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Minimalist license plate sticker explained

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Many thanks to Marni Pyke for taking the time to check this out

Simpler can be better. But not when it comes to the pared-down license plate stickers the Illinois secretary of state’s office is dispensing, some drivers think.

“What’s the deal with the new plate renewal stickers that only show the year of expiration?” reader Dale Maradei asked.

“The old ones showed the month, year and plate number. If you do not remember when your plate expires, you could be in trouble. Are they trying to save money on printing costs?”

It’s not printing costs creating sticker shock; it’s supply-chain dysfunction involving paper products.

Read the rest.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hmm…




* The Question
: Who should run for mayor?

  44 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Campaign notebook

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Not unexpected…


But…


Real tough guys, eh? But maybe part of a larger trend…


* Subscribers know more…


* Meanwhile

Burr Ridge Mayor Gary Grasso has condemned Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey’s 2017 comments comparing abortion to the Holocaust.

“As a person with Jewish heritage on my mother’s side, Darren Bailey’s comments claiming abortion is worse than the Holocaust clearly disqualifies him, combined with his many other disqualifying positions, to hold any responsible office in this state,” Grasso, a Republican, said Thursday in a statement on Facebook. “Bailey should withdraw and give Republicans a chance to put forth a viable candidate. He’s already lost the Governor’s race. Bailey is too extreme to hold any office.” […]

“Bailey has not apologized for his comparison of abortion being worse than the Holocaust,” Grasso said. “Republicans who think they can get elected in November on their own merit must decide whether to distance themselves from and disavow the albatross at the top of the ticket.”

In the June 28 Republican primary, Grasso lost to Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau in the 6th Congressional District race. Grasso has not publicly endorsed Pekau.

Grasso was endorsed by House Republican Leader Jim Durkin.

* And…

Darren Bailey’s voting record shows a disturbing pattern of voting against the very initiatives he claims he supports. Despite his tough rhetoric, a closer look at Bailey’s four years in the legislature shows his votes don’t match up to his talk. In fact, during his time in Springfield, Bailey has sponsored only two bills that have passed and has instead spent his time voting against legislation that would make life better for Illinoisans—even bipartisan legislation that his Republican colleagues supported and voted for.

Bailey has voted against historic investments in law enforcement, including the single largest dollar investment to expand cadet classes in Illinois history, $10 million for a local law enforcement retention grant program, and $8 million for a multi-year equipment replacement program at the Illinois State Police.

Bailey has also been given multiple opportunities to denounce January 6 insurrectionists and stand up for the Capitol Police officers who defended our democracy, but he has declined to do so. Instead, Bailey has pushed the Big Lie, promised to “roll out the red carpet” for Donald Trump, and even had a close campaign associate charged for participating in the attack on the Capitol.

“Given his dismal voting record and hypocritical stance on supporting Capitol police officers who fought on January 6, Darren Bailey has no right to claim he supports law enforcement,” said JB for Governor Press Secretary Eliza Glezer. “Bailey’s real record is one of staggering inaction and contradiction, and we deserve better.”

Bailey also voted against:

    • Strengthening the Illinois State Police Division of Forensic Services
    • Strengthening safety for first responders on state highways
    • Installing hundreds of highway cameras and doubling state police presence on Chicago-area interstates in response to on-road violence
    • Providing tens of millions of dollars for police body cameras, retention grants, and mental health screenings
    • Building new, state-of-the-art forensics labs to provide law enforcement with the resources to solve crimes
    • Delivering millions of dollars to local fire departments to purchase firefighting and ambulance equipment
    • Requiring municipalities to coordinate 911 and 988 services in order to respond to mental and behavioral health emergencies with proper emergency care, reduce danger to those in crisis, and lessen the burden on local police

* Press release…

Greg Hart, Republican Candidate for DuPage County Board Chairman, received an endorsement today from former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar who served from 1991 to 1999.

“I am honored to have the support of a deeply respected, results-oriented leader like former Governor Jim Edgar. He worked with Democrats and Republicans to break through the partisan gridlock and get things done for all Illinoisans. That is the kind of leadership we need in DuPage County. I admire Governor Edgar’s service and believe his endorsement will show voters that I’m the right choice to lead DuPage forward.”

Edgar was known for his popularity and leadership that cut through partisanship and earned him a massive reelection victory in which he carried 101 of 102 Illinois counties, including Cook County.

“I am proud to give my endorsement to Greg Hart based on his demonstrated ability to lead DuPage County and get results for taxpayers. With the nation as divided as it is, and politicians taking such extreme positions on the left and right, Greg Hart gives me hope that there are still leaders who know how to accomplish great things in government for the people. Greg Hart is a bright, motivated leader who will serve DuPage County very well,” said Edgar.

* NRCC…

Hi there –

The House is set to vote on the so-called “Inflation Reduction Act” this week.

A question worth asking: If Nikki Budzinski was in Congress, would she support this bill that will raise taxes on the middle-class and hire 87,000 IRS agent
s to audit Americans?

I waited more than an hour for the Budzinski campaign to get back to me. I’ll let you know if they ever do.

…Adding… Tribune

John Catanzara, the firebrand president of Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police, won’t run for mayor against Lori Lightfoot.

Catanzara, who retired while facing potential termination by the Chicago Police Board after a career as one of the department’s most disciplined officers, flirted with the idea of running for City Hall’s top job but told ABC 7 Monday that he will focus instead on being re-elected as union president next year.

*** UPDATE *** The FOP also endorsed Tom DeVore today. Here’s AG Raoul…

As someone who started my career as a county prosecutor, I value the relationships I have developed working directly with police officers, prosecutors and other law enforcement partners across Illinois to protect our communities, and I plan to continue this work on a bipartisan basis. I’m proud of the work we’ve done collaboratively to prosecute murder cases, cases against sexually violent people, internet crimes against children, retail theft crime and illegal gun trafficking. My opponent has never prosecuted a criminal case in his career and has threatened to use the power of the Attorney General’s Office to investigate his Republican adversaries.

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*** UPDATED x1 *** Eli Lilly, Cummins warn Indiana about new abortion ban

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bloomberg

Eli Lilly & Co., one of Indiana’s largest employers, said the state’s freshly passed restrictions on abortion would force the drug maker to “plan for more employment growth outside our home state.”

A growing list of companies, including Citigroup Inc., Apple Inc., Bumble Inc. and Levi Strauss & Co., are offering benefits for reproductive-care services in states that have imposed restrictions. But Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly’s announcement marks a swift escalation by a multinational that employs 10,000 people in Indiana, where the drug maker was founded in 1876.

* The company’s full statement…


* Terry Cosgrove at Personal PAC…

Good for them.

More corporations need to be following Lilly out of states with laws that put the health and lives of women at risk.

We’d gladly welcome Eli Lilly to Illinois, a state that respects women and trusts them to make medical decisions for themselves.

* Some more context

Lilly has had somewhat of a complicated relationship with its native state lately. Earlier this year, the company’s CEO David Ricks criticized the state in a speech before the Economic Club of Indiana, stating, “[o]ur education attainment in the state is not good.”

“The ability to reskill the workforce, I think, could improve,” he added at the event. “Health, life and inclusion, overall, I think, conditions rank poorly nationally in our state. And also workforce preparedness, also related to reskilling, is a liability for us,” Ricks said.

At the same time, Ricks noted Indiana’s healthcare costs exceed those of neighboring states, which makes the Hoosier State unattractive to potential employers.

Still, one month later, Lilly laid out $2.1 billion to erect two new manufacturing sites in Indiana’s Boone County, with plans to add 500 new jobs along the way.

* And Lilly isn’t the only one

Cummins, an engine manufacturing company headquartered in Columbus, Ind., has nearly 10,000 employees in the state. It has said it opposes the law.

“Cummins believes that women should have the right to make reproductive healthcare decisions as a matter of gender equity,” spokesperson Jon Mills told NPR. “The right to make decisions regarding reproductive health ensures that women have the same opportunity as others to participate fully in our workforce and that our workforce is diverse.”

Mills said parts of the law conflict with the company’s beliefs and will “impede our ability to attract and retain top talent and influence our decisions as we continue to grow our footprint with a focus on selecting welcoming and inclusive environments.”

* PPIA on the Indiana legislation…

Statement attributed to Jennifer Welch, President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Illinois Action:

“We are outraged that the Indiana General Assembly has banned most abortions, denying Indiana residents access to essential health care. This dangerous ban is another devastating blow for the Midwest, which is quickly becoming a vast desert for abortion care. Now people in Indiana are forced to either travel to a state like Illinois for care, seek an alternative means of ending their pregnancy or remain pregnant against their will.

I want to be clear, abortion is still safe and legal in Illinois and will remain that way. Planned Parenthood of Illinois (PPIL) has been preparing for the overturning of Roe and subsequent state bans for years and has taken active steps to meet increasing demand. PPIL opened a new health center in Flossmoor, near the Indiana border, in 2018, in anticipation that our neighbors would likely lose abortion access after the fall of Roe. The Flossmoor health center has already seen its out-of-state abortion patients triple in the weeks following the SCOTUS ruling in June.

This is clear evidence that abortion restrictions and bans do not stop people from having abortions; restrictions and bans only make it harder for people to access safe reproductive health care where they live. While Indiana used its special session to take away a person’s right to abortion care, in Illinois we look forward to further protecting and expanding abortion access in order to meet this rising patient surge so people can access the abortion care they need and deserve, no matter who they are or where they live.”

Thoughts?

*** UPDATE *** Greg Hinz

Illinois won’t necessarily try to grab the headquarters, though that would be nice. But given Illinois’ competitive cost of living compared to other big states that might make a pitch (like New York and California) and its talent advantage over Indiana, a fairly large investment here is potentially within reach, my source says. […]

“The Governor is in regular contact with numerous business leaders, both in Illinois and nationally, to discuss Illinois’ competitive strengths—including the fact that we have enshrined reproductive rights into law while others are stripping them away,” his spokeswoman, Jordan Abudayyeh, said in a statement. […]

Sources also report that some Chicago developers, who have been busily adding lab space in the city designed to appeal to biopharma companies, have reached out to Lilly on their own.

The bottom line: It’s a lot easier to set up, say, a new research center just over the border than it would be on the other side of the country.

  52 Comments      


Central and southern Illinois lung cancer rates double those in Chicago region

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Maureen Foertsch McKinney

Lung cancer rates in central and southern Illinois are double those in the Chicagoland region, according to the American Lung Association.

Kristina Hamilton, who is advocacy director for the American Lung Association in Illinois, said smoking is the leading cause of lung cancer in the state.

”The smoking rates are higher in many of the counties where the lung cancer incidence rate is higher. We see a lot of correlation,’’ she said. “The smoking rate for the state of Illinois is about 15 percent. But in some of those counties with high lung cancer rates, we’re seeing rates of 20 to almost 30 percent for smoking rates.”

She said individuals in mainly rural parts of southern and central Illinois have less access to lung cancer screening because there are fewer medical facilities performing the service.

Estimates are more than 9,000 people in Illinois will be diagnosed with lung cancer this year, and more than 5,000 will die from the disease. That’s according to the American Lung Association.

Thoughts?

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Progress made, but still a long way to go

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW

In late July, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued a second round of conditional adult use cannabis dispensary licenses that brought the total number of issued licenses to 177.

The applicants, all of whom qualify as social equity applicants, have 180 days to obtain a physical storefront location and the full adult use dispensing organization license. According to the state, of the business selected for the licenses, 41% are majority black owned, 7% are majority white owned, 4% are majority Latino owned and 38% did not disclose the owner’s race. […]

“We need to continue to remove barriers to our viability, both on the cultivation side and the retail side,” Parnell said. “There’s still some pretty significant barriers to viability for us as craft growers … And that feeds over into the retail side because now we have 177 new social equity businesses that need product and they need a diversity of product that we need to get that in their hands … so we need to remove barriers for us to be successful. And we also need state funding more quickly.” […]

Similarly, on the expungement side, Brandon Williams, supervising attorney of criminal records at Cabrini Green Legal Aid, said while a great deal of progress has been made, he hopes to get the word out to more people about the free resources made available for expungement via New Leaf Illinois.

“There have been hundreds of thousands of cannabis convictions and arrests expunged already, but there’s still a long way to go. We believe there are over 700,000 cannabis arrest convictions within the state of Illinois, and we are still working to lower that number each and every day through the court system and through the automatic process,” Williams said. “People can get free assistance from an attorney getting their criminal records expunged and sealed in the state of Illinois. We’ve been trying hard for the last two and a half years to get the word out as much as possible, but we still haven’t seen the numbers that we anticipated in regards to people signing up to get this free assistance … I think the word still needs to get out more into the actual communities where the war on drugs impacted the most people, which obviously is in the Black and brown neighborhoods.”

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Why has Illinois’ “red flag” law not lived up to expectations?

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Annie Sweeney, Jeremy Gorner and Dan Petrella at the Tribune take a hard look at the state’s Firearms Restraining Order

Since the [Illinois] law took effect in 2019, just 228 of the orders have been granted in Illinois, according to Illinois State Police. In Maryland, an estimated 2,000 red flag orders have been granted since the law went into effect in late 2018, according to data from the Center for Gun Violence Solutions at Johns Hopkins University. Researchers in California, meanwhile, say about 1,000 were granted there between 2016 and 2019.

* Why the difference? One reason

In a statement to the Tribune this week, the Illinois attorney general’s office acknowledged that the firearms restraining order law rolled out without any funding for training.

“When the Illinois Firearm Restraining Order Act became law in 2019, it did not provide a process or funding mechanism for training,” the statement reads.

In late 2020, the office developed training and materials to raise awareness and has since trained “law enforcement agencies, state’s attorney’s offices, crime victims’ organizations, gun safety groups and veterans’ service providers,” the statement read.

DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin said after reviewing the red flag legislation in 2018, he immediately added the topic to his annual training for law enforcement. He has also assigned an assistant state’s attorney to help with the filing of the orders, and he met with the county’s chief judge to set up a process to handle the filings, which are all heard in the same courtroom.

According to the article, 228 firearms restraining orders have been issued in Illinois and DuPage County “has led the way with 70.”

Go read the rest.

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Protected: *** UPDATED x3 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Report: Sen. Sims “approached” by law enforcement

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Illinois state Sen. Elgie Sims was approached in the spring by federal authorities investigating potential influence peddling involving a police body-camera manufacturer that hired the law firm where Sims works as a lobbyist, sources have told the Tribune.

Sims, 51, a Chicago Democrat who spearheaded the state’s massive criminal justice reform law passed last year and represents portions of the South Side and south suburbs, was contacted by the FBI in early May as the investigation intensified, according to two sources who have knowledge of the investigation but are not authorized to speak about it publicly.

Sims’ attorney told the Tribune the senator has done nothing wrong.

The ongoing probe involves Axon Enterprise Inc., an Arizona law-enforcement technology company that hired law firm Foley & Lardner LLP to lobby the legislature in Springfield and Chicago, according to the sources. Sims is an “of-counsel” attorney at Foley, specializing in government affairs and public policy.

There’s more, so go read the rest. This is about the recent legal requirement for police body cams in the SAFE-T Act, which has been a longterm goal of the entire Legislative Black Caucus.

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Shakman case react

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Crain’s

A lawsuit that independent political candidate Michael Shakman filed in 1969 against Cook County set in motion what would become the Shakman decrees, which were placed on the state of Illinois and local governments throughout the state, including the city of Chicago, to outlaw patronage jobs given to political allies rather than qualified applicants.

In 1972, Shakman and the government reached a “mutually agreed-upon and court-approved remedy for the past practices that infected state and local employment decisions,” Scudder said in the decision.

In the [new appellate court] decision, Scudder wrote that after the Illinois inspector general found instances of patronage hiring from 2003-2014, “most especially” in the Illinois Department of Transportation, and an investigator appointed by the magistrate judge overseeing compliance with the decree found similar instances, additional oversight and regular reviews were established to more closely monitor hiring decisions.

The state created a comprehensive hiring plan and recently a “hiring and employment monitoring division” was put in place in the inspector general’s office.

* Tribune

While the governor’s office has been under the decree since 1972, scrutiny of hiring practices ramped up in 2014 after the state’s then-executive inspector general, Ricardo Meza, found improper hiring at IDOT that began under Gov. Rod Blagojevich and continued under his successor, Gov. Pat Quinn.

Meza said his investigation was “unable to conclude” that top officials knew of the illegal hiring, which involved bringing hundreds of people on board as “staff assistants” to bypass anti-patronage personnel rules.

That fall, a federal judge granted a request from Shakman to appoint a monitor to oversee hiring at IDOT.

After Brennan reported in 2017 that Quinn’s office “played a key role in the staff assistant abuse at IDOT,” her purview was expanded to include all hiring under the governor’s authority. By that time, Rauner was well into his single term.

* Sun-Times

“I appreciate the work the judges do, the federal judges. Having said that, I respectfully disagree with their decision today,” Shakman told the Sun-Times.

“We’ve been eager to get people out of the federal court and back in the business of running their own employment systems,” Shakman said.

“We’ve asked that every … government agency have an employment plan, have an enforcement procedure for that plan that’s designed themselves, but actually running and showing that it works. And that’s all we asked from the governor. Unfortunately the governor hasn’t done that yet.”
Michael Shakman in 1970, left, and in 2014, right. […]

“The opinion makes the point that Gov. Pritzker is a person to be trusted, a person who understands the responsibilities of the governor’s office and his constitutional responsibilities. I assume every one of those facts is correct,” Shakman said.

“But none of them really addresses the fact that Gov. Pritzker is not making the hiring in state government. That’s being done by hundreds of people that he has never met. And he never will. Some of those people were hired through the patronage system. Some of them are loyal to the politicians who got them their jobs.”

* Lobbyist Heather Wier Vaught, an attorney whose spouse is involved with the Cook County case [corrected], had this analysis for her clients…

On Friday the Seventh Circuit vacated the Shakman Decree against the Governor, starting the process of ending one of the oldest cases in Illinois. Six different federal judges have overseen the case, more than 1,000 status reports have been filed, and more than 10,000 entries on the federal docket have been filed since the original consent decree took effect in 1972. To understand the effect of this decision, you have to know a bit of the history.

In 1969, Michael Shakman, an independent political candidate for the 1970 state constitutional convention, and a voter named Paul Lurie filed a class action lawsuit against various political organizations and units of government claiming that political patronage violated the rights of independent candidates and voters. In 1972, the parties, including then Governor Richard Ogilvie and various units of local government, mutually agreed to a federal consent decree that made it clear that political reasons and factors could not be used when making certain governmental employment decisions. After the 1972 decree was entered, in two separate cases the U.S. Supreme Court found that governments could not constitutionally base public employment opportunities on political affiliation and may not consider political affiliation in hiring except as to certain exempted political positions. One of those cases was Rutan v. Republican Party of Illinois, 497 U.S. 62, 79 (1990). Those cases should have, in my opinion, ended the Shakman consent decree since the Court held patronage unconstitutional, despite the fact it had played a prominent role in American political life since the nation’s founding. As a result of these cases, it was made clear that governments couldn’t consider party affiliation or political activities when hiring, with exception for certain policy related positions. However, the Shakman decrees lived on.

Over the past 50 years the various decrees covered the Governor, the City of Chicago (released in 2014), Cook County (released in 2018), and other county offices including the Cook County Recorder, Treasurer, Circuit Clerk, Assessor, Sherriff, Clerk, Forest Preserve, Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, and on and on. The units of government impacted had to work with private attorneys representing the Shakman plaintiffs and federal special masters tasked with monitoring the review of employment related decisions – from employment manuals, to the hiring process, to the staff coordinating hiring, to the types of resumes that were received and reviewed by a state or local agency, even time keeping records. Taxpayers have spent tens of millions of dollars on Plaintiffs’ legal fees, fees charged by the monitors, and fees for outside defense counsel. This doesn’t include the tens of millions more spent by agencies on compliance and their own legal fees, or the costs related to the state and county Inspectors General.

Specific to the Governor, in 2009, following the impeachment of Governor Rod Blagojevich, a bipartisan committee of the Senate and House recommended, and the General Assembly passed, an amendment to the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act that gave the Office of the Inspector General unfettered discretion to investigate allegations of political patronage in State government and “review hiring and employment files of each State agency within [its] jurisdiction to ensure compliance with Rutan v. Republican Party of Illinois… and with all applicable employment laws.” 5 ILCS 430/20-20(9). In 2015, the Office created the Division of Hiring & Employment Monitoring to conduct compliance-based reviews of State hiring and employment procedures, file reviews and on-site monitoring of agency hiring decisions, and work with the monitor appointed in the Shakman litigation. (More on the OEIG’s role here.) As a result, employment-related decisions had oversight by agencies, the ultimate jurisdictional authority (i.e. Governor’s Office), lawyers representing the plaintiffs, inspectors general at the individual agencies, the Office of the Inspector General, court monitors, and federal judges.

In November 2019 the Clerk of Cook County filed a motion to vacate the Shakman decrees against that office, but the motion was denied by the magistrate judge then presiding over the case. The Seventh Circuit affirmed when the Clerk appealed, but it cautioned the decrees left the Court with “serious concerns about the duration and seemingly never-ending nature of the Shakman decrees.” The Court said, “Do not let today’s result cloud the grave federalism concerns we have with the fact that the Clerk of Cook County has been under the thumb of a federal consent decree for the last 50 years.” After the Clerk’s decision was handed down, the Governor moved to vacate the decree against the State. The District Court denied the Governor’s motion and the Governor appealed. Friday the Seventh Circuit reversed the District Court and remanded the case back with direction to vacate the decree against the Governor.

The Court stated in its opinion, “What may have started with a federal court’s well-grounded injunction came to look more like indefinite federal judicial supervision of state employment practices.” The Court said “What most concerns us is that the special master’s oversight—which the district court relied on in denying the Governor’s motion to vacate—has drifted beyond any obligation imposed by the decree and, most certainly, the Constitution. Nowhere do we see the special master, the district court, or Shakman and Lurie on appeal relying on the standards articulated in Elrod and Rutan to identify constitutional violations.”

What may have started as a good-faith effort to challenge that patronage practices in effect in the 1960s had crept over the years into a cottage industry for plaintiffs, the court appointed monitors, and outside defense counsel focused on employment minutia rather than the requirements of federal law. (For Office Space fans: It was as though the federal court had appointed many Bill Lumburgs to oversee how well governmental offices filled out their TPS reports.) The Seventh Circuit decided that was too much, holding “leaving the Governor subject to the 1972 decree is no longer warranted or tolerable. Governor Pritzker has demonstrated substantial compliance with the decree and identified and instituted durable remedies to help ensure that compliance sticks. He has earned the right to make employment decisions for the state on his own and not under the terms and conditions of the 1972 decree or the watchful eyes of a special master and federal court. We cannot let perfect be the enemy of the constitutionally adequate.”

Though the decision only affects the Governor, it was written to clearly provide guidance to the other offices still under decrees. In fact, shortly after the Seventh Circuit’s Order was issued Friday, the district judge ordered supplemental briefing on the Cook County Clerk’s pending motion to vacate to discuss the decision. Other offices under the decrees and court appointed monitoring are expected to consider moving to vacate as well.

After 50 years and countless millions of dollars out of state and county coffers and into the pockets of attorneys, the federal court is on track to return control of employment decisions back to the officials elected by the people. It’s actually a very important reminder that elections have consequences. To those that may lament the good government reforms the decrees supposedly stand for, don’t. Governments are still barred from making employment decisions based on politics, and everything required by the decrees is already required by federal, state, or county law or policy. The only difference is taxpayers will no longer bear the burden of annually paying millions to court appointed monitors and attorneys.

  15 Comments      


Pritzker couldn’t have won the DPI battle without Welch

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

One of the biggest unsung winners in the fight for control of the Democratic Party of Illinois is House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch.

The new state party chair is Rep. Elizabeth Hernandez, a member of Welch’s leadership team. Hernandez handled the delicate task of overseeing the redistricting effort in her chamber last year.

She is quite popular in her caucus, including among Latino progressives, who note Hernandez has been with them on very important votes despite her background as a “regular” Cicero Democrat.

That voting record helped seal the deal when progressive U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia decided to flip from supporting U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly for party chair last year to backing Hernandez this time around, taking the other Latino state central committee members with him in the process.

It’s no big secret that Welch has worked hard to develop close ties to Gov. J.B. Pritzker. Welch has eschewed the sort of political games Senate President Don Harmon has occasionally played with the governor.

As a result, the governor could be confident Welch wouldn’t try to pull Hernandez’s strings. And Welch helped bring votes to Hernandez’s bid, which put her over the top. Pritzker couldn’t have done this without Welch.

Kelly regularly boasted of the party’s hefty $2 million bank account, but she never mentioned the $2 million had been moved by former House Speaker Michael Madigan to the state party from the now-defunct House Democratic Majority committee shortly after he resigned as House speaker. Welch has been trying to get that $2 million released by the party ever since, to no avail.

Welch was also reportedly frustrated with the state party’s demands over the party’s postage discount rate, which could be worth as much as $3 million to the House Democrats in the upcoming fall campaign.

It also probably didn’t help matters much that the state party’s general counsel, Michael Dorf, performed some campaign legal work for Abdelnasser Rashid during his successful primary bid against sitting state Rep. Mike Zalewski, D-Riverside.

Because of Kelly’s very real federal legal limitations on her state campaign-related activities, Dorf had been listed as the state party’s chair in its official filings with the Illinois State Board of Elections. Needless to say, it wasn’t a good look for him to be doing legal work against a Democratic incumbent.

So, there was almost no downside for Welch to throw in with Pritzker in the battle over who would lead the state party.

The Hernandez win is widely seen as a big victory for Pritzker. But it’ll also hopefully help normalize the party down the road. Governors tend to control their respective state parties, for good or ill. Illinois Democrats have for years been a notable exception to that rule. Republican governors here have always run their state party organizations, but not the Dems.

Part of the reason for that is because the Republicans controlled the governor’s office for 26 straight years, which created an enormous Democratic Party power vacuum that was filled by whomever could muster the votes.

When Madigan figured out the state party could save him tons of money on campaign postage, he put his own person in and then finally replaced that person with himself. The party apparatus eventually became little more than a vehicle for sending reduced-cost House campaign mailers and a power center for a politician who regularly defied governors of his own party.

Kelly promised to change all that, but in doing so she neglected to consider the impact on the legislative caucuses.

Kelly was backed from the start by U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, who set up a successful shadow party operation years ago as a counterbalance to Madigan. Durbin has done quite a lot to build his party over the years, including recruiting numerous congressional candidates and an early insistence on turning the formerly solidly Republican Will County into a Democratic powerhouse.

But Durbin overreached by grabbing at the state party mantle, alienating the governor and U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth, both of whom are on the ballot this year. Kelly’s decision to run a scorched-earth campaign late in the game, by claiming through surrogates that the governor and his allies were somehow racists, injected even more hostility into the relationship between Pritzker and Durbin that has never been anything close to good.

Point being, once Pritzker leaves office (whenever that is), the next Democratic governor will likely benefit from the precedent set by this intra-party battle.

  33 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hope your morning is better than mine.

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Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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LIVE COVERAGE

Monday, Aug 8, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Cracker will play us out

I’m so sick of goodbyes

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Downstate daycare worker tests positive for monkeypox virus, but no additional cases have yet been found

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* IDPH Director Dr. Sameer Vohra has announced that a daycare worker in Rantoul has been infected with the Monkeypox virus. Quick transcript of his introductory remarks

I’m here today to discuss a case in Champaign County and inform everyone that we are undertaking a robust effort to address the situation.

Screening of children and other staff is taking place now, and no additional cases have been found at this time.

All available state local and federal resources are being deployed to assist families at the direction of Governor Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Public Health is focusing on making sure that families have everything they need.

Governor Pritzker and I’ve been in touch with the White House and we’re happy to report that President Biden’s staff has been incredibly responsive. We are pleased that at our request of the FDA, the Food and Drug Administration is authorized for use of the vaccine for anyone under 18 without jumping through the normal hoops in this process. That means that anyone with a guardian’s approval will be vaccinated today.

Pediatricians are on site as we speak to screen children for cases and their mobile testing and vaccines for their families. Health officials will continue to stay in contact with families and provide information and resources in the coming days.

The adult also works in home health care and we are in contact with the one client who has been impacted.

Governor Pritzker, his administration is also working to provide financial resources for impacted families so they can quarantine safely without fear of losing income for work.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

The local public health director added, “The person with monkeypox is in isolation and is being medically monitored and is doing well,” adding, “This press conference is not meant to alarm the community, but rather to be transparent and to answer any questions that the community may have. Just like with COVID 19, we want to fight fear with facts.”

  Comments Off      


Question of the day

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sen. Darren Bailey shakes hands with former Gov. George Ryan, via the Kankakee Daily Journal

* The Question: Caption?

  54 Comments      


A couple of COVID-19 updates

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

The Illinois Department of Human Services is restrained from relying on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s COVID-19 executive orders limiting transfers from county jails inmates deemed unfit for trial.

When a court orders a criminal defendant unfit for trial, state law requires the detainees to be transferred to state custody for a fitness evaluation within 20 days. That has not been done on time, in part because of monthly executive orders the governor first issued and modified in April 2020.

Six sheriffs from Sangamon, Knox, Madison, Rock Island, Macon and McLean counties sued DHS over the delays. A Sangamon County judge Thursday issued a Temporary Restraining Order, putting the sheriffs and DHS in the same position they were before the pandemic, which requires the state to follow the law. […]

Kaitschuk said despite the court’s temporary restraining order blocking the governor’s executive order, sheriffs will still have to file local petitions with the court to transfer inmates if the state doesn’t act.

“It clearly was a win as it relates to the executive order, it’s a win overall that they are not allowed to violate the law because of the executive order and that they need to try to find ways to get these people moving,” Kaitschuk said. “But, in order to finally get them to move it may still be an unresolved issue at this point in time.”

SJ-R

Tharp agreed with Campbell and the sheriffs, saying that the state did not have discretion to go beyond the limits of the 20-day policy in terms of determining where the inmates should go. She said that if the state had unlimited power over where an inmate is placed, DHS could refuse to allow anyone unfit into their facilities.

“The Court finds that DHS has a mandatory duty to place unfit defendants in a DHS treatment facility within 20 days of a court order for treatment,” Tharp said. […]

IDHS, being represented in court by Assistant Attorneys General Laura Bautista and Maria Gray, asked Tharp for a stay of the order pending appeal; however, it was not granted, as it was possible for the Fourth District Appellate Court to provide such an order in the future. The agency plans to appeal the decision to the higher court.

The plaintiffs intend to file a motion for expedited discovery in the case, stating that the matter of inmates remaining in the county jails was an urgent one. The sides will meet at 1:30 p.m. Aug. 25 for a status hearing on the matter.

* Meanwhile, here’s the Sun-Times

Dr. Sameer Vohra, who officially took his post as director of the Illinois Department of Public Health on Monday after Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced his appointment last month, said the agency will face those challenges with “one overarching and all-encompassing goal: to prevent and protect the public from disease and injury.”

“We are living in a moment where it is just hard to feel protected,” Vohra said during his first public appearance at a South Side news conference alongside the governor. “We are two and a half years since the start of the COVID 19 pandemic, and although we are learning to live with the virus, my heart continues to mourn and grieve for the families of the 34,388 Illinoisans we have lost to this terrible disease.

“Beyond other emerging illnesses like monkeypox, we are challenged with an epidemic of gun violence, a mental health crisis and a growing national threat to the protection of reproductive rights,” said Vohra, who’s the founding chair of the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine’s Department of Population Science and Policy. “It’s impossible not to feel the weight of these challenges.” […]

Vohra takes over as COVID hospitalizations have risen across Illinois to the highest levels seen in more than five months

The paper keeps hyping allegedly rising hospitalizations without quoting any experts who say that it’s a serious problem. In reality, hospitalizations have barely budged for weeks and might now be showing possible signs of decline…

For context, Illinois hit a high of 7,380 hospitalizations in early January. The numbers is the numbers.

  7 Comments      


Campaign roundup

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This Fran Spielman story is generating a whole lot of buzz

Zoning Committee Chairman Tom Tunney (44th) told the Sun-Times he plans to take some time off during the council’s August recess before deciding whether to call it quits after five terms to focus on the Ann Sather restaurants he owns — or run for mayor himself. […]

Over the years, Tunney has flirted with running for mayor repeatedly. This time, he said he hasn’t “completely ruled it out” and it “could be exciting for me” as a “young, 60-ish kind of guy” with plenty of “energy and initiative left” and a history of “bringing people together.”

“People want a unifier. People want somebody [who] can bring people together. Her personality is strong and can be somewhat divisive. She’s vulnerable. She knows that. A lot of people are looking for an alternative,” he said.

* Center Square

With the state’s college savings program seeing most investment funds down for the year, one analyst sees a potential cost to taxpayers.

Parents investing in Illinois’ Bright Start college savings program may have been shocked at their fund balance in recent statements.

Of 17 different individual portfolios, the Bright Start performance statement online shows investments in 13 of them are down over the past 12 months. Five of the funds are down double digits, with the T. Rowe Price Large-Cap Growth 529 Portfolio down nearly 23.5%. […]

For the Bright Start program, Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs’ office says individuals choose their risk tolerance.

“[I]ndividuals choose their 529 investments based on their own risk tolerance, goals and time horizon,” said Frerichs spokesman Greg Rivara.

If you go to the site, you’ll see that three and five-year average annual returns are positive for every fund.

ILGOP…

As thousands of Illinois students prepare for the upcoming fall semester of college, they’ll be shocked to see their Bright Start college savings down over 10%.

ILGOP Chairman Don Tracy is calling on the Auditor General to investigate State Treasurer Mike Frerichs for the mismanagement of Bright Start and student’s college savings.

“As the market anticipated a dip, Mike Frerichs did nothing to warn students that their college savings and investment was at risk,” said Chairman Tracy. When Mike Frerichs should have been reducing risk for young adults just months away from their first tuition payment, he instead let their accounts drop. Illinois families deserve to know why.”

* Pritzker press release…

Fresh off of failing to apologize for his offensive remarks about the Holocaust, Darren Bailey has once again found himself embroiled in scandal, this time for his support of the anti-LGBTQ+ far right group, Awake Illinois. Bailey has supported the group throughout his candidacy, spoken at and participated in several events, and continues to align himself with the organization––despite their role in inciting violence and attacks on a local bakery for planning to host a family-friendly drag show brunch.

Awake IL posted about an upcoming drag show at UpRising Bakery and Cafe and days before the event, the business was vandalized by a man with connections to the Proud Boys. Awake IL proudly admitted they “blasted” the event on social media in the days leading up to the attack, claiming the bakery was “coming for your kids,” and calling the event “perverted.” The owners received threats and endured harassment, ultimately forcing them to cancel the event.

Even after the attacks, Bailey is still proudly headlining Awake IL’s latest divisive protest on August 16. Bailey recently attended their first anniversary celebration and was the first candidate to take their “Parents Bill of Rights'’ pledge.

“Darren Bailey’s continued support for Awake IL is an affront to LGBTQ+ Illinoisans everywhere. Their vitriolic language led to violent attacks against a local business, and his silence speaks volumes,” said JB for Governor Press Secretary Eliza Glezer. “Bailey and Awake IL have employed the same homophobic and transphobic dog whistles, putting members of the LGBTQ+ community and their allies at risk. Darren Bailey must answer for why he is so proud to be aligned with this organization.”

Tom DeVore is also speaking, among others.

* Politico

— IRVIN ENDORSEMENT: In his first big move since losing the GOP primary for governor, Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin is endorsing Republican Senate nominee Kathy Salvi: “Illinois needs a senator who will prioritize families and businesses every day. Kathy Salvi has been an advocate for women and children in the greater Chicago area for more than three decades, and she will be a champion for all Illinoisans.”

Bankruptcy filing emerges in North Shore congressional race: “Joe Severino, the GOP candidate seeking to unseat Congressman Brad Schneider, contends the filing was prompted by a legal system gone awry,” by Crain’s Greg Hinz.

— Greg Hart, the Republican nominee for DuPage County Board chair, has been endorsed by the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police.

…Adding… Budzinski…

This week, anti-choice extremist group Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America endorsed Nikki Budzinski’s Republican opponent in Illinois’ 13th Congressional District, Regan Deering. Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America is a staunch supporter of anti-choice politicians who seek to ban abortion at any cost, and Regan Deering is no exception: she said she was “thrilled” when the leaked Supreme Court opinion draft indicated that the court would overturn Roe v. Wade, and she has promised that she’ll work to make abortion harder to access in Illinois if elected.

Budzinski released the following statement: “Across the country, like we saw in Kansas this week, voters are making it clear that they won’t stand by while out of touch politicians try and mandate what women can do with their own bodies.”

“Regan is one of those extremists, who would vote to ban and restrict abortion at every turn no matter what the people of Illinois’ 13th Congressional District want. Unlike Regan, I will fight to protect the reproductive rights of women in my district and stand up against national abortion bans and other restrictive measures.”

* Pritzker…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker met with Corrina Sac, owner of UpRising Bakery and Café, and leaders from Equality Illinois and Woodstock Pride to discuss the hateful attacks perpetrated against the bakery. Also in attendance was State Representative Suzanne Ness and host and performer Jakki Love. In the meeting and earlier today, the governor denounced the far-right group responsible for inciting the violence against the bakery. He also reaffirmed his support for the LGBTQ+ community and every person’s right to live and work safely without fear of discrimination.

“My administration has worked tirelessly to ensure everyone in Illinois is treated with dignity and respect, but our fight continues,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “We must come together to combat the rising tide of hate against the LGBTQ+ community and fight against discrimination and bigotry.”

“We are grateful to Governor Pritzker for his support of UpRising and his commitment to uplifting queer-owned businesses,” said Corrina Sac, Owner of UpRising Bakery and Café. “As hate crimes against the LGBTQ+ community rise across the nation, having a governor who shares our values of acceptance and inclusion has never been more important.”

“We can all learn from the UpRising Bakery and Cafe’s resilience and determination in the face of anti-LGBTQ+ violence, harassment, and intimidation. Left unchecked, violence and intimidation can have a chilling effect for all LGBTQ+ people who simply want to gather together in our communities,” said Myles Brady Davis, Director of Communications and Press Secretary at Equality Illinois. “Thank you, Governor Pritzker, for your commitment to LGBTQ+ equality and combatting hate crimes and for demonstrating in person our state’s values of equality, inclusion, and the freedom to be who we are and love who we love without discrimination. Love must win.”

“The recent attacks on Uprising Bakery and Cafe are a jarring reminder that our work to ensure everyone feels safe and supported by their communities is far from over,” said State Representative Suzanne Ness. “I am proud to stand with Governor Pritzker, Equality Illinois, Woodstock Pride, and the many other concerned citizens lending their voice to support queer-owned small businesses. The governor’s support means so much to this district and together we will continue to affirm that hate has no home in Illinois.”

Despite the anti-LGBTQ+ far right group’s role in inciting violence and attacks on UpRising Bakery and Cafe, extremist Darren Bailey has supported Awake IL throughout his candidacy. He has spoken at and participated in several events and continues to align himself with the organization. Even after the attacks, Bailey is still proudly headlining Awake IL’s latest divisive protest on August 16.

Meanwhile, Governor Pritzker expanded the Illinois Human Rights Act to include LGBTQ+ residents as a protected class and expanded infertility insurance to cover LGBTQ+ families. From inclusive LGBTQ+ curriculums in schools, to expanded Medicaid coverage for gender affirming surgery, to requiring single occupancy restrooms be designated as gender neutral––Governor Pritzker has made great strides in affirming that Illinois is a place where everyone can feel supported.

  19 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Federal appeals court vacates Shakman Decree: “The power to hire, fire, and establish accompanying policies needs to return to the people of Illinois and the Governor they elected”

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Seventh Circuit US Court of Appeals

In 1972 a federal district court entered the first of many consent decrees preventing the Governor of Illinois and units of local government from conditioning employment decisions on political patronage. And so were born the Shakman decrees. The Governor remains subject to the original 1972 decree to this day—50 years later—despite having demonstrated substantial compliance with its terms and objectives in recent years. Principles of federalism do not permit a federal court to oversee the Governor’s employment practices for decades on end in circumstances like this. The power to hire, fire, and establish accompanying policies needs to return to the people of Illinois and the Governor they elected. The federal courts will remain open to decide individual cases of alleged constitutional violations should they arise. But no longer shall the Governor’s employment practices and policies have to win the approval of a United States court. […]

Eight gubernatorial administrations have come and gone in Illinois since the initiation of this lawsuit. Yet the same named plaintiffs that brought the original suit in 1969 continue to prosecute enforcement of the decree under the district court’s watch and, more recently, the eyes of a special master. It is far from clear this arrangement comports with the Supreme Court’s emphasis in recent years on separation of powers and the related demands imposed by Article III for establishing and maintaining a Case or Controversy. See Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560–63. The proper equitable analysis of whether the Governor should remain under the 1972 decree requires us “to recognize that the longer an injunction or consent decree stays in place, the greater the risk that it will improperly interfere with a State’s democratic processes.” Horne, 557 U.S. at 453.

No longer is the Shakman decree’s enforcement necessary to protect the First Amendment rights of state employees and job applicants as declared in Elrod and Rutan. Rather, its continued application has put a federal court in a role tantamount to serving as an indefinite institutional monitor—not much different than an executive or legislative branch oversight agency—focused much more on ensuring that the Governor implements best practices rather than eliminates “an ongoing violation of federal law.” Horne, 557 U.S. at 454. This is antithetical to the limited role the Constitution created for the Third Branch: Article III does not “confer on federal judges some amorphous power to supervise the operations of government and reimagine from the ground up” the employment practices of Illinois. Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, 142 S. Ct. 522, 532 (2021) (cleaned up).

Be careful not to misread our conclusion. The district court is not closing. To the contrary, it will remain open and receptive to individual claims brought by persons able to allege concrete and particularized injuries as a result of unlawful patronage practices by the Governor or departments under his supervision. And nothing will prevent such plaintiffs from requesting not just money damages, but also appropriate injunctive relief. So, while today’s decision relieves the Governor of complying with the Shakman decree, the First Amendment remains alive and well. Future violations of the rules announced in Elrod and Rutan may see new plaintiffs bringing new cases requesting new and stiff remedies, all the while emphasizing the tragic history that led to the Shakman decrees.

We REVERSE the district court’s denial of the motion to vacate and its expansion of the special master’s duties and REMAND with instructions to VACATE the 1972 consent decree as it applies to the Governor of Illinois.

…Adding… Also from the decision

Second, the Governor has instituted or otherwise supported several remedial measures in recent years (under the special master’s and district court’s supervision, to be sure) to minimize the risk of political patronage in employment practices. Beyond the development of a Comprehensive Employment Plan, the state now has in place the Hiring & Employment Monitoring Division within the Office of Inspector General and a limited Rutan exempt list, among other things. That many of these measures have remained in place for several years with no findings of constitutional violations in or across individual employment decisions speaks to the stability of the state’s, and by extension, the Governor’s reform measures. Shakman and Lurie, to their credit, candidly acknowledge the Governor’s progress in recent years. And, for her part, the special master has on more than one occasion commended the Governor’s efforts to comply with the decree, including by describing his accomplishments as “extraordinary,” “notable,” and “significant.”

All of this is enough, we believe, for the Governor to show that he has implemented a durable remedy and satisfied the objectives of the 1972 decree.

*** UPDATE *** From the governor’s office…

The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals today ordered the lower court to vacate the 1972 Shakman Consent Decree, citing Governor Pritzker’s significant progress “instituting and supporting several remedial measures in recent years to minimize the risk of political patronage in employment practices.” The ruling acknowledges that the administration has instituted long-term policies and procedures that will ensure “compliance sticks.” This ruling means the state will no longer be under federal court supervision related to hiring practices, saving taxpayer dollars and ensuring state government can better serve the people.

“I’m gratified that the Court recognized my commitment to hiring practices that fully live up to the principles of the U.S. and Illinois Constitutions,” said Gov. JB Pritzker. “From the time that I took office, my administration has worked to strengthen the state’s hiring practices and ensure that we have durable, lasting reforms in place so that the state can guard against unethical hiring practices now and in the long term. With the end of this 1972 decree and the enormous work required by the ongoing federal monitoring, the State can focus our efforts on ensuring effective and efficient hiring that allows us to better fulfill our obligations to the people of Illinois.”

Highlights from the federal ruling:

“Leaving the Governor subject to the 1972 decree is no longer warranted or tolerable. Governor Pritzker has demonstrated substantial compliance with the decree and identified and instituted durable remedies to help ensure that compliance sticks. He has earned the right to make employment decisions for the state on his own and not under the terms and conditions of the 1972 decree or the watchful eyes of a special master and federal court.”

“The Governor has instituted or otherwise supported several remedial measures in recent years (under the special master’s and district court’s supervision, to be sure) to minimize the risk of political patronage in employment practices. Beyond the development of a Comprehensive Employment Plan, the state now has in place the Hiring & Employment Monitoring Division within the Office of Inspector General and a limited Rutan exempt list, among other things. That many of these measures have remained in place for several years with no findings of constitutional violations in or across individual employment decisions speaks to the stability of the state’s, and by extension, the Governor’s reform measures. Shakman and Lurie, to their credit, candidly acknowledge the Governor’s progress in recent years. And, for her part, the special master has on more than one occasion commended the Governor’s efforts to comply with the decree, including by describing his accomplishments as ‘extraordinary,’ ‘notable,’ and ‘significant.’

“All of this is enough, we believe, for the Governor to show that he has implemented a durable remedy and satisfied the objectives of the 1972 decree.”

“As we see the record, everyone involved in recent years— foremost Governor Pritzker, but also the special master, the district court, and Michael Shakman and Paul Lurie (and their talented counsel)—has been diligent in ensuring the state’s substantial compliance with the 1972 decree. This is what is supposed to happen in institutional reform litigation, even if it is coming many, many years too late. We see nothing more for the district court to do. The Governor has satisfied the objectives of the consent decree.”

…Adding… Important context for the people freaking out

Cook County in 2018 was removed from the constraints of the Shakman decree, with Magistrate Judge Sidney I. Schenkier finding the county to be in “substantial compliance” with fair hiring and employment practices. Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle had argued that since 2006, the Shakman suit had cost county taxpayers around $8 million. Around $3 million of that went to claims from employees who said patronage played a role in them advancing in their careers.

A federal judge in 2014 released Chicago from the consent decree. Since 1972, Chicago taxpayers had spent $22.9 million to create a $12 million fund created to compensate victims of the city’s rigged hiring system; $6.6 million for the hiring monitor; $1.8 million for consultants; $1.5 million for plaintiff’s counsel; and $1 million to outside counsel.

  52 Comments      


IMA touts manufacturing’s impact on Illinois’ economy

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dave Dahl

“Manufacturing Matters” is the name of a tour the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association is on to promote a new study which shows things are better than many people believe.

IMA’s president and CEO, Mark Denzler, said, “Education workforce is probably the Number One challenge that manufacturers face. Before the covid pandemic, the state’s unemployment rate was about three percent. Today it’s just slightly over that.

“Nearly every manufacturer has a Help Wanted sign,” Denzler said Wednesday at the tour’s kickoff in Decatur, “trying to attract (workers); whether it’s young men and women coming out of high school, dislocated workers, returning veterans; we have to get them into jobs. We have to better showcase what manufacturing is. I don’t think manufacturers pat ourselves on the back enough to show what we do.”

The study’s author, Joseph Von Nessen, a research economist at the Darla Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina, talked about the “household spending multiplier.”

* From the study’s executive summary

The Illinois manufacturing industry represents a key economic pillar of the state’s economy. Comprising a diversified employment base across a wide range of industry subsectors, manufacturing is the state’s largest industry when ranked by contribution to GDP.

The total economic impact of manufacturing on the state of Illinois is estimated to be between $580 billion and $611 billion annually. This figure reflects the dollar value representing all final goods and services produced statewide that can be attributed (directly or indirectly) to manufacturing. This level of economic activity corresponds to between 1,681,284 and 1,771,928 jobs and to between $142 billion and $150 billion in labor income for Illinois residents.

Although manufacturing’s direct employment base alone represents roughly 9.5 percent of all jobs in Illinois, after accounting for the additional impacts resulting from all economic multiplier effects, this percentage jumps to 29.6 percent. This means that manufacturing ultimately supports nearly 30 percent of all jobs in Illinois, making it among the state’s largest industry sectors.

The Illinois manufacturing industry maintains an employment multiplier of 2.7. This implies that for every 10 jobs that are supported directly by the manufacturing industry, an additional 17 jobs are created elsewhere in Illinois (for a total of 27 jobs). This multiplier effect is significantly higher than that of the average industry in Illinois, meaning that future expansions of manufacturing have the potential to generate relatively higher secondary employment impacts when compared to similar expansions of businesses in many other industry sectors.

The majority of the manufacturing base in Illinois – approximately 65 percent – derives from the five major subsectors of Food and Agriculture Manufacturing, Metal Fabrication Manufacturing, Heavy Equipment Manufacturing, Pharmaceutical Manufacturing, and Transportation Equipment Manufacturing. The total annual economic impacts of these subsectors are $135 billion, $71 billion, $61 billion, $59 billion, and $44 billion, respectively.

As a group, these five subsectors also contain among the highest employment multipliers and average wages across all of Illinois’ manufacturing base. The pharmaceutical manufacturing subsector is an especially unique outlier with an employment multiplier of 3.7 and an ability to support jobs with an average wage 46 percent above that of the average job in the Illinois manufacturing industry as a whole.

The Illinois manufacturing industry continues to evolve in the face of rapid technological development. This study’s examination of the requirements associated with manufacturing occupations projected to be in the highest demand over the next decade suggests a shift towards a more high-skilled, experienced workforce. As such, the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association has supported the creation of two new world- class Manufacturing Academies designed specifically to provide workforce training to Illinois residents in these high-demand fields.

  7 Comments      


Duckworth and Pritzker take different paths on Lightfoot endorsement

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC 7

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot received her first state-wide endorsement Thursday.

“Hello this is Senator Tammy Duckworth and I am proud to endorse my good friend, Mayor Lori Lightfoot for her reelection campaign,” Duckworth said in a video released by Lightfoot’s campaign.

During an unrelated news conference Governor JB Pritzker was asked if he would be endorsing Lightfoot and he gave a very non-committal response. […]

The mayor and the governor have had, at times, a very cool relationship, going back to the pandemic shutdown, but one political consultant believes Pritzker’s hesitancy could be a more practical one.

“So it buys him some time. And buying that time also allows him an opportunity to see who all is going to be in the race because I’m sure the field is not complete as of yet,” political consultant Delmarie Cobb said.

* From yesterday’s Pritzker press conference…

Q: Given Senator Duckworth’s endorsement of Mayor Lightfoot, would you be endorsing her?

A: You know, I’m engaged in my own campaign, as you know, for reelection as governor. And so, you know, those of us who live in the city of Chicago will consider the question of the mayoralty after the November election.

* From the second Pritzker press conference yesterday…

Q: Governor, do you think you could clarify the comments you made earlier today about the, what they’re calling the non endorsement for Mayor Lightfoot. Do you do plan to make any kind of endorsement in that or you’re just waiting or are you saying you’re not going to be endorsing Mayor Lightfoot?

A: I’m focused on my own election. That’s what I was saying earlier. And, we’ll all make decisions after that. Let’s get past November. There’s a February election you’re trying to project toward and I’m focused on my own.

Q: Are you saying you’re not going to endorse?

A: No. I know you’d like me to say something. Look, just because I haven’t talked about endorsements in future elections, does not mean that there isn’t the possibility of it.

Not one question was asked about his own campaign, by the way.

  29 Comments      


Chair Hernandez asks DPI staff to stay on board

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I could easily understand if top staff chooses not to stick around, but there are also field staff on the DPI payroll, so it’s good to see that they won’t be trampled in the wake of the big fight. Politico

State Rep. Lisa Hernandez, just elected chair of the Illinois Democratic Party, has asked the current staff to stay on board as she tries to ramp up operations before the General Election in November.

The lingering question is whether the 10 staffers who worked under her predecessor, Congresswoman Robin Kelly, will choose to stay.

“I want to move forward in a unified fashion. It’s all about really building that ticket up and down. We have to make sure that Illinois remains blue, so that’s the ultimate goal. We’ve got to do well in November,” Hernandez told Playbook in her first interview since the contentious race for party leader was resolved last week.

Your thoughts?

  27 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I thought it was time for an Oscar video…


  33 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

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LIVE COVERAGE

Friday, Aug 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Do better
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts (Updated)
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
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