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Griffin recharges Irvin campaign with another $25 million

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller


  27 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rendering of the new Chicago casino on the riverfront…

* The Question: Caption?

  53 Comments      


Pritzker signs new pension buyout plan into law

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

On Thursday, legislation to extend the successful “Batinick Buyout” program for state pensions was signed into law by Governor Pritzker. House Bill 4292 passed the House and Senate with bipartisan support and Rep. Mark Batinick (R-Plainfield) was a chief co-sponsor.

“I said back in 2018 when the Batinick Buyout first passed through the General Assembly that we had to make changes to our pension system if we were going to solve our long-term fiscal problems in Illinois,” said Rep. Batinick. “I am delighted to see this program extended after successful implementation that has saved the state over $1 billion on our unfunded pension liability. I look forward to seeing how much more we can save to finally overcome and move past our state’s longtime pension crisis.”

HB 4292 amends the General Obligation Bond Act and authorizes an additional $1 billion to State Pension Obligation Acceleration Bonds. These bonds make accelerated pension benefit payments and participants can receive these payments instead of pension benefits or for reductions in the increases to their annual retirement annuity and survivors’ annuity. This extension is now June 30th, 2026.

Rep. Batinick originally introduced this pension reform language in 2018, which closely resembled a plan he introduced in 2016 and 2017. At the time, he was the first person in the United States to propose such a concept in bill form. Rep. Batinick is also the House Republican Spokesperson for the Personnel & Pensions Committee.

* More…

“Responsible fiscal management means taking every action possible to address our pension obligations while honoring promises made to current and retired workers – promises made by governors and legislators on both sides of the aisle,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “The expansion of this bipartisan pension buyout program builds on Democrats’ work this session to save taxpayers nearly $2 billion in pension liabilities by paying down our pension debt in advance.”

“The COLA buyout program is a win-win for the state’s finances and our retirees,” said State Representative Bob Morgan (D-Highwood). “I’m proud of this bipartisan effort that frees up nearly $100 million in our Budget annually to address much-needed investments in education and human services.” […]

“When legislators of both parties can come together on a plan to save taxpayers money by reducing the state’s pension shortfall, this is an occasion to celebrate,” said Illinois State Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza. “This is yet another example – along with a billion dollars for the Rainy Day Fund and half-a-billion in additional pension payments – that show Illinois is saving, not spending, and earning credit upgrades.”

“The savings generated by the pension buyout program is big point of pride for me,” said Illinois Senator Robert Martwick (D-Chicago). “When this idea was formed by myself and Rep. Batinick, we put aside our different ideas on partisan issues, and worked together to find a bi-partisan solution for the state’s most persistent and crippling financial problem. When Democrats and Republicans work together on these core financial issues, every Illinoisan benefits.”

“This bill is part of a commonsense solution to help us meet our pension obligations and reduce our unfunded liability, and I’m glad to see it signed into law today. I hope Illinoisans see this as another sign that we are putting our state back on the path of fiscal responsibility and making real progress for our residents.” -State Representative Margaret Croke (D-Chicago).

“By providing an additional $1 billion of State Pension Obligation Acceleration Bonds, we’re reducing long-term pension liabilities and furthering our state’s commitment to fiscal responsibility,” said State Representative Sue Scherer (D-Decatur). “This is an important piece of legislation that not only benefits the state, but also benefits state employees who have more of an opportunity to receive accelerated pension benefits.”

State employees will now have the opportunity to opt for a pension buyout for an additional two years, through June 30, 2026. $1 billion in bond authorization was approved to fund these buyouts. Previously the buyouts were offered only through June of 2024.

  16 Comments      


Report: Boeing moving headquarters to DC from Chicago

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* An announcement is expected next week…


…Adding… Durbin and Duckworth…

U.S. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) and U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) today released the following statement regarding Boeing’s plans to move its headquarters from Chicago to Washington, D.C.:

“Boeing’s decision to leave Illinois is incredibly disappointing—every level of government in our state has worked to make Chicago and Illinois the perfect home for Boeing’s headquarters for the past 20 years. We are working together to ensure Boeing leadership both understands how harmful this move will be and does everything possible to protect Illinois’s workers and jobs.”

In 2001, Durbin initiated two letters to then-Boeing Chairman and CEO Philip Condit when the company announced plans to leave the Seattle area, including a bipartisan letter that was signed by 17 Illinois Members of Congress.

* Crain’s

Two decades ago, Illinois officials offered Boeing a $51 million package of tax breaks and incentives to lay down roots in Chicago. The state forked over $30 million, down from its original offer of $41 million that lawmakers ultimately deemed too hefty. An additional $21 million of deal sweeteners came from Chicago.

In exchange, Boeing was supposed to bring 500 top-level jobs to its new home—or at least that’s what public officials had advertised. Subsequent reporting by the Better Government Association shows Boeing has received more than $60 million in tax breaks despite falling short of the 500 job mark in at least four of the years since it moved. Politicians and Boeing apparently had different understandings of how to reach that metric and which employees would count toward fulfilling it, such as positions that are technically located in Gary. There were also different interpretations about whether hiring here or transferring people from Seattle would both meet the agreement.

Worries that Boeing might leave Chicago have been swirling for more than a year, since the company decided to review its real estate amid the upheaval from COVID-19 and the 737 Max debacle that sapped the company’s profits. Reuters last year called Boeing’s headquarters a “ghost town.”

  52 Comments      


Fitch finally upgrades Illinois credit rating (and it’s a double notch)

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. This means all three rating agencies have now upgraded the state’s grade. Moody’s has upgraded the state twice in less than a year. Fitch

Fitch Ratings has assigned a ‘BBB+’ rating to the following State of Illinois’ GO bonds:

    –$925 million series of June 2022A;

    –Up to -$900 million refunding series of June 2022B.

Additionally, Fitch has also upgraded the following state of Illinois ratings:

    –Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to ‘BBB+’ from ‘BBB-’:

    –GO bonds to ‘BBB+’ from ‘BBB-’;

    –Build Illinois senior and junior obligation sales tax revenue bonds, which are linked to the state’s IDR based on state-dedicated tax analysis, to ‘A’ from ‘BBB+’;

The Rating Outlook is Stable. […]

ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

The upgrade to ‘BBB+’ reflects fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience including full unwinding of pandemic-era and certain pre-pandemic non-recurring fiscal measures, meaningful contributions to reserves and sustained evidence of more normal fiscal decision-making. The ‘BBB+’ IDR also reflects the state’s elevated long-term liability position and resulting spending pressure, as well as a long record of structural imbalance primarily related to pension underfunding. Illinois’ deep and diverse economy is only slowly growing, but still provides a strong fundamental context for its credit profile.

DEDICATED TAX ANALYTICAL CONCLUSION

The Build Illinois bonds’ ‘A’ ratings reflect Fitch’s view that pledged state sales tax deposits will grow with inflation. The security structures can withstand a substantial level of decline and still maintain sum-sufficient debt service coverage. However, Fitch caps the ratings on the Build Illinois bonds at two notches above the state’s ‘BBB+’ IDR based on our assessment of security-specific considerations. This is below our assessment of the underlying credit quality of the dedicated tax bonds.

Economic Resource Base

Illinois’ economy is centered on the Chicago metropolitan area, which is the nation’s third largest and a nationally important business and transportation center. The state’s GDP ranks fifth largest amongst all U.S. states. Economic growth lags that of the U.S. as a whole with population stagnation and relative labor market weakness.

KEY RATING DRIVERS

Revenue Framework: ‘aa’

Over the long term, Fitch expects Illinois’ broad revenue base, primarily income and sales taxes, to capture the breadth of its economy and to track its slow growth trajectory. Illinois has unlimited legal ability to raise revenues.

Expenditure Framework: ‘a’

Illinois has adequate expenditure flexibility, with some of the broad expense-cutting ability common to most U.S. states. The natural pace of spending growth will likely outpace revenue growth, requiring ongoing and active budget management. Carrying costs are higher than all other states and contribution demands for retiree benefits will continue to be a particular pressure point as these benefits are constitutionally protected.

Long-Term Liability Burden: ‘a’

Long-term liabilities are an elevated but still moderate burden on Illinois’ significant resource base. Constitutional limitations suggest Illinois has very limited flexibility to modify existing pension and other post-employment benefit (OPEB) obligations.

Operating Performance: ‘bbb’

Illinois’ operating performance has improved but remains weaker than other U.S. states. Steady reduction in accounts payable, retirement of outstanding budgetary liabilities and smoother fiscal decision-making have become sustainable. Sizable gaps in pension funding and limited resilience to future downturns, despite recent additions to reserves, persist.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to positive rating action/upgrade:

    –Sustained progress towards structural balance and improved liability management, primarily through narrowing the wide gap between actual and actuarially determined pension contributions;

    –Material improvements in fiscal resilience, primarily through building reserves to, or approaching, double currently forecast levels.

    –For the Build Illinois bonds, an upgrade to the state’s IDR.

Factors that could, individually or collectively, lead to negative rating action/downgrade:

    –Reversion to previous pattern of irresolute and contentious fiscal decision-making that could include delayed budgets with unsustainable fiscal measures such as deeper pension funding deferrals or sustained increases to accounts payable or other budgetary liabilities.

    –For the Build Illinois bonds, deterioration in the state’s IDR given the linkages, or material weakening of pledged revenue coverage and structural resilience. Fitch considers this unlikely given the limitations on additional debt issuance. […]

CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS

Economic Recovery Picks Up; Continues to Trail National Pace

Illinois’ employment recovery has modestly accelerated in recent months, but overall recovery still lags the national rate. Through March 2022, Fitch’s analysis of BLS data indicates the state had recovered 82% of the jobs lost at the start of the pandemic versus the national recovery rate of 93% through the same period. Over the past six months, Illinois has gained jobs at a faster clip with its recovery rate up more than 18 percentage points (pps) versus 16 pps nationally.

The state’s official March monthly unemployment rate of 4.7% was higher than the national 3.8% rate that month. Illinois’ Fitch-adjusted unemployment rate (which adds back the declines in labor force since February 2020) was higher at 6%, indicating the state has seen material weakening of its labor markets over the course of the pandemic, which could be a factor in Illinois’ slower employment recovery.

Strong Revenue Growth Helps Unwind Nonrecurring Budget Measures

Revenue growth well ahead of budgeted expectations in fiscal year 2021 and 2022 (ending June 30) and prudent expense management allows the state to accelerate repayment of various budgetary liabilities. Revenue performance largely reflected economic activity rebounding much faster than anticipated, with federal economic support playing a key role. Illinois currently estimates fiscal 2022 net individual income tax (IIT) revenues of $22.7 billion will be $1.9 billion higher than the enacted budget, a 9.3% improvement. The estimate for net sales tax revenues similarly forecasts fiscal 2022 growth more than 10% ahead of the enacted budget estimate, by nearly a billion dollars. Corporate income taxes, typically the most volatile and least predictable of the primary tax revenues, is estimated to end $1.6 billion ahead of budget. In total, Illinois currently projects fiscal 2022 state general funds tax revenues will end the year at $41 billion, $4.5 billion above the June 2021 estimate of $36.5 billion.

Recently released April 2022 revenue collections reported by the state legislature’s committee on government forecasting and accountability (CGFA) suggest final fiscal 2022 collections will be even stronger. Through April, a key month for income tax collections, CGFA reports fiscal 2022 state general funds receipts, net of refunds and statutory distributions for income and sales taxes, up more than 16% yoy. CGFA notes several reasons for the sharp increase in April monthly receipts (69.1% yoy) including a change in tax filing deadlines in 2021, which suggests final year results will be somewhat lower than the 16% YTD gains. Through March, CGFA reported a yoy increase of 9.4%.

With operating expenditures generally in line with the enacted budget, the state was able to direct the revenue surplus for the current year towards paying down liabilities including the remainder of its federal Municipal Liquidity Facility (MLF) loans ($1 billion), outstanding interfund borrowings ($929 million - most of which was incurred pre-pandemic) and longstanding unpaid health insurance bills for employee and retiree healthcare ($898 million, also incurred pre-pandemic). Additional measures taken include paydown of a liability for the College Illinois program, a contribution to the state’s budget stabilization fund and primarily one-time tax relief measures as described further below.

The state’s trend in accounts payable has improved for several years, with the pace of repayment accelerating since the start of calendar 2021. As of March 31, 2022, the Comptroller’s Debt Transparency Act (DTA) report indicated an approximately $3.6 billion general funds bill backlog and a 12-month moving average (to adjust for seasonality) of $4 billion. This is down 44% from the pre-pandemic (February 2020) 12-month moving average of $7.1 billion. The March DTA report also notes $48 million in reported pending late payment interest penalties, down 85% from February 2020 ($319 million).

According to the March report, the Office of the Comptroller’s bill payment cycle, or the age of the state’s oldest unpaid general funds voucher for external vendors was 18 business days as of March 31. The Comptroller reports this metric has steadily decreased (aside from seasonal variation) from a peak of 210 days in November 2017.

Enacted Fiscal 2023 Budget Reflects Improved Operating Profile

Illinois’ enacted fiscal 2023 budget, along with supplemental fiscal 2022 budget changes, solidifies the state’s recent financial operating performance improvements but also maintains some fundamental weaknesses. The state expects to end the current year having fully repaid a series of outstanding budgetary liabilities while also making steady progress in reducing its account payables to essentially normal levels with an external vendors bill cycle well below 30 days. The 2022 revised and 2023 enacted budgets also deposit just over $1 billion into the state’s budget stabilization fund (BSF), which had been essentially zeroed out since fiscal 2017. While significantly improved, the planned contributions would leave the BSF at a still modest 2.2% of projected total general funds expenditures in fiscal 2023.

The 2023 enacted budget also includes increases over the current year originally enacted budget in all major spending areas including education ($767 million, with $350 million in evidence-based funding for K-12), human service ($1.3 billion) and healthcare ($552 million). Total general funds expenditures rise $3.7 billion from the enacted fiscal 2022 budget. General funds revenue sources rise $4.1 billion in the 2023 budget, yielding a roughly $440 million surplus, with $312 million allocated towards the BSF. $1.8 billion of tax relief measures in the revised fiscal 2022 and enacted 2023 budgets is concentrated in one-time measures in fiscal 2022, drawing on the large revenue surplus. Only $100 million for an increase to the earned income tax credit is an ongoing tax policy change.

While the fiscal outlook continues to improve, structural gaps remain, primarily underfunding of pension contributions. The 2023 budget fully meets Illinois’ statutory obligations which are based on funding up to target of 90% funding of the state’s pension liabilities by 2045. For fiscal 2023, the CGFA estimates a gap of $4.1 billion (roughly 10% of state sourced general funds revenues) between the statutory state pension contributions of $10.8 billion and the actuarially determined contributions (ADC). The 2022 budget revisions and the 2023 enacted budget includes a total of $500 million in supplemental pension contributions, over the statutorily-defined level, but still well below the actuarial level necessary to fully fund pensions over time.

Measured Initial Use of Federal Aid

Illinois’ plans for spending American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) state fiscal recovery fund aid is focused on one-time investments rather than recurring operating needs. In the fiscal 2022 budget, the state allocated $2.8 billion of Illinois’ $8.1 billion ARPA state fiscal recovery fund (SFRF) distribution on infrastructure and other one-time, or temporary pandemic-specific needs. Additionally, the state created the Essential Government Services Support Fund (EGSSF) and anticipates flowing $1.5 billion of the ARPA aid through the fund for operating needs. The $1.5 billion is more than offset from a budgetary perspective with repayment of the MLF loan (approximately $1 billion) and interfund borrowing ($928 million), though ARPA aid will not be used for the actual repayments.

In the spring 2022 legislative session, the state also allocated $2.7 billion to repay Illinois’ loan from the federal government’s unemployment trust fund account. Additional one-time uses for healthcare facilities, small businesses and affordable housing essentially round out the state’s use of SFRF aid. Illinois also has access to $254 million from the ARPA’s Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund for infrastructure projects.

Bottom line is Fitch wants the state to stay the course, avoid going back to the endless Blagojevich/Quinn/Rauner (especially) budget wars and double the rainy day fund to $2 billion.

…Adding… Speaker Welch…

Less than a year ago we celebrated Illinois’ first credit rating increase in more than 20 years. Today, we’ve received multiple upgrades from all three credit rating agencies. Thanks to steadfast and responsible budgeting, Democrats continue to improve our state’s fiscal health. More work remains, but we’ve promised to restore financial stability and that’s exactly what we’re delivering.

…Adding… Gov. Pritzker…

Governor JB Pritzker hailed a two-notch bond rating upgrade from Fitch Ratings, Illinois’ fifth notch upwards in less than a year, saying it validated the strong and responsible fiscal management he’s implemented since taking office.

The Fitch upgrade is the first for Illinois’ GO bonds since June 2000 and follows an upgrade by Moody’s Investor Service last month, the second such upgrade by Moody’s in 10 months.

“Balanced budgets four years in a row, paying the state’s bills on time, early repayment of pandemic-related borrowing, clearing out debts left by previous administrations, making higher-than-required pension payments, setting aside $1 billion in savings for a rainy day — this is what responsible fiscal management looks like,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Working with the General Assembly and my fellow constitutional officers, with dedication and determination we have turned Illinois from a deadbeat state into a fiscally responsible state that is attracting business from around the globe.”

“The upgrade to ‘BBB+’ reflects fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience including full unwinding of pandemic-era and certain pre-pandemic non-recurring fiscal measures, meaningful contributions to reserves and sustained evidence of more normal fiscal decision-making,” the Fitch Ratings release stated, noting a steady reduction in accounts payable and retirement of many of the state’s lingering debts.

In its rating action, Moody’s credited the state’s “solid tax revenue growth over the past year” which expanded the state’s ability to rebuild financial reserves and increase payments toward unfunded liabilities. Moody’s noted Illinois’ progress in repaying its debts and its increased pension contributions as an indication of the state’s increased commitment to paying its pension debt.

The Governor thanked House Speaker Chris Welch, Senate President Don Harmon, Leader Greg Harris, Senator Elgie Sims, Comptroller Susana Mendoza and Treasurer Michael Frerichs for their ongoing commitment to Illinois’ fiscal well-being.

The upgrades follow the enactment of the state’s fourth balanced budget in a row, while providing $1.8 billion in tax relief to the working families of Illinois and marked Illinois’ first contribution to a Rainy-Day Fund in 18 years, as well as a $500 million extra payment toward the state’s pensions. The historic budget places Illinois it its strongest financial position in a generation while funding key investments for education, human services, law enforcement and violence prevention.

Fitch upgraded Illinois’ rating on its General Obligation bonds to BBB+ (stable outlook) from BBB- (positive outlook), and also upgraded Build Illinois sales tax bonds to A (stable outlook) from BBB+ (positive outlook).

Moody’s upgraded Illinois’ rating on its General Obligation bonds to Baa1 stable outlook from Baa2 stable outlook, and also upgraded Build Illinois sales tax bonds to Baa1 from Baa2 while maintaining their stable outlook.

The rating of a state’s bonds is a measure of their credit quality. A higher bond rating generally means the state can borrow at a lower interest rate, saving taxpayers millions of dollars.

Between 2015 and 2017, the State of Illinois suffered eight credit rating downgrades and sat at the top of many analysts’ lists of the worst managed states in the nation. At its worst, Illinois’ bill backlog hit nearly $17 billion.

Key Actions – Responsible Fiscal Management

Fiscally responsible choices over the last three years have resulted in historic progress toward financial stability in Illinois.

Illinois’ FY2023 budget:

    • Deposits $1 billion to the Budget Stabilization Fund (BSF) across FY2022 and FY2023 - the first deposits in 18 years. Also creates ongoing, permanent funding for BSF for the first time.
    • Contributes an additional $500 million directly towards state unfunded pension liabilities, reducing long-term liabilities by an estimated $1.8 billion.
    • Pays down $4 billion in debts across FY2022 and FY2023, including eliminating the payment delays in the employee and retiree health insurance program through $898 million in FY2022 supplemental appropriations.
    • Keeps pace with payment of the state’s bills, with estimated bill payment delays at the lowest levels since before the Great Recession, saving taxpayers hundreds of millions in unnecessary interest costs.

…Adding… Comptroller Mendoza…

Today, Fitch Ratings gave the state a two-notch, bond-rating upgrade, noting the state’s “fundamental improvements in Illinois’ fiscal resilience.” This is the first Fitch upgrade for Illinois in more than 20 years. It comes on the heels of an upgrade from Moody’s Investors Services last month.

Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza repaid Illinois’ federal loans years ahead of schedule, saving Illinois taxpayers $82 million.

“Prudent expense management allows the state to accelerate repayment of various budgetary liabilities,” Fitch said in its double-upgrade Thursday.

Last year, Moody’s upgraded the state’s rating on June 29, 2021, which was the first upgrade the state had earned in more than two decades. The next week, on July 8, S&P Global upgraded the state’s credit rating as well.

With Fitch’s announcement today, the state’s credit has now been boosted five times in less than a year.

“Our state has now earned five credit upgrades during my tenure as Comptroller, it’s an amazing accomplishment and I’m very proud that my team and state leaders are showing you can lead with empathy – prioritizing human and social services as well as promises made to state retirees about their pensions – while also prioritizing fiscal responsibility,” Comptroller Mendoza said.

Comptroller Mendoza has focused on paying down the state’s backlog of bills and shrinking the time state vendors wait to be paid.

“According to the March report, the Office of the Comptroller’s bill payment cycle, or the age of the state’s oldest unpaid general funds voucher for external vendors was 18 business days as of March 31. The Comptroller reports this metric has steadily decreased (aside from seasonal variation) from a peak of 210 days in November 2017,” Fitch wrote.

Under the prior governor, the state had suffered a 736-day budget impasse and eight credit downgrades, during much better economic times.

Moody’s and Fitch both cited the state’s contributions into reserves as a reason for the recent upgrades.

Comptroller Mendoza has been a strong proponent and driver of reviving the state’s Budget Stabilization Fund – commonly referred to as the Rainy Day Fund.

The FY ‘23 budget signed by Gov. JB Pritzker includes $1 billion for the Rainy Day Fund and an additional $500 million to the Pension Stabilization Fund, saving Illinois taxpayers $1.8 billion in the long run.

Under Comptroller Mendoza, there is no longer a bill backlog, rather an accounts payable, that stands at about $2.1 billion today. That’s down from nearly $17 billion in 2017.

“We’re putting our best fiscal foot forward, and we’re earning recognition for these great strides we’re making,” said Comptroller Mendoza. “Even better days are yet ahead if we keep leading with fiscal responsibility.”

  37 Comments      


Audit slams IDPH on LaSalle Veterans Home response, whacks IG report,

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m still going through the full Performance Audit of the State’s Response to the COVID-19 Outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home, but this is from the summary

• Although the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) officials were informed of the increasing positive cases almost on a daily basis by the Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs (IDVA) Chief of Staff, IDPH did not identify and respond to the seriousness of the outbreak. It was the IDVA Chief of Staff who ultimately had to request assistance. The IDVA Chief of Staff inquired about a site visit and about rapid tests (November 9th), and inquired about getting antibody treatments (November 11th) for LaSalle Veterans’ Home residents. From the documents reviewed, IDPH officials did not offer any advice or assistance as to how to slow the spread at the Home, offer to provide additional rapid COVID-19 tests, and were unsure of the availability of the antibody treatments for long-term care settings prior to being requested by the IDVA Chief of Staff.

• The outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home occurred at a time when COVID-19 cases were trending up statewide. Positive cases in Region 2 (where the LaSalle Home is located) increased from 12,108 in October 2020 to 37,825 in November 2020, an increase of 212.4 percent. Also, the outbreak occurred prior to the COVID-19 vaccine. Prior to the outbreak that began at the end of October 2020, only six staff members had tested positive for COVID-19. Even though the LaSalle Home had designated areas for isolation and quarantine, once the virus entered the Home, it spread very rapidly.

The administration threw IDVA chief of staff Tony Kolbeck under the bus. He appears to have gotten a bad rap on at least some of this.

* Tribune coverage

Department of Public Health officials didn’t show up at the Lasalle home until 11 days after the outbreak began on Nov. 1, 2020, even though department leaders had been receiving near daily updates on the deteriorating situation at the home, according to Auditor General Frank Mautino’s review, which was released Thursday.

The public health department’s visit came only after top agency staff members were told that Pritzker was “very concerned” and wanted them to go to the facility, the report said.

The public health department’s failure to intervene early at the LaSalle home after the outbreak had been detected was notable, the audit said, because “all but four” of the 36 “residents who died were positive prior to” the agency’s first site visit on Nov. 12, 2020.

Mautino’s review, requested by the General Assembly, also said an inspector general’s report ordered by Pritzker and released in April of last year that blamed management failures at the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs and the LaSalle home was too narrowly focused on that VA and was flawed because it largely excluded the public health department’s role in the crisis.

That report, from the Department of Human Services inspector general, contended the significance of the outbreak was not being meaningfully tracked by Veterans Affairs chief of staff when, “in fact, auditors found the chief of staff provided detailed information” that was used by former state Public Health Director Ngozi Ezike in her daily COVID-19 briefings, the auditor general report said. […]

Overall, the state audit points to a massive bureaucratic failure involving the administration’s response to the pandemic and the LaSalle deaths.

* From the audit

The virus hit the Home very quickly with a large number of residents and staff positive within a few days. As a result, it was unclear whether non-adherence to policy caused the virus to spread so quickly or whether the rapid spread was due to other factors. These factors include: a rumored outside gathering of employees; a Halloween parade at the LaSalle Home; or possibly the high positivity rate during that time in the community. Auditors obtained pictures of the parade and Halloween activities from October 30, 2020, where residents and some staff were unmasked. Since the virus is invisible, and several days may pass after exposure before symptoms develop, the origin of the virus at the Home may never be determined. It is likely that the high positivity rate in the community during that time period was a significant contributor.

Emphasis added because we’re going to hear from outraged GOP legislators today who were pushing back hard against the administration’s mitigations at the time of the outbreak and up to this day.

…Adding… Rep. Welter…

Illinois House Republican Conference Chair Rep. David Welter, R-Morris, issued the following statement today in reaction to the Auditor General’s findings on the Pritzker Administration’s response to the deadly COVID-19 outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans Home in the fall of 2020 that claimed the lives of 36 of our state’s heroes:

“The Governor’s Office previously testified how the IDVA Director duped them regarding the outbreak’s severity. Today’s report from the Auditor General proves Governor Pritzker was the one who deceived us. His office had information from day one and failed to act. The Governor’s investigation into the matter was flawed, too narrowly focused, and purposely removed him and IDPH’s leadership team from scrutiny until today’s independent findings. The Governor can no longer cover up the truth, and he must be held accountable for his collapse of competence. Legislative hearings must be scheduled to determine how the administration failed so greatly in protecting our state’s heroes.”

…Adding… Irvin campaign…

Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin released the following statement in response to the Illinois Auditor General’s report published today showing that J.B. Pritzker’s team and senior leadership at the Illinois Department of Public Health were well aware, in real time, of the Covid-19 epidemic at the LaSalle Veterans Home and failed to take quick action to address the outbreak that ultimately took the lives of 36 heroes:

“As an Army veteran, it is disheartening and beyond disturbing that J.B. Pritzker and his Department of Public Health were aware of the outbreak at LaSalle and neglected to respond quickly to save the lives of 36 veterans. The governor owes the families of these American heroes an explanation and needs to be held accountable for his administration’s failure to prevent this needless tragedy.”

The outbreak occurred several months into the Covid-19 pandemic in Illinois, where safety protocols and preventative measures were to be in place at all nursing homes, hospitals and community living facilities. An initial investigation by the Office of the Inspector General found that this tragedy could have been prevented if the safety protocols were followed. Today’s Auditor General Report found that the OIG report did not go far enough in thoroughly investigating the Governor’s Office and IDPH, and only lightly touched the surface in its determination of their actions or lack thereof.

…Adding… Irvin mentions “safety protocols” in his response, but check out his answer to this newspaper question

What is your position on mask- mandates and vaccination requirements at workplaces?

Again, I oppose such state mandates.

Not good.

* Rep. Yednock…

State Rep. Lance Yednock, D-Ottawa, who led the Legislature to request a special state audit in the aftermath of the deadly La Salle Veterans Home COVID-19 outbreak in late 2020, today issued the following statement in response to the release of the audit:

“The devastating and deadly outbreak at the La Salle Veterans Home raised so many questions, and we needed to know more. Today’s audit reveals some disappointing breakdowns in communications and protocols that very likely led to more sickness and deaths. It also underscores the terrifying speed of infection we saw at COVID-19’s peak and acknowledges even the best preparation and planning might not have been enough to prevent more infection.

I want to thank Auditor General Frank Mautino and his dedicated staff for reviewing thousands of documents and spending the time needed to talk with everyone involved and paint a clear picture of what went wrong and how we can make sure it never happens again at the La Salle Veterans Home.

I’m frustrated and disappointed there wasn’t better coordination between state agencies to recognize and address the increasingly serious infection rate at La Salle as it was happening. As the audit found, staff should have been tested more regularly, and the Illinois Department of Public Health should have moved more quickly to visit the home.

I also want to acknowledge those in charge of the home and at the Illinois Department of Veterans Affairs who, despite previous reports, did take proper precautions and sound the alarm for help repeatedly as infections grew.

Our goal with this audit was to produce positive change, not settle political vendettas. I am encouraged that significant improvements have been made to prevent this from happening again. I would ask the Auditor General’s team and all of the involved agencies to meet with us in an upcoming legislative hearing to discuss these findings in more detail. With COVID-19 still in our communities, we owe this continued work to every veteran counting on us to protect them and keep them safe.”

…Adding… Leader Rezin…

llinois Senate Deputy Minority Leader Sue Rezin (R-Morris) issued the following statement after the Illinois Auditor General released their report on the Pritzker Administration’s handling of the COVID-19 outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home that resulted in the death of 36 residents:

“The audit tells the story of a governor who fatally mismanaged the state’s response, abdicated his responsibilities to protect the veterans of this state, and tried to hide it with an investigation he arranged with a predetermined outcome, ensuring his office escaped all accountability.

“Governor Pritzker and his political appointees intentionally misled legislators during public hearings as we sought answers for the families who lost loved ones but nineteen months after the outbreak began, the truth came out. He must finally accept responsibility for failing to act on the information his office sat on since day one. The Senate must hold legislative hearings to demand answers from the Pritzker Administration.”

…Adding… HGOP Leader Durkin…

House Republican Leader Jim Durkin offered the following comments after Illinois Auditor General Frank Mautino released the findings of a performance audit into the fatal mismanagement that led to the tragic deaths of 36 of our nation’s heroes at the LaSalle Veterans’ Home.

“The Auditor General’s report today shows again that when it comes to protecting our state’s most vulnerable, like children in DCFS or Veterans in the care of IDVA, Governor Pritzker is a failure. Our heroes deserved better than Pritzker’s fatal mismanagement at the LaSalle Veteran’s Home.”

…Adding… Jesse Sullivan…

Following today’s release of an audit of the Pritzker administration’s failed response at the LaSalle Veterans Home, Jesse Sullivan is calling for an immediate criminal investigation into the Pritzker administration – starting at the top with J.B. Pritzker himself.

Sullivan said:

“What happened at LaSalle was a shameful tragedy. When our heroes cried out for help, they were met with deafening silence from the Pritzker administration. Thirty-six veterans died as a result. Illinois veterans deserve better. The families who lost loved ones deserve better.

“Four years ago, J.B. Pritzker called the 13 deaths at the Quincy Veterans Home from Legionnaires’ disease a ‘shameful neglect of our veterans’ and an ‘unconscionable moral failing.’ ‘[T]his is incompetence,’ Pritzker said. ‘This is gross mismanagement.’ Attorney General Lisa Madigan quickly launched a criminal probe into the Rauner administration.

“J.B. Pritzker needs to be held accountable for his failures, and to take responsibility for the lives lost and the damage done. Time and time again, Pritzker has blamed others. He scapegoated IDVA Chief of Staff Tony Kolbeck for not disclosing the severity of the outbreak, but now we are learning that it was IDPH that didn’t act. The bottom line is that by his own definition four years ago, Pritzker is unfit to serve as governor.”

“As governor, I will always stand up for our veterans, and ensure they receive the highest quality of care.”

…Adding… Rep. Kifowit…

State Representative Stephanie Kifowit (D-Oswego), a United States Marine Corps Veteran and Chair of the IL House Veterans Affairs Committee, was the Chief Co-Sponsor of House Resolution Number 62 (HR62), which passed the Illinois House unanimously on April 28, 2021. As Chair of the Illinois House Veterans Affairs Committee, she issued the following statement following the Auditor General’s Report issued today pursuant to HR62:

“The Veterans in all our Veterans’ homes trust and depend on the state of Illinois to give them the best care we can in honor for their service to our great Country. As a Veteran myself, I stand by this standard and strive to ensure our Veterans are properly taken care of every day”, stated Kifowit. “The heart-breaking loss of our decorated Veterans at the LaSalle Home showed us just how deadly COVID-19 was, and still is.

“The members of the Veterans Affairs committee have been diligent on ensuring that all the information regarding the COVID-19 outbreak at the LaSalle Veterans affairs has been fully vetted, and as Chair of the Veterans Affairs Committee, you have my word that this report will be fully vetted as well in an upcoming subject matter hearing that I have already requested to be scheduled before the end of May.

“Through the hard work of the committee, and already law in Illinois, the soon to be established Veterans Accountability Unit is expected to address some of the issues that we are seeing in the Auditor General’s report and will provide an avenue for concerns and complaints to be readily addressed in a timely manner. It is unfortunate that so many lives were lost in a complete breakdown in communication during the largest public health crisis in our history. We must make certain that tragedy like this will never happen again to our most vulnerable Veterans under the care of the State of Illinois.

“In the end, this is about our Veterans. I am encouraged by the leadership of newly confirmed IDVA Director Prince and his team, the hard work of all the employees that care deeply for our Veterans in all our Veterans’ Homes, and the dedication of the Veterans Affairs Committee members to bring about positive change for our highly decorated Veterans under the care of the state of Illinois.”

  28 Comments      


Another day, another cannabis lawsuit

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This is really getting intolerable. Tribune

A legal battle over cannabis business licensing in Illinois could overturn the state’s residency requirement, throwing a wrench into the already dysfunctional process and attempts to diversify the industry.

The litigation is just the latest in a series of lawsuits that have kept much of the state’s legal cannabis industry in limbo. But there are signs the logjam may be breaking.

A Cook County judge in another case has indicated she may lift a court injunction against issuing 185 pending recreational store licenses and hold a corrective lottery to remedy complaints about the licensing process. State officials also plan to issue 55 new licenses using a new streamlined process.

But this new federal case could jeopardize that. At issue is whether the state can favor license applicants who live in Illinois. Federal courts have struck down similar requirements in Maine, Michigan and Missouri, potentially opening licensing to much greater competition nationwide.

* But this story is from last month

An Illinois federal judge said Friday that it appears that the statute laying out Illinois’ licensing process for cannabis dispensaries probably does violate the dormant commerce clause of the U. S. Constitution, but questioned the “sweeping relief” sought by two men claiming the state discriminates against out-of-state residents. Juan Finch Jr. , who moved to Chicago in December, and Pennsylvania resident and cannabis investor Mark Toigo want U. S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer to block the state from issuing the 185 conditional licenses it has allotted so far in three separate lotteries and require regulators to rerun the licensing process without the residency requirements.

* Brenden Moore a couple of weeks ago

Cannabis Business Association of Illinois executive director Pamela Althoff summed up the state of the state’s legal recreational-use cannabis industry in one word: “Halted.” […]

“With the legal battles ongoing and the temporary restraining order placed on dispensaries, we’ve halted any real growth and advancement of the cannabis industry in Illinois,” Althoff said.

This has left lottery winners, many of whom have invested significant funds in their bids for licenses, in limbo while also delaying the diversification of what is still a nearly all-white and all-male industry on the dispensary side. […]

The diversity numbers would likely stand to improve significantly once licenses are given out as all those who have applied in the latest rounds are considered social equity candidates.

There’s evidence of this on the cultivation side. Last year, the Illinois Department of Agriculture awarded its first 40 craft grow licenses and 32 infuser licenses along with several transporter licenses.

This led to an increase in non-white majority-owned licensees on that side of the industry from zero to 44%. After the resolution of a court case last month, an additional 60 craft grow licenses could be awarded in the coming days or weeks.

* One problem is the “supercase” judge appears to be overwhelmed

An Illinois judge Friday pushed dozens of unsatisfied cannabis dispensary license applicants towards a corrective lottery before hearing arguments on whether or not they deserve to participate in the application process and told litigants that she expects the case to last through the end of the year and possibly into late 2023.

This case will never conclude by 2022, you’ll be lucky if it concludes 18 months following that. There would not even be a ruling on merits for many, many months. If not years out,“ said Cook County Circuit Court Judge Cecilia Gamrath. “I want those plaintiffs to understand that reality. If any plaintiff is thinking they will get a ruling in three months.”

Judge Gamrath’s pronouncement was part of a four hour hearing in the state’s dispensary “supercase”, a consolidation of 67 plaintiffs from across Illinois ordered by the state Supreme Court. The supercase deals with applicants who contend their applications were either mishandled by the state or barred from participating in the application process. [Emphasis added.]

* Good points by Rep. Tarver

State Rep. Curtis Tarver says Illinois erred in the first place when it passed the cannabis legalization law. He said he said drafters were ultra-cautious about not wanting to invite lawsuits by giving too much priority in the license application process based on social equity and racial qualifications.

Instead, it’s those who can least afford it who are beset by litigation. He said there’s little legislators can do while various lawsuits wind their way through the courts.

“I don’t know that we ultimately will legislate our way out of this,” Tarver said. “The original 678-page bill was so flawed, I’m not sure that there’s legislative solutions. There was a lot of concern initially when I was in conversations and trying to push back on some of these things, about their being litigation if we went too far as far as providing equity. And now we’re in a situation where there’s litigation regardless. And the people often who can least afford to be litigated are the ones fighting for their opportunities.”

Once the courts weigh in, he said Illinois can make more moves.

* Related…

* Over 15,000 Total Cannabis Convictions in Illinois to Be Expunged, Kim Foxx Announces

* Belleville expects proposed marijuana dispensary to be big revenue producer for city

  10 Comments      


Senate drops Ukraine ball as pension funds drag their feet on Russian divestment

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I stopped tracking this bill at the end of session because I figured it would pass. Here’s the BGA

Despite strong rhetoric from Gov. J.B. Pritzker and other top state officials demanding public pension funds divest more than $100 million in Russia-based assets, state lawmakers now say they won’t act until the Fall veto session.

A key legislative proposal to force the pullout in the wake of the Russian invasion of Ukraine died in a Senate committee awaiting a vote.

Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, declined to be interviewed for this report, but his staff suggested the Senate had too little time before the session closed on April 9. The House bill — which passed by a vote of 114-0 on April 5 — was never taken up in the Senate chamber.

Liz Mitchell, Harmon’s spokeswoman, said the plan is to review the measure and take it up when they return in the Fall veto session.

Critics say that’s too little, too late.

“When you have a supermajority in both chambers and a Democratic governor, it’s a massive failure,” said Rep. Jim Durkin, R-Western Springs, the House Minority Leader. “It’s the right thing to do at the right time, and they have failed to do anything. It’s embarrassing. We could have been a leader on this.”

Durkin’s GOP divestment bill never made it out of committee.

In a written statement to the Better Government Association, Harmon promised action in retaliation for the Russian invasion that began on Feb. 24. He did not address the delay. […]

According to a review of pension audit reports for nine of the major public pension funds — including five in the City of Chicago and three state pension funds — a combined total of nearly $112 million was invested in Russian equities, bonds and other assets at the start of the invasion. […]

The Teachers’ Retirement System, the biggest fund in Illinois that represents teachers outside Chicago Public Schools, identified close to $59 million in assets in its portfolio.

TRS spokesman Dave Urbanek put the battle between fiscal responsibility and morality surrounding the issue into perspective.

“Letting go of an investment that’s making money, there’s a risk to that,” Urbanek said. “But you don’t want to be profiting off a war.”

Urbanek described the fund as waiting for direction from the state to act, similar to others.

Unreal.

  16 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** US Rep. Miller’s relationship with pedo questioned

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Accusations way too often turn out to be confessions for these folks

If you signed a petition to help put U.S. Rep. Mary Miller (R-Illinois) on this June’s primary ballot, there’s a chance that a man convicted of luring a child for sex was the one who asked you to sign those campaign documents.

Congresswoman Mary Miller is facing new questions about her relationship with Brad Graven, a former state worker who pleaded guilty to luring a young boy to a drugstore parking lot for sex acts in 2005.

Photos, videos, and state election records show Graven was actively involved in helping the effort to re-elect Miller. Reached by phone, Graven claimed he was merely an unpaid volunteer for the Miller campaign. His name does not show up on the campaign payroll, but Graven enjoyed virtually unlimited access to Miller, served as her personal chauffeur at public events and raised money for her campaign. Miller trusted Graven with her family vehicle, which is adorned with campaign stickers and legislative license plates.

At several of those campaign stops, Miller encouraged voters to judge her and her colleagues in Congress by the company they keep.

“A politician is known by their votes and by who they hang around with,” Miller told supporters on Monday night in Quincy. […]

Miller’s closest ally on Capitol Hill is arguably U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. The Georgia Congresswoman hosted a fundraiser for Miller last summer and recently caused a stir among religious conservatives for claiming the Catholic church “harbored monsters.”

“I could not trust the church leadership to protect my children from pedophiles,” Greene said.

*** UPDATE *** Coincidentally

YOU’RE INVITED TO CELEBRATE THE LAUNCH OF THE ILLINOIS FREEDOM CAUCUS TRUMP HOTEL CHICAGO, MAY 5 12:30PM

The State Freedom Caucuse Network would like to cordially invite you to a private luncheon celebrating the launch of Illinois’ new Freedom Caucus! Come mingle and enjoy good company while supporting limited government in Illinois!

Join Illinois Freedom Caucus members—Chris Miller, Brad Halbrook, Dan Caulkins, Adam Niemerg and Blaine Wilhour — and select members of Congress, at our celebration.

Gotta figure US Rep. Miller is that “select” member. No relation, by the way.

…Adding… Washington Examiner

Critics of the congresswoman argue that her rhetoric surrounding policies aimed at “protecting minors” is hypocritical. One source noted that a summer camp run by her family featured twice-removed Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore as a speaker. Moore came under fire during his 2017 GOP Senate bid after nine women accused him of inappropriate sexual or social conduct, some of whom were under the age of 18.

Additionally, campaign finance reports show Miller’s husband, state Rep. Chris Miller, donated $5,000 to former Illinois state House candidate Tom McCullagh, who dropped out of his race following accusations of grooming an underage person. McCullagh has publicly denied the accusations.

  46 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Happy Cinco de Mayo!

  17 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Thursday, May 5, 2022 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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