Budget cut backlash
Thursday, Aug 30, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Sun-Times Editorial: Gov’s cuts just don’t add up
The governor says he is pushing forward with his plans — without legislative approval — because he is trying to improve the lives of Illinois citizens. But his methods shouldn’t include using taxpayer money to reward friends and punish enemies. And they shouldn’t include taking money from one good cause to fund another.
* Governor cuts HIV funds
Among the “pork” that was cut: $70,000 for Better Existence with HIV ( BEHIV ) ; $50,000 for Vital Bridges; $100,000 for Howard Brown towards HIV prevention; $70,000 for Chicago House towards housing and job training; and more than $154,000 for Bonaventure House. Meanwhile, Blagojevich made sure to push through 3.5 percent salary increases for statewide elected officers, just one week after approving a 9.6 percent salary increase.
BEHIV’s executive director Eric Nelson told Windy City Times that what he finds most “frustrating and unbelievable” is the way the governor chose what he would eliminate. Nelson felt that the Democrats’ “pet projects” were eliminated, while Republicans’ were left alone in order to curry favor.
“There is always so much more to the story than he lets on,” Nelson said, pointing out that a $500,000 bike trail project for Romeoville that was approved could have covered all the HIV prevention and education “pork” that was sliced.
* Governor’s budget cuts hit public radio, TV
The reductions mean public broadcasting will receive as much as 30 percent less this year from state government than last year, said Chet Tomczyk, president and CEO of WTVP-TV in Peoria, and a board member of the national Association of Public Television Stations and the Illinois Public Broadcasting Council.
“For stations, it’s going to be a fairly significant cut,” Tomczyk said today.
“We had to make some difficult decisions about what the state can really afford and what our most critical spending priorities should be,” said Justin DeJong, spokesman for the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget. “We think we ended up with a budget that better reflects the needs and values of the people of our state.”
* Is CeaseFire worth your $13 million?
A state audit questioned CeaseFire’s effectiveness and why nearly $264,000 in expenditures couldn’t be accounted for. The findings come a week after Gov. Blagojevich vetoed $6.25 million in funding for the group, which uses ex-gang members to resolve conflicts.
A state audit questioned CeaseFire’s effectiveness and why nearly $264,000 in expenditures couldn’t be accounted for. The findings come a week after Gov. Blagojevich vetoed $6.25 million in funding for the group, which uses ex-gang members to resolve conflicts.
Auditor General William Holland said no state standards are in place to measure CeaseFire’s work. Holland did his own analysis.
* CeaseFire criticized over bookkeeping
* Daley rips gov for cutting gang negotiation funds
* Press Release: IL Assoc. of Rehab Facilities asks for veto override of Gov cuts
* Press Release: Aids foundation of Chicago blasts Gov’s cuts
* Daley assaults Blago over choice of cuts
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Democratic Party disUnity
Thursday, Aug 30, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Eric Zorn: Governor can pull rank, but he shouldn’t
Otherwise, Quinlan said, House or Senate leaders could simply schedule the session for the year 2025, rendering the power meaningless.
It’s a fair point, and one Quinlan is making (speaking of 10 years in the future) in a suit filed on Blagojevich’s behalf last week against House Speaker Michael Madigan…
o I played the “3 a.m. Christmas morning” card on top of Quinlan’s “2025″ card.
If, I asked him in a message, the governor’s power to yank the leashes of the legislators and drag them into their respective chambers is truly unlimited under Illinois law, as his suit argues, then does anything stop him from dragging them from their beds at 3 a.m. seven days a week right through all the holidays until they made his priorities their own?
Quinlan didn’t get back to me Wednesday, but Blagojevich’s press office told me no, nothing limits a governor’s power to call special sessions.
* Democrats still at odds over mass transit legislation
If the measure were to find its way to the governor’s desk, however, Gov. Rod Blagojevich says he will veto the proposal because it violates his campaign pledge to not raise taxes.
On Wednesday, in a written statement, the governor reiterated his opposition and again called on lawmakers to support his plan to raise taxes on businesses, which was rejected unanimously in the House last spring.
”I do not support the plan to require people to pay a higher sales tax and real estate transfer tax,” he wrote. “That just ends up hurting the very people who rely on mass transit. We shouldn’t take more money from working people when there are major corporations doing business in Illinois who benefit from a strong mass transit system, but aren’t paying their fair share to help maintain it.”
* House panel OKs plan for CTA
Combined with matching money from the state and funds already in the budget, the new taxes would make the entire package worth about $525 million, said Democratic state Rep. Julie Hamos, chairwoman of the House Mass Transit Committee.
Hamos’ committee approved the bill Wednesday with a bipartisan 15-4 vote. She said the full House will consider it when it meets next Tuesday in Springfield.
* Kadner: Durbin says leaders put us in an ‘awful’ state
When U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) stopped by the Daily Southtown offices for a chat with the editorial board Wednesday. I asked him what he thought of his Democratic colleagues, who control the governor’s mansion, state Senate and state House.
“The situation has deteriorated so badly,” the state’s senior U.S. senator said. “It’s gotten entirely too personal among the leaders. There’s been little effort at compromise or cooperation.
“It’s awful.”
Darn right.
* Let courts decide Madigan-Blago suit, says Lt. Gov. Quinn
* Joe Calomino: State budget process needs reform and transparency
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Morning Shorts
Thursday, Aug 30, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Bernie Schoenburg: Governor changes flight habits after bad publicity
The way he’s been acting lately – slashing health care funding along with what he calls “pork” from the state budget, and suing a leader of his own party — it almost seems as if Gov. Rod Blagojevich likes bad publicity. But it does appear that he’s changed his flying habits a bit in response to bad press.
* Jake Parrillo blog: ‘IL 2010 for Gov’ web operation playbook (H/T: IlliniPundit)
* Sneed: Blago, Lauzen
* Jennifer Hunter: Despite union declines, Dems still court labor votes
“The political reach and institutional capability of the labor movement far outreaches its membership numbers,” she says. And unions put a lot of their resources into political efforts, both on the local and national level.
Labor is one of the few organized groups that can walk precincts and mobilize workers. “Their resources remain considerable,” Milkman said.
And, most important for Democrats, union membership is highest in states politically crucial to the party during a general election.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, nearly half of the 15.4 million union members live in six states: California, New York, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
And those who study labor, such as Cornfield, believe the movement will only get stronger because of the vast immigration to the United States — a replay of the trend in the early 20th century that led immigrants to form the modern labor movement. If experts like Cornfield are right, it is a fortuitous development for the Democrats, one that should allow them to really celebrate this Labor Day.
* New law prevents sex offenders from voting at schools
* Governor partially veto’s bill requiring eye exams
* Blagojevich appealing dismissal of fighter-wing lawsuit
* Daley: Hike gas tax 5 cents
* Russ Stewart: Gene Moore rejects ‘Michael Vick’ Syndrome
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Absolutely awful news for the governor
Wednesday, Aug 29, 2007 - Posted by Rich Miller
Paul linked to this yesterday, but I thought it deserved more play….
RASMUSSEN REPORTS, Fox Chicago Illinois poll [Edited slightly for more clarity]
Survey of 500 Likely Illinois Voters, taken August 22, 2007…
1 - How do you rate the way that George W. Bush is performing his role as President? Excellent, good, fair, or poor?
15% Excellent
17% Good
14% Fair
53% Poor
1% Not Sure
* BUSH TOTALS: 32% good or excellent… 67% fair or poor…
2 - How do you rate the way that Rod Blagojevich is performing his role as Governor? Excellent, good, fair, or poor?
5% Excellent
17% Good
25% Fair
53% Poor
1% Not Sure
* BLAGOJEVICH TOTALS: 22% good or excellent… 78% fair or poor…
So, in a pretty heavily Democratic state, Gov. Blagojevich is polling much worse than an enormously unpopular, lame duck Republican president. Truly horrendous.
By comparison, a July 12th poll by Ask Illinois found Blagojevich’s job approval as follows…
Approve 25.27%
Disapprove 64.41%
Unsure 10.32%
The new Rasmussen poll also shows that Illinoisans are very pessimistic about the present and the future…
8 - Looking out over the next couple of years, will the quality of life in Illinois get better, worse, or stay about the same?
15% Better
40% Worse
39% The Same
5% Not Sure
9 - How do you rate the economy in Illinois today—Excellent, good, fair, or poor?
3% Excellent
31% Good
45% Fair
21% Poor
0% Not Sure
10 - Over the next couple of years will the economy in Illinois get better or worse?
21% Better
43% Worse
26% The Same
10% Not Sure
And here’s the big kicker…
11 - Who is most to blame for the government’s budget stalemate—Governor Rod Blagojevich, the state legislature, special interest groups, or voters?
53% Blagojevich
19% State Legislature
20% Special Interest Groups
2% Voters
7% Not Sure
The voters seem to grasp the problem pretty well.
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Blago, Budget, Etc.
Wednesday, Aug 29, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Audio from the governor’s press availability yesterday…
[audio:Blago-828.mp3]
* Sun-Times Editorial: Silly farce is shaming our state
That’s what Blagojevich has used them for. He’s called 16 special sessions on this or that issue so far this year, one less than 2004, when he also was engaged in a battle with lawmakers over the budget. He accounts for nearly half of the 67 special sessions called by governors since the state’s 1970 Constitution was adopted.
That constitution gives him the authority to call for the special meetings to discuss a specific topic, but it doesn’t clearly say the governor may set the date and time. It would probably be a good thing to settle that issue. But that will do nothing to settle the underlying problem — that Blagojevich was ordering lawmakers to show up when there was nothing for them to do, often on weekends. For instance, he called a special session to address CTA funding on August 13. He offered no bill of his own, but he did threaten to veto the only realistic proposal on the table, an increase in the regional mass transit sales tax.
* Illinois governor blasts fellow Democrats
Party affiliation seems to have gone by the wayside for Blagojevich, a Democrat. He mentioned House Democrats and Madigan by name several times in a 15-minute question-and-answer session but avoided discussion of the state Senate, headed by one of his strongest allies and fellow Chicago Democrat, Senate President Emil Jones.
State Rep. John Bradley, D-Marion, who had a hand in crafting electric rate legislation Blagojevich signed Tuesday, was not invited to the bill signing but came anyway and questioned the governor’s idea of “pork.”
“These are not pork projects, these are things that are absolutely necessary,” said Bradley, who estimates his district lost $650,000 for child abuse centers, senior citizen meals, sewer construction and more.
* Bradley puts a face on state budget cuts
* Madigan: Suit a waste of resources
House Speaker Michael Madigan on Tuesday labeled the governor’s lawsuit against him an unnecessary distraction as pressing budgetary problems remain unresolved.
“It is a waste of state resources. It is a waste of time,” Madigan told the Daily Herald in his first public comments on the suit.
* Editorial: Judges should wash their hands of political dispute
* Lawmaker says governor’s veto was unfair
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Transit Controversy
Wednesday, Aug 29, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Mark Brown: Time running out to pass transit bill
You wouldn’t think it would need to be said, but we all benefit from strong mass transit, not just those who ride the trains and buses. If you drive to work like yours truly, mass transit means that many fewer motorists with whom to contend on the roads. Fewer cars on the road mean cleaner air for all of us.
Of course, a lot of people riding the CTA don’t have the option of driving. They can’t afford a car. But our local economy couldn’t survive if they can’t get to their jobs or classes.
It’s starting to sound too much like I’m preaching, and I didn’t want to do that.
* Sales tax hike could fund CTA, road improvements
Chicago Transit Authority drivers were among those cheering the loudest as politicians promised to vote next week on a proposed sales tax increase for roads and mass transit. Those drivers received letters threatening that their jobs could be eliminated next month.
“Yes, I’m very afraid of getting laid off,” said bus driver Calvin Alexander.
“You lay us off, then it means we can’t provide for our families. Then it also messes with the public,” said CTA bus driver Gail Williams.
* Daley, others lead rally for transit funding
To provide transit funding, a Senate bill calls for a 0.25 percent increase in the RTA sales tax collected in the six-county region and a new real estate transfer tax in Chicago.
The House Mass Transit Committee will hold a hearing Wednesday on the measure in the Thompson Center. Committee Chairwoman Rep. Julie Hamos (D-Evanston) said she expected that the committee would pass the measure, and that it would be voted on by the legislature on Sept. 4.
Hamos and other supporters said they were confident they would have votes to override a veto from Blagojevich, who has said he would not approve any increase in the sales tax.
* Daley lead rally to support mass transit
* Mass transit funding close to passing?
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Governor signs rate relief bill
Wednesday, Aug 29, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Governor signs electric rate relief despite displeasure with bill
Blagojevich spent almost a month reviewing the deal –which lawmakers approved at the end of July after lengthy negotiations — before signing the plan into law at the Downstate DuQuoin State Fair
“This bill is a good starting point,” Blagojevich said in a written statement.
Under the package, the average Chicago-area customer will see between a $50 and $60 service credit on their October bills, said Bob McDonald, ComEd’s senior vice president and chief financial officer.
The lump-sum credit will serve as a retroactive, partial-bill credit for service this year. The amount will vary depending on how much energy the customer used.
* Rate relief now a reality
The governor drew criticism by not immediately signing the bill into law when he received it nearly a month ago. Some feared his inaction could cost consumers millions of dollars in higher rates by negating the price of a contract Ameren had negotiated to buy power.
But Lisa Madigan spokeswoman Robyn Ziegler said consumers actually will save $17 million over several years compared to the original negotiated price because of fluctuations in recent weeks.
Blagojevich defended his long review, comparing himself to a careful customer standing up to pressure from a used-car dealer.
Negotiators are hopeful consumers see bigger benefits from moves made to keep prices as low as possible.
* Governor belated signs utility deal
But Blagojevich, who sat on the sidelines during the negotiations, angered lawmakers by announcing that he would take up to 60 days to review the bill. He said he thought he might be able to persuade the power companies to sweeten the deal, despite warnings from the attorney general’s office that any delays could lead to higher bills.
“After reviewing it, I believe it will provide immediate relief and put us in a position to keep working on longer-term electricity issues that need to be addressed to ensure that electricity in Illinois is affordable,” Blagojevich said in a statement.
State Rep. George Scully (D-Flossmoor), the House’s lead utility negotiator, said he was happy the governor signed the bill. “But it’s very unfortunate that he forced the people of Illinois to wait another month to get rate relief,” Scully said.
* Electric rate relief now a done deal
“The only thing the governor’s delay produced is a delay in when residents get the relief to which they are entitled,” state Rep. Dan Beiser, D-Alton, said in a statement, echoing a common complaint lately among downstate legislators whose constituents were hardest hit by the rate hikes.
Blagojevich, flanked by lawmakers and consumer advocates Tuesday, defended his decision not to sign the bill right away.
“Beware when these big companies are pressing you to sign on the dotted line before you’ve had a chance to (study) … a bill as complicated and as thick as the one you just saw me sign,” Blagojevich said. “When you get a big company like Ameren that’s treated customers the way they have, I think it’s prudent to be suspicious of their motives.”
* Ameren checks expected to arrive in September
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Chicago-related news
Wednesday, Aug 29, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* ‘Welcome to hell,’ new OPS chief told; more here
* Alderman reignites sparkler debate; more here
* Plans for citywide wireless dropped with bogged negotiations; more here
* City could earn $7.4 million off car stickers scofflaws
Nearly 62,000 Chicago motorists have been slapped with $120 tickets since the revised July 15 deadline for failing to display valid city stickers — and that’s before investigators resume their annual hunt for sticker scofflaws in city-licensed garages
* Michael Sneed: Potentials filter out in Chicago top cop search
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Morning Shorts
Wednesday, Aug 29, 2007 - Posted by Paul Richardson
* Forby to seek another term
* Appellate judge won’t seat Congressional seat
* Lawyer for Ryan attack conduct of trial proceeding
* Ryan seeks new trial amid ‘avalanche of errors’
* Census: Illinois poverty drops, but uninsured up
* Governor OKs funding stem-cell research
Although no money is directly tied to the Illinois law, the bill’s sponsors said they would seek to secure millions in funding over the next few months.
The measure, which bans human cloning, ensures researchers could work with embryonic stem cells in Illinois, which typically come from early-stage human embryos left over from in-vitro fertilization. Groups opposed to abortion argue the research requires the destruction of human embryos and is immoral. Proponents say embryonic stem cells offer the best chance of treating or curing many debilitating diseases.
The law also establishes procedures for couples to donate their unused in-vitro fertilization treatments for research and authorizes the Illinois Department of Public Health to administer the Illinois Regenerative Medicine Institute to give grants for research.
* Governor to appeal base closing rule
* Forced moment of silence in schools vetoed
“I believe in the power of prayer,” Blagojevich wrote. “I also believe that our founding fathers wisely recognized the personal nature of faith and prayer, and that is why the separation of church and state is a centerpiece of our Constitution, our democracy and our freedoms.”
The measure’s House sponsor, Rep. Will Davis, a Homewood Democrat, had argued it was not a religious exercise, but a chance for pupils to settle down and reflect on the coming day.
He noted that both the Illinois House of Representatives and Senate begin each legislative day with prayers led by members of the clergy.
* Rep. Fritchey: Supporting governor’s ‘moment of silence’ decision
* Editorial: Veto of forced school prayer a wise move
* State loan commission makes $1 billion sale
* SAT scores down, but diversity up as Illinois bests national average
The decline isn’t significant and may be explained by the larger pool of test-takers, which numbered nearly 1.5 million high school graduates, said officials with the College Board, the private company that administers the SAT.
Illinois students did better than their counterparts across the nation. The state composite reading score was 594, up 3 points from last year; the math composite was 611, a jump of 2 points.
* State SAT scores buck national trend
* Privacy issues curb teen-driver rules
* Editorial: Prison recidivism pilot a test worth taking
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