The Illinois Senate and House Democratic caucuses today released a draft Chicago Elected School Board District map for the public to review ahead of hearings to gather feedback and consider potential changes.
Click here or here if you’re interested in seeing the maps.
Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson released the following statement on the new arrival of asylum-seekers in Chicago:
“The truth of the matter is that we have governors around the border who have demonstrated they are not open to collaborating, and that of course is a disappointment. I’m prepared to have conversations with everyone — particularly those who have used this as a weapon against cities — because asylum seekers are experiencing extremely difficult conditions, both emotionally and physically.
“What we will do day one is make sure there is a real effort to coordinate our resources at the federal, state, county and city levels. We are already in the process of developing the infrastructure for that type of coordination, but also for engaging in a real community process that allows for our response to not just meet the need, but include all stakeholders in solving what is ultimately a crisis that was engineered by outside forces.
“I’m going to work collaboratively with the people of Chicago and alderpersons who represent areas where we can be supportive for asylum seekers to make sure every community, and every person in it, is protected. Many communities have for too long been denied basic amenities and resources that could help strengthen them, but the stronger our communities are, the better position we are in to support both newcomers, and current residents and families.”
I would like to share with you a quote by Abby Wambach, because this is our vision for the next four years. “I never scored a goal in my life without getting a pass from someone else.” The Mayor cannot score a goal, without getting a pass or many passes from the other members of the team that are the other twelve elected officials. We are team Springfield, we are going to make many goals, together. Our Team that the citizens have elected are going to take our passions and turn them into actions for a better Springfield.
A bill that would make it easier to move tens of thousands of effectively abandoned residential lots back onto the tax rolls and into productive use has picked up some late-session momentum in Springfield, clearing a House committee this morning.
Under the proposal pushed by Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas and The Chicago Community Trust, an estimated 50,000 tax-delinquent properties that have not been claimed by anyone, most of them residential lots on the South and West sides, could pass into county control in three years or shortly thereafter, rather than going four, five, six years or longer as a neighborhood blight.
The county still would have to put the delinquent property up for sale once in its annual scavenger sale and give the owner an opportunity to pay off the tax debt. But after one attempt at a sale, the county could acquire the properties, arranging for resale or passing them on to the Cook County Land Bank Authority or Chicago and other municipalities that seek redevelopment of largely empty areas.
The bill would apply statewide, says sponsoring state Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, who was able to get the bill through the House Revenue Committee by an 11-6 vote. But the major impact would be in Cook County, which has had a persistent problem with abandoned properties in certain neighborhoods for decades. “We need to do something different,” Buckner said.
* Comptroller Mendoza…
Democratic and Republican state senators unanimously approved Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza’s Act-of-Duty bill to cover Chicago first responders severely stricken by COVID-19 in the days before vaccines were available.
The bill, which was unanimously approved by the state House of Representatives last month, now goes to Gov. Pritzker for his signature.
“My brother and all his fellow officers targeted by the city’s unfair policy are so grateful for today’s vote by the state Senate. We can’t say ‘Thank You!’ enough to Senators Cunningham, Senator Fowler, Representative Hoffman, Speaker Welch and all the legislators who fought for this,” Comptroller Mendoza said.
Comptroller Mendoza’s brother, Chicago Police Det. Sgt. Joaquin Mendoza, was the first COVID disability case to go before the city’s police disability board, which adopted a policy of not giving disability pensions to officers disabled by COVID.
“I watched in disbelief as the board’s majority inexplicably ruled against their own doctor’s findings and gave my brother only an Ordinary Disability benefit instead of a Duty Disability benefit, which means he’d only get 50% of his salary for five years and no health care insurance,” Comptroller Mendoza said.
* Sen. Preston…
State Senator Willie Preston passed a measure to remove all references to the death penalty in criminal statutes.
“The language we use influences attitudes and behavior,” said Preston (D-Chicago). “It’s important that we clean up the language used in our laws to avoid creating unconscious biases.”
HB 3762 makes improvements to the language used in certain criminal laws by removing the use of all references to the death penalty. Capital punishment has been abolished in the Illinois since 2011. Removing references that refer to death sentencing and the type of drugs that can be administered to cause death constitutes a vital component of the Illinois culture to avoid unintentional predispositions when determining sentencing for defendants.
“How we choose to write and speak on laws plays a big role in how others see the law,” said Preston. “We may perceive something to be harmless, when in reality we are unknowingly influencing the world around us. These improvements help mitigate that.”
Turnout in last year’s midterm elections fell from a century-high point of 50 percent in 2018 to 46.6 percent in 2022, and census data released Tuesday suggest the drop was concentrated among Black voters, younger voters and college graduates.
Black voter turnout dropped by nearly 10 percentage points, from 51.7 percent in 2018 to 42 percent in 2022, according to a Washington Post analysis of the Census Bureau’s turnout survey. White voter turnout slipped by only 1.5 points to 53.4 percent. The 11-point turnout gap between White and Black voters is the largest in any presidential or midterm election since at least 2000.
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* Commerical-News | Marron calls for Project Success funding : State Rep. Mike Marron has called on the Illinois State Board of Education and Gov. JB Pritzker’s office to fix a funding error that resulted in cuts made to Project Success of Vermilion County. Funding for one-third of the nonprofit organization’s after school enrichment programs has disappeared, prompting them to make the decision to cease programming at six sites in Westville, Georgetown and Oakwood come August.
* Daily Herald | Naperville gun shop owner gives city until Monday to start negotiating end to gun sale ban: Naperville officials have declined to comment on the offer, but — with the state law in place — Bevis and his lawyers believe the Naperville law is redundant and unnecessary. “Now (Naperville) can get out of the ordinance even easier,” Bevis said after Thursday’s court ruling was announced. “This might entice them to act quicker.”
* Tribune | Brandon Johnson ran a pro-worker, tax-the-‘ultra-rich’ campaign. Can he and business leaders find common ground?: Johnson during his campaign proposed hiking a tax on hotels, reinstituting a city head tax, tripling the tax on high-end real estate transactions, taxing jet fuel and levying tolls on securities trading. Business leaders also expressed concern about Johnson’s positions on policing following two rounds of civil unrest that ended in wide-ranging theft and property destruction that also diminished the city’s downtown and other commercial corridors.
* Illinois Answers Project | Explained: Chicago’s Migrant Crisis: Last week the city was caught flat-footed when migrants began arriving at O’Hare International Airport. Those arriving were Venezuelan migrants and given a one-way ticket from Texas. About 40 people, mostly young women and children slept outside a homelessness center inside the airport, Block Club Chicago reported.
* Daily Herald | What’s behind the ‘epidemic’ of drivers recklessly fleeing from police?: Instances of drivers recklessly fleeing from police have reached “epidemic” levels, DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin says. And the stats back him up. Last year, his office prosecuted 82 cases of aggravated fleeing and eluding, up from 54 in 2021 and 51 in 2020. With 14 cases in April alone this year, the office is on pace to far exceed last year’s total.
* Sun-Times | Gun assault rates for kids doubled in Chicago, 3 other big cities during COVID pandemic, even worse for Black children, study finds: The analysis led by Boston University’s Jonathan Jay, who studies urban health, included a review of gun assaults between mid-March 2020 and December 2021 in Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and New York. It found that Black children were 100 times as likely as white children to be victims of fatal and nonfatal shootings. Pre-pandemic, they were 27 times as likely. The researchers excluded accidental shootings and incidents of self-harm.
* WCIA | Former Sangamon. Co police chief accused of possessing child pornography: An arrest warrant and charging documents made available by the State’s Attorney’s Office show that James Hillyer is charged with eight counts of possessing child pornography, five counts of official misconduct, and one count of grooming. State’s Attorney Dan Wright said Hillyer turned himself in on Thursday following the warrant being issued; he remains in custody at the Sangamon County Jail on a $150,000 bond.
* CBS Chicago | Former U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk speaks publicly for first time in more than five years: Kirk served only one term – he lost a bid for reelection in 2016 to Democrat Tammy Duckworth. And in January 2012 – just over a year into that one term – Kirk suffered a stroke. […] “I had somewhat of a speech impediment after the stroke. The toughest thing to do is to keep the attention of a senator - they have strong ADD,” Kirk said. “The thing I most insisted on, that I could speak fast enough to keep their attention.”
* Crain’s | CTA is getting $200 million from the feds for new train cars: “This is a big win for the city of Chicago,” said U.S. Rep. Michael Quigley, the ranking Democrat on the transportation, housing and urban development subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee. “This is part of why I wanted to be on this committee, to make a difference.”
* Media Matters | Right-wing conspiracy theories drive GOP-led states to pull out of important interstate voter data-sharing effort: In January 2022, The Gateway Pundit launched a series of articles accusing the Electronic Registration Information Center of being a George Soros-funded “left wing voter registration drive disguised as voter roll clean up.” Other right-wing outlets followed suit, creating new narratives to frame a once-mundane data-sharing effort as a bad actor. Since this misinformation campaign began, six states have pulled out of ERIC, with Republican elected officials echoing theories promulgated by right-wing media. Former President Donald Trump also chimed in, posting on Truth Social that GOP-led states should “immediately pull out of ERIC, the terrible Voter Registration System that ‘pumps the rolls’ for Democrats and does nothing to clean them up.”
CSL Behring is in the early phases of a 1.8 million-square-foot expansion which will easily require an investment far north of $1 billion.
Although employment projections have not been publicized yet, there is speculation it could come close to doubling the existing 1,600-member workforce.
The Australian-based pharmaceutical company has not asked for a penny of financial assistance or tax breaks from any governmental body.
It has made one seemingly simple request. This request was made 16 months ago, and as of this week, it still has not been satisfied.
CSL wants a traffic light put at its pending new entrance at the intersection at the Lowe’s Hardware store. The company has told the Illinois Department of Transportation it will pay for the stoplight.
Incredibly, a state thirsting for manufacturing development has yet to OK what seems to be a simple request. […]
Abell said CSL is making the largest investment anywhere in the state and perhaps beyond and yet, their request cannot be resolved.
“We can’t get a three-way light to become a four-way light.” […]
Kankakee County Board Chairman Andy Wheeler said he’s been calling IDOT in Springfield, local state political leaders and anyone else he can think of to get the situation rectified.
I kinda lost my cool when I read that story. I’m from that part of the world. They’ve had hard times since the 1980s, when most of the good jobs left. It just about broke me to see how poorly that invaluable company was being treated.
Today, State Representative Lindsay Parkhurst (R – Kankakee) is excited to announce major road and bridge projects for the 79th District stemming from the Rebuild Illinois Capital Plan. […]
The $8.5 million project to improve the efficiency at the intersection of Route 50 and Armour Road has been included in the Capital Plan. … The project includes adding turn lanes, removing the 4-way stop sign at CSL Behring and replacing it with a stoplight, and coordinating stoplights on Armour Road and Route 50 to increase the efficiency of the flow of traffic. The first part of this project is slated for 2020.
I posted the complete press release on the blog at the time and the resulting reader comments actually generated a news story in Kankakee. Heh.
* Anyway, 65 months after CSL Behring first requested a four-way traffic light, 49 months after I first wrote about it and 45 months since the groundbreaking, IDOT is starting an ambitious project. Press release…
Gov. JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) were joined today by local officials and community leaders to announce the start of improvements to the intersection of Illinois 50 and Armour Road, a project that will reduce congestion and enhance safety while promoting economic development and job growth. Made possible by Gov. Pritzker’s historic, bipartisan Rebuild Illinois capital program, the $13.8 million project is the final step to improving traffic flow in a busy area surrounded by retail, lodging, and CSL Behring, Kankakee County’s largest employer.
“Revitalizing communities, redesigning transit systems — these are the kinds of changes that I’m proud to support — here and all across the state. And it’s the kind of change that sits at the heart and soul of what Rebuild Illinois is all about,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “This project has a ripple effect that spreads throughout the county, meeting community needs on many levels. It makes Bradley-Bourbonnais a more welcoming place for Kankakee’s largest manufacturing employer, while also creating new construction jobs and investing money back into local business.”
The project consists of widening and resurfacing the intersection of Illinois 50 and Armour Road with additional dedicated turn lanes. Improvements also include new storm sewers, an updated biking and walking path, sidewalks, new curbs and gutters, improved lighting, modernized traffic signals, and landscaping. The project will improve access from Armour Road to Pharmaceutical Drive/Arthur Burch Drive, an access point for the CSL Behring factory on the intersection’s southwest corner.
The project will eliminate the need for a four-way stop at one of the entrances to CSL Behring’s Bradley facility, which employs more than 1,600 people and recently underwent a $1 billion expansion. The work also removes a bottleneck for the approximately 16,900 motorists who use Armour Road and the 24,000 drivers on Illinois 50 each day. […]
Gov. Pritzker visited the CSL Behring plant in 2019 five months after being elected, pledging his support to help expedite plans to build a new plant main entrance on Illinois 50 and advance improvements to the intersection with Armour Road that are starting this spring. With the plant’s main entrance open and intersection work progressing, chronic backups in the area have diminished, improving traffic flow and safety surrounding a major state employer and tech jobs creator.
* The locals appear to be happy…
On Friday, House Assistant Minority Leader Jackie Haas (R-Kankakee) joined Governor JB Pritzker and other community leaders to launch the reconstruction of the Illinois 50 and Armour Road intersection. This project, funded through the Rebuild Illinois program, will widen and resurface this important intersection in the village of Bradley.
“This is a terrific day to launch such an important infrastructure project for the 79th District and Kankakee River Valley region,” said Leader Haas. “By making this critical intersection easier and safer to navigate, we will help connect constituents and visitors alike to economic engines of our communities in Kankakee County. I urge all traveling in the area during this construction period to be mindful of road workers and their safety, as well as the safety of other drivers.”
In Missouri, the statewide Chamber of Commerce identified the “Top Job Killing Legislation” filed in 2023. Every single bill was a Republican bill. Every. Single. One.
The GOP is not the party of economic growth, and they haven’t been for a long time.
In March, a Texas man, Marcus Silva, sued three women for $1 million each after they helped his ex-wife obtain an abortion last summer using pills. The suit alleged that the termination of the pregnancy qualified as wrongful death under state law, and he presented text messages between his ex-wife and the women as evidence.
In the post-Roe era, the suit horrified abortion-rights advocates and galvanized opponents. Both sides view it as a test case aimed at discouraging anyone from helping women access abortion in states where the procedure is now banned or severely restricted.
This week, two of the women, Jackie Noyola and Amy Carpenter, filed their response in court: They are countersuing Mr. Silva for invasion of privacy in addition to offering a number of defenses to his claims. Ms. Noyola and Ms. Carpenter, who are close friends of Brittni Silva, Mr. Silva’s ex-wife, said he searched her phone without her consent and read their private messages. […]
The suit asserts that under that state law, the rights of a fetus are equivalent to those of an adult. If Mr. Mitchell’s argument succeeds, it would be a legal victory for the concept of fetal personhood — a goal of many abortion opponents.
The Florida legislature passed a bill Thursday that will let the state take transgender minors away from their families if they are receiving gender-affirming care.
The bill passed the Senate by a vote of 26–13, mainly along party lines, and the House shortly after by a vote of 83–28, again along party lines. The measure now goes to the desk of Governor Ron DeSantis, who has previously expressed support for it and will likely sign it into law.
If he signs it into law, the measure will allow the state to take custody of a child if they have been “subjected to or [are] threatened with being subjected to” gender-affirming care, which includes puberty blockers and hormone replacement therapy. Florida courts could modify custody agreements from a different state if the minor is likely to receive gender-affirming care in that second state. The text refers to gender-affirming care as “sex-reassignment prescriptions or procedures” and qualifies this care as a form of “physical harm.”
Medical facilities would have to give the state Department of Health a signed attestation that they neither provide gender-affirming care to any patients under the age of 18 nor refer people to providers that do. Their medical license renewal is contingent upon sending in this attestation.
North Carolina hastily approved legislation on Thursday that would ban most abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy, setting the stage for a likely test of the Republican Party’s new, but slim, supermajority.
After an emotional, five-hour debate, the Senate, by a vote of 29-20, approved a ban the House had already passed the night before.
The bill now goes to the state’s Democratic governor, who has called it “extreme,” and said he would veto it. He has 10 days to act.
But the legislature has the potential to override his veto if Republicans can keep their party united to muster enough votes.
Tammy Murphy, the first lady of New Jersey, has made infant and maternal health her signature cause during her husband’s tenure as governor. She led the push for free nurse visits for newborns and expanded access to doulas during labor, with a goal of improving New Jersey’s abysmal pregnancy-related death rates.
But a gender-discrimination lawsuit, filed by four female troopers against the State Police, accuses Ms. Murphy of failing to practice what she has so often preached.
The suit claims that Ms. Murphy refused to permit a State Police trooper assigned to protect her to use a carriage house at the family’s riverside estate in Middletown, N.J., to pump breast milk during breaks.
The first lady told the woman’s supervisor, who runs the State Police unit that guards Gov. Philip D. Murphy and his family, that “it was not encouraged because of optics by guests who may be on the premises,” the lawsuit states.
Indiana’s governor on Thursday signed a bill that will require schools to notify a parent if a student requests a name or pronoun change at school, one of the final bills approved in a legislative session that had targeted LGBTQ+ people in the state, especially students.
Critics worry the law could out transgender children to their families and erode trust between students and teachers while supporters have contested the legislation keeps parents empowered and informed about their children when at school.
Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb’s approval of the legislation comes in a year when GOP-led legislatures around the country are seeking to curb LGBTQ+ rights, specifically targeting trans people’s participation in sports, workplaces and schools, as well as their access to health care.
Recently, Florida Republicans on Wednesday also approved a bill that would prevent students and teachers from being required to use pronouns that don’t correspond to someone’s sex, a bill Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis is expected to sign into law. Meanwhile, at least 16 states, including Indiana,have banned or restricted access to gender-affirming care such as hormones, puberty blockers, and surgeries.
House Bill 3413 would streamline the process in which Illinois returns Native American remains and materials to their communities. The bill passed unanimously in the House in March and an amended version cleared a Senate committee unanimously this week, sending it to the full Senate for consideration. […]
For 30 years, the state museum has resisted returning remains and materials back to their original communities, according to a ProPublica investigation. Despite the 1990 passage of the federal Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, the state museum still maintains one of the largest collections of Native American remains in the country.
That law provides a process for federal agencies and museums receiving federal funds to repatriate or transfer their collections to lineal descendants or tribes. As of 2022, the Illinois State Museum had only returned 2 percent of the 7,700 remains it reported to the U.S. government, or just 156 individuals. […]
The Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation, a federally recognized Native American tribe in Kansas with historic ties to Illinois, advocated in favor of the bill.
* HB2203 was re-referred to the House Rules Committee back in March. The deadline hasn’t changed and the sponsor lost one of his co-sponsors, Rep. Debbie Meyers-Martin. From the Sun-Times…
The five biggest auto insurers in Illinois have raised automobile insurance rates a whopping $527 million since January, an analysis by two consumer groups shows. […]
Besides being able to raise rates as they like, only needing to notify state officials of their plans, Illinois insurers can consider non-driving factors in setting those rates — such as gender, occupation and whether a person rents or owns a home. […]
Now, state Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, has introduced legislation to address those issues and crack down on insurers. Guzzardi’s bill would:
-Require automobile insurers to get prior state approval for rate hikes.
-Ban “excessive” insurance increases.
-Prohibit using gender, marital status, age, occupation, schooling, home ownership, wealth, credit scores or a customer’s past insurance company relationships in setting car insurance rates.
Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago) said his bill could expand education and job training credits for incarcerated people to become eligible for mandatory supervised release sooner. The proposal would also update state law regarding drug testing prior to parole hearings, as drug tests would only be required if there is reasonable suspicion of illegal drug use.
“There are requirements that the Department of Corrections makes certain disclosures to participants so they know what their goals are and what they need to do to successfully complete their term under MSR,” Cunningham said Thursday.
Senate Bill 423 states that parole officers would be required to complete quarterly reports for the Department of Corrections. However, AFSCME leaders told Cunningham they are currently opposed to that idea. […]
Senate Bill 423 passed unanimously out of the Senate Special Committee on Criminal Law & Public Safety. The legislation now heads to the Senate floor for further consideration.
Republican lawmakers from both chambers hosted separate news conferences Thursday and outlined what they hope to accomplish before the end of the session, despite being in the minority. […]
State Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville, said one of the ways to do this is by addressing the high cost of energy.
“Senate Bill 2200, that would get rebates into the pockets of the families that need them the most,” Plummer said. “To be clear, this policy has already passed. It’s there. All we have to do is fund it. We can fund it right now. We are spending money on many other things. We can fund Illinois families that are struggling under egregious energy bills that the General Assembly caused.” […]
State Rep. Steven Reick, R-Woodstock, said he has a measure related to DCFS he hopes to pass.
“I put forth a bill to require DCFS to institute a caseload tracking system with yearly reports to the General Assembly as to the ongoing case files, operation of the caseload management system itself, the ratio of active files to personnel, and how appropriations can be structured to incentivize caseload management,” Reick said.
A bill supported by Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias passed out of the Senate Thursday that would change the law so police can’t pull someone over solely for having something hang on a rearview mirror.
“There is absolutely no data to support that pulling people over for an air freshener or a rosary hanging from their rearview mirror reduces violent crime or prevents accidents,” Secretary Giannoulias said. “Amending the current law will not jeopardize public safety; instead, it will result in greater equity on the road and improve relationships between police and community by eliminating pretextual traffic stops that disproportionately affect people of color.”
The bill passed out of the Senate 41-11. […]
The bill now heads to the Governor J.B. Pritzker’s desk.
Subscribers know more, but the scare tactics used by opponents about completely obstructed views would be covered under the reckless driving statutes.
A new Senate bill amendment backed by the Cook County treasurer’s office and the Chicago Community Trust seeks to reform Illinois’ property tax sale system.
Backers such as state Rep. Kam Buckner, a Chicago Democrat, say the bill would cut the cost for homeowners trying to pay off property tax debt in half, close a loophole that critics said allowed private investors and hedge funds to profit off local governments and help get vacant or abandoned properties back on the tax rolls. […]
The treasurer’s office and the Chicago Community Trust introduced separate and overlapping bills aimed at reforming the delinquent property tax system earlier this year. A merged proposal cleared the House Revenue and Finance Committee Thursday and is on track for House floor approval later this month. […]
The amendment, Senate Bill 1675 Amendment 1, would reform the state’s system for selling delinquent property taxes. Under the current system, property owners who don’t pay their bills can see their taxes put up for auction. When sold, a lien is put against the home or business until the owner can pay the taxes back to the buyer, plus interest. Delinquent sales allow taxing bodies to collect revenues they’re owed while giving property owners extra time to pay their bills without losing their homes. Investors, too, can make a profit at a low risk. Most homeowners do eventually pay back their taxes with interest.
A measure amending language in child welfare and juvenile court statutes to be more inclusive has passed in the Illinois Senate.
House Bill 1596 recognizes the growing number of minor Illinoisians who identify as LGBTQ+ and amends the language to better reflect their identities.
The ACLU Director of Systems Reform Policy, Nora-Collins Mandeville said that, “Today’s majority vote in the Senate sends House Bill 1596 to the Governor’s desk for final approval. A few years ago, the Illinois Auditor General reported that DCFS was failing to meet the needs of the growing number of LGBTQ+ youth under their care.” […]
The legislation now heads to the Illinois Governor’s desk for signing into law.
Opioids have been involved in over 70% of fatal drug overdoses in Illinois. State lawmakers hope to pass a package of bills to address the opioid crisis before session ends.
Sen. Paul Faraci (D-Champaign) told reporters Thursday that pharmacists, nurses, and physician assistants are the only people currently authorized to use overdose prevention equipment. Faraci said his plan could allow trained overdose responders to use fentanyl testing strips to help people in need. […]
House Bill 1121 passed unanimously out of the House in March. The plan also received unanimous support from the Senate Public Health Committee on April 19. […]
House Bill 1557 could require most music venues to have Naloxone and other opioid-overdose antidotes on hand. The legislation applies to for-profit venues with an occupancy of 1,000 or more people. Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) said the proposal also requires venue staff to be trained on how to properly use antidotes to safely prevent an overdose. […]
House Bill 1557 passed out of the House on a 105-2 vote on March 23. The Senate Public Health Committee unanimously approved the plan on April 19.
Earlier this week, the “ComEd Four” were found guilty on all charges related to a conspiracy to bribe Former Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan.
“Finally, we are starting to see Illinois Democrats held accountable for their corrupt actions. After decades of Democratic insiders putting their personal interests ahead of Illinois residents, it’s now clear that the Madigan Democrat machine corrupted Illinois State government,” said Illinois Republican Party Chairman Don Tracy.
“Former Speaker Madigan may be gone, but we can’t forget that Illinois Democrats across the state – from Gov. JB Pritzker on down – supported, enabled and kissed the ring of Speaker Madigan,” added Chairman Don Tracy.
Former Illinois House Republican leader Jim Durkin, who left the legislature after last year’s elections solidified the Democrats’ legislative supermajorities, said the verdict “opened a window” for GOP candidates to go after Democratic lawmakers who participated in Madigan’s operation.
”We have actually been given a glimpse of how Mike Madigan and his playbook, how they have operated in this corrupt manner for such a long time. It has now been brought to a jury, exposed and convicted of federal crimes,” Durkin said. “So Republicans should be talking of course about Mike Madigan, what he’s done to the state, what he’s done to our reputation, what he’s done to our finances.”
But, Durkin said, the window of opportunity slams shut if the political conversation turns from corruption to social issues.
” ‘Republicans, you’re anti-women, you’re anti-choice.’ We’ve got to stay away from that,” Durkin said, “particularly in the areas where we have to compete and where we should be winning — that is in the suburbs and the collar counties.”
It’s clear from the jurors who spoke after Tuesday’s clean-sweep guilty verdicts that the argument that Madigan and his associates have been pitching to the public — that this was all politics as usual — fell completely flat in a federal courtroom.
“We bought it for a while, but then when evidence started unfolding (we thought) ‘Explain to us how you can turn around and pay these folks gazillions of dollars and they’re not doing anything?’ ” juror Rob Garnes told the Tribune. “What does that have to do with lobbying?”
Hiring a lobbyist based on a leader’s recommendation and then not using that lobbyist could become problematic.
Garnes said the general consensus of the panel was that, while nobody’s perfect, it seemed like no one seemed willing to step in and put a stop to the corruption.
“They just continually do it over and over and over again,” said Garnes, an IT professional who lives in Westmont.
Madigan surrounded himself with people who got the things he wanted done. Nobody in that circle seemed to question him about the line between right and wrong. Hubristically fatal mistake.
The state is suspending the legislative pension of former Commonwealth Edison lobbyist Michael McClain, but the move may not be permanent.
A spokesman for the state General Assembly Retirement System tells WBEZ that it has moved to withhold McClain’s pension following a federal jury’s verdicts against him in the ComEd bribery trial. […]
State law holds that legislative pensions can be revoked if a legislator has engaged in misconduct arising out of or in connection with his or her service in the General Assembly.
That could be a factor against the permanent revoking of McClain’s benefits — the wrongdoing that federal prosecutors focused upon spanned between 2011 and 2019, long after McClain’s time as a Democratic lawmaker from Quincy.
Which brings up the question of whether future legislators’ pensions should be yanked if they’re convicted of a felony. Your thoughts?
But the writing is already on the wall – cut a deal with prosecutors now, or go to trial and risk spending the rest of your life in prison.
OK, cut a deal on what? The feds generally cut deals to avoid iffy trials and/or in exchange for the head of someone higher up the criminal food chain. The unanimous ComEd Four verdict indicates that Madigan’s trial likely won’t be all that iffy, and, as far as the G is concerned, Madigan was at the very tippity top of the food chain.
Unless Madigan agrees to plead guilty and takes a long sentence (perhaps, for instance, if they bust someone truly close to him), I don’t see it happening.
* On another topic…
Following the verdict in the ‘ComEd 4 trial’, Congressman Sean Casten (D) is calling for Michael Madigan to immediately step down as the Committeeman for the 13th Ward of Chicago.
Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06) represents thousands of Illinoisans in the 13th Ward of Chicago.
“Mr. Madigan will have his day in court, but the corruption has come too close to his office for him to claim ignorance. Public service is a sacred trust. For the good of our democracy and the Democratic Party, he should step down at once,” said Rep. Casten.
I kinda wonder what US Rep. Chuy Garcia thinks, since his congressional district covers the 13th Ward. So, I reached out and will let you know.
Larry Rivelli is a body in constant motion on the backstretch at Hawthorne Race Course. […]
But his pacing comes to a standstill when it’s time to trot out Two Phil’s, the 3-year-old chestnut colt with the white-striped snout, who commands all of Rivelli’s attention. Other trainers and riders stop to poke their heads over the backstretch gate, too, for a view of one of the horse’s final training sessions before the biggest race in the world.
All eyes in the state’s entire horse racing industry will be focused on Two Phil’s this weekend, too, as he’s poised to become the first Illinois-based horse to compete in the Kentucky Derby since Recapturetheglory finished fifth in 2007. […]
It’s the first Derby run for Rivelli, unquestionably Illinois’ top thoroughbred trainer with 1,772 wins and more than $36 million in earnings since 2000.
A full field of 20 is scheduled to go postward. Two Phil’s — No. 3 with Derby rookie Jareth Loveberry in the irons — is a sixth selection in the morning line at 12-1.
The top opening picks are: Forte (No. 15, trainer Todd Pletcher, 3-1), Tapit Trice (No. 5, Pletcher, 5-1) and Angel of Empire (No. 14, Brad Cox, 8-1). […]
TWO PHIL’S IS JOINTLY OWNED BY Patricia’s Hope LLC (Vinnie Foglia and mother Pat Foglia, both of North Barrington, 80 percent) and former advertising exec Phil Sagan of Bloomingdale, who bred the chestnut charger in Kentucky.
The colt is named for Sagan and eightysomething Phil La Sala of Bensenville. La Sala is the father of longtime Chicago jockey Jerry La Sala, who was instrumental in helping to bring about the breeding of Hard Spun to Mia Torri, a General Quarters mare. Anthony Sagan — the son of the breeder — also played a role.
The group has a live chance on that stage. Two Phil’s got here through winning the Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3) at Turfway Park, which is not traditionally a producer of top Derby contenders, though last year’s winner, Rich Strike did come from it.
However, he’s won at Churchill. He has experience, and his connections think he has the temperament to perform well in an environment that stresses out some runners.
“Real cool,” Rivelli said. “He’s perfect for this type of setting. He’s laid back, he likes to sleep. Nothing really bothers him.”
And if Two Phil’s does the unlikely, a major city will celebrate.
“Everybody back home before we left were patting me on the back, you know, ‘Bring home the Derby,’” Rivelli said. “That’s pretty cool.
While Two Phil’s is now a serious Derby contender, he was once a horse that slipped through the cracks in the sales ring. He was a $150,000 RNA at Keeneland September and he failed to garner much interest the following spring at OBS. The Sagans decided to send the colt to Rivelli, hoping that the conditioner could get a win on his record as a juvenile and they could find a buyer from there. […]
Two Phil’s has never actually raced in Illinois, he has trained out of Rivelli’s barn at Hawthorne Park and shipped to six different tracks, collecting four wins and two more placings from eight career starts. Rivelli decided to keep the same routine for the Derby, with Two Phil’s putting in his final five-furlong prep in :59 flat on Mar 27. at Hawthorne before heading to Churchill Downs on Sunday. […]
Rivelli will readily admit that while Two Phil’s is already a winner at Churchill, having claimed the GIII Street Sense S. last October, the big question surrounding the colt is about just how strong his affinity for synthetic might be. His 101 Beyer Speed Figure at Turfway Park in the Jeff Ruby, which is the biggest number among the Derby contenders, is 13 Beyer points higher than his second-best figure from a second-place finish in the GIII Lecomte S. in January.
Now that Derby week is well underway and the Two Phil’s contingent is in Louisville, the dream is starting to become a reality for Rivelli as he represents his grandfather and uncle that went before him, his fellow Chicago horsemen back home and, perhaps in some ways, his beloved Arlington Park, where he won nine training titles before it closed two years ago.
For years, Arlington Park’s opening day coincided with Kentucky Oaks Day. Then COVID-19 struck, and Arlington didn’t begin a 2020 meeting until July. In 2021, the opener returned to the first Friday in May – a dark day, not a celebration. Churchill Downs Inc., Arlington’s owner, already had decided, strictly for financial reasons, to shed the track from its corporate portfolio. In May 2022, the massive Arlington grandstand, the vast tract of land upon which it rests, stood quiet as a remote Illinois prairie.
No one would have felt the closure more acutely than the trainer Larry Rivelli, the owner Vince Foglia, and the jockey Jareth Loveberry. Rivelli won every Arlington training title from 2014 through Arlington’s end. Foglia, who races as Patricia’s Hope LLC, was the perennial leading owner starting in 2015. Loveberry, late to the party, arrived in 2020, winning the riding title that year and the next.
“I grew up by Arlington Park. I went to the high school nearest Arlington Park,” Foglia said. “The whole thing feels tragic. I drive by it all the time and just say, ‘Wow, what a shame.’ ”
Let the first Friday in May 2023 rouse bittersweet memory. Rivelli, Foglia, and Loveberry have other business on Saturday.
* DRF | Beyer Figures say Two Phil’s shouldn’t be overlooked: Two Phil’s earned a 101 Beyer last out, the highest last-out figure in this year’s Derby field. He did it in a romping victory at Turfway Park, and therein lies the rub. Turfway has an all-weather surface. On dirt, Two Phil’s has never been close to the triple-digit fig he earned on synthetic.
* TRC | ‘Blood, sweat and tears’ – Jareth Loveberry takes on racing’s elite in Kentucky Derby with Two Phil’s: Trained by Illinois-based Larry Rivelli, Two Phil’s has won four out of eight starts. The son of Hard Spun already has a victory at Churchill Downs, landing the G3 Street Sense in October last year, and sealed fifth place in the Derby points standings with a 5¼-length success in the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks at Turfway Park.
At a joint City Council committee hearing last week, alderpersons were told Chicago is out of money, space and time to handle the “humanitarian crisis” caused by asylum-seekers descending on Chicago, with 40,000 people waiting at the border and a surge that has yet to peak. […]
With “zero dollars” from the federal government for 2023 costs and a $53 million shortfall to meet the [migrant] surge through June, [City of Chicago] Budget Director Susie Park said the Council will soon be asked to approve a “mid-year budget amendment” that applies portions of a nearly $700 million surplus to plug the gap.
Matthew Doughtie, manager of emergency management services for the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communications, told alderpersons 13 options have been identified as additional shelter locations, “none of them great. … Each of them comes at a cost, be they financial personal or political cost. But, they’re options nonetheless.”
* Meanwhile, the state’s estimated costs have grown yet again for a DHFS program to a pretty scarily high number. From Capitol News Illinois…
The estimated cost for Illinois to continue providing health care coverage to noncitizens who are otherwise ineligible for Medicaid benefits has been revised upward to $1.1 billion for the upcoming fiscal year.
As of the end of March, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services estimated it would cost $990 million to fund the program that provides state-funded health care to individuals age 42 and older who would otherwise qualify for Medicaid if not for their citizenship status.
The new estimate, shared by IDHFS Director Theresa Eagleson in testimony to a Senate appropriations committee Wednesday night, is now $880 million beyond the $220 million estimate included in Gov. JB Pritzker’s February budget proposal. […]
IDHFS chief of staff Ben Winick told the committee that the original estimate relied on the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey data to estimate the eligible population, then assumed a certain percentage would enroll. But both the cost of providing care and the number of enrollees have far outpaced estimates.
Obviously, they really need to find a way to get a handle on those costs. It’s starting to remind me of how the Edgar administration was overrun by Medicaid costs in the 1990s.
By the way, there it is again. The ACS always undercounts Illinois.
A day after former Commonwealth Edison CEO Anne Pramaggiore was convicted of bribery and conspiracy, ComEd parent Exelon disclosed a likely $173 million cost tied to addressing a class-action lawsuit accusing the company of hiding the scheme from shareholders.
The December 2019 lawsuit, filed in federal court in Chicago, has proceeded under an agreement with the federal government barring inclusion of company communications with the feds from discovery. That agreement expires May 15, according to Exelon’s U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission filing today. […]
The plaintiffs, New York-based Local 295 IBT Employers Pension Fund, recently agreed to the $173 million settlement, said Jim Barz, attorney with Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd in Chicago. It remains subject to court approval. […]
This settlement won’t hit Exelon’s bottom line, though, because the company expects the entirety to be covered by liability insurance for directors and officers.
The average household ratepayer in northern Illinois will get a $4.80 credit on their electric bill next April in recompense for Commonwealth Edison’s nine-year-long bribery scheme.
The Illinois Commerce Commission unanimously approved ComEd’s $31 million offer to settle the issue of how much ratepayers should be refunded for the scheme, aimed at currying favor with then-House Speaker Michael Madigan. ComEd is adding another $7 million under Federal Energy Regulatory Commission jurisdiction, so the total refund is $38 million.
* NBC Chicago | Illinois Residents Debate On Tax Credit Scholarship Program For Private Schools: Families that participate in the Invest In Kids program say it’s an invaluable resource, though critics say the initiative hurts public schools. Tracy Smith of Hyde Park told NBC 5 that her 15-year-old twins are blazing a path to success, and it all began at St. Sabina Academy.
* Tribune | Migrants moved to Park District field houses, as South Shore residents criticize city for shelter plans: There were 207 families residing inside Chicago police stations Thursday morning, said Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, citing an unofficial count shared with him by community groups. Dozens of migrants were shown sleeping shoulder to shoulder on the lobby floor of Rogers Park’s 24th District police station in a photo shared on social media and confirmed with police sources by the Tribune.
* Center Square | Illinois lawmakers warn of the rising costs to care for undocumented immigrants: Gov. J.B. Pritzker said since August, the state has provided $240 million for arriving migrants being transported from places like Texas. “To make sure that we were providing the services necessary,” Pritzker said. “We’re talking about shelter, we’re talking about food, we’re talking about health care.”
* Tribune | The Chicago White Sox can’t ruin your summer, no matter how hard they try: So why would anyone come out and watch a Sox team that fell on its face the first month of the season and has little chance of competing in 2023? Maybe because it’s one of the few things from their childhood that remains relatively the same as it was back in the day. They’ve been waiting for months for the weather to turn, and what else is there in Chicago that defines summer like going to a baseball game?
#BREAKING The federal appeals court in Chicago has stayed last week’s ruling by a district court judge that blocked enforcement of Illinois’ assault-weapons ban. pic.twitter.com/8WmGcgiBJa
State Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, issued this statement after the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals resumed enforcement of the Protect Illinois Communities Act, staying a previous lower court ruling:
“Today’s ruling by the Seventh Circuit once again ensures that the Protect Illinois Communities Act can continue to save lives in Illinois. We know the fight isn’t over– the gun lobby will continue to try and block any common sense efforts to keep assault weapons off our streets. But we aren’t backing down, and this ruling only strengthens our resolve and confidence. Assault weapons are killing machines that have caused carnage in too many of our communities, and this law is a powerful step forward on the path to ending the devastating scourge of gun violence in Illinois.
* This is a tiny budget pressure, but it’s still an ask. From another publication…
With a May 19 deadline looming to wrap up state legislative work, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle drove to the state Capitol on Wednesday to make a direct ask of lawmakers to pick up the slack on paying for the health care costs of asylum seekers coming to Illinois.
What she wants: Preckwinkle says the county needs an additional $1.8 million a month to run the Cook County Health system that has been caring for the thousands of migrants who have landed in Chicago — either by bus or plane — since last year. That funding would be in addition to the $1.8 million that the county already kicks in.
Up until February, the state had been paying an estimated $1.6 million for medical care. Then it stopped, and the county took on paying it all. Preckwinkle now worries the task will be more difficult with the expected influx of migrants when Title 42 expires May 11. That’s the Covid-era rule that has allows U.S. officials to turn back thousands of asylum seekers.
I asked the governor’s office for a response…
The Governor’s focus remains on investing in priorities he outlined during his budget address. His administration is working closely with the General Assembly to ensure that additional priorities fit within a balanced budget framework.
Not exactly an endorsement, but it looks like they’re keeping an open mind.
* Press release…
In an effort to prevent yet another long, hot summer of violence, Rep. Danny K. Davis (D-7th) is hosting a prayer and peace breakfast Friday, May 5th, 7 a.m.-12 noon, at the St. Paul Church of God in Christ, 4526 S. Wabash, where clergy and community leaders will hammer out an anti-crime agenda they plan to give to Mayor-elect Brandon Johnson.
The conference is a reaction to the recent teenage takeover of the Loop and the political fallout that pursued. However, the clergy want to present a holistic proposed solution to Johnson rather than focusing only on anti-crime suggestions.
“We are doing this to help create peace and forgiveness,” said Rev. Paul Jakes, pastor of the New Tabernacle of Faith Baptist Church. “We have other issues that may be the basis for the crime, like the long neglected communities of color, homelessness, the lack of jobs, mental illnesses, inadequate schools and a need for better public safety.
“We are taking a pro-active stance in helping Mayor-elect Johnson get a handle on a myriad of social and economic problems he is inheriting,” Rev. Jakes said. We are inviting the public and they are welcome to bring their suggestions.”
* This is always a big event…
The annual Illinois Peace Officers Memorial Service to honor law enforcement officers killed in Illinois in the line of duty, including 12 who died in late 2021 and during 2022, was held Thursday, May 4 at the Illinois Peace Officer Memorial sculpture on the Illinois State Capitol grounds in Springfield.
“This annual ceremony honors those who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving their communities,” said Illinois Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) State Lodge President Chris Southwood. “Every man and woman in this difficult and dangerous profession knows the risks they face every time they put on the badge. This memorial service is a testament to those risks and to the selfless courage of the officers who laid down their lives to keep us safe.”
The 12 officers killed during late 2021 and in 2022 include: Officer Nicholas Kozak, Forest Park Police Department, November 27, 2021; Officer James R. Svec, Chicago Police Department, December 8, 2021; CBP Canine Officer Jeffrey P. Dela Cruz, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, December 23, 2021; Officer Jose M. Huerta, Chicago Police Department, December 23, 2021; Detective Joseph A. Tripoli, Chicago Police Department, January 3, 2022; Deputy Sheriff Michael John Queeney, Will County Sheriff’s Office, January 8, 2022; Officer Brian Romel Shields, Aurora Police Department, January 11, 2022; Deputy Sheriff Joseph Robert Tinoco, Cook County Sheriff’s Department, January 13, 2022; Sergeant Kenneth John Thurman Sr., Aurora Police Department, January 19, 2022; Deputy Sheriff Brian J. Norton, Ford County Sheriff’s Office, February 5, 2022; Officer Brian Lee Sember, Ottawa Police Department, April 3, 2022; and Deputy Sheriff Nicholas Donald Weist, Knox County Sheriff’s Office, April 29, 2022.
In addition, five officers who were confirmed to have died in the line of duty in the past but who had not yet been officially included on the memorial were recognized. These include: Sergeant Claude E. Bowman, Cook County Highway Patrol, July 7, 1923; Sergeant Francis J. McGraw, Chicago Police Department, May 6, 1942; Officer Charles Hibsch, Chicago Police Department, November 9, 1947; Officer Dennis F. Collins, Chicago Police Department, July 3, 1953; and Deputy John Venton Donaldson Sr., Ogle County Sheriff’s
The day’s observance began with the lineup of squad cars from around the state at the Illinois State Fairgrounds. The procession departed the fairgrounds and arrived at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception for a memorial church service. The procession then traveled to the State Capitol for the 11 a.m. ceremony.
Illinois generated about $562 million from marijuana in 2022, placing the state ahead of every of every other in the country in that department except California, according to data from the Marijuana Policy Project.
Overall, tax receipts grew by 10% in Illinois last year, with all the growth coming despite the state being slow to distribute new licenses after legalizing recreational marijuana sales in 2020. In addition, the state charges some of the highest taxes in the country at nearly 40% when local taxes are included, compared to just 10% for Michigan.
* Press release…
Governor JB Pritzker and the Illinois Immigrant Impact Task Force released a report examining various issues affecting immigrant, refugee, and limited English proficiency communities, sharing recommendations the state can take to improve services to immigrant communities. The Task Force identified thirteen issues in the legislation ranging from citizenship assistance, business development, education access, discrimination prevention, immigration detention, COVID-19 relief, language access programs, and more.
The report emphasizes the importance of programs and resources provided by the Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) in supporting immigrant communities. These programs include language assistance, referrals to community resources, and the Refugee and Immigrant Services Program, which offers various services to help refugees and immigrants integrate into their new communities.
The report also highlights Illinois serving as a welcoming state and IDHS’s efforts to address the unique challenges undocumented immigrants face. These efforts include the creation of a hotline for individuals to report fraudulent immigration services, as well as the provision of legal assistance to immigrants facing deportation.
In 2020, House Republican Representatives Ryan Spain, Jim Durkin, and Andrew Chesney launched a special investigation committee to examine then-Speaker Michael Madigan’s involvement in the ComEd bribery scandal. Rep. Emanuel “Chris” Welch served as chairman, called the process a sham and chose to abruptly end the investigation after hearing from just one witness. Welch now serves as Speaker of the House and was supported in this effort by Rep. Lisa Hernandez, who now serves as Chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois.
“We convened and launched an important investigation with substantive work asking for follow-up and investigation into these matters we’ve heard about in detail in the prosecution and now the guilty verdicts which have been delivered this week,” said Rep. Ryan Spain. What was the response from the Democratic legislators that participated in that Investigating Committee? Coverup and sweeping the facts under the rug.”
This week, four of Mike Madigan’s ComEd allies were found guilty of bribery conspiracy in federal court because of their efforts to gain Madigan’s favor while he served as Speaker.
“For too long, we have allowed the poor ethical behavior of people like Mike Madigan, his associates, and others to become the way we do business in the State of Illinois, and unfortunately, the “Madigan Way” is still the way in which our government works here in Springfield. It has to stop now,” said Rep. Ryan Spain.
Nothing has changed since Madigan’s indictment to prevent this type of behavior and nothing will change until the majority party gets serious about ending corruption and reforming the Madigan Rules which govern the House of Representatives.
Emanuel “Chris” Welch is now Madigan’s handpicked successor as Speaker of the Illinois House. Lisa Hernandez is now Chairperson of the Democratic Party of Illinois. “It’s time to throw out the Madigan playbook, pass robust ethics reform measures, and give Illinoisans an honest state government they can believe in,” concluded Spain.
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…
* Tribune | Illinois’ property tax sale system on path to potential reform: A new Senate bill amendment backed by the Cook County treasurer’s office and the Chicago Community Trust seeks to reform Illinois’ property tax sale system. Backers such as state Rep. Kam Buckner, a Chicago Democrat, say the bill would cut the cost for homeowners trying to pay off property tax debt in half, close a loophole that critics said allowed private investors and hedge funds to profit off local governments and help get vacant or abandoned properties back on the tax rolls.
* WBEZ | Greater Ashburn residents want to revamp a program once designed to curb white flight: SWGHE is one of three such Chicago programs that were created under a 1988 Illinois law out of fear white homeowners would flee the city after the election of Harold Washington, Chicago’s first Black mayor. The programs on the Southwest and Northwest sides are funded by nominal property taxes collected from every homeowner in their respective districts. Those who enroll in the program by paying for an appraisal of their home are offered a guarantee: They won’t lose money if they hold on to their homes for at least five years before selling, even if property values fall. That’s unless the reason prices decline is an economic recession.
* Illinois Answers | Tax hikes to ebb for many north suburban businesses, leaving homeowners on the hook: Residential valuations in five north suburban townships are 15% higher for the 2022 tax year than they were in 2019, the last time north Cook County was reassessed, new data from the county Board of Review show. At the same time, combined commercial and industrial valuations edged downward by 1% compared to their last turn under the microscope.
* WBEZ | Cold hard floors, no privacy, asylum seekers make do at Chicago Police Stations: At several of Chicago Police Department Stations, you’ll find Little Caesar pizza boxes, Dunkin Donuts coffee cups and other items surrounding the migrants who lay sit or stand in the vestibule of these stations, with little to protect them from the blowing wind when the front doors open. The Diaz family arrived at one two weeks ago. Their journey began two years ago when they left their native Venezuela and found a temporary home in neighboring Colombia. Then they went to Mexico before arriving in Chicago. Joana Diaz says it’s been tough. She says they had to sleep on bare floors with no sheets, no food or access to showers and sometimes they aren’t made to feel welcome.
* AP | Proposed carbon dioxide pipeline that would end in Illinois hits legal road bump in Iowa: In his ruling Wednesday, District Judge John Sandy denied a pipeline company’s request for an injunction that would allow survey crews access to Martin’s Koenig’s farmland near Sioux Rapids in northwest Iowa. Sandy said a law giving crews that access violated the state constitution because it doesn’t provide just compensation for damages to landowners in exchange for the loss of their right to deny entry to their land, according to the Sioux City Journal.
* WTTW | A Faith Leader Was Convicted of Sexually Abusing a Student and Employee. He Still Lives Within Feet of the School: “It sounds like a very unusual and very specific allowance for somebody,” Rivette said. “If some sort of allowance like that was in place for somebody, there has to be a really big assurance that the person would not have access to children at all, or any vulnerable populations, because generally people that sexually offend have patterns of behavior that aren’t easily broken.”
* Crain’s | Metra gets a lift from Kennedy construction: The biggest increase came on the Union Pacific Northwest line, which runs from downtown through suburbs such as Arlington Heights. It recorded a post-pandemic high of 25,900 passenger trips on Wednesday, April 12, up 30% from the same-day average during the previous six weeks, according to Metra. Eight of the 10 best weekdays for ridership on the UP Northwest since the pandemic began have come since the Kennedy construction started.
* SJ-R | Chicago group closes on financing for Poplar Place redevelopment: Construction will be done in phases and is set to begin later this month, Mayor Jim Langfelder said. It will consist of 25 structures, or 50 duplex units and 50 structures that are single-family houses, lessening the density from its previous 125 structures.
* Crain’s | Chicago firm closes $300 million fund for opportunity zones, plans another: The Chicago-based real estate firm announced today that it has closed its second qualified opportunity zone fund at $300 million, adding to the nearly $265 million it raised for its first fund in 2021. The combined total ranks Origin among the top 2% of fund managers by equity raised for the federal opportunity zones program, according to data tracked by San Francisco-based tax advisory and consulting firm Novogradac.
* WCIA | Is it safe to eat fish from Illinois water? IDPH releases mercury, PCB advisory list: The IDPH released an updated map of affected waters on Wednesday, including many in Central Illinois. In that update, three lakes were added to the list of waters with methylmercury advisories while seven lakes and rivers saw advisories for polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) removed.
* Crain’s | State Street and Deerfield office buildings listed among state’s most endangered: The nonprofit advocacy group’s annual list of the most endangered historic places, released today, warns of imminent threats to nine sites around Illinois, including an affordable housing project at the state’s extreme southern end, in Cairo, and a neglected mid-1800s wooden bridge at its extreme northern end, in Richmond.
* Tribune | Violins from the Holocaust part of Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra’s season finale in Palos Heights: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra closes its 45th anniversary season with violins from the Holocaust. May 13′s Dvořák & Beach at Trinity Christian College’s Ozinga Chapel in Palos Heights also features the world premiere of Jonathan Cziner’s strings-only composition “Nifrach,” which is dedicated to his grandparents Manfred and Linda Blum, the former who lost many family members in the Holocaust.
* Describe what you think former Gov. Bruce Rauner’s official portrait will look like…
Looks like @GovRauner is headed back to his old Springfield stomping grounds. The former Illinois governor and his wife have invites out for a June 11 BBQ. The occasion: the unveiling of his official gubernatorial portrait. pic.twitter.com/hqQcBIKtr1
Landmark legislation designed to prevent book banning passed the Illinois Senate, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced [yesterday].
HB 2789, which now awaits the Governor’s signature, sets a nationwide precedent in the fight against book bans, as libraries and librarians face unprecedented censorship of books and resources, including in Illinois. The bill passed the Illinois House in March.
Giannoulias, who also serves as the State Librarian, initiated HB 2789 after extremist groups – including the far-right nationalist group, the Proud Boys – targeted Illinois libraries, divided communities and harassed librarians, despite that the books are not required reading. […]
House Bill 2789, sponsored by State Rep. Anne Stava-Murray (81st District – Downers Grove) and Sen. Laura Murphy (28th District – Elk Grove Village), allow Giannoulias’ office to authorize grant funding only to libraries that adhere to the American Library Association’s Library Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights states that reading materials should not be removed or restricted because of partisan or personal disapproval, or that issue a statement prohibiting the practice of banning books or resources.
Currently, Illinois law does not contain language related to book banning or the eligibility for state grants if a library bans items from its collection. Last fiscal year, the Secretary of State’s office awarded 1,631 grants to Illinois libraries totaling more than $62 million. Of those, 97% of the grants were awarded to public and school libraries, with public libraries receiving 877 grants and school libraries securing 712 grants.
According to the Chicago-based American Library Association (ALA), there were 67 attempts to ban books in Illinois in 2022, increasing from 41 the previous year.
Nationally, the number of attempts to ban books has been surging. According to the ALA, last year more than 2,500 different books were objected to, compared to 1,858 in 2021 and just 566 in 2019. […]
If signed into law, HB 2789 would take effect on January 1, 2024.
* From Giannoulias’ press conference…
At the state’s librarian, we’ve traveled the state. We’ve spoken to librarians, and what we’ve heard unequivocally across the board is that librarians have never dealt with this level of intimidation, hatred. They’re scared, they’re quitting their jobs. It’s tougher to get new librarians for doing what they’ve always done … That, to me is absolutely unacceptable.
He went on to say that he was “blown away that this has become a partisan issue,” which, he said, “has been the most disheartening part of this whole process.”
* Sen. Andrew Chesney (R-Freeport)…
“This is yet another example of extreme Democrats in the General Assembly taking rights away from parents and local communities and deciding what is best for people. This law, if signed by the Governor, installs a statewide doctrine that provides that all content will be equally available to minors and adults. Through its very nature, this legislation will subject minor children to inappropriate adult content.
“It is becoming commonplace at the Capitol for the majority party to push through legislation that tramples on the rights of people who don’t agree with them or don’t share their same liberal ideology. They’ve been pushing their agenda in our schools, and now they are forcing it upon our libraries. This isn’t about adults going to their library and viewing adult content. It’s about children having unfettered access to that same content, and that’s simply unacceptable.”
* Sen. Jason Plummer (R-Edwardsville)…
This bill is another attempt by the super majority to make it easier to force their extreme ideology on communities across this state, by taking control away from locally elected library boards, and handing it to an outside national organization. It’s offensive to the ideals of good government to threaten to take public funding away from the very communities that generated that funding through their taxes. The members of locally elected library boards, who work to increase literacy in their communities, don’t need a book-ban agenda foisted on them by Chicago politicians who are just trying to get cheap publicity. I will continue to fight against these repeated attempts to take away local control from our communities, whether their target is schools, libraries, or other units of local government.
Sen. Plummer professed not to know what the American Library Association even is. He called it a “random organization” four times during floor debate. One excerpt…
A yes vote on this bill does two things that I think everyone in this chamber should really think about. One, it deprives local taxpayers of the very revenue that they spend to support their local schools and libraries. And it allows unelected and unidentified random people in some organization at the national level to ban books, to set local policy and to usurp the authority of the local elected officials that our constituents voted into their position to make decisions on their behalf. None of your constituents voted for this random organization. None of your constituents are funding this random organization. They’re funding their local libraries, they’re electing their local library boards, and you’re taking their powers away from them simply because you may not agree with their beliefs.
Yeah, no. First, the American Library Association was founded in 1876. It’s a pretty durable American institution. They published a Library Bill of Rights in 1939. It ain’t some rando.
According to the Illinois Public Library Trustee Manual, issued by the secretary of state’s office, only library directors and their staff should be selecting library materials, not library boards.
And the comments by more moderate Senate Republicans during debate (including about drag shows) just confirms my belief that the party’s center is too willing to enable its far right wing to the point where the center (such as it remains) will soon disappear.
* More of that in Isabel’s roundup…
* Tribune | Bill aimed at deterring library book bans heads to Gov. J.B. Pritzker after party-line vote in Senate: “The conversation has been based around book bans. This bill is about taking local control from your elected officials who are elected locally to decide for their libraries what’s best for their libraries,” said Rezin, a Republican from Morris. “Southern Illinois may be different than the suburbs. The suburbs may be different than Chicago.” …
* WCIA | Illinois bill preventing library book bans passes Senate: “This is just a layer of bureaucracy and a threat to these local districts, a bureaucratic threat of taking away their funding that they desperately need,” Sen. Jil Tracy (R-Quincy) said.
* Capitol News Illinois | Bill blocking libraries from state funding if they ban books clears General Assembly: “I think what I heard is, regarding the Bill of Rights here, that if a library does not make its public space available for anyone who wants to use it, including, say, a drag show, because of what the local officials of that library feel is not appropriate for the library, that library can now potentially lose their state funding,” [Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris] said. Likewise, Sen. Steve McClure, R-Springfield, said that prohibiting libraries from banning books for any reason would mean they could not reject the donation of books from the public, including books that are purely hate speech or books offering directions on how to build a bomb. … At his news conference, Giannoulias described those arguments as “ludicrous” and said the legislation does not deal with drag shows or dictate to librarians what materials they have to maintain. “We’re not telling you what books to buy or not buy,” he said. “What we’re saying is, if a book is in circulation as determined by the libraries and the librarians, that book cannot be banned because a group of individuals don’t like or want that book in their library. That’s what the legislation is all about.”
The Illinois House of Representatives moved House Bill 3957 to the Senate on Wednesday, a bill blocking drug price gouging on off-patent and generic drugs.
Consideration was postponed on the bill during a third reading frenzy before the legislature’s spring break last month. Democrats adjourned that April 18 without having enough members to move it forward despite having a super-majority in the chamber.
Wednesday’s vote proved to be much less dramatic and advanced on a 84-25 bipartisan vote. House Minority Leader Tony McCombie and Rep. Mike Coffey, R-Springfield, joined Democrats in supporting the legislation.
Specifically, the bill from Rep. Nabeela Syed, D-Palatine, permits the Director of Healthcare and Family Services or Director of Central Management Services to inform the Attorney General when a price increase for a drug is merited as price gouging. From there, the AG’s office could request a drug manufacturer to explain why they have increased the medication and potentially file subpoenas to a circuit court.
The Illinois House has passed a bill to make it possible for noncitizen residents to receive a standard driver’s license. Currently, such persons may only obtain a Temporary Visitor Driver’s License, which may not be used as identification. As of May 1 the bill was awaiting a final vote in the Senate. The legislation would prohibit state authorities from delivering personal information, including immigration status, to federal officials when individuals apply for a standard driver’s license.
The bill would also eliminate the current requirement that noncitizens either possess an unexpired passport or be able to prove residency in the state for a year before taking the driving exam. Instead, otherwise valid identification that has expired within the past two years would now be accepted. Noncitizens could only receive a standard driver’s license, not the REAL ID license, which remains available only to citizens.
Rep. C.D. Davidsmeyer, R-Jacksonville, is opposed to the bill and says it improperly accommodates people who are in the country illegally. “The federal government is failing on the issue of immigration,” he said in an email to Illinois Times. “Meanwhile it’s costing the state of Illinois hundreds of millions of dollars in ‘free’ services for individuals who are here illegally.” Davidsmeyer says that the new license is an attempt to evade federal immigration laws. “I don’t believe that we should be rewarding individuals who are operating outside of [federal] law.” […]
Members of Springfield’s immigrant community expressed optimism about the new measure. They report that obtaining a Temporary Visitor Driver’s License under current law is so difficult that many do not take advantage of it. For instance, if an applicant does not have an unexpired passport, he must prove residency in Illinois for the past 12 months. Many recent arrivals live in shared accommodations where the lease and utilities are contracted in someone else’s name. This makes proving residency difficult. “I know a lot of people who would like to get a driver’s license, but they don’t have the right paperwork because nothing is in their name,” says Cristina.
* Press release…
A coalition of community developers, affordable housing advocates and tax policy experts led by The Chicago Community Trust today applauded the House Revenue Committee for passing legislation to reform Illinois’ delinquent property tax sale system that research shows will increase investment in historically disinvested communities across the state.
Senate Bill 1675 Amendment 1 reforms the Illinois Property Tax Sale system by closing loopholes that prevent blighted properties from redevelopment and allows local governments to intervene to save abandoned properties after only one failed delinquent tax sale rather than allow them to cycle through the tax sale system for years while the property deteriorates, requiring taxpayer-funded maintenance and eventually demolition. The measure is supported by cities with high concentrations of vacant properties across Illinois, including Chicago, Peoria, Rockford, Decatur and Kankakee.
These common-sense reforms would empower local governments to work with community developers and residents to restore vacant homes and return them to viable properties. In Cook County alone, an estimated 50,000 vacant or abandoned properties are concentrated in its Black and Latinx neighborhoods on Chicago’s South and West sides and in the south suburbs. […]
Under the current Illinois Property Tax Code, county treasurers are required to conduct an Annual Tax Sale at which private tax buyers — typically institutional investors such as hedge funds or out-of-state private tax buyers — can purchase tax debt and seek repayment from the property owners including interest up to 18%. Tax buyers are given up to three years to pay off the tax lien if an owner fails to repay the taxes.
However, a loophole in state law known as a “Sale in Error” allows tax buyers to ask a court for a full refund — plus interest — paid by local governments if the tax buyers don’t want to possess the deed to the distressed property after that three-year period. Under current law, tax buyers can claim a “Sale in Error” for any number of trivial reasons — if the property has a $100 municipal mowing lien on it, for example. […]
Senate Bill 1675 Amendment 1 would limit reasons a “Sale an Error” can be granted, for example, when there is an actual error in the legal description causing a tax buyer to bid on a parcel that doesn’t exist.
Importantly, the legislation would also stop abandoned properties from continually passing through the tax sale cycle while sitting vacant. The measure would allow county governments to intervene more quickly after only one failed delinquent tax sale and then work with land banks, community developers and local residents to rehabilitate the properties before the property deteriorates beyond the point of rehabilitation.
There is new hope for a revival of the Hotel Florence, with House Bill 779 continuing to make its way through the Illinois General Assembly.
HB0779 would provide $21 million in state funding to restore the once-opulent structure back to its former glory. Hotel Florence — named after George Pullman’s daughter — was built in 1881 as a 50-room hotel at the corner of 111th and Forrestville, complete with reading room, billiards room, bar, and restaurant. It sits within the footprint of the Pullman National Historic Park. […]
Quiroz used to spend time as a boy playing in the front yard when his mother was Hotel Florence’s head housekeeper. That was in the 1940s. But decades later, the hotel’s heyday is a distant memory. The building was barely saved from the wrecking ball in the 1970s, and despite efforts by the State of Illinois — which has owned it since the 1990s — to preserve parts of the structure, it has sat mostly empty for decades. […]
HB0779 has passed the state House and is now making its way through the Senate.
* Press release…
Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford is leading a measure to require all schools in the state to provide an option of full-day kindergarten.
“Kindergarten is pivotal for children’s learning journey,” said Lightford (D-Maywood). “Full-day kindergarten classes across the state will ensure equal access to early learning opportunities for all our families.”
Currently, it is optional for school districts to offer full-day kindergarten. Parents who live in districts without the option of full-day kindergarten are often faced with additional barriers to preparing their children for early elementary school. These barriers include, but are not limited to, mid-day transportation, loss of income due to being home with the child or finding additional childcare, and ensuring developmentally appropriate activities are being provided throughout the day. […]
House Bill 2396 passed in the Senate Education Committee and heads to full Senate for further consideration.
* Illinois Senate Democrats…
Opioid overdoses in Illinois alone increased 33% between 2019 and 2020 – a jarring statistic that has led members of the Illinois Senate Democratic Caucus to champion measures to tackle the epidemic.
“The ongoing opioid crisis deserves our full attention, and expanding access to overdose prevention supplies is a critical step in our efforts to prevent overdoses and save lives,” said State Senator Paul Faraci (D-Champaign).
Faraci is sponsoring a measure to expand access to overdose prevention supplies for providers enrolled in the Illinois Department of Human Service’s Substance Use Prevention and Recovery Division Drug Overdose Prevention Team. House Bill 1121 would increase access to fentanyl test strips and improve public health outcomes by preventing fatal overdose.
“All providers enrolled in the Drug Overdose Prevention Program must store testing supplies so that they are accessible only by authorized personnel, including other trained overdose responders,” said Faraci.
Fentanyl abuse is on the rise, leading State Senator Laura Ellman to sponsor House Bill 3924, which seeks to combat the risk of overdoses by requiring all high school students enrolled in a state-required health course to learn about the dangers of fentanyl and fentanyl contamination.
“I’m proud of the work my colleagues and I have done to increase access to naloxone and protect people seeking help for someone experiencing an overdose from being arrested, but our work to address this crisis is not over,” said Ellman (D-Naperville). “Educating people of all ages on the dangers of potential overdose is an effective way to save lives and combat overdoses long-term.”
To increase patron safety at concert venues State Senator Karina Villa is championing House Bill 1557. The measure would require for-profit music venues that have an occupancy of 1,000 or more to have opioid-overdose antidotes, such as naloxone, on hand and have staff members who are sufficiently trained in administrating it.
“People go to a music festival or concert to enjoy themselves — one bad decision should not cost them their life,” said Villa (D-West Chicago). “Whether someone consumes a harmful substance on purpose or accidentally, this bill will save lives by expanding first aid in concert halls to include treating overdose.”
The Senators will work over the weeks leading up to the May 19 adjournment to pass the measures.
Attorney General Kwame Raoul [yesterday] issued the following statement after sending a letter to the mayor of Danville about the ordinance the mayor signed that ignores the Illinois Reproductive Health Act, but is not in effect and will not take effect based on a last-minute amendment.
“After stepping up to the brink of open defiance of state law, I am relieved that the city of Danville heard the concerns I raised in the letter I sent earlier this week and those raised by fellow advocates. Ultimately, after a last-minute amendment, the City Council decided to pass an amended ordinance that, by its own terms, is not in effect and will not take effect.
“Even if the city’s ordinance is merely symbolic, I do not want it to instill fear and confusion. Let me be clear: all residents of Illinois continue to enjoy the fundamental rights guaranteed to them under state law, and my office will continue to ensure that all localities in the state understand that access to reproductive health care is a fundamental right in Illinois.
“Illinois law could not be clearer. Our state is a proud safe haven for access to reproductive health care that respects bodily autonomy and fundamental rights. The Reproductive Health Act states that units of local government cannot limit abortion rights, and Danville has no authority under Illinois law to enact a municipal abortion ban or to otherwise impose its own restrictions on access to abortion care.
“As I said in the letter I sent to the mayor of Danville [yesterday], any future attempt by the city of Danville to restrict the fundamental right to access abortion care would be a violation of Illinois law and will not go unchallenged.”
* David Bonagura Jr., author of the book “Steadfast in Faith”, was invited to appear on WTTW’s news program to talk about Rep. Kelly Cassidy’s bill to allow people to have their dead bodies composted under state regulations…
Bonagura: Cremation is allowed, but not preferred in the Catholic tradition precisely because of the value we place on the body as a religious tradition. We think the body has been ennobled in such a great way through the incarnation that Jesus Christ became God and gave the body an incredible dignity, He divinised it. So even in cremation, we allow that, the church requires that the ashes and bones be kept together and not separated. To separate is really to denigrate the nature of the person.
One of the great tragic elements of September 11 was that so many of those bodies were not able to be recovered, and those people were lost into oblivion, just like people who are composted are. There’s no way to bring closure or peace.
Rep. Cassidy: I’m sorry. You’re comparing this to a terrorist attack? Please.
Bonagura: It’s what happened to the bodies of those poor people.
Rep. Cassidy: And let’s stay with the facts, man. C’mon.
Bonagura: Those were bodies that were lost to all eternity, just like…
Rep. Cassidy: And that has nothing to do with a person making a conscious choice to use a low-impact process to dispose of their remains in a way that is consistent with their belief system. I respect your belief system. I’m not asking Catholics to be cremated, or to be composted. I have no business telling a Catholic what to do with their body post-death. Just as the Catholic Church doesn’t have any business telling an environmentalist that they have to use an environmentally damaging process to handle their remains.
Bonagura: We make laws that reflect the values of our culture. And to allow human composting, to allow our bodies to be thrown into oblivion…
Rep. Cassidy: This is not a Catholic country. [Crosstalk]
Bonagura: If we can defend the body in death, we can do it in life as well.
Please pardon all transcription errors. More on the panel discussion (and there was quite a bit more) is here.
Thursday, May 4, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department
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Steven Woletz, of the 100 block of Jason Court, called the Governor’s Office of Constituent Affairs April 15 and left a voicemail threatening both Pritzker and his mother, according to the DuPage County State’s Attorney’s Office.
Officials allege the 46-year-old man spewed threats and profanities on the voicemail, saying, “F— you and your f—ing mother” and “I’m going to f—ing kill you, you f—ing silly f—ing a–hole.”
The state’s attorney’s office announced the charge against Woletz Wednesday evening. He posted the necessary 10 percent of a $100,000 bond to be released from custody after Illinois State Police arrested him without incident Tuesday afternoon following an investigation.
Pritzker’s mother died more than 40 years ago. Ugh.
And, just saying, but the General Assembly updated the SAFE-T Act last December to include a long list of alleged offenses that are detainable pretrial. One of those was “threatening a public official.” Woletz may not have been allowed out of jail if several state’s attorneys hadn’t sued to block the law.
The Chicago Bears filed paperwork to begin tearing down Arlington International Racecourse, another step toward the team’s plan to transform the massive northwest suburban site into what could be a $5 billion stadium-anchored campus. […]
Yet the Bears spokesman cautioned that the application doesn’t mean the team will begin developing the project anytime soon. Team officials have repeatedly said it will move ahead with the redevelopment only if it gets taxpayer help financing a mixed-use portion of the proposed campus.
Tearing down existing structures on the site, however, could help lower the cost of owning the property in the meantime. That could be more important now that Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi has dramatically hiked the assessed value of the property. As Crain’s reported yesterday, Kaegi’s new valuation of the property at the price the team paid for it would increase the property tax bill by $15 million per year.
The team said the demolition was in the works for a while and that the timing had nothing to do with the reassessment — though demolishing the grandstand is likely to significantly lower the property value and resulting taxes. The “improved value” of the site, meaning structures like the grandstand, racetrack, offices, stables and jockey dorms, makes up $168 million of the assessed value.
Removing the building’s heating, air conditioning, electrical, water and other utilities would also reduce maintenance costs. It’s not clear when the structures would be torn down, but if approved by the village, it could happen this year.
The Bears shared the following statement on the tax issue: “Paying property taxes is part of being a member of the community. We want to pay our fair share. But the proposed assessment of the unoccupied property we purchased, and the taxes associated with it, would be more than five times what the property generated when it had an income-producing racetrack operating on it. Arlington Park would not be redeveloped by anyone at such an excessive property tax rate.”
“The Cook County Assessor has increased the cost potentially of a Bears’ tax bill dramatically by reassessing the property way above what it was,” said Greg Hinz, of Crain’s Chicago Business, who first reported the news. He said the move could raise the bill from $2.75 million to an estimated $16.5 million.
“By my calculations, the owners of that property have to pay at least another $15 million a year in property taxes right away if his decision is upheld,” Hinz said. “Fifteen million is a lot for the Bears. Fifteen million dollars is probably what a couple of good players cost a year.” […]
“Whenever a taxpayer disagrees with that value, they have the opportunity to appeal,” said Cook County Board of Review Commissioner Samantha Steele. She noted that an area school district is also intervening in the appeal, presenting an appraisal of the property at $150 million. […]
“This is not a team that’s known, or family that’s known for throwing around money,” [Hinz] added. “They tend to keep it pretty close to the vest and in their wallet and if the vehemence of their reaction is any indication, they don’t like this at all.”
Clearing the property of structures also would be a key consideration amid the Bears’ proposed Payments in Lieu of Taxes financing mechanism that would help bankroll the redevelopment.
Under the proposal, the assessed value of the property would be frozen a year before the Illinois Department of Revenue certified the so-called “mega project.” Then, instead of paying more taxes as the property grows in value, the Bears would make annual payments to schools and other local taxing bodies that are negotiated with village officials.
Thursday, May 4, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department
[The following is a paid advertisement.]
Tell state legislators to bring offshore wind to Lake Michigan. Fight climate change. Create thousands of union jobs for local communities. And generate homegrown clean energy.
* Chalkbeat | Advocates call on Illinois lawmakers to fund after-school programs after state error: After-school programs for 27,000 Illinois students may be in danger of running out of money after next year because of an accounting error made by the Illinois State Board of Education. The error has caused a projected $12.4 million shortfall for 2024, according to a spokesperson with the state board. State Superintendent Tony Sanders says the state will use emergency COVID-19 funding to fill in the gap this year, but will not have new funding available in the future.
* WBEZ | A Chicago group aims to better track anti-Asian hate crimes in the Midwest: Abbey Eusebio, the center’s manager, said better tracking and more public awareness are needed in this region because Asian American communities are more spread out and isolated. “We’re not as concentrated in these different parts of the city as New York and parts of the West Coast,” Eusebio said. “That really contributes to the struggle” in data collection and connecting victims to resources.
* The Telegraph | Committee balks at MCT appointment: A sometimes heated meeting of the Madison County Board’s Government Relations Committee resulted in the denial of another request by Chairman Kurt Prenzler to place former state Rep. Dwight Kay on the Madison County Transit (MCT) District Board, and ended in a three-way shouting match Tuesday between county board members who were not members of the committee.
* Tribune | Starbucks illegally fired Chicago barista, threatened workers during union drive: judge: The coffee giant also illegally threatened workers at the Hyde Park cafe and another location in Edgewater last year, administrative law judge Geoffrey Carter ruled. Managers at those stores threatened baristas that they could lose benefits or opportunities for raises as a result of the union campaign, Carter ruled.
* Evanston Now | More Ryan Field details expected soon: Northwestern University is expected to submit its planned development request to the City of Evanston to rebuild Ryan Field sometime this week. That was the word Wednesday from Ald. Eleanor Revelle, whose 7th Ward includes the stadium.