Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Politico…
* Press release…
* Wieland announced a $500M expansion and modernization plan in East Alton…
* Daily Herald…
* Here’s the rest… * WTTW | Treasurer Conyears-Ervin Fired Employees After They Warned She Was Violating Ethics Ordinance by Using City Resources to Host Prayer Service: Inspector General Deborah Witzburg’s determination that Conyears-Ervin violated the city’s Governmental Ethics Ordinance is the second time in six months that Witzburg has found probable cause that an elected Chicago official violated city ethics rules. * Sun-Times | Illinois businesses must share ownership details under new federal law; here’s what you need to know: The Corporate Transparency Act of 2021 requires most companies doing business in the United States to file reports about the people who own them to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, a bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. * NBC Chicago | Texas bus company sues City of Chicago over migrant drop-off ordinance: A Texas bus company has filed a federal lawsuit against the City of Chicago alleging the city’s recent ordinance aimed at deterring buses from dropping off migrants unannounced is “unconstitutional” and “punishes” transportation companies who do business with Texas. * Sun-Times | Hilco to pay $12.25 million in class-action lawsuit over Crawford coal plant implosion: Residents who were affected must submit a claim by March 26. Those who want to object to the agreement or opt out of the settlement have until Feb. 26. Opting out is the only way a person can seek any other lawsuit against Hilco and its contractors. * WBEZ | Blankets, gloves, a tent and some propane protect some of Chicago’s homeless during ‘brutal’ cold snap: “Unhoused folks die from weather-related injuries. We understand that now is especially the time we want to be intentional about our work,” says Christian Zamarriego, director of Thresholds’ outreach program. * Tribune | Harvey residents in boarded up apartments being aided by Cook County Housing Authority, mayor says city has tried to help: The authority couldn’t say how many people it is working with, but said options offered include apartments with rental assistance in other authority owned buildings in Harvey and Homewood, a spokesman said Tuesday. * PJ Star | 11 WTVP board members resign amid financial crisis: WTVP-TV Board Chairman Andrew Rand and 10 other members of the WTVP Board of Directors announced their resignations Tuesday in yet another bombshell development at the embattled public television station. The board then accepted appointments of eight new members, including John Wieland, MH Equipment Company’s CEO, as the board’s new chair. * Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows could owe Arlington Heights $1 million over taxes received in error: In a 2-1 decision issued Friday, the First District Appellate Court reversed a lower court’s decision that initially dismissed Arlington Heights’ lawsuit seeking more than eight years’ worth of back taxes. * Crain’s | Dan McGrath: For Bulls fans, being cruel to Jerry Krause when he was alive just wasn’t enough: Jerry Krause could be a hard guy to like. That said, the booing that rained down on him during the Bulls’ “Ring of Honor” ceremony last Friday — on his memory, really, as Krause died in 2017 — was thoughtlessly cruel, an embarrassment to a city that fashions itself as classy, above the incivility that runs rampant in this country. * WGN | Lawmaker wants to entice Chicago Bears to move to Indiana: Indiana State Rep. Earl Harris Jr. (D-East Chicago) is looking to continue his late father’s dream of luring an NFL team to Northwest Indiana, and with the nearby Chicago Bears mulling the option of leaving Soldier Field, a short move across state lines might not be out of the realm of possibility. * Sun -Times | Illinois saw the most tornadoes in the U.S. in 2023, National Weather Service says: About 120 tornadoes were reported in the state, more than triple the amount in 2022 when there were 39. “We had a significant number of days where just … all the ingredients you need for tornadoes all came together,” said Victor Gensini, a professor at Northern Illinois University. * ABC Chicago | Chicago-area Tesla drivers stranded as charging stations not working in bitterly cold weather: At the charging station near 95th Street and Western Avenue in the Evergreen Park area, many Tesla owners were stranded with dead batteries from the cold. Drivers said there were not enough working chargers at that location.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Local Journalism Task Force releases report
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Considering that the Illinois Local Journalism Task Force’s new report reveals that “journalism jobs at Illinois newspapers have plummeted 86 percent” since 2015, this photo showing more task force report presenters than actual journalists is worth a thousand words…
* I do take some issue with the report’s analysis. For instance…
One actual problem these days is that lots of large news media companies are leveraged to the hilt. Revenues are diverted to loan/bond payments. Another is that some companies are brutally squeezing every last dollar they can from the local papers before the outlets eventually die. And another is just plain old greed. Newspaper profit margins used to be pretty hefty. But with those margins vanishing, ownership is cutting into the marrow for their short-term profits. * So, I’m very skeptical of these proposals unless taxpayers can be assured that the government isn’t throwing good money at bad-faith actors…
There’s more, so click here to read the rest.
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Today’s must-read
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Chris Teale at Route Fifty compiles all the reporting and online furor over Thornton Township Supervisor and Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard. A brief excerpt…
There’s so much more. Click here.
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Yeah, no
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * We’ve already talked about the first half of this excerpt, but the second part is new. Block Club Chicago…
That’s quite a policy change, especially considering that the state, not the city, is in charge of resettling new arrivals. Also, from what I can gather, the city hasn’t yet told the state that they’re shifting money toward resettlement.
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Harmon still waiting for “clear direction” from mayor on elected school board
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * We talked about Greg Hinz’s story on the Chicago elected school board bill the other day, but not this part…
* The lack of any real guidance from the mayor’s office came up again in a recent Tribune story…
The CTU has said it prefers the hybrid system, so I suppose the mayor will eventually publicly fall in line. But that flip-flop would be Lightfootian in scope. …Adding… I forgot to post this statement from Rep. Ann Williams, who heads the House Democratic CPS Districting working group…
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The IG really needs to look at this
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Leigh Giangreco at Crain’s…
That Tribune story is here. Thoughts?
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Illinois House Democrats form new arrivals working group
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers can find Rich’s interview with Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz here. Press release…
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It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * HB4462 was filed by Rep. Lance Yednock yesterday…
* HB4453 from Rep. Anthony DeLuca…
* Sen. Celina Villanueva filed SB2756…
* HB4469 from Rep. Maura Hirschauer…
* Rep. Anna Moeller filed HB4467…
* HB4450 from Rep. Jackie Haas…
Rep. Jaime Andrade filed HB4451…
* SB2763 from Sen. Laura Ellman…
* Rep. Mary Gill filed HB4452 yesterday…
…Adding… PhRMA regarding Illinois House Bill 4472, filed today, to establish a prescription drug affordability board (PDAB)…
* Rep. Nabeela Syed filed HB4472…
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Open thread
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of the state?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Legislators OK rules for maintaining, enforcing registry of guns covered by state ban. Tribune…
-While Republicans on JCAR failed to stop the rules from being put into place, their motion to object to the rules passed in a 6-5 vote along partisan lines, meaning the state police will have 90 days to address the objection. * Related stories… ∙ Capitol News Illinois : Lawmakers clear path for assault weapon registration rules ∙ Center Square: Despite legislators objecting, Illinois’ gun ban rules remain in effect * Isabel’s top picks… * Axios | Texas paused sending migrant buses to Chicago during extreme cold: City data show no new buses brought migrants to Chicago over the past four days, when extreme cold created dangerous conditions across the region. * WTTW | Emails Show Johnson, City Officials Notified About Sewage, Roaches and Illnesses at Pilsen Migrant Shelter Almost 2 Months Before Boy’s Death Highlighted Problems: However, emails exclusively obtained by WTTW News shine new light on the timeline of when Johnson and his administration were made aware of conditions at the shelter and what exactly those conditions were. The emails also raise questions about how the administration has monitored conditions at migrant shelters and the city’s oversight of outside vendor Favorite Staffing, which manages day-to-day operations at migrant shelters. Governor Pritzker will be at Wieland in East Alton at 10:30 a.m. to announce new investments and then Ellis Elementary School in Belleville at 12:30 p.m. touting Smart Start investments. Click here to watch. * Here’s the rest of your morning roundup… * Journal Republican | Get to know Chuck Erickson, candidate 88th statehouse district: People have been asking me to run for a long time. But I am a public servant interested in serving, not a politician in search of a seat. In 2022, one didn’t have to live in the district in which one wanted to represent but could move their afterwards. I wouldn’t do it. I like where I live. Many encouraged me to run but I said no. I take the view if it is meant to be then it is meant to be. When this seat opened up, I decided to run. I want to serve. * WAND | Illinois Supreme Court announces creation of Pretrial Release Appeals Task Force: The Task Force will hold its first meeting within two weeks and will issue a report of its findings and recommendations to the Supreme Court within the next 45 days. The Chair of the Task Force will be Fourth District Appellate Justice Eugene Doherty. * Center Square | New legislative caucus looks to improve one of Illinois’ largest industries: Lawmakers from both parties will form the first-ever Illinois Manufacturing Caucus, including state Rep. Amy Elik, R-Alton, state Rep. Justin Slaughter, D-Chicago, state Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, and state Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex. * Sun-Times | Family demands answers after veteran dies from self-inflicted gunshot inside Chicago VA hospital: “By the time I was getting ready to leave, again he said, ‘I’m gonna miss you guys,’” Donald Giddens said. “I’m thinking, I don’t have anything to worry about … because I can’t think of a better place for him to be.” On the drive home, Donald Giddens learned his brother might have access to a gun. Minutes later he received a call from the VA: His brother had shot himself. * Sun-Times | Brutal cold claims four lives, but Chicago area hospitals don’t see rise in weather-related problems: The people who died had pre-existing health conditions, and their secondary cause of death was listed as cold exposure, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s office. * Tribune | Racial equity activist must pay at least $38,000 after judge dismisses her lawsuit alleging harm from Awake Illinois leader: Cook County Judge Daniel Kubasiak on Dec. 14 ordered Jasmine Sebaggala, who works as an assistant principal for Evanston/Skokie District 65 schools, to pay the $38,000 after he dismissed her lawsuit. Sebaggala had sued Helen Levinson, vice president of the board of the conservative group Awake Illinois and, according to her Facebook page, chair of Moms For Liberty Cook County, for defamation and intentionally causing her emotional distress in 2022. * Sun-Times | Failing furnaces, frozen pipes, dead car batteries make surviving the cold no snap: Ben Jungman, the vice president of business development for Four Seasons, said his company has responded to about 2,500 service calls over the last three days, mainly from people who have lost their heat. “It’s been extremely busy,” Jungman said. * BBC | ‘It hasn’t delivered’: The spectacular failure of self-checkout technology: While self-checkout technology has its theoretical selling points for both consumers and businesses, it mostly isn’t living up to expectations. Customers are still queueing. They need store employees to help clear kiosk errors or check their identifications for age-restricted items. Stores still need to have workers on-hand to help them, and to service the machines * Sun-Times | Boos of Jerry Krause at Bulls’ Ring of Honor ceremony should have been expected: I know Thelma Krause, a kind and decent woman. And if I worked for the Bulls, I would have told her Friday to be prepared for boos ringing out at the mention of late husband Jerry’s name. The event was the Bulls’ inaugural Ring of Honor induction, and there were 21,153 people at the United Center. Some were going to boo. The Bulls should have been prepared for it. When alive, Jerry Krause had been booed at Bulls events before. * SJ-R | Five places where it’s warmer–and five places where it’s colder than Springfield: Tuesday didn’t provide much of a reprieve, with below zero temperatures reported at 8:52 a.m. at Abraham Lincoln Capital Airport – 2 below zero to be exact – and wind chills at 23 degrees below zero. Things should warm up on Wednesday, with high temperatures expected to reach the upper 20s, moving towards something more like normal for this time of year, but still cold.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Jan 17, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news the way we’ve done since Twitter stopped ScribbleLive from working…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were told about this last week…
* Press release…
* Here’s the rest…
* Starved Rock Media | No Vote Yet On Declaring La Salle County A “Non-Sanctuary” County: La Salle County on Thursday could have become the latest entity to declare itself a non-sanctuary location. But the measure presented to members of the La Salle County Board hadn’t come through a proper committee. So, down it goes until the Committee on Appointment, Legislative and Rules can iron out certain elements. * Crain’s | Rovner steps into semi-retirement, opening a 7th Circuit seat for Biden: “Today, I am delighted to say, I am one of five women in active service on our court (one of six in total),” Rovner said in her Jan. 12 letter to Biden. “I know that, in choosing my successor, you will consider candidates whose life experiences, professional background, and worldview equip them to think critically, to give respectful hearing to points of view that may be unpopular or go unheard, and to pursue justice with an open heart and mind.” * WGN | Suburban politician’s cancer charity fails to file financial records: Tiffany Henyard holds two elected offices and runs a charity for cancer patients. However, the Illinois Attorney General’s office says her namesake foundation has failed to file basic information about how it collects and spends money. WGN Investigates found the Tiffany Henyard Cares Foundation also benefited from money, manpower and promotion from the village of Dolton and Thorntown Township, two municipalities led by Henyard. * Tribune | Judge bans Cook County prosecutors’ new Conviction Review Unit boss from courtroom, alleging conflict of interest: The order stemmed from a spat over Mbekeani’s connection to a business venture that connects defendants seeking to overturn their convictions with lawyers while serving as a prosecutor handling post-conviction cases for the state’s attorney’s office. * WTTW | E-Learning or a Snow Day? Here’s How Illinois School Districts Decide: “It’s locally determined,” said Jackie Matthews, spokesperson for the Illinois State Board of Education. “No one is required to have one. Some may feel it’s a good fit, and some may not.” ISBE did not immediately have an accounting of how many of Illinois’ approximately 850 districts have e-learning policies. * NBC Chicago | Chicago Bears stadium updates: What Kevin Warren has said about Arlington Heights, downtown sites: The timeline for the Bears to break ground on a new stadium site is still unclear. Hell, they still haven’t officially announced where the new stadium will be. During the Bears end-of-season press conference, president and CEO Kevin Warren said that finalizing the location for the team’s next home is one of the most pressing steps for the Bears to take in the short term as they continue to work on their long term plans. But there’s more to it than just picking a spot. * Tribune | CPS to buy green buses with federal grant, but driver shortage remains a challenge for worn-out parents: Since August, CPS has provided transportation only for students with disabilities who have Individual Education Plans or 504 Plans requiring transportation, and students in temporary living situations, for whom the district is federally mandated to provide transportation services. Parents advocating for busing recognized the importance of electric buses but questioned how the district would provide support to families currently without any busing. * WICS | Federal court date set for Terrence Shannon Jr.’s motion for a temporary restraining order: Shannon is expected to plead not guilty to the charges on January 18th. But with the trial not expected to be resolved until this summer — after the college basketball season and NBA draft — Shannon’s legal team is looking to the federal court to pause the University’s suspension. * ABC Chicago | Kankakee River ice jam causes floodwaters to surround homes in Wilmington: Chunks of ice built up along the Kankakee River banks in Wilmington on Monday night, giving rise to flood waters and concerns for neighbors. “About a foot off of this pipe right here is our seawall, so then the water is usually about 2 feet below that,” said Chris Krall. * WBEZ | EPA to decide if foul-smelling, toxic Southwest Side waterway needs cleanup — and who would do it: The source of the odors is the collateral channel, about a quarter-mile stretch of water that connects West 31st Street, just east of Kedzie Avenue, to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. The channel is not only foul-smelling but also toxic and a threat to human health, community members say. * Tribune | ‘Grandmothering While Black’ takes a deep dive into how parents’ parents are coping with raising the next generation: The Northwestern University alumna collected data from nearly 100 women on Chicago’s South Side for four years through in-depth interviews with the women and ethnographic research via doctor’s visits, welfare offices, school and day care center appointments, and caseworker meetings. * AP | Ground collision of two Boeing planes at O’Hare sparks investigation: Delta spokesperson Emma Johnson said Monday afternoon by phone that an All Nippon Airways aircraft clipped a Delta plane while it was parking at a gate after arriving at O’Hare from Detroit. “Customers deplaned normally at the gate and the aircraft is being evaluated by Delta’s maintenance technicians,” the company said in an emailed statement. * Baltimore Sun | The Baltimore Sun purchased by Sinclair’s David D. Smith: Smith would not disclose how much he paid for Baltimore Sun Media. He purchased the newspaper group independently of Sinclair, which is known for its ownership of television stations and local news programming across the U.S. and a recent failed foray into regional sports network ownership. The Sinclair empire started with Baltimore’s WBFF Fox 45 television station. * WBEZ | M&M’s guru mulls chocolate all day at Mars Wrigley headquarters on Goose Island: “I actually talk very little about what I do, I’m not big on going on about myself,” [Matthew Kradenpoth] said in an interview next to a wall of M&M’s dispensers in the cafeteria of the Mars Wrigley global headquarters on Goose Island. “I don’t know why because I have, like, the greatest job.” * NBC Chicago | What should you do if your pipes freeze? Here are several steps you can take: It will likely take around 30 minutes for pipes to thaw. However, this may vary depending on how cold it is, how long the pipe has been frozen and its location. If you’re not successful with any of the above steps, you’ll want to call a plumber for help.
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * How are you and yours coping with the cold weather this week?
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Rate Mike Bost’s second TV ad
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* The ad… * Script…
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Welch says he has had no conversations about 2024 Bears legislation
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Let’s go back to the highly informative article from the Tribune’s Jeremy Gorner and Dan Petrella…
Thoughts?
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Abbott publicly rejected Pritzker plea, but his buses aren’t showing up
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
Abbott may have publicly rejected a pause, but I checked with the city and the state this morning and no migrants have arrived in Chicago via bus since Friday and none are expected today. So, we’ll see. Maybe the companies didn’t want to risk the weather. More here.
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Harmon rejects stand-alone migrant appropriations bill
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Jeremy Gorner and Dan Petrella at the Tribune…
Except, as we’ve already discussed, the governor’s budget office is projecting a deficit next fiscal year.
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Don’t be like Ed
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: The General Assembly returns to Springfield. Tribune…
- House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said the migrant issue “is going to be top of everyone’s mind” - The shift to an elected school board in Chicago still awaits the GA’s approval of a 20-district map and the how board members are elected * Related stories… ∙ WBEZ: Illinois lawmakers are returning to Springfield. Here’s what we’re watching ∙ FarmWeek: General Assembly returns to Springfield ∙ Capitol News Illinois: Illinois legislators call for expanding vote-by-mail program * Isabel’s top picks… * Sun-Times | Gov. J.B. Pritzker says Texas Gov. Greg Abbott rebuffed his plea to pause migrant transports to Chicago area during freeze: On Friday, a spokesperson for Abbott said Pritzker’s request for a pause would not be granted. Pursuing the matter, over the weekend Pritzker personally paid for ads appealing to Abbott in five Texas newspapers: the Houston Chronicle; Dallas Morning News; Fort Worth Star-Telegram; San Antonio Express News and the Austin American-Statesman. * Tribune | Out of work and running out of time, migrants struggle to find jobs in Chicago: Like countless other groups of migrants and undocumented workers across the city, Cuadrado has been getting up at 5 a.m. every day for the past month to stand in parking lots and wait to be picked for day labor jobs. When a vehicle drives by, he said there is a rush. People want to find work so badly they will push each other. * Tribune | Park District closer to controlling state land in Tinley Park, hiring project manager: The Tinley Park-Park District could gain ownership before the end of this month of 280 acres of state-owned land that it plans to redevelop for recreational uses, according to a Park District official. At the same time, the district expects to get $15 million in state grant money to address environmental issues and move forward with initial steps such as removing underground storage tanks and clearing lead-based paint and asbestos from buildings before they are demolished, according to Lisa O’Donovan, a Park Board member. * Here’s the rest of your morning roundup… * Tribune | After conviction, ex-Ald. Ed Burke gets pension bump; former Speaker Mike Madigan now in line for hike before new trial date: Burke, Chicago’s longest-serving alderman, stands to collect nearly $50,000 this year — half of his new $99,200 annual pension rate — because pensions aren’t cut off for City Hall officials convicted of corruption until they are sentenced, which for Burke isn’t scheduled until mid-June. As a result, Burke received his annual 3% bump right on schedule when the calendar turned to 2024. * Tribune | Homeowner exemptions raising tax rates, undercutting savings in some towns, Cook County report finds: A new report from Cook County leaders comes with a warning about expanding property tax breaks for homeowners: What seems good for one taxpayer can backfire on a whole town. Countywide, those exemptions remove $1.6 billion in annual tax revenue by lowering taxes for specific categories of homeowners. But the report found that in some municipalities, they don’t provide as much relief as people think. * Tribune | Illegal bribe or legitimate ‘gratuity’: How a $13,000 payment to an Indiana mayor could alter political corruption cases in Chicago: At issue in Snyder’s case is a nuance in the federal bribery statute that makes it illegal to “corruptly” offer something of value to reward a public official for an official act. Chicago-area defense attorneys have long complained that relatively vague language has been exploited by federal prosecutors to criminalize a wide range of normal political give-and-take, be it a steak dinner or the hiring of a political crony, even when there was no quid pro quo agreement. * WTTW | Illinois Secretary of State Says Updates Will Make Booking Previously Hard-to-Get License, Driving Test Appointments Easier: Giannoulias on Thursday blamed appointment hoggers: people who grabbed multiple appointments and never showed up without bothering to cancel the extras, and driving schools that he said hoarded appointments for students, locking up the program. Those issues, he said, should now be alleviated and his office is working with driving schools. * Tribune | Drought that affected Illinois, other states was most expensive billion-dollar disaster in 2023, but extreme cold can be costly in other ways: Beyond concerns for the local unhoused population, the city is for the second year in a row contending with finding wintertime shelter for thousands of migrants. Because of the cold, Mayor Brandon Johnson postponed evictions until at least Jan. 22 for migrants staying in shelters who are due to leave the system. But with shelters at capacity, some migrants have had to find warmth in idling buses. * Daily Herald | Radical course: What two villages are doing to transform beleaguered mall properties: West Dundee sees a mixed-use development with residential, office, retail and entertainment. Bloomingdale’s consultants have drawn up conceptual plans showing residential, commercial and recreational development in place of the mall’s former retail buildings and parking lots. * CBS | Full interview: One-on-one with Mayor Brandon Johnson: CBS 2’s Sabrina Franza talked with Mayor Johnson about the migrant crisis, city spending, and other issues. * Sun-Times | Six-figure skimming from city sticker sales, $200K in rogue debt collection fees highlight inspector general’s quarterly report: “People left with their stickers. But the employee was collecting money for themselves into the six-figures. … When people paid with cash, they manipulated the payment system so the system reflected the sale of the sticker, but not all of the actual cash went into city coffers.” * Daily Herald | How data centers became the newest growth industry in the suburbs: A blend of several factors enabled this, with one in particular lighting the fuse, according to Josh Levi, president of the Virginia-based Data Center Coalition. “It was the tax incentive in Illinois that unlocked a lot of the growth you’re seeing now,” he said. * Pantagraph | Illinois lawmakers created an arson registry. 20 years later, it’s still empty.: Nearly 20 years ago, survivors of one of the worst school fires in American history brought a novel idea to Illinois lawmakers: an arsonist registry akin to the long-established database of sex offenders. * Sun-Times | Feds want a year in prison for Chicago police officer who entered the Capitol on Jan. 6: Insisting that he disregarded his oath as a “public servant of the City of Chicago,” prosecutors have asked for a year in prison for the Chicago police officer convicted last summer for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Karol Chwiesiuk and his sister, Agnieszka Chwiesiuk, ignored damage and violence outside the Capitol before pressing on into the building that day, according to the feds. Not only that, but prosecutors alleged that Karol Chwiesiuk lied on the stand during their trial. * AP | Efforts to restrict transgender health care endure in 2024, with more adults targeted: LGBTQ+ advocates say that most of the states inclined to pass bans on gender-affirming care have done so, and that they now expect them to build on those restrictions and expand them to include adults. With legislatures in most states up for election this year, transgender youths and their families worry about again being targeted by conservatives using them as a wedge issue. * KTSM | Migrant mother, children drown in Rio Grande; Congressman says Texas ‘bears responsibility’ for blocking border agents: “Border Patrol attempted to contact the Texas Military Department, the Texas National Guard, and DPS Command Post by telephone to relay the information, but were unsuccessful. Border Patrol agents then made physical contact with the Texas Military Department and the Texas National Guard at the Shelby Park entrance gate and verbally related the information. However, Texas Military Department soldiers stated they would not grant access to the migrants — even in the event of an emergency — and that they would send a soldier to investigate the situation. Earlier today, Saturday, Jan. 13, the three migrant bodies were recovered by Mexican authorities,” he said. * WSJ | The Gun Influencer Who Used Small-Town Cops to Import Machine Guns: Sawyer got a strange request, according to court documents. A man named Larry Vickers, who held popular firearms-tactics training sessions for law enforcement, needed a favor: Could Sawyer help him import a machine gun into the country? All he had to do was write a letter that would be submitted to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives saying his one-man department was interested in buying the highly restricted weapon. * The Atlantic | What’s Gone Wrong at Boeing: When, last week, a panel called a door plug blew off a Boeing 737 Max 9 plane in mid-flight, leaving a gaping hole in the plane’s fuselage, air travelers everywhere no doubt felt a shudder of horror—even though the aircraft was able to turn around and land safely. But in a sense, the startling thing was how unstartling the news was. In the six years since the Max—an updated version of the long-running 737, Boeing’s most popular plane—made its debut, the aircraft has been plagued by quality problems. The most dramatic of these resulted in two catastrophic crashes, in 2018 and in 2019, which together killed 346 people.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password) (Updated)
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jan 16, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news the way we’ve done since Twitter stopped ScribbleLive from working…
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