Another day, another failed lawsuit
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Tribune…
A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought by a downstate Republican congressman and two GOP officials that sought to block the state from counting mail-in ballots cast on or before Election Day, but received by election authorities up to two weeks afterward.
U.S. District Judge John Kness ruled that five-term U.S. Rep. Mike Bost of Murphysboro and two prospective 2024 GOP presidential electors lacked standing to sue the State Board of Elections over an Illinois law allowing mail-in ballots to be counted in the 14 days after Election Day as long as they were postmarked or certified on or before that day.
More than just rejecting the three Republicans’ standing to file suit, Kness explicitly ruled that Illinois’ 2015 law complied with the U.S. Constitution as well as federal election law. […]
Bost’s challenge to the law was somewhat ironic since he touts his past service in the Marines and the law was designed in part to meet federal voting requirements for military members serving overseas. The U.S. Department of Justice issued a “statement of interest” in support of the state of Illinois, in part citing protections for military members to have their votes counted.
* Democratic Party of Illinois…
Last night, a federal judge for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois denied Congressman Mike Bost’s challenge to Illinois’ Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute. Bost filed this suit against the State Board of Elections ahead of last year’s election in an attempt to prevent the counting of mail-in-ballots received after Election Day. The lawsuit could have invalidated thousands of mail-in ballots, including those of military members serving overseas, if they are postmarked on or before Election Day but received after. […]
“This ruling by a Trump-appointed judge is a win for voting rights and a loss for those who wish to suppress fairly counted votes to suit their political ambitions. Despite their bad faith effort to undermine free and fair elections, this ruling shows the lack of legal standing Republicans have in challenging laws that protect our right to vote. The Illinois GOP knows how wildly out of touch they’ve become with Illinoisans, but fortunately, their effort to override the will of the voters with this baseless lawsuit rather than accepting the results of our elections was as unsuccessful as their campaigns,” said Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Lisa Hernandez.
* From the decision…
Plaintiff argues that the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute directly contradicts Article I, Section 4 of the Constitution. That section establishes that “[t]he Times, Places, and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof.” Nothing on the face of the Statute runs afoul of this constitutional provision. By implementing the Statute, Illinois is following the constitutional command that states determine the time, place, and manner of elections. In addition, the Statute further does not conflict with the federal mandate that Election Day be held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. By counting only mail-in ballots postmarked on or before Election Day, the Statute does not extend the day for casting votes in a federal election. Because the Statute does not conflict with a constitutional provision, it does not fall under the plan of Convention doctrine. […]
Plaintiffs allege that the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute violates 2 U.S.C. § 7 and 3 U.S.C. § 1 by allowing the state to count votes that are received after Election Day, even if they are postmarked on or before the date of the election or certified before Election Day. (Dkt. 1 at 10.) But the Statute does not contradict 2 U.S.C. § 7 and 3 U.S.C. § 1. As the statute says, all mail-in ballots must be “postmarked no later than election day.” 10 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. § 5/19-8(c). If a ballot is not postmarked, it must be certified on or before Election Day to be counted. Id. Nowhere in the text does the Statute allow ballots postmarked or certified after Election Day to be counted. The question, then, is whether ballots that are postmarked or certified on or before Election Day, but are not received by Election Day, should be disregarded as untimely under federal law. […]
In this Court’s view, and with due respect to Plaintiffs’ contrary view, the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute operates harmoniously with the federal statutes that set the timing for federal elections. Many states have post-Election Day absentee ballot receipt deadlines, and at least two states other than Illinois allow mail-in ballots postmarked on or before Election Day to be counted if they are received within two weeks of Election Day. … Other states will accept mail-in ballots received seven to 10 days after Election Day. … Despite these ballot receipt deadline statutes being in place for many years in many states, Congress has never stepped in and altered the rules.
Moreover, the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute is facially compatible with the relevant federal statutes. By counting only these ballots that are postmarked no later than Election Day, the Statute complies with federal law that set the date for Election Day. As the United States notes in its statement of interest in this case (Dkt. 47), even federal laws governing elections allow ballots received after Election Day to be counted. […]
More broadly, Plaintiffs consistently—and wrongly—conflate “voting” with “counting votes.” The word “voting” as used in this case is a gerund; that is, a word derived from a verb that functions as a noun. As a derivative of the verb “to vote,” “voting” refers to a specific act: casting a vote. Under the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute, the voting deadline is unambiguous: the act of voting must take place on or before Election Day. 10 ILCS § 5/19-8(c). Counting those votes, however, may take place up to 14 days after Election Day. Id. Voting (as an act) and counting votes (as a separate act) are not the same thing, and the Statute allows counting alone—not voting—to continue after Election Day. […]
Plaintiffs allege that the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute forces Congressman Bost and other candidates “to spend money, devote time, and otherwise injuriously rely on unlawful provisions of state law in organizing, funding, and running their campaigns.” Plaintiffs do not, in connection with their right to stand for office claim, explain why the Statute constitutes an invalid regulation of the times, places, and manner of federal elections. Instead, Plaintiffs merely set forth their reasons why the Statute could make standing for federal office in Illinois more challenging
These allegations do not assert a plausible claim that the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute impairs the right to stand for office. Spending time and money on campaigning is an inevitable feature of running for office, and Plaintiffs do not contend that the extra time and money they might have to spend due to the Statute prevents them from standing for office at all. For these reasons, Plaintiffs’ “right to stand for office” claim is unavailing.
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Today’s quotable
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Rick Morrissey wrote this earlier in the week, but it’s even more true after last night’s loss to that team on the other side of town…
You know what 19 games below .500 is? It’s the kind of record rebuilding teams have. The Sox aren’t rebuilding. Their 26-man payroll is $130.2 million, which is the 11th-highest in baseball. Their .406 winning percentage is the lowest among the top 15 spenders. Ten of those 15 teams have records above .500.
You almost have to try to be as bad as the Sox are. This can’t be emphasized enough: The Sox aren’t trying to be this bad. They’re not trying to get higher draft picks. Their prolific losing is completely organic. Their losing is a living thing, a creature. This is spontaneous dreadfulness. […]
The Sox have finished above .500 only twice in Rick Hahn’s 11 years as general manager.
The White Sox are currently playing .398 ball.
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I kinda wonder how this conversation went
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* I posted this press release earlier today…
Governor JB Pritzker joined Hoyleton Youth and Family Services today to break ground on a once in a generation construction project that will provide a new model of care for vulnerable youth 9-18 years old living in residential care. The new residential campus will allow youth, who are both developmentally and intellectually delayed and have experienced trauma, to heal and grow in a therapeutic environment.
Hoyleton is in southern Illinois.
* Mark Maxwell was there and posted a pic on X, or whatever it’s called. Zooming in…
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Afternoon roundup
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* National economic analysts have been wrong for at least a year now…
GDP grew at a 2.4% pace in the second quarter, topping expectations despite recession calls
• Gross domestic product rose at a 2.4% annualized pace in the second quarter, topping the 2% estimate.
• Consumer spending powered the solid quarter, aided by increases in nonresidential fixed investment, government spending and inventory growth.
• A Commerce Department inflation gauge increased 2.6%, down from a 4.1% rise in Q1 and well below the estimate for a gain of 3.2%.
* IDES…
Over-the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in all fourteen metropolitan areas for the year ending June 2023, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). Over-the-year, the unemployment rate increased in thirteen metropolitan areas and decreased in one. […]
The metro areas which had the largest over-the-year percentage increases in total nonfarm jobs were the Danville MSA (+3.3%, +900), the Peoria MSA (+2.7%, +4,600), and the Champaign-Urbana MSA (+2.6%, +2,900). Total nonfarm jobs in the Chicago-Naperville-Arlington Heights Metropolitan Division were up +2.0% or +74,000. Industries that saw job growth in a majority of metro areas included: Education and Health Services and Leisure and Hospitality (twelve areas each); Government (eleven areas), Other Services (ten areas); Transportation, Warehousing and Utilities (nine areas); and Manufacturing (eight areas).
The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate increases were the Danville MSA (+1.0 point to 5.9%), the Kankakee MSA (+0.9 point to 5.7%), the Rockford MSA (+0.9 point to 6.3%) and the Lake County-Kenosha County IL-WI Metropolitan Division (+0.8 point to 4.6%). The only metro area with an unemployment rate decrease was the Chicago-Naperville-Arlington Heights Metropolitan Division (-1.0 percentage point to 4.3%).
* Press release…
Joint Statement from Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Chicago Bears President & CEO Kevin Warren:
“We continued our productive discussion this week that began in early June. We plan to have regular dialogue with each other, and across our respective staffs, as we work together to meet the needs of the citizens of Chicago and Bears fans.”
Crain’s…
Johnson has been preparing an offer to work with the Bears to find multiple city sites within Chicago that could satisfy the demands of an NFL stadium, according to a source with knowledge of the situation. […]
State Rep. Kam Buckner, who served on Johnson’s transition team, previously said the city should be “proactive” in finding another location for the team outside of Soldier Field, including the 500-acre former U.S. Steel site on the Southeast Side along Lake Michigan.
Other sites that could hold a smaller footprint are Related Midwest’s The 78 megadevelopment between Chinatown and the Loop, but the developer has been focused on the development of space for the Discovery Partners Institute with the University of Illinois.
Another possibility is just south of Soldier Field on land occupied by the Lakeside Center, part of the McCormick Place Convention Center campus that is set to be redeveloped.
* Press release…
Governor JB Pritzker, Prysmian Group, and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) today joined local leaders and partners to announce a new Reimagining Energy and Vehicles in Illinois (REV Illinois) agreement and break ground on Prysmian Group’s expanded facility in Du Quoin. The expanded Southern Illinois facility will enable the company to increase cable manufacturing for the renewable energy and electric vehicle sectors. […]
Bolstered by a REV Illinois incentive package, Prysmian Group plans to invest $63.8 million and create 80 new high-paying jobs while retaining 225 jobs in Southern Illinois – solidifying its position as one of the largest employers in Perry County. The expansion paves the way for increased renewable cable production in Illinois, adding over 100,000 square feet of new manufacturing space and seven major pieces of equipment, including a two-line expansion for renewable cable production. The expansion will also help modernize the existing infrastructure and implement an Energy Management System within the facility.
“This expansion will produce cutting-edge, high-quality, sustainable products that not only help enhance the grid – by increasing reliability, preventing blackouts and reducing overall maintenance costs,” said Andrea Pirondini, CEO of Prysmian Group North America. “Ultimately, we will ensure we have the capacity needed, when it is needed, in order to ensure we can build an electrical grid that’s built for the future. As we work to help harden the grid across the U.S., Du Quoin will play a large role in that.”
With 150 years of experience, Prysmian Group is supporting the worldwide transition to clean energy by manufacturing thousands of miles of cables and systems for power transmission and distribution, as well as cables in microgrids, energy storage, renewable energy and EVs and EV charging stations – which have different requirements and specifications than traditional cables.
* Mike Bost…
U.S. Representative Mike Bost (IL-12) today announced that his re-election campaign has been endorsed by over 100 Republican elected officials from across the 12th District. This comes two weeks after Bost announced his re-election campaign has been endorsed by 19 GOP county sheriffs.
“Southern Illinois’ mayors and local officials have a unique feel for the pulse of the people,” said Bost. “They understand better than anyone what their community wants and whether or not they have a representative in Washington who can deliver. That’s why I’m thrilled to have the endorsements of over 100 Republican officials from across the 12th District, including in our new central and southeastern counties. They know I’m fighting for our conservative values and will never sacrifice what’s best for Southern Illinois just to please the Beltway insiders.”
The list of 100 endorsers is here.
* The ILGOP’s latest press release on the SAFE-T Act included this kicker at the end…
Let’s put it this way: if Al Capone was arrested today on tax evasion, the Democrats would’ve had him released before lunch.
* Press release…
Governor JB Pritzker joined Hoyleton Youth and Family Services today to break ground on a once in a generation construction project that will provide a new model of care for vulnerable youth 9-18 years old living in residential care. The new residential campus will allow youth, who are both developmentally and intellectually delayed and have experienced trauma, to heal and grow in a therapeutic environment.
“Every child deserves an opportunity to be equipped with the tools they need to reach their full potential,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Coupled with the superior therapeutic treatments provided by Hoyleton, this expansion will enable more of our vulnerable youth to receive these outstanding services as well as provide them with modern physical and outdoor spaces encouraging full wrap around services in this unique setting.”
The new facility, which will cost $16 million, has had more than 50% of its project costs funded by Illinois DCFS through its capital development program. Remaining funds will come from federal programs as well as a capital campaign supported by both private and corporate donors.
The project will allow for the creation of seven brand new homes, increasing residential capacity from 36 to 42 youth. Each resident will have a private bedroom, semi-private bathroom, sound and sensory appropriate space, art spaces and planned outdoor areas. Each home will be equipped with solar panels and there will be electric vehicles as well as two charging stations with the capacity for a total of up to six. The housing portion of the project will be completed by January 2024 and none of the residents will be displaced during the construction.
* Bill signing…
Governor JB Pritzker signed SB1909 into law, also known as the Deceptive Practices of Limited Services Pregnancy Centers Act. This law bars so-called “crisis pregnancy centers” from using misinformation, deceptive practices, or misrepresentation in order to interfere with access to abortion services or emergency contraception. The law allows the Illinois Attorney General to investigate complaints against centers using such tactics and strengthens the AG’s Offices power to prosecute incidences of consumer fraud in such cases.
“Women need access to comprehensive, fact-based healthcare when making critical decision about their own health—not manipulation or misinformation from politically motivated, non-medical actors,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “By empowering the Attorney General’s office to battle deceptive practices, we’re ensuring Illinoisans can make their own decisions about their bodies using accurate and safe information.”
“Misinformation is a form of injustice, particularly when it is used in an attempt to control women’s healthcare decisions,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “In Illinois, we refuse to accept anything less than bodily autonomy for all, and that includes the right to accessible and accurate medical information. We are committed to protecting Illinoisans from these manipulative tactics and ensuring all have the power to choose what is best for their futures.”
“I witnessed deceptive crisis pregnancy center tactics firsthand on a visit to tour a Planned Parenthood health center in Illinois. People who appeared as though they might work there were outside attempting to divert patients away from the health center,” Attorney General Kwame Raoul said. “Patients report going to crisis pregnancy centers – sometimes even receiving exams and ultrasounds – thinking they were visiting a clinic that offers the full range of reproductive care. As a result, patients may disclose personal medical information, unaware the center may not keep that information private and confidential. By signing this law at a time when reproductive health access faces continued attacks in other states, Governor Pritzker is helping to protect patients who seek care in Illinois from these extreme violations of trust and privacy.”
“Crisis pregnancy centers,” which are often located near facilities that offer full-service abortion or contraceptive care, are non-regulated and at times even nonmedical facilities. As such, they are not subject to laws regarding confidentiality or accuracy as laid out by medical governing boards. Over 100 of these centers exist in Illinois. Many of these centers advertise to women unsure about continuing a pregnancy, and present inaccurate information on risks of procedures, fetal development, and other aspects of reproductive healthcare to discourage patients from accessing abortion or emergency contraceptive services.
The Deceptive Practices of Limited Services Pregnancy Centers Act clarifies how the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Practices Act applies to crisis pregnancy centers. Centers are not required to provide information about abortion or emergency contraceptives but cannot give incorrect information or use false advertising to attract clients. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has recommended that states strengthen laws against these centers to preserve patient safety. The law is effective immediately upon signing.
…Adding… A lawsuit was filed today…
Today, Thomas More Society attorneys filed a federal lawsuit against Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, seeking to stop him from enforcing Illinois Senate Bill 1909, a measure drafted by Raoul’s office that declares the pro-life speech of the state’s life pregnancy help ministries to be a “deceptive business practice.” Thomas More Society is representing NIFLA, a national pregnancy help center network, along with several Illinois pregnancy help centers and pro-life organizations.
“This law is a blatant attempt to chill and silence pro-life speech under the guise of ‘consumer protection,’” explained Peter Breen, Thomas More Society Executive Vice President and Head of Litigation, and a former Illinois State Legislator. “Pregnancy help ministries provide real options and assistance to women and families in need, but instead of the praise they deserve, pro-abortion politicians are targeting these ministries with $50,000 fines and injunctions solely because of their pro-life viewpoint.”
The lawsuit, filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Western Division, seeks a temporary restraining order, preliminary injunction, and permanent injunction against SB 1909. If temporary and preliminary injunctions are granted, they would prevent the law from being enforced while the case makes its way through the court system.
“The state government has completely overstepped the bounds of any logical and relevant authority by inserting insane partisan politics into their governing bodies and attempting to trample the First Amendment rights of those with whom they disagree,” said Thomas Glessner, President of NIFLA. “There is no basis for their blatant attacks on pregnancy centers, who provide all of their services for free for women and their families throughout Illinois. They do so out of their deeply held beliefs of caring for one another and exhibiting human decency and compassion for those in need, something the leaders of Illinois are completely clueless about. This attempt to deny mothers their constitutional right to choose life is disgraceful and should be an embarrassment to the people of Illinois.”
The lawsuit is here.
* ISP…
The Illinois State Police welcomed 17 new Troopers today from Cadet Class 142 at a graduation ceremony at the Illinois State Police Academy in Springfield. The new Troopers will report to three different Troops throughout the state on Sunday July 30, 2023. The total number of ISP Troopers added since 2019 now stands at 445.
Cadet Class 142 marks the 14th cadet class graduation under Governor JB Pritzker. […]
The new officers are assigned to the following areas of the state and will immediately begin their patrol duties, joining veteran Troopers in the effort to safeguard the public and Illinois roadways.
Troop 2 La Salle, 1 Trooper
Troop 3 Des Plaines, 12 Troopers
Troop 8 Collinsville, 4 Troopers
* I was privileged to be quoted in this article about Yvette Shields…
Yvette Shields, a reporter originally trained to cover Chicago City Hall, turned her fearless pen to Midwest state and local finance when she joined the Bond Buyer nearly 26 years ago and launched a career that enriched the public finance industry with unrivaled coverage of the people, deals and events that matter to the bond world.
Along the way she earned a reputation as a consummate financial reporter who had great personal charm, intelligence, and humor. She built an extensive network of sources and friends, routinely scooped the competition, and acquired a deep understanding of the political and financial nuances that shape municipal finance.
Shields died suddenly on July 19 of what is believed to be sepsis. She was 57.
You can contribute to the Yvette Shields Memorial Fund by clicking here. Thanks.
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* Axios | A year in, Illinois 988 crisis hotline “has much work to do”: About 14% of the 23,000-plus Illinois calls made in April and May to the 988 crisis hotline were redirected to other states, per an analysis by health research outlet KFF.
* WMBD | Illinois Secretary of State program to reduce wait times at DMVs: Giannoulias said that the program, which will start Sept. 1, is expected to eliminate the unpredictability of wait times at the DMV and improve customer service. The program will require everyone to make appointments for in-person visits at the 44 busiest DMVs in Illinois. In Central Illinois, that includes Peoria, Pekin and Bloomington.
* KFVS | Gov. Pritzker announces new initiative, attends groundbreaking in Du Quoin: Prysmian, based in Milan, Italy, is considered a world leader in the design, manufacturing and sale of wire and cable products, including aluminum, copper and fiber optic wire and cable products for the energy, communications and automotive industries.
* Journal Courier | Illinois attorney general calls on Congress to extend GI Bill benefits: The bill would extend eligibility for Veterans Affairs housing loan and Post-9/11 GI Bill educational assistance programs to Black World War II veterans and their families and descendants if the veteran can prove they were denied GI Bill benefits on the basis of race. It would also create an accountability office to monitor how many veterans received benefits from the bill and a panel to study inequalities in how women and minority veterans are given benefits.
* Crain’s | Chicago climate-tech investor raises $300M fund: The new fund will make growth-stage investments in companies that have proven their technologies and products and now need money to scale up their operations or pursue acquisitions. Interest in clean-energy technology was helped by the nearly $500 billion in government incentives aimed at climate change from last year’s federal Inflation Reduction Act.
* Bond Buyer | Illinois Senate honors Bond Buyer’s Yvette Shields for her work: The life and legacy of Bond Buyer reporter Yvette Shields was honored Tuesday with a proclamation introduced on the floor of the Illinois Senate. Introduced by Sen. Rob Martwick, D-Chicago, the proclamation pays homage to Shields as a “celebrated and beloved financial reporter” who “left behind an indelible mark on the public finance industry in both the Midwest and the nation as a whole.”
* Sun-Times | Illinois National Guard member charged with assaulting police in Jan. 6 Capitol riot: Joseph Bierbrodt, of Sheridan in La Salle County, allegedly slammed a law enforcement officer against a wall after breaking into the Capitol. His brother was also charged.
* Tribune | Updated X-ray machines for searching backpacks approved for more than 100 Chicago Public Schools buildings: The $1 million renewal agreement follows an initial two-year, $1.4 million investment in new X-ray equipment, approved by the board in 2021. (During the remote learning period of the COVID-19 pandemic, virtually none of those funds were spent, Chou said.) But, with six of seven members just appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson early this month, new leadership presides over the Board of Education. And in response to the district’s renewal request, some members initially questioned CPS’ reliance on the technology — though all members ultimately voted Wednesday to approve the funds.
* Daily Herald | ‘I want to build bridges’: Officials make pitch for cops in Arlington Heights, Elk Grove schools: Arlington Heights Police Chief Nick Pecora has proposed the addition of two full-time officers to work at the two middle schools in Arlington Heights Elementary District 25, where a pair of officers already split their time among the district’s nine schools. The officers also make the rounds at 10 other schools both public and private within the village boundaries.
* Crain’s | Johnson makes pitch to Bears to keep team in Chicago: As the Chicago Bears appear to be in stalled negotiations to build their new stadium in Arlington Heights, team president and CEO Kevin Warren met with Mayor Brandon Johnson at City Hall on Wednesday to discuss potential new stadium sites within the city but outside of Soldier Field. […] The locations Johnson is offering are unknown, but there are only a handful of options that are large enough to satisfy the need for an NFL stadium and potentially a surrounding entertainment district.
* Block Club | Broadway Armory To Become Migrant Shelter Starting Next Week, City Says: The conversion will require the relocation of multiple park programs and services by Saturday, giving city officials time to prep the massive complex into a shelter. Though most park programs will either end early or be moved elsewhere, the city-run senior center at the Broadway Armory will remain open, according to the mayor’s office. The senior dining center will continue to serve meals, though the computer lab and ping pong room will be closed.
* WGEM | Public squirrel hunting opening in Schuyler, Pike, Scott Counties: IDNR reported Thursday it has leased more than 4,400 acres of private land for 2023 squirrel hunting through IRAP, creating more than 30 public access squirrel sites in 18 counties, including Schuyler, Pike and Scott Counties. Sites are available at no cost to participants. Hunters simply must register, sign a liability waiver, and reserve a site through IRAP’s online registration system.
* Block Club | Pride Flags Ripped Down, Woman Spat On As Anti-LGBTQ Incidents Escalate At Wicker Park Church: And last week, a man driving by the church stopped to yell about the flags as a day camp was ending its activities. He spat on a woman who confronted him before driving away, according to church and camp administrators and police spokesperson Kellie Bartoli.
* Illinois Newsroom | Excessive heat warning in effect in central Illinois: The National Weather Service in Central Illinois is forecasting Heat Index values higher than 100 degrees Wednesday through Saturday.
* AP | McDonald’s posts surprisingly strong sales after ‘happy birthday’ Grimace campaign goes viral: Global same-store sales, or sales at stores open at least a year, rose nearly 12% in the April-June period. That handily beat Wall Street’s forecast of a 9.4% increase, according to analysts polled by FactSet.
* Sun-Times | Chicago first responders stage dramatic emergency drills on Chicago River: And the departments delivered — the river became a simulated active incident, with police officers running onto a Chicago Water Taxi with guns drawn and actors in distress. A helicopter swooped in, hovering just feet above the water as swimmers jumped out and propelled themselves toward the chaos.
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* Gov. Pritzker was asked today if he felt like there was a “safety crisis” inside the state’s developmental centers, including Choate. Here’s part of his response…
These facilities often are located in places where it’s very hard to find the qualified labor that you’re looking for. We have terrific people that we attract, but it’s also very difficult to fill positions when we don’t have enough people with the kinds of credentials that are necessary to do this work.
This is hard work. The people who work there deserve to be compensated properly, and they deserve to be rewarded and recognized for good work that’s done. But if we can’t attract more people like that, then the provision of health care that’s necessary isn’t going to be up to the standard that we like.
This is a problem we’re all trying to solve. It’s not an easy one, because people are not willing to drive 100 or 150 miles to a job every day. And so where are we going to find those quality workers in an environment by the way where there’s a labor shortage, too? So we’re working on all those problems simultaneously, they won’t be solved immediately.
What we can do immediately is resolve the complaints to determine if there is actual wrongdoing, and then address that wrongdoing, hold people accountable.
Discuss.
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Delivery Helps Chicago Restaurants Grow On Uber Eats
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department
[The following is a paid advertisement.]
At Uber Eats, local restaurants are the backbone of our communities and delivery continues to help small business owners reach new customers and increase sales.
We recently published the results of the 2022 US Merchant Impact Report—which come directly from a survey of merchant partners. Read More.
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* The Washington Post…
With $14 billion in new federal funding, the infrastructure law was supposed to jolt efforts to protect the U.S. highway network from a changing climate and curb carbon emissions that are warming the planet. New records show the effort is off to an unsteady start as hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent elsewhere.
Last year, 38 states made use of a provision in the law to shift about $755 million to general-purpose highway construction accounts, according to Federal Highway Administration records. The sum is more than one-quarter of the total annual amount made available to states in two new climate-related programs.
* Illinois shifted more than $39 million, according to WaPo…
* Back to WaPo…
California shifted $97 million to pay for safety projects. New York moved $36 million to fund what officials called the state’s “core capital program.” Arizona said it used $20 million for its five-year highway construction program, largely for “pavement preservation,” and Louisiana used $8.2 million to fund roundabouts near an outlet mall. […]
A legal provision predating the infrastructure law allows states to shift up to half of their federal transportation funds among several different programs — a provision that also applies to transportation money from the new law. Kevin DeGood, director of the infrastructure program at the left-leaning Center for American Progress, said Congress clearly intended for money to be allocated to projects that would reduce emissions or protect against extreme weather.
* Related media advisory…
On Monday, July 31, U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg will join Congresswoman Nikki Budzinski and other local leaders in the Champaign-Urbana, IL, and East St. Louis, IL, areas to highlight major infrastructure investments and announce new funding.
These projects are examples of how the Biden-Harris Administration is investing in America and working to build the next generation of American infrastructure, while creating good-paying jobs.
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* The governor received a lot of national kudos for this…
* But here’s Gretchen Sterba at the South Side Weekly…
While punchy national headlines announce that Illinois has outlawed book bans, Chicago Books to Women in Prison board president, Vicki White, can’t help but point out that this bill applies only to public libraries, not Illinois jail and prison libraries, or books sent by mail that are regulated by the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC).
In response to the governor’s tweet, White, who has been involved with the volunteer-run nonprofit organization for over a decade, urges the state to incorporate incarcerated folks in Pritzker’s declaration to “stand up for liberty.”
“I would just ask Pritzker to spearhead the same type of action in prisons, and not just prison libraries but prisons in general,” White said. “Because there are the books in the prison libraries, but books from organizations like ours go through the mail room. Another thing that would be excellent would be for an [assessment] to happen from the top; fold in the prison library system into the Illinois library system and [take it] out of the Illinois Department of Corrections…JB Pritzker, I love what you’re saying. Maybe just think a little more broadly.” […]
According to a 2023-updated article by The Marshall Project about banned books in prisons by state, while most of the titles are pornographic, the list also includes books on Asian martial arts, the fundamentals of tattooing, how to write believable fight scenes, and Prison Ramen, which details prison recipes and personal narratives from incarcerated inmates. In contrast, Mein Kampf is banned in Illinois, but inmates are free to read it in Texas, according to a 2019 Illinois Library Association article.
The Marshall Project is here. You can download the full list of banned Illinois prison books by clicking here and scrolling down.
* According to that list, IDOC has apparently reversed its ban on the books highlighted in this 2019 story…
In May 2019, the Illinois library community received an alarming bit of news: Between November 2018 and late January 2019, more than 200 books were removed, censored, or banned from the Education Justice Project library at the Danville Correctional Center, located in East Central Illinois. Among these books were titles such as Up From Slavery by Booker T. Washington; Don’t Shoot: One Man, A Street Fellowship, and The End of Violence in Inner-City America by David M. Kennedy, and “Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?” And Other Conversations About Race by Beverly Daniel Tatum, Ph.D. […]
EJP students are University of Illinois students, and so also have access to Interlibrary Loan materials from U of I libraries. Students complete loan requests for specific titles or topics of study, and the requested items are provided by the EJP librarian—if the items pass the correctional facility’s clearance process.
* Excerpt from the IDOC policy…
1. Publications shall not be disapproved solely because its content is religious, philosophical, political, social or sexual content, or because the content is unpopular or repugnant.
Publications that meet one or more of the following criteria may be disapproved:
a. It contains sexually explicit material.
b. It is written in code or facilitates unauthorized communication between offenders.
c. It blatantly encourages activities that may lead to the use of physical violence or group disruption.
d. It facilitates unauthorized organizational activity.
e. It overtly advocates or encourages violence, hatred or group disruption.
f. It encourages or instructs in the commission of criminal activity.
g. It depicts or describes procedures for the construction or use of weapons, ammunition, bombs or incendiary devices.
h. It depicts or describes procedures for making alcoholic beverages or manufacturing drugs.
i. It depicts, describes or encourages methods of escape from correctional facilities or provides material that may assist in an escape attempt such as a detailed map of areas surrounding Illinois correctional facilities.
j. The content contains security threat group (STG) material or depictions of hand signs or symbols that appear to be related to an STG and could promote or enhance the image of an STG within the facility or may be interpreted as legitimizing gang behavior.
k. It is detrimental to the security or good order of the facility.
l. It is determined by a mental health professional or counselor to be detrimental to mental health or rehabilitation. Disapproval of publications under this criterion shall be made on a case-by-case basis and documentation of the mental health professional or counselor’s determination shall be provided to the Central Publications Review Committee with the Publication Review Determination and Course of Action, DOC 0212.
* Definition of sexually explicit material…
Sexually explicit material – for the purpose of this directive shall mean any publication that contains pictorial depictions of actual or simulated sexual acts including intercourse, oral sex or masturbation; any publication that by word or picture depicts or describes illegal activity of a sexual nature, sadomasochism, bestiality, sexual activity involving children (whether actual or perceived) or any publication that depicts or describes anything otherwise contrary to law. Publications that contain nudity without additional elements as provided above or publications that provide research or opinions on sexual health, reproductive issues or are scientific in nature shall not be considered sexually explicit.
Except for the illegal stuff, of course, that definition seems pretty harsh, particularly in a state that’s supposedly trying to get away from using prisons as punishment centers.
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Question of the day
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Press release…
In an effort to improve customer service and eliminate the unpredictability of wait times at Illinois DMVs, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias will begin implementing a Skip-the-Line program starting September 1.
The Skip-the-Line program includes:
Simplified Online Services — Customers are encouraged to take advantage of the many services offered online at ilsos.gov, including renewing their driver’s license or ID card and license plate sticker online.
Appointment Scheduling — Customers will be required to make appointments for in-person visits at 44 of the busiest DMVs including all Chicago and suburban locations and some central and downstate DMVs for those seeking REAL ID, driver’s license and ID card services, and in-car driving tests.
Those seeking vehicle-related services, such as title and registration or renewing their license plate sticker, do not need to make an appointment and can just walk in.
Upon arrival, customers will check in with DMV staff and “Skip the Line,” eliminating lines and unpredictable wait times. Illinoisans may visit ilsos.gov or call (844) 817-4649 to schedule an appointment.
New Extended Hours of Operation — All DMVs statewide will extend hours of operation, with 16 facilities open six days a week – Monday through Saturday.
• All DMVs will change their days and hours of operation from Tues-Sat to Mon-Fri,
8 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
• 16 DMVs will also be open on Saturday, 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m., as noted below.
“Customers will save time by skipping the line,” said Giannoulias. “Our goal is to eliminate the Time Tax that has plagued Illinoisans for years, forcing them to stand in long lines wasting time – just to conduct basic services. Extending hours at all DMVs and requiring appointments at our 44 highest-volume facilities is the most efficient way to get the services you need quickly and without the headache of unpredictable wait times.”
The appointment-only facilities include 24 Chicago and suburban DMVs and 20 DMVs in central and downstate Illinois that are within 10 miles from a population center of at least 25,000 residents. The list of these facilities is below, along with their days of operation.
View instruction video on how to schedule an appointment.
The full list of appointment-only facilities is here.
People tend to dislike change, sometimes just because it’s different. With that in mind…
* The Question: Do you like this idea? Explain.
Also, we discussed the whole DMV thing yesterday, so try to focus solely on the new policy. Thanks.
…Adding… I noticed some folks chiming in about closing on Saturdays. Giannoulias said at his press conference that people just weren’t coming in much on Saturdays…
What I would say is what we’ve seen, and data backs this up, people are way more inclined to visit a facility on a weekday than they are on a Saturday. That’s pretty universal. Foot traffic at our facilities on Saturdays is just not there. The other thing we noticed is that, and while we changed the hours from 8 to 12:30, that some of the facilities that were open Saturday afternoons, for months and years, no one stepped foot in a facility at 2:30, 3pm on Saturday. So we want to shorten those hours, increasing for 16 locations that we think are pretty strategically placed that people have the ability to go in six days a week.
The Tribune has more here.
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* Capitol News Illinois…
House Bill 2831 codifies an executive order Pritzker signed in 2021 that established the Illinois Interagency Task Force on Homelessness and the Community Advisory Council on Homelessness. It centralizes programs across 17 state departments and agencies to develop and implement a comprehensive plan to combat homelessness.
At a bill-signing ceremony at Featherfist, a homeless services organization in Chicago, Pritzker said the goal of the initiative is to bring homelessness in Illinois to “functional zero.”
“For those who don’t know and who may be listening, it’s a measurable metric of success that reduces homelessness to something that’s brief and rare and nonrecurring,” Pritzker said. […]
Christine Haley, the state’s current chief homelessness officer and chair of the interagency task force, said Black people and other people of color are disproportionately affected by homelessness.
“We stand here in one of the few Black-led homeless services organizations in our state. And as we stand here, we know that this housing crisis before us is rooted in housing injustice, is rooted in segregation, is rooted in racism,” she said. “We know this because in our city of Chicago, where now less than a third of its residents are Black, 73% of individuals and 90% of children and their parents who are experiencing homelessness are Black.”
* Center Square…
The bill codifies the Interagency Task Force and Community Advisory Council, formed in 2021 to work across 17 Illinois state departments and agencies to develop a comprehensive plan to combat homelessness. […]
The state’s budget sets aside $360 million for the task force, with $118 million to support unhoused populations seeking shelter and services. Also appropriated is about $40.7 million for the Emergency and Transitional Housing Program, $50 million in Rapid Rehousing services for 2,000 households and $40 million in Permanent Supportive Housing.
The funding is an $83 million increase from last year’s budget.
* WAND…
The administration’s Home Illinois initiative is expanding options for affordable housing, targeting people in high-risk situations, and providing comprehensive support individuals experiencing homelessness. Several communities across the state have reached “functional zero homelessness,” meaning people can quickly find new housing options through local resources.
“We will build from the successes of serving unhoused veterans to advance housing strategies to serve all Illinoisans - from infants to our elders,” said Christine Haley, Chief Homelessness Officer for the Illinois Department of Human Services.
The Fiscal Year 2024 budget includes $360 million to help people find shelter and support services, build short-term and long-term housing units, and secure financial stability.
“We know the difference it can make when all of our partners from all levels around the state work together,” said Carolyn Ross, President and CEO of All Chicago Making Homelessness History. “We are in this for the long-term. And this legislation demonstrates that our Illinois leadership is in it for the long-term too.
* ABC Chicago…
Featherfist’s founder and CEO Melanie Anewishki called this a very encouraging day.
“It’s saying keep going; keep going, Mel. It’s OK; it’s gonna be all right,” said Melanie Anewishki, Featherfist founder and CEO.
Anewishki said it will help reduce what is often a silo’d approach to helping the homeless.
“So, yes, I’m reenergized. I feel great. Today is a very great day,” Anewishki said.
The goal of this coordinated effort is by 2025 to reach what’s called functional zero homelessness, which in essence means more people are finding housing, than are becoming homeless.
* WTVO…
“Every person deserves access to safe shelter and the dignity that comes with housing,” Pritzker said. “This is a first-of-its-kind multi-agency cooperative effort — bringing together state agencies, nonprofit organizations, advocates, and people with lived experience to prevent and end homelessness. I’m grateful for their dedication and believe that together, we can prevent and end homelessness once and for all.”
Rockford has already taken strides in this aspect. In 2017, it became the first community to reach “functional zero” levels among veterans and the chronically homeless.
Illinois’ Interagency Task Force and Community Advisory Council works across 17 state departments and agencies, as well as over 100 processes, programs and policies, to develop a comprehensive plan to combat homelessness. […]
“People experiencing the trauma of housing instability are our neighbors and community members who deserve to be treated with humanity and dignity. With this cooperative effort, Illinois is ensuring our state agencies can continue to collaborate, and that stakeholders are at the table with us, to support our most vulnerable in living healthy, well, and with dignity.” Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton said. “Our state is making it clear that we will continue to work together so we can all move forward, and we will focus on holistic strategies that bring us closer to ending homelessness in our state.”
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Open thread
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* What’s up? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* CBS Chicago | Illinois Auditor General reports on $5B improperly paid by the state: Among those receiving benefits: 481 dead people who got $6 million and about 3,500 inmates who received more than $40 million. The report dings the Illinois Department of Employment Security for its call center, describing hundreds of people who had to call more than 1,000 times to get through.
* Sun-Times Editorial Board | Pipe nightmare? Put safety in place before transporting carbon dioxide to Illinois: Sequestering and transporting carbon dioxide could be a tool to help fight climate change, but only if it is done safely and doesn’t encourage the burning of fossil fuels.
* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker Signs Bill Aimed at Ending Homelessness in Illinois by Bringing Agencies Together for Comprehensive Plan: House Bill 2831 codifies an executive order Pritzker signed in 2021 that established the Illinois Interagency Task Force on Homelessness and the Community Advisory Council on Homelessness. It centralizes programs across 17 state departments and agencies to develop and implement a comprehensive plan to combat homelessness.
* Tribune | Need to renew your driver’s license? Starting Sept. 1, you’ll need an appointment.: Illinois residents will be required to make appointments to renew driver’s licenses or deal with state ID business at more than 40 of the busiest drivers’ services facilities starting Sept. 1 under a “skip-the-line” program aimed at cutting wait times.
* Scott Holland | New union contract includes action steps for staffing concerns: The terms include several items aimed at improving the state’s hiring process and employee retention. The new contract language reflects the state’s switch to an electronic system for filling open positions and joint commitments to streamlining steps to filling vacancies. A new labor-management committee is tasked with identifying hiring roadblocks. There will be a pilot program testing recruitment bonuses for tough-to-fill jobs and a commitment to making sure current employees away on parental leave aren’t cut off from applying for openings.
* WBEZ |
A Chicago Park District lifeguard was fired after he allegedly ‘inappropriately touched’ a girl: In the latest incident, though, the Park District’s inspector general describes a disturbingly familiar situation. The internal investigation began with “a complaint that a male lifeguard inappropriately touched an underage female program participant during the summer of 2022,” records show.
* WSN | Illinois Set to Award More Sports Betting Operator Licenses Soon: The state’s $20 million application fee is a big reason for the struggles. That is a far larger number than in other states, and obtaining a license would only be the first step. New operators would enter a small pool of online sportsbooks filled with all of the major players. Operators like FanDuel, DraftKings, and Caesars have driven out smaller competitors nationwide. That makes entering the market a high-stakes move, driving away many second or third-tier operators.
* Bloomberg | Chicago, Milwaukee Seek Extra $50 Million to Cover Convention Security: “Cities shouldn’t be expected to front the cost,” Representative Mike Quigley, a Chicago Democrat and House Appropriations committee member, said in an interview. He added that risks aren’t static. “If anything, they have increased,” he said.
* WBEZ | New Chicago Public Schools board lays out ambitious agenda for school system: The newly seated Chicago Board of Education hand-picked by Mayor Brandon Johnson unveiled ambitious plans Wednesday to transform the school district into a place where parents of students with disabilities want to send their children and where the definition of safety includes “dismantling the school-to-prison pipeline.”
* WBEZ | Chicago’s Urban Prep school for boys wins right to remain open this fall: Cook County Judge Anna Loftus this week sided with Urban Prep in ruling that a state moratorium on CPS school closings applies to charter schools and CPS “thus may not close, consolidate, or phase-out Urban Prep-Englewood and Urban Prep-Bronzeville until after the moratorium expires on January 15, 2025.”
* Sun-Times | Former CPD official accuses top cop of retaliating against her after she headed investigation that led to his suspension: Many of Skahill’s key claims relate to Waller ordering her to nix the department’s costly training agreement with a Texas firm that has close ties to former Supt. David Brown, whom Skahill had directly reported to.
* Shaw Local | Rep. Fritts selected to Edgar Fellows Program’s Class of 2023: The group will meet for the first time at their Executive Leadership Training Program held Aug. 6 through Aug. 10 on the University of Illinois (U of I) campus in Urbana-Champaign.
* Pioneer Press | Lake Bluff, Park District at odds over pickleball courts; ‘We have to enforce the zoning code’: In a dispute stemming from a noise complaint coming from play on pickleball courts, the two government entities are at odds whether the Park District acted within its authority to operate the courts, and whether village approval was required for the conversion from tennis to pickleball courts.
* WBEZ | Chicagoans remember trailblazing cop Renault Robinson: A South Side church service Tuesday celebrated the life of Renault Robinson. He’s a former Chicago cop who organized against police racism in the ’60s and ’70s. He also sued successfully to force CPD to hire more minority and female officers. In the ’80s, under Mayor Harold Washington, Robinson had a stormy tenure as head of the Chicago Housing Authority. He died this month at age 80.
* Gizmodo | Twitter Deletes Its Own Fact Check Correcting Elon’s Bogus Vaccine Tweet: Unfortunately for fans of accurate information, that label no longer appears on Musk’s tweet, but you can see a copy preserved by the Internet Archive. There’s no indication that Musk intervened to take the note down. The company’s press email auto-responds with a poop-emoji, a joke that continues to bring joy to five-year-olds across the globe.
* NBC | ‘Translators’ gives bilingual teens of immigrant families their due recognition: A short documentary has drawn praise for showing the crucial role children play as translators for their parents, as generations of Americans have done.
* Sun-Times | Illinois tops nation in tornadoes in ’23 with 119: On March 31 the state had 37 confirmed tornadoes, putting Illinois ahead of other states. On July 12, 13 tornadoes tore across the Chicagoland area.
* NYT | What ‘The Bear’ Gets Right About Chicago: Leave it to a Chicagoan like me to note that there are, in fact, more than 20 restaurants in the city with at least one Michelin star. But “The Bear” captures something real about the city’s dining culture — and, more broadly, what you might call the geography of ambition.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Jul 27, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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* Media advisory…
Giannoulias to Announce Skip-the-Line Program at DMVs
Who: Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias
What: Secretary Giannoulias will announce the implementation of a Skip-the-Line program at DMVs throughout the state.
Where: 555 W. Monroe
3rd Floor – Room 300-N (Press Room)
Chicago
When: Thursday, July 27, at 11 a.m.
Why: Secretary Giannoulias’ Skip-the-Line program is designed to improve customer service and eliminate the unpredictability of wait times at DMVs. The program is scheduled to launch September 1, 2023
I asked if this means walk-in service will be eliminated…
Walk-ins will be allowed at the lower-volume facilities. This is the majority of the DMVs across the state.
As a side note, I really don’t like that it’s now common practice to call drivers’ service facilities “DMVs.” There is no Department of Motor Vehicles in Illinois.
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* Sen. Bennett was appointed to the seat this year after incumbent GOP Sen. Jason Barickman stepped down…
Illinois State Senator Tom Bennett (R-Gibson City) announced his plans to retire from his storied and successful career in the General Assembly at the completion of his current term representing the 53rd District.
“Serving in the General Assembly has been one of the most challenging, amazing and rewarding times in my life,” said Bennett. “The only way I know how to do this job is full-time, often six or seven days-a-week and my family and I have decided that after this term it is time to slow down,” Bennett said.
Senator Bennett served in the Illinois House of Representatives representing the 106th District from 2015 until 2023 when he was appointed to the State Senate on behalf of the 53rd District of Illinois, including Bureau, Ford, Grundy, Iroquois, LaSalle, Livingston, Marshall, McLean, Peoria, Putnam, Tazewell, Will, and Woodford Counties.
“Senator Bennett is as well-known for his kindness and compassion as he is for his legislative skills,” said Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove). “The accomplishments and impact that he continues to make will be felt throughout the capitol and the state for many years to come. I am grateful for the chance to serve alongside him and look forward to working with him in his final session and endeavors beyond the capitol.”
Senator Bennett grew up in Gibson City before earning a BS in Education and a BS in Computer Science from Eastern Illinois University, an MBA from Illinois State University and a Doctor of Business Administration from Nova Southeastern University. He spent his career in education as a high school and junior high science teacher and later as an IT professional at State Farm Insurance.
His passion for education stemmed into his public service in Springfield where he was a leader on Education participating in many meaningful negotiations and legislative packages in the House and passed multiple bipartisan education bills, specifically ones focused on addressing the state’s teacher shortage in the Senate. Raised on a family farm, he also took an active role in agriculture, small business, public safety and transportation issues.
Despite his many legislative accomplishments, it is the people he has met along the way that brings Sen. Bennett the most joy.
“It’s amazing what my staff has done over the last nine years for countless constituents across our district and our state to make a positive difference in people’s lives,” Sen. Bennett said. “I am also grateful for my colleagues on both sides of the aisle in the General Assembly – we come from different parts of the state, with different backgrounds, sometimes holding very different viewpoints, but we have tried to respect each other and work together on issues important to the people of Illinois.”
Always finding new ways to give back to his community, Sen. Bennett served on several school and education boards including 19 years on the distinguished Parkland College Board of Trustees and became the first Illinois trustee to ever serve as Chair of the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT).
“The process of running for office, meeting people, telling them why you’re running, your goals and how you hope to achieve them – is not an easy one. I make this announcement today so the hardworking and fair-minded people I represent are in the best position to elect a new leader.”
In the meantime, Senator Bennett said he looks forward to making the most of the remainder of his term.
“Today is not the end of my work as a Senator, it is simply the beginning of the sprint to the finish,” Bennett said. “I have a lot of legislative work left to do and a lot of people yet to meet. Because, as I learned from a friend a long time ago: it’s all about the people.”
Sen. Bennett’s term will end at the completion of the 103rd General Assembly in January 2025.
* Sen. Van Pelt was absent for most of the spring session…
State Senator Patricia Van Pelt issued the following statement after filing to retire from the 5th Senate District seat:
“It has been an honor of a lifetime to serve the people of the 5th Senate District for the last decade. Throughout this time, we have accomplished much change to ensure the voiceless are heard and the underserved receive the help they need.
“I want to thank all who have stood by me over this past year throughout my health challenges. It has been a blessing to serve the people of this great state, but it’s time to pass the torch. I will forever be grateful for the people I’ve encountered, the stories they’ve shared and the work we’ve accomplished together.”
The retirement will be official August 1, 2023 at 5:00 p.m.
Notice the lack of any other voice in that second release.
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Afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* The Illinois Auditor General looked at the Illinois Department of Employment Security’s books and found a whopping $5.24 billion in overpayments…
Overpayments (which include fraud, non-fraud, and identity theft) were an issue in both the regular UI and PUA programs. IDES reported overpayments for FY20 to FY22 that totaled $5.24 billion; regular UI accounted for $2.04 billion and PUA accounted for $3.20 billion. Considering gross benefits associated with regular UI claims were 2.5 times higher than gross benefits associated with PUA claims, it shows the magnitude of fraud experienced in the PUA program. IDES noted stopped or recovered payments of $150.36 million and $361.34 million for the regular UI and PUA programs respectively.
Many decisions made during the pandemic were intended to decrease or eliminate delays and prioritize paying claims as soon as possible. Several of IDES’ defenses against fraud could not handle the exponential increase in claims. Claimants were unable to register for claims since they were required to pass these cross-matches in order to file. Beginning in March 2020, IDES suspended some routine identity cross-matches performed on all regular UI claims filed because the cross-matches required time to run and constricted the processing system severely. These cross-matches were temporarily suspended and/or processed offline. This allowed IDES to better handle the increase in claims processing traffic; however, this left the unemployment programs more susceptible to fraud.
Timely payment of benefits and preventing fraud are competing concepts. Preventing fraud, especially in new programs with evolving guidance and guidelines, likely would require additional processing time and a possible delay in benefit distribution to claimants. Conversely, paying claims quickly, especially when certain cross-matches and controls were suspended, increased IDES’ risk of making improper payments.
Go read the rest.
* The Republican Party’s elders in this state have not had much of an influence on the rank and file for quite a few years. So this likely won’t change things much…
An influential Illinois Republican is urging Republicans to break from ex-President Donald Trump, the current front runner for the 2024 GOP nomination.
Richard Porter, a local and national party leader, took his first public stand about moving on from Trump in a column published Wednesday by Real Clear Politics.
The op-ed is here. Porter is backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, whose campaign appears to be imploding at the moment.
* IDPH…
The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) is reminding the public to be aware of the potential for exposure to rabies from infected animals. Bats are the most common source of potential infection in Illinois, and exposures from bats tend to be more frequent during the summer months, especially July and August. The disease can also be found in other wild animals, including raccoons, skunks, foxes, and coyotes.
So far this year, 27 rabid bats have been found in fourteen Illinois counties. There have been five rabid bats each in Kankakee and Lake counties, four in Cook County, and three in McHenry County. Rabies has also been found in bats in Bureau, Clark, DeKalb, Macon, McLean, Peoria, Rock Island, Sangamon, Wayne, and Will counties.
“Rabies is a fatal but preventable disease,” said IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra. “It is important that Illinois residents know how to prevent rabies exposure to protect themselves and their loved ones. Rabies can be prevented in a number of ways including vaccinating pets, being cautious around wildlife, and seeking medical care immediately after a potential exposure. If exposed, please seek medical attention immediately.”
Rabies is a deadly virus that affects the brain and nervous system. People can get rabies from being bitten by an infected animal. Rabies can also be contracted when saliva from a rabid animal comes into contact with a person’s eyes, nose, mouth, or an open wound. If someone wakes up to find a bat in the room, that is also considered an exposure even if they cannot identify a bite.
A bat’s teeth are small, so someone who has been bitten by a bat may not know it, or may be unable to communicate it (for example, very small children). That’s why it’s important that if you discover a bat in your home, you should avoid killing or releasing it; instead, immediately consult with your local animal control or your local health department to determine appropriate next steps. If you have been exposed to rabies, preventive treatment, known as PEP, is necessary. But if the bat or wild animal can be safely captured and tested, and the test comes back negative, no preventive medication is required.
* IEPA…
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency Director John J. Kim today announced a grant opportunity with $10 million in funding for projects that will improve water quality in Illinois. The Green Infrastructure Grant Opportunities (GIGO) Program has been made possible by Governor Pritzker’s bipartisan Rebuild Illinois capital plan. The Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) is posted at https://il.amplifund.com/Public/Opportunities/Details/8eb59a23-1ba2-4930-acf3-2622dbb7e364. […]
The GIGO Program provides funding for projects to construct green infrastructure best management practices (BMPs) that prevent, eliminate, or reduce water quality impairments by decreasing stormwater runoff into Illinois’ rivers, streams, and lakes. Projects that implement treatment trains (multiple BMPs in series) and/or multiple BMPs within the same watershed may be more effective and efficient than a single large green infrastructure BMP.
For GIGO, green infrastructure means any stormwater management technique or practice employed with the primary goal to preserve, restore, mimic, or enhance natural hydrology. Green infrastructure includes, but is not limited to, methods of using soil and vegetation to promote soil percolation, evapotranspiration, and filtering or the harvesting and reuse of precipitation. Examples of project types/BMPs that may be funded through GIGO are provided in the NOFO. Illinois EPA anticipates project awards between $75,000 and $2.5 million. The first $5 Million in GIGO grants were awarded to eleven grantees in 2021 and 2022. Four projects have completed construction and the remaining are under construction.
* Not the ballot name it used to be, but we’ll see…
Today, Justice Eileen O’Neill Burke (Illinois Appellate Court, Retired) formally announced her campaign to be the Democratic Candidate for Cook County State’s Attorney:
“At the beginning of this month, I stepped down from my position as a Justice on the Appellate Court for a simple reason: our criminal justice system is not working for this community that I love. As a former prosecutor, criminal defense attorney, and judge, I have spent more than thirty years seeking justice for the people of Cook County from every corner of the courtroom. I believe that my experience, sound judgment, and record of fairness can make things better at a critical time,” said Justice Eileen O’Neill Burke.
“The State’s Attorney has an awesome responsibility to vigorously prosecute cases and seek justice for victims, their families, and the people of Cook County while respecting the rule of law and the civil rights of the accused. That requires not only tackling violent crime but also a thoughtful approach to restorative justice, where we put resources into juvenile, veterans, drug, and mental health courts to help people get back on the right path and build stronger, safer communities.
“We don’t have to choose between safety or justice. We can have both with the right leadership. Above all, I know that no State’s Attorney can be successful without earning the trust of the public. I will lead an office with the highest standards of professionalism, and I look forward to sharing my vision with voters to make the office of the Cook County State’s Attorney one of the best prosecutor’s offices in the country,” O’Neill Burke concluded.
In only three weeks since stepping off the bench, Justice Burke has garnered the enthusiastic support of the local legal community. More than 150 retired judges, retired Assistant State’s Attorneys, and lawyers have joined Burke’s campaign.
* This ain’t gonna work…
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* Sun-Times | State Supreme Court rules man who pleaded guilty to murder he didn’t commit can get certificate of innocence: The unanimous opinion last week comes less than a month after Wayne Washington reached a multimillion-dollar settlement in a lawsuit alleging he was framed by detectives.
* Daily Herald | Other than Coroner Russell, Kane GOP lacks countywide candidates for 2024: The Kane County GOP leadership still does not have solid commitments from candidates to challenge Democratic incumbents for county board chairman, circuit clerk, state’s attorney or auditor.
* Shaw Local | Will County Board member faces dubious reprimand after pushing courthouse cause: Will County Board member Daniel Butler is facing possible reprimand for pushing for a special meeting to explore options for the old courthouse. “They’re putting me in time out,” Butler, R-Frankfort, quipped over directions from the board Republican leader that would force him to sit separately from other members at future County Board meetings.
* The Record | Wilmette to consider formal objection related to Ryan Field rebuild, as resident disapproval intensifies: According to Plunkett, trustees will vote during their Aug. 8 meeting on a resolution objecting to the zoning changes in Evanston, which would allow concerts to take place at Ryan Field under NU’s plans to reimagine the stadium and its grounds.
* WBEZ | No jail time for man who admitted buying gun used to kill 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams at McDonald’s drive-thru: Straw-purchasing cases like Keys’ can be vexing for law enforcement. While they may have disastrous consequences, judges often face defendants at sentencing with mostly clean criminal histories. Defense attorneys argue their clients have committed a non-violent, paperwork offense that involved lying on a form during a firearm purchase.
* Block Club Chicago | Rogers Park Motel Becomes Migrant Shelter Housing 250 People: The Super 8 Motel, 7300 N. Sheridan Road, will welcome over 250 new arrivals in the coming weeks, Ald. Maria Hadden (49th) said. The motel — which has private rooms and individual bathrooms and showers, unlike other city shelters — is prioritizing migrant families with young children, Hadden said.
* Crain’s | Winston & Strawn to move to riverfront tower: “Our Chicago roots run deep and when we embarked on a search for a downtown office location that would inspire our team and exceed expectations well into the future, we knew 300 North LaSalle was the perfect fit,” Cardelle Spangler, Chicago managing partner of Winston & Strawn, said in a press release.
* Daily Southtown | Aqua Illinois ordered to provide free, monthly water testing for University Park residents: Any resident or business on the public water system can request Aqua complete a free test of the tap water, as often as once a month, said village attorney Nina Fain. The testing will continue until either the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency or the court order otherwise she said.
* WBEZ | Why does Chicago’s Silver Room Block Party have to end?: At the first Silver Room at 1410 N. Milwaukee Ave., my rent was $800 a month [in 1997]. Then it eventually went from $800 to $4,000. [By 2014] I’m going to $8,000 a month. So I was like, it’s time to go.
* Tribune | Chicago’s hottest days — with temperatures of 100 degrees or higher — on record: The last time O’Hare International Airport, the city’s official recording site, experienced a temperature of 100 degrees or higher was July 6, 2012 — more than a decade ago.
* Illinois Newsroom | Decatur superintendent to ask for inspections for every school after structural concerns at Dennis Lab School: After structural problems at Dennis Lab School caught Decatur Public Schools administrators by surprise, Superintendent Rochelle Clark wants structural engineers to check every school. Clark asked the DPS Board of Education to consider a master plan instead of immediately repairing the two Dennis buildings.
* WaPo | Some long-covid patients have brain struggles for at least two years: Researchers in the United Kingdom found that people who reported having long-covid symptoms for at least 12 weeks after being infected with the coronavirus showed reduced performance in tests for, among other things, memory, reasoning and motor control, for up to two years after the infection. Their findings were published last week in the Lancet journal eClinicalMedicine.
* Sun-Times | Chicagoans set to watch U.S. Women’s National Team second game at FIFA World Cup: The USA-Netherlands FIFA World Cup game might kick off in Wellington, New Zealand, on Wednesday, but the ball won’t stop rolling there as scores of fans head out to catch it in Chicago. “We’re going to have a huge watch party,” said Heather Roberts, the co-owner of Whiskey Girl Tavern, a North Side bar dedicated to watching women’s sports. “We’ve dedicated the entire space in front and the back rooms for the match.”
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Today’s gruesome task
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Click here to read the replies to this tweet (or Xeet, or whatever it is now). Flat-out and even enthusiastic racism, historical revisionism, whataboutism all mixed in with weight comments. It’s a collection of miserably horrible people the likes of which you may have never seen before…
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Rocky Wirtz
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Governor Pritzker at today’s bill signing…
I’ve known Rocky Wirtz for 25 years, I believe. Every day, this man showed his heart to people. I’m not talking about the leadership of the Blackhawks, which those of us who are fans are so proud of the work that he did to win our championships. I’m talking about the man who cared deeply about people all across the city, all across the state.
In fact, all across the country, Blackhawks Charities and the efforts that they made were an impetus of Rocky Wirtz. And he was a person that you could call up and he would try to help in anything that you asked him to do. Anything, anything.
When you think of big, powerful people in business, you often don’t remember that there are people who made it to that exalted height in their careers who brought with them a caring for people that aren’t just up there enjoying the treasures of having made it, but who bring with them the people that they know are most in need.
Rocky Wirtz was somebody who cared about those people and he demonstrated it in so many ways. And I can just tell you on a personal level, no better friend that you can have.
* Sun-Times…
Formally, he was W. Rockwell Wirtz.
But he was always just Rocky, a name that fit both for its common-man connotation and the sense that he could be tough when the occasion demanded it.
Rocky Wirtz was the third-generation leader of his family’s businesses. Most Chicagoans knew Mr. Wirtz as the owner of the Chicago Blackhawks, and he enjoyed the role to the hilt, often chatting with fans in the stands instead of sequestering himself in a skybox. […]
Mr. Wirtz, 70, died Tuesday at NorthShore Evanston Hospital following a brief illness. He was surrounded by his wife, Marilyn, and his four children, according to a statement from Wirtz Corp. Friends say he had been experiencing stomach pains for a while, but he thought the symptoms would resolve themselves. […]
Along with his businesses, Mr. Wirtz leaves a long legacy of support for Chicago, including the activities of the Chicago Blackhawks Foundation. He also won city support in recent weeks for a land deal that allowed the Blackhawks to build a community ice arena and practice facility on the West Side.
* Crain’s…
“Our hearts are very heavy today,” Rocky’s son, Danny Wirtz, CEO of the Blackhawks, said in the statement. “Our dad was a passionate businessman committed to making Chicago a great place to live, work and visit, but his true love was for his family and close friends. He was a loving father, a devoted husband to Marilyn, a brother, a nephew, an uncle and a doting grandfather to his six remarkable grandchildren. His passing leaves a huge hole in the hearts of many and we will miss him terribly.”
Wirtz’s death will reverberate through the Chicago sports, business and philanthropic communities, where he has been a high-profile figure for years.
Wirtz’s legacy may be most clearly defined by the resurgence of the Blackhawks after the death of his father, Bill. Inheriting a historic franchise that had alienated fans and had languishing ticket sales and sponsorships, Rocky hired new business leadership for the franchise and put its local games back on television, which combined with a rare mix of young talent and success on the ice to turn the Blackhawks into one of the biggest business success stories in professional sports.
* Tribune…
By 2009, just a year and a half after Bill Wirtz’s death, the Hawks were back in the playoffs for the first time since 2002.
Forbes Magazine dubbed the Hawks’ revitalization the “Greatest Sports-Business Turnaround Ever” in 2009. […]
In May 2021, former prospect Kyle Beach sued the team, alleging negligence over a claim former video coach Brad Aldrich sexually assaulted him. In October of that year, law firm Jenner & Block released its finding after investigating Beach’s claims. The firm found that Hawks upper management — including McDonough, Stan Bowman, Kevin Cheveldayoff and coach Joel Quenneville — failed to act on Beach’s sexual assault claim until after the championship was secured.
Wirtz said he was unaware of the 2010 allegations until the lawsuit was filed in 2021.
* ABC Chicago…
NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman released a statement on Wirtz’s passing, saying in part, “Devoted to family and the Chicago Blackhawks, Rocky was a native son of Chicago and an accomplished businessman. Rocky took over control of the Blackhawks in 2007 and almost immediately restored the passion and following of the storied, Original Six, franchise…The NHL sends its sincere condolences to Rocky’s wife Marilyn, his children Danny, Kendall and Hillary, Marilyn’s daughter Elizabeth, and their six grandchildren. He will be missed terribly.”
“Rocky Wirtz was a champion in every sense of the word - in family, in business, in sports ownership, and most important, in life,” said Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson in a statement. “From his stalwart leadership of the Wirtz Corporation and multitude of corporate ventures, to the Blackhawks’ miracle run of three Stanley Cup champions in six seasons, he exemplified class and excellence at every turn.” […]
White Sox Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf released a statement, saying in part, “This is just shocking news, and I am personally devastated. Rocky truly was a great man. We were far more than partners at the United Center. We were very close; he was a dear friend and our trust, our bond, was unbreakable.”
* WGN…
Chicago mayor Brandon Johnson had this statement following Wirtz’s death on Tuesday.
“Rocky Wirtz was a champion in every sense of the word — in family, in business, in sports ownership, and most important, in life. From his stalwart leadership of the Wirtz Corporation and multitude of corporate ventures, to the Blackhawks’ miracle run of three Stanley Cup champions in six seasons, he exemplified class and excellence at every turn.
As successful as he was as a chairman and owner, however, he was an even greater man, giving a United Center security officer or parking attendant the same amount of respect he would offer a fellow magnate or CEO. That is who Rocky Wirtz was, and he will be dearly missed.
My heart is with the Wirtz family, his colleagues and the entire Blackhawks organization during this difficult time. This is a sad day, and a tremendous loss for our city.”
* More…
* Paul Sullivan | Rocky Wirtz changed the Chicago Blackhawks organization almost overnight. ‘You can say he saved it.’: A natural salesman, Wirtz was ready to do his thing when the position was thrust upon him. “It’s just like liquor,” Wirtz told the Tribune in 2007. “It’s account by account, drink by drink. The Hawks had a selling problem.”
* Block Club | Chicago Blackhawks Owner Rocky Wirtz Dies At 70: The Wirtz family has owned the Blackhawks since 1954 when Arthur Wirtz, Rocky Wirtz’ grandfather, bought the team, according to a team bio. His father, Bill Wirtz, oversaw the team from 1983 until his death in 2007.
* WGN | Tributes pour in for late Blackhawks owner Rocky Wirtz: “On behalf of the Chicago Cubs, our thoughts and prayers are with the Wirtz family during this difficult time. After taking over as owner of the Blackhawks in 2007, Rocky turned the organization into a premier franchise, winning three Stanley Cups and creating wonderful memories for hockey fans both in Chicago and all over the world.”
* NYT | Rocky Wirtz, Chairman of N.H.L.’s Chicago Blackhawks, Dies at 70: Today, the family’s businesses, through the Wirtz Corporation, include real estate, insurance, banking, beverage distribution and sports and entertainment. Rocky Wirtz had been the president of the corporation and the chairman of team since 2007, having assumed the roles after the death of his father, William.
* NBC Sports | Patrick Kane releases statement on passing of Blackhawks chairman Rocky Wirtz:“Not only was Rocky Wirtz a great man and humble to the core, he was extremely loyal and generous to everyone, but especially to us players,” Kane wrote. “He always made sure everything was first class for us. That mattered to him, just like winning and just like his family. My sympathy to his wife Marilyn, to his son Danny, and the entire Wirtz and Blackhawks family.”
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* Senate President Don Harmon has also said he believes a major root cause for people leaving Illinois is the state’s estate tax. WGLT…
There’s a push to change inheritance laws in the state of Illinois, and an unexpected source is taking up the cause.
You don’t usually find Democrats picking up the gauntlet to weaken provisions of a law originally intended to prevent the concentration of capital into hereditary wealthy elites. But State Sen. Dave Koehler of Peoria said there’s a sound economic development reason to do so.
“You know what I think the number one reason that people leave Illinois is? I think it’s the way we structure our estate tax,” said Koehler. […]
Koehler supports a bill to increase exemption to the estate tax from $4 million to $12 million. He said the federal exemption already is set at $12 million and will go to $12.9 million this year. In Illinois, for estates above $12 million in value, the estate tax percentage goes up as the size of the estate, until it tops out at a 16% marginal tax rate on inheritances of $10 million and higher. […]
Koehler said it’s not just farmers who are affected, but the families of small business owners, who also might be forced to shut down to pay the inheritance tax.
“I talked with somebody who is a retired teacher who said their accountant tells them if they really want to pass on their family wealth they really need to move to another state. That’s driving a lot of decisions. We really need to address that,” said Koehler.
Thoughts?
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* NBC Sports Chicago’s associate producer for White Sox Baseball…
* The Question: Should White Sox ownership sell the team? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Happy Wednesday! We’re halfway through the week already, what’s been shakin’ in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* The 21st Show |After changes at Choate, has anything changed at other mental health centers?: Back in March, after years of abuse allegations, The Choate Mental Health and Developmental Center in Anna Illinois will be repurposed. All 121 residents of the center will be relocated either to community settings or other state-supported centers. However, new reporting shows that abuse problems at mental health hospitals are common within the statewide supported centers.
* Tribune | AFSCME ratifies 4-year contract with state that includes 18% pay raise and extended parental leave: The four-year contract between the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31 and Pritzker’s administration is expected to cost taxpayers about $625 million, an increase of about $200 million from the previous contract, according to Pritzker spokesman Alex Gough.
* WREX | Governor Pritzker signs legislation to strengthen Illinois’ Hydrogen economy: “Here in the Land of Lincoln, we refuse to deny the looming threats of the climate crisis—and we are taking tangible action to create a more sustainable, environmentally-conscious future for the next generation of Illinoisans,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This tax credit for users of clean hydrogen won’t just bolster our clean energy economy—it further sets us on a path towards reaching our ambitious goal of 100% clean energy by 2050.”
* Tribune | Native American students, educators have high hopes for bill mandating their history be taught in Illinois schools: House Bill 1633, spearheaded by state Rep. Maurice West of Rockford and supported by several others, aims to make it a requirement for Illinois schools to teach a unit of Native American history. Pritzker is expected to sign the bill by mid-August.
* LA Times Editorial Board | L.A.’s bail reform is an improvement, but falls short of what Illinois has done: There’s an arguably contradictory provision in the California Constitution that makes public and victim safety the primary considerations in bail decisions. But it also doesn’t specify money. So perhaps California can still adopt legislation with a line like the one in the Illinois Pretrial Fairness Act: “The requirement of posting money bail is abolished.”
* ABC Chicago | Former appellate court justice Eileen O’Neill Burke launching Cook County state’s attorney bid: Clayton Harris III, a professor of public policy at the University of Chicago, has already announced he’s running. Richard Boykin said he’ll launch his candidacy soon. Others considering running include Jim Durkin, Joe Ferguson and Bob Fioretti.
* WBEZ | Cook County’s estimated budget gap doubles to about $170 million: In June, county leaders said they expected to start the 2024 budget year with an $86 million gap — one of the smallest financial holes in the last decade. But now that gap is expected to swell to about $170 million, county chief financial officer Tanya Anthony revealed during a budget hearing on Tuesday.
* Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson tours West Side flood damage as FEMA begins assessment: Over the next week, seven teams from FEMA and the Illinois Emergency Management Agency will knock on doors and assess the damage in the areas hit hardest, Peterson said. The teams will also survey flood damage in suburban Cicero, Berwyn and Stickney.
* Crain’s | Rosemont office complex landlord hit with $115 million foreclosure lawsuit: A venture of Canadian real estate firm Adventus Realty Trust failed to make its mortgage payment last month on the loan tied to the Riverway office complex at 6111-6133 N. River Road, according to a complaint filed last week in Cook County Circuit Court. Investment management company Wilmington Trust filed the suit on behalf of bondholders in the loan, which was packaged with other loans and sold off to commercial mortgage-backed securities investors.
* Sun-Times | Margarito Flores, Chicago cocaine kingpin who helped bring down El Chapo, will teach cops how to catch drug traffickers: Now free along with his brother after completing their 14-year prison terms, Margarito Flores will be teaching law enforcement authorities in the Chicago area how to catch narcotics traffickers. He’s scheduled to speak Sept. 25 at a one-day seminar titled “From Kingpin to Educator” at the Kane County sheriff’s office headquarters in St. Charles.
* Tribune | Judge rejects Evanston’s request to limit discussion of Northwestern football stadium plan: U.S. District Judge Nancy Maldonado denied a motion to change a 19-year-old court order to restrict discussion of the project. She said the language in the order was “crystal clear.”
* WCBU | New Illinois Association of School Administrators president prioritizes school safety: “We can talk for hours about school safety, and quite honestly, that is and should be the number one priority of every administrator and every educator across Illinois, the nation and the world,” Alvey said. “If kids don’t feel safe, then they’re not going to learn. And obviously we want kids to learn and that’s our top priority as well.”
* Tribune | New regional airline coming to O’Hare to serve three small Midwest cities: As part of a federal government program to ensure smaller markets continue to receive scheduled air service, Contour Airlines will begin offering flights between O’Hare and Marion, Illinois, Kirksville, Missouri, and Owensboro, Kentucky. The flights are set to begin Aug. 1.
* Daily Southtown | Richton Park mayor makes pitch for Chicago Bears, touting expressway access and available land: With the Chicago Bears exploring suburban options beyond Arlington Heights as a site for a new stadium, Richton Park is making its pitch to the team. In a recent letter to Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren, Richton Park Mayor Rick Reinbold touts large expanses of available land and the south suburb’s proximity to highways and the Metra Electric Line.
* Sun-Times | Rocky’s road: Wirtz remembered as fans’ friend in the stands, fierce fighter in the boardroom: Rocky Wirtz was the third-generation leader of his family’s businesses. Most Chicagoans knew Mr. Wirtz as the owner of the Chicago Blackhawks, and he enjoyed the role to the hilt, often chatting with fans in the stands instead of sequestering himself in a skybox.
* Crain’s | Ken Griffin’s $63 million Chicago condo selloff is not going well: The asking prices for the five condos, in three different high-rises all within a few blocks of one another, add up to nearly $63.18 million. So far, Griffin, head of the Citadel financial empire, has sold two, for a total of about $21.43 million.
* Fox Chicago | Beyoncé foundation donates $100K to Chicago small businesses: Beyoncé’s sold-out Soldier Field shows may be over, but she left a lasting impression in Chicago with several small businesses. Her Bey-Good Foundation gave $100,000 to several small, Black-owned businesses in the city.
* STLPR | It’s slim pickings for southern Illinois peaches this year — and you’ll pay more: “To have a loss as bad as we’ve had this year, it’s very rare,” said Austin Flamm, the farm manager of the family orchard. “This is the worst loss we’ve had in about 16 seasons.”
* AEN | God loves us as we are - Pope to young transgender person: ‘The Lord always accompanies us, always. Even if we are sinners, He draws near to help us,” said the pope after hearing the story of Giona, who spoke about the challenges of being a believer, while accepting the reality of having physical challenges and being transgender. “God loves us just as we are,” he added.
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Jul 26, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jul 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Press release with most hyperbole excluded…
…Governor JB Pritzker signed House Bill 2204, establishing a tax credit for users of clean hydrogen in the state of Illinois. […]
This legislation creates a tax credit of $10 million per year in 2026 and 2027 for users of clean hydrogen. At the conclusion of the tax credit, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will run a comprehensive study to evaluate both the emissions impact of the tax credit and the national landscape to recommend additional policy measures to ensure Illinois remains competitive in the clean hydrogen economy and meets the clean energy goals outlined in the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act.
The tax credit was designed to keep pace with the state’s clean energy goals and includes a number of measures to ensure environmental benefit. In addition to the comprehensive study, those measures include:
• Directing funds to eligible uses that have been agreed to by environmental groups and industry to ensure hydrogen investments are made where they can have the greatest impact while also maintaining the state’s electrification goals.
• Ensuring that hydrogen projects have community input via public hearings and requiring 40% of the benefit go to equity investment eligible communities as outlined in CEJA.
The bill also contains workforce provisions in line with the nation-leading standards that were set in CEJA, including requiring a minimum equity standard and requiring Project Labor Agreements.
* Sun-Times this morning…
Major Chicago unions will sign a “Labor Peace Agreement” on Tuesday at McCormick Place, promising not to strike during the Democratic National Convention next year in Chicago.
On April 11, the Democratic National Committee announced that Chicago will host the convention at the United Center on Aug. 19-22, 2024, with other events at the McCormick Place complex. The master contract giving Chicago the convention over New York and Atlanta did not include the labor deal — because negotiations could not take place until the winning city was announced.
DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, in Chicago on Monday to attend a fundraiser headlined by Vice President Kamala Harris, will be at the signing ceremony with Gov. J.B. Pritzker, Mayor Brandon Johnson and Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter, Other union leaders and stakeholders are also expected.
Jake was there…
* Sun-Times this afternoon…
Gov. J.B. Pritzker expects the 2024 Democratic National Convention to be the “biggest ever,” with fundraising efforts to make that goal well underway, he said Tuesday.
Pritzker’s words came as major Chicago unions signed a “labor peace agreement” on Tuesday at McCormick Place, promising not to strike during the convention, which is being held in Chicago.
“We, on day one, started calling the people that we knew would be the most important to making sure that we were reaching out and raising the proper dollars. We are doing very well so far. Having said that, we are going to be doing that for some many months to come and I’m very, very confident we’ll hit our goal — the necessary goal to put on the best and biggest convention ever,” Pritzker said, speaking at McCormick Place.
* AFSCME Council 31…
AFSCME offers roadmap to reopen clinics, expand public mental health services
Mayor Brandon Johnson’s commitment to reopen the city’s previously closed mental health clinics and begin building a new and better system of public mental health services can be kept in the mayor’s first four-year term, according to a new report from the union that represents clinical employees in the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH).
Click here to view and download an extract of the report from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Council 31.
“Under Mayor Johnson and the new City Council, Chicago has an opportunity to fix past mistakes, reverse clinic closures and rebuild the strong network of public mental health services our communities need,” AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Roberta Lynch said. “We offer this report to look at where we’ve been, where we are and most importantly, where we can go together as a city. Our union and our members look forward to working with other stakeholders and elected officials to make the mayor’s vision a reality.”
The report suggests:
• Growing the capacity of the five existing clinics by making sure they are fully staffed.
• Building on existing pilot programs that provide mental health response to emergency calls and mental health services in city libraries.
• Twenty possible community areas that should be considered when sites for the promised 14 new clinics are chosen.
• Opening two new CDPH clinics in the coming 2024 budget year, and phasing in the balance of the 14 new clinics over the subsequent three years, keeping Mayor Johnson’s promise to restore CDPH to 19 clinics by the end of his first term.
AFSCME represents therapists, psychologists and administrative staff in CDPH, which operated 19 clinics until the 1990s and 12 as recently as 2011.
Related…
* Speaker Welch is in DC today…
So is the lieutenant governor…
Today, Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton joined President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris as he signs a National Monument Proclamation to honor the life of Emmett Till and the brave advocacy of his mother Mamie Till-Mobley. As a resident of Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood—the home of the church where Emmett Till’s funeral was held—Lt. Governor Stratton recognizes deeply that we must uplift their legacies as we continue the work to build a better tomorrow.
While states across our country are attempting to erase Black history, we remember Mamie Till-Mobley’s efforts to shine a light on the miscarriage of justice against her son Emmett, with her voice helping to spark the movement for civil rights that endures today.
“I am honored to join President Biden and Vice President Harris to observe the 82nd birthday of Emmett Till. While Emmett’s murder was over 60 years ago, we remember him and the life that was stolen from him, and his mother Mamie Till-Mobley’s bravery and advocacy to shed a light on the injustice,” said Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton. “Far too many lives have been disrupted by prejudice, racism and discrimination across our country. We must not, and will not, sit idle. As a mother and the first Black Lieutenant Governor of Illinois, this proclamation is a major step—because hatred does not belong in our schools, in our communities, or in our future.”
This monument is a step forward in the fight for civil rights and racial justice to repair the harm that has been done by the legal system. It is a recognition that for too long, being a Black person in America has been a death sentence for many – Emmett Till, Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, Sandra Bland and many more names who have tragically become headlines in our society. Today will mark a new day in which Emmett Till’s story is told to educate and heal our wounds.
* Meanwhile, Speaker Welch had a nice crowd at Saturday’s Beyoncé show…
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* WGLT | Mental health professionals will join Illinois State University police on 911 calls: “Our officers now will be able to take that clinician or that crisis worker right to the scene, make sure the scene is safe, let that crisis worker deal with the student in crisis and step back,” he said. “If the officer needs to step in, they step in, but for the most part, we’ll just follow the directions of that crisis worker on how we’re going to handle the situation.”
* Block Club | Cops Should Not Respond To Mental Health Emergencies, Experts Say As City Weighs Ordinance: Ald. Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez (33rd) introduced her “Treatment Not Trauma” ordinance two years ago. Based in part on Eugene, Oregon’s CAHOOTS program, the alderwoman’s plan would create a network of professionals to respond to mental health emergencies without armed police officers.
* AP | 911 workers say centers are understaffed, struggling to hire and plagued by burnout: The survey conducted by the National Emergency Number Association in conjunction with Carbyne, a cloud technology company focused on emergency services, polled about 850 workers from 911 call centers across the country. It found that many were experiencing burnout, handling more frequent call surges and felt undertrained. The findings show the widespread nature of staffing problems that have been laid bare in some communities in recent years.
* Chalkbeat | Chicago closed 50 schools 10 years ago. What’s happened since then?: Chicago Public Schools would pay an Ohio-based logistics company to manage all the stuff from the shuttered buildings — a contract that would eventually double from $8.9 million to $18.9 million. Years later, metal desks, solid wood chairs, and other relics from the school closings would end up for sale on Craigslist.
* Block Club | Humboldt Park Health Clinic Closing After 9 Years, Leaving Local Patients Scrambling: Officials determined through a “careful evaluation” that the Humboldt Park space isn’t big enough to “accommodate a full range of Mile Square programs,” spokeswoman Sherri McGinnis Gonzalez said. The building’s landlord also plans to sell the Division Street building, McGinnis Gonzalez said.
* Daily Southtown | Nurses union at Ludeman Center in Park Forest fight for a new contract to address unsafe work conditions: Ludeman nurses say they want a contract that ensures safe working environments; safe staffing ratios for nurses, which includes filling seven vacant positions; consistent contract enforcement; proper pay for time worked; proper technology for on-demand access to individual’s health information; and for the facility to follow state guidelines on use of technology in long-term care centers, said Marika Loftman-Davis, a registered nurse and union steward.
* WSPD | Carbondale parents, leaders looking for child care solutions after Boys & Girls Clubs of Southern Illinois closes: While the Boys & Girls Clubs of Southern Illinois organization has said it hopes to find a way to reopen, families like Barlett’s are left to figure out child care. “It’s hurting a lot more people than just the Boys & Girls Club. And just, the kids, they are heartbroken they can’t go anymore. So, it’s sad all the way around,” Barlett said.
* PJ Star | Why a splash pad funded with a fine arts grant is creating controversy in Peoria: The water feature, which includes built-in musical instruments for children to play, is one of two projects being completed in Peoria Public Schools this summer with a fine art grant the district secured late last school year. The Peoria Federation of Teachers Local 780 says the money should have been directed elsewhere because fine art programs in the district are underfunded and teachers in the district are struggling to do their jobs.
* Crain’s | Samir Mayekar takes post at Chicago Fed: The former top aide to Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Samir Mayekar, has landed on his feet, at least for the time being. In a social media post today, Mayekar, who handled the proposed Chicago casino and a host of other business-related items for the former mayor, announced he has accepted a position as a “visiting scholar” at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
* Crain’s | Chicago leads nation in home price growth: Chicago-area single-family home values rose 4.6% in May compared with May 2022, according to new data from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices released this morning.
* Patch | Poor Air Quality, Then 105 Heat Index Possible For Chicago Area: Temperatures could hit the mid-90s by Wednesday and Thursday before climbing to nearly 100 degrees on Friday. A peak afternoon heat index of 95 to 105 degrees is also possible Wednesday through Friday.
* Fox 2 Now | Thousands of huge native sturgeon destined for Illinois waters: Several Illinois fisheries are working to bring more sturgeon back to state lakes. The Jake Wolf Memorial hatchery is located south of Peoria, Illinois. They say that over 10,000 lake sturgeon hatchlings arrived in July from Neosho National Hatchery in Missouri
* Crain’s | Back-to-school spending this year may break records, reports forecast: U.S. families expect to spend $4.6 billion more in back-to-school shopping for grades K-12 and $20 billion more in back-to-college shopping, according to a survey by the National Retail Federation.
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* WAND’s Mike Miletich…
The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services allowed assistants at day care centers to watch children under two for up to three hours per day throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to help address the worker shortage. Now, DCFS is facing scrutiny for trying to reduce the time assistants spend monitoring rooms.
Assistants were allowed to watch children under two for longer periods of time due to an emergency rule filed in 2020. However, DCFS never worked with state lawmakers to make it a permanent rule. The agency wants to cut that time frame down to 90 minutes per day.
“That most vulnerable age group must remain under the supervision of qualified staff at all times,” said Shontée Blankenship, the DCFS Deputy Director of Licensing. “That is nothing new. It’s part of our permanent rule. We have been enforcing it before COVID and we’re still enforcing it today.”
Many day care providers told lawmakers that cutting this option for assistants would create unreasonable and unnecessary costs for their business. The powerful Joint Committee on Administrative Rules suspended the DCFS rule on July 18, stating that the potential change would pose a threat to the public interest and welfare.
“I don’t think you folks belong in this business,” said Rep. Steve Reick (R-Woodstock). “This is not part of your portfolio. Your portfolio is to protect the safety of children, not to license day care centers.”
Um.
* The Flynn Report explains what actually happened…
JCAR objected to and suspended portions of the Department of Children and Family Services’ emergency rule titled Licensing Standards for Day Care Centers because they fail to meet the criteria for emergency rulemaking in 1 Ill. Adm. Code 230.400(a)(1)(C) and (a)(3)(B) and meet the criteria for suspension in 1 Ill. Adm. Code 230.550(a)(3)(A). Suspended portions of the emergency rule include: (1) Section 407.90(e)(3)(A) and (e)(3)(B)(i), (ii), and (iii); (2) provisions in Section 407.90(e)(3) and 407.190(f) that limit early childhood assistants’ supervision of day care center classrooms in the absence of early childhood teachers to classrooms of children age 2 and older, for only the first and last 90 minutes of the center’s licensed program hours; and (3) provisions in Section 407.90(e)(3)(B) that allow no more than 50 percent of licensed classrooms in operation to be supervised by early childhood assistants.
This emergency rule implements previous Department policy, with additional unjustified restrictions, that allowed day care center classrooms to be supervised for up to 3 hours a day by early childhood assistants when an early childhood teacher is not available and this substitution is included in the center’s staffing plan. The Department initially implemented this 3-hour policy in 2020 via emergency rules that were allowed to expire and never adopted companion proposed amendments that would have made this policy permanent. The Department then revived this policy as guidance that was in effect from September 23, 2022, through May 31, 2023. This emergency is agency created because the Department previously implemented the 3-hour policy outside of rule and passed up previous opportunities to adopt this rule despite multiple requests from day care providers. Additionally, this emergency rule imposes new restrictions, without adequate justification, on the use of early childhood assistants that the previous emergency rules and Department guidance did not include. By limiting the times of day when assistants can substitute for teachers and the number and age range of classrooms that can be supervised by assistants, this rule imposes unreasonable and unnecessary economic costs on day care providers, many of whom have relied on this policy for the last 3 years and may be forced to curtail their hours or reduce their number of classrooms as a direct result of this emergency rule. JCAR finds that these specified provisions of this emergency rule pose a threat to the public interest and welfare.
1) The Pritzker administration really needs to up its game with JCAR, and has needed to do so for a very long time. 2) JCAR declaring that a rule limiting assistants’ roles in supervising very young children without a trained teacher around is a “threat to the public interest and welfare” is a bit much.
…Adding… I’m told by a JCAR member that the administration has since circulated a draft that does include the commitment they made in June, which would allow for the same sort of flexibility that existed during the pandemic. The administration and the day care industry are now in talks. “If that goes well, we can lift the suspension in August and allow them to amend the rule with the flexibility language embedded in it,” the member said.
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* WBEZ…
College enrollment for Black students in Illinois has dropped more than a third since 2010, according to the Illinois Board of Higher Education. This decline at two- and four-year colleges comes on the heels of rising tuition costs and student debt.
Nationally, the falloff was 22 percent between 2010 and 2020.
And I don’t see how that trend is going to reverse itself after what the US Supreme Court did…
For example, in the University of California system, Black and Hispanic enrollment dropped by half within two years at the Berkeley and Los Angeles branches after the use of race in admissions was banned in 1996. Today, after the state spent more than half a billion dollars to promote diversity in enrollment, Black undergraduate enrollment is 5% at UCLA and graduate enrollment is 6%. At UC Berkeley, 4% of undergraduates were Black in 2021.
At the University of Michigan, where the use of race was banned in 2006, Black undergraduate student enrollment dropped from about 7% in 2006 to 4.5% in 2022. The school has tried to focus on special preference for socioeconomic status but that has not proven a perfect proxy for race.
More broadly, the average Black-to-white student graduation rate gap at the top 12 public universities that do not use affirmative action was 10.1%, according to research from UCLA. The average gap at the top 12 public universities with affirmative action was 6%.
There are examples of schools where discontinuation of affirmative action has not had a dramatic impact. The University of Oklahoma, which banned the practice in 2012, told the high court that it has seen “no long term severe decline” in minority enrollment. And other schools in California have enrollment demographics that better match their populations.
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* Subscribers were briefed on the tentative deal a few weeks ago. It’s now official…
Governor JB Pritzker’s administration and AFSCME Council 31—the largest union of frontline Illinois state employees—have announced the ratification of a new contract after membership voted overwhelmingly in favor.
The agreement was tentatively reached by negotiators for the state and the union in the early morning hours of July 1. Over the past two weeks, members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Council 31 attended local union meetings throughout the state to review and vote on its terms. The four-year agreement is now in effect.
“Illinois is a pro-worker state—and when it comes to workers’ rights, my administration is committed to ensuring that every Illinoisan has access to good-paying opportunities,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This contract represents a partnership that won’t just expand our pool of state employees—it will strengthen our state’s workforce and provide opportunity for employees and their families. I’m thankful for a productive negotiation that led to a contract which recognizes the valuable contributions of state employees and makes government more efficient.”
“AFSCME members care deeply about serving their communities. They go above and beyond to meet challenges like the COVID pandemic and staff shortages,” AFSCME Council 31 Executive Director Roberta Lynch said. “This contract helps to address the toll that inflation has taken on state employee incomes and keeps health care affordable.”
The agreement provides for a 4.0% pay increase retroactive to July 1. In all, base wages will rise 17.95% over four years. Other provisions include expanded parental leave to 12 weeks and new joint efforts to improve workplace safety.
The agreement also includes a number of significant actions to expedite the filling of vacancies and improve strategies to recruit, hire, and retain workers, such as:
• Modernizing how vacancies with State agencies are filled by updating the contract language to reflect the state’s transition to an electronic hiring process.
• A commitment to work together to streamline the State’s hiring process to improve the pace at which vacancies are filled.
• Increasing hiring and retention of current employees by forming a joint labor-management committee that will meet to identify roadblocks to hiring.
• Implementing a pilot program for recruitment bonuses for positions that have high vacancy rates.
• Ensuring that employees on Parental Leave may still bid on vacancies during their leave.
AFSCME represents some 35,000 state employees who work to provide the essential public services our communities need in every part of Illinois, every day. They protect children, care for veterans and people with disabilities, help struggling families, keep prisons safe and much more.
*** UPDATE *** Brenden got the numbers…
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jul 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Yeah, sure, why not…
With the Chicago Bears exploring suburban options beyond Arlington Heights as a site for a new stadium, Richton Park is making its pitch to the team.
In a recent letter to Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren, Richton Park Mayor Rick Reinbold touts large expanses of available land and the south suburb’s proximity to highways and the Metra Electric Line.
“I understand how the complexity of completing a stadium deal at the former Arlington Park site can be frustrating,” Reinbold told Warren in the July 21 letter. “Allow me to interest you in greenfield opportunities awaiting the Bears in Richton Park!” […]
This is a developing story. Check back for more details.
* The Question: What other cities should the Bears consider? Explain your answer and snark is heavily encouraged.
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Mapes’ motion denied by federal judge
Tuesday, Jul 25, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller
* Isabel posted this story earlier today…
A judge rejected a bid from Michael Madigan’s former chief of staff to keep mention of his immunity deal out of a trial in which prosecutors allege he failed to keep his end of the deal and lied during grand jury testimony.
Tim Mapes served for years under former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan as the clerk of the Illinois House and as Madigan’s chief of staff. In May 2021, federal prosecutors charged Mapes with lying to a grand jury in a federal probe connected to the longtime former speaker.
U.S. District Judge John Kness denied a motion filed by Mapes’ attorney to keep mention of the immunity deal out of the trial. Mapes had argued that portions of the indictment that referred to the immunity agreement were irrelevant and prejudicial.
* From Judge Kness’ ruling…
As charged in the Indictment, seven of Defendant’s answers regarding Madigan and McClain were knowingly false; as a result, the Indictment alleges that Defendant committed both perjury and obstruction of justice. These charges are based on the following seven question-and-answer segments, which the parties refer to as Episodes 1–7:
[1] Q: Okay. Did [McClain], after he retired, kind of give you any insight into what his interactions with [Madigan] were that you weren’t privy to personally?
A: No, that wouldn’t–that wouldn’t happen.
[2] Q: Okay. And [McClain] didn’t—wouldn’t tell you what he was discussing with [Madigan] or anything that he was doing on behalf of [Madigan] in that ‘17, ‘18, and ‘19 timeframe?
A: No.
[3] Q: Do you have any knowledge about whether or not [McClain] performed any sort of tasks or assignments for [Madigan] in [the] 2017 to 2018 timeframe at all?
A: I don’t recall any.
[4] Q: . . . Do you have any reason to think [McClain] was acting as an agent for [Madigan] after he retired in 2016, that is, doing work for him or carrying out assignments for him?
A: I’m not aware of any. I’m not aware of that activity. Let’s put it that way.
[5] Q: . . . [A]ll these questions are going to be for the 2017 through 2019 timeframe. Do you recall anyone ever describing any work–anyone at all describing any work or assignments [McClain] was performing on [Madigan]’s behalf?
A: I don’t recall that–that I would have been part of any of that dialogue. I don’t know why I would be.
Q: The answer is yes or no to that question. Do you recall?
A: No, I don’t recall any of that.
[6] Q: . . . So one of the things we were trying to figure out, Mr. Defendant, is whether or not–kind of a key issue for us is whether or not [McClain] acted as an agent for [Madigan] in any respect, including that timeframe. We’re talking about the 2017, 2018, 2019 timeframe. Are you aware of any facts that would help us understand whether or not, in fact, [McClain] acted as an agent or performed work for [Madigan] or took direction from [Madigan] in that timeframe?
A: I don’t know who you would go to other than [Madigan] and [McClain]. [Madigan], if he had people do things for him like I did things for him, was—didn’t distribute information freely.
[7] Q: Let’s talk about 2017, 2018 to the present, do you know [McClain] to have acted in any capacity as a messenger for [Madigan] to convey messages to and from him?
A: I’m not aware of any.
Contesting the allegations that these statements constituted perjury and seeking to strike other allegations included in the complaint, Defendant filed the Motion to Strike, Motion for Disclosure, and Motion to Dismiss. Both the Motion to Strike and the Motion to Dismiss are addressed in turn.
* If you click here and scroll down to page 41, you’ll see excerpts from federal recordings which prosecutors say proves their case. A few of them…
GX7. In this call, Mapes tells McClain that the plan is for McClain to meet Madigan and Andrew (Andrew Madigan is Madigan’s son) for dinner. This call thus demonstrates that Mapes knew McClain was meeting with Madigan in 2018. In fact, Mapes was acting as intermediary; by telling McClain of the dinner plans on behalf of Madigan. Mapes told McClain, “So, I, I was gonna give you an update on your life, after you get to Springfield. . . one is, now you’re having dinner at Saputo’s tonight.” GX7-T at 1. It is therefore relevant to the allegation in Count 2 that Mapes testified falsely about whether Madigan gave messages for Mapes to pass along to McClain. Dkt 1., Count 2, ¶ 2(k). The second excerpt involves Mapes telling McClain about something Madigan wanted to discuss with McClain, referring to this as McClain’s “the to do list I had to give you” from Madigan. GX7-T. In the final excerpt, they once again discuss dinner plans with Madigan and McClain says he’ll be there in a half hour. GX7-T. Mapes claims that this call is not admissible because he wasn’t specifically asked about it in the grand jury. R. 66 at 7. But again, Mapes’ lies were much broader, and calls like this one are unquestionably relevant to show that Mapes knew of McClain’s role within Madigan’s orbit in 2018. […]
GX16 (5/30/18 at 9:34 p.m.). In this short follow-up call, Mapes tells McClain that “we’re in the midst of all kind of things going on,” including related to Public Official B. McClain offers to share what he knows, and Mapes says ‘let me put you on with the boss. Okay? . . . so you’re going to inform him what you know and go from there.” This call demonstrates as clear as day that Mapes knew McClain communicated with Madigan in 2018, because Mapes sets up that conversation. It also is an example of McClain working for Madigan, helping get information to him about a brewing sexual harassment scandal. […]
GX17 (5/30/18 at 9:34 p.m.). This is another call on May 30, 2018 concerning the allegations involving Public Official C and other matters. … The conversation then turns to one of McClain’s “assignment[s]” from Madigan related the Chinatown parcel, discussed above. GX17. McClain related that “in my case uh it’s an assignment as you probably know. I’m trying to get some uh legal, um, um, property transferred from the I, CDOT.” … Finally, it is also relevant that this is the third call between the two men on May 30, 2018. The sheer number of calls between these two men on a single day is probative as to Mapes’ testimony about his memory. […]
GX36 (6/21/18). For the bulk of this call, Mapes and McClain discuss matters concerning the Democratic Party of Illinois (“DPI”), including fundraising, personnel issues, and replacing Mapes as executive director of DPI. This call is highly probative. After Mapes’ abrupt resignation, DPI was left without an executive director. This call demonstrates that Mapes knew McClain was helping Madigan with DPI operations and fundraising after Mapes resigned.
There’s lots more.
* Back to Judge Kness’ ruling…
Defendant seeks to strike the following statement from the Indictment: “MAPES provided [McClain] with messages communicated to MAPES by [Madigan], including messages concerning work and assignments [McClain] was performing on behalf of [Madigan] between 2017 and 2018.” Defendant appears to contend that this statement fails to “state the elements” of perjury as required under Vaughn because this allegation does not contradict any of his statements in Episodes 1–7 and so cannot form the basis of a perjury charge. The Court disagrees.
In Episode 4, Defendant stated that he was “not aware of any” “reason to think [McClain] was acting as an agent for [Madigan],” where “acting as an agent” was defined as “doing work for him or carrying out assignments for him.” If Defendant was, in fact, “provid[ing] [McClain] with messages communicated to [him] by [Madigan], including messages concerning work and assignments [McClain] was performing on behalf of [Madigan],” this would directly contradict Defendant’s response to the question in Episode 4. Accordingly, the motion to dismiss this portion of the Indictment is denied.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jul 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jul 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Here you go…
* Center Square | Judge in Mapes case says evidence of immunity deal allowed at trial: A judge rejected a bid from Michael Madigan’s former chief of staff to keep mention of his immunity deal out of a trial in which prosecutors allege he failed to keep his end of the deal and lied during grand jury testimony.
* Crain’s | For their first big post-Madigan fundraiser, Illinois Dems land a star: The party today is announcing that U.S. Sen. Rafael Warnock of Georgia will be the keynote speaker at what’s being billed as the party’s inaugural Illinois Gala in Chicago on Oct. 27. Tickets start at $150 a pop and then go way, way up, with platinum-level individual tickets priced at $10,000 each and corporate and PAC sponsorships available for $13,700 to as much as $68,500, according to promotional materials being sent to potential donors.
* WAND | Top Illinois committee suspends controversial DCFS day care rule amid worker shortage: The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services allowed assistants at day care centers to watch children under two for up to three hours per day throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to help address the worker shortage. Now, DCFS is facing scrutiny for trying to reduce the time assistants spend monitoring rooms.
* WTTW | Media Matters When It Comes to the Public’s Perception of Crime and Violence: “Mainstream media very narrowly defines crime as shootings, homicides and property theft, the most sensational types of crimes that have Black/Brown faces often attached as perpetrators and victims,” says Morgan Elise Johnson, co-founder and publisher of The TRiiBE, a digital media platform reporting on the experiences of Black Chicagoans.
* Tom Kacich | Miller, Budzinski taking different routes to re-election: Rep. Mary Miller, the second-term Republican from Oakland in Coles County, reported nearly $150,000 in campaign contributions for the quarter that ended June 30. Her campaign spent about $155,000 during the period and reported $390,161 on hand on June 30. By contrast, Rep. Nikki Budzinski, a freshman Democrat from Springfield whose district includes Champaign-Urbana, reported nearly $450,000 in campaign contributions with expenditures of about $158,000. Budzinski’s campaign said it had $720,125 on hand on June 30.
* Center Square | Freedom Caucus calls for Illinois public libraries to withdraw from American Library Association: The Freedom Caucus said in April 2022, Emily Drabinski wrote in a Twitter post “I just cannot believe that a Marxist lesbian who believes that collective power is possible to build and can be wielded for a better world is the president-elect of @ALALibrary. I am so excited for what we will do together. Solidarity! And my mom is SO PROUD I love you mom.” State Rep. Jed Davis, R-Newark, said the remarks should raise a red flag about the organization.
* Pioneer Press | State Rep. Canty hears constituents’ concerns, discusses needed legislation over servings of fro-yo: In addition, she said she’s working with a few legislators on reexamining how to manage safety and inspections at carnivals after some recent incidents of injuries on carnival rides. “I want to do everything, I want to help everyone,” Canty said, adding education has been her most recent focus. “But at my heart, I’m truly a generalist.”
* Sun-Times | Mayoral allies lay groundwork for mental health plan dubbed ‘Treatment Not Trauma’: Speakers included psychoanalyst Dr. Eric Reinhart, an anthropologist of policing, prisons and public health. Reinhart is among those being pushed by community advocates as a possible replacement for Dr. Allison Arwady. Reinhart isn’t just urging Johnson and his Council allies to re-open the six mental health clinics famously shuttered by former Mayor Rahm Emanuel. What post-pandemic Chicago really needs, Reinhart said, is to reopen the 19 mental health clinics it had during the 1980s under former Mayor Harold Washington.
* Tribune | Marilyn Mulero — once sent to death row without a trial — sues Chicago after her conviction is overturned: A mother of two young children when initially incarcerated as a 21-year-old in 1992, Mulero joins a growing number of exonerated ex-inmates who have sued former detectives Reynaldo Guevara and Ernest Halvorsen. Her lawsuit accuses the Chicago Police Department of fostering an environment in which the detectives, in framing her for murder, were allowed to fabricate evidence, coerce a false confession through psychological torture, manipulate lineups and violate her civil rights in spite of her innocence.
* Tribune | Vice President Kamala Harris uses Chicago appearance to call for Latinos to act against extremists: Harris stressed the “challenges of the moment we are in” as a result of “extremist so-called leaders.” She referenced recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings that reversed a federal right to an abortion and affirmative action at universities and limited the Voting Rights Act, as well as efforts within states to curb the availability of books and teaching of race in U.S. history.
* Crain’s | Old Post Office developer looks to defy a brutal market with a new project: The New York-based real estate developer is ramping up marketing for Canal Station, a refurbished office building at 801 S. Canal St. with 683,000 square feet of workspace that it aims to have mostly ready for tenants to move into by the end of the year. The $265 million project is breathing new life into a six-story property stretching almost a full city block along Canal Street between Polk and Taylor streets; it was fully leased to Northern Trust from 1990 until the bank’s lease expired in late 2020.
* Crain’s | Crain’s adds reporter to government and politics beat: Before coming to Crain’s, Giangreco worked for several years as a freelance reporter whose work has appeared in The Guardian, Politico Magazine, Bloomberg CityLab, The Washington Post and Pew’s Stateline. Before coming to Chicago, she covered the defense industry in Washington, D.C.
* Crain’s | Back-to-school spending this year may break records, reports forecast: U.S. families expect to spend $4.6 billion more in back-to-school shopping for grades K-12 and $20 billion more in back-to-college shopping, according to a survey by the National Retail Federation.
* NYT | From Twitter to X: Elon Musk Begins Erasing an Iconic Internet Brand: Inside Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco on Monday, X logos were projected in the cafeteria, while conference rooms were renamed to words with X in them, including “eXposure,” “eXult” and “s3Xy,” according to photos seen by The New York Times. Workers also began removing bird-related paraphernalia, such as a giant blue logo in the cafeteria. Outside the building, workers took off the first six letters of Twitter’s name before the San Francisco Police Department stopped them for performing “unauthorized work,” according to an alert sent by the department.
* Daily Herald | Where does Arlington Park wreckage go? Some bricks to be preserved, other debris being recycled: Arlington Heights Mayor Tom Hayes said Monday the village is leading an effort to preserve about 1,000 bricks and make them available to the public. Plans for how or when the relics would be distributed are still being formulated.
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jul 25, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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