However, Treasury issued proposed rules to implement this law in October 2023 that appeared very limited in terms of how states could make use of the bond information.

Frerichs submitted comments on the proposed rule and is calling on Treasury to revise its final rule in a way that would allow states to better utilize bond information to reunite Illinois residents with their missing bonds.

Congressman Davis has championed legislation in a prior Congress, sponsored by a bipartisan group of nine Representatives (H.R.5269) and twenty Senators (S.2417), that would have effectively allowed for the transfer of unclaimed savings bonds to states, allowing states to use all available state unclaimed property resources to try to find the owners of the bonds.

At Issue:

    • Most of these $30 billion in bonds are physical pieces of paper that are lost, stolen, forgotten or destroyed.

    • Many of these bonds were issued more than 70 years ago, were for small amounts, and matured after 30-40 years. The chances of owners or heirs seeking to redeem these bonds from the U.S. Treasury is extremely low and federal officials are not required to try to find them.

    • The U.S. Treasury is the sole source of names, addresses and serial numbers needed to claim the bond proceeds.

    • The problem only will get worse because the federal government eliminated paper bonds in 2010. Since January 2011 the bonds are electronic, so there is nothing to secure in a safe deposit box.

    • The National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators estimates that $1 billion in unredeemed lost or missing bonds belong to Illinois residents.

    • Estimated value of matured, unpaid U.S. savings bonds in nearby states: Indiana, $478 million; Kentucky, $319 million; Missouri, $438 million; Iowa, $226 million; Wisconsin $415 million; and Michigan, $773 million.

That’s fascinating.

  6 Comments      


Protect Illinois Hospitality – Vote No On House Bill 5345

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

“The hospitality industry in Illinois is a strong economic driver to the state’s economy. We have some of the best breweries, restaurants, and hotels in the world and we should be doing what we can to help these businesses continue to prosper and grow. However, policy changes are being discussed that would eliminate the tip credit, effectively hurting the heart and soul of what makes those businesses special – the people. That is not the path that we should take as it will impact our small independent operators in communities all over the state the most. We hope Illinois legislators will reject these plans and vote no on any measure that will eliminate the tip credit on hospitality workers.”

Lou Sandoval
President & CEO
Illinois Chamber of Commerce

Tell your state legislators to VOTE NO on House Bill 5345 and Protect Illinois Hospitality

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Need something to read? Try these Illinois-related books

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* SIU Press

Pulling off the Sheets tells the previously obscured history of the Second Ku Klux Klan which formed in deep southern Illinois in the early 1920s. Through meticulous research into both public and private records, Darrel Dexter and John A. Beadles recount the Klan’s mythical origins, reemergence, and swift disappearance. This important historical account sets out to expose the lasting impact of the Klan on race relations today.

The ideation of the Klan as a savior of the white race and protector of white womanhood was perpetuated by books, plays, and local news sources of the time. The very real but misplaced fear of Black violence on whites created an environment in which the Second Klan thrived, and recruitment ran rampant in communities such as the Protestant church. Events like the murder of Daisy Wilson intensified the climate of racial segregation and white supremacy in the region, and despite attempts at bringing justice to the perpetrators, most failed. The Second Klan’s presence may have been short-lived, but the violence and fear it inflicted continues to linger.

This disturbing historical account challenges readers to “pull back the sheet” and confront the darkest corners of their past. Dexter and Beadles emphasize the importance of acknowledging the damage that white supremacy and racism cause and how we can move toward healing.

* Block Club Chicago

After a year of locking herself in her office at night, [Arionne Nettles] emerged with her city tale, “We Are The Culture: Black Chicago’s Influence on Everything” (Lawrence Hill Books). It hits shelves Tuesday.

Nettles’ debut is an ode to the city that raised her, and a history lesson in the culture that molded her and the world, she said.

She explores moments that shaped pop culture worldwide, not just in Chicago, from the “Oprah Winfrey Show” to the founding of “Soul Train” and Drill music. There are sections dedicated to Chicago’s Black Media Powerhouse, fashion and haircare. […]

“As a journalist, you’re always told not to put yourself in the story. But I was connected to a lot of these things, and I think it’s important for people to know why I might have landed on certain themes,” Nettles said. “I’m just a Chicago girl, and I think my experiences I talk about in my essays are very familiar to so many other Chicagoans I know.”

* Hoptown Chronicle

Kimberly France, the author of “Black Settlements in Southern Illinois,” will discuss her research for the book during a program from 2 to 3 p.m. Saturday, April 27, at the Hopkinsville-Christian County Public Library. The public is invited.

France — a native of Carbondale, Illinois, and a graduate of Howard University and Southern Illinois University — said in a March interview with WPSD television that she wants to encourage others to research Black history in their own communities. […]

The book, from Arcadia Publishing, was released in January.

“Never before has there been a published record that identifies the Black settlements in each of the lower sixteen counties of Southern Illinois,” states a description from Arcadia. “Few are aware of this legacy, which dates back to the early founding of the Illinois territory, but these communities are an essential part of the region’s heritage. Author Kimberly France identifies these historic institutions by the pillars that anchored them. She describes how Black settlement began, how it ended and the untold history that lies between.”

* Greg Pratt sat down with WGN earlier this month to discuss his book “The City Is Up for Grabs.” Click here to check it out.

Do you have any recommendations?

  14 Comments      


Illinois Hospitals Are Driving Economic Activity Across Illinois: $117.7B Annually And 445K Jobs

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Over 200 hospitals and nearly 40 health systems: Illinois’ hospital community sparks economic activity and growth throughout the state totaling $117.7 billion every year. Such significant economic impact comes from a diverse group of healthcare providers—community and safety net hospitals, teaching hospitals and academic medical centers, rural and critical access hospitals, and specialty hospitals. Yet each one contributes to their community as economic anchors and large employers providing good-paying jobs.

Consider the key findings in a new report on the essential role of hospitals on the economy:

    • One in 10 jobs in Illinois is in healthcare;
    • Illinois hospitals directly employ 190,000 Illinoisans; and
    • Every $1 in hospital spending leads to another $1.40 in spending.

Driving economic growth is just one of the many roles hospitals have. Most associated with providing lifesaving care, hospitals and health systems also promote community health and well-being; foster neighborhood revitalization; enhance public health and safety through community partnerships; and advance health equity initiatives to ensure optimal health for all residents.

Illinois hospitals and health systems support working families by generating a combined 445,000 jobs among hospitals and other sectors due to hospital spending. Learn more about the hospital community’s economic impact.

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Today’s quotables

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* House Speaker Chris Welch yesterday when asked about the Chicago Bears stadium plan

Welch: Let me say this. I’m going to say to you publicly what I said to Kevin Warren privately last week: If we were to put this issue on the board for a vote right now, it would fail and it would fail miserably. There is no environment for something like this today.

Now in Springfield, environments change. Will that environment change within the next 30 days? I think that’s highly unlikely. You know, I think there’s a whole lot of Chicago Bears fans in the General Assembly, but our priorities are pretty clear. And we, starting next week, have one month to pass another balanced budget to, continue the positive outlook that Moody’s talked about yesterday with regard to our financial health. And I can tell you, that’s something that we have front and center as a top priority for us right now. Taking care of working families across this state is the top priority for us right now.

Q: [Does he envision any scenario where this could happen?]

Welch: Again, environments do change in Springfield. I mean, peoples’ minds can be convinced, there’s gonna be a lot of conversations. But as the governor noted, there’s three teams in Chicago. You have the Bears, the White Sox and the Chicago Red Stars, the women’s soccer team. They’re all wanting a share of this pot. And I think you have to seriously have those conversations as well. You know, in sports, equity is very important. Equity is at the center of everything we do in the House. And so I don’t think anyone can be left out of that conversation. And so, I think what’s happening today is really the kickoff, no pun intended, of some conversations to be had.

Discuss.

…Adding… Mayor Brandon Johnson talked to NBC Sports Chicago after yesterday’s presser

How does Johnson respond to the lack of alignment between the city of Chicago and the state of Illinois?

“Well, I run the city of Chicago,” Johnson said. “I mean, that’s my responsibility to people in Chicago voted for me to run the city. And what the city has made very clear is that the public use and the public benefits to transform the lakefront. That has always been my goal. It’s not about just keeping the bears in the city of Chicago, which we have a commitment from the Bears to remain in Chicago, but it’s also about the transformation that exists there.

“Now, as far as the next steps, of course, to engage the speaker of the House, the Senate president to engage the governor, to engage the people of Chicago as a whole. That is also part of the process. But we needed to make sure that the Bears organization and my administration were on the same page. And when it comes to investing in this moment, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs, we’re talking about $3.5 billion of income in our workers.”

Full video is here.

  48 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  11 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Bears have designs on the lakefront, as Mayor Johnson plays the wrong position of cheerleader-in-chief. Lee Bey

    Team officials acted like city-paid planners and transit experts as they outlined the additional roadways and infrastructure needs that would have to happen to get the project off the ground. […]

    But the public and elected officials, not the Bears, should be the ones deciding what remedies are needed.

    Meanwhile, the Bears said they will pay $2 billion to design and construct the publicly-owned stadium — with the help of the NFL and the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority.

    There is a catch though: The team also said it would require an additional $1.5 billion in public infrastructure and transit to make all those pretty renderings fully come to life.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will be at the University of Illinois Chicago at 2 pm to announce new action plan addressing homelessness. Click here to watch.

* Druker, Yadgir & Haupt…

The communications team that served Jesse White over the entirety of his record 24-year, 6-term tenure as Illinois Secretary of State has launched a media, advocacy, and public policy consulting firm: Druker, Yadgir & Haupt (DYH).

Longtime friends and colleagues, Dave Druker, Bob Yadgir and Henry Haupt are united in the overarching goal of DYH: Working with good people to accomplish good things. In addition to securing paid clients, the firm is committed to “giving back” by providing pro bono services to worthy causes.

The firm will specialize in media relations, crisis communications, internal and external communication strategies, advocacy, and public policy development, implementation, and communication. Yadgir and Haupt are founding partners; Druker will serve as a senior adviser.

“For 24 years and counting, I have relied upon Bob, Dave and Henry to help develop my public policy, communication and media relations strategy,” said former Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White. “I’m proud of the work we did at the Secretary of State’s office and can objectively say the role Bob, Dave and Henry played was instrumental in securing and promoting many of the achievements over my 24-year tenure. I congratulate them on this exciting new venture and know they will be successful. I look forward to helping them in any way I can.”

“Dave, Henry, and I had a front-row seat watching one of the state’s most impactful elected officials work, and we learned from him. Jesse White believes that truth and integrity form the foundation of trust, and as a result, the people of Illinois trusted Jesse White and his administration. We will bring this same commitment to all our clients,” said Yadgir. “And as the saying goes, by forming Druker, Yadgir and Haupt, we are getting the ‘band back together.’ I am so proud to be flanked by these two, amazingly talented individuals.”

“We bring different skills that balance and complement one another and have forged a working relationship that is time-tested and invaluable,” said Haupt. “We are committed to serving our clients with integrity and a relentless, laser-focused work ethic to deliver desired results.”

“Serving as Press Secretary for Jesse White was the opportunity of a lifetime,” Druker said. “I’m thrilled to continue to work with the team that for 24 years successfully helped strategize, develop and promote Jesse White’s agenda to serve Illinoisans with honesty and integrity.”

For more information about DYH and its mission, visit dyandh.com or call Bob Yadgir at 312-907-4792 or Henry Haupt at 217-503-5585.

*** Isabel’s top pick ***

* The Guardian | Mega-warehouses heap more pollution on hard-hit Illinois neighborhoods: Two million people in Illinois live within a half-mile of large warehouses, which are disproportionately located in low-income neighborhoods and communities of color. A new report by the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) identified at least 2,400 leased warehouses covering 632m sq ft – a 33% rise from the previous decade.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois Secretary of State, Attorney General prioritize cybersecurity in budget requests: Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias is proposing an $825 million budget for Fiscal Year 2025. Giannoulias explained his team spent $75 million to improve his office’s technology last year, but he believes there are still critical needs in cybersecurity. Giannoulias stressed that the Secretary of State’s IT systems had not been updated in decades and the only employees who understand the technology are set to retire.

* 21st Show | State Senator Celina Villanueva speaks on budget priorities, migrant support, and latino voting trends: Our conversation will begin with a discussion on the state budget allocation and the legislative priorities of the Latino Caucus for this session. We will then shift our focus to the topic of migrants, discussing the current influx and Senator Villanueva’s stance on the funding allocated for them.

* WCIA | Senator Scott M. Bennett Memorial Highway signs to be hung this week: IDOT will hang the signs up along portions of I-74 between Route 45 and the Indiana state line Thursday, according to State Senator Paul Faraci (D-Champaign). Faraci, a friend of Bennett and his successor in the Illinois State Senate, announced he is holding a dedication ceremony for the new signs Thursday morning at 10 a.m. in Oakwood at the village hall. He passed the legislation for the signs last year. Family and friends of Bennett will also be in attendance.

* First Listen | Governor Pritzker not making any guarantees on a new Logan Correctional Center: Governor Pritzker not making any guarantees on a new Logan Correctional Center, a major bond rating agency has upgraded Illinois’ credit rating, And an Illinois State Police squad car hit on I-55 near Litchfield over the weekend.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Rainbow PUSH Coalition Searching for New Leader After CEO Steps Down Just Months After Taking the Job: Rainbow PUSH Coalition said in a statement the search for an interim president is underway and that Yusef Jackson, the group’s COO and the son of Jackson Sr., will provide day-to-day oversight in the meantime.

* Daily Herald | Southwest flights from O’Hare to dip this summer amid Boeing fallout: As the company waits for more planes from Boeing, Southwest Airlines is scaling back O’Hare International Airport flights by about 40% this summer. “We are revising our summer schedule due to delays related to receiving new aircraft deliveries from Boeing,” Southwest spokesman Dan Landson said Wednesday.

* Sun-Times | Art Institute argues it legally owns watercolor: ‘No evidence’ it was ‘ever physically seized or “looted” by Nazis.’: The Art Institute of Chicago contends that decades of investigation and litigation have concluded that a watercolor it now holds was never stolen by the Nazis from a cabaret performer who later died in a concentration camp — but rather was legally sold by the man’s heirs. In a detailed court filing Tuesday, the Art Institute argued that New York prosecutors’ allegations that they were holding artwork stolen during the Holocaust are groundless.

* Sun-Times | Chicago rat hole in Roscoe Village removed by city: “[The Chicago Department of Transportation] is removing and replacing sections of damaged sidewalk on Roscoe Street between Wolcott and Damen in coordination with the Alderman’s office,” CDOT said in a statement. The nouveau tourist attraction was preserved, but its future home is yet to be determined, CDOT said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘We are at a standstill’: DuPage County Board and County Clerk at odds over clerk’s authority: DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek continues to refuse to answer questions about no-bid contracts awarded by her office, potentially setting the stage for a legal fight with the county board. Kaczmarek has come under scrutiny by county board members after an April 11 memo from county Auditor Bill White said two invoices, totaling more than $250,000, from the clerk’s office stemmed from no-bid contracts. On Wednesday, White said three other unpaid bills, totaling more than $135,000, also were the result of no-bid contracts. All of the bills were related to work performed for the April primary.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton and Mayor Tiffany Henyard hit with another lawsuit from business owner: A federal lawsuit filed against Dolton and Mayor Tiffany Henyard alleges a business license for a barber shop was denied due to “arbitrary and capricious” actions by the mayor. It’s the latest in a string of lawsuits filed in state and federal court against the village and Henyard, many of which allege retaliatory actions by the mayor and her administration aimed at those who do not support her politically or financially. Tyrone Isom Jr. ultimately did not receive a license to open his barber shop and said he had to sell the property, after putting in thousands of dollars to remodel the building, according to his lawsuit.

* Tribune | Northwestern University hazing lawsuits on new track after claims school attorneys mishandled confidential information: Broadly speaking, the lawsuits from former players appeared to be on their way to a settlement, and the Fitzgerald lawsuit was headed for trial next year. But now there appears to be little hope of resolving the ex-players’ suits via mediation, attorneys said. That process “has gotten us not only nowhere but backward,” attorney Lance Northcutt , who represents multiple former players, said in court Tuesday.

* NBC Chicago | Suburban Chicago mall permanently closed over the weekend: Stratford Square Mall in Bloomingdale, the once bustling mall of the 90s, closed for good on Sunday, nearly one month after plans to shutter the mall were first announced. As of Monday, the mall’s website has been removed. Opened in 1981, the mall was previously anchored by Sears, Marshall Fields, and Carson Pirie Scott. It faced many challenges, like other malls across the country trying to keep up with the changing retail landscape, the surge of online shopping and the economy.

*** Sports ***

* Tribune | Angel Reese isn’t taking anything for granted as a WNBA rookie, but her goals for the Chicago Sky are set: ‘I want to dominate’: Throughout her introductory news conference Wednesday, Reese kept emphasizing that she can’t get ahead of herself. She knows the harsh reality of making a roster in the WNBA — and she’s prepared to fight for her spot on the Sky this season. “I don’t want to go into the league thinking that I’m automatically on the team because I’m not,” Reese said. “Anybody can get cut any given day. We have amazing vets on our team and I know they’re gonna push me every day to get even better. There’s no given spot. I don’t take this moment for granted (like) I’m just gonna have it given to me. I need to go out there and earn my spot.”

* Tribune | OK, then what? After likely drafting Caleb Williams at No. 1, here are 11 players the Chicago Bears might target at No. 9.: General manager Ryan Poles is excited about the flexibility he likely will have with the team’s second top-10 pick, while coach Matt Eberflus said at last month’s owners meetings he expects the Bears to land a “blue player” at No. 9, the color-coded label that indicates the highest level of prospect. That means the Bears anticipate adding an immediate impact starter.

*** National ****

* Bloomberg | Allstate will insure California homes again — under one condition: Allstate confirmed in a statement to Bloomberg News that it seeks to increase its market share in California, but rates must “fully reflect the cost of providing insurance to consumers” before agreeing to lift its current restrictions. The new rules will allow for rate increases that the company says will ensure they can pay customers’ claims in the event of a fire, according to the statement.

* Crain’s | Why Realtor settlement might not change commissions much — or even at all: To be clear, Realtor commissions are unlikely to go away. Traditionally, broker compensation was advertised on multiple listing sites visible only to Realtors, but that practice will be prohibited. Under the settlement agreement announced in March, listing agents will no longer be permitted to advertise the commission to buyers’ agents, a practice that change advocates have said led representatives toward homes with higher commissions, a breach of fiduciary duty for Realtors working on behalf of buyers.

  28 Comments      


Live coverage

Thursday, Apr 25, 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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Daily Southtown

Prairie State College leadership announced Tuesday it will no longer plan events at Victory Apostolic Church in Matteson after the Daily Southtown published concerns from students and community members over the church’s opinions of same-sex marriage.

“Prairie State College is committed to finding a new venue that respects and honors the rights of all individuals without any religious affiliation for all future events,” a statement from the president’s office reads.

Victory Apostolic Church does not recognize marriage that is not between a man and a woman, and believes the Bible teaches that homosexuality is a sin and does not “condone the homosexual lifestyle,” according to its website.

These comments led Rebecca Fassbender, a graduating student from Park Forest and the president of the school’s Pride Club, to file a complaint with Prairie State College’s Department of Equity and Inclusion.

* South Side Weekly

When mayor Brandon Johnson announced in February that Chicago would stop using the gunshot-detection system known as ShotSpotter by year’s end, local activists were elated. […]

But ending the contract may not be enough to remove the company’s more than 2,500 sensors from neighborhoods on the city’s South and West Sides, where they’re disproportionately located. Internal emails reviewed by South Side Weekly and WIRED suggest ShotSpotter keeps its sensors online and, in some instances, provides gunshot detection alerts to police departments in cities where its contracts have expired or been canceled. The emails raise new questions about whether the sensors in Chicago will be turned off and removed, regardless of Johnson’s decision. […]

An organizer who’s been active in the push to cancel ShotSpotter’s contract in Chicago wasn’t surprised the company has continued to work with police behind the scenes in cities where contracts have ended.

“I think it’s exactly what cops and corporations do,” says Nathan Palmer, an organizer with the Stop ShotSpotter Campaign and Black Youth Project 100. “Especially when we’re thinking about Chicago, it would benefit ShotSpotter to keep the mics up and working so that they can also throw lobbying money at whoever’s gonna oppose mayor Brandon Johnson in the next election.”

* Sun-Times

Maybe you’ve noticed some little cicada-like creatures on the ground while gardening or after flipping over a log lately. […]

“They are preparing to emerge,” said Negin Almassi, a resource management training specialist with the Cook County Forest Preserve District. “I have not seen any reports, nor have I myself seen any adults yet. The soil is not warm enough yet for that.

“It’s a fun wait-and-see game right now to see when the firsts start to emerge, so they’re getting ready, and they generally do that about three weeks before they start coming out.”

The periodical cicadas should start to appear once the soil reaches 64 degrees, which is expected by late May.

*** Statewide ****

* WICS | Senator urges residents to ‘hog’ all the bacon on new Illinois Bacon Day celebration: On May 1st, the Illinois Pork Producers Association will gather at the Illinois State Capitol to celebrate the commemoration of Senate Joint Resolution 50, sponsored by Senator Tom Bennett (R-53), designating May 1st as Illinois Bacon Day. Illinois pig farmers, IPPA staff, and FFA state officers will be handing out BLT sandwiches to legislators at the Illinois State Capital to discuss the role that pork production plays in Illinois.

* Center Square | Measure to provide freed prisoners with naloxone advancing in Springfield: The Illinois House recently passed House Bill 5527 that would provide naloxone to people leaving incarceration if they were behind bars for drug-related charges or have a substance abuse problem. The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, said studies have shown overdose is the leading cause of death for people recently released from incarceration. He said funds from Illinois’ share of the nationwide opioid settlement will cover the cost.

* Center Square | Illinois federal judges rescind ‘discriminatory’ policies after complaint: The rules that gave newer, Black female attorneys more time in oral arguments were discriminatory and illegal, he said. “Oral argument is not something the court has to give somebody, but the standing orders of the judges said that they will give oral argument to litigants that have either a female or minority lawyer, pretty much illegal,” said Shestokas.

*** Chicago ****

* Tribune | Lawyers for indicted Ald. Carrie Austin say she’s medically unfit for trial, plans to retire in March: In a motion Friday afternoon, Austin’s attorney, Thomas Anthony Durkin, asked that her case be severed from Wilson’s and that she be declared medically unfit for trial due to chronic and worsening heart failure, as well as a breathing condition “that makes her feel like she is drowning when she lays down, so she can only sleep in a recliner.” Durkin wrote that the request was made “out of an abundance of concern that Ms. Austin simply will not make it through the stress of trial or the difficult pretrial preparation.”

* Tribune | April Perry nominated for federal judge, nixing bid to be Chicago’s first female U.S. attorney: Perry is being nominated to fill a seat being vacated by U.S. District Judge Nancy Maldonaldo, who has been nominated to the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago, the White House announced Wednesday. Meanwhile, the search for Lausch’s replacement will likely have to begin anew and almost certainly won’t be decided until after the 2024 presidential election in November.

* Sun-Times | Family of Dexter Reed files federal civil rights lawsuit over his killing by Chicago police: The lawsuit accuses Chicago police of promoting “brutally violent, militarized policing tactics,” and argues that the five officers who stopped Reed “created an environment that directly resulted in his death.” Reed, 26, was driving in the 3800 block of West Ferdinand Street in Humboldt Park on March 21 when tactical officers in an unmarked car stopped his GMC Terrain. Video footage released by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability shows the officers drawing their guns as they yelled for Reed to lower his window and open his door.

* Crain’s | Foxtrot, Dom’s facing lawsuit one day after shuttering stores: The proposed class-action lawsuit was filed this morning in federal court in Chicago. It alleges that Foxtrot, Dom’s and parent company Outfox Hospitality violated the federal and state Worker Adjustment & Retraining Notification acts. The WARN acts, as they are commonly called, require companies to give employees 60 days’ notice of a mass layoff or plant closure, and provide compensation during that notice period.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ****

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan’s mayor says invitation to Bears was worth a shot: ‘We have to explore every opportunity for economic development’: As the Chicago Bears embark on a plan to build a new stadium near their current Soldier Field home, Waukegan Mayor Ann Taylor said she has no regrets about having invited the team to relocate 50 miles north to her city’s lakefront. Taylor said she knew when she invited the Bears to explore putting a stadium on undeveloped lakefront property in June it was a longshot, but the team responded and she also heard from other developers who wanted to be part of any such project.

* ABC Chicago | Des Plaines’ St. Zachary School closing after more than 60 years: St. Zachary School in Des Plaines reportedly had only 20 students enrolled for next year, and the school will be closing at the end of this year. A spokesperson from the Office of Catholic Schools called the news “heartbreaking,” saying the decision “only came after thoughtful exploration of multiple options to keep the school sustainable.”

* Daily Herald | Judge: Accused Highland Park shooter gets some phone privileges restored: Rossetti ordered Robert Crimo III be allowed to speak by phone with his parents and siblings. The defendant’s phone privileges were suspended last year after authorities say he violated jail rules by using another inmate’s PIN number to call his mother, after his phone privileges were suspended for threatening corrections officers.

* Daily Herald | With new campaign contributions in tow, Elk Grove mayor announces reelection bid: Already Elk Grove Village’s longest-serving mayor, Craig Johnson announced Tuesday he will seek an unprecedented eighth term in next year’s election. At the same time, longtime Trustee Chris Prochno — who has been Johnson’s right hand on the village board as long as he’s been mayor — announced she won’t seek another term, wrapping up a 28-year tenure a year from now.

*** Downstate ***

* Crain’s | Tech entrepreneur Tom Siebel gives U of I another $50M to fund data science: Tom Siebel, one of the most famous tech entrepreneurs to graduate from the University of Illinois, is doubling down on his support of the school’s computer science program as it gears up to handle the next big thing: artificial intelligence. Siebel, 71, is giving another $50 million to the school, bringing his total donations to $110 million, the university says. The U of I is naming its computer science department the Siebel School of Computing & Data Science.

*** Sports ****

* Tribune | 2024 NFL draft: Everything you need to know, including when the Chicago Bears pick and how you can watch: It’s all happening in downtown Detroit, where top prospects will walk the red carpet at Campus Martius Park and Hart Plaza before Round 1 — and the traditional booing of Commissioner Roger Goodell — starts at 7 p.m. Thursday CDT. Rounds 2 and 3 will happen Friday beginning at 6 p.m., with Rounds 4-7 kicking off at noon Saturday.

*** National ****

* Business Insider | Threads just dethroned X, according to this key metric: Meta’s newest app, launched last summer on the back of Instagram’s tech, has seen daily active users grow consistently since November, according to usage estimates from Apptopia. Threads is a direct rival of X, formerly Twitter, which has struggled to maintain its user base since Elon Musk acquired the platform about 18 months ago.

* Missouri Independent | Bill ending Medicaid reimbursements to Planned Parenthood clears Missouri Senate: A bill that would make Planned Parenthood ineligible to receive reimbursements from the state’s Medicaid program passed out of the Missouri Senate early Wednesday morning after an 11-hour Democratic filibuster. The bill now returns to the House, where it can be sent to Gov. Mike Parson to sign into law.

* AP | Airlines will now be required to give automatic cash refunds for canceled and delayed flights: The Transportation Department said airlines will be required to provide automatic cash refunds within a few days for canceled flights and “significant” delays. Under current regulations, airlines decide how long a delay must last before triggering refunds. The administration is removing that wiggle room by defining a significant delay as lasting at least three hours for domestic flights and six hours for international ones.

  8 Comments      


Pritzker says he ‘remains skeptical’ about Bears proposal: ‘I’m not sure that this is among the highest priorities for taxpayers’ (Updated)

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker was asked today about his thoughts on the Bears’ domed stadium proposal

Well, let me start out by saying I’m a Bears fan.

But you know, before I became governor, I was a businessman, and I’ve tried to be a good steward of taxpayer dollars throughout my term in office. And as you know, I’ve been very active in attracting businesses to Illinois and helping companies in Illinois expand. So that’s something that I do with, again, the role of protector of the Illinois taxpayers dollars in mind at all times.

But I remain skeptical about this proposal. And I wonder whether it’s a good deal for the taxpayers. It’s early and I have not even heard the announcement today, but obviously read your reporting and others. But it’s very important to me that with all the state needs to accomplish, that, you know, we think about what the priorities are of the state. You know, here we stand talking about the Health Care Protection Act. Later today I’m going to be talking more about birth equity, and helping to build birth centers in areas of the state where people don’t have options for their for giving birth, that are outside of hospitals. And that requires capital. There are a lot of priorities the state has and I’m not sure that this is among the highest priorities for taxpayers.

Q: …I know you’ve also said you’re open to listening to proposals from sports teams. What would it take to put the Bears over the finish line with this? Given, you know, are there any lessons to be learned from the last 20-30 years and state governments familiarity with this topic?

Pritzker: Well, maybe one lesson that can be learned just from the last few years is stadium deals and taxpayers putting money forward for stadium deals, not particularly popular around the country.

Take note that the winner of the Super Bowls this year, the team went out to try to get a stadium financed by the public and it was rejected by the public in a place where the Super Bowl champions reside. And I think this is, you know, a recognition that these are private businesses, that the owners of these private businesses need to put a lot more forward in order to get, you know, have their dreams fulfilled and not just rely upon the taxpayers of Illinois to make that happen for them.

Having said that, I think all of us want success for the state. We want more commerce, we want more jobs, we want our teams to be successful. So you know we share all of that in common, but we’ve got to use our dollars wisely.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

You can watch the team’s press conference today on the Bears’ homepage.

…Adding… Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren was introduced as the man who shepherded Minnesota Vikings’ new stadium project. From a recent local newspaper story

U.S. Bank Stadium, the home of the Minnesota Vikings, will require some $280 million in maintenance to remain in top condition over the next decade, including nearly $48 million next year, according to an architectural assessment released Friday.

…Adding… Mayor Johnson is going all-in with effusive praise, and claimed: “This project will result in no new taxes on the residents of Chicago.” Except, nobody has yet said how that new capital spending will be paid for.

…Adding… The mayor just said the new venue would host several events. What he doesn’t say is that the plan allows the Bears to keep the revenues from those events.

…Adding… Is it weird that they’re doing a splashy news media briefing before briefing the governor?

…Adding… This is the capital plan. The Bears claim they’ve worked “closely with the state” on funding sources, but the governor’s office says they haven’t talked to them about it…

That’s $1.5 billion in capital longterm.

Also note the fine print at the bottom. “Financial forecasts subject to change.”

…Adding… $15 million for the state ain’t much. Just sayin…

…Adding… Click here for the full press release. Renderings are here. Economic impact study is here.

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker just pointed out during another press conference that three professional sports teams are hoping to build new stadiums, but the Bears plan uses all the available bonding authority for this project, leaving nothing for the other two.

…Adding… Isabel just asked how the capital plan will be funded. “There are dollars that we believe exist at the state level, at the potentially federal level, [and] at the city level,” CEO Williams said. So, he didn’t answer the question.

Isabel asked a follow-up about specific funding from the state, but Williams would only say “We do look forward to having some detailed conversations with the state here in the near future.”

…Adding… Senate President Harmon react…

Senate President Don Harmon (D-Oak Park) issued the following statement regarding the Chicago Bears’ stadium proposal unveiled Wednesday:

“At first glance, more than $2 billion in private funding is better than zero and a more credible opening offer. But there’s an obvious, substantial gap remaining, and I echo the governor’s skepticism.”

…Adding… House Speaker Chris Welch…

The Speaker is happy to continue engaging in conversations regarding the future of our Chicago teams, and is encouraged by the private investments being proposed. In the current legislative environment, with many important budget pressures, there hasn’t been a strong appetite for these projects. Environments can and do often change in Springfield, but the Speaker’s priority is to stay focused on passing a balanced budget and continuing the positive outlook we saw announced by Moody’s yesterday.

Welch also told reporters today that if he put this plan on the big board today it would fail miserably.

…Adding… Asked if he thought the plan could run this spring or if they would wait until the veto session, Warren said…

I mean, we feel that the time is now. I mean, every year that we wait, it’s 150 to $200 million of increased costs. That ultimately will, we’ll have to figure out, but we don’t think that’s prudent The time is now. So our expectation is in this session. And the reason why we’re staging that now and not even in a fall veto session is because even if we’re approved in a veto session, we wouldn’t be able to get into the ground because of the weather, we would push it back a year. If we’re approved in May, then that will allow us to be able to start construction to put people to work next summer. and that would allow us 36 months later to open up our building in 2028. So this truly is one of those adages that time is money, and we do need to figure figure this out. And that’s why we’ve put forward such a robust program and plan.

…Adding… Mayor Johnson was asked: “You have a host of progressive priorities in the capital such as more education and migrant funding. How are you going to make a progressive case for a publicly funded sports stadium?” The response…

Well, because of the public benefit, you know. I mean, again, the best way to grow our economy really requires partnerships with public and private entities. That’s exactly what this does. We’re investing in people. You know, look, these these pictures are miraculous. We’re talking about thousands of lives that will benefit from this investment. You know, the fact that we have not just a storied history with this franchise, but with the McCaskey family, with Kevin Warren’s leadership with the entire Bears organization, my administration. We know that the sooner we can put shovels in the ground and put people to work, that is our surest way to secure a better stronger, safer Chicago and it benefits the entire region. We’re talking about $8 billion of economic vibrancy as a result of this investment. The time is now for that. Think about how long people have been waiting for investments like this.

…Adding… A top Pritzker administration official says the Bears “have no risk under this scenario. The risk is 100% on the state.”

…Adding… Asked about the White Sox plan, Warren admitted the Bears’ plan “doesn’t include any money for what they want. But it doesn’t mean that money does not exist for what they want. So that’s why we’re continuing conversations.” Um. OK. Magic money?

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker went from saying he remained skeptical this morning, to saying he is “highly skeptical of the proposal that’s been made” this afternoon. He continued: “I believe strongly that this is not a high priority for legislators and certainly not for me, when I compare it to all the other things when we’re talking about health care here, even when you talk about capital for health care as they’re asking for capital for a stadium.”

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker said he could eventually support a plan, but this plan “can be a lot better for taxpayers than what they put forward.”

…Adding… Speaker Welch told reporters today what he said he told the Bears privately last week: “If we were to put this issue on the board for a vote right now, it would fail and it would fail miserably. There’s no environment for something like this today. Now in Springfield environments change. Will that environment change within the next 30 days? I think that’s highly unlikely.”

…Adding… More from Welch today…

Again, environments do change in Springfield. I mean, people’s minds can be convinced, there’s gonna be a lot of conversations. But as the governor noted, there’s three teams in Chicago. You have the Bears, the White Sox and, and the Chicago Red Stars, the women’s soccer team. They’re all wanting a share of this pot. And I think you have to seriously have those conversations as well. You know, in sports, equity is very important. Equity is at the center of everything we do in the House and so I don’t think anyone can be left out of that conversation. And so I think what’s happening today is really the kickoff, no pun intended.

…Adding… Sen. Peters…

State Senator Robert Peters (D-Chicago) released the following statement in response to the Chicago Bears’ proposal for a new domed lakefront stadium:

“I haven’t had the opportunity to thoroughly examine every aspect of the proposal just yet. I do want to give the Chicago Bears credit on putting forth private dollars. However, I remain skeptical using public dollars to fund private sports teams.

“Illinoisans are facing many challenges, and my job first and foremost is to take on those challenges and improve the lives of everyday Illinoisans. I’ll always keep the door open for further conversations, especially as I look more into the details of this proposal.

“Chicago is a world-class city and we must do all we can to maintain a strong tourism and entertainment culture but I just want to make sure I do that responsibly.”

And Sen. Lewis…

Officials with the Chicago Bears unveiled a new stadium plan on Wednesday that has Illinois taxpayers on the hook for half of the cost of the multi-billion-dollar project. In response to the new stadium details and cost, State Senator Seth Lewis (R-Bartlett) issued the following statement:

“For the past several months, Illinoisans have heard stadium proposals from the White Sox and Chicago Bears, but what has been missing has been statements of accountability for taxpayers and the fans. As Minority Spokesperson for the Appropriations-Public Safety & Infrastructure Committee, the Sports Finance Authority will be coming before us with their Fiscal Year 2025 budget request. During this hearing, I will be very interested to hear if they are seriously considering this proposal, and if so, how they are planning to protect taxpayers and ensure a positive return on their investment. Additionally, and perhaps more importantly, I will be interested to learn if they have the ability to hold the team’s ownership accountable for producing results that will satisfy the team’s fanbase. These issues could include protecting seat license-holders, ticket prices, and perhaps even producing a playoff-contention team.”

  103 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bloomberg

A new bill expected to be passed by the Illinois legislature would likely defang the contentious Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) by drastically changing the risk associated with litigating an alleged violation for both parties.

The proposed amendments (S.B. 2979) would lower the potential damages per privacy violation and possibly dissuade individuals from bringing suits altogether.

The law’s intent is to protect the public from misuse of their sensitive personal information. It imposes harsh fines on entities who fail to safeguard the biometrics they collect. By including a private right of action, BIPA gives the public the right to hold an entity that was careless with their biometric information directly responsible.

The bill would, among other things, limit damages to one recovery per plaintiff of $1,000 or $5,000 for a finding of negligence—no matter how many violations occurred. Previously, plaintiffs could recover this amount for each violation.

If passed, employee plaintiffs may consider these damages too small to outweigh the cost, time, and potential workplace fallout of litigation. And employers might simply find it cheaper to break the law than to change their operations or technologies.

* Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, Illinois Retail Merchants Association, Illinois Restaurant Association and more…

The United States has one of the safest, most efficient, and affordable food systems in the world, in no small part due to the commitment of and close coordination between industry and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Federal regulatory standards and programs – which offer an opportunity for stakeholder input through the rulemaking process and are grounded in science - provide consistency for industry as we produce innovative products while meeting consumers’ expectations for a safe food supply.

Collectively, our organizations represent America’s food, beverage, ingredient, agricultural, and retail industries. Our members source, manufacture, distribute, and sell safe and wholesome products across the United States.

The safety and quality of what we make and sell to our customers is of the highest importance, and we share a common commitment to a strong, unified federal food safety system. Unfortunately, SB2637 would supplant FDA’s authority to regulate the safety of the American food supply by prohibiting an entity from manufacturing, selling, delivering, distributing, holding, or offering for sale products that contain certain specified ingredients in the state of Illinois.

With regulatory oversight of approximately 80% of the nation’s food supply, FDA prioritizes its review of food and color additives through the rigorous evaluation and application of the entire body of scientific evidence to make safety determinations. Those reviews are continuous and ongoing; as recently as March 4, 2024, FDA updated its list of substances currently under the agency’s review to provide more insight on the status of post-market assessments regarding these ingredients. At present, all substances identified in HB 2637 are under active, current review by FDA. It is imperative that FDA be permitted to conclude its review process before action is taken to remove these ingredients from the marketplace.

Legislation such as SB2637 shifts food safety decisions away from qualified scientists and regulatory experts and creates a state-by-state patchwork of inconsistent requirements that will increase costs, create confusion around food safety, and erode consumer trust. By creating two different regulatory standards for the food industry - one enforced by Illinois and one by the federal government - this legislation would inject additional costs into the food supply chain at a time when we should be doing everything we can to bring prices down for consumers.

The organizations above therefore express our opposition to SB2637. We urge you to allow FDA to perform its responsibilities as mandated by Congress to oversee the safety of our nation’s food supply. It is critical that we maintain a national system for determining the safety of food ingredients that is grounded in science and adheres to the process FDA has in place for the appropriate and ongoing review of ingredients.

* WAND

The Illinois House could soon pass a plan to help law enforcement and retailers keep electronic cigarettes away from young people. Sponsors told WAND News that Illinois must hold bad actors accountable for bringing illegal and potentially dangerous vaping products to retail stores. […]

There are roughly 300 vaping products approved by the FDA, but state lawmakers and advocates have seen a significant rise in unregulated products hitting the shelves. […]

“What type of products are they selling,” asked Rep. Bob Rita (D-Blue Island). “You know? When you start looking at these different products, they’re geared towards younger kids. As you dug deeper into it, a lot of these products are illegal that are being sold.” […]

House Bill 5069 could require vaping manufacturers to provide product certifications to retail stores to ensure the vaping products meet safety standards set by the state and federal government.

* WCIA

If you’ve ever booked a hotel room or bought concert tickets, you might have been surprised to find the amount you had to pay at the end was more than you expected because of those additional charges tacked on at checkout.

These are considered so-called “junk fees” – labeled as processing or service fees you don’t see until it’s time to pay. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, these fees cost an average family of four $3,200 a year. […]

A bill in the Capitol would ban those fees. Instead, consumers would pay the advertised price for the item or service. The proposal passed out of the House Thursday and is now in the Senate for further consideration. […]

There have also been efforts at the federal level for this. In October, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced a proposed rule change to ban businesses from using junk fees.

“But a lot of times at the federal level, it takes a long time,” Anna Aurilio, the senior campaigns director at the Economic Security Project, said. “And that’s why we were really happy to be there with representatives from four different states that are working on state level junk fee legislation because we think, number one, states know what the experiences of their own citizens [are], they’re much closer, and number two, they can act much more quickly.”

* SJ-R

House Bill 5057 introduced by Rep. Sue Scherer, D-Decatur, is a bill that would slightly change the process to become a teacher. It would allow the State Board of education to create a content test for those seeking to teach first through sixth grade.

The test would include content on foundational teaching skills and methods that would be appropriate for students first through sixth grade.

The test will have elements that cover areas such as biliteracy, bilingualism, oral language development and foundational literacy skills. The bill would also allow people to retake parts of the test where they previously scored low on, but they will not be allowed to teach until they pass the full test. […]

The bill passed through the House last week and is now headed to the Senate for further consideration.

* Robert Mensch

As the principal of an elementary school that has been providing free breakfasts to students during school hours for six years, I see firsthand the difference a morning meal makes. Kids who eat breakfast perform better on tests, take fewer trips to the nurse and attend more school days per year. What I witness every day at my school reinforces what years of research tells us — providing kids with breakfast helps reduce their risk of developing health issues and increases their chances of academic success. They have better brain function, memory and attention and score 17.5% higher on standardized tests than kids who skip the morning meal. […]

I believe that most schools want to offer breakfast after the bell. However, many can’t afford the start-up costs needed to get the program off the ground. A new bill proposed in the state Senate authorizes the Illinois State Board of Education to provide some schools with a modest one-time grant of $7,500 to purchase equipment such as kiosks, portable coolers and storage, cited by schools as one of the main obstacles to making the switch from cafeteria meals.

The bill also makes school breakfasts and lunches free for working families living just above the poverty line. The reduced price of a daily breakfast and lunch can add up fast, creating continued hardship for families. Our state’s children living in households earning barely above the poverty line still struggle with having to pay for reduced-price school meals, often incurring school meal debt. Committing to covering this cost would not only provide peace of mind for these families but would also ensure all low-income children have access to the nutrition they need to thrive.

These are the main reasons why I wholeheartedly support the bill. I urge members of the Illinois General Assembly to support and approve funding in the budget to help schools start or expand flexible breakfast programs so that all children have access to the morning nutrition they need to thrive. Currently, Illinois ranks 41st in the country when it comes to school breakfast participation. We can and must do better.

SB2209 has not made it out of Senate Appropriations.

* Rep. Harry Benton…

State Rep. Harry Benton, D-Plainfield, is working to increase workforce development opportunities for people with autism by passing legislation to expand workforce training programs for people on the spectrum.

“Our disability accommodations and services need to include folks with autism,” said Benton. “People with autism are fully capable of doing important work when given opportunities, which we all need to learn and develop. Making sure our training programs for differently abled people including those with autism will be beneficial to both them and our state.”

Benton’s House Bill 5256 will allow state agencies to hire individuals with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) through existing trainee programs for people with disabilities. These trainee programs exist throughout state agencies to give people with disabilities work experience. The bill received unanimous support in the house, and now moves to the Senate.

* Rep. Laura Faver Dias…

State Rep. Laura Faver Dias, D-Grayslake, is continuing to fight for families with her measure to guarantee extra days of leave for the parents of children in the neonatal intensive care unit, which recently passed the House with strong bipartisan support.

“Denying parents of seriously sick children the ability to spend time with their kids is unthinkable, but it has been the reality to far too many,” Faver Dias. “Some parents have had to continue to work through their child’s serious illness for fear of losing the source of the income paying for lifesaving medical care. This measure allows for well-deserved time off for these parents to be by their children’s bedside, something I think anyone with children can understand is vital.”

House Bill 5294 is a parents’ rights measure Faver Dias passed with the support of Planned Parenthood of Illinois, and Illinois Education Association and AFSCME Council 31. It gives parents unpaid time off to attend a child who is a patient in a neonatal intensive care unit in addition to leave provided under the Family Medical Leave Act. Employers with 15 or fewer employees are exempted from the 10-day requirement, while employers with 51 or more employees must provide 20 days.

  4 Comments      


It sure looks like lawmakers were right to be worried

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW last week

An increased moratorium on closing Chicago Public Schools – including charters – for an additional two years easily passed the state House Thursday night over the objections of the Chicago Teachers Union, which described the measure as “racist,” and despite protestations from Mayor Brandon Johnson’s appointees to the city’s school board.

The Chicago Board of Education would also temporarily lose the ability to change admissions standards for selective enrollment schools and to reduce selective enrollment schools’ budgets out of proportion with cuts made to other CPS schools – restrictions intended to protect selective enrollment schools, but which critics say is a de-facto undercut of neighborhood schools. […]

“The district has no plans to close selective enrollment schools, as the board and district have continually repeated. Let me repeat, we are not closing selective enrollment schools,” Board President Jianan Shi told a House committee last week]. “The small number of selective enrollment schools in the district are well-enrolled, well-supported, well-resourced and we’re going to continue to support those schools.”

That bill passed 92-8.

* Well, Sarah Karp and Nader Issa crunched the numbers and found that CPS - which also appears to be playing a game of “Hide the ball” - is indeed cutting budgets for selective enrollment and magnet schools

Parents at selective enrollment and magnet schools were already on edge before the budget season. Amid a bus driver shortage, transportation to these schools, which had been provided for decades, was eliminated last year so buses could take disabled and unhoused students as required by law. Then, the school board in December passed a resolution that called for a shift away from school choice and toward neighborhood schools. […]

A WBEZ analysis using the new funding formula appears to back up the contention that these budgets have been cut. Two-thirds of the city’s 32 magnet and selective enrollment elementary schools, such as LaSalle, did not receive enough staff positions to keep all current teachers. Schools will receive an additional pot of flexible funding that officials say should be used to make up the difference. But those funds need to cover all sorts of expenses, from recess monitoring to teacher assistants — and some LSC members say they’re inadequate.

Almost all selective enrollment and magnet high schools also lack positions to cover all current teachers, but they’re getting three times the flexible funding as selective and magnet elementary schools, making it more likely they can afford their current staffs. […]

While CPS officials dispute the concerns and trends identified by schools and the data, they refuse to release school-based budgets until they’re approved by LSCs in late May or early June. Until last spring, CPS regularly released budgets to the media in April.

  29 Comments      


Flashback: Candidate Johnson opposed Bears stadium subsidies (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mayor Johnson will attend the Bears’ press conference today unveiling plans for its new domed stadium. From a media advisory…

Mayor Brandon Johnson will attend the Lakeshore Redevelopment Press Conference.

Location: Soldier Field, 1410 S. Museum Campus Dr.
Time: 12:00 p.m.

* From a mayoral runoff debate in early March of 2023

Mary Ann Ahern: The Chicago Bears. Mayor Lightfoot wants to keep them by renovating Soldier Field. Do you agree? And if so, how do you pay for it?

Paul Vallas: I don’t support the billion-dollar subsidies for sports teams and I certainly don’t support putting billions of dollars into Soldier Field.

Brandon Johnson: Of course, I want the Bears to say in the city of Chicago. You know, I grew up with the Super Bowl Shuffle. We need another one in Chicago. And so I’m prepared and willing to sit down and and work with the ownership. And let’s see what we can figure out. I’m asking the ownership of the Chicago Bears just to hold tight, a better, stronger, safer, Chicago as possible. And give the new administration, I’m going to bring an opportunity to make the case. But of course, not subsidizing but finding creative ways in which we can make sure that the Super Bowl Shuffle lives on and my son gets to see a Super Bowl in Chicago.

…Adding… From the Chicago Public Schools’ 2024 capital plan document

The CPS facility portfolio includes 522 campuses and over 800 buildings. Our average facility is over 83 years old, and the total CPS critical facility need is over $3 billion.

And yet the mayor is supporting hundreds of millions of dollars in capital spending to build a domed stadium for a wealthy NFL franchise on Lake Michigan.

…Adding… SDG supports using state capital money for sports stadiums? Unreal

  48 Comments      


$117.7B Economic Impact: More Than Healthcare Providers, Hospitals Are Economic Engines

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois hospitals and health systems are essential to economic growth across the state. A new report illustrates the hospital community’s role as strong economic contributors who fuel $117.7 billion in economic activity every year, resulting in good-paying jobs and more vibrant communities.

While hospitals are first and foremost providers of life-saving care, their role stretches farther. They are innovators; community partners in addressing challenges of food insecurity, homelessness, health disparities and more; and major employers serving as the hub of economic activity in their communities.

Illinois hospitals and health systems create 445,000 direct and indirect jobs, and they support working families through over $50 billion in direct and indirect payroll annually. What’s more:

    • One in 10 jobs in Illinois is in healthcare;
    • Illinois hospitals directly employ 190,000 Illinoisans; and
    • Every $1 in hospital spending leads to another $1.40 in spending.

As larger purchasers of supplies and services, Illinois hospitals and health systems spend nearly $62 billion to have on hand for every patient the medical equipment and supplies needed to care for patients in any circumstance. In addition, the hospital community spends over $5.5 billion in capital projects yearly that benefit patients, and provide good jobs to Illinois workers. Learn more about the hospital community’s economic impact.

  Comments Off      


Open thread

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Bears want taxpayers to help pay for their new stadium, experts say city unlikely to get revenue. ABC Chicago

According to the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, since 2020 taxpayers have paid about $750 million toward construction costs of eight new stadiums or arenas across the four major sports leagues.

“That is usually the selling point, we can have development we can have whatsoever. The evidence is overwhelming: these make very poor investments,” said Allen Sanderson, University of Chicago economics professor.

Sanderson said cities rarely get a return on their investments, especially with football stadiums because there are so few games a year and ticket holders tend to be local.

“The Chicago Marathon probably generates more revenue than most these facilities because two-thirds of the runners are not from Chicago,” he said.

* Related stories…

Subscribers know more.

Governor Pritzker will be at Silver Cross Hospital Conference Center in New Lenox at 10 am and Loyola University’s Stritch School of Medicine at 12:15 pm promoting the Healthcare Protection Act. Click here to watch.

Bear’s Lakeshore Redevelopment press conference at noon in Soldier Field. You can watch here. Mayor Brandon Johnson will attend the news conference.

* Press release…

On Tuesday, several labor unions representing workers in Cook County announced their endorsement of Monica Gordon for Cook County Clerk. The group supports the Cook County Democratic Central Committee to slate Gordon for both the vacancy in office and to the ballot for November, citing her sterling track record working for the Illinois Black Caucus, as a Trustee at Prairie State Community College and most recently as Cook County Commissioner. The unions supporting Gordon include SEIU Local 73, Operating Engineers Local 150, Operating Engineers Local 399 and LIUNA.

“We believe Monica will bring election integrity, protection of vital records, and safeguard property deeds for the people of Cook County,” said Dian Palmer, President of SEIU Local 73. “Cook County Clerk is a critical role in the functioning of our county government, and Monica Gordon is uniquely suited to that role. We look forward to working with her as County Clerk as we continue to improve the public services our members provide in the Clerk’s office.”

Monica Gordon has years of experience managing budgets and complex projects and programs similar to those seen at the County Clerk’s office. As Executive Director of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus, Monica oversaw the disbursement of over $100,000 in college scholarships to deserving African American students. She served as a Trustee at Prairie State Community College and worked for at Chicago State University improving the lives of hundreds of students. She is the Bloom Township Committeeman and has served on numerous boards for local not-for-profit organizations over the past two decades. As County Commissioner, she has focused her efforts on bringing services to local residents, including healthcare and social services.

“Monica has decades of experience improving the lives of local residents, whether that be students working towards a better life or the residents of her district in Cook County,” said Jim Sweeney, President of Operating Engineers Local 150. “The County Clerk’s office impacts hundreds of people’s lives each and every day. From helping students explore their college options one-on-one and managing multi-million dollar budgets to picking up the phone and personally helping constituents, Monica has the right experience to continue Karen Yarbrough’s legacy.”

The Cook County Democratic Central Committee is scheduled to meet on Friday, April 26, 2024 to fill the vacancy left by the passing of the late Karen Yarbrough.

* From Sean Tenner…

Hi Rich,

Sean here - am a longtime friend of Che “Rhymefest” Smith and helping out on the Chicago School Board campaign; just wanted to let you know we now have the endorsements of:

    * Congresswoman Robin Kelly
    * Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias
    * State Representative Kam Buckner
    * Cook County Commissioner Stanley Moore
    * Cook County Commissioner Monica Gordon
    * Alderman Andre Vasquez

*** Isabel’s top picks ***

* Illinois Answers | For Many Illinoisans in Flood-Prone Areas, Buyouts Are the Only Way Out: In Illinois, there are two buyout programs: one run by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and funded through state legislative allocation, and another run by the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and funded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Buyouts offer people in distress significant help, but they often come with long wait times and bureaucratic complications. And they often don’t prevent people from moving into other flood-prone areas, experts who evaluate these programs told the Illinois Answers Project.

* ABC Chicago | Recycle plastic bags? New information about where they really end up: ABC News and the I-Team first glued trackers to plastic bags in May 2023 and dropped them off at Target and Walmart stores with plastic bag recycling. Out of the 46 trackers deployed by ABC News and ABC stations, a majority of the bags ended up at landfills or incinerators.

* Sun-Times Editorial Board | Time for a leadership change at CTA: Show Dorval Carter the exit door: Everyone agrees, it seems, except Mayor Brandon Johnson, who so far has resisted the idea of replacing Carter despite the overwhelming hue and cry from aldermen, CTA riders, transit advocates and now the governor to do so. But with the CTA, Metra and Pace together facing a $730 million shortfall once federal COVID-19 funding runs out in 2026, a Carter-run CTA is a potential liability to the city’s efforts to seek state funding to shore up the agency’s finances.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Top general for Illinois National Guard retiring after joining military nearly 40 years ago: On May 4, Neely, the adjutant general for Illinois and commander of the Illinois National Guard, will be giving the flag back, marking his retirement from the military after nearly 40 years of service. “It’s the symbology of one leader giving the flag up and one leader taking the flag,” Neely said, referring to his successor, Maj. Gen. Rodney Boyd, the assistant adjutant general. “One…of my priorities was to ensure the continuity of leadership.

* WTVO | Pritzker touts Healthcare Protection Act as ‘lifesaving’ bill in Rockford visit: Pritzker was at OSF St. Anthony Medical Center on Tuesday to explain what the bill, which has been passed in the House, could mean for patients, doctors, and insurance companies. “With this bill, we’re putting power back in the hands of doctors and patients,” Pritzer said.

* Illinois Farmer today | Farmland values increase at slower rate with tighter profits: While farmland remains a stable long-term investment with a long track record of growing in value, tight profit margins could mean a few years of stepping back in land values, Purdue University ag economist Michael Langemeier says. “Farmers are just more cautious for obvious reasons when they start seeing signs the margins are tighter,” he says.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | Most of Chicago’s mass shootings involve young victims: More than half – 53% – of mass shootings in Chicago involved at least one victim younger than 20. Mass shootings have occurred in 56 of the city’s 77 community areas, but nearly three-fourths of them have happened in just 16 communities on the city’s South and West sides.

* Tribune | Police Department rules Officer Luis Huesca died in line of duty: The designation was announced Tuesday, on what would have been Huesca’s 31st birthday, and it entitles his family to survivor’s death benefits. In a message to all CPD members, Superintendent Larry Snelling said he’s recently spent time with those closest to Huesca.

* WBEZ | CPS’s selective and magnet schools appear to take a hit under new equity funding formula: So with no clear sources of new revenue, it appears CPS is redistributing existing funding from some schools to others, based on a WBEZ/Sun-Times analysis and interviews with school leaders. The district has so far refused to publicly release the budgets for broader analysis. Jen Johnson, the deputy mayor for education, told WBEZ that the mayor’s office instructed the district to protect programming at all schools, even as it looks to prioritize high-poverty schools.

* Tribune | Chicago-based Dutch Farms makes bid to buy bankrupt Oberweis Dairy: Brian Boomsma, owner of Chicago-based Dutch Farms, made a stalking horse bid for nearly all of the operating assets of the company, with plans to “operate and grow the business” when it emerges from bankruptcy, Adam Kraber, president of Oberweis, said in a news release.

* Tribune | Water quality has improved dramatically in the Chicago River. But how safe is swimming?: “A lot of people think about the Chicago River as being super gross, super polluted,” Elsa Anderson, an assistant professor of environmental science at Northwestern University, said. “And at one point in time, that was true. But with the Clean Water Act in the early 1970s, it’s not.” Anderson said scientists have been able to measure the river’s improvement by looking at the vast increase in fish and plant species. The river has become a thriving wetland, according to Anderson.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Shaw Local | McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally calls his surprise decision to step down ‘agonizing’: He also said that there is someone who is going to take his place, although he declined to identify whom. Who would replace him on the November ballot will also be a decision involving the county’s Republican Party. :

* Daily Southtown | Will County Board Republicans sue county executive over 143rd Street project veto: Bertino-Tarrant inadvertently signed the resolution that stopped the widening Feb. 16, realized her mistake and then vetoed it the next day. The County Board did not have enough votes to override the veto. The lawsuit, filed April 18 by attorneys Steven Laduzinsky, John Partelow and Jeff Tomczak, said there is no authority in Illinois law that allows a county executive to sign and approve a resolution and then subsequently veto it. The lawsuit cites the Illinois Counties Code that says when the executive approved the resolution on Feb. 16 it became law.

* AP | College students, inmates and a nun: Unique book club meets at Cook County Jail: For college senior Nana Ampofo, an unconventional book club inside one of the nation’s largest jails has transformed her career ambitions. Each week, the 22-year-old drives a van of her DePaul University peers to Cook County Jail to discuss books with inmates and recently, the well-known activist Sister Helen Prejean. Ampofo comes prepared with thought-provoking questions to launch the conversations at the Chicago jail about the most recent books they’ve been reading together.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | State senator weighs in on Champaign School Board ‘chaos’: It’s not very often a state senator gets involved with a school board’s inner workings, but Rose had been reading about frustrations within the district. He decided to reach out to the State Board of Education’s Superintendent Tony Sanders about a month ago. “You maybe just pick up the phone and suggest mediation for this board, maybe organize some facilitators to come down and have a sit-down, and try to put Humpty-Dumpty back together again,” Rose said.

*** Sports ***

* Sun-Times | Ken ‘Hawk’ Harrelson on White Sox: ‘It’s been ugly, and I feel bad for our fans’: No one lived and breathed the White Sox more than Ken Harrelson, the retired Hall of Fame broadcaster. There is no bigger fan. Maybe it’s a good thing he and his wife, Aris, had been at their Florida home until they returned to Granger, Indiana, two days ago. Until watching the 7-0 loss to the Twins on Monday, Harrelson had followed his beloved online, reading box scores and reports and communicating via other channels as his South Side nine crumbled to an embarrassing 3-19 start.

* Daily Herald | Illinois PGA tournament season to feature team play: Team play will make its debut on May 13 at the first stroke play event at Schaumburg Golf Club. This is real team play, not best ball or foursome competitions. With nine six-player teams and a seven-tournament schedule, it more closely resembles what the LIV Golf League started doing three years ago at its tournaments.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Bird flu virus found in grocery milk as officials say supply still safe: Viral fragments of bird flu have been identified in samples of milk taken from grocery store shelves in the United States, a finding that does not necessarily suggest a threat to human health but indicates the avian flu virus is more widespread among dairy herds than previously thought, according to two public health officials and a public health expert who was briefed on the issue.

* WaPo Op Ed | You don’t want immigrants? Then tell grandma she can never retire: To put a finer point on it, there’s so much demand for workers now that even the most marginal American workers, such as teenagers and people with disabilities, are doing unusually well in the labor market. Ironically, some parts of the country complaining loudest about immigration today are the same places trying to loosen limits on child labor because their worker shortages are so acute.

* AP | Cicadas are so noisy in a South Carolina county that residents are calling the police: Some people have even flagged down deputies to ask what the noise is all about, Newberry County Sheriff Lee Foster said. The nosiest cicadas were moving around the county of about 38,000 people, about 40 miles (65 kilometers) northwest of Columbia, prompting calls from different locations as Tuesday wore on, Foster said.

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