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Bailey advertises event with Donald Trump, Jr.

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It goes without saying that Bailey’s objective is to secure the father’s endorsement and cruise to a congressional primary victory over Mike Bost, much like he did last year. This at least shows he’s heading that way

  24 Comments      


Afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Good news for the Gilman area…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker joined state and local leaders along with the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) to celebrate the groundbreaking of Incobrasa Industries LTD’s expanded manufacturing facility. The expansion represents more than $250 million capital investment and will create 40 new full-time jobs while retaining 200 jobs - generating economic benefit for the region and state.

“With Incobrasa’s announced expansion today, the company will more than double its production capacity by 2030. That’s a win for Gilman, for Illinois, and for the nation,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “In addition to sustaining and creating new, permanent, good-paying careers, this new $250 million expansion will mean dozens of construction and installation jobs for workers here in Iroquois County and across the region. We’re making it easier for companies to do business in Illinois. We’re investing in our skilled workforce. And we’re modernizing our transportation systems, roads, ports and airports. Illinois is on the rise and open for business.”

Incobrasa is an industry leader in soybean processing that has had a manufacturing presence in Illinois since 1997. The company’s capital investment will construct a new soybean crushing facility – adding 170,000 square feet of new state-of-the-art production facilities. The company will also be constructing a 50-acre solar array to help fuel the facilities.

The Gilman plant processes soybeans to produce animal feed, packaged vegetable oil, and biodiesel. This expansion will enable the company to make use of the vast supply of soybeans that are available in Illinois, which is the largest soybean producer in the United States. […]

As part of the expansion, the company received an Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credit, which specifies a minimum capital investment of $155.8 million. A link to the full agreement can be found here.

It’s really a nice little town.

* Crain’s

Northwestern University today announced the opening of the Ryan Institute on Complexity as part of a $480 million donation from the Ryan family — the same donation that went in part toward updating Ryan Field.

The new institute will focus on conducting research on how interconnected systems impact business using big data and artificial intelligence. The institute will be led by three professors at the Kellogg School of Management. Research from the institute will “drive the creation of unique curriculum at Kellogg, including the first PhD training program in a business school helping to train future thought leaders in complexity,” according to a press release.

* Rep. Miller (R-No Relation)…

Congresswoman Mary Miller (R-IL) released the following statement posing a question from parents for Governor Pritzker and President Biden’s Secretary of Education as they visit a school in Illinois today.

“Governor Pritzker and Secretary Cardona oppose parental rights and believe young children should be indoctrinated with radical “gender ideology” politics in the classroom behind their parents’ backs,” Miller said.

“JB Pritzker signed the most radical sexual education curriculum in the country. Pritzker and Cardona have led the effort to violate Title IX by forcing our daughters to compete against men in sports, and they want to force schools to allow men into girls’ locker rooms and bathrooms.

“Parents should be in charge of their child’s education, not radical politicians like Pritzker and Cardona who believe teachers should be discussing chemical castration and gender reassignment with your child.

“After the country watched Joe Biden put a mask back on yesterday, the big question parents want the “press” to ask Gov. Pritzker and Sec. Cardona right now is: Are you going to ignore parents by once again forcing your illegal COVID mask mandates on our students?”

We have vaccines and treatments now. That’s why the hospitals aren’t full. This mask fear on the far right is ridic.

* To the campaign trail

After losing the Illinois gubernatorial race in 2022 to incumbent JB Pritzker, Darren Bailey said he initially wanted to return full-time to his farm in Clay County, Illinois, and not return to politics.

When asked by mywabashvalley.com why he decided to run in another political race, this time for Illinois’ 12th Congressional District, he pointed to his supporters.

“My wife and family and friends, we prayed and we fasted for 10 days,” Bailey recalled. “And we feel like this is a mission field, this mission field of government, and for such a time as this, that we belong here as the people, the grassroots movement all across the state that fought so hard, for two years in the race for governor. And we believe that by going to DC, having a larger platform, a larger voice, that we’ll be able to shine that light back on the woes and the failings of Illinois and eventually reverse the tide.” […]

When asked about reaching across the aisle to achieve bipartisan legislation, Bailey referenced his work in Springfield.

“On several occasion, the other side of the aisle literally came to me as probably one of the most conservative voices in Springfield because they knew my interest,” Bailey said. “Whether it was education, whether it was the pharmaceutical benefit managers, getting them out of the way to make pharmaceuticals cheaper.”

* Politico

Tom Demmer, the former Republican state representative, says he won’t run for the state Senate seat now held by Sen. Win Stoller, who announced last week he wouldn’t seek re-election.

“I’ve decided not to run,” he told Playbook. “I like what I’m doing now. It’s great to be in town and home with my family. So, I’ve decided to pass on this year’s race,” he said, leaving a glimmer of an opening that he might run for public office down the road. Demmer is the executive director of the Lee County Industrial Development Association, a position he took after making an unsuccessful run for state Treasurer last year.

— Tosi Ufodike, an Ela Township trustee, has created a committee to run as a Republican against Democratic state Rep. Nabeela Syed in Illinois House District 51, according to a Board of Elections filing. […]

Republican Desi Anderson announces run against Democratic state Rep. Sharon Chung, by WGLT’s Ryan Denham

* Isabel’s roundup…

    * Sun-Times | Madigan won’t run for committeeperson, marking full stop end to his political career: Ald. Marty Quinn (13th) is circulating petitions for the 13th Ward spot after Madigan, 81, opted not to run. Madigan’s racketeering trial is set for April 1 — 13 days after the March 19 Illinois primary. … Madigan’s decision not to run for committeeperson was first reported by CapitolFax.com.

    * Crain’s | Illinois delays copay requirement for noncitizens: In June, HFS announced it would roll back several health care provisions for noncitizens between the ages of 42 and 64 covered by the HBIA program as well as those over 65 who are covered by the HBIS program. Among those concessions, HFS would require copays from enrollees who were not eligible for a federal match. That would mean inpatient visits could cost $250 and an emergency visit could impose a $100 copay.

    * Center Square | FEMA surveying damage from summer flooding in Illinois: “When it comes to the basement, peoples’ furnaces and things like that have been damaged so FEMA is not about making you 100 percent whole, we want to get you back to your living conditions,” said Larissa Hale, Media Relations Specialist with FEMA.

    * WBEZ | Advocates hope cycling safety is prioritized in upcoming city budget: Year after year, Chicago has consistently ranked among the worst big cities in the world for bike safety. In March, the Chicago Department of Transportation released the Chicago Cycling Strategy, a report outlining the city’s plan to improve its cycling infrastructure.

    * Crain’s | Johnson has few wells to tap for his lofty spending goals as first budget looms: Johnson is tentatively scheduled to release his first budget proposal on Oct. 11 and has given no indication he’ll flip-flop on raising property taxes. But absent other sources of revenue that are unlikely to materialize this year, his first spending plan will be measured on the down payments it lays down, rather than “transformative investments,” according to his allies in the City Council.

    * SJ-R | U.S. Secretary of Education Cardona to visit Springfield’s Fairview Elementary Wednesday: Cardona will visit Fairview Elementary School alongside Gov. JB Pritzker, Illinois State Superintendent of Education Tony Sanders and District 186 Superintendent Jennifer Gill. Fairview’s after-school program is part of the district’s academic recovery efforts following the pandemic.

    * Crain’s | United CFO shoots down worries over an HQ move: United Airlines doesn’t plan to move its headquarters to Denver, where it recently purchased 113 acres of land. “There are no imminent plans for that,” Gerald Laderman, the airline’s chief financial officer, said this morning at the TD Cowen Global Transportation Conference in Boston. “We have a long-term lease at Willis Tower. We’ve been there for decades in Chicago. Denver is like Houston. We have lots of facilities in Houston.”

    * Sun-Times | Officer uses Narcan to help 2 migrants outside West Side police station: A Chicago police officer used Narcan to aid two migrants experiencing potential overdoses outside the Harrison District police station. On Friday night, officers were alerted to two men unresponsive outside the station at 3151 W. Harrison St., according to a police report.

    * WGN | Highland Park hosting ‘poverty simulation’ event: “Participants in this immersive experience will begin to experience what a “month” in poverty feels like. Participants are put into situations in which they do not have enough resources and are forced to make difficult choices that can negatively impact them and their families. The outcome is increased awareness of the need for resources to support those living in poverty to create a more resilient health, human, and education sector in our local area,” a description for the event reads.

    * Tribune | Women in motorcycle groups travel far and wide to find fellowship and adventure outside the flatlands of the Chicago area: “I live in the city of Chicago, so it’s 50 miles to start getting into something that’s interesting, road-wise,” said M.J. Candido, president of the Furies Motorcycle Club and the organizer of this particular trip. “We like to ride out in the country and get some great scenery. We like to get out of the cities, stopping at local restaurants and businesses along the way.”

    * NYT | America’s Fire Spotters Aren’t Ready to Fade Away Just Yet: Mr. Haugen has worked for more than half of his 52 years as a fire lookout, scanning the larch and pine wilderness from a one-room mountaintop cabin. Alone most of the time but for his thoughts, his mutt, Ollie, and the occasional crackle of voices on the radio, he is part of a nationwide band of professional watchers who, like lighthouse keepers, stand on solitary guard between civilization and nature’s uncaring whims.

    * SJ-R | Springfield City Council’s move on new business district boosts sports complex: Tuesday’s generally supportive mood by the council members was a departure from last week’s committee of the whole meeting when frustration boiled over about the lack of progress on the $67 million 95-acre complex designed to attract traveling athletic teams for weekend tournaments.

  18 Comments      


CTU president won’t answer questions about enrolling her son in private prep school

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have been trying to reach CTU President Stacy Davis-Gates since yesterday about this story and have received no response. I asked the CTU for comment as well. Crickets. I’ve even tried back and side channels. Nada. I’ve waited long enough. ILGOP…

The spotlight is firmly on Stacy Davis-Gates, President of the Chicago Teachers’ Union (CTU), and her hypocritical stance on school choice. Davis-Gates, a vocal opponent of school choice programs, is championing the teachers union campaign to terminate Illinois’ Invest in Kids Act, a program that provides scholarships to nearly 9,000 underprivileged students for private school education. Her mantra: “I can’t advocate on behalf of public education and the children of this city and educators in this city without it taking root in my own household.”

But let’s take a closer look at her hypocrisy. While Davis-Gates advocates against school choice, she sends one of her own children to [school name redacted at Stacy Davis-Gates’ request], a private, Catholic high school in Chicago. Yes, you read that right - private school education for her own, while advocating for something entirely different for other children. Rules for thee, but not for me.

Now, let’s revisit some of Davis-Gates’ past statements on social media. She’s not one to mince words. According to her, “School choice was actually the choice of racists. It was created to avoid integrating schools with Black children.” She’s even gone as far as labeling private schools as “Segregation Academies,” and now she acts to provide her own child the benefits of a private education.

Stacy, if Illinois private schools are racist, why are you sending your child to one?

Davis-Gates’ actions speak louder than her words. They highlight the absurdity of the situation - advocating against something you choose to personally benefit from and can personally afford- unlike many other parents who cannot afford a private school without the Invest in Kids Act.

Davis-Gates’ actions, not her words, is proof positive that public education might not be the best fit for every student, and that parents should have the freedom to choose the education that best suits their children’s needs and aspirations.

To me, the Chicago Magazine quote, “I can’t advocate on behalf of public education and the children of this city and educators in this city without it taking root in my own household” really leaves her open to this.

* Receipts…


Thoughts?

  69 Comments      


McHenry County state’s attorney announces new restrictions on cannabis shops, which governor calls ’spreading disinformation’

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally writing in the Tribune

Cannabis dispensaries in McHenry County will now be the first in the country to warn customers through in-store signage of the mental health dangers associated with cannabis use, which include psychosis, depression and suicidal ideation.

Dispensaries will also be required to scrub their marketing and websites of any suggestion that their products have medical benefits. They agreed to these consumer protections as part of a settlement with the McHenry County state’s attorney’s office in lieu of a consumer fraud action. Dispensaries that have refused to warn consumers will face litigation.

Since Illinois’ legalization of recreational marijuana in 2020, the defining feature of the dispensaries’ sales strategy has been marketing cannabis as medicine and the antidote to many maladies, including depression, anxiety, insomnia, post-traumatic stress disorder, attention-deficit disorder, immune disorders, chronic fatigue and inflammation.

In furtherance of its strategy, dispensaries have appropriated the scientific lexicon to create their own fraudulent field of medicine, such that one no longer does a “bong rip” but rather receives a specific “dose” measured to the milligram by the cashier. (Or, should I say, “dispensary health care professional”?)

It goes on, and on, and on.

* From the Illinois Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act

The recorded use of cannabis as a medicine goes back nearly 5,000 years. Modern medical research has confirmed the beneficial uses of cannabis in treating or alleviating the pain, nausea, and other symptoms associated with a variety of debilitating medical conditions, including cancer, multiple sclerosis, and HIV/AIDS, as found by the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine in March 1999.

(b) Studies published since the 1999 Institute of Medicine report continue to show the therapeutic value of cannabis in treating a wide array of debilitating medical conditions. These include relief of the neuropathic pain caused by multiple sclerosis, HIV/AIDS, and other illnesses that often fail to respond to conventional treatments and relief of nausea, vomiting, and other side effects of drugs used to treat HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C, increasing the chances of patients continuing on life-saving treatment regimens.

(c) Cannabis has many currently accepted medical uses in the United States, having been recommended by thousands of licensed physicians to at least 600,000 patients in states with medical cannabis laws. The medical utility of cannabis is recognized by a wide range of medical and public health organizations, including the American Academy of HIV Medicine, the American College of Physicians, the American Nurses Association, the American Public Health Association, the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, and many others.

As I told subscribers yesterday, it looks like McHenry County dispensaries wouldn’t even be allowed to post that excerpt from state law inside their buildings now without facing a lawsuit for fraud.

* From the governor’s office…

Legalizing adult use cannabis has always been about justice, safety, and equity in Illinois. The failed war on drugs has destroyed families, filled prisons with nonviolent offenders, and disproportionately disrupted Black and Brown communities. That’s why, in Illinois, we focused on righting some of our historic wrongs by expunging criminal records and reinvesting a portion of the revenue back into communities hardest hit by the failed war on drugs. The Governor is disappointed to learn that the McHenry County State’s Attorney prefers focusing on spreading disinformation instead of tackling the issues that keep actually keep residents safe.

* Associated Press

(T)he federal Health and Human Services Department has recommended taking marijuana out of a category of drugs deemed to have “no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.” The agency advised moving pot from that “Schedule I” group to the less tightly regulated “Schedule III.”

* From Rep. Kelly Cassidy, House Speaker Pro Tempore Jehan Gordon-Booth, and former Sens. Toi Hutchinson and Heather Steans

When we first set out to legalize and regulate cannabis for adult use, we were immediately labeled the “marijuana moms” as we each had kids ranging from toddlerhood to adulthood. And we embraced that label, acknowledging that youth use of cannabis has shown to decrease in effectively regulated markets. We also faced our fair share of outlandish “chicken little” arguments from opponents to legalization such as the southern Illinois sheriff who claimed legalization would require drug sniffing dogs to be euthanized. Recently McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally decided to join the disinformation brigade.

In the mid-1930’s, then Federal Bureau of Narcotics Commissioner Harry Anslinger infamously vilified cannabis as a catalyst for violence, and unscientifically attributed half of violent crimes in minority communities to the consumption of “marihuana.” He spent decades misdirecting federal enforcement powers to promote fear over scientific evidence, and successfully prohibited cannabis throughout the nation. As his primary basis for doing so, he loosely associated the cannabis plant to unverified acts of violence, immoral behavior, and even “satanic music” – such as jazz.

Now nearly a century later, Kenneally takes another swing from the Anslinger playbook. In an announcement that he will force state-licensed cannabis dispensaries in McHenry County to post unscientific warnings to consumers about cannabis, Kenneally claims “half of the county’s recent homicides involve cannabis or cannabis-induced psychosis.” Like Anslinger a century before him, Kenneally’s connection of cannabis consumption to these tragedies is unexplained.

In a meandering editorial, Kenneally carelessly conflates cannabis use with the most complex societal issues that our own Illinois researchers, institutions, and community leaders work collectively every day to further understand and improve upon. To the McHenry State’s Attorney, the tragedies of violent crime, addiction, mental illness, and suicide can be narrowed down to one oversimplified, unbelievably obvious common denominator – they’re all a bunch of pot users.

At best, Kenneally misleads weekend editorial readers. At worst, he continues an unfortunate tradition in American history of using hyperbole to vilify cannabis use and possession, including for medical purposes.

The timing for Kenneally to issue an editorial calling medical cannabis “elaborate dupery” was poor, to say the least. Just days before his op-ed landed, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officially recognized the medical benefits of marijuana following an evidence-based review, recommending to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) that marijuana be rescheduled as a Schedule III substance, because it has a medical utility and low potential for abuse.

As legislators who have investigated this topic substantially ourselves, we don’t need to wait for the full federal scheduling report and findings to understand an integral part of the utility of medical cannabis. We have seen and heard the human experiences in our own offices: Late-stage cancer patients restored to a quality of life. Debilitating seizure disorders become a distant memory. Our own Illinois veterans pleading for relief from the side effects of pharmaceutical drugs, and an alternative, legal pathway to medical cannabis following active combat.

During this time, we have watched the nation’s registered medical cannabis patient population grow to exceed 5 million, now spanning 38 different states from coast to coast and in between. As the number of positively touched lives increases, we have witnessed public support for medical cannabis now hovering at 90%, covering all demographics and across party lines.

Further, as legislators who have worked collectively for the better part of a decade to build a strictly regulated, consumer protection-focused medical and adult-use cannabis industry in Illinois, we take particular umbrage with the assertion that the state has “warned no one and done nothing” about the potential public health impacts of cannabis.

In fact, since the inception of Illinois’ strictly regulated medical cannabis program in 2013 mandatory product labels and dispensary signage are required to conspicuously warn patients and purchasers that:

    Cannabis is only for registered medical patients or adults 21 and over; cannabis can impair cognition and may be habit forming; cannabis should not be used by pregnant or breastfeeding women; this particular cannabis product causes intoxication, the effects of which may be delayed for up to 2 hours, among several others.

We further mandated child-resistant containers, strict prohibitions against marketing or advertising to minors, independent lab testing of all products for safety, labeling of potency and serving sizes, real-time inventory controls and electronic tracking of cannabis to prevent diversion, and electronically scanned age verification at all dispensaries, to name a few.

We also make no apology for the economic and reinvestment dollars into Illinois communities. Our state’s legal cannabis industry now produces over $500 million annually in state and local tax revenue for the benefit of Illinois, surpassing alcohol tax revenue. For the first time in the state’s history, tens of millions of dollars in sustained funding are being reinvested into Illinois’ most historically disinvested communities every year. The revenues go to build youth recreational centers, support anti-violence programs in partnerships with local law enforcement, job training programs, and fund mental health and substance abuse clinics, as a few examples. In addition, a significant portion of the revenue supports training and DUI enforcement. SA Kenneally’s vague claim about increased DUIs could be because there is adequate training and resources to enforce against intoxicated driving now.

The State of Illinois will continue to follow the science in making regulatory considerations. The law was built for regulators to update its consumer safety protocols accordingly. In doing so, we will remain careful not to compel government speech on private businesses in violation of well-established First Amendment protections, simply because certain businesses may not see the world from our eyes, nor use our selective reading of publicly available literature to accomplish the same.

We stand willing to work with anyone from anywhere in our great state to address consumer safety, public safety, public health, and child development. We will not, however, stand idly and allow others to point myopically to cannabis to nonsensically explain away highly complex, multi-faceted societal problems.

Footnotes at the link.

  28 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. The governor was asked this at an unrelated press conference today

Q: This has been in the news over the Labor Day weekend that 20 employees from Speaker Welch’s office have basically renewed their efforts to unionize. And it’s kind of falling on deaf ears by Speaker Welch. I’d like to hear your position on this, because, considering you and Speaker Welch are such staunch proponents of the Workers’ Rights Amendment, codifying this fundamental right for anyone in Illinois to unionize. How do you feel about that. Do you think those 20 employees in Speaker Welch’s have the right to be recognized as a union?

Pritzker: Well, let’s start with the point of the Workers’ Rights Amendment is that workers should have the right to collectively bargain wherever they are. And, you know, as far as I’m concerned, I think the Speaker believes the same as I do. That’s true for everybody in the state, every position in the state. And so I don’t think there’s anybody that’s attempting to prevent people from organizing. There does take time, there does need to be a point at which the organizers get their workers together to determine what it is that they want. And the management gets its team together to meet with them. I think it’s just a time question. And also a question about whether the other people who work in state government for the legislature want to be part of a union, because, again, nobody’s preventing anybody from having a union, no one’s also saying you have to be unionized. Right. And you know, that our workforce in Illinois, about 14% of our overall workforce is unionized. So it’s not an enormous number. But again, nobody should prevent people from getting together to organize and I don’t think anybody is.

Q: Well, do you support the efforts of these 20?

Pritzker: I don’t know the specifics of what they’re demanding. And, of course, I support their ability to. That’s why we supported the Workers’ Rights Amendment. I think we all believe, those of us that supported it, that workers that want to get together in a workplace to organize should have the right to do that.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

  47 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news (Updated)

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Union membership is down, but organizing petitions are up

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

As workers in Illinois celebrate Labor Day, a new report shows there has been a surge in efforts to organize labor unions in workplaces throughout the state, while overall public approval of labor unions nationally is the highest in nearly six decades.

In 2022, there were 72 successful petitions to organize labor unions in Illinois, which represent 9,600 new unionized workers, the highest single-year numbers at any point in the last decade.



That’s according to The State of the Unions 2023, an annual report by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute, a think tank with strong ties to organized labor, and the Center for Middle Class Revival at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

After decades of declining union membership and declining unionization rates, U of I’s Robert Bruno, a coauthor of the report, said those numbers may signal a resurgence in the labor movement.

* From the IEPI report

Though the unionization rate fell nationally for the second consecutive year, the United States added union members in 2022 for the first time since 2017.

    • The United States added 277,000 new union members in 2022.
    • Illinois and the Chicago area both experienced small declines in unionization in 2022.
    • Unionization rates both nationally and in Illinois are at their lowest levels in 10 years.

Today, Illinois’ union membership rate is about 13 percent, which is significantly higher than the national average (10 percent) and is the 12th-highest union density among the 50 U.S. states.

    • Between 2013 and 2022, the unionization rate declined by 2.6 percentage points in Illinois, driven primarily by a transition from a more highly unionized manufacturing-based economy towards service- and knowledge-based sectors with low union densities.
    • Despite declines in unionization over the past ten years in Illinois, there has been a recent increase in new organizing activity over the last two years, with 2022 producing more successful union petitions and newly represented workers than at any comparable time over the past decade.
    • The union success rate for new organizing drives in Illinois was 56 percent in 2022. […]

Essential workers and public sector workers are more likely to be union members in Illinois.

    • About half of all public sector workers are unionized (49 percent) compared to fewer than one-in-twelve private sector workers (8 percent).
    • About 24,000 fewer state and local government workers are union members since the Janus Supreme Court decision, but the decrease may be attributed to labor shortages and unfilled positions.
    • Unionization rates are 84 percent for police officers and firefighters, 83 percent for public pre-K through 12 teachers, and 48 percent for construction and extraction workers.

* Illinois Policy Institute

Five years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Janus v. AFSCME that government workers cannot be forced to fund the political agendas of union bosses. Workers are embracing that freedom, especially as the unions spend more of workers’ money on priorities other than the workers.

Over 36,000 workers since 2017 have chosen not to associate with some of the largest and most politically active government unions in Illinois, according to the unions’ own reports with the U.S. Department of Labor. […]

But the number of workers rejecting union leadership is even higher than it looks in the federal reports. […]

SEIU HCII reported just under 60,000 members and fee payers in its 2022 federal report, filed in March 2023. But on its website, it claims to represent “more than 91,000 workers” in four states.

That means at least one-third of workers represented by SEIU HCII have chosen not to be a part of the union.

* This year, Chicago has the potential to set a record for the most new union petitions since 2010. WBEZ


* WBEZ

“When you see [petitions] increasing, you are seeing what we would call a leading indicator that there is an increased level of support for unionization,” [Robert Bruno, professor of Labor and Employment Relations in the School of Labor Employment Relations at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign] said. “It also strongly suggests that there’s a lot of current organizing going on.”

The high number of new union petitions is even more powerful when combined with high success rates of union votes, Bruno explained. His research has found that most petitions for new unions are making it past the union elections, which if successful, means the union can officially enter negotiations with the employer.

In Illinois, the success rate for those elections is now about 56%, Bruno said. “Over the last decade, its range has usually been between 33% or 47%. So that’s a substantial increase.”

The higher success rate can inspire new petitions, Bruno said. “It sends a signal to other workers that you can actually successfully organize your union. … It raises confidence that voting for a union is going to generate a positive outcome.”

  9 Comments      


Better management, please

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

In 2018, Chicago police officer Joseph DeRosa pleaded guilty to a felony in Michigan, admitting to resisting and obstructing police during an allegedly drunken meltdown at a casino. According to a police report, DeRosa kicked a Michigan officer in the face.

Under Illinois law, cops convicted of felonies lose their certification to be police officers in the state. The idea is to keep them from hopping from one law-enforcement employer to another.

Yet DeRosa is still a member of the Chicago Police Department.

CPD’s Bureau of Internal Affairs opened an investigation into DeRosa shortly after his arrest, and the department stripped the officer of his police powers. But it took 20 months for CPD to send notice of the felony conviction — notice required under the law — to the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board, according to that panel, which is in charge of decertifying cops.

Next it took the city’s Law Department another 31 months to move to fire DeRosa. Even today, the city’s Police Board has yet to schedule an evidentiary hearing on the dismissal charges. […]

The department has not provided records showing what became of the internal investigation into DeRosa’s arrest. CPD spokespersons also would not answer why it took the department so long to send notice of the felony conviction to the state board in charge of decertifications.

This is just so ridiculous. He’s been stripped of his police powers since 2018. He’s on the state’s attorney’s “do not call” list and was quickly decertified by the Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board, but only after CPD waited 20 months to send ILETSB the required notice. And he hasn’t been paid since 2020.

But CPD still hasn’t fired him?

* Meanwhile, from the city’s inspector general…

The City of Chicago Office of Inspector General (OIG) has published the results of its inquiry into the completeness of the Chicago Police Department’s (CPD) 911 call response data, as recorded by CPD and the City’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications (OEMC). OIG originally set out to evaluate geographic equity in CPD’s response times, but was unable to do so because of the frequency with which the data necessary to do so is missing. During the period of OIG’s inquiry, information on when CPD units arrived at the scene of an emergency call was missing more than half of the time.

In the course of planning and conducting this inquiry, OIG spoke with members of Chicago’s communities and representatives of 12 community-based organizations to gather data on public perceptions of CPD’s 911 responses. Several South and West Side organizations reported to OIG that they believe there to be geographic disparities in CPD’s response to 911 calls and that they have experienced slow or no response to 911 calls in their communities, leading to distrust of CPD members and the City’s emergency response apparatus. Neither OIG nor CPD, however, can meaningfully evaluate the efficiency or equity of 911 police responses because of inadequate data—despite a CPD policy which requires members to capture the relevant data.

“Effective emergency response is at the very core of CPD’s public safety function. The City and the Department are ill-equipped to evaluate and improve response times, simply because, more often than not, we have no information on when the police arrive to respond to an emergency,” said Deborah Witzburg, Inspector General for the City of Chicago. “Without this basic information, we can’t assess whether City services are provided equitably or efficiently—and we can’t improve what we can’t measure.”

A new information system procured by the City—though not yet implemented—promises some but not adequate improvement. OIG recommended that CPD provide training and appropriate technology to all members to reinforce and facilitate their responsibility to accurately report milestones throughout emergency events. OIG also recommended that CPD collaborate with OEMC to analyze and evaluate data for each time interval in the dispatch process and assess best practices for improving police responses to 911 calls.

The full report is here.

…Adding… Sun-Times

Chicago’s acting top cop has announced broad changes to the department’s leadership team, filling high-ranking positions before his replacement is expected to be confirmed.

Interim Supt. Fred Waller told department members that the staffing overhaul was effective Friday, but sources said some of his picks had already been installed.

Some of Waller’s choices have troubled records. Two commanders have been accused of fostering a hostile work environment, and two others have been named in costly lawsuits.

  12 Comments      


LG Stratton to lead Illinois delegation to Japan

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker has clearly been trying to increase Lt. Gov. Stratton’s public profile for several months. She’s quoted in almost every press release he sends out, for instance, and is regularly by his side at public events. Press release…

Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton will lead an Illinois Delegation to Japan beginning September 9. She will lead and represent Illinois at the 53rd Annual Joint Meeting of the Midwest U.S. – Japan and Japan-Midwest U.S. Associations Conference in Tokyo, Japan from September 10-12, joining Governors and economic development leaders from the Midwest and Governors and corporate executives from Japan.

The Lieutenant Governor’s first international delegation to Tokyo will focus on strengthening economic cooperation between Illinois and Japan and will reinforce Illinois as a leader in corporate recruitment, retention and expansion through Illinois Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). Programming throughout the delegation will tap into sustainability and innovation.

”I often say that Lieutenant Governor Stratton is the best Lieutenant Governor in the world—and now the global stage will have a chance to see just how true that is,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This delegation is another stage in our successful work towards attracting international business to Illinois, and I’m confident that the Lieutenant Governor will be an excellent advocate for our state and the many economic opportunities it offers.”

“Illinois truly is in the middle of everything, as the best place to live, work, and do business. Over the next several days, I am excited to meet with Japanese leaders and Governors throughout the Midwest to share what makes Illinois a world-class leader in business, innovation, and sustainability,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “Our state has the largest and most productive labor force in the Midwest, who have driven our growing green economy and put us on the cutting-edge of manufacturing, technology, and emerging industries. This is only a glimpse of why Illinois is the perfect place for international trade partners like Japan to do business. I’m looking forward to further cultivating the robust, long-standing relationship between Illinois and Japan.”

“Japan is one of Illinois’ largest trading and FDI partners and our enduring partnership has yielded significant economic benefits,” said DCEO Director Kristin Richards. “We look forward to strengthening our longstanding relationships while building new connections.”

The Midwest U.S.-Japan Conference is comprised of ten member states including Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio and Wisconsin. Illinois is a founding member state of the Association, a longstanding partner with Japan, and is home to more Japanese companies than any other state in the Midwest—employing over 42,000 people at 1,020 locations.

Illinois reached $1 trillion GDP for the first time in 2022 and is the home to more than 30 Fortune 500 headquarters. The bilateral trade between Japan and Illinois totaled more than $11 billion in 2022, with Illinois exports to Japan exceeding more than $2 billion. The state is also second in the nation for corporate investment and number one for workforce development by Site Selection Magazine. Illinois’ infrastructure, education, access to capital, and cost of living are all ranked in the Top Ten by CNBC’s annual Top States for Business Rankings.

Annual meetings alternate between Japan and one of the ten U.S. member-states. Last year, Illinois hosted the annual meeting for the first time since its first-ever conference in 1967.

Leaders joining the Illinois delegation include:

    • Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton
    • Teresa Reyes, Office of the Lieutenant Governor, Deputy Chief of Staff and Chief Operating Officer
    • Janelle Gurnsey, Office of the Lieutenant Governor, Deputy Chief of Staff for External Affairs & Communication
    • Teresa Ramos, Office of the Governor, First Assistant to the Deputy Governor of Education
    • Kate Lindgren, Office of the Governor, Senior Assistant to the Deputy Governor of Budget and Economy
    • Karen Sheley, Office of the Governor, Deputy General Counsel
    • Kristin Richards, Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO), Director
    • Margo Markopoulos, DCEO, Director of Trade and Investment
    • Lisa Clemmons Stott, DCEO, Electric Mobility and Innovation Director
    • Motoshi Yamada, DCEO Tokyo Office, Managing Director
    • Miho Jinoshi, DCEO Tokyo Office, Associate
    • Ginta Rubin, DCEO, FDI Manager
    • State of Illinois Partner Organizations:
    • Dan Seals, Chief Executive Officer, Intersect Illinois
    • Tommy Choi, Illinois Realtors, 2024 President-Elect
    • Matthew Silver, Illinois Realtors, President 2024
    • Ayumi DeLoney, Illinois Realtors, Residential Broker
    • Gordy Hulten, Illinois Manufacturer’s Association, Chief Operating Officer
    • Abby Powell, Springfield Sangamon Growth Alliance, Director of Business Development
    • Shelley Tulo, Springfield Sangamon Growth Alliance, Director of Marketing and Communications

  10 Comments      


ComEd under fire for massive clawback

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s in May

A little over a year ago, Gov. J.B. Pritzker extolled the beneficial effect his Climate & Equitable Jobs Act would have on ComEd customer bills thanks to a credit they would get from the owner of Illinois’ nuclear power plants. […]

That credit of 3.087 cents per kilowatt-hour, though, quickly turned out to be overly generous — so much so that ComEd customers now owe the utility $1.1 billion for credits it provided them but couldn’t collect from nuclear plant owner Constellation Energy Group when wholesale power prices dropped unexpectedly beginning last year.

CEJA, the landmark green-energy law Pritzker signed in 2021, bailed out three of Constellation’s six Illinois nukes, which were financially struggling at the time. The law set up a system in which ComEd ratepayers would pay extra if power prices fell below a certain level in a given month and would get a credit on their bills if they exceeded the threshold.

Beginning in June, ComEd will start recouping that $1.1 billion in monthly installments over the ensuing 12 months, with added interest of 5%. That means an extra $98 million per month for ratepayers.

* Press release last week…

The Chemical Industry Council of Illinois (CICI), which represents the interests of the chemical industry in the state of Illinois, and eight large commercial electricity users filed a Complaint today with the Illinois Commerce Commission claiming that the Complainants and CICI members are being overcharged by an amount estimated to exceed $100 million.

The Complaint, a copy of which is attached, alleges that ComEd has specifically violated Illinois’ Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA) by self determining the amount of previously provided Carbon Free Resource Adjustment credits, plus accrued compounded interest, that are currently being clawed back from Complainants and CICI members. The Complaint alleges that ComEd’s clawback charges violate the provision of CEJA requiring that the determination of the amount of clawback charges, if any, must be made by the Illinois Commerce Commission in an annual reconciliation proceeding.

The Complaint further alleges that the clawback charges violate the Illinois Public Utilities Act because ComEd imprudently managed its Carbon Free Resource Adjustment credits and charges. Complainants ask the Commission to order ComEd to stop billing Complainants and CICI members for Carbon Free Resource Adjustment charges that include charges to recover prior credits, plus accrued compounded interest, and to refund the full amount of these charges that occur prior to the cessation of the charges. […]

[Paul G. Neilan of the Law Offices of Paul G. Neilan, P.C. said]: “After its July 2020 Deferred Prosecution Agreement and ComEd’s alleged rededication to fully transparent and ethical management, it’s more than disappointing to see ComEd take back credits it had provided to customers without justifying its actions.”

The complaint is here.

* Capitol News Illinois

The fact that ComEd determined losses on its own, the complainants allege, violated a provision of CEJA that requires those determinations to be reviewed by the ICC in an annual proceeding.

“As a result of ComEd’s lack of disclosure of the real nature of its filings of these tariff revisions with the Commission, no party had an opportunity to object to the massive impacts of ComEd’s revisions,” the complaint reads.

The business groups also allege ComEd’s maneuver violates the state’s Public Utilities Act as an act of “imprudent management” of the Carbon Free Resource Adjustment credits and charges.

“It was never reviewed, there were never any hearings on it, it’s a lot of money and our position is that it violates the law,” Patrick Giordano, a lawyer representing the business groups listed in the complaint, told Capitol News Illinois.

* Crain’s

ComEd spokeswoman Shannon Breymaier said in an email that the utility was analyzing the complaint. But, she wrote, ComEd “expects to vigorously defend our actions in implementing CMCs.”

“We are appropriately charging and crediting customers and have been clear about the CMCs, and the charges and credits that implement them, with the commission and our customers,” she said.

The commission will have to respond to the complaint and is likely to get a motion to dismiss from ComEd. Commission Chairman Doug Scott joined the agency in June, about a month after its initial decision to allow the surcharges to go forward. He was a key architect of CEJA as an adviser to Gov. J.B. Pritzker in 2021, when the law was passed, and the way the nuclear bailout was structured was a point of pride for the Pritzker team.

It appeared to work better than anyone might have imagined when market power prices soared in 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But prices deflated within months while the ComEd credits to customers remained, causing the imbalance that led to the $1.1 billion recovery.

Best laid plans…

  4 Comments      


SIUC has some good news to report… kinda

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wikipedia

SIU’s [Carbondale] enrollment reached a record of 24,869 students in 1991, a time when SIU became notorious for its party school reputation.

The endless bickering with the town over the school’s partying ways, changing student tastes and the state’s fiscal problems eventually tanked enrollment. By the time Bruce Rauner took over, enrollment stood at 17,989. Then the former governor’s plot to “leverage” the passage of anti-union laws created a massive stalemate and no budget for two years, leading lots of parents and students to conclude the school could actually close. As with everything else, Rauner took a crisis and turned it into a disaster. Enrollment plummeted to 12,817 and it kept right on falling through the pandemic. It’s like that old saying about bankruptcy: It happens gradually, then suddenly.

* Press release

For the first time since 2014, enrollment at Southern Illinois University Carbondale has grown. Overall enrollment for fall 2023 is 11,359 — 252 students, or 2.3%, more than last year — the highest overall boost in the number of students in 21 years and highest percentage increase in over 30 years.

Enrollment is basically back up to where it was in 2020.

* Back to the press release

The university is well positioned for more growth, Lane said, and it is on track to reach its goal of 15,000 students by 2030, set in Imagine 2030.

15,000 students would be about a thousand fewer students than were enrolled in the 2016-17 school year.

One thing is for sure: You’re not gonna make SIUC any better by cutting its budget. Building it back up will take time, lots of effort and money.

* And now John Tillman, one of the chief cheerleaders of the Rauner playbook and the chief point person against the Workers’ Rights Amendment last year, is arguing in the Wall St. Journal that Virginia’s governor has to succeed where Rauner failed and strip public employee unions of their rights if he ever wants to be president…


  32 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Here you go…

  3 Comments      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ScribbleLive is still down. Twitter has stopped allowing people to embed list feeds on websites. So, click here or here to follow breaking news.

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* Reader comments closed for the weekend
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