Discovery Partners Institute teams up with U of I for cannabis research
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * I’ve said for decades that the U of I needs to turn loose its science and agriculture experts on cannabis research. Cannabis is a highly complex plant, and research might find all sorts of uses. Here’s Crain’s…
* Gov. Pritzker was asked about the proposal today…
Your thoughts?
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Afternoon news roundup
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. The governor was asked today about Stellantis’ decision to idle its Belvidere plant and the future of electric vehicle manufacturing in Illinois…
Please pardon all transcription errors. * Interesting stuff…
* Rep. Delia Ramirez has resigned her House seat now that she’s about to be sworn in as a US Rep. Lilian Jimenez won that district in November, so you gotta figure that she’ll be appointed early. As expected, Rep. Tim Butler submitted his resignation yesterday. Click here to read it. * AFSCME Council 31 heads back to the negotiating table for a new contract for its 35,000 state employees. Some stated priorities…
* Constituent email…
* Politico…
* Press release…
* In other words, they are prone to taking reckless risks…
* Isabel’s roundup…
* Sun-Times | Truck makers Rivian, Lion call on Pritzker to move faster on phaseout of gas and diesel-fuel engines: Rivian, with almost 6,000 employees in Normal, and Lion Electric, which is beginning to build electric school buses in Joliet, along with 14 other businesses connected to electric vehicles and clean energy sent a letter urging Pritzker to set specific targets for eliminating polluting trucks, buses and other large vehicles. Pritzker has touted electric vehicles as a major economic opportunity for Illinois, and last year signed into law new tax credits and other incentives to bring more manufacturing to the state promising “thousands of jobs.” * Courier and Press | Here’s how much Illinois made selling weed to Indiana, out-of-state residents: In October alone, Illinois made more than $40 million – $40,662,494 – off out-of-state sales to Hoosiers and other nearby residents. * Chalkbeat | Illinois education budget might boost career, early childhood programs – but recession worries loom: School districts must decide how to spend emergency COVID funds by a federally-imposed fall 2024 deadline. After federal funds run out, some districts may be scrambling to pay for programs created during the pandemic and increased staffing. However, according to a newly published spending dashboard, districts still have more than half of the pandemic relief money to spend. * Press Release | ISBE launches ESSER Spending Dashboard for funding transparency : he Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) has launched a new spending dashboard to provide the public with an easy-to-use tool showing how Illinois is using federal pandemic relief funds. The state received nearly $8 billion through three rounds of Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funding to support students’ recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. * Sun-Times | ComEd to spend $40 million on plan to rid homes of natural gas: ComEd is moving from a pilot project to a larger plan to “decarbonize” thousands of homes, making them energy efficient and more environmentally friendly. * Sun-Times | CTA, Pace to issue shared passes next year: “We’re thrilled to partner with the CTA on these changes which will open more doors to employment, education, and essential services throughout our region,” said Pace Executive Director Melinda Metzger. * Sun-Times | Metra to rebuild 3 Electric Line stations on South Side: The stations at 79th, 87th and 103rd streets will be rebuilt from the ground up starting next summer and will be made handicap accessible, the transit agency announced Wednesday. * Wall Street Journal | Why You Might Be Having Trouble Buying Children’s Flu and Cold Medicine: U.S. households are stepping up spending on cough and cold medicines and children’s pain relievers amid a rise in reports of respiratory infections, leading to sporadic shortages of some drugs online and at stores. * Washington Post | Why a ‘tripledemic’ is keeping many of us sick for weeks at a time: As we approach year four of the coronavirus pandemic, Lane and other doctors agree the overlapping viral surges and how they are playing out are unusual and concerning: Patients with back-to-back respiratory illnesses. Simultaneous infection with three or more viruses. Otherwise healthy people suffering for weeks, rather than days, with simple colds. * WSIU | Formerly incarcerated students in Illinois continue remote learning to finish their degrees: The pandemic forced prison programs around the country to adapt to remote learning. In Illinois, it also paved a path for college students leaving prison. * WGEM | Dr. Ezike testifies before special COVID-19 congressional subcommittee: The Congressional Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis submitted its final report Wednesday to help prepare for and prevent the next public health emergency. A familiar public figure from Illinois also testified during the subcommittee’s final hearing Wednesday afternoon. Former IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike was asked to provide her perspective on how to best address the ongoing pandemic. Ezike said COVID-19 has highlighted the need for public health departments to focus more attention on health equity. She noted that thousands of people hospitalized for COVID-19 complications in Illinois suffered from underlying chronic conditions. * Time | Here’s what we know about Sam Bankman-Fried’s political donations : A number of lawmakers from both parties are facing growing pressure to give up their campaign contributions from Bankman-Fried and other FTX executives in light of allegations that he stole customer funds. The campaign of Beto O’Rourke, a Democratic candidate for Texas governor this year, said it returned a $1 million SBF donation four days before Election Day, according to The Texas Tribune. Other lawmakers donated the money to charity, including Reps. Chuy Garcia, Democrat of Illinois, and Kevin Hern, Republican of Oklahoma. * Washington Post | Lawmakers grapple with sheer size of FTX’s missing billions: Lawmakers on Wednesday attempted to grapple with the stunning collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX a day after federal prosecutors laid out a case of brazen financial crimes allegedly perpetrated by its former CEO, Sam Bankman-Fried, who is being held by authorities in the Bahamas. * The Hill | Democrats press Amazon on ‘failure to improve safety’ of tornado-struck warehouse : Three Democrats on Thursday asked Amazon to detail how it plans to keep workers safe as it rebuilds a warehouse in Illinois that was struck by a tornado and collapsed last year. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), in a letter shared exclusively with The Hill, pressed Amazon CEO Andy Jassy to explain the “rationale” for Amazon’s “reported failure to improve structural safety” at the facility despite six workers dying at the site during last year’s tornado and subsequent collapse. * Washington Post | Want to save the planet? Saving whales could help, scientists say.: Many nature-based solutions to fighting climate change have focused on the ability of trees and wetlands to capture and store atmospheric carbon dioxide. But in a paper published Thursday in the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution, a group of biologists explores the idea that whales can influence the amount of carbon in the air and in the ocean, potentially contributing to the overall reduction of atmospheric carbon dioxide. * Washington Post | Elon Musk’s role at Tesla questioned as Twitter occupies his attention: Some Tesla investors are concerned that Musk is focusing too much on the social media company and becoming more polarizing.
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Jobs up, but state says unemployment rate rose a click as more people try to return to workforce
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * IDES…
More… ![]()
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Social justice advocates wary of criminal penalties in new gun bill
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is how gun control debates are usually covered in the news media…
The hard reality is that the Democrats’ huge super-majorities mean the pro-gun folks have precious few allies. They likely can’t stop a bill on their own. * To the bill…
And who would most likely be arrested? Black and Brown youth, say social justice advocates. * So, this is the coming legislative reality in Illinois…
Kollman is the policy director for the Children and Family Justice Center, but I have talked to others like her who have expressed the same sentiments. * A similar argument was used against this Chicago proposal, which ultimately passed…
These are the same groups who are fresh off their SAFE-T Act victory. They would view the legislation as a setback. Anyway, it’s something to be aware of as we move forward. And it’s likely the bill’s proponents included an oversampling of Black and Brown voters in their recent poll to help buttress their case against just this sort of argument.
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Question of the day: 2022 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best US Representative goes to Adam Kinzinger…
Runner-up is Lauren Underwood. * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statewide Officeholder goes to JB Pritzker…
Runner-up is Susana Mendoza. Congrats to all! * On to today’s categories…
Lifetime Achievement Award Please do your best to nominate in both categories and make sure to explain your nominations or they won’t count. The “Association/Union Leader” category is new this year, so we’ll see how this works out. House Majority Leader Greg Harris won the Lifetime Achievement Award last year, so he’s ineligible this year. * And now I have some very good news to share…
Y’all are amazing! Give yourself a big round of applause! My (White Sox) hat is off to you. Thanks!!!
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Local legislators not thrilled by new Bears tax plan
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. Daily Herald…
Nobody has talked to Rep. Morrison? Mrs. McCaskey has made five contributions to Morrison over the years. She’s given more actual money to others (including $10K to Jeanne Ives), but no other candidates have received more checks than him, although she has written 19 checks to Paul Caprio’s Family PAC.
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More victimhood
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * From St. Louis Public Radio’s story about a person who runs a Facebook group with 1,400 followers who wants to secede from Illinois…
Apparently, her feelings are hurt. But if you look at that little page, you see stuff like this…
Everything is projection with these people. I mean, avowed former secessionist Darren Bailey loudly called Chicago a “hell hole” for months on the campaign trail, but you didn’t hear any candidates blasting Downstaters for being inferior. * Chicago Tribune op-ed by some Eastern Bloc members…
Sixty people were given four hours to vent their rage at that meeting, including people like this…
They probably should’ve been ignored, but they weren’t. * Back to the op-ed…
1) Rauner won in 2014 then proceeded to wreck the state government and was clobbered for it in 2018; 2) Bailey didn’t defend their values? Kinda revisionist, don’t you think?
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Morning briefing
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here’s your morning roundup…
* Tribune | With approval of Chicago casino and Red Line extension TIF, Lightfoot scores two wins amid reelection bid: While both projects have plenty of remaining hurdles, for Lightfoot, the votes on the casino and Red Line extension mark political victories she will likely tout on the campaign trail as she seeks reelection. The state legislature’s approval of a casino license for Chicago was Lightfoot’s biggest victory in Springfield and, if it goes as planned, will bring significant revenue to the city’s coffers. The Red Line extension, while years away, is also another milestone Lightfoot will claim as a boon to the city’s South Side. * CBS Chicago | Retiring Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White honored with gala: Illinois leaders sent off longtime Secretary of State Jesse White in style Wednesday night. State leaders staged a gala to honor White’s decades of tremendous public service. The dinner was attended by Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Gov. JB Pritzker, and other people who have served in the upper echelons of Illinois government. * WCIA | State lawmakers discuss amendment to protect abortion rights into Illinois Constitution: State lawmakers want to go one step further to protect abortion access in Illinois with a constitutional amendment. They want it to stay safe no matter who’s in office. “We are supportive of state lawmakers taking any action that works to protect Planned Parenthood of Illinois patients, and makes sure that there’s reproductive rights and access to abortion care throughout the state of Illinois” Rianne Hawkins, the director of advocacy and campaigns for Planned Parenthood Illinois Action, said. * Tribune | Aldermen want to use COVID-19 relief money to give property tax loans to struggling Chicagoans: As Chicagoans face down a holiday deadline to pay their property tax bills, Ald. Michael Rodriguez has unveiled a proposal to spend $10 million in unallocated federal COVID-19 recovery funding to help low-income Chicagoans meet the deadline. At a virtual news conference, Rodriguez and fellow Ald. Maria Hadden said the hard-hit Southwest Side and North lakefront neighborhoods they represent were particularly in need. * Chalkbeat | New high school gets more money from Chicago City Council as cost estimate climbs: A controversial new high school is another step closer to reality after Chicago’s City Council approved $8 million in city funds for the $150 million project. Five progressive aldermen voted against the measure on Wednesday. * WTTW | In Cook County, Black Youth Make Up 70% of the Foster Care System. Advocates Say More Support is Needed After They Age Out.: In Cook County, Black youth account for more than 70% of the child welfare system. Meanwhile, Black residents make up only 23% of the county’s total population. As of February 2022, there are more than 4,000 Black children in foster care in Cook County. * Tribune | Man who straw-purchased gun used to kill Chicago police Officer Ella French sentenced to 2 ½ years in federal prison: The sentence was half the five-year maximum Jamel Danzy could have received. U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman noted Danzy is college educated and said he had no evidence Danzy knew where the gun he bought would wind up. * Block Club | Ald. Anabel Abarca Sworn In To Lead Southwest Side’s 12th Ward: Anabel Abarca became the newest member of City Council after being sworn in as 12th Ward alderperson Wednesday morning. Abarca was appointed by Mayor Lori Lightfoot earlier this week to fill the 12th Ward seat left vacant by former Ald. George Cardenas. Her appointment passed the Rules Committee Tuesday and the City Council Wednesday with a vote of 44-0. * Vandalia Radio | Illinois again leads nation in gun background checks: Illinois is on pace to lead the nation again this year for the number of firearm background checks and one legal expert expects the numbers will only increase. FBI stats show Illinois leading the nation with nearly 4 million firearm background checks. U.S. LawShield President Kirk Evans said while that doesn’t necessarily equate to the number of guns being purchased, people buy more guns when there’s uncertainty. * Sun-Times | After nearly 10 years, Jane Byrne Interchange ‘substantially complete,’ expected to cut congestion in half: “It’s been an awful long time in coming,” said Gov. J.B. Pritzker, who held a ribbon-cutting Wednesday morning to mark the accomplishment. * Sun-Times | Bally’s $1.7 billion River West casino gets final zoning approval from City Council: Chicago’s 30-year quest for a casino and entertainment complex that city officials are counting on to bail out police and fire pension funds is now exclusively in the hands of the Illinois Gaming Board. * Bloomberg | Chicago Taps Brakes on Gentrification With a Tax on Teardowns: “Living in a gentrifying neighborhood is like living with a live and open wound,” said Christian Diaz, who was born in Mexico but has called Logan Square home for most of his life. “It turns our streets into an emotional minefield because it just seems like our neighborhood is valuable now because White people want to live here. And it wasn’t before, because it was predominantly Latinx.” * The Athletic | The biggest takeaways from the NWSL—NWSL PA joint investigation report: On Wednesday, the NWSL and NWSL Players Association released the full report following their joint investigation into misconduct across the league. The document, prepared by law firms Covington & Burling (hired by NWSL as an independent investigator) and Weil (counsel for the NWSLPA), details “widespread misconduct directed at NWSL players” at “the vast majority of NWSL clubs at various times from the earliest years of the league to the present.” * NBC Chicago | Illinois Is Getting an Official State Snake. Here’s What to Know About the Serpent: The eastern milksnake is set to become the state’s official snake, notching the distinct title under an amendment to Illinois’ Designation Act. According to officials, the snake can be found all across the Land of Lincoln, living in river bottoms, rocky hills and woodlands. It can reach 2-to-3 feet in length, and it has large blotches and a y- or v-shaped marking on its head.
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Open thread
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * All yours, but keep it Illinois-centric.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Dec 15, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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Bears float new tax subsidy for suburban stadium
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Greg Hinz…
There’s more. Discuss.
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Labor news
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Daily Herald…
* Interesting insight from the New York Times…
* School of the Art Institute adjunct professors and lecturers have joined the union wave, the Sun-Times reports…
* More… * Sun-Times | Bally’s $1.7 billion River West casino gets final zoning approval from City Council: Burnett, who had been the casino’s biggest champion, threatened to “raise a lot of hell” if he didn’t see in writing the minority hiring agreements Bally’s had made with labor unions. For years, Burnett has criticized those same trade unions for shortchanging minorities. But after being bombarded with phone calls — from top mayoral aides, union leaders and Bally’s officials, Burnett dropped his threat, saying he’s convinced the casino giant will honor its promise to build a workforce composed of 60% minorities and 45% women. * CBS Chicago | Starbucks employees to rally at Federal Plaza for anniversary of unionization: Starbucks workers in Chicago will rally Friday to mark the first anniversary of a major unionization campaign. Chicago labor leaders will join Starbucks employees at the noon rally in Federal Plaza. * Sun-Times | UIC faculty union sets strike date: The nearly 900-member union has been working without a contract since mid-August and decisively authorized a strike last month. * Fairfield Sun Times | Illinois Is Pushing Back Against the Anti-Union Tide: Legal experts anticipate litigation over the amendment, including on issues as fundamental as who and what it actually covers. The amendment protects “employees” – not specifically “public-sector employees” – implying it could govern their private sector counterparts. That’s an apparent conflict with federal labor law. * Wardsauto | Stellantis Idling Illinois Plant; UAW ‘Deeply Angered’: Stellantis spokeswoman Jodi Tinson emphasizes the automaker is not closing the plant. “We are stopping production as of Feb. 28. We are not closing the plant,” she tells Wards. “We have to negotiate that with the union.”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Afternoon news roundup
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * First, an explainer…
Despite what Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown claimed yesterday and pretty much all Chicago news media repeated, Samuel Parsons-Salas wasn’t released early on parole in September. Parsons-Salas did his time and the state wasn’t allowed to hold him any longer. Parsons-Salas is currently charged with the brutal murder of three people and with kidnapping. The video is here, but I cannot recommend watching it. The shooter fired off 13 rounds in quick succession. Within half a minute, three people were killed and another was shot in the head. * Senate President Harmon told me he believes candidates are already required to list their sponsoring entities on their “paid for” messaging. The Board of Elections disagrees, so legislation is likely needed…
* Sen. Dale Fowler (R-Harrisburg) told WJPF that he’s heading to Taiwan today with a trade delegation. That Cairo port is still in the works, but it’s apparently generating some real buzz overseas. * Crypto bro fallout bites another candidate. Rep. Buckner press release…
* Isabel’s roundup…
* Press Release | Gov. Pritzker Celebrates Historic Completion of Jane Byrne Interchange in Chicago: Gov. JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) joined local officials and community leaders today to celebrate the completion of the Jane Byrne Interchange reconstruction, a multiyear effort to modernize a key gateway into downtown Chicago and a critical transportation hub for the region and entire Midwest. One of the biggest projects in state history, the new-and-improved Jane Byrne Interchange eliminates a notorious national bottleneck and improves safety, efficiency, and mobility across multiple modes of transportation while better connecting people and jobs throughout the Chicago area. * Tribune | United to add 2,600 jobs in Chicago as part of plan to replace its aging fleet : The Boeing order alone will create 2,600 new jobs next year in the Chicago area, as United staffs up to handle the increased capacity the refreshed fleet will enable, the airline said. * CBS | Fed hikes interest rates for seventh time this year: The Fed’s rate-setting committee hiked its benchmark rate by 0.5 percentage point on Wednesday, lifting its target rate into a range between 4.25% and 4.5% — the highest level in 15 years. The federal funds rate affects the cost of borrowing for consumers and businesses throughout the economy. The half-percentage-point increase marks a step-down from a string of bigger interest rate hikes this summer, when the Fed made four consecutive 0.75% jumps in an effort to curb the most ferocious bout of inflation in four decades. * WGLT | Bill Hauter focuses on constituent services given the Illinois GOP superminority: An incoming freshman lawmaker says it will be hard to pass or hold up legislation in Springfield, given his party’s disappointing election results. Republican Bill Hauter of Morton said he plans to focus on constituent services. “What I can do and what I have been doing as an emergency physician is I’ve been helping people,” Hauter said. “What you can do in the super minority is you can be a voice for your district and you can also help people. You can help constituents.” * NPR Illinois | Republicans are making plans for Rep. Butler’s replacement: Republican county chairs from that district are seeking applications to serve until the new general assembly is sworn in next month. That would include being installed for what is often called the “lame duck” legislature the first week of January. Butler was elected in November in the newly drawn 95th House District, which includes parts of Sangamon, Macon and Christian counties. Chairs from those counties will select someone to fill the new year term starting January 11. * NBC Chicago | 10 New Illinois Laws Taking Effect in 2023: Passed in May, the Student Confidential Reporting Act, establishes a program where officials from schools, the state and Illinois State Police can receive reports and other information regarding the potential harm or self-harm of students or school employees. The Safe2Help helpline will involve a toll-free telephone number and other means of communication allowing messages and information to be given to operators. * Pluribus | Marijuana delivery gains traction as legalization spreads: “I think that as long as it is regulated, as long as we make sure that the person who is ordering it gets it, and that they’re legally allowed to, then it would seem to me like the same as somebody coming into a store,” Pritzker said at an event to celebrate the opening of his state’s first “social equity” marijuana dispensary. Recreational marijuana is now legal in 21 states, two territories and the District of Columbia. Thirty-seven states, three territories and D.C. allow medical use. An estimated 23 states allow the delivery of recreational marijuana or medical marijuana or both, according to tracking by the National Conference of State Legislatures. * Tribune | Aurora nominating petition challenge hearing continued to next week: A challenge to the nominating petitions of Aurora Ald. Patty Smith was continued Tuesday to next week. Members of the Municipal Officers Electoral Board are expected to make a decision then on whether the complaints about the petitions are enough to keep Smith off the ballot for the April 4, 2023, municipal election. * Illinois Newsroom | Students say Champaign schools fail to provide menstrual products: Loreal Allen was not surprised when she went into a bathroom at Central High School in Champaign in late November. Everything was as expected. She found soap, paper towels and a white dispenser that was supposed to contain menstrual products. As usual, she said, it was empty. * Crain’s | Illinois board approves sale of downstate hospitals: The Illinois Health Facilities & Services Review Board approved Quorum Health’s sale of four southern Illinois hospitals to Deaconess Health System. Evansville, Indiana-based Deaconess, a nonprofit 12-hospital system with facilities in Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky, plans to acquire Crossroads Community Hospital in Mt. Vernon, Heartland Regional Medical Center in Marion, Union County Hospital in Anna and Red Bud Regional Hospital. * Crain’s | Red Line extension TIF earns full City Council approval: The City Council on Wednesday approved the creation of a new tax-increment financing district to create $950 million over three decades to help pay for the $3.6 billion extension of the Chicago Transit Authority’s Red Line from 95th Street south to 130th Street. * Press Release | Department of Human Services Launches Campaign to Help Those with Gambling Problems : The Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) launched “Are You Really Winning?” - a campaign to build awareness of problem gambling and to promote helpline services for people experiencing gambling problems. According to research by Health Resources in Action (HRiA), four percent, or nearly 400,000, of Illinois residents have a gambling disorder, and another seven percent, or 700,000, are at risk of developing a gambling disorder. * Illinois Answers Project | Cook County Office Looks to Shed Anti-Patronage Monitor as Watchdog Raises Alarm: Since it was first brought by attorney and onetime political candidate Michael Shakman in 1969, the lawsuit Shakman v. Cook County Democratic Organization has spurred wave after wave of federal interventions designed to prevent public officials at the city, county and state level from doling out government jobs as rewards to political allies. Shakman, now 80, still oversees the litigation. * The American Prospect | The Easiest Criminal Indictment Ever : But embarrassingly bad criminals can help speed things along. As current FTX CEO John Ray, a restructuring specialist installed to manage the crypto exchange’s bankruptcy, told a House committee on Tuesday, crimes at Enron, another famously bankrupt company he stepped in to manage, “were highly orchestrated financial machinations by highly sophisticated people to keep transactions off balance sheets.” Enron declared bankruptcy in December 2001, but its former CEO Jeff Skilling wasn’t convicted of conspiracy, securities fraud, and other charges until May 2006. The group home in the Bahamas housing FTX executives, by contrast, “isn’t sophisticated whatsoever, this is just plain old embezzlement,” Ray said. * FOX 32 | Mother sues Flossmoor school after daughter was allegedly sexually assaulted in class: The alleged attack came months after hundreds of students staged a walkout at the same school over more allegations of sexual assault and harassment. * Tribune | No charges against students involved in apparent ‘wrestling incident’ at York Community High School: Parents of a special needs student seen pushed to the ground in a video posted on social media have declined a formal police investigation, Elmhurst police announced Tuesday. The Dec. 8 incident in a York Community High School restroom involved five students, including a boy with special needs. Police determined the students engaged in “willful physical contact,” while other students watched. The boy with special needs is on the wrestling team, and two of the boys involved are his teammates, police said. * Tribune | HIV/AIDS advocate and her family work to promote testing and fight stigma. ‘I feel like I’m not just existing, that I’m living.’: Four years later, the power of going public was on full display Saturday when friends, family and people hoping to learn more gathered at Lawndale’s Jesus Word Center to talk about how the deeply stigmatized disease has touched their lives. Openly sharing about the disease has changed their lives, those gathered said. * CBS Chicago | Biden signs Respect for Marriage Act, recognizing marriage equality in federal law: Vice President Kamala Harris, Democratic and Republican lawmakers and more than 5,000 guests marked the occasion on a frigid White House South Lawn. The signing comes a decade after Mr. Biden as vice president put former President Barack Obama in an awkward position by getting ahead of the then-president and endorsing same-sex marriage on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” * The Center Square | Black carp spreading through the Midwest threatens Illinois waterways: Illinois waterways are being invaded by another invasive species that could threaten the ecosystem. Black carp, which are native to east Asia, were first imported into the U.S. to control snails in fish farms where fish are bred. How they escaped is unknown. * Illinois News Bureau | Book examines tallgrass prairies’ ecological history, effects on Indigenous cultures: History professor Robert Morrissey wrote the first comprehensive environmental history of the tallgrass prairies and how they shaped tribal cultures in his recently published book, “People of the Ecotone.” The book also examines how those transformations contributed to the Fox Wars * Crain’s | Walgreens bets its future on an unprecedented reinvention: Walgreens Boots Alliance is betting its future on an unprecedented effort to reinvent itself as a health care company, a venture of immense scale and complexity. There’s no playbook for what the Deerfield-based company hopes to achieve. Never before has a retail pharmacy chain transformed into a full-fledged provider of medical care. Walgreens’ ambitions threaten to disrupt long-standing U.S. health care delivery structures, a status quo guarded by powerful entrenched interests.
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Pritzker says federal government should “step up” and stave off mass transit’s upcoming “fiscal cliff”
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * As we’ve already discussed, the RTA put federal into its operating base and now faces a “fiscal cliff” of $730 million a year in 2026 when the money dries up. That’s about 20 percent of the RTA’s operating base. The governor was asked about this today. His response…
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Another move to beef up the state’s EV incentive programs
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Stellantis North America COO Mark Stewart talked earlier this week about the company’s plans for its Jeep facility in Belvidere, which is scheduled to be idled in February. The company, he said, is “continuing to look at what we can do to repurpose that facility — but it’s idle, not closed.” And now all of a sudden, a new electric vehicle bill is being floated. Here’s Greg Hinz…
Illinois Chamber of Commerce CEO Todd Maisch told Hinz that other states have used the “but for” provision against Illinois. “They say if you come here, we can guarantee you these benefits” without attaching any strings. * From the governor’s office…
Pritzker has floated the possibility of a $1 billion closing fund. * The state has approved several incentives already. This bill, for instance, ended up zipping through both chambers during veto session…
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Question of the day: 2022 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statewide Staffer goes to the crowd favorite Anne Caprara…
* The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best State Agency Director goes to GOMB’s Alexis Sturm…
Congrats to both! * Today’s categories…
Best Statewide Officeholder As always, do your best to nominate in both categories and make sure to explain your nominations or they won’t count. The statewide officeholder can be a federal or state constitutional official. [I deleted “spokesperson” because I forgot that I already did that one. Oops!] * And after you cast your votes, please click here and donate to Lutheran Social Services of Illinois to help buy presents for foster kids. More about what LSSI does…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Morning briefing
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Thank you to all who have donated!…
* Now to your morning briefing…
* WCIA | Sen. Bennett’s therapy dog law still making big impact, comforting child victims in Illinois: Prosecutors often hire victim advocates to help comfort victims, Sangamon county’s top victim advocate is so good, he doesn’t have to say a word to do his job. Gibson is a certified therapy dog. He was hired back in 2017, and since then, he’s made a huge impact. * WAND | Sen. Bennett to be honored at Wreaths Across America: Wreaths Across America honors those buried in national cemeteries in all 50 states including the Danville National Cemetery. On Saturday 4,000 wreaths will be laid on graves with a special wreath honoring State Senator Scott Bennett. * WILL 100 | Growing Asian American representation in the Illinois Statehouse : Asian Americans are the fastest growing racial demographic in Illinois. In 2020, the U.S. Census Bureau estimated Asians make up almost six percent of the state’s population. It also estimated the number of Asian people in Illinois increased by almost a quarter in the prior decade. But for all that growth, representation in state government has lagged. It was only in 2016 that the Illinois General Assembly had its first Asian American representative elected to office. * Ted Slowik | Lawmakers on both sides face political pressure to oppose Illinois gun violence bill: This week, however, mainstream media paid modest attention to the testimony of survivors who spoke about the human toll of gun violence. It was one small step in a long struggle to wrest control of the narrative and talk about the human pain and suffering caused by guns, for a change. * The Center Square | Supporters, opponents of Illinois gun-ban legislation prepare for fight: In the ongoing debate around proposed gun control legislation at the Illinois statehouse, advocacy groups on both sides are working to advance their positions… “The ISRA will not be entering into any negotiations on this piece of legislation,” Lombardo said in a video posted to the group’s website. “You’ve wanted to draw a line in the sand for a long time? OK. Now it’s time to draw that line. We will see the state of Illinois in court if this law is enacted. But we have a problem.” * Crain’s | As Stellantis mulls Belvidere’s future, Pritzker moves to sweeten new EV incentives: Under the measure, expected to be put to a vote in the General Assembly’s January lame-duck session, Gov. J.B. Pritzker would get the huge “deal-closing fund” that other governors have. Insiders say the lack of such a fund recently cost the state a battery plant which, instead, was won by Michigan. The amount is being negotiated with General Assembly leaders, but Pritzker has suggested he’d like to have as much as $1 billion on hand to match offers from other states. * WCSJ News | Departing Morris State Rep and Wife Now Own Local Business: Morris residents Ashley and David Welter purchased RE/MAX Top Properties from Vicki Geiger and Tana Nordaker on November 28th, 2022. Ashley Welter is the President and will be running the day-to-day operations of the office while pursuing her broker’s license. David Welter has been a broker with the office since October 2018. * WTVO | New Illinois laws take effect Jan 1, 2023 after carjackings increase 767%: The first law makes it illegal to possess anything that unlocks or starts a car–other than a key fob– without permission of the owner. Such devices are considered burglary tools, the law states. Another law ensures that carjacking victims are not liable for violations or fees involving their stolen vehicles. The third provision that goes into effect on Jan. 1 provides grants and financial support to municipalities to assist with the identification, apprehension and prosecution of carjackers and the recovery of stolen vehicles. * Tammy Duckworth | President Biden, make site of the 1908 Springfield Race Riots a national monument:Last year, along with my fellow Illinois Senator Dick Durbin, I introduced legislation that would designate the site of the 1908 Race Riots as a national monument. And while despite our efforts, Congressional gridlock has thus far prevented the bill from passing, there is still another path forward. The President can bypass that stalemate and give the bill an alternative way ahead through the Antiquities Act: a law that empowers the President to designate federal lands as national monuments in the hope of preserving and protecting spaces of historical or cultural significance. * Sun-Times | Mayoral hopefuls agree solving crime is the answer — no matter what the question: Candidates often veered back to crime and public safety when answering questions on the CTA, businesses leaving the city and other matters at the forum, which was held on the Northwest Side. * WGLT | Connie Beard to resign as McLean County Republican Party chair: Beard said she was resigning “due to a local change of residence and family needs.” The move comes about a month after a disappointing election for McLean County Republicans, in which Democrats achieved an even power-sharing split on the County Board and won seats representing Bloomington-Normal in the U.S. House, Illinois House, and Illinois Senate. Beard herself said “it makes no sense in sugarcoating the results,” which she called a “disappointment.” * Lake Forester | Lake Forest mayoral race taking shape; ‘I think this is a really crucial time for the city’: Lake Forest is set to have a spirited mayoral race next year as former Alderwoman Prue Beidler has announced an independent candidacy, thus taking on the hierarchy of the Lake Forest Caucus. * Sun-Times | Jury awards CPD whistleblower nearly $1 million: Isaac Lambert’s lawyers had sought as much as $2 million for veteran detective who was demoted for speaking out about 2017 shooting of an unarmed teen by an off-duty officer. * Sun-Times | Ald. Sigcho-Lopez calls for hearings on CPD officer suspended over ties to the Proud Boys: The department’s handling of the probe “points out a much bigger problem about how internal affairs — and how, in general, the police department — is accountable to the public,” the alderperson said. * Block Club Chicago | Proco Joe Moreno Should Be Kicked Off 1st Ward Ballot, Objectors Argue In Complaint: Two neighbors of candidate Sam Royko are challenging Moreno’s bid for office in part because of his criminal history, while a longtime backer of the former alderperson also is trying to get Royko tossed from the race. * Washington Post | New penalties for companies that illegally fire workers who unionize: Companies that illegally fire or demote unionizing workers can now be held responsible for workers’ financial demise — including credit card late fees, lost housing or cars and health-care costs — in a move that could help some workers who have been fired from Starbucks and Amazon, labor activists say. * In These Times | Crypto Predators Wage Class War with a Smile: This conjured aura of an urgent fear-of-missing-out propels entire industries. Billions of dollars can be made cultivating people’s fear that an opportunity is passing them by. It amounts to an entire chunk of the economy that does little more than pull up next to consumers in a mysterious van and yell, “No time to explain — get in!” * Democracy Docket | New York Enacts Law To Count Valid Ballots Cast at Incorrect Polling Locations: On Tuesday, Dec. 6, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) signed into law S 284, which requires election officials to count provisional ballots cast by eligible voters who voted at the wrong precinct, but within the correct county and assembly district. Previously, New York would reject all ballots cast at incorrect polling locations, one of the factors that has contributed to New York’s exceedingly high ballot rejection rate, the third highest in the nation in 2020. * CBS Chicago | NBA unveils the ‘Michael Jordan Trophy’ for the MVP: The NBA unveiled the newly designed “Michael Jordan Trophy,” on Tuesday, along with five other trophies trophies named after NBA legends. The winners will be presented to the end-of-season Kia Performance Award winners.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please.
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Dec 14, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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Afternoon news roundup
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is what happens when your party’s top candidates and former President warn gullible hyperpartisans about voting by mail. It obviously wouldn’t have won the race for Bailey, but it would’ve taken some pressure off whatever election day workers he had…
* Sun-Times…
It really felt unprecedented. There was an even larger outpouring when Judy Baar Topinka passed, but she was widely known. * Lightfoot campaign press release…
US Rep. Garcia got $2,900 in direct contributions from Bankman-Fried, plus this…
We may never know the extent of SBF’s spending because he gave a lot of cash through dark money groups, including apparently to Republicans. Either way, I’m guessing the mayor believes the new poll. * Sun-Times op-ed…
A mayor has deliberately yanked money from her city’s schools after the General Assembly approved an elected school board and now it’s the legislature’s job to fix it? Maybe Rep. Cassidy can come up with a bill /s * Speaking of Lightfoot…
“Widen and open up opportunities” except for cutting K-12 spending. * Isabel’s roundup…
* Press Release | Gov. Pritzker Announces Sean M. Smoot as Chairman of the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board: * Axios | Illinois lags in energy efficiency despite new law: Illinois ranked 16th best this year, slipping from 15th and 11th in two previous years. Why it matters: Policies can drive real change, and Gov. JB Pritzker has vowed to make the state a climate leader. Highs and lows: Top scores went to California and Massachusetts, New York, Vermont and Maine; Kansas and Wyoming ranked worst. * Daily Herald | Travel is spiking as gas prices keep dipping, AAA forecasts: “If this trend continues, many states could see their average prices fall below $3 a gallon by early next year.” Gas price averages were $3.55 a gallon in the Chicago region Monday compared to $4.41 a month ago. * ProPublica | Ken Griffin Spent $54 Million Fighting a Tax Increase for the Rich. Secret IRS Data Shows It Paid Off for Him.: For billionaire Ken Griffin, it was well worth spending $54 million to ensure he and other rich Illinoisans wouldn’t have to pay more tax. By the time Illinois voters streamed into voting booths on Election Day in 2020, Griffin, then Illinois’ wealthiest resident, had made sure they’d heard plenty about why they should not vote to raise taxes on him and the state’s other rich people. His tens of millions paid for an unrelenting stream of ads and flyers against an initiative on that year’s ballot, which would have allowed Illinois lawmakers to join 32 other states in setting higher tax rates for the wealthy than for everyone else. * Illinois Answers Project | Pritzker will sign into law measure to prohibit state investments in Russian companies : State pension funds would have to pull millions of dollars in investments from Russian stocks and bonds under a measure the Illinois General Assembly has approved and that the governor is expected to sign into law. The measure unanimously passed the House in April of this year following the attack in February by Russian President Vladimir Putin. But the turnaround for the Senate to consider it was too quick for it to be made into law by the end of regular session, according to some lawmakers. * NYT | Republicans Are Breaking With the N.R.A., and It’s Because of Us: Her polling picked up an even more decisive change just recently. “We’ve broadened out the villain,” she said. For decades, Americans saw the N.R.A. as the impediment to gun legislation. But rage is refocusing on Congress, increasingly seen as the N.R.A.’s collaborators: “politicians who actually fail to do anything again and again,” she said, “and have failed to stand up to the N.R.A. And that’s what people actually want — are politicians with a backbone.” It’s why Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa — an N.R.A. darling who ran for office by firing a handgun in a major ad campaign — broke with the organization leading up to the June vote. She said her phone lines were swamped, six to one in favor of the gun safety bill, urgently repeating: “Please do something.” * CNBC | Consumer prices rose less than expected in November, up 7.1% from a year ago: Stocks initially roared higher following the report, with futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average up more than 800 points initially before easing a bit. However, the rally lost much of its steam through the session, and the Dow was up just 50 points or so near 2:30 p.m. ET. “Cooling inflation will boost the markets and take pressure off the Fed for raising rates, but most importantly this spells real relief starting for Americans whose finances have been punished by higher prices,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union. “This is especially true for lower-income Americans who are disproportionately hurt by inflation. * Crain’s | Paul Vallas’ anti-crime program takes a turn to the political right: Also on Vallas’ list is reviving the Chicago Transit Authority’s police transit unit and giving it full legal authority to make arrests. “Commuters should be as safe on the CTA as they are in our city’s airports,” he said. “Public transportation in Chicago under my administration will be synonymous with safe passage.” Vallas said he’d get some of the money to hire a force of 600 to 700 officers by replacing private security guards that the CTA recently hired. “This new unit would ensure that all stations and platforms have a police presence,” he said. The promise to enact and enforce, “a robust public nuisance ordinance” aimed at those “who disturb the public peace and threaten to do harm to witnesses, victims and communities” is a bit of a blast from the past—it sounds much like the controversial “broken windows” strategy employed by former New York City Mayor Rudi Giuliani. * WBEZ | Delaying access to Chicago police radio calls threatens public safety, media coalition says: The city’s new system prevents news reporters and the public from getting instant access to police scanners that broadcast information about crimes and emergencies — access that had been available for decades. * Sun-Times | Chicago Plan Commission endorses Bally’s casino plan: The city’s planning agency Monday approved zoning for the proposed Bally’s casino at Chicago Avenue and Halsted Street, a step in the $1.7 billion project’s journey through government approvals. The approval came despite a last-minute objection from a key alderperson. The Chicago Plan Commission endorsed the Bally’s proposal embraced by Mayor Lori Lightfoot, which includes a 500-room hotel, a 3,000-seat theater and event center and a riverwalk. The casino would get 4,000 gaming positions. * Crain’s | Local activist takes her fight for an assault weapons ban to the national stage: The current Senate bill, S.736, passed the House at the end of July but expires at the end of the year with congressional turnover. It needs 60 votes to pass and has the support of President Joe Biden. While both Illinois senators, Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin, already are co-sponsors, two new ones, Michael Bennet, D-Colo., and Gary Peters, D-Mich., are helping further the cause, Brandtner says: “We have time and we have momentum.” * Tribune | Chicago homicides in 2022: 661 people have been slain. Here’s how that compares with previous years.: The number of people slain so far in 2022: 661. That’s 110 fewer people killed when compared with this same date in 2021. * Crain’s | Sears Hometown files for bankruptcy: The retailer listed assets of no more than $50 million and liabilities of at least $50 million in its bankruptcy court petition, filed in Delaware. Chapter 11 bankruptcy allows companies to continue operating while working on a plan to repay creditors. * Crain’s | Belvidere Jeep plant to be ‘idle, not closed,’ Stellantis exec says: The Illinois plant that builds the Jeep Cherokee is being shut down in early 2023, but Stellantis North America COO Mark Stewart on Monday said the factory still could have a future. Stewart, during an event at a Detroit-area plant, said the automaker is “continuing to look at what we can do to repurpose that facility — but it’s idle, not closed.” * Daily Herald | Landmark Illinois compiling list of most endangered historic places: Landmarks Illinois is accepting nominations for the 2023 Most Endangered Historic Places in Illinois, which calls attention to historic and culturally significant sites across the state that are threatened with deterioration, demolition or inappropriate development. * Tribune | Defensive coordinator Ryan Walters leaves Illinois to be the new head coach at Purdue: Walters, 36, becomes the fourth-youngest coach in the Bowl Subdivision behind Kenny Dillingham (32, Arizona State), Kane Wommack (35, South Alabama) and Dan Lanning (36, Oregon). Walters replaces Jeff Brohm, who left to become the new head coach at Louisville. * The Guardian | Ninety-year-old woman is oldest person to graduate from Illinois university: Joyce DeFauw of Illinois has given a whole new meaning to the term super senior, used for students who take longer than the usual four years to get their undergraduate degrees. On Sunday, the 90-year-old received a bachelor’s of general studies from Northern Illinois University more than seven decades after she first stepped on campus, becoming what officials believe to be the eldest person to ever graduate from the school.
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Legal fight over the meaning of bail
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Illinois Constitution…
That passage is at the heart of the state’s attorneys’ lawsuit challenging the SAFE-T Act’s constitutionality…
* As I’ve told you before, the Illinois Supreme Court’s Commission on Pretrial Practices defined bail this way in its final report…
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Question of the day: 2022 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Do-Gooder Lobbyist goes to John Amdor…
Nuff said. * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Legislative Liaison goes to Andi VanderKolk from the Illinois Department of Insurance…
Andi was clearly the crowd favorite and had a ton of solid nominations. Congratulations!
Best State Agency Director Please do your utmost to nominate in both categories and explain your nominations or they won’t count. Thanks! * After you vote, please come back and read this story: Before 2019, I helped Lutheran Social Services of Illinois raise a little money during my annual Christmas speech. It was usually around a couple thousand dollars plus a bunch of toys for foster kids. But I stopped doing that speech and decided to switch to online fundraising in 2019. Y’all really stepped up by contributing $11,111 to honor our late commenter Wordslinger that year to buy presents for foster kids in LSSI’s programs. In 2020, we raised $12,175 for LSSI’s kids. Last year, we raised $22,700 for presents. Well, as I write this, you have so far contributed $39,798! That is just amazing, and the folks at LSSI are simply over the moon with joy. Most importantly, though, you’re helping give a whole lot of foster kids a great holiday to remember. Merry Christmas! As I’ve already told you, because of your generosity, LSSI has revised its fundraising goal to $45,000. We are not the only ones raising money to buy presents for those foster kids, but we’re by far the largest group. So if LSSI is going to make it to their new goal, it’s mainly up to us to help them get there. Please, click here and help buy presents for foster kids. If you haven’t yet done so, now’s your chance. If you have already given, but could contribute just a little more, that would be so very awesome. Thanks and I love you all.
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Chicago poll shows crime and public safety far above any other issues for voters
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Heather Cherone at WTTW…
* OK, let’s focus on crime and public safety. Here’s how the polling question was asked…
You will recall that crime was not a huge issue for voters in the fall campaign except in Chicago, where it consistently ranked at the top of the list. But now, when the question is about what city leaders should be doing, it has rocketed up even further. 57 percent said their number one issue was “crime and public safety.” Affordable housing and homelessness was second, but it came in at just 10 percent. As noted in Heather’s article, when you combine respondents’ first and second choices, crime and public safety came in at a whopping 71 percent. Affordable housing and homelessness was still second at 24 percent. Again, when you combine 1st and 2nd choices together, schools and education were next at 22 percent, inflation and rising costs were at 19 percent, taxes were at 17 percent, jobs and the economy were at 14 percent, government corruption and ethics were at 11 percent, racial equity was at 10 percent and roads and infrastructure were at 7 percent. Also of note, respondents were read favorable talking points about some of the candidates and then they were asked to reevaluate their votes. The needle barely moved on any of the candidates. * I was asked not to post the poll itself, but here is the polling memo…
* More runoff results…
Willie Wilson 37% [VOL] Undecided 24% Lori Lightfoot 34% Lori Lightfoot 24% Lori Lightfoot 31% Quinn has dropped out, but I included him to give you an idea of how unpopular Lightfoot is, except maybe when it comes to Willie Wilson. …Adding… Wanted to front-page something I wrote in comments…
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First House hearing held on new assault weapon proposal
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Mike Miletich…
* The Tribune…
* WTTW…
* ABC 7…
* Sen. Robert Peters…
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Services announced for Sen. Bennett
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * WTAX…
* Also from the Office of the Senate President…
And you can click here to help Sen. Bennett’s family via Meal Train. Their friends have so far raised more than $29,000 for Sen. Bennett’s spouse and two kids. Several others have pledged their time to help out with meals and child care.
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Morning briefing
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Here you go…
* Ford County Chronicle | A life remembered: Sen. Scott Bennett made his native Gibson City proud: Indeed, a lot of people loved Sen. Bennett, D-Champaign, whose sudden, unexpected death Friday afternoon shocked and saddened countless people from his native Gibson City to across Illinois. From state officials and professional colleagues to constituents and friends, condolences came from around the state Friday for Sen. Bennett’s family, including his wife, Stacy, and their two young children, twins Emma and Sam. * SJ-R | Illinois Democrats want to act with ‘urgency’ on proposal banning assault weapons : First introduced during the final week of the veto session by House firearm safety and reform working group chairman Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, House Bill 5855 would outlaw the manufacture, possession, delivery, selling, and purchasing of assault weapons, .50 caliber rifles, and .50 caliber cartridges. The proposal comes as firearm homicides increased by 35% from 2019 to 2020 nationwide, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. * WTTW | García Claims ‘Front Runner’ Status by 7 Points in Race for Mayor, Says Poll Commissioned by Operating Engineers Union: “Local 150 commissioned a comprehensive poll as an in-kind contribution to Garcia’s campaign,” said Ed Maher, the union’s spokesperson. “The poll made clear that García has broad support across the city of Chicago and that voters understand all of the positives that he will bring as mayor.” * ABC Chicago | Chicago mayor race: Hearings held as Willie Wilson, Ja’Mal Green try to kick each other off ballot: Several candidates challenged the petition signatures of their rivals in attempt to disqualify them from the February election. There were a total of six hearings on Monday involving the race for mayor, but the two of note have pitted businessman Willie Wilson against community activist Ja’Mal Green as they try to boot another off the ballot. * BGA Policy | How Illinois Courts Are Hidden From FOIA: To help shine light on Illinois’ judicial branch, BGA Policy is proud to lead the Court Transparency Coalition, which recommends that the judicial branch be added to the state’s Freedom of Information Act. The Coalition, composed of BGA Policy, The Civic Federation, the Chicago Appleseed Center for Fair Courts, Chicago Community Bond Fund, Chicago Council of Lawyers, Chicago Justice Project, Illinois Justice Project, the League of Women Voters of Illinois, Common Cause Illinois and Reform for Illinois has committed to advocating for change to FOIA by amending the FOIA law to include the judiciary. * The Center Square | Illinois drivers can expect two gas tax increases in 2023: Motor fuel prices in Illinois are down nearly 70 cents a gallon since this time last month. However, the state is set to increase the fuel tax Jan. 1 by 3.1 cents a gallon, for a total of 42.3 cents per gallon, second highest in the U.S. Another increase will occur in the summer on July 1. * Tribune | The Satanic Temple of Illinois has the right to build a holiday display in Springfield. Members say it’s about religious freedom.: For the fourth time since 2018, the Satanic Temple of Illinois — a statewide chapter with about 100 members, part of a religion boasting half a million followers internationally — was in Springfield on an early December morning, not to worship a devil or perform a ritual sacrifice. Odd as it sounds, the Satanic Temple does not recognize a Biblical Satan. It is a self-described nontheistic group dedicated to the pursuit of religious plurality, free thought and pushing back against any form of conformist doctrine. * Tribune | Moms, rejected applicants decry new Chicago Fire Department exam procedures that shrink testing pool for city firefighters: Gone is the old-school method where tens of thousands of applicants sat at once for a written exam resulting in a hiring list whittled in the hiring process. City officials have abandoned wide-open hiring events of the past for smaller, more diverse pools of candidates, adding that those rejected could reapply to take the test in two years instead of the approximately 10 years between each exam. * The Center Square | Lawmaker says Illinois has work to do for better senior care: Pritzker spoke at the event and promised to continue working to prioritize senior care. “Over the past year, I have partnered with CHA to provide more than $137 million to help finance the creation and preservation of nearly 1,400 affordable housing apartments across Chicago,” Pritzker said. “Many of those are set aside for seniors.” * Sun-Times | Chicago Plan Commission endorses Bally’s casino plan: The action sends the zoning proposal to the City Council, but 27th Ward Ald. Walter Burnett Jr.’s objection could delay its consideration. * FOX Chicago | Naperville man put stickers in the shape of swastikas on campaign signs: prosecutors: Between Oct. 2 and Oct. 16, Klingeman allegedly defaced two campaign signs for Gustin with swastika stickers he created with a marker and other stickers, prosecutors said. * Tribune | NBA renames its MVP trophy after Michael Jordan — a 5-time winner of the award with the Chicago Bulls: The MVP trophy honors Jordan’s illustrious career, which included six NBA championships during his 13 seasons with the Bulls. Widely considered the greatest player in league history, Jordan received 11 All-NBA honors and 14 All-Star selections and won 10 scoring titles. In addition to the five MVP awards, he was named NBA Finals MVP six times, Defensive Player of the Year in 1988 and Rookie of the Year in 1985.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois today?
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Dec 13, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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Afternoon news roundup
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * From today’s hearing…
* The Better Government Association’s CEO David Griesing bemoans the victory of the Workers Rights Amendment in a Tribune op-ed...
The BGA didn’t report raising any money from labor unions in 2021, and I’m kinda doubtful any are gonna get on board after that column. * Speaker Welch press release…
* Ugh…
* Press release…
* Press release…
* Press release…
That was in November. This came out today…
* Paul Vallas releases his public safety plan…
* Press release…
* Isabel’s roundup…
* Fortune | The ‘pandemic is over’ mindset is seeping into nursing homes in troubling ways: ‘Worry about your granny’:Coronavirus-related hospital admissions are climbing again in the United States, with older adults a growing share of U.S. deaths and less than half of nursing home residents up to date on COVID-19 vaccinations. * SJ-R | Application deadline set for candidates wanting the GOP nod to replace Butler:Qualified candidates wishing to represent the district in the Illinois General Assembly have until Dec. 22 at 5 p.m., to file an application. The application must include a letter of interest and an up-to-date resume. It can be submitted at the Sangamon County Republican Central Committee headquarters, 1132 Sangamon Ave., or via email at sangamonrepublicans@scrcc.comcastbiz.net. * Tribune | Young voters’ enthusiasm for Democrats waned during midterms:Voters under 30 went 53% for Democratic House candidates compared with only 41% for Republican candidates nationwide, according to AP VoteCast, a sweeping national survey of the electorate. But that level of support for Democrats was down compared with 2020, when such voters supported President Joe Biden over his predecessor, Donald Trump, 61% to 36%. And in 2018, when Democrats used a midterm surge to retake control of the House, voters 18 to 29 went 64% for the party compared with 34% for the GOP. * CBS Chicago | Illinois mandates replacement of lead pipes, but who’ll foot the bill?:Instead of a $550 repair, her bill ballooned to nearly $7,700…Her pipe couldn’t just be fixed. The entire thing needed to come out per a new state law called the “Lead Service Line Replacement and Notification Act.” All this heavy lifting on her property came out of her pocket. * Patch | Undercounting Homeless IL Students Undercuts Access To Help: Report:A study shows that there were more than 47,000 students in Illinois who experienced homelessness during the 2019-20 school year. * Illinois Answers Project |As Investors Buy More Homes Around the Obama Presidential Center Gentrification Worries Soar:“People should be afraid, they should be concerned about firms that don’t live in this community buying up homes,” said Dixon Romeo, a South Shore organizer with Not Me We, a group fighting for better housing and sustainability. “It’s very simple, the goal of every firm is to make profit, right? In terms of housing that means raising the rent, imposing unnecessary fees and effectively displacing people.” * Sun-Times | Son of ex-state Rep. Edward Acevedo pleads guilty to cheating on taxes:Michael Acevedo, his brother Alex and their father were indicted separately in February 2021 for alleged tax crimes. The charges resulted from the same investigation that led to this year’s indictment of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan. * SEIU | The SEIU Illinois State Council Endorses Candidates Who Will Fight for Issues Important to Working Families:SEIU Illinois State Council Municipal Aldermanic Endorsements: 1 Daniel La Spata; 3 Pat Dowell; 4 Lamont Robinson; 5 Desmon Yancy; 6 William Hall; 7 Greg Mitchell; 8 Michelle Harris; 10 Ana Guajardo; 11 Nicole Lee; 12 Julia Ramirez; 14 Jeylu Gutierrez; 16 Stephanie Coleman; 17 David Moore; 19 Matt O’Shea; 20 Jeanette Taylor; 21 Ronnie Mosley; 22 Mike Rodriguez; 23 Silvana Tabares; 25 Byron Sigcho-Lopez; 28 Jason Ervin; 29 Chris Taliaferro; 31 Felix Cardona; 32 Scott Waguespack; 33 Rossana Rodriguez Sanchez; 34 Bill Conway; 35 Carlos Ramirez-Rosa; 37 Emma Mitts; 40 Andre Vasquez; 43 Rebecca Janowitz; 47 Matthew Martin; 49 Maria Hadden * Washington Post | Renewables to overtake coal as world’s top energy source by 2025, IEA says:The world is set to add as much renewable energy in the next five years as it did in the past two decades, as a global energy crisis sparked by the war in Ukraine accelerates growth in renewables such as wind and solar, the International Energy Agency says. Led by solar energy, renewables are poised to overtake coal as the largest source of electricity generation worldwide by early 2025, helping to keep alive the global goal of limiting Earth’s warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit), according to the Paris-based agency’s latest forecasts. * Block Club Chicago | Chicago Public Schools Did Not Defame Lincoln Park High Principal Fired Amid Scandal, Jury Rules: A federal jury sided with Chicago Public Schools in its handling of a high-profile scandal involving the school’s athletics program that led to the former interim principal’s firing. The jury deliberated for several hours Monday before reaching the verdict. As it was read at the Dirksen Federal Building in the Loop, former interim principal John Thuet looked down and clasped his hands in his lap as his attorney consoled him by patting him on the back. * KSDK | CARE STL Adoption Center overcrowded, in desperate need of foster homes:One of Downtown St. Louis’s largest animal adoption centers is overwhelmed with animals, particularly dogs. In a little over a week animal control brought in more than 70 dogs to CARE STL Adoption Center and they’re in desperate need of help. * Washington Post | Cause of death: Washington faltered as fentanyl gripped America:During the past seven years, as soaring quantities of fentanyl flooded into the United States, strategic blunders and cascading mistakes by successive U.S. administrations allowed the most lethal drug crisis in American history to become significantly worse, a Washington Post investigation has found. * Axios | Illinois’ nonfatal opioid overdose rate among highest in U.S.:Illinois ranks third nationally in nonfatal opioid overdoses, according to an analysis of emergency medical responder data. Why it matters: The number suggests opioid use is high in Illinois, but also that our safety precautions — including making overdose treatments like naloxone (Narcan) widely available — are saving lives. By the numbers: Illinois recorded 182,402 nonfatal opioid overdoses over the last year, a rate of 55 per 100,000 people. * Sun-Times |Chicago’s ‘Walking Man’ dies several months after being set on fire on Lower Wabash:Chicago’s ‘Walking Man’ died Sunday afternoon, several months after he was set on fire as he slept on Lower Wabash Avenue. Joseph Kromelis, 75, died Sunday afternoon, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. * Washington Post | Elon Musk uses QAnon tactic in criticizing former Twitter safety chief:Elon Musk escalated his battle of words with previous managers of Twitter into risky new territory over the weekend, allying himself with far-right crusaders against a purported epidemic of child sex abuse and implying that the company’s former head of trust and safety had a permissive view of sexual activity by minors. * Pantagraph | Abandoned nests reveal gaps in Illinois’ ability to protect endangered bird species:But construction last year on a new trail around the Chicago History Museum displaced a flock of the birds and put the remaining population at risk, as it is now highly concentrated in one location. Lardner wants to know what happened. For some conservation advocates, the herons’ abandonment of their nests represents a long-standing gap between policies in place to protect endangered wildlife and how they play out in practice. The state Endangered Species Protection Act mandates that public entities consult the Illinois Department of Natural Resources on any projects that could alter environmental conditions or could affect wildlife.
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Another way to meet emissions targets
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Illinois Environmental Council executive director Jen Walling argues that the state needs to focus on “nature-based climate solutions”…
* Some of her recommendations are to stop leaving federal money on the table and update the state’s ridiculously complex procurement system to make it more small business-friendly…
Thoughts?
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Question of the day: 2022 Golden Horseshoe Awards
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Contract Lobbyist is a tie. Heather Wier Vaught…
I might’ve used different punctuation and capitalization, but I nonetheless agree with the sentiment. * And Liz Brown…
Agreed. * The 2022 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best In-House Lobbyist goes to Khadine Bennett at the IL ACLU…
The vote and the intensity were pretty heavily in Khadine’s favor. Congratulations! * On to today’s categories…
Do your very best to nominate in both categories and make sure to explain your votes. Thanks. * And despite my fear of sounding like a broken record, please click here to help buy presents for LSSI foster kids. Together, we help make a difference in the lives of these children every Christmas season, and we are now entering our annual fundraising home stretch. Thanks!
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Treasurer’s office finds early Christmas gift for LSSI
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Best press release of the month…
That’s such good news. But our work isn’t finished. We’re still a long way from the revised $45,000 goal set by Lutheran Social Services of Illinois to buy presents for foster kids. So, please, click here and contribute if you haven’t yet done so. Thanks! Also, maybe click here and see if you have any unclaimed property, then send some or all of that LSSI’s direction. Just a thought.
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Another day, another DeVore loss
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * Peoria Journal Star…
* Petitions are also supposed to be signed at the bottom of the page by the circulators. Two pages weren’t signed, so they were tossed…
DeVore’s client is expected to appeal.
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Porter: “We have to recognize a lot of people see us as angry white people that cannot be trusted to govern”
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * From Rick Pearson’s story on the Illinois state GOP’s weekend meeting…
“One-flavor Republicans” is the very definition of an exclusive private club. Despite the protestations, however, party leadership remains intact. Make sure to read the whole thing.
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Group gears up to defend and nudge Democrats on guns
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
Discuss.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Morning briefing
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help Sen. Bennett’s family…
* Here’s the roundup… * Tribune | Downstate Sen. Scott Bennett, who played major role in changes to SAFE-T Act, dies at 45: “We remain in complete shock because it was all so sudden and unexpected,” Bennett’s wife, Stacy, said in a statement shared by Bennett’s Senate office. “Scott lived a life full of service and constantly looked for ways to lend his time and energy to helping our community and state. He worked tirelessly to find solutions to society’s most pressing issues by finding common ground and compromise. To say he will be greatly missed is an understatement.” * Tribune | Republican grassroots activists vent post-election frustration at state GOP: More than a hundred grassroots activists, defeated candidates and party loyalists descended on a meeting of the Illinois Republican Party’s top leaders on Saturday, voicing frustration over last month’s election results that extended the state’s one-party Democratic governance. But after four hours and nearly 60 speakers, Illinois GOP Chairman Don Tracy survived a sometimes raucous Republican State Central Committee meeting at the Bolingbrook Golf Club to continue as head of the state party after contending some outside the state GOP were stirring dissent and seeking to challenge his leadership in order to try to boost their internet presence. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ high court makes history: For the first time in its history, the state’s high court is made up of a majority of women judges. And it’s by a 5-2 margin. * Greg Hinz | How the Dems could still screw themselves in Springfield: I suspect it’s the House that’s worth keeping an eye on, both because it’s larger than the Senate with more folks who can stir up mischief and because Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch leads the biggest Democratic House majority in state history, the kind of majority that the indicted but shrewd Mike Madigan never wanted because it made enforcing caucus discipline much harder. Ergo, says one veteran Springfield Dem, keep an eye on pressure to bust the budget and spend money that a state that still has $140 billion in unfunded pension liability really doesn’t have. That pressure will be even more intense now that House Majority Leader Greg Harris, who had a real talent for getting budgets through, is retiring. * Daily Herald | What’s on the next secretary of state’s agenda: Among his top priorities is eliminating the “time tax” state residents pay to access simple government services, Giannoulias said in an interview last week. His agenda, which is still under review by a transition team, prioritizes developing digital licenses and state IDs that can be accessed by smartphones to cut costs and wait times. * Sun-Times | Cook County’s chief judge investigating court employees who got COVID-19 relief loans: Four workers in other county departments have quit or been fired this year while under suspicion of defrauding the federal Paycheck Protection Program. * Illinois Radio Network | Gov. Pritzker anticipates lawsuits over gun ban bills: “Not a constitutional lawyer but I will say that my expectation is that there will be lawsuits because once it’s passed the people who oppose it, that’s really all that’s left for them,” Pritzker said at an unrelated event. “I believe that this is a constitutional proposal.” * CBS Chicago | Glenwood police bust catalytic converter chop shop: Police said they recovered a total of 128 stolen catalytic converters with a value of around $54,000. Also recovered was a stolen Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT, which was later stripped for parts. Along with the stolen items, police recovered several reciprocating saws, a loaded .45-caliber handgun and magazines, and cash that has been classified as illicit funds. * Tribune | White voters helped propel Lori Lightfoot to the mayor’s office in 2019. Will they stick with her in February: Northwest Side Ald. Nick Sposato, 38th, whose ward includes Portage Park and Dunning, said Wilson’s attempt to make inroads is working. “I’ll tell you who’s gonna do well on the Northwest Side: Willie Wilson. People associate him with them, that he’s a genuine, nice man, hardworking guy, who’s made sacrifices,” Sposato said. * Daily Herald | Road salt can harm the environment. So is there a better way to treat roads? Experts have ideas.: Kuykendall said one of the best strategies municipalities can adopt is applying a salt brine liquid mixture to roads both before and after icy storms. The mixture typically consists of salt brine, liquid calcium chloride and beet juice, which all work together to use less salt more effectively. * WJOL | Changes To One Day Rest in Seven Act Take Effect Jan. 1: Illinois officials are informing employers in state about changes to the One Day Rest in Seven Act set to take effect January 1st. The One Day Rest in Seven Act gives workers the right to a day of rest every workweek and breaks for meals or rest during daily work shifts. Changes include giving employees a 20-minute break if working a 12-hour shift or longer, and at least 24 consecutive hours of rest in every consecutive seven-day period. Also, all employers covered by the act must post a notice at the workplace notifying employees of their rights under the Act. * Ralph Martire | Illinois education funding shows benefits of bipartisanship: The reality is, it’d be in everyone’s interest if bipartisanship did not become a quaint vestige of America’s political past, but rather a rational way to resolve complex, societal problems. For proof, look no further than the great state of Illinois, and its relatively new school funding formula — the “Evidence Based Formula for Student Success” or “EBF.” As its name suggests, the EBF ties education funding to covering what the evidence shows works to enhance student achievement. * Crain’s | Rivian to be added to Nasdaq 100: Rivian Automotive Inc. and Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. will be joining the Nasdaq 100 Index as part of its annual rebalancing, which adjusts the tech-heavy benchmark’s composition for changes in market capitalization. * Sun-Times | Docs to Pritzker: Truck diesel pollution is killing Illinoisans: More than 130 doctors, nurses and other health care professionals are urging Gov. J.B. Pritzker to save Illinoisans’ lives by speeding up the state’s transition to electric trucks that will reduce the amount of diesel fuel air pollution. * Daily Herald | Children’s Tylenol, Motrin scarce as ‘tridemic’ hits northern Illinois: Acetaminophen and ibuprofen are the two most common medicines for treating babies and children with fevers or other illnesses at home. The Food and Drug Administration has not released an alert of any official shortage or recall. * Washington Post | The big Republican Latino realignment didn’t happen in 2022. What now?: Leading up to Election Day last month, Republicans were poised to claim major victories, from a red wave in the House to control of the Senate. As part of those grand expectations, they hoped the results would show that Latino voters were continuing to join their ranks. That prediction proved off the mark. * Crain’s | Latest Fulton Market plans could add 2,100 apartments, office space: On Dec. 14, all three firms will present their plans to the Chicago Committee on Design, which has posted their designs on its website. They’re joining a herd of developers that have stampeded into Fulton Market the past several years, putting up office buildings, hotels and, more recently, lots of apartments. * Sun-Times | City announces permanent bus lanes on Chicago Avenue; advocates worry about enforcement, frequency: Despite the city making “important changes,” activists worry infrequent service and scofflaw motorists will undermine the changes. * The Ringer | This Secret Society in Washington, D.C., Has One Agenda: Fly, Eagles, Fly: Washington media outlets, like the city itself, are crawling with fans of every NFL team. But Eagles fans are particularly noisy. The email thread is the place where they ponder the bad things that could happen after they start the season 11-1. As Anne Caprara, an emailer who is chief of staff to Illinois governor JB Pritzker, says, “You stumbled onto the Illuminati of Philly sports.” * Daily Herald | How families can safely gather during viral season: If families have plans to gather but want to be mindful about potential transmission, Kusma suggests members either do a mini quarantine one week ahead of the event or proactively limit the number of other people they see right before the holiday. * Crain’s | How City Hall’s World Cup withdrawals proved prescient: But come 2026, the city will miss out on the action because, in 2018, then-Mayor Rahm Emanuel withdrew Chicago from the 2026 bid, citing taxpayer risk and demands from FIFA, soccer’s governing body. What’s less well-remembered: In early 2010, Chicago also withdrew from a U.S. World Cup bid (for 2022) citing concerns about the cost to taxpayers and “a tough economy.” * Daily Star | Earth hit by intense blast of energy that’s ‘unlike any we have seen before’: The event was detected in December 2021 by NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. The gamma-ray burst was significantly longer than average, which might normally suggest it had been produced by the collapse of a massive star into a supernova. * Shelly Palmer | ChatGPT In Its Own Words: ChatGPT has been all over the news. Last week, I asked it to help me write a blog post about Facebook – it did a very good job. Yesterday, just for fun, my son Brent and I asked it for 250 word answers to questions about history and philosophy. ChatGPT returned college-level answers. What exactly is ChatGPT? I asked it. Here’s its answer to the input “a five paragraph essay describing ChatGPT in your own words.”
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Open thread
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller * We have a matching donor…
What’s on your mind this morning?
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Live coverage
Monday, Dec 12, 2022 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Follow along with ScribbleLive…
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