Senate President Don Harmon said the bill provides for an “immediate ban on manufacture, delivery, sale, import or purchase of assault weapons, assault weapon attachments, 50 caliber rifles and 50 caliber cartridges. It also bans rapid fire devices, those attachments to weapons that can dramatically increase the rate of fire of a semi automatic weapons. Ban the manufacture, delivery sale or purchase or possession of large capacity magazines. For long guns, it’s a 10 round magazine. For handguns, it’s 15. We do grandfather possession of both the firearms and the magazines for the firearms.” On that point, FOID cardholders would submit the make, model and serial number of their weapon. They’re also expanding the duration of the firearms restraining order from six months to one year.
…Adding… Sen. Darren Bailey just said he and “millions” of others “will not comply” if the bill becomes law. Republican Sen. Neil Anderson claimed that the 2nd Amendment authorized citizens to possess “weapons of war.”
…Adding… “‘The right of the people to keep and bear arms’ is intended to produce a secure state,” Senate President Harmon said, quoting the US Constitution in closing. “We do not have a secure state.” “We’ll see you in court.”
…Adding… The bill passed and heads to the House…
…Adding… Press release…
Gov. JB Pritzker, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and Senate President Don Harmon issued a joint statement in support of a sweeping assault weapons ban. The Senate passed the legislation Monday and the House is expected to put final approval on it Tuesday to send to the governor’s desk.
Joint statement from the three leaders:
“After continued negotiations between the leaders, stakeholders and advocates, we have reached a deal on one of the strongest assault weapons bans in the country.
“Gun violence is an epidemic that is plaguing every corner of this state and the people of Illinois are demanding substantive action. With this legislation we are delivering on the promises Democrats have made and, together, we are making Illinois’ gun laws a model for the nation.”
Key components of HB5471 include:
· Immediately ends the sale, delivery and purchase of assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. The legislation includes a comprehensive, detailed and updated list of assault weapons subject to the ban. High capacity magazines are also prohibited.
· Strengthens assault weapons ban by allowing Illinois State Police to update as needed.
· Those already owning guns on the assault weapons list would have to provide information to the Illinois State Police.
· Immediately bans the possession and use of rapid-fire devices that increase the firing rate of semiautomatic weapons.
· Expedites the implementation of universal background checks.
· Does not change the FOID card age.
…Adding… Press release…
Everytown for Gun Safety, Giffords, and Brady released statements applauding Illinois Senate lawmakers for passing the Protect Illinois Communities Act, a critical gun violence prevention legislative package. The bill now returns to the Illinois House for concurrence.
“Today, Illinois lawmakers listened to voters and agreed on a package of common-sense policies to get assault weapons and high-capacity magazines off the streets, help keep guns away from people in crisis, and hold illegal gun traffickers accountable for taking advantage of weak laws in neighboring states,” said John Fienblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety. “ This victory was made possible by Illinois Moms Demand Action volunteers, who were a constant presence in Springfield. Everytown is grateful to Representative Morgan, Speaker Welch, President Harmon, Governor Pritzker, and their colleagues for honoring the victims and survivors of gun violence, from Highland Park to the South Side of Chicago, with lifesaving laws.”
“Since July 4th of 2022, thousands of activists across Illinois have been asking their legislative leaders to produce strong, effective gun violence prevention legislation. Today, leaders like Representative Bob Morgan, Speaker Welch, President Harmon, and Governor Pritzker came together to introduce and pass a strong gun safety bill that will get assault weapons off the streets,” said Peter Ambler, executive director of Giffords. “Giffords thanks all of those who worked hard to make this day happen, including groups like GPAC and Protect Illinois Communities.”
“Brady applauds the passage of this life-saving legislation that will better protect communities across Illinois. Put simply, weapons of war have no place in civilian hands and in our communities at large,” said Kris Brown, president of Brady. “This assault weapons ban will add to Illinois’ record of strong gun laws and help prevent tragedies like Highland Park and countless others from occurring again. We have the power to prevent these uniquely American tragedies, and a ban on weapons of war and the magazines that further increase their lethality is a critical step towards that future.”
This omnibus package was introduced during the Illinois veto session in December. It includes legislation that would prohibit assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, prohibit rapid-fire devices that dramatically increase the rate of fire of semi-automatic firearms, facilitate better implementation and efficacy of Illinois’s Firearm Restraining Order (FRO) law, and address illegal gun trafficking in the state. The package introduction came following a year that saw at least 23 mass shootings across the country, including one in Highland Park, where seven people were shot and killed and an additional 48 people were wounded at a July Fourth parade by a shooter using a high capacity assault weapon.
Policy experts and volunteers from Everytown, Moms Demand Action and Students Demand Action, Giffords, and Brady have been at the forefront of advocating for the Protect Illinois Communities Act, attending and testifying at hearings, meeting with legislators, and engaging in public discourse explaining the need for these life-saving measures.
In an average year, 1,505 people die and 2,715 people are wounded by guns in Illinois. Gun violence costs Illinois $18.6 billion each year, of which $625.5 million is paid by taxpayers.
* Press release…
Today, Protect Illinois Communities Chair and President Becky Carroll released the following statement on the Senate’s passage of the Protect Illinois Communities Act:
This is a historic day for our state, as the Protect Illinois Communities Act stands to become one of the strongest gun safety bills in the nation. Soon, survivors and their families throughout Illinois can breathe a little easier knowing that this bill will help save lives. From Chicago to East St. Louis to Highland Park, our communities deserve to live free from the devastating trauma of gun violence. Today, we are taking another step toward making that a reality.
This moment would not be possible without the countless individuals and organizations who have worked tirelessly, not only in recent months, but for years, to move comprehensive gun reform forward here in Illinois. We appreciate the unrelenting dedication of Brady United, Everytown for Gun Safety, Giffords Courage, Gun Violence Prevention PAC, and many others who lent their time, energy, and resources to getting this done.
We applaud the legislature and leadership of both chambers including Speaker Chris Welch and Representative Bob Morgan, the initial bill sponsor of the Protect Illinois Communities Act, and Senate President Don Harmon for their continued collaboration that sets the stage to pass a model assault weapons ban supported by the three leading national gun safety groups.
We also want to thank Governor JB Pritzker for his courageous, vocal leadership and commitment to signing a strong bill.
* Morgan…
Following is a statement from State Rep. Bob Morgan in response to the Illinois Senate’s passage this evening of SB 5471, a sweeping gun reform bill that includes an assault weapons ban, on Monday evening:
“The Senate stepped up and took bold action to save lives in Illinois tonight, and I applaud Senate President Don Harmon and his Democratic caucus for their leadership. Tomorrow, we have the chance to pass this once and for all, and send it to the Governor’s desk for signature. I urge my fellow Representatives to vote yes.”
This has been a really great year. I got married. I became a dog lover. I got re-elected. A lot of my friends got re-elected. We passed the Workers’ Rights Amendment. And, a couple weeks after the election, my wife let me know that this year, we will be growing our family.
* Things have settled down a little with the Senate’s gun bill. We’ve already discussed how House Speaker Chris Welch opposes the Senate’s version of the reproductive and gender-affirming care legislation…
As Speaker of the House I will stand firm in our values and principles as Democrats. I will fight for the needs of Illinoisans and I will not accept a watered-down version of legislation that falls unacceptably short of the comprehensive solutions that the people of this state deserve.
* Others are chiming in today as well…
If you live in IL, contact your state senator today and demand they support an inclusive SB 1534 (state sanctuary legislation) by including gender-affirming care alongside reproductive health care!
Any legislation, like IL HB 4664 Senate Amendment 1 that excludes gender-affirming care is unacceptable in excluding protections for the trans community. (3of3)
We have shared our very strong concerns with the Senate staff about the description of gender-affirming care. To be sure, there are some good things in the Senate bill, but we don’t think the language offers the specific protections of gender-affirming care that is under attack in hostile states across the country. We prefer the specific approach taken by the House on this issue.
* Personal PAC…
Personal Pac strongly prefers the language in SB1534 that explicitly covers the care to be protected by the bill. The worse outcome is that no bill is passed this week. That outcome is unacceptable because it leaves providers and patients unprotected and our fundamental rights at risk.
* But here’s Gov. Pritzker…
I believe we can work together to pass a strong bill that reflects our values as Democrats. In Illinois reproductive healthcare of all kinds is safe and legal. But Illinois is an island in a sea of anti-choice states who are passing laws to criminalize and block access to essential healthcare services. We have an obligation to expand access and protect our providers and patients by passing a bill that outlines clear protections for all.
With a few hours to spare, Gov. JB Pritzker announced today that he signed Senate Bill 1720 which amends the 2023 Budget Implementation Act and provides salary increases for members of the Illinois legislative and executive branches.
For the measure to go into effect, the governor had to sign the bill by noon today since pay raises for state officeholders during a term of office are barred by the state constitution. Before 10 a.m., Pritzker announced that he had signed SB 1720. […]
State Sen. Elgie Sims, Jr., D-Chicago, detailed several provisions the bill also includes in addition to the pay raises: $850 million to state’s rainy day fund, $400 million transfer from the state’s General Fund to the Large Business Attraction Fund and $72 million to the Disaster Response and Recovery Fund.
The following statement is from Illinois Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza regarding SB 1720, which passed the Illinois General Assembly Sunday.
“I applaud state lawmakers and Gov. Pritzker bolstering the state’s Rainy Day Fund with $850 million as part of the Budget Implementation bill passed by the House Friday and by the Senate tonight. Responsible budgeting tells bond-rating agencies that Illinois remains a good investment and is worthy of more upgrades. As we brace for inflationary pressures, having emergency funds in reserve means Illinois leaders are being accountable fiscal stewards for taxpayers.
“SB 1720 also increases the savings cap for the fund to 7.5% of General Funds revenue – up from 5%. This increase in our savings goal is a great step and is something I asked for in my bill, HB 5851, sponsored by Sen.-elect Michael Halpin. I will continue to push for the passage of HB 5851, which makes funding the Rainy Day Fund and the Pension Stabilization Fund a permanent obligation, with automatically triggered deposits.
“I look forward to continued work and progress in righting our fiscal ship, and once again I thank everyone who crafted and voted for these latest wins.”
The governor, however, can now order budget stabilization fund money transferred to the Large Business Attraction Fund (once, of course, the fund is actually created). [Adding: I’m told by an administration official that “the balance of the Large Business Attraction Fund can be used for budget stabilization if needed.” The bill’s language says “Any amounts transferred to the Budget Stabilization Fund may be transferred back to the Large Business Attraction Fund.” The administration’s explanation, however, is if money first goes from the Large Business Attraction Fund to the Budget Stabilization Fund, the language sets up the payback.]
There are also grants to local chambers of commerce for lost pandemic revenue. $460 million in Hospital Pandemic Recovery Stabilization Payments will be disbursed. Grants to the Ronald McDonald House Charities Fund go from “subject to appropriation” to “shall make grants.” The Illinois Police Training Board can make grants, subject to appropriation, for local police hiring and retention.And the Senate will now have the same authority as the House to charge members for the “preparation, filing, and reproduction of non-substantive resolutions.”
After an eruption of violence in 2021, expressway shootings dropped by nearly 40% in 2022, Illinois State Police data shows.
Reports of highway gunplay, almost all in Chicago and the suburbs, surged to 310 in 2021, sparking outrage and prompting installation of cameras that capture license plates.
Total occurrences in 2022 declined to 189, which is still higher than the 2020 tally of 147 shootings. As of Sunday, one shooting had occurred in the new year. […]
Of the 189 reported shootings, four were fatal and 74 resulted in injuries.
Still too high. And no word on whether the cameras led to an increase of arrests.
The highly anticipated racketeering trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan has been set for April 1, 2024.
The trial, which is expected to last six or seven weeks, was scheduled during a brief status hearing in Madigan’s case on Monday before U.S. District Judge John Blakey.
It’s been nearly a year since a federal grand jury indicted Madigan and his longtime confidant, Michael McClain. The indictment was the result of a yearslong, aggressive public corruption investigation that also led to charges against former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore, ex-ComEd lobbyist John Hooker and onetime City Club President Jay Doherty. […]
Meanwhile, McClain is set to go to trial in March, along with Pramaggiore, Hooker and Doherty. That lengthy trial before U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber will likely serve as a preview of Madigan’s trial, as it focuses on an alleged attempt by that group to sway the speaker which is also featured in Madigan’s indictment.
Madigan will likely turn 82 years old during his trial, if it’s held on time.
* I told subscribers about this when it was in draft form the other day. That draft is now House Amendment 3 to SB2951. The Invest in Illinois Act…
[The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity] shall not award economic incentives to a professional sports organization that moves its operations from one location in the State to another location in the State.
* Click here for the video. Remarks as prepared for delivery…
During the campaign last year, I drove all across the state, and I couldn’t help but notice some signs in people’s yards that said, “FIRE PRITZKER.” I was concerned about this until my kids pointed out that when people in their generation think something is really cool they say, “That’s FIRE!” So, I want to take this moment to thank everyone who put up those very encouraging signs!
Today, as every day, I feel blessed to stand with my compassionate and dedicated partner in governance and your Lieutenant Governor, the outstanding Juliana Stratton.
Officially retiring today is one of Illinois’ finest leaders ever. His legacy stands as an example to everyone who aspires to serve the public interest. On behalf of the people of Illinois, please join me in giving thanks to our inimitable Secretary of State Jesse White.
I want to acknowledge other distinguished guests here today: Beginning with the love of my life and the First Lady, MK Pritzker — and our children Teddi and Don Pritzker. Chief Justice Mary Jane Theis, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, Senate President Don Harmon, Leader Tony McCombie, Leader John Curran, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, Secretary of State-elect Alexi Giannoulias, Comptroller Susana Mendoza, Treasurer Mike Frerichs, Members of the General Assembly, Members of the Congressional delegation, Governor Jim Edgar, Governor Pat Quinn, and National Guard Adjutant General, Major General Rich Neely. To all of you, on behalf of the people of Illinois, thank you for your service and your sacrifice.
Four years ago, I stood on this very stage and laid out a vision for change in Illinois, one that was elevated by our shared hope for better days ahead and forged by a common belief that the smarts and hard work and the goodness of Illinoisans has always overcome adversity.
Our hope was buttressed by the past resilience of our people, who have survived wars and a Great Depression, two global pandemics, devastating tornadoes, fires and floods, yet who have made this the birthplace of national movements for justice, world renowned advancements in innovation, and cultural achievements second to none.
Our hope is perhaps rooted in our unique ability to endure Midwestern winters year after year, knowing there is always a glorious summer on the way.
Our hope is spurred on by the knowledge that the doomsayers who eagerly prophesy total misery every time Illinois faces an honest challenge — have unintentionally inspired a generation of leaders with a resilient optimism for our future.
The hope we share, the hope I expressed at my first inauguration, was born of a truth lodged firmly in my heart – that Illinois has always stood at the intersection of American ambition and human resilience. And that combination is what has made this the greatest state in the union.
So four years ago, with hope in our hearts and persistence in our souls, we went to work.
And we got BIG THINGS DONE.
We balanced the budget and got credit upgrades. We raised the minimum wage. We’re modernizing our transportation systems. We legalized cannabis. We protected reproductive freedom in our laws.
We took nation-leading climate action that’s growing our energy production, instituted nursing home reforms to increase staffing and safety, saved taxpayers money by consolidating pension systems, and provided real middle class tax relief to help families overcome inflation. We added better paying jobs, grew our economy to a trillion dollars, protected workers’ rights, and expanded healthcare coverage.
Amid a rise in intolerance and fascism throughout the United States with increasing attacks on our most vulnerable populations, Illinois has decisively moved to protect civil rights, human rights, and voting rights by enshrining them directly in state statute.
We did all those things while fighting to survive a historic crisis – one that has left a deep imprint on every one of us.
One of the realities I learned about being a Governor is that there is no permanent playbook to follow. Every four years brings different challenges than the four years past. All that you can do is become a student of history and of the people who came before you, to try and learn from their victories and their defeats, their triumphs, and their challenges.
I’ve taken to learning from the words and actions of past Governors, regardless of their political affiliations or leanings — though let’s be honest, in Illinois choosing which ones to learn from can be a challenge. But we’ve had more than 200 years of governors and — regardless of the adversities they faced — most of them put the people first. And I’ve tried to discern from the things those governors said publicly, what they may have been wrestling with privately.
Dwight Green became Governor of Illinois in 1941. He was the prosecutor who successfully put Al Capone behind bars and fought organized crime in Chicago in the 1930’s. When he won the governorship, he was suddenly faced with leading one of the largest states during a time of global upheaval.
His First Inaugural Address was given on January 13, 1941, as a World War was raging on but before the United States had been drawn in. Green’s tone was somber but bullish. He said:
“The political upheavals in Europe resulted when the people lost faith in the ability of their governments to meet their needs. Here in America, where the ideals and hopes of freedom still prevail, we must never permit the same tragic spirit of despair to overcome us.”
By the time Governor Green gave his Second Inaugural Speech on January 8, 1945 – the world weariness he must have felt seems to peek through as he talks about the waning days of the war:
“Throughout the decades, Illinois has written many illustrious pages into the history of our country. Now, in more than three tragic years of all-out warfare against the destroyers of freedom…our men and women have inscribed new and even more glorious chapters into the record of patriotism. By their incomparable bravery…they have sanctified the final victory.”
I suspect that Governor Green, wrestling with the unbearable cost of a terrible conflict, was attempting to comfort his people in that Second Inaugural Address, to express how deeply he felt the loss of the 18,601 Illinoisans who were killed during World War II.
I think everyone here knows a little about that feeling of loss. Over the last three years, we lost 35,814 Illinoisans to COVID-19. That grief and the desire to comfort are all too familiar to me.
There’s a day that stands out over others, and it was the day in September of 2020 when I sat in the chapel at the University of Chicago, listening to the husband of Joyce Pacubas-Le Blanc – one of the first nurses to die of COVID-19 in Illinois. Lawrence LeBlanc spoke of the intense love he had for his wife. He ended his tribute to Joyce saying, “If I had another 10 lifetimes to live and I had to choose, it would be with her.”
I did not know at that point that the pandemic would rage on to even higher peaks for another year and a half, that so many more people would die or fall ill, that the disruption to our lives, our well beings, our livelihoods was far from over. But that evening at that chapel, I just knew that I was the Governor, and I had a responsibility to Lawrence Le Blanc and his beloved Joyce, to honor his words and her passing and to make real the sacred prayer I said nearly every day at the podium: “May their memory be for a blessing.”
The difficult thing about governing through unprecedented times is that it’s your job to set the precedent, to find a path, even when none appears to exist….to lift up the front-line heroes, the essential workers on whom we all rely, to make the hard decisions to protect those doing the very hard work of keeping us all together.
As Governor it’s your job to plan for the future, even as you continue to grapple with the past. That’s a lesson tucked into Governor Green’s Second Inaugural Speech, which while filled with somber remembrance, also set a second term agenda for post-war Illinois even before the war ended.
So today, as Illinois continues its progress overcoming our historical fiscal challenges and a deadly global pandemic, I come to you with an agenda as ambitious and bold as our people are, thinking not only about the next four years, but about the next forty.
Our long-term ambitions must begin with a focus on the people for whom we are building. No policy proposal I could advance will have a greater impact on our future than the quality care and education we afford to our very youngest residents. For more than 20 years before I became Governor, I worked with national leaders and experts in early childhood development to make it a national policy priority. It’s time for Illinois to lead.
The research is clear. Quality childcare affords parents the opportunity to work or attend school and pursue greater economic security. And preschool improves academic success for our children, yields higher graduation rates, raises lifetime earnings potential, and saves taxpayers money.
That’s why I propose we go all in for our children and make preschool available to every family throughout the state. And let’s not stop there. Let’s provide more economic security for families by eliminating childcare deserts and expanding childcare options.
It’s also our obligation to make college more affordable by removing financial barriers. That’s why we need to bring down the cost of higher education. Since I took office we’ve increased scholarships by more than 50%. Now let’s focus on making tuition free for every working-class family.
Of course, none of this matters if you can’t afford a life-saving prescription or procedure. We already capped the cost of insulin, but we ought to continue making healthcare coverage more affordable and more widespread. Healthcare is a right, not a privilege.
Focusing on the future of working families and making everyday life easier and more affordable for people is what I believe government ought to be all about.
We’ve done a lot on this in recent years. Balancing the budget, paying off debt and eliminating interest on overdue bills has made it possible for us to provide tax relief. Let’s work toward more permanent tax relief. Improving our roads has saved hundreds of dollars a year for drivers, which matters even more when you know that one flat tire or one auto repair can lead to a genuine fiscal emergency or even the loss of a job for many people.
Lifting up working families and children also means doing everything we can to free them from the dangers of gun violence.
Four years ago, during my first Inaugural Speech, I memorialized the victims of the Mercy Hospital shooting. A few weeks after I took office in 2019, I stood with the people of Aurora after the Henry Pratt Company workplace shooting. And as we gather today, we acknowledge the victims of the Benito Juarez High School shooting just this past month.
I’m tired of living in a world where a mass shooting needs a title so you know which one we’re referring to.
Hospitals, high schools, homes, parades, offices – there is no place, geographic or otherwise, that has been spared from the threat of gun violence. Whether it’s ghost guns, high powered semi-automatic rifles, or modified rapid-fire handguns, dangerous weapons are putting families and law enforcement at risk.
Now, I’m a firm believer that government functions best when we look for compromise. But I’m done with the NRA having its way when it comes to mass shootings. Why do we allow anyone to easily purchase a rapid-fire, high-capacity weapon that can kill dozens of unarmed people in under a minute?
When I campaigned for reelection and promised to pass an assault weapons ban, eight states already had one. Very soon, Illinois must be the ninth. And we ought to have a real accounting of the assault weapons currently in circulation. Let’s get it done, and then the federal government should follow our lead.
One thing last year proved is that if given the chance, a bunch of right-wing judges and legislators will take away women’s rights. Well, Illinois spoke loudly and decisively in 2022 and declared that in the Land of Lincoln, we trust women! The right to privacy and bodily autonomy demand that we establish a constitutional protection for reproductive rights in Illinois. The extremists still want to take away a woman’s right to choose, and I don’t intend to let them. That’s why yet again, on women’s rights, Illinois will lead.
Finally, our success as a state goes hand in hand with a determination to fight against a rising tide of hate. Old evils will always find new haters to bring them back to life. Yesterday’s Father Coughlin becomes today’s Tucker Carlson. Racism, antisemitism, xenophobia, misogyny, homophobia have existed in some form or another throughout our entire history.
For some, the ugly voices that sing those discordant notes sound like siren calls. Their message is amplified by elected officials or political grifters who look to harness the tremendous power of hate for their own ambition. They pledge allegiance to our nation with one hand and then usher in the means of its destruction with the other.
Years before I ever thought about running for Governor, I was approached by a man named Sam Harris about the possibility of helping to build a Holocaust Museum in Illinois. Sam sat down at my conference table and conspicuously propped his watch up on its wristband, and he said, “I just need three minutes of your time.”
What I didn’t know is that Sam had been a highly successful insurance executive earlier in his life and this is how he would start every meeting. Those three minutes turned into ten years of my life working to build the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center.
But it was Sam’s personal story that has had the most impact on me over time. You see, Sam is a Holocaust survivor himself.
He was born in Deblin, Poland, and when the Nazis invaded his town, they murdered Sam’s parents, all his relatives except two sisters, and all his friends. Sam miraculously escaped extermination in two concentration camps, the conditions of which are almost unspeakable. Yet somehow, he survived.
After the war he was placed in an orphanage in Poland, and eventually was adopted by Dr. and Mrs. Ellis Harris in Northbrook, IL.
Sam is remarkable. For nearly 30 years he has traveled the country to tell his story to impress upon people that when hatred and bigotry go unchecked, democracy will come to an end, and even lead to genocide.
I’ve learned an awful lot from Sam. And I’ve realized that for my entire lifetime, progress has been made against bigotry and intolerance. But not anymore. None of us should ignore that our nation has slid noticeably backward, and dangerously so.
Just in the last few years we’ve seen gunmen killing dozens of Jewish and Black parishioners while they prayed. Swastikas spray painted on Jewish grave markers. Anti-vaxxers attacking Asian American seniors. Vandalism and intimidation against Muslim Americans and the LGBTQ+ community.
Hate crimes are increasing at an alarming rate.
Sam’s story reminds me today, as I start a second term as your Governor, that the battles for freedom and democracy that Governor Green thought we had fought and won, are being fought once again right here at home. That old evils must be faced head on yet again by a new generation.
But I bring hope to the battles ahead, because time and time again, the people of Illinois prevail when challenges arise. The families of Taylorville didn’t give up when a tornado wiped out 100 homes and 22 people were injured. They helped each other out and the community came together to rebuild. When schools closed for 8 weeks in 2020, 300 volunteers from Lombard, Villa Park and Oakbrook Terrace rode on a fleet of school buses and provided curbside delivery of 32,000 meals to 3,200 low-income children who would have otherwise gone without a meal. When food banks were facing shortages during the worst of the pandemic, Central Illinois farmers delivered tons of free produce.
Hate needs two things to thrive: the sense of helplessness that fertilizes hopelessness — and the willingness of powerful people to cower in front of a lie.
Illinois, we have power and we have hope – and a genuine goodness that is rooted in being the place in this country to which all people can come and live free.
We must recognize that hate can wield enormous strength — but we must remember the fortitude with which we have always confronted it.
Our history gives me hope and confidence that we will never falter. I’m honored to stand alongside you as we face the battles ahead together as One Illinois.
God bless you, God bless the great state of Illinois, and God bless the United States of America!
…Adding… A little something extra…
Gov. JB Pritzker will be sworn in for his second term today on two Bibles from the ALPLM. The top Bible belonged to Gov. Henry Horner, whose Lincoln collection became the foundation for the ALPLM's collection. The other belonged to #AbrahamLincoln himself. #ILhistorypic.twitter.com/daPSyjQQrG
Ashbey Beasley said the horrors of the July Fourth mass shooting are still fresh in her mind.
The Highland Park, Illinois, native was at the Independence Day parade with her 6-year-old son when the gunman opened fire. The two ran for their lives.
“The look on his face was indescribable. It was such a sheer, primal sense of terror,” she told “NIGHTLINE.”
While she and her son were not hurt during the carnage, Beasley said the mental anguish remains and she is devoting her life to stopping gun violence.
Senate President Harmon said afterward about her testimony and audio clip, “I have spent all the days of my career fighting to curb gun violence and I want to make sure we get this right. But in all those days, I don’t think anything I’ve ever said has been as powerful as a six-year-old screaming ‘What’s happening?’ Let’s remember that as we go to the floor and take this up.”
* Since today is Inauguration Day, what would you like Gov. Pritzker to focus on during his second term? Please make sure to explain your answer. Thanks.
* The new Senate amendment is here. They appear to have added much of the House’s language on filing serial numbers with the state of all grandfathered assault weapons. But there’s still an issue over large capacity magazines, so we might see further changes.
Kankakee County Judge Thomas Cunnington set off a chaotic chain reaction Dec. 29 with his ruling that the General Assembly over-stepped its constitutional grounds when it voted to eliminate cash bail. Cunnington essentially said that a cash bail requirement, even though not specifically mentioned in the Constitution, could be inferred; and that the General Assembly had exercised powers that properly belonged to the judicial branch.
Cunnington’s ruling only applied to the jurisdictions where 64 lawsuits had been filed to block implementation of the law on Jan. 1, without regard to the fact that some cities are in multiple counties. Aurora, for instance, is in four counties, including Kane and DuPage, which did not sue to stop the law from taking effect. Aurora is also in Kendall and Will, which were plaintiffs. Naperville straddles DuPage and Will counties.
Some county leaders who were not part of the lawsuit added to the confusion by filing for local temporary restraining orders, often giving minimal or even no warning to the attorney general’s office. Some counties actually filed for TROs without giving any notice at all to the AG’s office, including Alexander, Lawrence, Pike and St. Clair, according to the office.
It seemed to some that a few counties may have been coordinating their efforts to thwart the attorney general’s efforts to dispute their TRO demands. In Menard County, for instance, the AG’s office asked for a one-hour delay while they argued in another county. The request was ignored, and the state’s attorney reportedly entered the TRO without any ability for the state to respond.
Finally, on Dec. 30, the Democratic state’s attorney for Kane County, Jamie Mosser, and the Republican state’s attorney for DuPage County, Bob Berlin, filed an emergency motion for a supervisory order from the Illinois Supreme Court. Mosser had supported the push to eliminate cash bail and Berlin helped work behind the scenes to get the revisions in place during veto session. The two pointed to the massive jurisdictional issues and the TRO filings and asked the court to “enter an order sufficient to maintain consistent pretrial procedures because without such an order, defendants in different jurisdictions will be subject to different treatment upon arrest and throughout pretrial proceedings, creating an equal protection problem for citizens across the state.”
The Supreme Court complied within hours, staying the effective date of the SAFE-T Act’s cash bail provision during an expedited appeal process and effectively stopping the chaos from spreading further.
When asked by reporters last week, Gov. JB Pritzker said he expected the Illinois Supreme Court to decide what to do about the state’s cashless bail law “sometime in the next few months.”
That could well be, but the court won’t even hear oral arguments in the case until March.
A joint motion filed with the Supreme Court by the state and the county plaintiffs set out an agreed-upon briefing schedule; the Court adopted it. Opening briefs will begin in late January and will run through the end of February. Oral arguments will be held during the court’s March calendar.
From there, it’ll be up to the Supremes to hash out their decision and draft their opinion(s). So, it could possibly be a while.
Meanwhile, a poll taken Nov. 15-20 by Impact Research found that 32% of voters had a favorable view of the SAFE-T Act, which included the elimination of cash bail, while 40% had an unfavorable view. The super-controversial law was the subject of millions of dollars in campaign advertising, not just statewide, but also in state legislative districts. So it’s not surprising that those who had a strongly unfavorable view outnumbered those with strongly favorable views by 20 points (34-14). Even so, 28% had no position on the law. Criticism of the law didn’t seem to ultimately harm Democrats, except maybe in a couple of legislative races.
The poll of 800 likely 2024 voters (with a margin of error of +/-3.5 percentage points) was taken for a group called Giffords, a gun control organization founded by former member of Congress Gabby Giffords.
The poll also found that Pritzker’s favorables were 51%, while his unfavorables were 46%; 29% had a very favorable view of Pritzker, while 40% had a very unfavorable view.
And 41% of those polled said they had a positive view of the National Rifle Association, while 53% had an unfavorable view (46% said they had a very unfavorable view).
* It’s Inauguration Day! Any guesses on who the Inaugural Ball’s mysterious musical performer may be? One of my guesses is John Legend, who strongly supported the SAFE-T Act last year. But a source who had it right four years ago says it’ll be Bruno Mars.
* CBS Chicago | Illinois senators still debating assault weapons ban: The Illinois State Senate Executive Committee is meeting and they will likely discuss an assault weapons ban and reproductive rights. These discussions will take place before the Senate goes into a full session around 1:30 p.m.
* NBC Chicago | Illinois Senate Adjourns Without Vote on Assault Weapons Ban, to Resume Session Monday: While Illinois state senators debated a bill to help address the statewide bus driver shortage and another dealing with the length of windmill blades Sunday, the focus for many was on whether lawmakers would bring a proposed assault weapons ban for a vote. The State Senate was expected to vote on its version of the ban, but adjourned without one taking place.
* Illinois Newsroom | Faraci selected as new state senator in 52nd District: Speaking during the announcement, Vermilion County Democratic Party chair Sandra Lawlyes said the selection committee took into account the wishes of Stacy Bennett, Scott’s widow, who is serving the final days of his current term “It was also of the utmost importance to me that we honor Stacy Bennett’s preferences on behalf of her husband,” Lawlyes said. “I’m confident that Paul Faraci will continue Scott Bennett’s legacy during Scott’s remaining term and go on to forge his own on behalf of both counties in the 52nd Senate District.”
* Greg Hinz | Springfield won’t soon see another pol like this one: There are lots of ways to political fame. Having survived AIDS, multiple suicide attempts and governmental chaos are not normally among them. But then Greg Harris is not your typical Illinois legislator. Harris this coming week, on Jan. 11, will officially retire as Illinois House majority leader. The 67-year-old North Sider will do so with a bucket full of accomplishments, a sterling reputation and a long list of admirers on both sides of the legislative aisle. Whatever your political persuasion is, he’s a testament to the fact that, even in these dark times, American democracy can and does produce surprise winners.
* AP | 18% legislative pay raises started with Pritzker, though he sought raises only for the cabinet: The idea for raising salaries of top Illinois state government officials, which culminated this weekend with the House and Senate voting lawmakers an 18% pay hike, began with Gov. J.B. Pritzker. But the Democratic governor said he originally requested that the General Assembly increase pay only for his administration’s agency directors, in order to recruit and retain top talent. Pritzker said he wouldn’t presume to tell the General Assembly what its members should be paid.
* Northwest Herald | It’s time to abolish township form of government in Illinois: It is no secret Illinois leads the nation in sky-high property taxes. One of the largest driving factors is the huge number of local government bodies in Illinois, each with property tax authority that is largely unchecked in any meaningful way. Legislators often run on the promise of property tax relief, yet few discuss whether these units are truly necessary and take any reasonable steps to consolidate duplicative bodies or remove irrelevant and superfluous ones.
* CBS Chicago | Illinois state reps, Chicago aldermen oppose planned migrant shelter at old Woodlawn school: “We do believe that this community has a right to have a voice in what happens here,” said State Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago). “But we also know that we can’t pit Black and Brown people against each other. It’s happened for generations, and we’re standing here saying that we will not stand for it. We’re standing here saying that this mayor and this city has to have a plan both for asylum seekers and for communities that have been here.”
* NBC Chicago | Colorado Will Stop Bussing Migrants to Chicago and New York City, Governor Says: Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has pledged to stop busing migrants to Chicago after Mayor Lori Lightfoot sent a letter, warning that the city has no additional room to accommodate more arrivals. Meanwhile, groups are calling on officials to figure out where the migrants who’ve already arrived in Chicago will be housed.
* NYT | Mass Arrests in Brazil After Anti-Democracy Riots: Scores were taken into custody after supporters of Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil’s far-right former president, stormed official buildings in the capital to protest what they falsely believe was a stolen election.
* The Senate has adjourned until after the governor’s inauguration tomorrow without taking up their own assault weapons proposal or the House’s version, but they will caucus on it tonight. The chamber did pass a pay raise bill, which must be signed into law by the governor before noon tomorrow so that statewide elected officials can get their raises. The constitution bars any adjustments in salaries during a term in office.
Every time a weapon of war is used to inflict the maximum amount of damage in the shortest amount of time we mourn for the lives lost and communities shattered.
Enough is enough.
The people of this state deserve a real assault weapons ban, one that has a real accounting of the weapons currently in circulation and a real chance at ceasing the flow of more weapons of war immediately. We need a bill that meets the urgency of now and the current version in the Senate falls short.
* The Speaker’s spokesperson clarified that this statement is about both the gun bill and the reproductive rights bill passed by the House last week…
Speaker Welch’s Statement on Senate Proposals
“As Speaker of the House I will stand firm in our values and principles as Democrats. I will fight for the needs of Illinoisans and I will not accept a watered-down version of legislation that falls unacceptably short of the comprehensive solutions that the people of this state deserve.”
*** UPDATE *** Harmon spokesperson John Patterson…
The Senate and House have shared goals on these issues.
* As we’ve already seen today, the gun reform groups have been sticking with the House’s version of the assault weapons ban legislation. But I’ve been asking some of the groups where they stand on the Senate’s new bill. This is from John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety…
In the wake of the tragedy, Illinois lawmakers need to act swiftly and aggressively to help save lives. Illinois has long been a leader in gun violence prevention legislation, and the House-passed version of the Protect Illinois Communities Act lived up to those standards.
The Senate version is simply not as strong as the House version — particularly in regard to the assault weapons ban and high capacity magazine provisions — and we urge lawmakers in the Senate to step up and lead to help save lives in their communities.
On Tuesday, when the 102nd General Assembly is scheduled to come to a close, Durkin will retire after 24 years in the legislature — the last nine as House GOP leader, he said. […]
“The politics have changed. The party over the last at least six years has shifted,” he said. “The only way you can win in Illinois is that you’re going to have to just find the candidates that reflect the district. And we should not hold anyone to the 100% (party) purity test that some people in this party expect throughout the state.” […]
Shortly after the Nov. 8 election expanded the Democrats’ advantage in the House to a record 78 members compared to 40 Republicans, Durkin announced he would not seek another term as House GOP leader, and his decision to resign his seat had been expected. The Republican leader for the 103rd General Assembly will be state Rep. Tony McCombie of Savanna. Durkin’s successor representing the 82nd House district will be selected by local Republican township officials.
Durkin points the blame for the disastrous election results — particularly in the suburbs that were once a cornerstone of Illinois Republicanism — on a statewide GOP ticket led by gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey, a state senator who leaned heavily on his evangelical Christianity in his campaign and who was endorsed by Trump. A new legislative map drawn by Democrats also was a factor.
As the duly-elected and certified Representative-Elect for the 82nd Representative District in the 103rd Illinois General Assembly, I am declining service in the office.
It is with a heavy heart but a lifetime of great memories that I submit my resignation from the House of Representatives at 11:59pm on January 10th, 2023. After 22 years in the General Assembly, 9 as the minority leader, it is time to give this great responsibility to the next generation of public servants.
Serving in this august chamber will be the pinnacle of achievement in my life. To the countless members I have been fortunate enough to work with over the years, thank you for everything. To every employee of the General Assembly, who treat this institution with white gloves and hard work, thank you for being the best. I am eternally thankful to the people of Illinois for entrusting me with their democracy.
I hereby inform you I will not attend the January 11, 2023 convening of the 103rd Illinois General Assembly and I ask that you please accept this letter as a declination to serve notice for my duly-elected position as Representative-Elect for the 82nd Representative District.
…Adding… Updated seniority and demographic numbers from John Amdor…
…Adding… Glad to see he’s no longer bitter about the election /s…
Well, it took four years, but he finally took my advice!🤗🤗 Now we can get back to restoring Illinois! What a lovely article from the left wing, fake news Tribune…#twillhttps://t.co/w7WTNLkJXp
The Illinois Freedom Caucus is issuing the following statement on the news current Republican Leader Jim Durkin will be resigning as a state legislator.
“Leader Jim Durkin is offering all kinds of excuses as he leaves the General Assembly, but the truth is under his leadership our caucus is at its lowest point in membership in a very long time. Leader Durkin squandered money in the 2022 Primary to secure legislative candidates in open seats who were loyal to him and who were not necessarily the best fit for the districts in which they ran, and this proved to be a disastrous decision. We are in this mess not because of our principles but because of our leadership’ lack of commitment to our principles. Jim Durkin has abandoned Republican principles of lower taxes, reduced spending and standing up for our Constitutional rights. Raising taxes to spend more money we don’t have and attacking the Constitutional rights of honest citizens is not a winning message. We need to be united as a party against tax increases and we need to be the party of fiscal responsibility. Jim Durkin’s strategy of offering voters a ‘Democrat Lite’ agenda has been a colossal failure. Our party needs bold leadership if we ever hope to get out of the super minority. Jim Durkin has made it clear he is not willing to provide that bold leadership and is leaving the General Assembly. We wish him good luck on his future endeavors.”
The Illinois Freedom Caucus is comprised of State Representatives Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich); Chris Miller (R-Oakland); Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville); Blaine Wilhour (R-Beecher City) and Dan Caulkins (R-Decatur). The members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus are members of the Illinois General Assembly who are advocating for limited government, lower taxes and accountability and integrity in government.
* Ray Long’s Tribune story on how House Speaker Michael Madigan was forced to step aside runs over some familiar ground. But there are some interesting points that haven’t yet been made public. For instance, Rep. Maurice West (D-Rockford) was the only member of the Black Caucus who refused to vote for Madigan’s reelection and Long writes about the efforts to convince him to change his mind…
“Oh, man. It was brutal. It was brutal,” said Rep. Maurice West II, the only Black lawmaker to join the opposition group, a move made before the coalition was big enough to take away Madigan’s gavel. […]
The Black Caucus held a forum with both Madigan and Kifowit. Madigan secured 21 of 22 members, with West still holding out. Madigan moved fast.
“He called me immediately and said, ‘Mr. West, now that the rest of the Black Caucus is on board with me, does this give you cover to come back to the fold?’ ” West recalled. West declined, and he still remembered the speaker’s nonresponse.
“The silence was so loud on the other end of the phone,” West said.
[Welch] quickly sought support from fellow members of the Black Caucus, but they questioned whether Madigan, who no one was ready to count out yet, was just trying to “smoke out traitors.”
“The Black Caucus was having none of it,” Welch said. “None of them believed it was real.”
When the BC finally came around, Welch moved on to the LC…
Welch then needed the Latino Caucus’ backing. He bolted out to find Rep. Lisa Hernandez, the Cicero Democrat and Madigan ally who headed the caucus and is now head of the state Democratic Party. Like the initial skepticism of some of the Black Caucus members, Welch recalled, Hernandez too wasn’t convinced Madigan’s suspension was legitimate. But a day later the Latino Caucus too backed Welch, soon bringing the race down to he and Hoffman, as Kifowit and Williams dropped out.
Hernandez became Welch’s point person on the remap and then, with Welch’s backing, became the state party chair.
* Background on Dr. Baum is here. The Senate Democrats have shown some reluctance to support the House-approved assault weapons ban as-is, so this robocall is just one aspect of the proponents’ advocacy efforts. Other things are happening as well, but the main message is that the advocates want the bill passed as-is. The Senate has balked at House language requiring FOID holders to disclose serial numbers of their grandfathered assault weapons, apparently because this would be too much like formal gun registration, which Illinois doesn’t currently have. Advocates say deleting or altering the House language would gut the ban.
Anyway, here is one of the calls targeting Democratic voters in every Senate district yesterday and today…
Hi, this is Dr. David Baum calling with Protect Illinois Communities.
We only have days left to pass bans on assault weapons and high capacity magazines in Illinois that are enforceable, and we need your help.
Assault weapons are simply too lethal to belong anywhere near our communities.
I attended the Highland Park Fourth of July Parade with my family, and what I expected to be a celebration quickly turned into a nightmare.
I helped treat victims on the scene, and it was a sight which I will never forget. The injuries I saw were unspeakable.
Now is the time to take action. Ask your State Senator to vote yes on bill SB2226, the Protect Illinois Communities Act, today.
Paid for by Protect Illinois Communities. (773) xxx-xxxx. Thank you.
Again, this is just one angle on the effort to push Senators into voting for the House bill. More later.
…Adding… House proponents of the bill have been expressing concern about the Senate’s reluctance for several days. This is some of what I told subscribers early Friday morning…
“I’m concerned about what the Senate is going to do,” said Rep. Fred Crespo (D-Hoffman Estates) during debate over the assault weapons ban bill (SB2226) in the House last night.
“If the Senate does not pick up this bill and we don’t pass anything at all and end up empty-handed, you’re basically giving people a false sense of hope,” Crespo said. “And that is a crime in itself.”
*** UPDATE 1 *** The Senate’s language has been filed on HB5471. The serial number language from the House bill has been deleted…
This Section does not apply to a person who possessed an assault weapon, assault weapon attachment, or .50 caliber rifle prohibited by subsection (c) of this Section before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, if the person has provided in an endorsement affidavit, under oath or affirmation and in the form and manner prescribed by the Illinois State Police on or after 180 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly but within 300 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly: (1) the affiant’s Firearm Owner’s Identification Card number; (2) the serial number of the weapon or weapons; (3) an affirmation that the affiant possessed the weapon or weapons identified before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly. The affidavit form shall include the following statement printed in bold type: “Warning: Entering false information on this form is punishable as perjury under Section 32-2 of the Criminal Code of 2012. Entering false information on this form is a violation of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act.” In any administrative, civil, or criminal proceeding in this State, a completed assault weapon or .50 caliber rifle endorsement affidavit submitted to the Illinois State Police by the individual as required by this Section creates the rebuttable presumption that a person lawfully possessed or had completed a purchase of the assault weapon or .50 caliber rifle before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly and is entitled to continue to possess and transport the assault weapon.
Advocates say the Senate has also reduced the number of assault weapons covered by the House bill. The Senate proposal also grandfathers in high capacity magazines…
This Section does not apply to any person who possesses a large capacity ammunition feeding device prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
A “large capacity ammunition feeding device” is defined as “a magazine, belt, drum, feed strip, or similar device that has a capacity of, or that can be readily restored or converted to accept, more than 10 rounds of ammunition for long guns and more than 15 rounds of ammunition for handguns.”
But it will be lawful to possess these devices only on “private property owned or immediately controlled by the person,” private property not open to the public with permission of the owner, on firing ranges, during competitions, at the repair shop and while traveling to and from those locations as long as they have no ammunition in them and are stored in a case.
The Senate sponsor is Senate President Don Harmon. You may recall that the sponsor of the House proposal was Speaker Chris Welch. An interesting showdown is coming.
*** UPDATE 2 *** Three gun law reform groups are standing behind the House’s version which includes serial numbers…
Everytown for Gun Safety, Giffords, and Brady issued the following statements urging Illinois Senate lawmakers to pass an assault weapons prohibition that is comprehensive and can be fully implemented and enforced. This prohibition is part of the Protect Illinois Communities Act, a critical gun violence prevention legislative package currently on the Senate floor.
Requiring current owners of assault weapons who wish to keep those firearms after the law goes into effect to register their weapons with the state protects public safety and the rights of law abiding gun owners. A system that clearly identifies grandfathered assault weapons and their current lawful owners–including unique information like the firearm’s serial numbers– is necessary to ensure that law enforcement officials can identify illegal assault weapons in the months and years ahead and get them off the streets of Illinois communities. On Friday, the Illinois House passed their version of the legislative package, including this critical provision. We endorse the House’s version of the legislation, specifically the inclusion of this critical measure.
* Sun-Times | State Senate should join House in banning assault weapons, high-capacity ammunition magazines: With the Senate now preparing to deliberate on this proposed legislation, Illinois has a clear opportunity to stand for gun safety and pass a statewide ban on assault weapons and large-capacity magazines. If we do, we’d become the eighth and 10th states, respectively, in our nation to do so. Illinois can and must be next.
* Sun-Times | Assault rifle toll familiar to ER surgeons: “There’s very little funding that goes into gun violence prevention research,” [Dr. Arthur Berg] agreed. “In the ‘90s, there were so many motor vehicles accidents, they did a lot of research to prevent motor vehicle fatalities. They don’t do any of that for gun violence. There needs to be more funding for research. We don’t even know what laws work and what laws don’t work. States are all over the place. People don’t study it because there’s no funding for it.”
* NBC Chicago | Illinois Senate Set to Vote on Assault Weapons Ban Sunday. Here’s a Breakdown of the Bill: Individuals who already own weapons that fall under the “assault weapons” are required to note the serial number with their pre-owned weapons with the gun owner’s Firearm Owner’s Identification Card (FOID) card. This process must take place with the Illinois State Police within 300 days after final passage of the bill.
* Tribune | Developer unveils video tour of ‘reimagined’ domed Soldier Field in ‘Hail Mary’ bid to keep Bears in Chicago: The six-minute video, voiced by former Chicago news anchor Bill Kurtis, is meant to gain traction for the proposed $2.2 billion renovation of Soldier Field as an alternative to building a new stadium in the northwest suburbs. Keeping the Bears at Soldier Field might also help the cause of One Central, a proposed $3.8 billion mixed-used entertainment and transit development Landmark is hoping to build above a 32-acre rail yard near the stadium and Museum Campus.
* Capitol News Service | Democrats push to further expand abortion, gender care access: Under legislation passed in the Illinois House late Thursday, insurance plans regulated by the state would be required to cover – at no cost to the patient – abortion medications typically used up to about 10 weeks of pregnancy, in addition to gender-affirming medications like hormones. The measure also requires the same coverage of medications aimed at preventing HIV infections like PrEP and PEP.
* WCIA | Township Assessor Faraci chosen to replace Bennett: The Democratic Party Chairs for Champaign and Vermilion chose Champaign Township Assessor Paul Faraci to replace the late Sen. Scott Bennett (D-Champaign) as Senator for the 52nd District in the 103rd General Assembly.
* Energy News Network | A decade after ‘EVTown,’ Rivian is making an Illinois city’s electric vehicle vision a reality: In 2011, Normal dubbed itself “EVTown” in a marketing effort to make the city an early destination for Mitsubishi’s all-electric i-MiEV subcompact. Located 130 miles southwest of Chicago, Normal was home to the automaker’s only North American plant. And while the company never built the i-MiEV in the U.S., it agreed to reserve 1,000 cars for customers in the city.
* Sun-Times | COVID relief fraud probe includes over 50 employees in Cook County Clerk of Court Iris Martinez’s office: More than 50 employees of Cook County Clerk of Court Iris Martinez are suspected of defrauding a federal program intended to help small businesses struggling during the COVID-19 pandemic, a spokesman said Friday. The clerk’s inspector general is working with Cook County’s inspector general’s office, which is conducting a separate investigation of employees who work for Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, according to Martinez spokesman James Murphy-Aguilú.
* Shaw Local | Bill before Illinois Senate would make sex ed mandatory in public schools, but allow students to opt out: As amended, House Bill 5188 would require all public school districts to provide instructional content from the National Sex Education Standards but will allow for any individual student or their parent to opt out, Illinois State Board of Education spokeswoman Jackie Matthews said. The curriculum standards were set in Senate Bill 818, which was signed into law last year as the framework for public schools to adopt sexual education curriculum. That law allowed Illinois school districts to opt out, and many of them did.
* Lake County Journal | Democrats choose Hall to fill Bush’s seat in Senate temporarily: Gurnee resident Terry Hall was appointed to the Illinois Senate seat formerly held by Melinda Bush. Hall will build on the legacy Bush has left in the Senate as a champion of women’s reproductive rights, gun safety, criminal justice reform and so much more.
* Shaw Local | Tom Bennett named Jason Barickman’s successor in Illinois senate: Bennett, who was re-elected to represent the 106th House District in November, was selected Saturday to succeed Jason Barickman in the 53rd Senate District, after Barickman resigned in December. The 53rd District now takes in southern La Salle County, southern Bureau County and a portion of Putnam County, including Streator.
* Shaw Local | House speaker Welch will join Joliet MLK event: Proceeds from the event will go to the Michael Austin Clark Upward and Onward Certification Scholarship created in honor of the late president of the Joliet chapter of the NAACP and used to help develop local entrepreneurs.
* The Telegraph | Costello optimistic for agriculture in 2023: “Illinois has always been — and will always be — an agricultural state. And this year, we continued to lay the groundwork for a thriving, sustainable agricultural industry for generations into the future,” said Gov. J.B. Pritzker.
* NYT | Once Told to Move to the Back of the Bus, Jesse White Became an Illinois Institution: Mr. White came through it all as perhaps the best-known and best-liked officeholder in Illinois. Looking back, he said his approach to governing exemplified a kinder, more flexible brand of politics that could be an antidote to today’s partisan rancor. “You cannot walk into a room and take all the marbles off the table — you have to leave some for someone else,” Mr. White, a Democrat, said at his office in downtown Chicago, where decades’ worth of plaques, photos and sports mementos lined the wall. “You have to figure out a way to reach a happy medium.”
* Tribune | Lightfoot, García make first appearances at mayoral candidate forum: For much of the forum, the candidates focused on the issues instead of attacking one another or dropped anecdotes about their personal ties to people with disabilities. Lightfoot, for instance, noted that her father was deaf. García highlighted his wife’s multiple sclerosis and grandchildren in special education.
City of Champaign Township Assessor Paul Faraci will fill the remaining two years of Scott Bennett’s term as the 52nd District’s state senator.
Local Democrats made the announcement this morning in Champaign, choosing Faraci from a field of 10 applicants.
Faraci, among the applicants on hand for today’s meeting, called the moment “bittersweet” and the honor “one I’ll take very seriously.”
Sen. Bennett’s widow, appointed Sen. Stacy Bennett, had this to say about Faraci the other day when she named four people whom she thought her late spouse would support as a good replacement…
Paul Faraci has been a fixture in the Champaign/Urbana community for 45 years. His experience includes owning a small business, working on economic development, serving on the Champaign City Council, and now as the Champaign Township Assessor. He has also worked in Vermilion County through his positions with the Department of Economic Opportunity and the State Treasurer’s office.
FYI, Treasurer Michael Frerichs was on the selection committee. Scott Bennett replaced Frerichs in the Senate.
* Rep. Carol Ammons was, of course, not on that list. And as we discussed the other day, Ammons and her spouse, Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons, churned the water…
In a statement issued Monday night, Carol Ammons said denying her the post would be an insult to “African-American women” who “are the base of the Democratic Party and are disrespected and disregarded by the Democratic Party on a regular basis.”
Meanwhile, Aaron Ammons, Champaign County’s clerk and recorder, issued a separate statement Tuesday that contends that the appointment issue is a matter of race. He said the community will “find out soon if we have real allies in our movements” or whether “we have to battle this new generation of whites for the same reasons our parents, grandparents and great-grandparents battled before us.”
That didn’t help. The replacement committee wasn’t exactly stacked in Ammons’ favor to begin with, and Stacy Bennett released this statement…
I am heartbroken by the amount of bullying, threats, and negativity I am seeing surrounding this process. This is not at all what Scott would have wanted and certainly not how he would have behaved.
* You can watch Sen. Faraci’s acceptance speech at about the 9:00 mark…
Selection committee meeting to appoint in vacancy of 52nd Senate district.
* I will likely open the blog late Sunday afternoon before the Senate returns at 5, but I don’t think I’ll open comments until Monday. Background on this remix is here. The tune seems appropriate since the Senate hasn’t yet decided what to do about the two big House bills awaiting action next week…
Goes to show, you don’t ever know
Watch each card you play and play it slow
Wait until that deal come round
Don’t you let that deal go down, oh no
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, for terms beginning on or after January 16, 2023, the directors, secretaries, assistant directors, and assistant secretaries shall receive annual salaries, payable in equal monthly installments, and increases in salary, as designated in the Sections following this Section and preceding Section 5-500.
And then if you scroll through, salaries are laid out for directors, etc.
For terms beginning on or after January 9, 2023:
To the Governor, a salary of $205,700 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater, together with the use and occupancy of the executive mansion. To the Lieutenant Governor, a salary of $160,900 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater. To the Secretary of State, a salary of $183,300 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater. To the Comptroller, a salary of $160,900 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater. To the Treasurer, a salary of $160,900 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater. To the Attorney General, a salary of $183,300 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
…Adding… The governor doesn’t take a salary, but here are the current salaries for the other constitutionals…
Beginning with the 103rd General Assembly, each member of the General Assembly shall receive an annual salary of $85,000 or as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
…Adding… Base legislator salary is currently $71,800. So this is an 18.4 percent increase.
For any General Assembly in which the majority party in the House of Representatives has 71 or more elected Representatives, the majority party shall have one additional majority officer who shall have the title of speaker pro tempore and who shall receive an amount equal to the majority leader in the House and one majority officer who shall receive an amount equal to an assistant majority leader in the House of Representatives.
For any General Assembly in which the majority party in the Senate has 36 or more elected Senators, the majority party shall have one additional majority officer who shall receive an amount equal to the majority leader in the House and one majority officer who shall receive an amount equal to an assistant majority leader in the Senate.
And now maybe we know why legislators were willing to wait so long tonight.
…Adding… So, apparently, this all started with a request from the governor’s office for pay increases for top agency officials because Illinois’ compensation isn’t competitive with other large states. That morphed into talks about pay raises for constitutional officers. And then, as you might imagine, legislators didn’t want to be left out while everyone else was getting a raise.
The interesting thing is that this has to all be signed into law before noon on Monday, when the constitutionals are sworn in. The Senate is returning Sunday, so that chamber will be able to pass this on concurrence and get it to the governor.
Much credit for keeping this such a secret.
…Adding… For a comparison of agency director salaries to other large states, click here. To look at Illinois director and assistant director current salaries and proposed increases, click here. The documents were shared by the governor’s office.
* House members have been sitting around doing essentially nothing since the House Democratic caucus meeting ended shortly before 4 o’clock this afternoon.
All I’ve been able to discern so far is that they’re waiting on the final drafting of a BIMP after some “corrections” needed to be made and drafting has taken much longer than expected. Hopefully, they can get this moving soon. Stay tuned.
As Governor Pritzker concludes his first term in office and approaches his second inauguration, the administration announced the following personnel transitions at Illinois state agencies:
Illinois Department of Natural Resources Director Colleen Callahan will step down from her position on January 16th. Since beginning her term in 2019, Director Callahan has guided the department through the formation of a new strategic plan focused on protecting Illinois’s natural resources and reducing the impact of climate change. Callahan also advocated for IDNR’s largest budget in decades to fund repairs and updates at state sites and led the successful re-brand of invasive carp to Copi. Prior to her appointment to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Callahan served as state director of Illinois’ Rural Development for the U.S. Department of Agriculture and worked for over 30 years in agriculture communications for WMBD Radio in Peoria.
Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) Director Sylvia Garcia will step down from her position on January 16th. Appointed in 2021, Director Garcia has led DCEO through key COVID-19 revitalization and rebuilding efforts, including supporting thousands of businesses and local governments through over $1 billion in economic assistance and the launch of the state’s largest ever tourism campaign, “Illinois: The Middle of Everything.” Garcia previously served as Chief Operating Officer and Chief of Staff at the Chicago Transit Authority and as Chief Financial Officer of the U.S. Department of Transportation during the Obama Administration.
CMS Director Anthony Pascente will step down from his position on January 20th. Pascente, who previously served as CMS Chief of Staff, was appointed by Governor Pritzker in 2022. Pascente was instrumental in the historic sale of the James R. Thompson Center and the purchase of the new state government Chicago offices at 555 W Monroe Street and 115 S. LaSalle, as well as in guiding remote work and return to workplace initiatives during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to his time at CMS, Pascente served as the Deputy Chief Operating Officer for the City of Chicago in the Office of Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
Illinois Department of Innovation and Technology Secretary Jennifer Ricker will step down from her position at the end of the term. Ricker was appointed Secretary after previously serving as Chief of Staff and Assistant Secretary at DoIT. During her tenure, Ricker led DoIT’s efforts in expanding remote work capabilities for the state workforce and implementing pandemic-related systems and enhancements to facilitate virtual state services for residents. Prior to working at DoIT, Ricker served as chief of staff for the Illinois Emergency Management Agency.
The administration looks forward to announcing additional appointments in the coming weeks.
Brandon Ragle has just been named Acting Secretary of DoIT.
* Pretty decent growth. Imagine how much better it would be without the massive retail markups…
The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation announced today that 2022 set adult use cannabis sales records in all categories it tracks. This includes number of items sold, sales totals to Illinois and out-of-state residents, and sales total by month. For the year, Illinois adult use cannabis dispensaries sold $1,552,324,820.37 worth of product, an increase of more than 12% from 2021 and 131% from 2020, the first year cannabis sales were first legally allowed in Illinois. There are currently 113 adult use cannabis dispensaries in Illinois, including the first three social equity dispensaries that opened their doors in 2022. These figures do not include taxes collected, which are reported by the Illinois Department of Revenue.
“When I signed the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act into law in 2019, we set out on an ambitious goal: to create the most equitable and economically prosperous cannabis industry in the nation. Our data from 2022 shows that we are well on our way towards making that idea a reality,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Not only did we break our previous sales record by more than 12% with a total of more than $1.5 billion, we also saw the first of our social equity adult use cannabis dispensaries open their doors for business—paving the way for an even stronger 2023.”
“This marks the second straight year that Illinois’ adult use cannabis industry has seen record-setting growth, and we are excited for what the future holds for the most equitable cannabis industry in the country,” said Mario Treto, Jr., Secretary of the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. “We are optimistic the industry will only continue to flourish in 2023, as we welcome more dispensaries to Illinois.”
Statistics compiled by IDFPR show 2021’s sales totals were all exceeded in November 2022. In total, 36,435,129 items were sold in Illinois adult use cannabis dispensaries in 2022, an increase of 20% from 2021. In addition, Illinois resident sales totaled $1,073,132,436.48 (an increase of almost 14% from 2021), while sales to out-of-state residents totaled $479,192,383.91 (an increase of almost 10% from 2021). IDFPR’s complete adult use cannabis monthly sales tracker may be found online here.
In addition to three social equity adult use cannabis dispensaries that opened their doors in 2022, 189 other conditional licensees are in the process of receiving their full dispensary license from IDFPR. Dispensaries may begin adult use cannabis sales once they receive their full license from IDFPR. The Department also announced in December 2022 that applications for the next round of cannabis dispensary licenses will be accepted starting January 30, 2023. Additional information for prospective applicants (including a mock application, proposed timeline, and social equity criteria applicants will need to meet to receive a license) may be found on IDFPR’s Adult Use Cannabis Program webpage under the “Information for social Equity Criteria Lottery” section.
More dispensaries should force those price margins down.
* Press release…
The Illinois Holocaust Museum & Education Center is proud to announce the appointment of national nonprofit leader Bernard Cherkasov as the Museum’s Chief Executive Officer.
Cherkasov joins the Museum during an incredible moment in its history. In 2022, the Museum saw record-high attendance and gained international attention for its groundbreaking virtual reality exhibition, leadership combating antisemitism, and speaking out for justice.
“It is always incredible to find a leader who can meet the moment,” said Jordan Lamm, Chair of the Museum’s Board. “Bernard has had a profound impact on the fabric of the local, state, and national community. He committed himself with compassion and tenacity to the advancement of human and civil rights and worked tirelessly for equity and justice. Bernard’s personal connection to our work and his years of leadership make him a perfect fit for the Museum’s mission and legacy.”
When he was 13 years old, Cherkasov and his family fled antisemitism and ethnic violence in his native Azerbaijan and came to the United States as refugees. His worldview was shaped by the courage and conviction of those who took risks to help his family and refugees like them.
* House Resolution 1046: WHEREAS, Leader Harris maintains a wide variety of interests outside the General Assembly, including an abiding appreciation of bacon, watching little-seen science fiction movies, maintaining a unique collection of socks, raising awareness of days of recognition and celebration on social media, and acting as a human companion to Tip the Cat.
* Press release | Cunningham passes new law to help veterans: House Bill 5542 makes several changes to the Illinois Joining Forces network at their request. The bill removes the executive board, which allows the foundation to add an additional 18 members, nine of which can be appointed by the foundation themselves, to assist with fundraising.
* WBEZ | Is a longstanding Chicago political tradition on its way out?: Just 113 objections were filed against candidates’ nominating petitions for the 2023 municipal elections. That’s the lowest number of objections for a municipal election since 1983, when 105 objections were filed, according to a WBEZ analysis of historical objection cases heard by the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.
* The Crusader | Blacks blast Lightfoot’s plan to house migrants on South Side: In news reports, Alderman Taylor said she was “blindsided” by the decision. She told radio station WVON’S Perri Small she knew nothing about the renovations or the plan to house migrants at the shuttered school. Lightfoot herself did not attend the community meeting, fueling disappointment and disgust among Woodlawn residents, including homeowners.
* WBEZ | Chicago’s confrontational police union boss is facing a tough reelection challenger: A formidable candidate is trying to unseat John Catanzara as head of the union for Chicago’s 10,000 rank-and-file cops. But officers of color, women and political moderates in CPD may find Det. Robert Bartlett similar to the incumbent. Both are white men in a union long run by white men. Both have spoken highly of Donald Trump and both have opposed efforts to toughen police oversight.
* Daily Southtown | Area teachers join statewide effort to address racism in schools: The act would classify instances of racial harassment as civil rights violations for officials and institutions that don’t work to stop them. Schools would need to adopt and display a policy, as well as train employees and distribute it to everyone involved. The proposed bill is online at www.racismfreeschools.org.
* Tribune | Illinois ranks 2nd behind Alaska for wintering bald eagles, and festival season is underway: The state’s abundance of eagles is on proud display this month, as communities host eagle festivals large and small. One of the closest festivals for Chicagoans, the Will County forest preserves’ Eagle Watch on Jan. 14 in Channahon, will feature a good chance to see a nesting pair that likes to perch just across the Des Plaines River from the Four Rivers Environmental Education Center.
* Pantagraph | Illinois State women finish strong for MVC win over Missouri State: Paige Robinson made a successful return to the Ozarks and Illinois State’s Kristen Gillespie secured her 200th win as a head coach Thursday as the Redbirds rallied for a 67-63 Missouri Valley Conference victory over Missouri State at Great Southern Bank Arena.
* Evanston Review | Some Evanston City Council members hope to attract dispensaries with cannabis lounges: Councilmember Eleanor Revelle has already gone on the record to call the referral, sponsored by Councilmember Devon Reid, a “mistake,” citing concerns brought forth by Evanston Health Advisory Council Chair Donald Ziegler. Ziegler said he opposes cannabis lounges due to secondhand smoke and said it should be banned wherever tobacco consumption is illegal.
* WROK | World’s Largest Guitar Is Coming Home To Illinois : The Illinois Rock & Roll Museum on Route 66 in Joliet, Illinois is set to receive the largest hand-made guitar sculpture ever created. The artwork, named GIGANTAR, will begin its journey to the museum on January 14th, starting with a launch party at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, New Jersey. GIGANTAR will then travel across five states on an open flat-bed truck, making stops at prestigious and historical sites along the way. The sculpture will arrive in Joliet on January 16th.
Following is a statement from Rep. Bob Morgan, the chair of the House Safety & Reform Working Group, on the passage of the Protect Illinois Communities in the House of Representatives, including a ban on assault weapons and high capacity magazines:
“This passage by the House is a monumental step, and all the activists, organizers and survivors who have flooded this building with their advocacy should be proud of this achievement. This is your victory. We aren’t done yet–but this legislative action represents serious progress on the road to full passage. I want to thank Speaker Welch for his leadership and guidance as we have worked to negotiate this package and move forward on the path to passing this life-saving, common sense legislation.”
* Speaker Welch…
“Tonight, I want to congratulate the Firearms Safety Working Group and the Reproductive Health Working Group. More importantly, I want to thank the members whose leadership, hard work, compromise, and compassion have allowed us to find purpose and progress in the pain and trauma so many have felt.
It is thanks to their months of hard work that the Illinois House passed common-sense gun reform and necessary protections for reproductive health care. We know that the work is not done; we will continue looking for opportunities to engage stakeholders and continuing to do the work to move Illinois forward.”
* Gov. Pritzker…
Following the Illinois House of Representatives taking action on several bills today, Governor JB Pritzker issued the following statement.
For months lawmakers and advocates have been hard at work negotiating two very critical pieces of legislation to keep Illinoisans safe. Tonight, with the leadership and support of Speaker Welch, the Illinois House passed critical reproductive health protections and an assault weapons ban. The people of Illinois send us to Springfield to tackle tough issues and these bills are historic steps in the right direction. I look forward to working with our colleagues in the Illinois Senate to get bills addressing these issues to my desk so I can sign them as soon as possible.
I’d like to thank Rep. Cassidy for her tireless work to protect reproductive healthcare and Rep. Morgan for his work to get weapons of war off our streets.
* Rep. Niemerg…
The Illinois House has approved another extreme abortion rights bill and has once again taken aim at the rights of parents, according to State Representative Adam Niemerg (R-Dietrich).
The House approved SB 1534, which was amended to include more radical pro-abortion language. The bill paves the way for mobile abortion clinics and allows physician’s assistants to administer certain types of abortions.
“When is enough, enough? We pass abortion bill after abortion after abortion bill after abortion bill,” Niemerg said. “The other side is talking about the physician and the patient but what about the parents? I’m a father. There are many mothers and fathers who want to be involved in their kids’ lives. But the radical Democrat majority repealed parental notification. Now we are making it so that physician assistants can perform abortions and we are putting a mobile abortion clinic in southern Illinois. They have removed all liability for abortion clinics. So now a 14-year-old girl can be driven to an abortion clinic by her boyfriend, and she can have that abortion and that child could die on the table with no liability for abortion clinic and the parents wouldn’t know anything about it until it was all over. It is time we started talking about the parents. When is enough, enough? It is obvious there are no restrictions on abortion the proponents of this bill will support.”
Senate Bill 1534 now moves to the Illinois Senate for further consideration.
* ISRA…
The Illinois State Rifle Association (ISRA) harshly condemns the actions of the Illinois General Assembly as it prepares to vote in the Senate on a comprehensive ban of hundreds of types of firearms across Illinois.
“The Illinois General Assembly is working to pass a bill that the law-abiding gun owners across the state will fear, but criminals will ignore, as they already do to the dozens of laws already on the books,” said Richard Pearson, Executive Director of the Illinois State Rifle Association. “What is most alarming is the impact this will happen on police departments as they try to determine how to implement this law on their law-abiding constituents,” Pearson added.
Pearson echoed the concerns and the alarm felt by ISRA members and the thousands of other FOID card-carrying individuals across the state who rely on their firearms for safety.
Our members, concerned citizens, and members of the law enforcement community are being urged to call their senators in their Springfield offices to have their voices heard on SB 2226 HA2.
The link to the bill can be found here:
https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/fulltext.asp?DocName=10200SB2226ham002&GA=102&SessionId=110&DocTypeId=SB&LegID=134879&DocNum=2226&GAID=16&SpecSess=&Session=
Should the bill pass the Senate and be signed into law, the ISRA will work with other groups and concerned citizens across the state who put their personal safety first and will advocate for repeal in the next session of the Illinois General Assembly as well as consider litigation on what many believe is a constitutionally flawed bill.
“A comprehensive bill targeting the weapon but not the individual who is committing a crime with them is doomed to failure,” said Terry Kreimeier, retired Will County Sheriff Deputy. “Illinoisans want bills that disarm those who should not have firearms, not those who have trained, have complied with all laws, and are state approved to have them.”
* Illinois Freedom Caucus…
The Illinois Freedom Caucus today is issuing the following statement on the passage of Amendment 3 to SB 2226 (the latest version of House Bill 5855) which represents the most expansive gun control measure in the history of the state.
“Once again, we come to the end of the legislative session and the majority party pushes through a massive bill giving rank and file members only a few minutes to read it before voting on it. This legislation is not simple. It is a complex measure that should be seen in the light of day instead of pushed through in the dead of night.
The corrupt leaders in our state care nothing for the rights of members to cast informed votes nor do they care about the honest citizens whose rights are being trampled with this unconstitutional legislation. Illinois is one of the most restrictive states in the country for gun ownership and yet it is also one of the most violent states in the nation.
Multiple studies have shown that restricting the Constitutional rights of responsible citizens does not deter crime. The only thing this legislation accomplishes is to make a direct attack on our Second Amendment rights. The respect for individual liberty found in the Bill of Rights is what has made our country a ‘city upon a hill.’ As lawmakers, it is our duty to protect and preserve the Constitution. We believe every member of the House who voted for this legislation violated their oath of office by supporting a bill they know is on its face unconstitutional. Today is a sad day for liberty and freedom. Tyranny reigns supreme in the Illinois Legislature. We will continue to stand firm in our opposition to unconstitutional laws and any and all threats to our rights and freedoms as American citizens.”
The Illinois Freedom Caucus is comprised of State Representatives Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich); Chris Miller (R-Oakland); Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville); Blaine Wilhour (R-Beecher City) and Dan Caulkins (R-Decatur). The members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus are members of the Illinois General Assembly who are advocating for limited government, lower taxes and accountability and integrity in government.
* Rep. Harper…
Following the passage early Friday morning of the Protect Illinois Communities Act (PICA), state Rep. Sonya M. Harper, D-Chicago, issued the following statement.
“Last night, we made progress in promoting public safety in our state. The bill my colleagues and I voted on and passed promises to improve public safety in our state in many ways. It is important, however, that we not forget that assault weapons and mass shootings are only part of the problem we face. I hope I will not be misunderstood: the Protect Illinois Communities Act represents a significant—and necessary—step in protecting our communities. It is an accomplishment of which we should be proud. However, the fact is that assault weapons only account for about 3% of gun crimes nationwide, and mass shootings are only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the totality of the gun violence that people in our state have been experiencing on a daily basis for decades—especially in majority-minority and other historically disinvested communities. Again, last night’s historic achievement should in no way be diminished. But more remains to be done. I look forward to working with Governor Pritzker and legislative leadership throughout the coming session to develop and pass common sense solutions that address the most common and incessant forms of gun violence which remain a serious problem throughout our state. We have done a good thing, but we cannot rest with the job unfinished.”
*** UPDATE *** We may be seeing more of this as groups try to pressure the Senate into taking action. NASW IL..
Last night the Illinois House passed the Patient And Provider Protection Act (PAPPA) which was a culmination of months of negotiations by stakeholders. This bill not only protects patients and social workers who work in abortion-related services but also protects our clients and social workers who work in gender-affirming care from aggressive attacks from states wishing to strip rights and protections from these individuals.
Unfortunately, the Illinois Senate’s competing bill that was posted this week stripped out protections for social workers who provide gender-affirming care and protections for our clients seeking out those services. The lessons learned from the last election should not be to stand with groups like Awake Illinois, whose aggressive approach threatens and attacks our client’s very existence.
Children and adolescents who identify as LGBTQIA+ face numerous challenges that can negatively affect their mental health in Illinois. In addition to discrimination, harassment, and violence, LGBTQIA+ people face family rejection, inadequate support, and a lack of inclusive education and healthcare, including enough mental health professionals. Young LGBTQIA+ people may also be more likely to develop mental health issues such as depression, anxiety, and suicidality due to these stressors.
We already have a shortage of quality-affirming practitioners in Illinois. As clinicians licensed in multiple states fear challenges to their licenses and livelihoods, the added stressors from outside states that propose legislation that would impose their regressive policies on abortion and gender-affirming health care will only further worsen our shortage situation. Providing gender-affirming care is fraught with risks due to unclear laws, and one of the most frequently asked questions social workers are now asking is related to these risks.
In Illinois, LGBTQIA+ youth have found a welcoming beacon, but this light can shine only as long as Illinois affirms its commitment to its protections. During a time when extremist groups like Awake Illinois attack and bully our children, we look to our legislative leadership to reaffirm that hate has no place here in Illinois. The legislative leadership must reaffirm that social workers’ critical work is protected as they strive to heal the horrible wounds thrust on our children.
It is essential that Illinois protect healthcare providers and our clients seeking out abortion and gender-affirming healthcare. Social workers in Illinois are watching, and we expect the Illinois Senate to follow the lead of the Illinois House on this issue. The LGBTQIA+ children are watching, and they want the Illinois Senate to join the Illinois House in reassuring them that they are seen, wanted, and protected.
The Illinois Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers urges the Illinois Senate to support the Patient And Provider Protection Act as written and passed by the Illinois House.
And…
Today, the Gun Violence Prevention PAC (G-PAC) released the following statement from its CEO Kathleen Sances following reports that proposed statewide bans on assault weapons and large-capacity magazines passed the House. The bill will now be deliberated by the Senate.
“By passing the assault weapons and large-capacity magazines in the House, our lawmakers are prioritizing public safety over the gun lobby’s agenda. We are grateful to Representative Bob Morgan, Speaker Emanuel Welch and the House working committee for their leadership on this issue. Its passage through the House represents a critical first step in removing assault weapons and large-capacity magazines off our streets.
“Since July, G-PAC has stood firmly with gun violence prevention advocates and survivors to demand our lawmakers work to halt the assault on our families and communities. We are grateful to the network of activists who have helped us keep the pressure on Springfield and ensure gun safety remains top of mind for the General Assembly. We look forward to working with the Senate to pass these same life-saving measures for Illinois children and families. Gun safety advocates can count on G-PAC’s full support to help see this measure across the finish line.”
The Chicago Index, a collaboration between The Daily Line and Crain’s Chicago Business, conducted its second administration of the 2023 Race for Mayor survey from November 29 through December 14, 2022. A total of 1,757 Chicago residents were surveyed from a variety of sources, including subscribers to The Chicago Index’s panel, members of The Daily Line Chicago, subscribers to Crain’s Chicago Business, and via digital engagement on social media platforms
Results were weighted on age, region, housing tenure, race, ethnicity, and gender, so the sample was consistent with the demographics of Chicago. The margin of error was +/- 3%.
I mean, that’s basically just one step above the little online “polls” I run here. The difference is, I don’t claim that my little polls are scientific and they rightfully don’t generate news headlines or create talk show fodder. They’re for fun, not info. If a reporter tried to do a story on one of those silly polls, I’d laugh in their face.
If you want to see the results, by all means click those links, but they’re worthless and the media outlets need to stop publishing this silly nonsense.
[Chicago mayoral candidate Willie Wilson] is criticizing the survey and Crain’s decision to publish it, and says that as a result he will not participate in Crain’s mayoral forum scheduled for Feb. 1.
“Crain’s published a poll that seeks to mislead the voters of Chicago,” Wilson said. “The poll Crain’s published has me at 3%. This is an insult to my supporters and Crain’s has zero journalistic integrity. I will not be a pawn in their charade; thus, I will not participate in their upcoming mayoral candidate forum.”
He added, “The news media has an obligation to demonstrate integrity and thoughtfulness when deciding which polls to publish. If they know it is misleading or inaccurate it should not be published.”
Lightfoot spokeswoman Christina Freundlich also is ripping the survey: “This is about as scientific and reliable as an Elon Musk poll,” she said. “No amount of weighting can save a survey of Chicagoans where 74% of the respondents are white. Any media organization that gives this poll any air time needs to examine their standard for poll credibility.”
One quibble: The survey sample was 53 percent white. But that’s still way, way out of line with reality.
* What Bowen said…
If you are a journalism outfit and you are covering this poll, you are engaging in misinformation.
Everyone throws this word around willy-nilly, but I am being very direct here. You are spreading a blatant untruth, and you can ask anyone with professional experience about this.
* But don’t take our word for it. Jason McGrath with GBAO Strategies and Brian Stryker at ALG Research both took strong exception to this goofy survey way back in April of 2021…
Good public opinion research should be as representative as possible. A representative sample attempts to provide every potential respondent with the same chance of entering the sample. A representative poll of Chicago-area residents must give people in every community the same opportunity to take the survey.
But the data collection method in the Crain’s/TDL/ABC survey fails to meet that standard. The survey’s sponsors reached out to their personal networks—especially political operatives and insiders—and those reading their stories directly. That gave some well-connected people (like us) a higher likelihood of entering the sample than millions of others. This meant their disproportionately white and male network of political insiders and business executives were more likely to take the poll.
There are certainly deficiencies in modern polling. The areas where pollsters are working to address problems, including achieving full coverage of the electorate, declining response rates, omitted variables and the incorporation of multiple modes of data collection, have been discussed in detail elsewhere. But the Crain’s/TDL/ABC survey fails to correct for any of the problems present in public opinion research today—if anything, it makes them worse and creates new ones.
The massive design flaws in the survey are only part of the problem. The widespread media coverage of the index treated this instrument with the same seriousness as it would one from Pew, Gallup or another academic institution with a long record of measuring public opinion.
* The proposal allows students to opt out: “No student shall be required to take or participate in any class or course in comprehensive personal health and safety and comprehensive sexual health education”…
There had been little to no warning that this bill would be coming, but it was assigned to the Senate Executive Committee shortly after it was officially made public. It appears that they didn’t like the fact that nearly 70 percent of school districts opted out.
* I reached out to sponsoring Sen. Ram Villavallum…
It’s requiring age and developmentally appropriate, medically accurate personal health and safety education for K-5 and age and developmentally appropriate, medically accurate sex health education for 6-12.
When 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 13 boys experience child sexual abuse at some point in their childhood, what she calls controversial, I call necessary for all of our youth’s safety and health.
The bill was approved by the Senate Executive Committee on a partisan roll call last night, but Democratic Sen. Linda Holmes expressed concerns during the hearing about another state mandate.
– Statement regarding the status of reproductive rights and firearms proposals. Please attribute to John Patterson, spokesman for Illinois Senate President Don Harmon.
“These are critically important issues, and the Senate Democratic Caucus is committed to enacting the most effective legislation possible.
Senators are giving these proposals an extensive review and careful evaluation.
Following today’s session, the Senate will be returning to session on Sunday.”
As we’ve discussed, Senate President Harmon’s mom recently passed away and her wake is later today, so they’re going home early today and tomorrow’s session was canceled.
The House has canceled tomorrow’s session and will be back on Tuesday. But the House has already passed an abortion bill and a gun bill.
The new General Assembly convenes Wednesday at noon.
…Adding… The Senate reconvenes Sunday at 5 pm. I doubt we’ll see much action.
State Senator Robert Peters is leading a measure that would allow principals and assistant principals in the city of Chicago to collectively bargain.
“For far too long, Chicago principals have not had a say in the work environment and procedures that affect them, as well as their students,” said Peters (D-Chicago). “Chicago principals have a voice when it comes to their working conditions, and their voice deserves to be heard and valued.”
By clarifying which educators are considered qualifies “managerial employees”, House Bill 5107 ensures principals and assistant principals in Chicago will have the right to unionize.
“CPS is not only the largest school district in the state, but one of the largest in the nation,” Peters said. “With its size and staffing shortages come unique challenges that need to be addressed. I believe we should trust its principals to help create solutions to build a better work environment.”
If signed, principals and assistant principals could negotiate a work contract to focus time on developing teachers and school culture instead of dealing with problems that fall under the district’s responsibility.
School administrators in New York, California, New Hampshire, Alaska, Connecticut and several other states have collective bargaining rights.
House Bill 5107 passed the Senate Friday and awaits the governor’s approval.
The bill passed the House last March 63-35, but received significant bipartisan support in the Senate today when it passed 45-7.
Amends the Chicago School District Article of the School Code. Repeals provisions concerning exemption from bargaining unit membership. Amends the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act. With respect to an educational employer of the Chicago school district, provides that (i) a supervisor shall be considered an “educational employee” unless the supervisor is also a managerial employee and (ii) a “managerial employee” means an individual who has a significant role in the negotiation of collective bargaining agreements or who formulates and determines employer-wide management policies and practices, including a general superintendent of schools (rather than an individual who is engaged predominantly in executive and management functions and is charged with the responsibility of directing the effectuation of such management policies and practices). In provisions concerning strikes, prohibits educational supervisors employed in the Chicago school district whose position requires an administrative license from engaging in a strike. Effective January 1, 2023.
Mayor Lightfoot has been able to keep this proposal bottled up for quite a while, but not today.
…Adding… The mayor changed positions…
STATEMENT FROM MAYOR’S OFFICE SPOKESPERSON
“The City of Chicago commends the passage of House Bill 5107 and encourages its statewide expansion to benefit schools all across Illinois. This bill supports principals who have been on the frontlines, especially in recent years, and under CEO Martinez, CPS will continue to work hand in hand with principals to achieve academic excellence—a goal that should be implemented statewide.”
Yesterday was the six -month anniversary of the Fourth of July shooting and I had a really hard time in the morning as we got to 10:14. And I remember where I was standing, about to start the parade, and my wife and my two children were right behind me. And my staffer was standing in front of me and yelled, ‘Gunshots! Gunshots!’
And I reached back to make sure my children were safe.
When I got to the scene, I saw those who’ve been shot, carried away a two-year-old who was covered in blood because both of her parents had been shot.
And this is not a unique situation. And I left that day thinking I will do whatever I can, whatever is in my power to make sure none of us none of you, none of your communities go through what we went through.
And yet I failed. Because within three days of the Fourth of July shooting, there were more gun deaths throughout the state of Illinois than that day on the Fourth of July in Highland Park. So I failed. And I literally have been carrying that on my shoulders to this moment as we stand here right now.
So, I really want to say thank you. I know this is a complicated issue that affects a lot of communities in a lot of ways. A lot of you have directly been impacted by gun violence, mass shootings, death by suicide, individual gun violence. And you have created this legislation by sharing your stories with me, with us in this chamber. So I want to thank you all and I urge and aye vote.
Kimberly Saunders was grabbing a gyro at a restaurant just blocks from the upscale Magnificent Mile commercial district near downtown Chicago in May when she heard rapid-fire gunshots around 10:30 p.m.
“I feel like I heard 20 shots,” she recalled. “I used to watch these war movies as a kid, so it sounded like one of those machine guns.”
The shots came from outside a nearby McDonald’s restaurant, prompting Saunders to go down the street to find out what happened. What she discovered horrified her: Sprawled on the sidewalk in a pool of blood was her 17-year-old son, Parnelius. He had been shot multiple times in his arm, shoulder and back as he walked home from the beach.
“Oh, my God, I just walked up there on my son bleeding out,” Saunders said. “So I took my shirt off, and I begin to put my shirt over his wounds.”
Parnelius Saunders survived. Police and prosecutors said Jaylun Sanders, 22, shot him and eight others. Two of the victims died. The shooting was related to a fight 20 minutes earlier, police said.
The firearm used was a Glock 19 handgun that had been converted to an illegal high-capacity machine gun with a device known as an auto sear, a square device about the size of a thumbnail. It’s known on the street as a “switch” that turns the gun from a semi-automatic to an automatic weapon.
The Glock came with an extended magazine, making the weapon even deadlier. The magazine held 34 rounds, according to court records. Sanders told authorities he bought the gun in Indiana and the switch for less than $25. […]
The number of auto sear-equipped handguns seized by Chicago police skyrocketed from zero in 2018 to 355 last year, leading federal authorities to declare that Chicago has one of the worst switch problems in the country.
Sec. 24-1. Unlawful use of weapons. (a) A person commits the offense of unlawful use of weapons when he knowingly: … Manufactures, possesses, sells, or offers to sell, purchase, manufacture, import, transfer, or use any device, part, kit, tool, accessory, or combination of parts that is designed to and functions to increase the rate of fire of a semiautomatic firearm above the standard rate of fire for semiautomatic firearms that is not equipped with that device, part, or combination of parts.
Discuss.
* Related…
* In Chicago, handguns easily turned into high-capacity machine guns fuel growing violence: The number of switch-equipped handguns and extended magazines seized by the Chicago police has surged over the last several years, an investigation by the Chicago Sun-Times, WBEZ and NPR has found. And so has the number of prosecutions by the Cook County state’s attorney’s office involving guns that have been turned into machine guns. The proliferation of illegal switch-equipped guns has made Chicago a hot spot for what federal authorities say has become a national problem. That’s happened as mass shootings — in which at least four people are killed or wounded — have become more commonplace in Chicago. Federal authorities say they believe the proliferation of these makeshift machine guns is one of the main reasons.
* Sun-Times | Illinois House approves assault weapons ban: After a lengthy debate that stretched into Friday, the House voted 64-43 to pass the measure that would also ban “rapid-fire devices” that turn firearms into fully automatic weapons. It must still clear the Illinois Senate.
* Crain’s | Out-of-state providers could perform abortions in Illinois under proposed bill amendment: Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, is proposing to expand abortion access in Illinois through an amendment to a House bill that includes granting temporary licenses to out-of-state health care providers and protecting advanced nurses’ ability to perform abortions under certain circumstances.
* News-Gazette | In Springfield, the new Sen. Bennett reflects: “Those are the four he mentioned. It’s just that those are the four he talked about,” Stacy Bennett said. “And that’s all I feel comfortable saying. Those are the four who repeatedly came up when we talked.”
* Politico | Democrats’ big presidential primary changes are still stuck in limbo: Major changes, like dropping Iowa from its influential first-in-the-nation slot and elevating South Carolina, are on track. But others, like pushing Georgia up into the early window or forcing New Hampshire to relinquish its longtime status as the first state with a primary, look far more difficult to achieve despite the fanfare surrounding preliminary approval of the plan last year.
* The Atlantic | How Worried Should We Be About XBB.1.5?: After months and months of SARS-CoV-2 subvariant soup, one ingredient has emerged in the United States with a flavor pungent enough to overwhelm the rest: XBB.1.5, an Omicron offshoot that now accounts for an estimated 75 percent of cases in the Northeast. A crafty dodger of antibodies that is able to grip extra tightly onto the surface of our cells, XBB.1.5 is now officially the country’s fastest-spreading coronavirus subvariant.