Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here.
Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I think you’re gonna like this one. Man, it’s so good. I could listen to it all day. Here’s Rhiannon Giddens

Just follow me tonight

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Block Club Chicago has more on the Pilsen shelter measles case

Migrants at a city-run shelter in Pilsen were startled awake about 1 a.m. Friday and told there was a measles outbreak, the doors were locked, there was a 10-day quarantine — and anyone who left would lose their place there, new arrivals told Block Club. […]

Those who can prove they have been vaccinated were allowed to leave starting late in the morning Friday, while others must stay inside the shelter and quarantine.

* Tribune

A large majority of Illinois students who participated in specialized, intensive tutoring during the 2022-23 school year met academic goals in reading and math, highlighting the success of an education recovery program that targets students most impacted by the loss and disruption of learning during the pandemic.

From fall to spring, nearly 90% of tutored students met or exceeded expected growth in math, and 80% did so in reading, according to a report published in January.

The report analyzed more than 1,300 students in grades 3 to 8 who received individual or small group tutoring as part of the Illinois Tutoring Initiative, a collaboration between school districts and a handful of higher education institutions.

Known as “high-impact tutoring,” the tutors met with the students for one hour, three times a week for eight to 14 weeks in sessions linked with what they are learning in the classroom, according to the Illinois Tutoring Initiative which operates the program.

Click here for the full report.

* Sun-Times

Lance Michael Ligocki, 34, of Oakwood was arrested Thursday and is charged with civil disorder and assaulting, resisting or impeding certain officers — both felonies — along with other misdemeanor charges. The feds say he was given the moniker #FullFlagSuit online.

A photo allegedly from Ligocki’s Facebook account depicts him wearing an American-flag “Trump” hat while holding a bust of former President Donald Trump. And in one online message written Jan. 9, 2021, Ligocki allegedly said, “Trump is a lone Wolf, Pence is a snake and we the people are being silenced.”

Prosecutors say Ligocki can be seen on video footage from the riot approaching the Capitol’s lower west terrace. That’s where investigators say he swung a pole with the “Trump” flag at police three times while carrying a “Stop the Steal” sign.

The attack on the U.S. Capitol prompted a massive criminal investigation that led to criminal charges against more than 1,300 people across the country. Ligocki is now one of nearly 50 Illinois residents who are among them.

* Also, Jason Meisner



* Here’s the rest…

    * NPR Illinois | When it comes to sports betting, Pritzker wants a bigger cut of the action: It’s safe to say Illinois’ bet on sports wagering has paid off. The state’s revenue is higher than anticipated when lawmakers made betting on sports legal. Gov. J.B. Pritzker, as part of his budget proposal, called for more than doubling the tax from 15% to 35%. An analyst who follows the industry said it’s a bold move, but thinks the governor can make it happen.

    * SJ-R | Biden calls Belvidere, Illinois, “the great comeback story’ during State of the Union: All told, the $19 billion contract sets aside nearly $5 billion for the Belvidere plant and looks to add 2,500 jobs — hiring 1,200 employees to build pickup trucks and another 1,300 more workers for an electric vehicle battery factory.

    * Crain’s | Biden highlights Stellantis’ plans to reopen Belvidere plant in State of the Union address: He called out UAW President Shawn Fain and autoworker Dawn Sims, who were in the audience. Matt Frantzen, head of the UAW local in Belvidere, also was scheduled to attend the State of the Union as a guest of Illinois Rep. Bill Foster, whose district includes the plant. “To folks in Belvidere, Instead of your town being left behind, your community is moving forward,” Biden said. “Before I came to office, the plant was on its way to shutting down. Thousands of workers feared for their jobs. The UAW worked like hell to keep the plant open and get those jobs back.”

    * WGLT | From the projects to the bench: Carla Barnes-Wheeler’s important journey: When Barnes-Wheeler was 12, the matriarch of the family, her grandmother, died. The children were scattered. Barnes-Wheeler came to Bloomington-Normal to live with her sister, a student at Illinois State University. For the first couple months that was living, very quietly, in a Wright Hall dorm room. Uprooted. Absent father. Ill mother. Many people would be crushed by those hits. Barnes-Wheeler said it made her more determined.

    * Daily Herald | Democratic congressional candidates differ on NATO, military spending: Casten, a former energy industry entrepreneur who’s seeking a fourth term, said NATO’s existence is crucial to the “post-World War II order in Europe.” The organization’s collapse, he said, “is (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s dream.” […] Ahmad, a health care advocate making her first bid for elected office, was critical of the amount of money the U.S. spends on its military, calling it “absolutely unsustainable.” She insisted the U.S. needs to be “for peace” and to pursue diplomacy and statesmanship instead of using military might.

    * Crain’s | NanoGraf inks deal for big Near West Side expansion: After securing two big contracts with the U.S. Army to develop and ramp up production of batteries for soldiers’ equipment, NanoGraf has inked a deal to occupy the entire 67,850-square-foot building at 455 N. Ashland Ave., the company said in a statement. The industrial building is just more than a block west of NanoGraf’s existing home at 400 N. Noble St., where it debuted a new 17,000-square-foot production facility in December.

    * Shaw Local | McHenry County jail expects to bring in more than $500K for first 2 months of housing Lake County inmates: The average daily population of Lake County inmates in McHenry County jail was about 102 in January, the first month of the arrangement, but that climbed in February to 150, the maximum allowed, according to county documents. The Lake County Sheriff’s Office began transferring inmates to McHenry County Jail shortly after the new year, following an agreement the McHenry County Board approved in November to help Lake County cope with staffing shortages. Lake County pays McHenry County $100 per inmate daily as part of the contract, but McHenry County remains on the hook for expenses such as health care, food and transportation, which county officials estimate are about $31 per day per inmate. “It’s very fluid,” McHenry County Chief Financial Officer Kerri Wisz said of the expenses.

    * Tribune | Mistrial declared in juice loan extortion case after agent mentions ‘organized crime’: A federal judge on Friday took the rare step of declaring a mistrial for two west suburban men accused in a juice loan extortion scheme after an FBI agent testified he investigated “organized crime matters,” a term that the judge had explicitly barred to avoid prejudicing the jury. Gene “Gino” Cassano, 55, and Gioacchino “Jack” Galione, 47, both of Addison, are charged with conspiring to collect a debt by extortionate means, which carries a maximum of 20 years in prison. Galione is also charged with using violence to collect a debt.

    * Daily Southtown | Business owner sues Calumet City for reversal of gas station approval, alleges racism: Mohammed Abdallah received a unanimous recommendation in September from the Zoning Board of Appeals to develop a gas station on property he purchased at 473 Burnham Ave. The City Council approved the plans Sept. 11 by a 3-2 vote and two alderman voting present, according to the meeting minutes cited in the lawsuit. City officials indicated the development would move forward and Mayor Thaddeus Jones offered congratulations, according to the lawsuit and interviews with Abdallah.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago cop shown kneeling on 14-year-old’s back in viral video faces dismissal: However, formal disciplinary charges seeking his dismissal still haven’t been filed or made public. Vitellaro was off duty when he learned his son’s bike had been stolen and drove to a Starbucks at 100 S. Northwest Highway in Park Ridge, where someone had brought it, police oversight officials said in a report obtained through a public records request.

    * Block Club | Logan Square Women Donate Homes Worth More Than $1.5 Million To Preserve Affordable Housing: Sally Hamann and Anne Scheetz gave their homes to a community land trust to help lower-income neighbors buy homes in the gentrifying area. Families will move into the renovated homes this year.

    * Sun-Times | Alligator gar, Illinois’ biggest native fish, spread farthest north in latest restoration: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began a multi-state effort to reintroduce alligator gar in the 1990s. Illinois became involved in 2010. Before reintroduction began, the last known alligator gar, about 7 feet in length and weighing about 130 pounds, in Illinois was caught in 1966 from the Cache-Mississippi Diversion Channel in Alexander County.

    * Block Club Chicago: This Week In Photos: Primary Races Ramp Up, Scientology Church Opens Next To Dorm And More. The temperatures have dropped since the warm weekend and news has been nonstop. See what Block Club reporters captured while covering the neighborhoods this week.

    * WBEZ | ‘Oppenheimer,’ nukes and secrets: Take a walking tour of Chicago’s atomic history: UChicago played an absolutely critical role in the Manhattan Project, the U.S. government’s top-secret initiative to develop nuclear weapons. The university’s Hyde Park campus is where scientists led by Enrico Fermi built the world’s first nuclear reactor in 1942, generating just a tiny amount of energy — half a watt — but proving that it could be done.

    * ABC Chicago | Artificial intelligence runs fully-operational kitchen at Mall of India food court in Naperville: The Nala Chef is a robot that uses machine learning to replicate recipes and customize food to each individual’s preference. It can also operate 24/7. Nala Robotics, the company behind the technology, states that it’s the, “world’s first fully-automatic multi-cuisine robotic chef.”

    * WCIA | EIU preps for Unofficial St. Paddy’s festivities: “Ideally, it’s going to be an experience where students will have challenges, but we would like them to simply be smart, be wise and be adults,” said Lieutenant Michael Lusk of the EIU Police Department. “But, we want them to have fun at the same time.”

  2 Comments      


Fun with numbers: When a claimed 40 percent cut is actually a 43 percent increase

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Tribune editorial board likes the idea of eliminating the grocery tax, but hates the idea of cutting funding for local governments

And when you look at the fiscal problems present in suburbs like Evanston, which has little or no money to pay for replacements to aging city facilities, you can understand why the municipalities are trying to argue that the small individual savings are insignificant compared with their own cumulative losses.

You could, of course, argue that about any potential tax cut. But officials like Rockford Mayor Tom McNamara already were complaining about the reductions in the so-called Local Government Distributive Fund. “Since 2011,” McNamara wrote recently in the Rockford Register-Star, “the state has unilaterally decreased the local share of LGDF by almost 40%, so that in State Fiscal Year 2023, the local government share is only 6.16% of individual income tax collections and 6.845% of corporate income tax collections.”

The state did indeed reduce LGDF from its longtime percentage of 10 percent during the 2011 tax hike debate, at least partly because so many mayors were adamantly against that tax hike.

* I asked the governor’s office for a response…

In FY2010, Rockford received $11,392,699 in LGDF. In FY2023, Rockford received $23,167,389 in LGDF. Just FYI, Rockford also received $229,053 in FY23 as its portion of the monies sent to locals through the Cannabis Regulation Fund.

And you did not ask, but I thought I would include statewide totals for LGDF FY10 vs FY23: In FY10, $985,358,544 was distributed to locals through LGDF. In FY23 $1,996,786,951 was distributed to locals through LGDF.

As you can see, LGDF distributions to Rockford and statewide more than doubled from FY10 to FY23.

Adjusted for inflation, the statewide FY10 LGDF would’ve been equal to $1.39 billion at the end of FY23, compared to the $2 billion they actually received from the state last fiscal year.

So, LGDF disbursements to locals weren’t cut by 40 percent, as the Tribune’s editorial more than implies. Instead, municipalities have received a 43 percent increase in inflation-adjusted state LGDF dollars since their percentage was cut.

Also, restoring LGDF to 10 percent would cost the state as much as $850 million and equal a 100.5 percent inflation adjusted increase over what locals received in 2010.

  8 Comments      


After Johnson repeatedly sidesteps questions, city confirms evictions will go forward

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mayor Johnson just being his usual forthcoming self

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration suggested this week it has no plans to postpone enforcement of its 60-day shelter stay policy, meaning scores of migrants could soon be forced to leave city’s shelters starting on March 16.

Johnson initially side-stepped questions about this earlier this week when asked by NBC 5 Investigates if the City of Chicago was prepared to postpone enforcement again.

“We’re compassionate people, I got you,” Johnson said.

When pressed that he did not provide a “yes or no” response, Johnson said: “So, it’s not okay that I let people know that Chicago is compassionate? Let me just say it though, okay? Thank you. We are compassionate people and so we are doing everything in our power to demonstrate compassion. Now as far as whether or not we will extend deadlines, we haven’t gotten to that point, alright.”

When NBC 5 Investigates asked for clarification, Communications Director Ronnie Reese confirmed that the March 16 date still holds true for the first wave of migrants to move out of the city’s shelter system.

* I do not see how Comptroller Mendoza can accomplish this. You can’t just send the federal government a bill and expect payment unless the feds have already set the money aside, like it did during the pandemic

From New York to Denver, city and state officials have asked President Joe Biden to pay their bills for housing migrants. So far, they haven’t got much help.

Now one politician in Illinois is trying a different approach to amp up pressure. Comptroller Susana Mendoza is opening the state’s books to the public with an online portal that allows anyone to track how money is being spent. She plans to use the tally to garner state support for her pitch to claw back funds from the federal government.

There’s precedent for that, Mendoza said in an interview at Bloomberg’s office in Chicago. When the pandemic hit, states paid for things like gloves and masks before assistance from the federal government started flowing in. Illinois should also get aid now, said Mendoza, who wants reimbursement for a bill that has already reached $478 million.

“We should be able to claw back those funds,” said Mendoza, a second-term Democrat who is responsible for cutting the checks to pay the state’s bills. “This is a situation that the federal government has allowed to happen and now states are having to deal with it.”

The state can claw back some of its own revenues to, for instance, local governments and subsidized corporations.

* Good on WICS TV for debunking this hateful online nonsense

A rumor circulating in Decatur has residents up in arms. The rumor is that 2,000 migrants are to be housed in a vacant building in the former Cub Foods building in Decatur.

The current owner of the building and city told us the posts circulating social media are not true.

“There’s absolutely no truth to it,” Tim Vieweg, one of the current owners, said.

This comes after multiple social media posts from Decatur residents saying the former Cub Foods building will be fixed up to house migrants coming to the state.

“Number one, this isn’t zoned for it. So that would be the first step that would have to take place if you’re going to change this into some sort of residential use,” Vieweg said.

Some of the posts are here

* From Isabel…

    * Block Club | 7 Things Migrants Should Know About Upcoming Shelter Evictions: Many migrants have found alternative housing support from friends, family and local volunteers. If this is not an option, you can return to the city’s landing zone at 800 S. Desplaines St. to request another shelter placement. You can also visit an “Illinois Welcoming Center” (IWC) to seek additional assistance. However, these Welcoming Centers do not provide shelter.

    * Tribune | Measles case reported at Chicago’s largest migrant shelter: The site of the newly confirmed case is the most crowded shelter in the city’s web of 23 buildings currently housing over 11,600 migrants, thousands who have arrived on buses sent by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott — many who come fleeing a failed economy and health infrastructure in Venezuela.

    * Tribune | Amid migrant crisis, Chicago food pantries experience unprecedented demand: The network of the Greater Chicago Food Depository, which includes over 800 food distributors across the city, served 186,000 households in December, a 29% increase from the previous year. While pantries don’t ask guests their status, anecdotally, a significant portion of the new visitors are Latino migrants, several organizations said.

    * WREX | Winnebago County Operations committee divided on migrant solution: The resolution around the county leader’s response to the possible abandonment of asylum seekers in Winnebago County aims to inform residents that there is a plan in place to get potential arrivals to Chicago. The resolution also pushes for President Biden to pass immigration reform, but some board members say because migrants are already being sent to Chicago, the resolution is not needed on the county level.

  11 Comments      


Sen. Hunter says she’s ’shocked and appalled’ at Speaker Welch’s effort to unseat Rep. Flowers

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here and here if you need it. Chinta Strausberg at the Crusader

[House Speaker Chris Welch’s] targeting [of Rep. Mary Flowers, D-Chicago] for political defeat is shocking to Black leaders like Alderman David Moore (17th) who told the Chicago Crusader, “It’s not what they are doing to Mary Flowers. It’s what they are doing to Black women. So, when you start attacking Black women especially, and they use Black men, it’s a problem.

“They cannot find anything wrong with her record and the work that she has done,” Moore said. “So, they tell lies, and you try to put a bad light on a Black woman. I’m standing up as a Black man not only in protecting her, but letting other people know when you come after a Black woman, you got to come through David Moore.”

Asked how he felt about Welch putting up more than $500,000 to support an unknown candidate to defeat Flowers, Moore said, “It’s a waste of money.”

Senator Mattie Hunter (D-3rd) said she too is “shocked and appalled at what’s going on with our senior leader. She’s committed herself to her district over 40 years. It seems seniority doesn’t matter anymore. So many younger folks are willing to just disregard that and disrespect our leadership and take them out. It’s totally unfair, and I don’t like it at all.”

* Rep. Flowers also brought up this topic to the Crusader

Saying she was just trying to respect and protect him, Flowers also told Welch privately about one staffer who Flowers said had begun to look like Adolf Hitler. When Flowers talked to the staffer, whom she had known more than 20 years, and asked about his appearance, Flowers said he just laughed so she forgot about it.

That isn’t nearly the entire picture. From Welch’s letter to Flowers last year

Specifically, in a Caucus meeting on Tuesday, May 2, you used language widely recognized as a slur intended to divide people - including members of our own Caucus - based on their national origin. In this same meeting, you compared the appearance of a staff member to Adolf Hitler. You declined to offer the caucus a sincere apology for either comment when asked. This was not the first time you made derogatory comments toward colleagues and staff.

At a Caucus meeting earlier this year, when several members expressed that they felt bullied or insulted by you, you dismissed their concerns and attempted to further belittle them in front of colleagues and staff.

One private remark like that about a staff member is not enough to get anyone kicked out of leadership and caucus meetings. This was about a pattern of behavior toward her legislative colleagues and other staff members.

That being said, Welch’s primary campaign against her has been so negative that I’ve been wondering if it might create a backlash.

  40 Comments      


Rate the new Trumpy Bost ads

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Congressman Mike Bost’s campaign this week has released its fifth television advertisement of the 2024 election cycle. The ad, titled “Bost Results,” will air district-wide on cable, broadcast, and satellite television, as well as on streaming services.

The ad

Script

PRESIDENT TRUMP: “Mike Bost fights every day for the hard-working people of Illinois.”

ANNOUNCER: “That’s why National Right to Life endorsed Mike and called him a courageous fighter.

The NRA’s endorsement says Bost is a proud defender of the 2nd Amendment.

And the Farm Bureau calls him one of the strongest protectors of farmers and rural America.”

PRESIDENT TRUMP: “A vote for Mike is really a continuation to Make America Great Again.”

BOST: “I’m Mike Bost and I approve this message.”

* Meanwhile, in the mailboxes…


  15 Comments      


Once Converted To Electric, Consumers Will Pay 3x As Much. Keep Our Energy Options Safe And Affordable.

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

There are real costs and risks associated with decarbonizing without a plan. To convert to electric could cost as much as $70,000 per home. Once converted to electric, instead of saving, consumers would be hit with higher prices. The cost of an electric BTU is 3x more than the cost of a natural gas BTU.

When Governor Pritzker’s appointees on the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) shut down the natural gas line Safety Modernization Program, it not only wiped out 1,000 jobs, but also subjected residents and business owners to the unnecessary danger of old, leaky gas infrastructure.

It makes no sense for Illinois to shut down the gas line safety program that prevents methane leaks and catastrophic accidents. We are calling on Illinois residents to fight back with us and tell Governor Pritzker and the ICC to decarbonize the right way. Fix our dangerous gas lines first.

Click on the links to view our ads: Ticking Time Bomb & Real Change.
To learn more and help fight back, visit us online at Fight Back Fund.

Paid for by Fight Back Fund

  Comments Off      


It’s just a bill

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A pair of competing bills in the House would, for the first time in Illinois, offer state-funded stipends for student teachers. […]

Both bills call for paying stipends of $10,000 for a semester, the rough equivalent of $15 per-hour for 40 hours per week – even though most student teachers say they work much more than that. Assuming an average of 5,400 student teachers per year, that would work out to $54 million in state funding needed to support the program.

The major difference between the two bills is how the program would work in years when lawmakers don’t fully fund the program.

House Bill 4652, by Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, does not account for underfunding the program. An initiative of the Illinois Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union, it assumes lawmakers would fully fund the stipends each year. […]

House Bill 5414, an initiative of the advocacy group Advance Illinois, calls for paying the same $10,000 stipend to student teachers, plus another $1,500 to cooperating teachers, raising its total price tag to an estimated $67 million per year. But in years of underfunding, it would prioritize recipients on the basis of financial need, then focus on hard-to-fill subjects and areas of the state with the highest teacher vacancy rates.

* WICS

Senate Bill 3203 limits the cost an individual with health insurance pays for an inhaler to $25 for a 30-day supply.

Under [Sen. Mattie Hunter’s] proposal, health insurance providers would be prohibited from denying or limiting coverage for prescription inhalers beginning Jan. 1, 2026. […]

Despite insurance coverage, many individuals still face out-of-pocket expenses ranging from $180 to $300 per month for inhalers. This legislation aims to alleviate this financial burden on asthma patients.

Senate Bill 3203 passed the Senate Insurance Committee on Wednesday.

* WCIA

“The AI-generated material is often indistinguishable from reality, where maybe several years ago, if you saw a video or saw an image that was meant to portray a candidate, you can kind of tell most people would be able to say, ‘I know that’s fake, or that’s photoshopped,’” State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid, (D-Bridgeview) said. […]

Rashid is pushing for a bill to stop people from distributing or working with someone else to knowingly distribute deceptive political media, including the intent to harm a candidate’s electoral chances and to influence voting behavior. […]

The bill does carve out an exception for political media that includes a disclaimer informing people that the content was manipulated with the help of technology, or by disclosing what was said or what occurred in the content didn’t actually happen. […]

If the bill becomes law, anyone who violates it could be charged with a Class C misdemeanor. If someone violates it again, it would be considered a Class 3 felony.

* H/T Chicago Bars


* Hyde Park Herald

As a tool to help revitalize commercial corridors across the state, Buckner is pushing for the creation of Business Improvement Districts (BIDs). Similar to Special Service Areas, which exist in Chicago, BIDs impose a specific local tax on property owners in commercial corridors.

This tax revenue is invested in the area through efforts usually overseen by chambers of commerce, such as business retention, beautification efforts and security.

“SSAs work, but in certain areas like the Mag Mile, which I represent, and State Street Corridor, there really is a need for more targeted investment and resources in these spaces to allow businesses to grow, thrive and flourish,” Buckner said.

Initially filed last February by Rep. Robyn Gabel (D-18th), Buckner became the chief sponsor of HB 3303 the following month. The bill is awaiting committee assignment in the General Assembly.

State Senator Rachel Ventura held a press conference on Thursday, joined by mental health advocates and professionals, to advocate for the legalization of psilocybin, commonly known as ” magic mushrooms.” […]

Senate Bill 3695, named the CURE ACT (Compassionate Use and Research of Entheogens Act), targets treatment-resistant conditions such as anxiety, depression, PTSD, substance abuse, eating disorders, and other mental health ailments. Additionally, it aims to facilitate research into the safety and efficacy of psilocybin through medicinal, psychological, and scientific studies. […]

“Law Enforcement Action Partnership recognizes this bill as nothing short of life saving. Providing a proven means for people to work through their traumas and live happier, healthier, and more productive lives, stated Dave Franco, retired police officer and speaker for the Law Enforcement Action Partnership. “The benefits for mental and behavioral health can also have a sizable impact on community and public safety.”

Under Senate Bill 3695, psychedelic therapies would be administered in controlled, supervised settings to ensure safety and treatment effectiveness. Retail sales of these medicines would be prohibited, and they could only be used under supervision at designated service centers. […]

Senate Bill 3695 has been assigned to the Senate Executive Committee for further consideration.

* WGEM

State Rep. Jeff Keicher, R-Sycamore, is sponsoring a bill allowing minors in juvenile court to petition the court to immediately seal or expunge their records if the crime they committed was a direct result of human trafficking. […]

State Rep. Nicole La Ha, R-Homer Glen, introduced three pieces of legislation. One bill would remove the affirmative defense of mistake of age for someone soliciting a minor engaged in prostitution. Another bill would remove the statute of limitations for prosecutions of involuntary servitude, involuntary sexual servitude of a minor and trafficking in persons and related offenses when the victim is a minor at the time of the offense. Her third bill requires those convicted of trafficking in persons, involuntary servitude or involuntary sexual servitude of a minor register as a sex offender.

State Rep. Jennifer Sanalitro, R-Hanover Park, is sponsoring two pieces of legislation. One bill creates an affirmative defense for victims of human trafficking who commit the offense as a result of being trafficked. Her other bill creates the Human Trafficking Order of Protection Act, which would allow victims of human trafficking to obtain orders of protection against their traffickers.

State Rep. Brad Stephens, R-Rosemont, is also sponsoring a bill adding “patronize” to involuntary sexual servitude of a minor. This would mean people soliciting underage prostitutes are held accountable as sex trafficking offenders.

* WTTW

Illinois law has no explicit restriction on guns in polling places.

State Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield) is working to change that with a proposal (House Bill 5178) that would forbid firearms at “any building, real property or parking area of a polling place.” […]

Gun rights advocates said Morgan’s proposal is an answer in search of a problem.

“Show me the data that there is a problem, and if there is a problem, then great, let’s see it,” Illinois State Rifle Association lobbyist Ed Sullivan said. “I can almost guarantee you, there’s not.” […]

“This is something we saw in Wisconsin and Michigan in 2020, where polling locations were literally under threat and people were showing up with extensive amounts of firearms to intimidate and scare people,” Morgan said. “We’re not going to let that happen in Illinois. We’re going to make sure that polling locations are a safe place to go.”

* WJBD

Senate Bill 3077, by Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria, would establish a $2 million per-year grant program within the Illinois Department of Agriculture to help fund projects to enhance local food processing, aggregation and distribution within the state. Those could include projects such as food hubs, canneries, mills, livestock processing and other kinds of infrastructure that help move food from a farm to communities.

“And this is important because while we have some of the best farmland in the world, we don’t actually have the infrastructure in place to feed ourselves,”said Molly Pickering, deputy director of the Illinois Stewardship Alliance. “Ninety-five percent of the food that we eat here in Illinois is imported from out of state. That means every dollar that anyone spends on food is not going into our local communities. It’s being exported.”

Senate Bill 3219, by Sen. Doris Turner, D-Springfield, would establish another kind of grant program through the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to help fund equipment upgrades at farmer-owned grocery stores. […]

Both bills advanced out of the Senate Agriculture Committee Thursday and could be taken up soon by the full Senate.

* Sen. Laura Fine…

One family’s tragic loss will help others in the future. Last fall, an Evanston family lost their son, Jordan while he was seeking treatment in a substance abuse treatment facility. Working with the family, the state and mental health care providers, State Senator Laura Fine is leading a measure to require substance abuse programs and mental health facilities to better communicate and give a patient’s family or caretaker timely notice of the patient’s passing.

“No parent or caretaker should have to wait days to be notified that their loved one has died while under the care of a treatment facility,” said Fine (D-Glenview). “It is essential that these facilities and programs have clear standards in place for sharing information with a patient’s loved ones. No one should ever have to go through what Jordan’s family experienced.”

Under current law, a facility must provide verbal notice regarding a significant incident to the Department of Human Services within 24 hours. However, there is no mandate that requires a family member to be notified of a patient’s death within a specific timeframe.

Jordan’s Law is named in honor of an Evanston family who shared their story about their son, Jordan, who passed away while in a rehab facility. The family was not notified of their son’s death until at least a week later and wanted to ensure other families never experience this kind of tragedy. This bill requires substance abuse disorder programs and mental health and developmental disability facilities to notify a patient’s personal representative of their death within 24 hours and provide a written notice within five days. […]

Senate Bill 3137 passed the Senate Behavioral and Mental Health Committee on Wednesday and heads to the full Senate for consideration.

  9 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois lawmakers approve elected school board for Chicago. What comes next? Sun-Times

    ∙ In the first elections this November, voters will pick one board member per district for a total of 10 elected members. Johnson will appoint a second member in each district, plus a board president.
    ∙ Candidates can begin circulating petitions March 26. They’ll need to file 1,000 valid signatures by June 24 — but no more than 3,000 — to be eligible to run.
    ∙ State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, said this bill was a good first step, but he hopes to keep working on campaign finance rules.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

* Here’s the rest…

  17 Comments      


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

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Live coverage

Friday, Mar 8, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comments Off      


Bost slammed by Dems for celebrating passage of a bill he voted against

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* US Rep. Bost hailed the passage of his proposal Wednesday

* However…

Yesterday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed six of the 12 appropriation bills that fund the federal government. 207 Democratic members joined 132 Republicans in voting for the funding package. From Illinois, Representatives Mike Bost, Mary Miller, and Darin LaHood voted NO along with 80 other House Republicans.

Today, Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association President Mark Guethle released the following statement:

“Thank you to Illinois Democrats for continuing to responsibly fund the federal government. And thanks for nothing Mike Bost, Mary Miller, and Darin LaHood.”

“It gets worse: Representative Mike Bost had the nerve to celebrate the passage of the legislation he voted against because it included a provision he supported. Even richer, there is more than $40,000,000 in funding for projects in Illinois that Darin LaHood and Mike Bost specifically requested to be included in the bill. While we are glad tax dollars are coming back to Illinois, we cannot let LaHood or Bost take any credit for funding they would not even vote for.”

“Bost, Miller, and LaHood think they can convince Illinoisans they are fighting for them, but voters need to know it is a lie. You can’t vote NO and then take the dough – that’s partisan politics at its worst.”

US Rep. Bost recently defended earmarks like those mentioned above in the Tribune

Bost supports earmarks and notes that neighboring U.S. Rep. Mary Miller of Hindsboro, a Bailey backer and Freedom Caucus member, rejects them to the chagrin of local mayors in her district.

“Any earmark, or whatever you want to call it, that I have ever asked for, I will defend it because I am talking to my people and knowing that it is supported,” the congressman said.

“If you don’t do it in your district, somebody’s going to do it in theirs. And if Mary doesn’t want what should have been her earmarks, then send them to the Illinois 12th because I’ve got other places where I’m going to be falling short and projects that need to be done so that we can grow and be the booming economy that we need to be,” he said.

He’ll defend them, but apparently won’t vote for them.

* Meanwhile, Darren Bailey concocts a conspiracy theory…


  9 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Press release…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined Primient leadership, the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, and local stakeholders to celebrate Primient’s new investments in Decatur. With this milestone $400M investment over the next 5 years in infrastructure and operations, Primient will improve refining and drying practices and further ensure quality and reliability for decades to come. A leader in sustainable food and industrial ingredient production, Primient is the sole corn wet miller to replace coal use at every facility with more sustainable energy sources.

“Illinois is open for business, and we’re showing the rest of the nation that business development and environmental sustainability go hand-in-hand,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “I couldn’t be prouder to join Primient leadership as they announce a historic $400 million capital investment here in Decatur. Today’s announcement doesn’t just secure Primient’s status as a market leader — it speaks to their commitment to serve as a true community partner.”

“In Illinois, we embrace innovation. We are ready to make changes that will protect our land for future generations and it’s exciting to partner with businesses who share that goal,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “I look forward to seeing how Primient will use these funds to propel sustainable energy. This is the kind of work that will ensure Illinois’ long-term economic and environmental success.”

Primient’s Decatur facility investments will prioritize a few key projects:

    - Modernizing and upgrading feed, germ, and drying processes,
    - Improving syrup refining reliability and efficiencies,
    - Enhancing safety and equipment capabilities,
    - Updating employee spaces such as lunch and locker rooms,
    - And providing additional training and development opportunities and programming.

[…]

The investment aims to guarantee the Decatur site’s future for the next 20 years, with technological and environmental considerations to ensure prosperity. As a long-term community partner, Primient has increased corn processing capacity by 10 million bushels, locally sourced, and created hundreds of jobs for Illinoisans.

As part of the expansion, the company received an Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credit, which stipulates a $40 million minimum investment and creating 50 new full-time jobs and retaining nearly 540 full-time jobs. A link to the full agreement can be found here. (Note: Agreement will be on this site when executed).

* Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association…

The Illinois Hotel & Lodging Association (IHLA) released the following statement applauding the Senate Environment and Conservation committee for passage of SB 2960, which will ban single use toiletries in hotels.

“The Illinois Hotel & Lodging Association applauds the Senate Environment and Conservation committee for passage of SB 2960, which will ban single use toiletries in hotels. While most hotels are already in compliance with this bill and have proactively replaced these products with more environmentally-friendly options, we remain committed to strengthening sustainability efforts and reducing waste within our industry. We thank Sen. Laura Fine for her leadership on this measure, which will codify these practices into law and make common-sense sustainability effort the baseline for Illinois hotels,” said Michael Jacobson, President and CEO of the Illinois Hotel & Lodging Association.

* Press release…

Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) was joined at a March 7th Capitol press conference by Senator Dave Syverson (R-Cherry Valley) and Senator Sally Turner (R-Beason) to talk about legislation he is sponsoring to require an annual report to the General Assembly identifying all state spending on services and resources for migrants. […]

Curran’s Senate Bill 3170 would require the Illinois Department of Human Services to work with relevant State agencies, to prepare an annual report to the General Assembly identifying all state spending on services and resources for migrants. It would also be made available to the public on the Department’s website.

…Adding… From the governor’s office…

Following Donald Trump’s orders, Senate Republicans are blowing their racist dog whistle and conflating different immigrant populations to vilify human beings for their political gain. Whether it’s the Governor of Texas shipping people across the county creating a humanitarian crisis or Republican legislators complaining that people who call Illinois home are getting services they need, Republicans are once again proving their only focus is on dividing us. Just because they do not agree that we should live up to our duty to care for people, doesn’t mean information about how we’re doing that isn’t already publicly available. Instead of their ridiculous political theater, the super minority party should be focused on working with their colleagues in the General Assembly to vote for a balanced budget that invests in the very services they claim they care so much about.

Whew.

* Press release about a bill that’s now heading to the governor’s desk…

Today, the Illinois House of Representatives passed HB779, a rewrite of the Pawnbroker Regulation Act (PRA). Upon passage, a coalition of consumer advocates – including AARP, the Catholic Conference of Illinois, the Chicago Urban League, and Woodstock Institute – and financial technology (fintech) companies (the “Coalition”), sent a letter to Governor Pritzker identifying the pros and cons of the bill.

Among the pros: the bill prohibits pawnbrokers from making auto title loans, which is a problem in other states. The bill also empowers the Illinois Department of Financial & Professional Regulation (IDFPR), to collect data about every pawn loan made in the state.

Among the cons: the bill permits pawnbrokers to continue charging 240%+ APR on loans less than $500.

“This bill is a ‘mixed bag’ from a policy perspective. Unable to compete with the pawn industry’s considerable resources, we decided to remove our opposition to the bill and take “No Position.”” said Brent Adams, Senior Vice President of Policy & Advocacy at Woodstock Institute. “The interest rates are still too high, but HB 779 lowers the rate on loans of $500 and above. A critical component of HB 779 is data collection, which is intended to enable the stakeholders to revisit the issue of interest rates at a future date. We are grateful for the leadership of State Senator Elgie Sims, who spearheaded negotiations in the Senate and signaled a commitment to addressing rate-related concerns in the years to come.”

Earlier this year, Woodstock released a report, which showed that Illinois consumers have saved over $600 million thanks to the 36% interest rate cap on consumer loans that was established in 2021. Woodstock’s report stated that there is a high probability that some of the money saved by consumers on payday and auto title loans was spent on pawn loans. The report pointed to Ohio where, after enacting a cap of 28% APR on payday loans, there was a 97% increase in pawn shops.

Caps on pawn loan finance charges vary considerably among the states. Michigan caps pawn loans at 36% APR plus a $3 per month storage fee while Kentucky permits a pawnbroker to charge as much as 264% APR. Iowa has no cap.

In recent years, more states have established rate caps and resisted industry efforts to raise rates. New Mexico established a 36% rate cap on installment loans modeled after the Illinois law. Colorado and Minnesota reduced the allowable APR on certain small short-term loans, and Florida’s governor vetoed a bill last year that would have raised interest rates on installment loans to 36%.

* A little taste



* Here’s the rest…

  22 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Rivian to build new car at Illinois plant (Updated x3)

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rivian’s CEO just said that the company plans to start deliveries of its new R2 in the first half of 2026. How will they do that? By building the car at their plant in Normal.

More in a bit.

…Adding… Full remarks

I’m excited to say that we’re going to be pulling the timing in to allow R2 to start deliveries in the first half of 2026. And we’re able to do that, we’re able to achieve that accelerated time by leveraging our production capabilities in Normal using our Illinois site to launch R2 and get that in the market as quickly as we can.

Now our Georgia site remains really important to us. It’s core to the scaling across all these vehicles between R2, R3, R3X. And we’re so appreciate of all the partnership we’ve had there. But being able to leverage the team, the skill, the passion we have in our Illinois facility to get that into the market, to get customers [the car] as quickly as possible. We are just ecstatic about that.

…Adding… Gov. JB Pritzker…

Once again, Rivian has reaffirmed a message I have been championing since day one of my administration—Illinois is one of the best places to do business in the country. I want to congratulate Rivian on the newest additions to their growing line of vehicles and look forward to seeing them on the roads very soon. Rivian’s latest announcement and related expansion will add more economic investment and job growth to the Bloomington-Normal community on top of the thousands of jobs they have already created. I’m pleased that Rivian is an important partner in building Illinois’s rapidly-growing manufacturing sector, and I look forward to working with them to continue to build the clean energy economy of the future.

Notice the word “expansion.” The plant is apparently getting bigger.

…Adding… Atlanta Journal-Constitution

BREAKING: Rivian pauses plan to build $5B Georgia factory […]

“Rivian’s Georgia plant remains an extremely important part of its strategy to scale production of R2 and R3,” the company said in a statement. “The timing for resuming construction is expected to be later to focus its teams on the capital-efficient launch of R2 in Normal, Illinois.”

The decision to pause the factory will save Rivian more than $2.2 billion in comparison to waiting to launch R2 production in Georgia, the company said in a news release.

  25 Comments      


Pritzker indicates he favors elected Chicago school board bill (Updated x3)

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Gov. Pritzker’s press conference today

Q: Today, the House is expected to vote on the Chicago elected school board implementation. Literally, what we’ve seen the last couple of days, there’s been some division among the Democrats on which plan works better. Obviously, they voted on the hybrid model. So this appears to be another issue where we’ve seen the division of Democrats in the legislature as of late. So with this hybrid model, with this school board issue, where do you stand on this and what does this division in this latest issue say about the state of the Democratic Party?

Um, only two Senate Democrats voted against the bill on Tuesday. They have structured roll calls with more conflict than that.

But, yes, there was a strong disagreement between the two Democratic-dominated chambers about this issue for months. In the end, they worked it out and decided to get something done before the deadline.

* Pritzker didn’t respond to the Dems in disarray part, but he did say that he’s long supported an elected school board, and said he could support the current version as well. “Either way, I think the city of Chicago is doing the right thing,” he said. “The Chicago Public Schools will be better led by people who are representative of the people and not just appointed by the mayor of the city of Chicago.”

…Adding… And it’s important to note that the final vote has been more about a disagreement over foreign policy with the mayor than party differences over the bill itself…


Also, Rep. Jaime Andrade (D-Chicago) is now asking about the CPS policy going forward on selective enrollment schools, not an elected school board.

…Adding… The House just passed the bill 75-31-3.

…Adding… Speaker Chris Welch…

“With the passage of this legislation, we made history and we’re charting a brighter future for generations to come. Chicagoans in every part of the city can begin to circulate petitions to run for their school board in just three weeks and this November every Chicagoan will be able to vote for an elected representative who will answer to them. Today, we were able to keep our promise to allow every Chicagoan to have a say in their school board.

“I want to thank Rep. Ann Williams and the entire CPS Districting Work Group for getting this historic proposal across the finish line. It’s been a long, deliberate process, but this House Working group stood by the compromises that made this elected school board possible after years of negation. Thank you for your hard work and thank you for your continued commitment to getting this right for the children and families of Chicago.”

  11 Comments      


Illinois UAW region withdraws Rashid endorsement, votes to back Foster

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Russell Lissau at the Daily Herald

An Illinois-based, regional office of a powerful labor union for autoworkers has rescinded its endorsement of the candidate challenging U.S. Rep. Bill Foster of Naperville in the Democratic primary for Illinois’ 11th Congressional District and instead is backing the incumbent, the group announced Thursday morning.

The UAW’s reversal is a blow for challenger Qasim Rashid, who just last week had announced the union’s endorsement to reporters and on social media. The UAW had been the most prominent group to endorse Rashid’s bid to topple Foster from the post he’s held since 2013. […]

The regional UAW’s members voted to change their endorsement in the race Thursday night. Region 4 Director Brandon Campbell attributed the earlier support of Rashid by the Ottawa-based group to “some miscommunication in our internal democratic process.”

“The UAW is excited to endorse Bill Foster for Congress,” Campbell said. “Foster’s efforts to save, and build upon, thousands of Illinois jobs (in Belvidere) is just one of the many reasons that working families should join the UAW in support of Congressman Bill Foster.”

Hilarious. Rashid probably shouldn’t have bought a non-American car a few months ago. Also, on a purely hardcore political level, if an organization goes out of its way to stiff elected officials and others who went out of their way to help them, as happened with Foster, then maybe other folks won’t be so eager to stick their own necks out in the future.

* From a Foster spokesperson…

Congressman Foster will always fight for American workers because it’s in his DNA. He started a company with his brother when he was 18, and they refused to ship those Midwest manufacturing jobs to China to make more money for themselves. The campaign is thrilled to be recognized by the voice of working people - members of Organized Labor - for his commitment to fighting for good paying, American jobs.

  4 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGEM

Lawmakers joined leaders from organizations serving people with developmental disabilities at the Illinois State Capitol Wednesday to rally against eliminating the subminimum wage for people with disabilities.

Known as the Dignity in Pay Act, HB 793 would require people with disabilities less than the minimum wage paid to everyone else beginning in 2027.

People who oppose the legislation said it will force organizations providing services and jobs to people with disabilities to lay them off or potentially close.

“Without a well-constructed, well-developed plan, the people who HB 793 is intended to benefit would likely experience unnecessary hardships,” said Doug McDonald, the CEO of Sparc, a Springfield-based organization serving people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

* Center Square

State Sen. Chapin Rose, R-Mahomet, said under federal law there’s a waiver for minimum wage because the productivity of someone with certain disabilities isn’t the same as someone who has full-cognitive abilities.

“It’s neat to see how happy these people are to get their paycheck. They made their contribution to society at the level they are able to contribute. Who wouldn’t in a perfect world want to do this [mandate at least minimum wage for disabled adults]? But the reality is, you’re going to put these people out of work,” said Rose. […]

“They are calling it the Dignity in Pay Act, and I am here to counter that narrative,” [state Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville] said in October. “The bill is not agreed, as Charlie [Meier] pointed out when 33 out of 35 providers are not in agreement, that is not agreed.” […]

“It feels like they’re saying there’s only two options: ‘Sub-minimum wage or no job.’ It’s not true. The research has shown, nationwide, that we can phase this out. I was talking with a small town mayor in Alaska, which has phased it out. He was the lead sponsor on this bill and they found a lot of success with customized employment in their small town,” said [Nicholas Boyle, an economic justice policy analyst with Access Living]. “Other places can do it, I don’t see why Illinois can’t.”

* Sen. Michael Hastings…

Senate Bill 3538 would require any self-insured county or municipality that provides health insurance coverage to first responders to include mental health counseling coverage without imposing any cost-sharing requirements on patients.

“First Responders” are classified as any police, corrections officers, deputy sheriffs, firefighters, or emergency medical services personnel that are employed by local government entities, which would include counties and townships. […]

Senate Bill 3538 passed the Senate Local Government Committee on Wednesday and now heads to the full Senate for consideration.

* SJ-R

Through Senate Bill 2705, the sale and distribution of products such as carpets, cookware, food packaging and more containing intentionally added PFAS would no longer be allowed starting next year. By 2032, all products with PFAS, unless it is proven it cannot be made without it, would be banned.

The Illinois Department of Agriculture would also have to approve bans of pesticide, fertilizer, agricultural liming material, plant amendment, or soil containing them.

State Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview, is leading the bill currently awaiting committee assignment. The intent behind the bill, she said is not to burden manufacturers but instead to produce environmentally-friendly products that are more cost-effective. […]

Lawmakers are also weighing legislation that would require manufacturers of intentionally added PFAS to register their products with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. Opponents, such as the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, have said identifying these products would be challenging and implementation would be costly.

* Sen. Robert Peters…

State Senator Robert Peters advanced legislation Wednesday to ban employers from requiring workers to attend meetings regarding political or religious matters. […]

Senate Bill 3649 will prohibit Illinois employers from requiring employees to attend employer-sponsored meetings where the primary purpose is to communicate the employer’s opinions on religious or political matters. Further, the legislation safeguards employees from adverse actions for refusing such employer-sponsored meetings.

The National Labor Relations Board’s general counsel issued a memorandum outlining a plan to advocate for mandatory meetings concerning union representation, political opinions and religious matters unlawful under federal labor law. There has been no action following the memorandum, which was issued in 2022. […]

Senate Bill 3649 passed the Senate Labor Committee and now awaits further consideration in the Senate.

* WAND

Illinois lawmakers could pass a plan this spring to ensure school vendors and learning partners follow the state’s new comprehensive literacy plan.

House Democrats want vendors responsible for English language arts improvement plans to abide by the historic Literacy and Justice For All Act.

The Illinois State Board of Education introduced the framework for the literacy plan in January. However, this bill could ensure schools are not limited by their vendors. […]

The proposal passed out of the House Elementary & Secondary Education: School Curriculum & Policies Committee on a 11-2 vote. House Bill 4902 now heads to the House floor for further consideration.

* Sen. Dave Koehler…

enate Bill 3077 would create the Local Food Infrastructure Grant Act. This measure would require the Illinois Department of Agriculture to amplify local food processing, collection and distribution within the state through grants. Eligible applicants would include farms, co-ops, process facilities, food businesses and hubs with fewer than 50 employees, as well as Illinois nonprofit organizations and local governments.

Koehler’s bill creates a two-tiered grant system for both individual and collaborative projects. Individual projects may receive grants between $1,000 and $75,000, where collaborative projects may be awarded $1,000 up to $250,000. These grants may be used toward production, grading and packaging equipment, as well as refrigerated trucks, milling equipment, local fish processing and milk processing.

According to the Illinois Stewardship Alliance, a 10% shift in the average grocery budget toward local food purchasing could generate billions in economic growth for the state. By incentivizing the expansion and collaboration of local food providers, Senate Bill 3077 will reinforce Illinois’ food industry, grow local economies and provide access to locally sourced food to residents across the state. […]

Senate Bill 3077 passed the Senate Agriculture Committee on Thursday and now moves to the full Senate for further consideration.

* Sen. Seth Lewis…

With 25 students from the Prairie School of DuPage in the committee room with him to help lobby for his bill, State Senator Seth Lewis (R-Bartlett) received unanimous recommended approval from the Senate’s State Government Committee on Wednesday for legislation that designates the Calvatia Gigantea as the official state mushroom.

As the bill was presented, committee members learned that 174 witness slips in favor of the bill had been properly filed by students, parents, and others in support of Senate Bill 3514.

“I visited with these students at their school in Wheaton several weeks ago, and they told me they wanted Illinois to adopt a new symbol,” said Lewis. “They engaged in a great deal of research, and asked me to file a bill to make the Calvatia Gigantea, or “Gigantic Puffball” the official state mushroom. I filed Senate Bill 3514 on their behalf on February 9.”

Upper Elementary Teacher Erin Hemmer testified before the committee and explained that students compiled research and held a “primary” election that brought the list of mushroom choices down to two, and then the students made campaign signs for their favored choice prior to a “general” election to determine the winner. “They entered this process with wonder and passion,” said Hemmer. “I am very proud of them.”

Upper Elementary student Charlotte DiGangi also testified on the bill and said the idea for a state mushroom came from a question she asked during a classroom discussion on state symbols. “We were talking about all of the different state symbols and I asked if there was a state mushroom,” said DiGangi. “I said we should have a state mushroom and now here we are.”

The Prairie School of DuPage is a private, environmentally-focused school that offers K-8 students a progressive, hands-on education.

“This was a priceless lesson in the value of civic engagement and sends a message to these students that even at a young age their voice can be heard and that they can influence change,” added Lewis. “It was an honor to partner with them on this legislation, and look forward to their continued assistance as we bring this bill across the finish line.”

  12 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?…

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: State commission says Illinois underfunds public universities by $1.4 billion. Capitol News Illinois

    - The Commission on Equitable Public University Funding is made up of 34 members, including legislators, representatives from public universities, and members of advocacy organizations.
    -It found that dedicating an added $100 million to $135 million annually to public universities would allow the state to bridge the funding gap in 10-15 years.
    - The amount of operational funding covered by the state has decreased from 72 percent covered in 2002 to 35 percent in 2021.
    - Public universities are currently at 68.5 percent funding adequacy collectively the commission found.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Borderless | 7 Things Migrants Should Know About Upcoming Shelter Evictions: Earlier this year, residents expected to vacate the shelter between Jan. 16 and Feb. 29 were given a 60-day extension due to cold weather. If you were given a move-out date between March 1 and March 28, you should have received a 30-day extension from your assigned exit date. For individuals who received a 60-day notice on Feb. 1, your eviction date will be April 1, according to the city.

    * Sun-Times | Votes on Johnson’s ‘Bring Chicago Home’ referendum to help the unhoused should be counted, judges rule: In the opinion, written by Mitchell, the appeals court argued it cannot interfere with the legislative process by removing the question from the ballot. “The holding of an election for the purpose of passing a referendum to empower a municipality to adopt an ordinance is a step in the legislative process of the enactment of that ordinance. Courts do not, and cannot, interfere with the legislative process,” the opinion reads. “Courts are empowered to rule on the validity of legislative enactments only after they have been enacted.”

* ABC Chicago

The appellate court ruling came down as Mayor Brandon Johnson was speaking to the media at a news conference on an unrelated subject.

“I’ve said all along that the people of Chicago should determine how we should address the unhoused crisis in Chicago,” the mayor said in the moment, “and I made a commitment, not just as a candidate but as mayor of the city of Chicago, that I would do everything in my power to move us closer towards housing for all, because this has been a long time coming for the people of Chicago.”

The Building Owners and Managers Association of Chicago released a statement on the decision, saying, ”We are disappointed in the outcome of this case, but felt it was important to challenge this misleading and manipulative referendum question. This massive tax increase would hurt homeowners, renters, union workers, and businesses throughout the neighborhoods. Even worse, a yes vote on this referendum is a vote to deliver huge blank checks to the City with no plan for how millions will be accountably spent. We have already ramped up our efforts to educate the public about the negative impacts of this tax increase.”

In a statement, Maxica Williams, chair of the End Homelessness Ballot Initiative Committee and board president of the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless, said:
“Our longstanding coalition of policy advocates, service providers, labor unions, and homeless and formerly homeless people commend the judges of the First District Appellate Court for dismissing the real estate lobby’s effort to invalidate Ballot Question 1. We look forward to keeping up our efforts to reach hundreds of thousands of voters about their opportunity to vote yes for a fair and sustainable plan to fund housing, care for the homeless, and ask wealthy real estate corporations to pay their fair share.”

Governor Pritzker will be in Decatur at 10 am to celebrate Primient investments in Illinois. Click here to watch.

    * Capitol News Illinois | With feds citing ‘extensive cooperation,’ judge gives ex-Sen. Terry Link 3 years’ probation: In June, Link was the government’s star witness in the trial of Jimmy Weiss, a politically connected businessman charged with bribing both Link and Arroyo. Weiss had been pushing for the legalization of “sweepstakes machines,” a close cousin of the heavily regulated and taxed video gaming terminals found in bars, restaurants and standalone video gambling cafes across Illinois.

    * WMBD | Here is a look at the 88th district Illinois State House race: Erickson introduced a resolution in January that McLean County, which he said has not declared itself a sanctuary, should not allocate county tax dollars should it be presented with an influx of migrants. His stance not to vote for a tax rate increase while on the county board is indicative of his desire to lower taxes. He also wants to push back on gun registration and gun bans.

    * WCIA | House District Republican Primary to be decided by rare write-in battle: Teacher’s unions backing a candidate against Niemerg is not surprising. He consistently attacks them, going so far as to say no one who calls themselves a Republican should accept money from them. “I think Republicans should swear off taking teachers’ unions money until the teachers’ unions actually stand for teachers instead of the woke indoctrination that I see coming out of Springfield,” Niemerg said.

    * Daily Southtown | Republicans in 19th Senate primary say property taxes, immigration as top issues: Samantha Jean Gasca, of New Lenox, Hillary Mattsey Kurzawa, of Frankfort, and Max Solomon, of Hazel Crest, are seeking their party’s nomination to challenge 19th District incumbent state Sen. Michael Hastings, D-Frankfort, in November. It will be the second time in the past two elections where Hastings has faced a general election challenger after Lockport Republican Patrick Sheehan conceded a very close race in 2022.

    * Sun-Times | Protests & peace — Chicago ready for demonstrators at Dem convention, but police won’t ‘tolerate violence’: Snelling made a distinction between the types of demonstrations that are expected during the Democratic convention and “pop-up” protests that were sparked by George Floyd’s murder at the hands of a Minneapolis cop that gave way to widespread looting and gun violence. He specifically pushed back on a scathing report by the city’s inspector general’s office that found officers were “outflanked, under-equipped and unprepared,” and that the department “critically disserved both its own front-line members and members of the public.”

    * Crain’s | House OKs extra $75 million for security at DNC: Tucked into a huge, $467.5 billion bill to pay for federal spending on scores of items this year is $75 million for Chicago, with an identical $75 million for Milwaukee, where Republicans will hold their convention. That’s $25 million more than the $50 million convention cities have received in recent years, but advocates say costs and security needs have risen.

    * Crain’s | As Durbin frets over O’Hare expansion’s future, airlines re-up their support: But in a March 4 opinion piece in the Chicago Tribune, Durbin wrote “if United and American airlines had it their way, they would delay the satellite terminals and build only the part of the project that benefits them and doesn’t increase competition. This means putting off the construction of both satellite terminals to focus on the Global Terminal.” [….] American and United, meanwhile, insist they’re still committed to the project and haven’t proposed to build only the global terminal because satellite capacity would be needed to handle the activity from Terminal 2 while it’s being demolished and rebuilt.

    * Tribune | After loss of tax credit money, anonymous donors help Catholic school in Cicero stay open: In late January, the archdiocese announced that St. Frances of Rome in Cicero would close its doors in June. The sunset of the state’s Invest in Kids tax credit scholarship program created a financial cliff for the school, which has a majority Hispanic student population from working-class families. For weeks, parents, parishioners and community members rallied to garner attention and pressure leaders to save the school outside the parish’s Sunday Mass and in front of Holy Name Cathedral in River North, where the Archbishop of Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich works.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago’s search for new revenue targets video gaming, wealth taxes, heliport, downtown digital ads: Freshman Ald. William Hall (6th), Mayor Brandon Johnson’s hand-picked chair, also warmed to possibly leveling the tax playing field between the haves and have-nots by seeking legislative approval for a city income tax on salaries over $100,000 earned in Chicago or taxing stock holdings and personal liquid assets of wealthy residents.

    * Crain’s | Bears’ stadium plans involve significant public amenities — and public subsidies, too: To make the stadium more attractive, the team is also proposing infrastructure improvements that would better connect the entire museum campus to the city’s grid and Northerly Island. While the city has long sought improvements to the campus, the infrastructure would likely add hundreds of millions to the total taxpayer tab to support a new stadium.

    * Axios | Illinois’ recreational weed market is most expensive in the Midwest: According to the Marijuana Policy Institute, Illinois’ legal cannabis tax is among the highest rates in the U.S., with up to 40% over the sale price. We’re behind several states, including Washington, New York, Nevada and California.

    * ABC Chicago | Aurora at Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont on track to be world’s fastest supercomputer: Argonne’s new supercomputer doesn’t just have one node, 10 or 100, instead it has 10,000 of them. Each single rack of nodes weighs eight tons and are cooled by thousands of gallons of water. Its computing power equals 2 exaflops, or 2 billion-billion calculations per second.

    * AP | Alabama governor signs legislation protecting IVF providers from legal liability into law: Republican Gov. Kay Ivey signed the bill after it was approved in a late-night session by lawmakers scrambling to address a wave of criticism after services were halted at some of the state’s largest fertility clinics. Doctors from at least one clinic said they would resume IVF services on Thursday.

    * AP | State of the Union: What to watch as Biden addresses the nation: The White House hasn’t disclosed specific proposals that will be in this year’s speech. But he could reference unfinished business from his first term, and he’ll likely press for military assistance for Ukraine to reinforce American leadership overseas.

    * Sun-Times | Here are the guests of Illinois members of Congress for President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address: With access to in vitro fertilization now an issue, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, whose two daughters were born using IVF, invited Illinois reproductive endocrinologist and infertility specialist Dr. Amanda Adeleye to be her guest “as part of the senator’s continuing efforts to protect access to in-vitro fertilization.”

  11 Comments      


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

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Live coverage

Thursday, Mar 7, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comments Off      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood pledges to continue care despite cuts
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax Advertise Here Mobile Version Contact Rich Miller