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Robin Kelly wins DPI chair

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Preliminary vote total…


…Adding… Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association (IDCCA) President Kristina Zahorik…

“On behalf of all 102 County Democratic Party Chairs and the Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association, I would like to congratulate our new State Democratic Party Chair Robin Kelly. Chair Kelly brings a wealth of experience to the table and has been a friend of the IDCCA. We have a lot of work to do before 2022 and we look forward to working with her. We are confident Chair Kelly will lead our Party to victories throughout Illinois.”

…Adding… ILGOP…

Tonight, the central committee of the Democratic Party of Illinois met to elect a new party Chair after the reign of Mike Madigan has come to an end. Unfortunately for Governor JB Pritzker, his hand-picked candidate (and the candidate Madigan also supported), Chicago Alderman Michelle Harris, was unsuccessful in her bid losing to Congressmen Robin Kelly.

The Illinois Republican Party would like to provide our sympathies to Governor Pritzker as he is in the midst of a long string of high-profile political losses. It really is sad.

As a reminder


Tax Hike Amendment - DEFEATED

Governor Pritzker’s signature proposal - a progressive tax that was supposed to plug our budget hole and pay for all of his other promises - was soundly defeated by Illinois voters last November. Pritzker spent big on his tax hike gambit and came up short.

Senate President Kimberly Lightfort - DIDN’T HAPPEN

Pritzker and his team, including Senators Andy Manar and Heather Steans, worked overtime to get the Illinois Senate Democrats to choose Kimberly Lightford as their next Senate President. Team Pritzker lost that battle too when Lightford lost to Senate President Don Harmon. Bad feelings remain and Manar and Steans have resigned their seats.

$1 Billion Small Business Tax Hike - VOTED DOWN

Governor Pritzker thought he was walking into friendly territory when he tried to get his super-majority Democrat legislature to pass a $1 billion dollar tax hike via a bill that “decouples” Illinois tax law from federal tax changes under the CARES Act. He was mistaken. It failed.

Tonight’s loss was no different than the others. Governor JB Pritzker expended considerable political capital to get his way but just wasn’t able to pull out a win.

We would like to send him a sympathy card for his many losses. See you in 2022 for another one!

…Adding… Robin Kelly…

Congresswoman Robin Kelly Elected Chair of Democratic Party of Illinois
Makes history as the first black woman elected to lead; Vows to Unite All Democrats

Remarks as Delivered to the Democratic State Central Committee

“Thank you Chairwoman Yarbrough, Tonight we made history together. We as Democrats are at our best when we have vigorous debate, and then come together for the betterment of the party and our country. I want to thank the members for the State Central Committee for your support and vote of confidence. I look forward to working collaboratively with you as we strengthen our party and work together to build a bench across our 102 Counties.

As President Obama said “We can disagree without being disagreeable”.

And that’s more important than ever.

Our Democracy is under siege. Yes, in State after State Republicans are trying to roll back voting rights, suppress the rights of people of color to vote, and trample on what makes Democracy sacred: the right of all people to participate in the process.

I was in the House chamber, trapped in the gallery when a violent mob invaded the greatest symbol of democracy in the history of the world. I stood with my fellow members, elected representatives of the people, as insurrectionists, fed the big lie, for the first time in American History attempted to prevent the peaceful transfer of power.

Yes, we all felt personally afraid. But beyond the threat to personal safety was a fear for the very fabric of our democracy. We’ve always said democracy is fragile, that it must be fought for. But has that ever been more true than tonight?

If we are going to preserve, protect and defend the government of the people, by the people and for the people, we must change. We must fight back. We must take on the big lie, the insurrectionists, the fox news, the q anon’s head on. And with your help, the same Illinois party that elected the first African Woman to the United States Senate, sent the first African American President to the White House, and had so many other firsts, will lead the way once again.

My friends, we start from a position of strength. Illinoisans have trusted us with the Governorship, both US Senators and every State-wide office. We have not just majorities but supermajorities in both legislative houses. We made and continue to make strong progressive gains throughout the State. But we know we need to do more if we are going to protect these gains and build upon them. Together, we can move our democratic party forward. Starting tonight.

* Gov. Pritzker…


* Ald. Michelle Harris…

“Congresswoman Kelly is an esteemed colleague and I am proud to work with her as our next Chair and the first Black woman to lead our Party,” said Ald. Harris. “It is time to move forward and we will do that together.”

* Mayor Lightfoot…

“Today, Illinois Democrats made history by electing Congresswoman Robin Kelly as party chair. Rep. Kelly has the experience and energy to lead Democrats to victory in 2022 and beyond.

“Chairwoman Michelle Harris and Senator Cristina Castro are also accomplished leaders and well qualified to lead our party. The race to fill this seat was at times contentious and I know that Rep. Kelly will work closely with Chairwoman Harris and Sen. Castro to bring Democrats together and build a better, more modern party. I look forward to helping support Rep. Kelly’s work to build a strong, inclusive Democratic Party of Illinois.”

* Senate President Harmon…

Congratulations to Congresswoman Robin Kelly on being elected to lead the Illinois Democratic Party. Her exemplary service in Congress during such trying times, background in local government, upbringing in Peoria as the daughter of a small business owner and postal worker, along with her compassion for people are exactly the qualities Illinois Democrats need right now to lead us and move our party forward. I’m ready to work together with her on behalf of Democrats across Illinois.

* Speaker Welch…

“I congratulate Robin Kelly on her election as chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois. I am confident we will work together to offer voters a bold agenda for Illinois: more resources for our public schools; social and economic justice for Black, Indigenous, and communities of color; improved access to health care and social services; and a safe and resilient recovery from this pandemic. With her at DPI, we will build on an already strong and diverse Democratic coalition, so I look forward to working with her.

* Sen. Cristina Castro…

“I was honored to have the support of my fellow Latino elected officials when I put my name forward to become the next Chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois, so I was proud to give voice to Latinos throughout Illinois when I cast my vote for Congresswoman Kelly. For too long the Illinois Democratic Party has focused singularly on Illinois House races, but with Congresswoman Kelly as the new Chair we’re now in a position to refocus the Party, expand the gains Democrats have made in the collar counties, and win races up and down the ballot. She has what it takes to represent our Latino community and Democrats in the suburbs as she moves our entire state forward.”

  44 Comments      


Unclear on the concept of “an inclusive and democratic public dialogue”

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* BGA

Amid protests this summer over police brutality and civil rights, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot in the middle of the night removed statues of Christopher Columbus that had become a focal point of the demonstrations.

Lightfoot also formed a committee to conduct a thorough review to assess if other public art should be removed or changed and promised the newly formed Monuments Project Advisory Committee would begin “an inclusive and democratic public dialogue” about the future of Chicago’s internationally known public art collection.

But during its first six months of work, the committee’s deliberations were kept secret. In fact, the mayor’s monuments committee was designed that way.

“What’s said here, stays here,” is a message city officials delivered to the committee members at their Oct. 14 meeting, according to a slim, 24-page packet of committee agendas and minutes records City Hall released recently to the Better Government Association.

The committee is tasked with identifying any public monuments linked to white supremacy and injustice that “warrant attention” and could be removed. It ultimately flagged 41 problematic artworks, including statues of Columbus as well as Presidents Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Ulysses S. Grant and William McKinley.

But despite Lightfoot’s transparency pledge, there was no public notice of the committee’s six meetings, no record which 30 committee members attended or any details about what they recommended during roughly 12 hours of online deliberations.

The public had no opportunity to observe or offer any input at the private meetings — none of which were recorded in audio or video form, Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events Communications Director Christine Carrino said.

“The Chicago Monuments Project advisory committee is not a ‘public body’ and therefore the [Open Meetings] Act’s requirements do not apply to it,” Carrino told the BGA in a statement, explaining the city’s refusal to release committee recommendations and reports, attendance rosters and any recordings of its first six meetings.

  22 Comments      


Center Square highlights Mary Miller claims that she, her husband and “conservative Christians” are the real victims

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

A Republican congresswoman is defending her state lawmaker husband from what she says are attacks full of lies about the Jan. 6 capitol riots. Illinois Democrats are demanding an investigation.

Hundreds of thousands of people were in Washington D.C. Jan. 6 when the U.S. Congress was certifying the presidential election. A riot then ensued at the capitol building. Hundreds of people face criminal charges because of the violence and trespassing.

Video and other images on social media show state Rep. Chris Miller, R-Oakland, was in Washington D.C. Jan. 6 attending rallies. Pictures also show a truck purportedly owned by Miller with a decal for a group called The Three Percenters.

State Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, filed House Resolution 132 condemning Miller and claims he violated his oath of office. It has the support of 35 other Democrats, including House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside.

“Miller participated, and publicly promoted his role, in a rally that led to a violent insurrection of the Capitol of the United States of America, which resulted in the death of United States citizens, including members of law enforcement,” the resolution says. Miller “has continued to publicly support The Three Percenters, a para-military, anti-government hate group identified by the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center as having the goal of overthrowing the United States government through violent revolutionary tactics.”

Miller couldn’t be reached for comment.

U.S. Rep. Mary Miller, R-Oakland, told WMAY Wednesday her husband was nowhere near the riot, and they do not condone violence.

“He attended with constituents the rally,” Miller said. “It never crossed his mind once to be violent. We don’t advocate violence. We stand for rule of law and anybody that was violent or broke the law should be arrested and prosecuted, but he had nothing to do with that.” […]

The congresswoman said Morgan’s resolution is the latest in a series of increased targeting from Democrats.

“The attack is not just on him or on me, but it’s on all of my colleagues, we are all getting vile, vile messages and death threats,” Miller said. “They’re misrepresenting and lying about us, taking things out of context.”

It’s not just elected Republicans Miller said Democrats are going after.

“Their goal is to scare conservative Christians, especially, to be quiet and don’t get involved,” Miller said. “And I can say they may be coming for us today but they’ll be coming for you tomorrow. And I want to tell everybody to grow a backbone and get involved and speak up.”

Not one mention in that article about her Hitler comment. Nor this…


Notice he’s standing in front of a 3 Percenters banner in that first video.

* Center Square appears to be rapidly moving well beyond its stated purpose

The focus of our work is state- and local-level government and economic reporting. A taxpayer sensibility distinguishes our work from other coverage of state and local issues. As a result of this approach, our readers are better informed about the focus of state and local government and its cost to the citizens whose tax dollars fund governmental decisions.

  30 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Email to Statehouse media from John Patterson, spokesman for the Office of the Illinois Senate President…

As the Senate begins to transition back to in-person activities, we have implemented a testing requirement that applies to employees, staff and members. This would also apply to media when we return next week.

We have implemented the University of Illinois saliva test, which is done twice a week to ensure anyone in Senate facilities is negative for COVID-19. This is the same process used at the University of Illinois. Essentially you show your negative test result email to gain access.

All online access will continue for anyone not wanting to be tested. The ILCA offices will continue to be available regardless. This testing requirement is only for in-person in Senate facilities (offices, committees, Senate chamber). Health and safety guidelines do also remain in effect. That means even with the testing, the press boxes are limited to three spots, as is the overhead TV gallery.

The cost of the test is $30 per test per person. Media outlets would be required to cover the cost. (Yes, I know I buried the lede.)

Here’s how the system works. There is testing on Monday with results coming later that day that clears you to be in the Senate on Tuesday and Wednesday. On Wednesday, there is another round of testing, the results of which clears people to be in the Senate on Thursday and Friday. Testing is done on the Capitol Complex.

The end result of this is people can come to work at the Senate knowing that anyone they come in contact with has a current negative status. Anyone not wanting to test can utilize remote participation and access.

Of note, this testing and process is being done at UIS, so any PAR students should already have access to free testing under this same system.

For next week, the media would be the only outside entity that would be accommodated under this system. It is envisioned as expanding, but we are still working through this transition.

To anticipate a question, the public gallery would be open to media who are not credentialed for the press boxes but whose personnel have gone through the COVID testing.

The Senate is scheduled to return to the Capitol next week for Tuesday and Wednesday and possible Thursday. That would mean anyone wanting to cover proceedings on Tuesday and Wednesday would need to be tested on Monday. This is the policy for anyone to be in the Senate offices, committees or chamber.

Paying $30-$60 a week to exercise my 1st Amendment rights isn’t the best news I’ve ever heard, but I’ll deal with it.

* The Question: Your thoughts on the Senate’s testing mandate?

  21 Comments      


Decent short-term news, not-so-good long-term news for Illinois

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Latest COGFA fiscal year to date report

Excluding borrowing related activity, through the first two-thirds of the fiscal year base receipts are up $2.719 billion. In addition to December’s surge in federal sources, that growth also reflects the timing of income tax receipts related to the filing deadline extension. Through February, combined net income tax receipts are up $1.982 billion. While over half of those gains continue to be attributed to the shift of FY 2020 final payments into early FY 2021, very respectable underlying base income taxreceipting must be recognized as well. Also impressive is the continued positive trend of sales tax receipt performance. While overall levels of growth are fairly modest at 2.4%, given that rate reflects a post-pandemic versus pre-pandemic period, salestax performance continues to impress.

All of the other revenue sources combined have declined a net $143 million. While exceptional performance has been seen from inheritance tax and insurance tax, those gains have been more than erased by lower public utility tax receipts as well as timing related to one-time court settlement proceeds receipted last fiscal year, shown in the “other sources” category.

Overall transfers are off considerably, down $858 million, reflecting the lack of riverboat gaming transfers [$195 million] significantly lower Income Tax Refund transfer levels [$336 million] as well as lower other miscellaneous transfers [$438 million]. With another comparatively strong month of receipting, federal sources are up $1.562 billion year to date.

* But here’s Greg Hinz

Illinois’ economy will recover along with the nation’s as COVID-19 pressures lift, but it’s going to be a slog for us, with the state unlikely to return to its previous employment level until at least 2023.

That’s the bottom line of a new forecast prepared by Moody’s Analytics for the Illinois Legislature’s fiscal unit, a report that is pretty dour, projecting Illinois in the long run will continue to markedly lag the nation and even the rest of the Midwest until it gets its finances in order and reverses its population drain. […]

However, the report adds: “The success of the state’s economy, and particularly that of the Chicago metro area, will depend on the strength of its tech sector, including computer systems and design and biotechnology. Tech companies that can meet the needs of Illinois’ manufacturing base will also be successful.” Logistics is a strength, too

Ultimately, it says, “Illinois has what it needs to remain a top business center, as long as it can solve the fiscal problems that are eroding its edge in the competition for talent, jobs and capital.” The state has a high educational attainment level, superb transportation links and below-average costs.

The forecast is here.

  14 Comments      


Corporate board diversity study released

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Speaker Welch…

The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign’s Corporate Board Diversity, Inclusion, and Representation Report for 2020 marks the first summary of gender, racial, and ethnic makeup across companies based in Illinois. With the availability of this data, equity and diversity goals are one step closer to being realized. As a strong advocate for the creation of this report, Speaker Chris Welch offers his following statement:

“This report marks a pivotal moment for Illinois and the business community to realize our shared goals of diversity, equity, and inclusion. In 2019, I sponsored this bill because I knew we could not effectively address racial, ethnic, and gender inequities without a clear picture of the existing environment. Today, we have the findings for 2020 that show we need to collectively do better. As the report stated, women are still underrepresented in leadership roles with only 67 percent of companies having two or more women serving as directors. Additionally, only 35 percent of companies have two or more non-white directors. We need to continue to push high standards for a diverse workforce and hold companies accountable that are not taking these goals seriously. This report illustrates where we need to focus our attention and empower our underrepresented communities. As Speaker, I am looking forward to using these findings to guide our next legislative steps to fulfill our commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion.”

Background
In 2019, Speaker Chris Welch sponsored Illinois House Bill 3394 that required companies and corporations based in Illinois to report the racial and gender makeup of their board to the Secretary of State’s office. Additionally, this bill required the University of Illinois systems to analyze the data and issue a report with their findings.

* From the report

Illinois corporate boards average about two female directors per board and female directors comprise nearly 21 percent of the average board’s total membership.4 These figures are generally aligned with broader gender equity and inclusion goals, which advocate that firms should have at least two women on the board and should aim to have at least 20% female representation. Consistent with this, 67 percent of Illinois corporations have two or more female directors. […]

Among Illinois corporations that provided information about the white/non- white status of each director, 19 reported having zero non-white directors. Another 24 firms reported having one non-white director. 10 firms reported having 2 non-white directors each, while 13 firms reported having 3 or more […]

For the average firm, non-white directors comprise about 15 percent of the board membership. By comparison, non- white (including Hispanic) individuals comprise nearly 40 percent of the population of Illinois. Appendix B presents data on non-white representation for all firms with available information. Appendix B also includes a measure of proportional representation, which accounts for non-white groups’ representation among workers in each firm’s primary industry sector.

Taking a closer look at specific race and ethnic groups reveals more subtle features of racial and ethnic underrepresentation among Illinois corporate directors. Black and African-American individuals are particularly underrepresented among corporate directors in Illinois. Among firms that provided information about the racial and ethnic composition of their board, 33 firms (52 percent of the sample) reported having zero Black or African-American board members. Another 26 firms (41 percent) reported having one Black director (Figure 3). For the average board, Black directors comprise about 6 percent of the total board membership. By comparison, Black residents comprise 13.8 percent of the total population of Illinois.

  9 Comments      


Our sorry state

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Moody’s…

Moody’s has published new research (attached) noting the State of Illinois (rated Baa3/negative outlook) will set another record for the 50 states when its adjusted net pension liability (ANPL) exceeds $300 billion in financial reporting this year, reflecting the June 30, 2020, funding position of its five pension plans. With historically low interest rates, this increase in liability will closely track other states, but the higher ANPL connected with the state’s June 2021 financial reporting underscores Illinois’ growing pension challenges. Even with the substantial increase in long-term liabilities, however, the near-term funding and cash-flow positions of the state’s pension systems will remain relatively unchanged.

“The new liability is based on the aggregate ANPL of Illinois’ five pension systems, which reached $317 billion as of June 30 last year, a 19% jump from the prior year that was driven largely by falling interest rates,” said Ted Hampton, Vice President at Moody’s. “The FTSE Pension Liability Index, a high-grade corporate bond index Moody’s uses to value state and local government pension liabilities, fell to 2.70% as of June 30, 2020, from 3.51% the prior year.” (In comparison, the aggregate net pension liabilities reported under Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) rules by the state’s five pension systems grew to $154 billion from $145 billion as of June 30, 2020, reflecting a weighted average discount rate of 6.74%. The results will appear in the state’s audited financial statements covering the period ending June 30, 2021.)

With a state GDP decline estimated at 2.5% in 2020, Illinois’ ANPL amounts to roughly 37% of economic output, up from a range of 28% to 32% over the previous four years. As illustrated in our most recent survey, Illinois’ pension liabilities are the highest among the 50 states, and the state’s liabilities and fixed costs for pensions, debt service and retiree healthcare (or OPEB) are at or near the top by almost any measure. Illinois also allocates about 30% of its budget to retirement benefits and debt service, a “fixed-cost” ratio more than three times the median for states.

  24 Comments      


Caption contest!

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was watching the House Adoption & Child Welfare Committee hearing on Monday and couldn’t help but notice the cool Zoom background used by Rep. Terra Costa Howard (D-Glen Ellyn). She told me she obtained the image from the House Democrats, which is not what I expected to hear considering the HDems’ past issues with newfangled things like the Internet and touch-tone phones. “It’s a little more engaging than my white wall,” the legislator said. Here’s a screen shot…

  31 Comments      


Drop in state unemployment rate leaves some PUA benefit recipients in the lurch

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Reader email…

I’ve been on PUA unemployment since July (it was backdated to March 8) and suddenly and unexpectedly last night my unemployment seems to have stopped. Apparently, this happened to thousands of others as well.

As you can see from screenshots below of my account, I was not paid this week and given no correspondence as to why even though my claim should have seven more weeks thanks to the covid relief Congress passed before Trump left office. Other people with the same issue did receive an email from IDES explaining why they were cut short and I’ve included a screenshot of that as well. Unfortunately, IDES never made any of this clear from the onset.

In a Facebook group specifically for PUA Unemployment in Illinois, many other people are reporting this problem. It seems as though IDES is claiming either due to a metric or configuration in the CARES Act, PUA claims were exhausted at 50 weeks even though congress extended the federal benefit through March (11 weeks). Everyone was completely blindsided. The bigger issue is that in order to get extended unemployment in President Biden’s bill in the senate you have to receive at least $1 WBA from your state. If IDES kicks so many of us off now, I’m pretty sure we won’t qualify for that new extension.

I’m self-employed with children at home whose schools still have not fully reopened. One daughter is remote hybrid and the other daughter I’m personally homeschooling fulltime because remote learning doesn’t work for her. I haven’t been able to receive any self-employment income since this pandemic and unemployment has helped keep my family afloat.

I called constituent services for Senator Duckworth and Durbin and emailed Stephanie Kifowit and Linda Holmes but no response yet.

I know IDES has had a lot of issues and I’m hoping this is newsworthy.

I thought it was quite newsworthy and reached out to the governor’s office right after I read the email. I was told that the state’s unemployment rate had dropped below the threshold where the state was allowed by the federal government to make those payments. That doesn’t excuse the fact that people believed they were left in the dark, though.

* An IDES press release was issued today…

Because Illinois’ unemployment rate has dropped, federal rules now prohibit individuals from seeking seven additional weeks of Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA), a new federal effort to cover individuals who did not qualify for regular unemployment and which largely covers those who are self-employed.

“This is precisely why I’ve encouraged Congress to set out long-term rules that help the people most hurt by this pandemic, and why it’s imperative that they pass something immediately that corrects this gap,” Governor JB Pritzker said. “Our federal leaders must come together around a solution, and we will be ready to help people get the benefits they need to get through this pandemic.”

According to unemployment data published by the federal government, Illinois’ unemployment rate is now below the threshold for the state’s High Unemployment Period (HUP) to be active, and individuals no longer qualify for additional weeks of benefits provided during HUP. Under federal law, when a state is in the HUP, there are seven additional weeks added to PUA eligibility, as well as seven additional weeks added to Extended Benefits (EB) eligibility under state law. As a result of Illinois’ unemployment rate dropping, under state and federal law, the seven additional weeks for both programs are no longer available.

The maximum number of weeks available to PUA claimants has reduced from 57 weeks to 50 weeks. Additionally, extended benefits (EB) for regular state unemployment insurance benefits reduced from 20 weeks to 13 weeks. Federal law provides regular unemployment insurance benefit recipients with a transition to added weeks of Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation (PEUC) benefits but is currently silent with regard to extra assistance for PUA claimants.

PUA claimants who have exhausted the 50th week or more have been, or will be, notified they will have reached the maximum number of weeks allowable under federal law. Barring additional federal action or extensions to federal unemployment programs, PUA claimants who have exhausted the maximum number of weeks will no longer be eligible to collect unemployment insurance benefits.

The Department is closely monitoring any action from the federal government to extend PUA benefits, in addition to the other federal unemployment benefits programs, set to expire on March 13, 2021. As was done with the CARES Act and the Continued Assistance Act, IDES will publicly provide individuals with programmatic updates, changes, and information pertaining to unemployment programs as they are made available by the federal government and the U.S. Department of Labor.

Those with questions or in need of assistance with unemployment benefits at this time are encouraged to visit IDES.Illinois.gov.

…Adding… From Rep. Kifowit…

Hi Rich, In regards to your post. That concern came into my office just before 1pm yesterday and it was sent over to the IDES Liaison. This morning at 11:15am we got a response from the IDES Liaison and responded to the person at 11:21am. Our office, as I’m sure all our offices, is working very hard to reply to our residents within 24 hours with an initial response. Thank you for bringing to light the struggles of many families.

…Adding… From Sen. Holmes…

Hi Rich, I want to thank you for bringing attention to this issue and to this constituent for reaching out to my office late yesterday afternoon. We are doing everything we can to get them the assistance they need. I have facilitated multiple conversations with my colleagues and IDES on the many unemployment issues we’ve seen over the past year, with a focus on getting help to constituents across the state. This pandemic has turned so many families upside-down. There is still work to be done, and I will continue to work with and put pressure on IDES to get people the benefits they need.

  12 Comments      


2,104 new confirmed and probable cases; 44 additional deaths; 1,260 hospitalized; 275 in ICU; 2.4 percent average case positivity rate; 2.9 percent average test positivity rate; 84,202 average daily doses; Huge decrease in nursing home cases/deaths

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today reported 2,104 new confirmed and probable cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 44 additional deaths.

    - Bureau County: 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s
    - Clark County: 1 male 70s
    - Coles County: 1 male 70s
    - Cook County: 1 female 50s, 1 female 60s, 2 males 60s, 1 female 70s, 1 female 80s, 1 male 90s
    - Crawford County: 1 female 70s
    - DeKalb County: 1 male 80s
    - DuPage County: 1 female 50s, 1 male 60s, 1 female 90s
    - Edgar County: 1 male 70s
    - Fulton County: 1 male 70s
    - Henry County: 1 male 60s
    - Iroquois County: 1 female 90s
    - Kane County: 1 female 50s, 1 female 60s
    - LaSalle County; 1 male 60s
    - Macoupin County: 1 male 60s
    - Madison County: 1 male 60s, 1 female 70s, 1 male 80s
    - Marion County: 1 male 70s
    - McHenry County: 1 male 70s
    - McLean County: 1 female 70s
    - Montgomery County: 1 male 80s
    - Peoria County: 1 female 70s
    - Randolph County: 1 male 70s
    - Rock Island County: 1 female 60s, 1 female 70s
    - Saline County: 1 male 60s
    - Sangamon County: 1 female 90s
    - Washington County: 1 male 60s
    - Whiteside County: 1 male 70s
    - Will County: 1 male 40s, 1 male 80s
    - Winnebago County: 1 female 70s, 1 male 70s, 1 female 80s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 1,191,520 cases, including 20,626 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 80,854 specimens for a total of 18,315,522. As of last night, 1,260 individuals in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 275 patients were in the ICU and 138 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from February 24–March 2, 2021 is 2.4%. The preliminary seven-day statewide test positivity from February 24–March 2, 2021 is 2.9%.

A total of doses of 3,392,925 vaccine have been delivered to providers in Illinois, including Chicago. In addition, approximately 443,700 doses total have been allocated to the federal government’s Pharmacy Partnership Program for long-term care facilities. This brings the total Illinois doses to 3,836,625. A total of 2,900,341 vaccines have been administered in Illinois as of last midnight, including 328,795 for long-term care facilities. The 7-day rolling average of vaccines administered daily is 84,202 doses. Yesterday, 82,449 doses were administered in Illinois.

*All data are provisional and will change. In order to rapidly report COVID-19 information to the public, data are being reported in real-time. Information is constantly being entered into an electronic system and the number of cases and deaths can change as additional information is gathered. Information for deaths previously reported has changed, therefore, today’s numbers have been adjusted. For health questions about COVID-19, call the hotline at 1-800-889-3931 or email dph.sick@illinois.gov.

* Nursing home industry press release…

The American Health Care Association and National Center for Assisted Living (AHCA/NCAL), representing more than 14,000 nursing homes and long term care facilities across the country that provide care to approximately five million people each year, released a report today showing nursing homes in the U.S. have seen the lowest number of new COVID cases since the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) started tracking back in May 2020, suggesting that the vaccines are working.

Recent CMS data shows that nursing homes have seen an 82 percent decline in new COVID cases among residents since the peak during the week of December 20 of last year when there were more than 30,000 new resident cases. In the same period of time, community cases in the general population dropped by 46 percent, showcasing that vaccines are having an impact in protecting the elderly population in nursing homes.

* I asked for Illinois-specific info…

The feds began requiring reporting through the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) last May, and so the best usable data begins then, though we had state specific reporting requirements prior to that which was hosted on the DPH website. Per the NHSN data the final week of May saw 728 new cases in centers across the state. This dropped significantly over the summer, following the same trend line the general population was seeing, with a low point of 134 new cases in the last week of July. New case occurrences also followed the general population trendline over the fall and winter, with a high mark of 2057 new cases the first week of December. Long term care wasn’t in the first wave of priority 1A for the vaccine, though we were part of 1A, and saw the first vaccine clinics in our centers beginning the week of December 28. Numbers have taken a nosedive following the completion of the clinics, with the last two weeks reporting 212 and 116 new cases respectively.

The number of deaths followed a similar trajectory. There were 293 in that last week of May, 32 the first week of August, 367 in the middle of December, and now 41 in the most recent week of completed reporting.

That’s a 94 percent drop in cases from the peak in December and an 89 percent decrease in deaths.

  10 Comments      


A good way for Illinois Republican leaders to be relevant

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Republicans don’t have a single statewide officeholder in Illinois. They are vastly outnumbered in the congressional delegation, where their party is in the minority in both chambers. And, of course, the GOP is in the super-minority in both state legislative chambers.

There is something that Illinois Republican Party leaders can and should do to help their state right now, though: Encourage their fellow Republicans to get vaccinated….

But a new national poll found that vaccine hesitancy may be more political than racial. The poll, conducted by Civiqs, found that 56% of white Republican voters reported they would not accept a vaccine or weren’t sure, compared to only [29]% of Black voters who answered the poll. Other polls have found that as many as 35% of Black Americans have reported vaccine hesitancy.

The poll found that 41 percent of white Republicans said they would not take the vaccine and 14 percent were unsure, while 15 percent of Black voters said they won’t take the vaccine and 14 percent were unsure.

* And it’s not just one poll. CBS News survey of 1,500 adult citizens in the U.S. was conducted by YouGov between February 21-24, 2021

* Monmouth national poll

Democrats are most eager to get the vaccine as soon as possible (72% when combined with those who already got the vaccine) – much more so than independents (51%) and Republicans (39%). More than 4 in 10 Republicans (42%) say they will avoid ever getting the vaccine if they can, which is significantly higher than the number of independents (25%) and Democrats (10%) who feel the same.

* Colorado registered voters also taken last month

Only 29% of Republicans, however, said they’d get a coronavirus vaccine, according to the poll. Meanwhile, 57% said they would not get inoculated while 12% said they were undecided.

* Oregon

According to polling figures released in January by Oregon Business & Industry, 48% of Republicans in the state were willing to get vaccinated compared with 88% of Democrats.

* Michigan

The poll released Tuesday also found that while large percentages of self-identified Democrats and independents plan to get vaccinated, nearly half of Republicans — 47% — do not, compared with 46% who plan to be vaccinated.

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Schimpf on governing, campaigning

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WMBD interviews gubernatorial candidate Paul Schimpf, a former state Senator

“What I’m running on is responsible government, safe communities and economic growth through the free market. What I mean by responsible government really is a government in Illinois that’s doing what it’s supposed to be doing. We should not be passing laws in Illinois unless it’s done in a transparent manner where people know what the legislation is before they vote on it,” Schimpf said.

So, he’s running on legislative process? Governors have enough to do without also trying to insert themselves into the role of House and Senate parliamentarian. Ask Bruce Rauner, Pat Quinn and Rod Blagojevich how that theoretical approach to governance worked out.

* On winning the GOP primary

“You have to be able to reunify our Republican party, you have to give the voters a contrast between yourself and J.B. Pritzker, that’s not just a policy contrast, that needs to be a life story contrast as well. The third thing you have to do to win as a Republican in Illinois is you have to get crossover votes. I think I’m the Republican candidate who can do those three things. I’m confident that when the voters take a look at the Republicans who are running in Illinois, I think they’re gonna believe I’m the candidate who can beat Gov. Pritzker,” Schimpf added.

Easy to say, but one wonders how he’ll respond to things like the House resolution filed to condemn Rep. Chris Miller (R-No Relation).

* He does have a good story to tell, though

“We need someone who can work together across the political and social spectrum. I was a State Senator for four years, but before that, I spent my adult life in the Marine Corps. If you’re gonna be successful in the military, you have to be able to work with people across the political and social spectrum. You can’t be afraid of tackling challenges,” Schimpf said. “I’m gonna bring leadership to the table. That’s probably my biggest contribution I can bring to the State of Illinois to try and solve our States problems in a manner where we try to work together and rely on solutions and not political power to ram stuff through.”

* More from the News-Gazette

Schimpf said it will be important to contrast his “life story” as a child of two teachers who graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and became an officer and lawyer in the Marines with Pritzker’s life as the multibillionaire scion of the Pritzker family fortune.

“Voters will ask, ‘Who understands me?’” said Schimpf, who predicted voters will choose him if he can attract enough money in campaign donations to get his message out.

* Back to WMBD. This message sounds good

“You look at the budget that Gov. Pritzker passed 2 years ago, it was his first year in office, he touted a fact it was a bipartisan budget. A lot of the Republican leadership voted for it, I did not. The reason I did not vote for that budget is because it increased spending across the board,” Schimpf said. “We had record revenue coming in, but anywhere we could increase spending, we did increase spending. That just doesn’t reflect the reality that Illinois has a spending problem, not a revenue problem. We need to get our spending under control, it’s something the people of Illinois expect us to do and it’s something I’m going to make my number one priority as governor.”

Spending is up because of pensions and health care. It’s been that way for decades. That spending pressure has put the hard squeeze on all other programs, which has resulted in the hollowing out of state government. But the people who argue that the state should simply slash pension benefits and kick people off of health care appear to have never met a Democratic legislator in their lives. If it was as easy as they constantly claim, it would’ve already been done, for crying out loud. Read the room, people.

Schimpf appears to be advocating for cuts to state programs to make up the difference. In other words, back to the squeeze. But that’s a far more legitimate (if politically risky) debate to have than the magic beans approach which so many pundits here appear to love and embrace, partly because it involves zero actual risk of facing reality.

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*** UPDATED x1 - Pelosi weighs in *** Lots of unanswered questions

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a legal memo prepared for US Rep. Robin Kelly

In its most basic interpretation, Section 300.62 would prevent you from raising or spending soft money in state and local elections. In addition, the DPI would be prohibited from spending soft money to the extent that you directly or indirectly “controlled” DPI.

Again, that’s Kelly’s own attorney saying this.

So, unless they come up with a way to make the state party chair completely and utterly powerless, the party can forget about raising and spending soft money. Millions of dollars, perhaps tens of millions, will be left on the table. And that’s why organized labor is watching this contest with growing dismay.

* More from that legal memo

I previously recommended that, once we have set forth the proposed new decision making structure for DPI, we seek an advisory opinion from the FEC with a set of questions and a list of proposed activities for you as Chair. On this course of action, both Mr. Svoboda [the DPI attorney] and I agree. Getting the FEC’s imprimatur will resolve any possible ambiguity in the regulations and will provide a safe harbor for DPI.

So, the state party will to have to wait until the FEC decides to issue an advisory opinion before they can do anything? What could possibly go wrong?

* And what will US Rep. Kelly be doing if elected state party chair?

Senator Durbin’s longtime aide Bill Houlihan… sits on the State Central Committee, and said Kelly would make a great spokesperson for the party.

“That was not something that Chairman Madigan was interested in doing,” Houlihan said. “I think Robin Kelly will be very good at getting around the state.”

A strong party spokesperson would be a good thing. And I fully agree with Houlihan that Robin Kelly would be great at that job. But they’re not supposed to be electing a spokesperson. They’re electing a new chair.

It’s a no-brainer that Gov. Pritzker and his peeps will be actively involved in the party if Michelle Harris wins. He’ll effectively have control and that understandably rubs some folks the wrong way. They have a perfect right to that position.

But who will be controlling things if Kelly prevails? Will they set up special decision-making committees? Who will appoint the members? Who will set the agenda? Because, according to her own attorney (and despite what this WCIA story implies), she cannot have any direct or indirect party control if they want to raise and spend soft money

Dueling legal memos outlined federal election laws and limitations that would prevent Kelly from raising “soft money” or controlling the party coffers on her own, but members of Congress in Colorado and Georgia have taken the helm of their respective parties by delegating those restricted activities to other party leaders.

“We’re willing to make those changes,” Houlihan said. “It says that more people are going to be involved in both the fundraising as well as the spending of the money.”

Georgia’s situation is new since that state party chair was only recently elected to Congress. And with the legit compliance questions, it may not be a legally safe model to follow.

* Politico

Taking the reins of the party also means controlling money. Given Pritzker’s wealth, he’s expected to fill party coffers and in turn have a big say on how funds are spent. Kelly, because of her position in Congress, would operate a more decentralized operation that likely would see Durbin’s top aide, Bill Houlihan, playing a role in governing.

Hmm. But you’d think Houlihan would also be limited in what he could do since he’s an employee of the US Senate.

* Back to Politico

Players to watch: Board of Review Commissioner Mike Cabonargi is the big question mark because he holds a large number of weighted votes. He’s a longtime friend of Pritzker’s — the two were part of a brat pack group of Democrats that worked on elections outside of the ward system. But Cabonargi also worked for Durbin and has remained loyal to the senator.

Lauren Beth Gash is a former state rep who now chairs the Lake County Democratic Party. Like Pritzker, she served on the Illinois Human Rights Commission and years ago worked on staff for Sen. Alan Dixon.

Kristina Zahorik, a former senior legislative aide for the late Sen. Paul Simon, holds a powerful position separate from the state committee. She’s president of the Illinois Democratic County Chairs Association.

Cabonargi will likely be with Kelly, I’m told. Gash is expected to be with Kelly as well. We’ll see. Durbin has been the force behind the IDCCA, so I’ve always just figured Zahorik would be a Kelly vote.

You can watch events unfold by clicking here at 6 o’clock tonight.

*** UPDATE *** Speaker Pelosi offers kind words for a caucus member…


  64 Comments      


Paris Hilton among those supporting bill to ban schools from physical restraint

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* BuzzFeed last month

Paris Hilton on Monday told Utah lawmakers about the abuse she suffered at multiple treatment centers for troubled teens while urging them to pass legislation requiring more regulation of the programs.

Hilton, 39, spent time in three of the facilities as a teen, including nearly a year at Provo Canyon School, where she said she was “verbally, mentally, and physically abused on a daily basis” when she was 16.

“Although Provo Canyon School marketed itself as a premier treatment center, it was as if hell itself was on Earth,” Hilton said. “I cried myself to sleep every single night, praying I would wake up from this nightmare.”

Provo Canyon School, which remains open, has faced widespread accusations of mistreatment, including beating, drugging, and sexually abusing clients, and cutting them off from their families so they can’t get help.

* Synopsis excerpt from HB219

Makes changes in provisions concerning a school board’s use of time out and physical restraint, including providing that isolated time out, time out, and physical restraint may be used only under certain circumstances, prohibiting the deprivation of necessities and prone, mechanical, and chemical restraint, and requiring a meeting with school personnel if requested by the parent or guardian, the provision of information to parents and guardians, and written procedures. Effective immediately.

* Ms. Hilton filed as a proponent of the legislation. Here’s the legislative affairs director for the National Association of Social Workers’ Illinois chapter…


* Back to last April

Five months ago, when Illinois schools Superintendent Carmen Ayala learned students were being repeatedly shut inside small rooms alone as punishment and physically held down on the floor, she said she cried. She vowed it would never happen again.

But Illinois State Board of Education officials negotiated with a key legislative rule-making committee to allow schools to use prone restraint for one more school year, aiming to phase out its use by July 2021. The decision last week came after a few small schools — including one whose advisory board includes state lawmakers — mounted letter-writing campaigns and direct appeals to government leaders. […]

At least 101 of the 149 letters that advocated keeping prone restraint — nearly 70% — came from two private schools, Giant Steps and Marklund Day School, and the A.E.R.O Special Education Cooperative, a public school.

“As a staff member at Marklund Day School, I have personally performed a safe prone restraint more times than I can count,” began each of the 350-word letters that about 30 employees of Marklund, a suburban school for students with autism, filed with the state.

The nearly word-for-word letters — sent by teachers, aides and other workers — urged ISBE to allow prone and supine, or face-up, restraints at school and touted the improvements shown by Marklund students with “maladaptive” and aggressive behavior because employees were allowed to physically restrain them. State enrollment data shows that Marklund Day School serves about 70 students. […]

Among those who advanced Giant Steps’ argument was the chief of staff for one of the Illinois House’s most powerful members, Republican leader Jim Durkin. The school’s suggestions were emailed to ISBE and the legislative rule-making committee by House staff, records show.

Durkin and five former Illinois lawmakers sit on Giant Steps’ eight-member advisory board, along with two lawyers. The school’s director, Sylvia Smith, said in a recent interview that she regularly speaks to Durkin and other legislators and has made building relationships with them a priority.

Almost all of the opponents are from Marklund.

  29 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois-centric topics, please. Thanks.

  33 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Wednesday, Mar 3, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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One of these things is not like the others

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’re entering parody territory here, or Tobin’s just saying the quiet part out loud that others including the Tribune are too polite to utter

As the U.S. Senate considers whether to pass a $1.9 billion stimulus package, an Illinois nonprofit is urging a no vote.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker said despite a $120 million surplus in his proposed budget, the state needs an estimated $7.5 billion.

“This is a budget that is the result of a crisis that we had facing the state and the country,” Pritzker said.

Pritzker has also blamed the state’s dire fiscal condition on voters’ rejection of his progressive tax amendment and on Congress’ failure to provide unrestricted state bailouts earlier.

Jim Tobin, the founder of the Taxpayer Education Foundation, is opposed to any kind of federal bailout and said the Illinois state government needs to fail to change its irresponsible spending habits.

Kill it in order to save it. That worked so well for the Confederacy’s approach to the United States, and Tobin fancies himself an expert on that bit of history, believing the Civil War was fought over tax revenues.

* GOP Rep. Tom Demmer has some actual ideas

First, both state and local governments should refill and reopen small-business grant programs that have to date only provided assistance to a fraction of the businesses that have been dealt a blow from COVID-19-related closures and restrictions. The highly touted Business Interruption Grant program, for example, awarded grants to just 20% of the businesses that applied. Many businesses are also struggling to pay their crushingly high property tax bills from a year in which they may have seen their property closed or restricted a majority of the time — a property tax relief program could go a long way in reducing that burden. And further mortgage and rental assistance to families who have seen their income drop because of COVID-19 closures would help reduce foreclosures and housing insecurity.

Second, the current state budget relies heavily on borrowing more than $3 billion from the Federal Reserve. All of that is due to be repaid within the next 2œ years. Carrying a short-term debt load like that will put further strain on the state budget, even after the pandemic. An influx of federal aid should be used to immediately pay off that short-term debt and avoid a repayment problem that is right around the corner.

Third, Illinois is notorious for carrying billions of dollars in unpaid bills. By paying our bills and reducing the current $5 billion backlog, we put cash in the pockets of Illinois service providers and vendors who are waiting to be paid — and we also reduce our overall debt load. As businesses fight to stay afloat during the pandemic, we shouldn’t add to their problems by making them wait and wait for the state to pay its bills. Further, when the state pays Medicaid bills — which is one of the largest programs in the state budget — we get matching funds from the federal government. During the pandemic, the matching rate has been temporarily enhanced for all states, meaning that Illinois can stretch every dollar even further.

The debt and backlog ideas are already on the table, as is more relief to businesses.

* Comptroller Mendoza and Connecticut Comptroller Kevin Lembo…

The most cynical actors in Washington have portrayed pleas for aid as an undeserved “bailout” for states that don’t share their politics. The opposite is true. States don’t seek funds for legacy costs. While both Illinois and Connecticut have been addressing long-standing fiscal challenges and legacy costs within our respective state budgets in recent years, both also act as donor states, contributing more in the form of federal taxes than we receive back in federal aid.

This year, we do this dutifully, to proudly support our fellow states as they face identical challenges of their own. This crisis has provided a clear example that we are one nation, meeting a common challenge together. The federal government’s response should reflect that, and not leave anyone behind. Our states, our residents and small businesses can’t wait.

  25 Comments      


A Fair Map Prioritizes Voting Rights And Public Input

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Representative democracy works best when people actively engage in policy discussions and elections, ensuring that communities of color, long disenfranchised, are prioritized. Historically, Illinois’ redistricting process favors incumbents and is dominated by partisan, rather than community, objectives.

In 2021, we can create a fair map for Illinoisans that puts their interests first with a process that:

    ● Invites broad, meaningful public input through at least 35 public hearings for community members
    ● Requires fairness standards that prioritize people of color through the Federal Voting Rights Act, the Illinois Voting Rights Act, and communities of interest
    ● Allows for the public to weigh in on a map proposal through a public hearing and responses to suggestions before a final vote
    ● Is transparent, with a centralized website including all remap records and discussions and a compliance report detailing how the map meets these standards

Learn more at CHANGEIL.org.

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Protected: *** UPDATED x1 *** SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in…

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Spring is the new Christmas for marketers preparing to unleash media spending in anticipation of an explosive sales uptick as the weather warms and consumers rush to resume their everyday lives. From retailers to airlines and hospitality, special-occasion brands and media vendors, the marketing industry is looking to spring, typically a time of rebirth and renewal, to reconnect with customers eager to get out and spend as COVID-19 vaccines roll out and the threat of the coronavirus diminishes.

Consumer sentiment is switching from “hesitation to hope,” as Marriott International’s Brian Povinelli, senior VP, brand loyalty and portfolio marketing puts it. That’s fueling an anticipated spending surge from consumers releasing their pent-up shopping demand—which marketers are looking to help along. […]

The National Retail Federation is forecasting the highest growth in retail spending in 17 years—a jump between 6.5% and 8.2% to as much as $4.4 trillion this year. Much of the growth may come from high-income households. In a recent survey conducted late last month by Ad Age-Harris Poll, 30% of households making $100,000 or more a year said they’ll spend more this spring compared to last; the majority of this group said the vaccine rollout has influenced this decision.

And shopping will extend beyond ecommerce to brick-and-mortar stores as well as consumers get comfortable again with in-person experiences. Some 62% of consumers say they plan to shop in stores this spring at least once a week, the Ad Age-Harris Poll found.

* The Question: How will your life change when you are fully vaccinated?

  52 Comments      


1,577 new confirmed and probable cases; 47 additional deaths; 1,231 hospitalized; 281 in ICU; 2.4 percent case positivity rate; 2.8 percent test positivity rate; 80,416 average daily doses; 83,000 J&J doses by Wednesday

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today reported 1,577 new confirmed and probable cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 47 additional deaths.

IDPH anticipates that the state of Illinois will receive 83,000 doses of the newly authorized Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine by Wednesday. Unlike the currently available Pfizer and Moderna doses, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine requires only one shot and can be stored at much higher temperatures. Like Pfizer and Moderna, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is 100% effective in protecting recipients against death and hospitalization.

The vast majority of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine – more than 90% – will be distributed to mass vaccination sites throughout the state. The remaining doses will be shipped to other providers across the state.

These doses are in addition to the approximate 288,000 doses the federal government allocated to Illinois this week. This total does not include doses for the city of Chicago, which will receive its own allocation.

“As Dr. Fauci and many medical experts have pointed out time and again, we are so fortunate to have three effective vaccines that are proven to fully protect against death and hospitalization,” said IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike. “The new Johnson & Johnson vaccine will be distributed for use at mass vaccination sites across the state, so that we are maximizing their capacity and getting as many eligible Illinoisans vaccinated as possible so that we can win the race against the new virus variants and end this pandemic.”

The newly reported deaths include the following:

    - Alexander County: 1 female 70s
    - Clay County: 1 male 70s
    - Cook County: 2 teens, 2 males 50s, 2 males 60s, 4 females 70s, 8 males 70s, 2 females 80s, 4 males 80s, 4 females 90s, 3 males 90s
    - DuPage County: 1 female 80s, 1 male 80s
    - Jefferson County: 1 male 40s
    - Jersey County: 1 male 60s
    - Kane County: 1 male 80s, 1 male 90s
    - Lake County: 1 male 90s
    - McLean County: 1 female 90s
    - St. Clair County: 1 male 50s
    - Union County: 1 male 70s
    - Vermilion County: 1 male 50s, 1 male 60s
    - Wayne County: 1 male 70s
    - Will County: 1 female 70s

Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 1,189,416 cases, including 20,583 deaths, in 102 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have reported 56,181 specimens for a total of 18,234,668. As of last night, 1,231 individuals in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 281 patients were in the ICU and 148 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

The preliminary seven-day statewide positivity for cases as a percent of total test from February 23–March 1, 2021 is 2.4%. The preliminary seven-day statewide test positivity from February 23–March 1, 2021 is 2.8%.

A total of doses of 3,186,385 vaccine have been delivered to providers in Illinois, including Chicago. In addition, approximately 443,700 doses total have been allocated to the federal government’s Pharmacy Partnership Program for long-term care facilities. This brings the total Illinois doses to 3,630,085. A total of 2,817,892 vaccines have been administered in Illinois as of last midnight, including 324,827 for long-term care facilities. The 7-day rolling average of vaccines administered daily is 80,416 doses; the highest 7-day rolling average to date. Yesterday, 61,061 doses were administered in Illinois.

*All data are provisional and will change. In order to rapidly report COVID-19 information to the public, data are being reported in real-time. Information is constantly being entered into an electronic system and the number of cases and deaths can change as additional information is gathered. For health questions about COVID-19, call the hotline at 1-800-889-3931 or email dph.sick@illinois.gov.

* Tribune live blog headlines

State to get 83,000 doses of Johnson & Johnson vaccine

Chicago bars and restaurants can stay open until 1 a.m., boost capacity to 50%, Lightfoot announces

Parents tear into Naperville District 203 School Board for not reopening schools full time: ‘You will all be replaced’: Many in attendance Monday argued it’s now safe to return all students to full-time, in-person classes, and used the meeting to not only criticize the board but also to castigate district Superintendent Dan Bridges, the current return-to-learn plan and the social distancing restrictions that kept several people from being allowed into the meeting.

Indiana makes COVID-19 vaccine available to residents 55 and older

Merck will help produce rival Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, Biden official says

Brookfield Zoo reopens with new polar bear, Mexican gray wolves making their debut

Schools in Park Ridge-Niles School District 64 to reopen schools for full-time in-person learning

Two big annual trade shows canceled — again — at McCormick Place

* Sun-Times live blog headlines

Every CPS student to get $450 for food through federal program that will benefit 1 million Illinois children

Victims of anti-Asian attacks reflect a year into pandemic

Lightfoot to loosen grip on restaurants and bars — again — to allow 50% capacity, trade group says

U of I rapid COVID test gains emergency use authorization

How to end the confusion of COVID-19 vaccine appointment scheduling

COVID-19 pandemic fuels attacks on health workers globally

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Speaker Welch says his own top legislative priority this spring is stopping hospital closures in low-income communities

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

A new report underscores just how much small hospitals on Chicago’s South and West sides struggle financially, and what can be done to prevent them from closing.

These small so-called “safety net” hospitals tend to be staples in their communities. They typically treat low-income and elderly Black and Latino patients, and often don’t have enough money flowing in to make ends meet.

A new study commissioned by the Health Care Council of Chicago estimates that by 2024, a dozen of these hospitals could lose at least $1.8 billion combined. And that doesn’t even account for money hospitals lost during the COVID-19 pandemic, as they suspended money-generating surgeries and shifted patients to video and phone visits to help slow the spread of the coronavirus.

“We cannot do this for another three or four years and expect that we are not going to see the threat of more hospital closures, more job loss, while health does not get better,” said David Smith, CEO of Third Horizon Strategies and lead author of the paper. “This does not have to be our future.”

The report comes as one safety net, Mercy Hospital in Bronzeville on the Near South Side, recently filed for bankruptcy protection and has been preparing to close this spring.

The report is here.

* House Speaker Chris Welch was asked by Greg Hinz the other day what issue was personally important to him to address this session and he talked about hospital closures

Welch: You and I have talked a number of times, because you personally witnessed my fight to save Westlake Hospital out here in my area, and to watch and see what’s going on with Mercy Hospital. I was warning people back then that this was just the tip of the iceberg. We really need to do something about hospitals closing, particularly in black and brown communities. The disparities already are so wide, you can drive a Mack truck through them. They’re only going to grow if we continue to allow hospitals to close in poor communities. How does a hospital like Mercy post 6$05 million profits in a quarter and then file bankruptcy? It’s crazy. Allowing these hospitals to close is something that we need to take a good long look at and protect communities like the one that I serve and like the one that Rep. Lamont Robinson serves out on the South Side where now Mercy Hospital is threatening to close his doors. This is something that I really want to take a look at. And we can address it this session that would be great.

Hinz: Is the problem that there was not adequate public help for these facilities to keep them open or is the problem that people who operate some of these hospitals are not acting in the public interest, or is it both?

Welch: I think there’s a combination. I certainly think government can do do better. As I told you earlier, our budget is a moral document. I think on the federal level on the state level, we can probably do more to help these these hospital systems. But I certainly think that the hospital industry has changed. Healthcare shouldn’t be a for-profit industry. Unfortunately, it’s become a for-profit industry. And it should be about care and compassionate, compassion, and healing. And unfortunately now it’s about dollars and cents. That’s really unfortunate. And to leave poor communities with gaping holes for access to healthcare has been the byproduct of the healthcare industry becoming a for-profit industry. We have to correct that. That’s a serious issue that has to be corrected.

Hinz: There’s already laws on the books as you know that says before you close a hospital facility have to go to a board, and the board has to sign off on it and the board usually goes along that way. What more should the state be doing?

Welch: I think we have to give that board some more teeth to the law. Because right now it’s more like a ratification a check the box type of process. You talk about an entire community, heartbreaking. That process that we went through at Westlake Hospital was demoralizing and heartbreaking. And people really loved that community hospital. It provided care to folks who otherwise otherwise aren’t getting it. There’s a hole now that they’re not getting that care. And so, watching, I was in Bolingbrook when the board met. And you know, it was more like checking the box because there was really nothing they can do other than grant the application. […] The last thing I want to see is another hospital closing in a low income community. I want to see them opening up, not closing.

  14 Comments      


DPI roundup

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some of the news coverage of yesterday’s developments wasn’t exactly clear on how big the news actually was. One headline

Dueling Memos Raise Questions in Race for New Chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois, 2 Days Before Vote

Um, the memos actually say the exact same thing: If elected, Robin Kelly can’t be involved with raising or spending non-federal “soft money.” That’s huge. Beyond that, it’s just spin, some more clever than others.

* More

The race for the reins of the Democratic Party of Illinois heated up on Monday with the release of a legal opinion contending that U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly may be ineligible to serve in the top state party post.

The congresswoman’s team called that “suggestion” both “false and offensive.”

Kelly released her own legal opinion conceding that, as a federal elected official, she would be barred from raising or spending money for state or local campaigns, something the Matteson Democrat suggested would empower other party leaders.

Except the party may have to do without contributions from organized labor.

* Illinois Democrats always snipe at their party’s governors, so this is just another level added to the mix

It’s unusual that Illinois Democrats are haggling like this. In many states and even for the national Democratic Party, the person at the top of the ticket gets to choose who leads the party operations. President Joe Biden, for example, gave the nod for Jaime Harrison to lead the Democratic National Committee.

With that in mind, Pritzker would be calling the shots on party leadership ahead of the 2022 election where he and Sen. Tammy Duckworth will be the Democrats’ marquee candidates. Duckworth also backs Harris.

Some Democrats, however, have a nagging concern about Pritzker’s control over the party’s checkbook. The billionaire governor’s deep pockets would allow him to dictate which races get more attention than others.

Yes, but isn’t that the case already?

* From Robin Kelly…

Dear Fellow Central Committee Members:

Change isn’t easy. And it’s clear some are resistant to opening up the party and being inclusive. From the beginning, I’ve been committed to a positive and transparent vision for Chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois. If you’re afraid, don’t be. Help is on the way at 6:00 pm this Wednesday.

What we have seen over the course of the last 48 hours should not be what our party is about. Democrats unite and come together. You know me. I have always told you the truth, I have always been inclusive, and we can do this as long as we keep working together. Stay with me.

Together, we will build a party apparatus that acts collaboratively, not unilaterally - that includes raising the funds and resources to elect Democrats up and down the ballot. We’re about to make history together. Thank you, Robin

I’ve known Robin Kelly for years and have always had a high regard for her, but she was not up front about her inability to raise and spend soft money if she was elected and has not yet explained how she intends to get around that and who would be making those major multi-million-dollar decisions in her stead.

* Peter Janko

Endorsement of Robin Kelly for Chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois
- - - - -
We are about six months from the start of the 2022 election cycle, and the Democratic Party of Illinois needs to start rolling up its sleeves and getting to work on earning the vote of all Illinoisans. They say that it is the responsibility of Local Democratic Parties, but most local Democratic Parties don’t get all the resources that they need to be effective. They never have the funds they need because their economies do not even support small dollar donations. Let me see, “Do I put food on the table this week or donate $10 to the local Democratic Party or a local candidate who probably has no chance of winning?” Tough choice, right?

The Democratic Party needs to understand and value the needs of ALL of Illinois. This starts by finding and supporting good Democratic candidates for all offices across the entire state. We need to give all Illinois Democrats and independents a reason to vote.

From South Beloit to Cairo
From Quincy to Danville
From East Dubuque to Mt. Carmel
From Winthrop Harbor to East St. Louis

It is no secret that voters outside of Chicago feel that the Democratic Party of Illinois picks the winners and losers, only supporting Democratic candidates of their choosing. They won’t support candidates in a red district, claiming it would just be a waste of resources. Because of this, few Democrats step forward to run for office, leaving few or no local Democratic candidates on the ballot. Democratic voters stay home, and these districts stay red. It hurts statewide candidates on the ballot like the Governor and our two US Senators, but I am told not to worry; we have enough votes in the blue areas of Illinois.

This is our first opportunity in decades to break from underneath the thumb of the Chicago machine. We must avoid a continuation of the old. It is time for us to finally live up to what we say we are - The Democratic Party of ILLINOIS.
I believe Robin Kelly has the personal commitment and skills to lead us there.

Peter Janko
Democratic State Central Committeeman
14th Congressional District of Illinois

* Latest tally…


…Adding… I’m getting a bit fed up with some of the ill-informed comments. This is from Michael Dorf’s memo to Robin Kelly

In addition, the DPI would be prohibited from spending soft money to the extent that you directly or indirectly “controlled” DPI.

  57 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Andy Shaw on WGN Radio

Look, we as reform groups tried to pass redistricting reform. The Supreme Court led by Democrats threw that out. There was a pension reform bill passed, some years ago. Supreme Court threw that one out, led by Democrats.

The pension decision was unanimous, but I digress. Back to Andy

So these things have been tried. I’ll tell you, the most interesting election in 2022 may not be for governor, or Attorney General or legislative seats, it may be for an open Supreme Court seat. You know, James Kilbride, he wasn’t retained, he lost his retention fight in November. And now, if the Republicans can win that seat, they take over the majority in the General Assembly [I think he meant Supreme Court]. And even though I’m nonpartisan, I’m not, I don’t want Republicans in just because they’re Republicans. But they would be in support of pension reform and term limits, and income tax reform, there’s a lot of reforms that they would approve of that the Democrats didn’t. And so that will be an interesting one to watch to see how that plays, a lot of money will be spent to either protect the seat for Democrats, or turn it over to Republicans. And that could be one of the most important things that happens in 2022, regardless of who the governor is.

  31 Comments      


Sen. Hastings to announce SoS campaign kickoff tomorrow with carpenters union support

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Media advisory…

STATE SENATOR MICHAEL E. HASTINGS TO ANNOUNCE RACE FOR SECRETARY OF STATE

Elk Grove Village, IL — State Senator Michael E. Hastings to announce bid for Secretary of State. Hastings wins a major endorsement from the Carpenters union, which represents 30,000 Illinois working families.

WHO: Senator Michael E. Hastings (D-19) and Gary Perinar, Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters

WHAT: Press conference to announce bid for Secretary of State

WHERE: The Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters Apprentices and Training Program, 1256 Estes Ave, Elk Grove Village, IL 60007

WHEN: Wednesday, March 3rd at 9 AM

His campaign committee had $363K in it at the end of the year.

Discuss.

  33 Comments      


House resolution condemns Rep. Chris Miller (no relation)

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Brenden Moore

Illinois House Democrats have introduced a resolution condemning state Rep. Chris Miller, R-Oakland, after a decal of a far-right wing militia group was displayed on the back of his pickup truck as it was parked near the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrection.

The resolution, filed Monday, states that Miller “violated his oath to the Constitution of the United States of America and the Constitution of the State of Illinois by actively and publicly promoting the actions of an internationally recognized para-military hate group.”

The resolution, introduced by state Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Highland Park, has already garnered more than two dozen co-sponsors, including House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and members of his leadership team. No Republicans have signed on so far. […]

“Supporting and participating in insurrection against the government is way beyond the pale and violates our oath of office,” Morgan wrote in an email. “The State of Illinois deserves to know what role Rep. Miller had in the riot of January 6 in Washington D.C., and that is why I referred this matter to the Legislative Inspector General for proper investigation.”

Click here to read the resolution before commenting, please.

I reached out to Rep. Miller’s spokesperson yesterday and didn’t hear back. From Speaker Welch’s spokesperson…

The insurrection on January 6 at the U.S. Capitol was sickening. It was deliberately planned and orchestrated by white supremacists. The fact that Rep. Chris Miller was involved amounts to a violation of his oath of office. Speaker Welch strongly condemns his actions and wants accountability.

  59 Comments      


IML wants fed aid to bypass state

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Center Square

With the U.S. Senate preparing to take up a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package, the Illinois Municipal League wants local governments, not the governor, to control dollars local governments are meant to get. […]

The federal spending plan the U.S. Senate could take up this week could include $7.5 billion for the Illinois state budget and an additional $5.7 billion for local budgets. [Illinois Municipal League Executive Director Brad Cole] doesn’t want Gov. J.B. Pritzker to capture dollars meant for local governments as was done last year.

“If there is a federal relief package, we’re hoping the money will flow directly to communities and without additional restriction put on by the state which was the case with the federal CARES Act last year,” Cole said.

If federal funds are distributed directly to locals, Cole said the state shouldn’t use that as an excuse to cut state funding for local governments.

“That money can’t be in lieu of our regular state-shared resources that provide for the operations of the community just in regular times,” Cole said.

The governor’s proposed state budget has around $152 million in cuts for local governments statewide unless state lawmakers approve ending $930 million in tax incentive programs. Cole said even if those incentives were closed, there’s no guarantee the state would generate that much money.

Thoughts?

  25 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I wanna hear it


I don’t have to fear it

Keep it local, keep it polite. Thanks.

  26 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

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*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Tuesday, Mar 2, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Your moment of zen
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Illinois receives $430 million federal pollution reduction grant
* Today's quotable
* The Internet is forever, Rodney
* Edgar Fellows Class of 2024 unveiled
* Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation
* Governor Pritzker endorses Kamala Harris for president (Updated)
* Mayor Johnson's actual state ask is $5.5 billion, and Pritzker turns thumbs down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Pritzker, Durbin, Duckworth so far keeping powder dry on endorsing VP Harris (Updated x7)
* Biden announces withdrawal from reelection (Updated x3)
* Yesterday's stories

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