* 3:17 pm - The leaders have concluded their meeting with the governor. From a BlackBerrying pal who is on site…
leaders meet over….session day wednesday, probably look at 12-months capital bill…no new money
Translation: They’re coming back to town next Wednesday. They’ll try do do a “clean” capital bill for a year without any Senate Democratic add-ons.
The key to the future is how Senate President Cullerton’s caucus reacts. If they dig in their heels and demand that extra budgetary spending, it could be a very long summer.
* The Illinois Republican Party’s lawsuit to declare the tie-breaking provision of the state Constitution as unconstitutional has been denied a hearing by the Illinois Supreme Court.
The lawsuit was essentially a tactic by the Republicans to convince the top court to delay a final vote on the remap bill until after May 31st, when legislation would require a three-fifths, bipartisan majority for passage.
Illinois GOP spokesman John Blessing did tell us, though, that a lawsuit challenging the maps “more than likely” would come from a third-party group, not necessarily straight from the Republican Party.
“There are a lot of entities, including us, that are reviewing those maps,” Blessing said.
* A few days ago, the Chicago Tribune editorial board praised Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Mayor Rahm Emanuel while excoriating Gov. Pat Quinn…
Preckwinkle and Emanuel demand that their respective realms deliver not only for recipients of government spending, but also for the taxpayers who fund it. Both rookie executives plainly are sensitive to what they can, and cannot, ask of citizens battered by job losses, home foreclosures and aggressive taxation. Neither would define governance as the private sector serving the public sector. They talk instead of the public sector serving a private sector that, in return for supplying tax revenues, expects streamlining, value and competence.
Preckwinkle and Emanuel are in touch — with these demanding times, and with the challenges that face individuals and employers.
Then there’s Pat Quinn, a governor whose personal decency and love for his state are givens. Right there, the comparison to his fellow Democratic execs abruptly shifts into uncomfortable, unfavorable contrasts:
The rapid readiness for leadership that Preckwinkle and Emanuel exude is terrible fortune for Quinn. At a time when state government needs a tightly focused agenda and a leader with firm resolve — attributes for which Preckwinkle and Emanuel already are renowned — Quinn in Year Three of his governorship still is all reaction and appeasement. Watching Preckwinkle and Emanuel excel only reinforces a verdict we offered last autumn: Strength, constancy, innovation, iconoclasm, the courage to speak truth to power — by each of these leadership metrics, Quinn stands bent and pale.
Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle ran for the job as a reformer, but on Tuesday she found herself defending a decision to put two former southwest suburban state lawmakers on the county payroll.
Michael Carberry and John O’Sullivan served short stints last year as appointees to the Illinois House, but were out of office in January because they didn’t seek election last fall.
Now Carberry has landed as a nearly $100,000-a-year deputy director job in the county’s facilities management department. And O’Sullivan, the Worth Township Democratic committeeman, is making $85,000 a year as a regional superintendent at the Cook County Forest Preserve District.
Former County Board President Todd Stroger was criticized during his term for hiring the politically-connected. On election night last November, a victorious Preckwinkle told supporters she planned to “clean up county government by ending patronage.”
* The BGA helped do the probe, and the BGA’s director is quoted in the original Fox Chicago story…
Better Government Association Executive Director Andy Shaw said you’d have to be a pretty big believer in coincidences not to see the politics here.
“It sounds like a couple of guys went down to Springfield, did the bidding of the party to pass the tax hike, and as a result they’re awarded with jobs in Cook County,” Shaw said. “This sounds like business as usual and on its face it’s troubling.”
Even more troubling is the fact that O’Sullivan was fired by Cook County after the county’s inspector general found he had been falsifying his time card while working as a laborer at Stroger Hospital. O’Sullivan appealed the firing and got his job back. He said he was framed for not supporting Todd Stroger.
“Retaliation from that administration is what brought upon these bogus charges. Unproved on all the charges. And I received full back pay and benefits,” said O’Sullivan.
But Inspector General Pat Blanchard told us he stands by his finding that O’Sullivan was ripping off taxpayers. Preckwinkle said she never considered that allegation before awarding O’Sullivan with a plum county job.
Preckwinkle has a reputation for “being above politics.” Apparently, she’s not. That doesn’t make her corrupt or venal or anything. It makes her a (gasp!) politician. These things happen.
* Meanwhile, this is from the last part of the spring session and I simply forgot to post it. It’s a very good lesson for legislators in how not to deal with the media…
For the CTU, the rally sets the stage for another fight on Wednesday, when the new school board deals with a proposed longer school day and contractually-obligated four percent teacher pay raises.
“I don’t believe in slavery on any level. I don’t believe we should work for free. Ever. And we’re not going to,” said Lewis.
Slavery? Whew. That’s some overly charged rhetoric if ever there was overly charged rhetoric, especially considering this…
CPS officials say that even if the 4 percent hike is denied, 75 percent of teachers will still get a pay increase next year. They will qualify for step increases of 3 to 5 percent granted for more years of service.
Newly-seated Chicago School Board members ruled Wednesday that the cash-strapped CPS system does not have the money to cover promised 4 percent raises for teachers and other union workers.
The Chicago Teachers Union now has until the end of the day Monday to decide whether to reopen their contract with the district to negotiate on the issue.
The unanimous decision came after board members were told that nearly three-quarters of the system’s teachers will get some kind of raise — at a cost to the district of $35 million — even if the board refused to cover the 4 percent raises — which cost $80 million. […]
The vote came even after officials said the district’s deficit isn’t as bad as had been thought. During the meeting, new Chief Operating Officer Tim Cawley pinned the system’s current shortfall at $712 million, down from the $720 million the district had previously estimated. Still, plugging that budget hole, Cawley said, will be a “daunting challenge.”
“It would make no sense for this brand new board to shortchange the children who need a quality teacher in every classroom by voting down teachers’ raises. In terms of salary, CPS ranks 71st in salary for high school teachers and 38th in salary for elementary school teachers in this state,” said Karen Lewis with the Chicago Teachers’ Union.
“Mr. Brizzard, come to the school that my daughter goes to, without your suit and tie, just come up there unannounced and you’ll see what these teachers go through. So before you say, ‘Well we don’t have that money,’ the money is in that budget. The school has that money. If you go through the fraud and waste, there’s more than $100 million,” said parent Ronald Jackson.
They noticed that not all of them had the same number of pages for one of the phone calls in their transcript binders.
Some jurors noticed that there were nine pages for the phone call but others noticed there were five pages. The jurors all agreed they would not go further with that phone call until they got an answer.
Turns out that they were supposed to only have five pages for that phone call. Court security will go in and remove the pages for those who had the fuller transcript.
It was a good hint of what jurors are up to, however. The phone call in dispute was a Nov. 14, 2008 between the former governor and his brother, Robert. In it, they discuss Dick Durbin as well as fund-raiser Raghu Nayak.
* Maybe three things. First, prosecutors advised jurors to study the transcripts in chronological order. If that’s what they’re doing, then they have a long way to go before the last recordings on December 8th.
* Secondly, WLS had an interesting take on the jury as a whole…
Jury consultant and attorney, Mary Griffitts, founder of Trial Consulting Enterprises in Dallas, Texas tells WLS Radio’s Monica DeSantis, “women especially will take the time to make sure that everyone has a voice and everyone has been heard.”
Griffitts says the length of deliberations will take longer as “women are geared that way to listen to each other to talk about issues.”
The jury of 11 women and one male also has the added pressure of being the second trial jury and thus will do all they have to so a hung jury doesn’t occur again.
* And here’s the transcript of what may be the relevant aspect of that particular day’s conversation between Blagojevich and his brother Robert…
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: Ah, here just, by, information. I got two faxes that, from Ragu Nayak from various Indian organizations, and I can give you the names if you care, but I guess I assume they’re high-powered Indian organizations that are advocating that you choose Jesse Jr. as the next senator.
BLAGOJEVICH: Yeah don’t worry about it.
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: Okay, so I’ll, I’m just, by, by this discussion I’ve passed that information onto you.
BLAGOJEVICH: No. You know what, it’s better if you don’t pass it onto me. Just say no, I didn’t get a chance to send it to him.
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: Mm’kay.
BLAGOJEVICH: Yeah, no need to say you gave that to me.
(PAUSE)
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: Okay.
BLAGOJEVICH: You don’t…
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: Okay.
BLAGOJEVICH: …let him wonder if I saw it or not. Why should I like, a-, assume that I did and now I’m, you know rejecting them. You know what I’m saying?
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH I hear ya. I hear ya.
(PAUSE)
BLAGOJEVICH: When’s the Indian fundraiser? When is that?
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: It’s, ah, I think it’s December 6th.
BLAGOJEVICH: Yeah. Okay.
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: Which is wh-,…
BLAGOJEVICH: I’m not gonna, you know, here again, that’s another tactical reason for waiting on this decision.
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: And let me give you one other and that is the Hispanic event’s the 5th.
BLAGOJEVICH: Correct.
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: And Gutierrez, I mean, I talked to Juan Ochoa last night. Evidently everybody’s working real hard on this thing, obviously to support you, but also to support Gutierrez. Now I don’t know if it’s to be chosen as senator but they just, it was just supporting Louie and you. Although it’s all, you know it’s all your money.
(PAUSE)
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: So I, I totally agree with you tactically. I think you’re right on.
(PAUSE)
BLAGOJEVICH: Yeah.
(PAUSE)
ROBERT BLAGOJEVICH: That is to drag it out. Not drag it out, but be deliberate.
Illinois Gaming Board chairman Aaron Jaffe yesterday (Tuesday) afternoon summed up his opinion of the new Illinois gambling expansion bill this way:
“You can’t make perfume out of a pile of garbage.”
In a prepared statement read at the beginning of Tuesday’s meeting in downtown Chicago, Jaffe, a retired state representative from Skokie and Cook County judge, charged that the new gaming bill is vague, massive, “very, very bad constitutionally” and could lead the state into years of litigation.
“This bill is not funded like video gaming is not funded,” added Jaffe. He said that if the bill remains in tact and Gov. Quinn gives his stamp of approval, the gaming board will need to double its manpower to adequately regulate the huge increase in state licensed gambling. […]
“I’d like to know how these areas were selected,” he said. “The board spent months on the 10th license location.” That 10th license is for the Rivers Casino in Des Plaines. Besides Chicago, the other four casinos are slated to be located in Rockford, Danville, Park City and a South suburb. He also questioned the wisdom of permitting Chicago-owned slot machines at O’Hare and Midway without gaming board oversight.
“No one should get a license without being fully vetted,” he said.
[ *** End Of Update *** ]
* The Chicago Crime Commission has a new poll which the group claims shows that Illinoisans oppose the new gaming bill. From a press release…
Voters in Chicago and throughout Illinois strongly oppose the gambling expansion bill recently passed by the Illinois legislature, according to a new survey commissioned by the Chicago Crime Commission. The survey also reveals that Illinoisans would veto the gambling legislation and ask for greater review of future proposals.
“Governor Quinn has said repeatedly that he wants to hear from anyone with an opinion on the gambling expansion issue and today voters from throughout Illinois responded to his request,” according to J.R. Davis, Chairman and President of the Chicago Crime Commission. “If the average voter could sit down with the Governor, they would tell him this legislation is bad for Illinois and that they had little input into the decision making process,” he added.
DO YOU SUPPORT OR OPPOSE THE GAMING LEGISLATION THAT HAS BEEN PASSED BY THE STATE LEGISLATURE THAT WILL GREATLY EXPAND GAMBLING AND CLAIMS TO BE THE ANSWER TO THE FINANCIAL PROBLEMS FACING ILLINOIS?
Hardly unbiaased. Nobody, for instance, claims that the bill is the “answer to the financial problems” facing the state.
THE GAMING LEGISLATION THAT PROVIDES FOR MASSIVE EXPANSION OF GAMBLING, SUCH AS NEW CASINOS IN CHICAGO AND THE SUBURBS AS WELL AS SLOT MACHINES AT THE AIRPORTS AND RACETRACKS WILL BE HARMFUL TO THE QUALITY OF LIFE FOR ILLINOIS RESIDENTS.
* The poll was conducted by TelOpinion Research. I checked the pollster’s Web page…
Whether it was helping elect a Governor in Maine, a new Congressman in Louisiana or predicting the outcome of the United States Senate race in North Carolina, Tel Opinion Research had another successful year in helping elect Republicans throughout the United States.
Once again, Tel Opinion Research worked with Senate Republicans in North Carolina to help win the largest number of seats in North Carolina history and take control of the State Senate. We helped Illinois House Republicans structure their messages, and were in 66 congressional districts across the country.
I sure hope the Illinois House Republicans got better questions out of the pollster than these…
THE MONEY FROM TAXES ON CASINO GAMBLING THAT WILL END UP IN THE STATE’S TREASURY WILL NOT OFFSET THE HUMAN PROBLEMS AND NEGATIVE IMPACT ON SOCIETY THAT ARE ASSOCIATED WITH CASINO GAMBLING IN PLACES LIKE LAS VEGAS AND ATLANTIC CITY.
* This result, however, is useful. The question asked for right direction/wrong track in “your area of Illinois”…
* And so is this one. The question asked favorability ratings on the Illinois state legislature…
Leaders from the agricultural community gathered at the Statehouse Tuesday to urge the Governor to sign SB 744, the gaming expansion bill, because of its many benefits to agribusiness.
Supporters said SB 744 includes an agricultural component to the legislation, which includes maximum annual funding in the following areas:
• $5 million for county fairs
• $10 million for soil and water conversation districts
• $4 million for Cooperative Extension – match 100% of local funds
• $1 million for the Forestry Fund for CREP Forestry Assistance Program
• $2.5 million for the State’s historic sites
• $2.5 million Transfers to Parks and Conservation Fund for operations costs
• $100,000 in equine research to Illinois public universities
“The gaming provisions at the at the State Fairgrounds included in SB 744 also establishes the Future of Agriculture Fund, which would direct funding through the Illinois Department of Agriculture to county fairs, the Illinois Association of FFA (formerly Future Farmers of America) and the University of Illinois Extension 4-H programs. These programs are vital to fostering young’s people’s interest in agricultural careers,” explained Margaret Vaughn, Government Affairs Director for the Illinois Association of Agricultural Fairs (IAAF), who worked towards the passage of SB 744.
* I grew up going to the Iroquois County Fair every year, and Marvin Perzee has been running that fair for as long as I can remember. Marvin wants the gaming bill passed…
Marvin Perzee lives an hour and a half from Chicago, Danville and the other proposed casinos in Illinois, but as president of the Iroquois County Fair, he is one of the biggest supporters of gambling expansion in the state.
Perzee and a handful of other downstate, county fair officials visited the Capitol on Tuesday to tell Gov. Pat Quinn to sign the recently approved casino legislation.
Perzee said gambling in Chicago would pay for his fair in tiny Watseka.
“Now we’re all in trouble financially, and we need a dedicated source of monies,” said Perzee.
Lawmakers designed the gambling expansion to pump money from the new casinos and other gambling venues into Illinois’ beleaguered horse-racing industry. Money from the horsemen and horse tracks is then pumped back into the state budget and spent on local county fairs.
Perzee said that money is then spent in local communities.
The fair’s address may be Watseka, but it’s closer to the far tinier Crescent City. Going to that fair is like stepping back in time. Anyway, if Perzee is for the gaming bill, then you know that other ag interests are fully on board.
* Steve Brubaker, a lobbyist for the Illinois Harness Horsemen’s Association, has some advice for Gov. Quinn about how to “fix” the gaming bill…
Brubaker did have some logical, if somewhat cynical, strategic advice on how Quinn might use his amendatory veto to reduce the scope of the bill, and still get those changes through the Legislature: By only angering the lawmakers who voted “no” the first time.
Part of the bill would allow the expansion of existing casinos like the Casino Queen. That part was put in there to try to get lawmakers from existing casino communities on board, but it mostly didn’t work. Metro East lawmakers and others representing casino areas mostly voted against the bill, because the existing casinos don’t want competition from new casinos and “racinos” at the horse tracks.
So by gutting the provision that allows existing casinos to expand, Quinn could claim to have scaled back the legislation, and the only lawmakers he’d lose in the approval vote are those were already opposed anyway. As Brubaker put it: “What, are they going to vote, ‘No, no!’?”
* Earlier this month, the Illinois ACLU asked the US Justice Department to investigate “the substantial racial disparate impact cause by consent searches conducted by Illinois State Police troopers of Hispanic and African American motorists.” The ACLU took a look at available data and concluded…
Data demonstrates that almost all motorists – between 94% and 99% — consent to a search when asked by an ISP trooper, suggesting that the coercive nature of the encounter renders the “consent” not truly voluntary. […]
…Hispanic and African American motorists are far more likely than white motorists to be subjected to consent searches by ISP troopers. Hispanic motorists were 2.7 to 4.0 times more likely to be consent searches (in the years between 2004 and 2009), and African Americans motorists were 1.8 to 3.2 times more likely. Remarkably, white motorists who consent to searches by ISP troopers are far more likely to have contraband than compared to Hispanic and African American motorists. [Emphasis added.]
Keep in mind that this is about “consent” searches, not searches based on reasonable cause. Those searches can be done without the driver’s consent.
“These [consent] searches are carried out on a hunch, and it’s clear the Illinois State Police have hunches more frequently with black or brown drivers, and that those hunches turn out to be wrong more frequently for black and brown drivers,” said Harvey Grossman, legal director for the ACLU of Illinois.
Grossman said the group decided to ask the Department of Justice to intervene because it would be quicker than a court case, and because the agency’s civil rights division has taken an active role under Obama.
A spokeswoman for the federal agency says it will review the complaint.
The ACLU’s figures show only 177 state police consent searches produced any contraband, and more than half of it came from white drivers. Mostly what troopers found was alcohol and drug paraphernalia. They found weapons only 14 times and more than 50 grams of drugs only eight times.
“Consent searches are a tool recognized and authorized by the U.S. Supreme Court,” department spokesman Scott Compton said in a statement. “In 2009, ISP requested consent from 2 out of every 1,000 motorists stopped. This statistic demonstrates that troopers … are not abusing the use of consent searches.”
He said state police were less likely than other departments to seek permission to search minority drivers. Overall, 2 percent of minority drivers were asked to allow a search during traffic stops in 2009, but among stops by the state police the figure was only 0.4 percent, down from 1.35 percent in 2005.
* But now the governor is stepping in and wants a review…
Gov. Pat Quinn has asked the head of the Illinois State Police to review allegations of racial bias in the department’s handling of searches during traffic stops.
* In other police-related news, Illinois’ extremely harsh eavesdropping law is racking up more outrageous felony charges against alleged violators, including Michael Allison…
This Robinson, Ill., man is facing four counts of violating the eavesdropping law for the recordings he made of police officers and a judge. Allison was suing the city to challenge a local zoning ordinance that prevented him from enjoying his hobby fixing up old cars: The municipal government was seizing his cars from his property and forcing him to pay to have them returned. Allison believed the local police were harassing him in retaliation for his lawsuit, so he began to record his conversations with them.
When Allison was eventually charged with violating the zoning ordinance, he asked for a court reporter to ensure there would be a record of his trial. He was told that misdemeanor charges didn’t entitle him to a court reporter. So Allison told court officials he’d be recording his trial with a digital recorder.
When Allison walked into the courtroom the day of his trial, the judge had him arrested for allegedly violating her right to privacy. Police then confiscated Allison’s digital recorder, where they also found the recordings he’d made of his conversations with cops.
Allison has no prior criminal record. If convicted, he faces up to 75 years in prison.
* Related…
* Jody Weis: My unused police plan showed city had enough officers
In a cellphone interview after an hour-long meeting with CME Group Inc. Executive Chairman Terrence Duffy, Mr. Cullerton said a recent hike in the state’s corporate income tax rate was “bigger than I wanted” and might be adjusted as soon as the Legislature’s fall veto session.
But any cut would have to be “revenue neutral” — offset by revenue from closing corporate “tax loopholes,” Mr. Cullerton said. Or, he added, the rate could be cut if revenue from the recent hike exceed expectations. […]
“We hope we can bring it (the tax rate) down,” Mr. Cullerton said. “We’ll talk with the Republicans to see if we can close the loopholes.”
Added the president, “We in the Senate always wanted to lower the corporate rate….It’s gone higher than we wanted it to go….We’re open to suggestions.”
Closing corporate loopholes always sounds very easy, but it’s definitely not. Those loopholes were put in place by powerful interests. Killing them off means going up against those very same powerful interests.
John Atkinson, who had been exploring a Democratic House bid from a Chicago area district, suspended his campaign on Tuesday, faced with the prospects of tough primaries in either of the two districts he was considering running from.
“I believe that it is in the best interest of my community and the state for me to suspend my exploratory campaign and support Bill Foster in his effort to become my Congressman in the new 11th Congressional District,” Atkinson said in a statement.
…Adding… From Bill Foster…
“In his words and in his actions, John Atkinson put his principles and his love of country ahead of political considerations, traits that would make him a great public servant. I am very proud and humbled to have his support. I share John’s concerns about job creation and the direction of our nation, particularly Republican efforts to end Medicare as we know it and balance the budget on the backs of Illinois seniors . There is a right way and a wrong way to get our financial house in order, and I look forward to a vigorous debate about these issues with people like John Atkinson at my side,” said Bill Foster.
Veterans Affairs Assistant Secretary Tammy Duckworth submitted her resignation, the VA confirmed for me on Monday.
One of her options will be to return to the Chicago suburbs to run for a House seat from the new 8th Congressional District and I bet she does. […]
If Duckworth ran for the House again, she would have a much stronger position than the first time around. Her resume is more formidable — since 2006, she has run the Illinois veterans agency and has been one of the top VA officials in Washington — and she would be running from a more Democratic district. […]
There is a potential for a Democratic primary. Former Deputy Illinois Treasurer Raja Krishnamoorthi has already announced he will run. He lost his Democratic primary election for state comptroller in 2010.
* There’s more than just a “potential” for a primary. Krishnamoorthi has already lined up several endorsements, including Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle…
Krishnamoorthi announced he has the endorsement of Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, State Rep. Jack Franks, DuPage Democratic Party Executive Director Amy Rohrer, Metropolitan Water Reclamation District commissioner Mike Alvarez , and Cook County Board of Review commissioner Larry Rogers Jr.
That’s not a completely killer lineup, of course, but it’s enough to give one pause. Krishnamoorthi has also provided the media with a breakdown of his performance in the new 8th District during last year’s Democratic primary for comptroller. Click here to view it. According to his campaign, Krishnamoorthi scored 62 percent against David Miller in those precincts.
Democrat Bill Foster, announced some fairly impressive endorsements in his comeback bid in the new west suburban 11th District.
Included: former U.S. Sen. Adlai Stevenson III, former Illinois Comptroller Dawn Clark Netsch, state Sen. Linda Holmes, D-Aurora, and state Rep. Linda Chapa La Via, D-Aurora.
And Mr. Foster reports that he’s given to a local food bank the $1,000 campaign donation he received from “Weinergate” figure U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner. Mr. Foster notes that the donation from the New York Democrat came more than three years ago, but Republicans have been yapping about the money.
Mike Frerichs said he gave a congressional race a lot of thought but has decided to run for re-election to the state Senate.
Frerichs said Monday that he considered a challenge to U.S. Rep. Tim Johnson, R-Urbana, in the new 13th Congressional District that includes Champaign-Urbana, Decatur, most of Springfield, Decatur and parts of Bloomington-Normal.
The marginally Republican district extends all the way to Madison County and the Illinois suburbs in the St. Louis metropolitan area.
“I’ve thought about this and I think I could have a good run for Congress. I think I could spend the next year and a half being a good senator for the area. I think I could also be a good father. But I don’t think I could be all three,” Frerichs said. “So I think I’m going to take a pass at Congress now and concentrate on running for re-election to the state Senate.”
Now that state Sen. Dave Koehler has announced his run for Congress, he’s working quickly to get the nuts and bolts of his operation in place.
When we talked early last week, he was still working to hire a campaign manager, and said most of what he’s spent time on since his announcement has involved having a phone glued to his ear.
The campaign plans a swing through both the Quad Cities and Rockford this week, trying to hit up the other major cities in a district that stretches from central Illinois all the way north to the Wisconsin border.
As for response to his run? “It’s been quite encouraging so far,” he says.
Koehler’s first formal fundraiser for the race also is on the books. It will be June 24 at the Jay Janssen Law Center in Downtown Peoria from 5 to 7 p.m. (C.K.)
* Related…
* Proposal would end pensions of convicted former congressmen, but not Blagojevich
* Redistricting wears on Republican freshmen: A House GOP source, for example, noted that Rep. Adam Kinzinger, 33, would bring “more energy, fundraising ability and a brighter future” to a showdown with the 67-year-old Don Manzullo, who hasn’t had a serious reelection challenge since he was first elected in 1992.
Wrigley Field is “a dump” that could be a bigger problem than expected for new Chicago Cubs owner Tom Ricketts, according to MLB Network analyst Peter Gammons.
“The problem that (Ricketts) has, and the Ricketts family has a serious issue, is they’re going to have to understand it’s not only rebuilding personnel,” Gammons said Friday on “The Mully and Hanley Show” on WSCR-AM 670. “They got to make that ballpark livable, it’s a dump, Wrigley Field. They’re going to have to spent $200-and-something million on re-renovating Wrigley Field, do what the Boston owners did with Fenway Park. And the investment is far greater than, I think, maybe they realize. That the amount of work that Wrigley Field needs is, there’s a ton of money that has to go into rebuilding that place.”
The White Sox’s series with the Cubs is two days away, but manager Ozzie Guillen had no problem warming up for his dreaded visit to Wrigley Field.
Guillen emphasized he holds no grudges against the Cubs, their front office, manager Lou Piniella or their fans.
“But one thing about Wrigley Field, I puke every time I go there,” Guillen said Sunday morning. “That’s just to be honest. And if Cub fans don’t like the way I talk about Wrigley Field, it’s just Wrigley Field. I don’t say anything about the fans or anything now. But Wrigley Field, they got to respect my opinion. That’s the way I feel.”
[That above quote is from a couple of years ago, but it still applies.]
Publicly, a reasonable owner would say Wrigley is a charming ballpark in need of loving renovations. Privately, you might hear a reasonable owner utter the word “dump” now and then.
“Obviously, we love Wrigley Field,’’ general manager Jim Hendry said Monday before the Cubs faced the Brewers. “Nobody wants the field to be any different, or the ambiance of the great atmosphere here.
“But I don’t think it’s any secret the plans that Tom and his family have to enlighten the facilities and make it better for fans, but also make it better for the players and more productive for the players. I think that’s going to be taken care of the next few years.’’
The Ricketts family didn’t get many favors from the previous owners, who put about as much effort into keeping up Wrigley as they did into keeping up Stonehenge. There is plenty of work to be done and revenue streams to be explored.
* But here’s the problem. The Ricketts family took on so much debt when they bought the team that they are now in violation of the league’s debt rules…
Long one of baseball’s most financially solid franchises, the Cubs find themselves on a list of teams on the wrong side of Major League Baseball’s debt rules.
They are one of nine franchises in violation of MLB’s debt service rules, according to information presented in a confidential briefing at the owners meetings last month and confirmed to the Los Angeles Times by three people familiar with the presentation. […]
With only $120.4 million in guaranteed salaries on the books beyond 2011, the Cubs’ debt issues would not appear to be tied to their roster. By comparison, the Yankees owe $469.3 million to players under contract. The White Sox owe $207.8 million to players.
More likely, the Cubs’ appearance on the list is the result of the financing stipulations between Tom Ricketts and his family and Tribune Co. to assume control of the team in October 2009. The $845 million deal included Wrigley Field and part of Comcast SportsNet Chicago.
In other words, any renovations on that “dump” may have to be paid for in cash. I’m not even sure that outsourcing the remodeling debt to state government (via the Sports Facilities Authority or some such agency) would work.
So, Cub fans, it looks like you’re stuck with the dump.
* By the way, I’ll be at a non-dumpy park on Monday watching my team beat that North Side Triple-A club.
The bill signed by Quinn to much fanfare in Chicago on Monday was the product of months of negotiation that involved the state’s teachers unions, education reform groups and lawmakers from both parties. State Sen. Kimberly Lightford, D-Maywood, led the talks.
This is in sharp contrast to recent attempts at education reform in other states, where legislators have vilified unions and, by extension, teachers themselves. In Florida, lawmakers sought to link teacher pay to performance on standardized tests. They didn’t invite teachers to the table as they drafted their bill, causing tremendous public outcry from teachers and parents alike and leading to the bill’s veto by Gov. Charlie Crist.
The governors of Wisconsin and Ohio have drawn battle lines with teachers unions by making wholesale grabs at public employee unions’ collective bargaining rights. Ohio’s reform bill, signed into law in April, imposes a merit pay system for teachers and is being hotly contested.
We wonder how any state can purport to improve its education system without listening to the people who work in classrooms. We also have serious problems with the message these kinds of imposed “reforms” send to aspiring teachers.
All of this makes Illinois’ new reform law remarkable.
* Mayor Emanuel was asked repeatedly by reporters at another event later in the day why the CTU’s president was a no-show at the governor’s big bill-signing ceremony. He said he didn’t know. There was apparently a “scheduling conflict“…
A spokesperson for the Chicago Teachers Union says union president Karen Lewis did not attend the bill-signing ceremony, due to a scheduling conflict.
“This bill is the result of painstaking negotiations. We commend Senator Lightford and Representative Flynn-Curry for leading the way through the process. We look forward to continuing work that will improve schools, smaller class sizes, reducing the focus on standardized testing and equitable funding for all schools throughout the state, ” CTU spokesperson Liz Brown said in a statement.
But notably absent from Monday’s signing ceremony was Chicago Teachers Union President Karen Lewis, who had characterized parts of the bill as an attack on teachers’ collective-bargaining rights. Lewis did not attend the event because she was “busy focusing on the budget” ahead of a special school board meeting Wednesday, said union spokeswoman Liz Brown.
* But not all teachers union leaders were as skeptical…
Carpentersville-based Community Unit District 300 relied largely on seniority when it sent out 363 layoff notices earlier this year. But those letters could have ended up in different hands under sweeping education reforms that became law Monday.
Future school layoffs will be based more on performance under the new rules, signed by Gov. Pat Quinn as part of a major package of reforms intended to keep the best teachers in the classroom.
The law also makes it harder for teachers to strike and makes it easier to fire tenured teachers.
“I think in the long run, it’s going to be better for educating kids,” said Jane Russell, president of West Suburban Teachers Union, which covers parts of western Cook and DuPage counties.
* What about that longer school day provision? Progress Illinois takes a look…
The CPS school year is made up of 170 classroom instructional days. High schools get 421 minutes or about 7 hours in a school day, while the elementary school day is 354 minutes or 5 hours and 45 minutes long, CPS spokesman Bobby Otter said. The amount of time in the elementary school day is the number being used by Emanuel and the media in reference to the short length of the district’s academic day. According to a 2008 study by the Center for American Progress, that number is indeed the shortest school day amongst the nation’s large urban school districts.
Nationwide, the average number of hours in a school day (not just instructional time) is 6.64 hours, while the average number of days in the school year is 180, according to a schools and staffing survey obtained by Progress Illinois from the U.S. Dept. of Education’s National Center for Educational Statistics. Statewide, the average school day is 6.5 hours and the average school year is 177 days long. Texas has the longest average school day of 7.17 hours, while Florida has the longest school year with 184 school days.
The longer-school-day saga first hit Chicago this year with talks about bringing recess back to CPS elementary schools — which would also lengthen the school day, althought it would not affect instructional hours. Schools currently have the autonomy to determine when, or if, they have recess and breaks.
As for the the teacher’s union, CTU’s spokeswoman Liz Brown said there have been previous discussions about moving teachers’ 45-minute break, now taken at the end of the day, to the middle of the day, which would effectively lengthen the school day although, again, not necessarily instructional hours. While no proposal has been released on what a longer day would look like, Brown said, “It’s all in the implementation. It is tricky. There is a lot of issues — facility, safety, price on after-school programs.”
* But while some of the new law’s focus on Chicago takes effect immediately, other areas will only see change over time…
The new law takes effect immediately, but many schools will have to wait until contracts that have been negotiated this summer expire before they feel the effect of the new law.
Matt Vanover, spokesman for the Illinois State Board of Education, said many downstate districts won’t see any changes until at least the 2012-2013 school year, and some may not see any changes until the 2016 school year.
“The part of (the law) that deals with teacher tenure; that’s phased in over a period of years,” said Vanover. “You’ll see some schools begin to implement that in the next couple of years. Each year after that, additional schools would come on board.”
Alton Community Unit School District No. 11 Superintendent David Elson said his district is in the last year of a three-year deal with local teachers. He said he expects to begin negotiating a new contract in October.
“We will (of course) comply with state law as soon as we negotiate a new agreement,” said Elson.
* Even so, Downstate administrators seem enthused…
Salem Community High School Superintendent Brad Detering says the legislation makes the bargaining process between the teachers and schools more transparent for the community. “Niether side has the ability to hold things as a bargaining chip, and when you’re required to publicize your last, best offer after an impasse has been declared, I think it gives community members an opportunity to look and see if each side is being realistic,” he says.
The Superintendent also says it gives schools more options to handle sub-par tenure instructors. “No one is going out and looking for someone to dismiss, but if someone isn’t doing their job and not taking care of things, it does create a mechanism for that,” he says. “It also gives an opportunity for teachers who transfer from other districts to reach tenure earlier and also gives non-tenure teachers a chance to obtain tenure after three years if they are excellent.” Detering says the bill was the first collaborative effort between all of the parties involved. He says the only real drawback is some additional record-keeping.
* And education funding remains an issue, of course…
The challenge now turns to putting such changes in place amid financial uncertainties and state budget woes, educators caution. Illinois owes public schools $1 billion in unpaid bills. The spending plan for next year would slash $171 million in education funding.
“When you fund education as it should be funded … perhaps it will support the principles of (the law),” said Sen. Kimberly Lightford, D-Maywood, who led negotiations among union leaders, reform groups, policymakers, parents, school managers and rank-and-file teachers.
Illinois is so hard up for money that it’s studying the possibility of selling ads on state license plates.
Yes, woe is us. We are certainly one of a kind in our hopelessness. Or are we? From last year…
Texas became the first to sell corporate license plates last November, says Kim Drummond, spokeswoman for My Plates, which produces the plates for the state. Legislators in Illinois and Florida have proposed similar programs, and Virginia is looking at a program of special plates for business fleets registered in the state.
* As the Rod Blagojevich jurors deliberate, let’s take a peek at Jim Warren’s column about former Mayor Daley…
And since I was rushing back to the trial of former Gov. Rod Blagojevich, I asked about him. Mr. Daley is wary of kicking a guy while down, so I got the response I did when he was mayor.
“Cuckoo.”
* The Question: What one word would you use to sum up Rod Blagojevich’s tenure as governor?
* Capitol Fax readers have been learning about Stand for Children’s attempt at big-footing Illinois politics since last October. It took the mainstream media months to catch up, even after Stand for Children accumulated and spent huge money during the election, and even as the group’s major issue, education reform, played out at the Statehouse.
Today, Gov. Pat Quinn will sign the education reform bill that probably wouldn’t have even been introduced without the group’s involvement. So, it’s the Tribune’s turn to catch up…
As Edelman focused on Illinois last fall, he saw an opportunity. A new state law set to take effect Jan. 1 would for the first time limit the size of political donations, but the window was closing fast.
“I didn’t need a rocket scientist,” Edelman said.
He shook the money tree.
The people who quickly poured big bucks into Stand for Children’s campaign kitty include a Chicago-centric crew of philanthropists whose interests in improving education coincide with a willingness to write big checks. […]
The group didn’t spent it all, and it’s now sitting on about $2.9 million, a significant sum now that the biggest check an individual can write a political action committee is $10,000.
* Speaking of campaign contributions, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange gave big bucks last year to politicians who turned around and raised the company’s taxes - a move that Merc’s parent company says could force it to leave Illinois…
The exchange has donated $1.27 million to Illinois politicians in the last two decades, with almost $500,000 of those campaign contributions coming in the last 1-1/2 years, including: […]
* Two contributions together worth $150,000 to state Democratic Party leader Michael Madigan’s efforts to continue as speaker of the Illinois House.
* A $50,000 donation to Quinn’s general election run last year, after the exchange gave $40,000 to the governor during the Democratic primary campaign.
* CME’s estimates of its state tax liability means it will pay about 5 percent of all new corporate income taxes generated by January’s tax hike. The company certainly has a point about the unfairness of the corporate tax structure here…
But in the April interview, Duffy said the tax hike felt like a slap coming right after the company’s investment in Aurora, which created a lot of jobs in the state.
He also noted the state’s tax structure hits some companies harder than others.
A restructuring of the state’s tax law restricted the tax to profit on in-state sales and eliminated property value and payroll size from the formula. The change benefited multinational manufacturers with sales all over the world.
In fact, two-thirds of corporations filing Illinois returns owed no taxes in 2008.
“I’m not suggesting I have the answers,” Duffy said in April. But, he said, it would be better if everybody paid a little.
CME Group may not only seek an incentive package. According to sources, the company is considering a request for a change to its industry’s corporate income tax formula. […]
Revising “apportionment rules” in this way would require the approval of the General Assembly. Already, some industries have different rules. For instance, airlines operate under a different tax formula than other transportation companies.
If the changes being considered by CME Group are approved, Illinois’ overall corporate income tax rate of 9.5 percent would remain the same for Chicago’s exchanges. What is subject to that rate would change, in order to lower the company’s tax burden. […]
CME Group is expected to argue that because of the way its business is structured and conducted, the company had the highest effective state and local corporate income tax rate among the top 50 Illinois public companies that paid those taxes in 2010. […]
According to an analysis of public filings obtained by the Tribune, CME Group’s state and local income tax rate was 8.9 percent in 2010. It was the only company in the 8-9 percent range; four companies had a rate between 7 and 8 percent.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel said today he remains committed to phasing out a corporate employee “head tax” that brings in about $19 million annually to the city.
“I believe it’s a disincentive for companies,” Emanuel said at a news conference to announce United Airlines will be bringing 1,300 more jobs to Chicago. “My goal is — and it will reflect it when I do my budget — that we will roll back a buck a year, so that over my term, it will be the $19 million that is quote unquote raised, will be eliminated.”
CME Group Inc. is looking to sell most of the Chicago Board of Trade building, putting one of Chicago’s most iconic structures on the market.
The disclosure comes less than a week after the exchange operator warned it may leave Illinois to avoid an increase in corporate taxes. Yet a CME spokesman said the sale of the Board of Trade building isn’t connected to discussions over a potential move and declined to say whether it would make an exit easier.
The 80-year-old Art Deco building is comprised of three towers and houses the trading floors for agricultural commodities such as corn and wheat and financial derivatives such as interest-rate futures. It was designated as a historic landmark in 1978 and anchors Chicago’s financial district.
CME said it has hired Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. and Holly Duran Real Estate Partners LLC to market the north and south towers, which include the trading floors for agriculture commodities. CME said it would lease back the space it currently occupies in the buildings, including the trading pits.
* Three stories over the weekend suggest the gaming bill could be lopped off a bit. AP…
Senate President John Cullerton has put a hold on the measure as he and other Democrats consider ways to scale it back. That hold stops the clock on the legislation and buys legislators time before an upcoming special session.
If Quinn amends the bill, the House and Senate must approve his changes. But removing proposed sites in Chicago, Rockford, Danville, the south suburbs or Park City, or dropping the racing components, would reverse support from lawmakers representing those interests.
“I control the bill. I’m the only one who can call the bill, and I’m the only one who moves the bill,” said state Sen. Terry Link (D-Waukegan), whose district includes Park City. “Do you really think I would allow the bill to move forward without mine being in it?”
Multiply Link’s stance by 95—the number of lawmakers who voted for the bill — and you can understand how changes could sink it. It received the bare minimum 30 votes to advance from the Senate.
Link said he plans to meet with Quinn in the next few weeks to discuss the possibility of follow-up legislation to address Quinn’s concerns. The goal would be to convince Quinn to sign the bill on the condition a follow-up bill might later scale down the scope.
State senators are looking for ways to shrink the size of a major casino expansion lawmakers just approved in the hopes of avoiding a veto by Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn, who fears too much gambling is packed into the plan.
The gambit faces two significant challenges. It’s unclear how much lawmakers would have to cut out to pass muster with the governor. And the gambling deal had so many pieces to satisfy so many interest groups, removing one could send the whole thing toppling down. […]
Rep. Lou Lang, a Skokie Democrat who sponsored the measure in the House, said he was surprised to hear his colleagues were considering changes when Quinn has yet to weigh in with specifics about what he would sign off on and what he wouldn’t.
Lang said it’s “premature” to start nixing parts of the plan, noting that negotiating such a large deal requires weighing many interests. He said peeling away some portions in an attempt to bring Quinn on board could put the whole thing in danger.
“I’ve been working on this bill for 20 years, and I finally found the right combination,” Lang said. “If slots at tracks come off, you can’t pass the bill. If the money for downstate agriculture comes off, you can’t pass the bill. If you take out casinos for Danville and Rockford, it might damage the ability to pass the bill.”
* Related…
* Gambling package hinges on Quinn decision: “I wouldn’t have voted for it if it didn’t have slots at the racetracks,” Poe said. “I’ve got an agricultural background. It’s a lot bigger business than people realize. There’s a lot of jobs that surround horseracing. We’re just losing that industry. In that main gaming bill, excluding the fairgrounds, there’s a lot of money going to (university) extension (programs), water conservation. There’s a lot going to rehabilitate 4-H, county fairs. I think that brought a lot of downstaters onboard that wouldn’t have been with that. I don’t think it would have passed without that.”
* If you’ve been wondering what’s really going on with this potential special session, read my latest syndicated newspaper column…
Illinois Senate President John Cullerton says he had a simple message for House Republican Leader Tom Cross in the waning hours of the spring legislative session: “See you in July.”
As you probably know by now, Cullerton’s Senate voted to add $430 million to the House’s austere state spending plan. The Senate initially wanted to spend a billion dollars more than the House, but many of Cullerton’s Democratic members demanded that they at least get something, so they came up with a list totaling $430 million.
House Speaker Michael Madigan couldn’t agree to the additional spending unless Leader Cross also signed off because the two had decided months earlier to stand together on the budget. Cross said he wouldn’t agree to the additional Senate spending, even though Cullerton said he’d found a way to pay for it.
So, Cullerton tacked his member requests onto the capital plan bill, which also contains road construction money. The House refused to agree to the amendment and Speaker Madigan announced that he wanted to appoint a conference committee to work out a deal over the summer.
No dice, said Cullerton. The Senate has no intention of acting on Madigan’s request and wants a new bill, he said. Cullerton could be voted down by the other three caucuses in a conference committee, so that idea is out, he said.
And despite claims by House leaders in both parties that the administration can spend money approved this fiscal year on projects next fiscal year because the state’s “lapse period” was extended out to six months, Cullerton believes that lots of road construction will stop very soon.
“They have the money,” Cullerton explained, “but they have no authority to spend it.”
Gov. Pat Quinn agrees with Cullerton, saying all construction work will have to start shutting down after June 17.
Quinn has said that a special session may have to be held sometime soon to work out this problem, or, as Cullerton put it, “The second largest road construction season in the history of Illinois will come to a halt.”
“I won’t be forcing a special session,” Cullerton said. “The road builders will.”
Cullerton promised to reduce his caucus’ budgetary add-on demand from $430 million down to $280 million. He said he’s backing away from $150 million for the General State Aid program for schools. The House’s budget keeps the official school spending level the same, Cullerton explained, but it deliberately under-funded the program by $150 million. The Legislature can come back in January and add back that cash, he said.
But how will he pay for these budget requests? Well, the Senate President said he purposely left out at least $280 million in what are known as “trouts” from the budget implementation bill to fund the increased spending he wants.
This may seem complicated, but it’s not, so stay with me.
Transfers out, or “trouts” as they’re more commonly called, are inserted into the budget implementation bill every year to transfer cash from the state’s bank account into special funds. They’re done almost as a matter of course, but Cullerton decided to short some of the trouts this year to pay for his members’ requests. But the House Republicans wouldn’t go along with the plan and that’s when Cullerton made his comment about seeing Leader Cross in July.
Cullerton also more than hinted that he plans to reintroduce his dollar a pack tax hike on cigarettes to help pay for the capital plan when the General Assembly returns — a proposal that has so far been rejected by the other three leaders.
As I write this, he’s also preparing to demand that both chambers come back to Springfield to pass a new legislative furlough plan. The Senate introduced a 12-day furlough plan, but never passed it. The House passed an identical proposal, but it’s still sitting in the Senate awaiting action.
The House, for its part, wants the Senate to come back to town on its own, back off its demand for that extra program spending and then pass the furlough bill that the House already approved. But several members of the Senate President’s Democratic caucus are itching for a fight over that extra spending, as is the governor.
For right now anyway, nobody is backing down and I’m not making any vacation plans.
* Related…
* Road builders already see effects of capital-bill impasse: Mike Sturino, president of the Illinois Road and Transportation Builders Association, said contractors have been notified by the state not to start work on projects on which bids were approved April 29.
* Finke: Lislators set to begin work on capital bill
* They’ll be back: It’s a dangerous game the Senate Democrats are playing. If they insist on pursuing the additional cash and the House doesn’t concur, they could be facing serious backlash for putting tens of thousands of laborers out of work.
* Unions have gotten the blame for the high costs at McCormick Place. But they’ve never been the real problem. It’s mostly about the contractors and the associations. Crain’s explains why…
Average drayage rates at Orlando and Las Vegas convention centers are 42% and 51% lower than McCormick Place, respectively, according to a 2009 Tradeshow Week survey. GES and Freeman say one reason is that labor costs are lower in those cities, but drayage is also 38% cheaper at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, which operates under the same labor agreements as McCormick Place.
The Stephens center uses an in-house contractor, Rosemont Exposition Services, to manage its freight.
Show management — the trade associations that stage conventions — also make good on the exhibitors’ nickel. McCormick Place leases floor space to the associations at $1.30 to $1.80 per square foot.
But associations charge exhibitors $20 to $40 per square foot. A show with 300,000 square feet of exhibitor space would pay McCormick Place up to $540,000 but collect $12 million from exhibitors — a better-than-2,000% markup. […]
In its exhibitor kit for the Digestive Disease Week Show in April, Freeman misleadingly implied exhibitors didn’t have a choice. “As the official service contractor, electrical installations must be performed by Freeman union labor,” the document reads.
Neither Freeman nor the critical-care association bothered to tell Ms. Canavan she had a choice. She saved money by choosing ETS but only after McCormick Place called to say she had that option.
Friends, colleagues and above all family remembered the late state Rep. Mark Beaubien of Barrington Hills on Friday, as a man of conscience and integrity whose embrace of people from backgrounds and mindsets very different from his own evolved over time.
“Before he was deified by you all for his tolerance, he was quite an Old Testament father,” Beaubien’s son Mark recalled, evoking a chuckle from those attending the funeral Mass at St. Anne Church in Barrington. […]
The younger Mark Beaubien said it was a wonder to watch his father evolve into a Republican legislator capable of lending support to such untraditional causes as same-sex civil unions and a woman’s right to choose whether to carry a pregnancy to term.
A statement on the back of the funeral program said, “If asked why he was one of the few Republican supporters of the Civil Union Bill, he would respond with humility and simplicity that it was simply time and we should all ‘live our own lives and speak our own values.’”
The younger Beaubien said his father died as one of his best friends, describing him as “oppressively affable.”
llinois gained nationwide notoriety in January when Governor Pat Quinn signed into law a 67% hike in the personal income tax rate while lifting the corporate tax rate to 9.5%, the fourth highest in the nation. How is that working out?
The good news is that corporate tax receipts in Springfield are up by about $300 million amid the economic recovery—though the state comptroller’s office announced in April that the state still faces $8 billion in unpaid bills. The bad news is that, according to the state’s Department of Commerce, Illinois has already shelled out some $230 million in corporate subsidies to keep more than two dozen companies from fleeing the state. And more are on the way.
Illinois has most definitely not “already shelled out some $230 million in corporate subsidies” this year. Those subsidies will be handed out over time, as many as ten years in the case of Motorola Mobility. So subtracting a decade-long subsidy from five months of corporate tax receipts to make some sort of a point is just beyond ridiculous.
* From a column written by then-Lt. Gov. Paul Simon on November 3, 1971…
The Downstate Teachers’ Retirement System is funded only at 34%.
That means that we can get by this year and next year, but 10 years from now or 15 years from now there will be a great many teachers retiring and someone is going to suddenly say, “What happened to all that money?”
There’s almost nothing new at the Statehouse. And worries about imminent doom of the pension system go back decades before that column was written.
Gov. Pat Quinn is withholding $52 million in transportation payments for Illinois’ cash-strapped schools so he can use that money instead to get the most out of federal Medicaid stimulus funds.
“After the buses are in the garage and the students are home for the summer, how’s a school district supposed to make a cut?” asked state Rep. Roger Eddy, R-Hutsonville, and Hutsonville School District superintendent. “Those expenses have been incurred. There is no way that we can do that. This is the most ridiculous proposal I’ve ever heard.”
As part of the 2009 stimulus plan, the federal government offered states more Medicaid money if they didn’t decrease Medicaid eligibility and followed certain guidelines. Illinois receives 60 cents from the federal government for every dollar it spends, but that will drop to the pre-stimulus amount of 50 cents for every dollar spent starting next month. So far, the state has received $3.6 billion from the federal government’s stimulus plan.
“We have to manage our resources right now in order to get that match. That’s worth maybe $100 (million) to $200 million to our state,” Quinn said at a news conference earlier this month. “I have to do everything necessary to get the most money that we can.”
Quinn said he is using school transportation funding, because the school districts have flexibility in how they spend their general state aid, or GSA. Schools can dip into their GSA to cover the lack of bus money over the summer and fall months, Quinn’s office said, until they are reimbursed for their transportation outlays.
Quinn’s office plans to pay the districts the $52 million by December for expenses incurred during the fourth quarter, which ends June 30.
Republicans are beating the drums, asking if former Democratic Congressman Bill Foster of Batavia plans to return $1,000 in “tainted contributions” he received from disgraced New York Rep. Anthony Weiner. […]
“Will Bill Foster return his scandal-tainted Weiner money … or will he silently condone his former colleague’s unacceptable and potentially ethically-compromised behavior?” a GOP email blast asked. Foster, who plans to run again, has not replied to our request for comment.
“Scandal-tainted money?” Really? Was Weiner sending X-Rated Tweets to potential donors? C’mon.
Try your very best to keep your comments clean, people. Thanks.
*** UPDATE *** Sheesh. I can’t believe I forgot to do this. I mean, the whole point of writing this post was to show you this photo…
On the average day, the man attends between five to ten events, meets dozens of people, has regularly scheduled media appearances, is responsible for $15 billion in investments, and manages a staff of close to two hundred employees. Meet Dan Rutherford, the banker for the State of Illinois. […]
Treasurer Rutherford recently announced the state’s purchase of $10 million worth of bonds from the State of Israel as a portion of the treasury’s sovereign bond holdings. “State of Israel bonds is a secure investment with an outstanding track record; they produce a strong rate of return and Israel has never defaulted on payments of principal or interest,” Rutherford said.
In praising the purchase, Israel Bonds president and CEO Joshua Matza noted, “The state of Illinois has been a loyal, consistent purchaser of Israel bonds. We are gratified by the state’s continued recognition of Israel bonds as dependable securities, as well as the fact that Israel bonds represent an investment in a sister democracy with shared values and ideals.”
Sounds like a decent idea, but apparently Illinois has been buying these bonds for years. Dude, could you make it any more obvious that you’re running for governor?
On Thursday, it was the Chicago Board Options Exchange suggesting that higher corporate taxes in Illinois could cause it to take jobs out of state. The CBOE’s warning came a day after CME Group Inc. said the same thing. CME owns the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade.
* And some good news for a change. From a Gov. Pat Quinn press release…
“Today’s announcement that United Airlines is bringing 1,300 jobs to Chicago is great news.
“The merger of United and Continental Airlines and their plan to continue making Chicago the nation’s hub for air transportation show that our efforts to boost Illinois’ businesses are paying off. This investment will have a major impact on our state as the company grows and its employees become part of our economic fabric.
“This once again demonstrates that Illinois is the premier state in the Midwest for businesses from around the world, and we’re committed to continuing to make it an even better place to live and work. I thank United Airlines for its continued commitment to the state of Illinois and the city of Chicago as we continue our economic recovery.”
…Adding… From Mayor Emanuel’s press office…
Mayor Emanuel made the announcement alongside United Airlines president and CEO Jeff Smisek, on the 10th floor of the Willis Tower, where many of the United Airlines employees will be working.
“As Chicago’s hometown airline, United is pleased to announce that we are bringing an additional 1,300 jobs downtown from locations throughout our system by the end of 2012,” said Smisek. “Mayor Emanuel recognizes the importance of keeping Chicago competitive with other cities and expanding job growth here, and we look forward to working together with him and his team.”
* The Question: Should Illinois’ corporate income tax hike be repealed - after finding a way to replace the revenue or cut the budget? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
* Kudos to the Tribune editorial board for this piece about all the “wilding” stories…
The test for Emanuel and his top cop is to shut down the violence — and the fear-mongering — fast.
* But, wait, wasn’t this Trib editorial yesterday part of the problem? Yep…
It feels like a variation on “wilding,” in which roving gangs assault strangers, seemingly for sport. In 1989, five young men were charged with raping a jogger in New York’s Central Park. Police said the attack was a case of wilding — though in the end the convictions were vacated.
The violence hasn’t reached that level in Chicago. It needs to be stopped before it does.
The [Central Park] convictions were vacated in 2003. Another man already jailed for other crimes confessed to the attack. DNA evidence supported his claim.
On April 19, 1989, Meili was raped and nearly beaten to death while jogging in New York’s Central Park. She suffered numerous injuries, including skull fractures and lacerations and severe blood loss. The five young men who were ultimately indicted, tried and convicted say they were coerced into a confession. At the time, police attributed the crime to marauding gangs of teens who engaged in what was termed “wilding.” Those who committed such acts became known as “wolf packs.” Once again, as in other points in American history, associations between animals and black criminality became part of the public conscience.
In 1989, Donald Trump paid $85,000 for full-page ads in four of the New York-area newspapers. Under the headline “Bring Back the Death Penalty,” Trump wrote, “They should be forced to suffer and, when they kill, they should be executed for their crimes. They must serve as examples so that others will think long and hard before committing a crime or an act of violence.”
Members of the Central Park Five believe that Trump’s call for the death penalty — for minors in a non-capital case — only served to create a hostile media environment before the teens went to trial. A new book on the case by New York Daily News staff writer Sarah Burns, called The Central Park Five: A Chronicle of a City Wilding, suggests that Trump’s incendiary rhetoric was one of numerous factors which resulted in injustice for the Central Park defendants.
Some innoccent people are gonna get railroaded if we go back to those bad old days. Guaranteed. The crime wave is real and serious. But we absolutely cannot let newspapers dictate the climate.
*** UPDATE *** Nope. From Bill Brady’s spokesman Dan Egler…
Rich:
Sorry to diminish the spectator sport here. Brady had some people suggest he should consider a Congressional run in the 18th or new 13th, but after the briefest of consideration told them his focus is on reelection to the Senate and continuing to work to fix Illinois’ problems.
(He hasn’t made any calls seeking support for any Congressional run, and you’ll recall he announced for re-election earlier this week.)
Schock shock? Sneed hears state Sen. Bill Brady, the GOPer who came this/close to beating Gov. Pat Quinn, is making calls to explore running for Congress against Rep. Aaron “Mr. Abs” Schock.
Discuss.
* Roundup…
* From an e-mail: Word in Kane County is John Laesch is planning on running in the 11th District. Possible Foster/Laesch rematch. His website John06.com is down for “maintenance”
* Alderman Bustos considers run for 17th District: East Moline Ald. Cheri Bustos has added her name to the growing field of Democrats considering a 2012 run for the U.S. Congress from the newly-redrawn 17th District… Former, long-time Rock Island Mayor Mark Schwiebert said Thursday his hat is still in the ring. He said he’s also close to making a final decision.State Sen. Dave Koehler, D-Peoria, publicly has announced he’s running.
* War on Women Is Democratic Rallying Call Against Republicans: Emily’s List cited the Medicare plan as it singled out nine House Republican freshmen as its first targets next year, months earlier than in the last election. They are Paul Gosar of Arizona, Allen West of Florida, Robert Dold and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, Chip Cravaack of Minnesota, Joe Heck of Nevada, Frank Guinta and Charlie Bass of New Hampshire and Steve Stivers of Ohio.
* GOP Freshmen Promise Cuts, Spend Big in First Quarter: GOP Freshmen Promise Cuts, Spend Big in First Quarter: Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger is the biggest freshman spender, dishing out $78,000 on “mass mailings and communication” to constituents, including a pamphlet explaining “some of the ways we can help” in government interaction
* Republican freshmen spend big bucks on cars, PRL: The biggest newly elected spender in this realm is Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger, who authorized spending $78,518 in taxpayer money on “mass mailings and communications” — just under $900 for every day he was in office during the first three months of his congressional career. Kinzinger sent a pamphlet to his constituents explaining “some of the ways we can help” in interactions with the government. Kinzinger also advertised the “state-of-the-art multimedia section” on his website. His office told POLITICO in a statement that it has no more plans for franked mail after it sent a mailing to 217,000 houses across the district.
* GOP freshman fundraising off new Congressional map: Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) is fundraising off the new Illinois congressional map. His campaign is urging supporters to “fight back” and “stop Chicago Democrats’ Illinois power grab.” The goal is to raise $20,000 by June 30, which marks the end of second quarter fundraising, according to his campaign website.
* A Letdown from Freshman GOP Congressmen: According to Politico, more than a dozen of these budget-conscious freshmen spent thousands of taxpayer dollars on these items. Including the biggest spender, Illinois’ Adam Kinzinger.
“He talked and he talked and that is all he did. . . . They want you to believe his talk is a crime. It’s not.”
That statement Thursday by Rod Blagojevich’s attorney Aaron Goldstein, as reported by the Sun-Times’ “Blago Blog,” pretty much sums up the former governor’s defense in his federal criminal trial:
“I’m not sayin’ . . . I’m just sayin’.”
Mind you, Rod wasn’t saying that he wanted to extract a bribe in exchange for appointing various people to fill Barack Obama’s vacant U.S. Senate seat. He was just tossing around ideas. He didn’t really mean it.
“He’s not perfect,” Goldstein said. “He likes to talk.”
Rod didn’t really want a bunch of billionaires to pony up cash to fund a nonprofit group in exchange for appointing Valerie Jarrett to the Senate seat. He was just talking about it. And the fact that he stopped talking about the scheme after Jarrett withdrew her name means nothing. He just has attention deficit disorder or something. He quickly moved along, and so should we. There’s really nothing to see here.
Um, OK. Hold on. What about when he told his brother to be careful about negotiating a huge cash payoff in exchange for appointing U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. to the Senate seat because the whole world would be listening?
“‘The whole world is listening’ is a phrase I use all the time,” Blagojevich said on the stand.
But, wait. When Blagojevich discovered soon after that his office was being bugged by the FBI, didn’t he then order an aide to “undo” the negotiations on the Jackson appointment?
All talk. No big deal. There wasn’t anything there to begin with.
Excuse me, but what about when he told an aide that he wanted to hit up the CEO of Children’s Memorial Hospital for a $50,000 campaign contribution while discussing a state grant for that hospital? Didn’t he also make a call to see if he could hold up the grant?
Nah, there’s nothing to that. He was just thinking out loud.
But the grant wasn’t actually released until after he left office, right?
Hey, he tried to have the money released after he was arrested by the FBI. So, see? It’s all just talk.
“Look at his actions,” Blagojevich’s lawyer said Thursday. That’s how you will know what was in his mind.
You see, Rod never actually came right out and told the hospital CEO, or a big tollway contractor, or Rep. Jackson or anybody else that he wanted a campaign contribution or a job or whatever in exchange for doing them a favor. Others he sent might have said some words to that effect, but they weren’t sayin’. They were just sayin’. Plus, how can Rod control what his own emissaries say? Not to mention that just asking for a contribution isn’t illegal. Never mind that he said privately that he wanted something in return. He didn’t really want anything. It was all just talk. There’s nothing to it.
“This case is about nothing,” Goldstein said. Blagojevich got nothing and he did nothing.
All Rod did was talk.
“I’m not sayin’ . . . I’m just sayin’.”
His lawyers are clearly hoping the jurors will buy into that line of bunk. But maybe they’ll think about it a bit differently. Maybe they’ll assume it’s what a bookie might say if you fall behind on your gambling debts.
“I’m not sayin’ I’ll break your legs if you don’t pay me tomorrow. I’m just sayin’ you might have trouble walking for a while.”
* Meanwhile, we can only hope that the Blagojevich jury decides the same…