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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

CTA chief of staff Nora Leerhsen will become the interim president of the transit agency, taking over after Dorval Carter’s retirement at the end of January.

Leerhsen will, for now, take on leadership of an agency that has faced rampant complaints from riders in recent years, with another challenge on the horizon as a massive budget gap looms and lawmakers in Springfield prepare to debate the future of the region’s four transit agencies in a move that could have significant repercussions for the CTA’s authority. Leerhsen will be paid an annual salary of $278,703.73.

This is from Block Club’s 2023 story on how many times CTA officials used public transit

Nora Leerhsen, chief of staff for the CTA president, did not swipe her work card in 2021 [to ride a bus or train] and then used it on five days in November and December 2022.

* The Illinois Freedom Caucus…

The Illinois General Assembly has once again wasted time and taxpayer resources to push through yet another gun bill that will most certainly not withstand a Constitutional challenge, according to members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus.

“Radical leftists are congratulating themselves for ramming through yet another gun bill, but their victory today will be a short-lived one and they know it. House Bill 4144 mandates police seizure of firearms from anyone subject to an order of protection or “red flag” order and includes ex parte orders in which there is no notification of a hearing or any due process rights. Furthermore, there are no provisions for the return of firearms should the ex parte orders be dismissed.

No one wants criminals to use firearms to commit acts of violence, but the way to stop violent acts from happening is to punish those who break the law and to increase the penalties for those who violate orders of protection. There are solutions that actually work. Unfortunately, the Democrats chose the least effective path by passing a bill that will most likely be ruled unconstitutional, proving that the priority of the radical left is not to solve problems but rather to make political statements. Illinois needs solutions and real leadership not more political slogans and activism.”

Several members of the freedom caucus boycotted the vote for minority leader.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | While deficit looms in next year’s budget, current-year revenues remain on track: Pritzker is slated to give his budget address on Feb. 19, facing the largest projected deficit entering a spring session since 2021, when the pandemic hurt state income – though federal stimulus funds and a strong economic recovery helped erase the gap that year. Since then, the state has enjoyed more robust revenue with little need for new revenue-generating policies – until the current-year budget that passed in May with about $1 billion in new revenues through a tax hike on sportsbooks and businesses among other changes.

* Block Club | Hemp Loophole Causing Chaos In City Hall, Springfield — But Smoke Shop Owners ‘Ready To Fight’: While negotiations in Springfield stall, Ald. Marty Quinn (13th) is quickly advancing a local ordinance to not only ban the sale of “cannabinoid hemp products” but compel the city to not renew any retail tobacco licenses in a part of the Southwest Side he calls the “Midway Residential Area.” That would all but force Race to close two stores near Midway Airport this year. The ordinance is expected to be up for a vote before City Council Wednesday.

* KARE | Minnesota, Illinois attorneys general sue John Deere company alleging ‘repair monopoly’: Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison sued agricultural manufacturer John Deere Wednesday, alleging it has used unfair practices to drive up equipment repair costs for farmers. AG Ellison, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and the Federal Trade Commission filed the lawsuit, claiming that Deere & Company practices have made it difficult for farmers and independent repair providers to repair Deere products. The lawsuit alleges this has forced farmers to rely on Deere’s dealers for repairs and pay heightened repair fees for decades.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | Former chief counsel for Madigan’s office testifies as closer for ex-speaker’s defense team: The former top legal counsel to House Speaker Michael Madigan testified at Madigan’s corruption trial Wednesday that key legislation being pushed by ComEd and AT&T came amid a “political war” with then-Gov. Bruce Rauner and only passed after months of negotiations and compromise. … Wier Vaught also testified there was a strong vetting process to identify any potential conflicts of interest between his private legal clients and state legislation.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Johnson blasted for failing to deliver on environmental promises: Despite promising to fix city policies, Johnson has made no progress in a number of areas, all requirements laid out in a binding agreement with federal officials, the South Side groups said in a letter sent to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on Wednesday. The civil rights complaint was filed with HUD in 2020 in response to the city’s multiyear involvement in moving the scrap metal operation General Iron from white, affluent Lincoln Park to East Side, a low-income Latino-majority community. The relocated metal-shredding operation was fully built at East 116th Street along the Calumet River, but the city — under pressure from community organizations and other advocates — ultimately refused to issue an operating permit. That permit denial is still being fought in court.

* WTTW | Key City Panel Advances Measure to Ban Sale of Intoxicating Hemp in 2 Southwest Side Wards: The Chicago City Council’s License and Consumer Protection Committee advanced an ordinance that would prohibit the sale of “cannabinoid hemp products” that are “capable of producing a psychoactive effect in a person who consumes it” in Ald. Marty Quinn’s 13th Ward and Ald. Silvana Tabares’ 23rd Ward. If approved by the full City Council, violations of the ordinance could trigger fines of at least $2,000 and no more than $5,000. A final vote on the measure could come at the City Council meeting scheduled for Jan. 15.

* Crain’s | Bally’s seeking lucrative property tax break for Chicago casino: Chicago regularly approves property tax incentives to developers, including recently inking a deal with the developers of the Southeast Side quantum campus, reducing their taxes by over $175 million for the life of the 30-year incentive. But the request from Bally’s — coming right as the company appears ready to begin construction of a permanent casino that City Hall is banking on to shore up its police and fire pensions — may rankle some in the City Council who have been skeptical of the project since it was approved in 2022.

* SCOTUS Blog | Supreme Court considers Chicago alderman’s “false statement” charges: The Supreme Court on Tuesday grappled with the case of Patrick Daley Thompson, a former Chicago alderman and member of Chicago’s most storied political dynasty. Thompson served four months in a federal prison for making false statements to bank regulators about loans he took out and did not repay. He contends that the federal law under which he was convicted does not apply to statements – like his – that are misleading but not false. But after just over 75 minutes of oral arguments, it wasn’t clear whether the justices would actually decide that legal question, or whether a majority of the justices believed that a ruling on that question would even help Thompson.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WTIP | Cook County sells land to HRA for future Hamilton Habitat project: After several weeks of discussion and working to create a legal description, the Cook County Board of Commissioners voted on Jan. 14 to convey a parcel of public land to the Cook County Housing Redevelopment Authority (HRA), earmarked for a future Hamilton Habitat project. The sale has been part of the board discussion for the past several weeks. It is located at the intersection of the Gunflint Trail and Creechville Road. While the final board of commissioner meetings of 2024 included discussion of transferring the land to the HRA, a lack of a legal description of the plot caused some delay.

* Daily Herald | Officials: Fires at Elgin homeless encampment were accidental and unrelated: The Elgin Fire Department’s investigation into the three fires, which took place Dec. 4, Dec. 12 and Jan. 11, found no evidence of suspicious activity in any of the incidents. In a press release Wednesday, the fire department said the use of heating equipment near combustible materials was a common factor in the three fires.

*** Downstate ***

* KWQC | Inquest: Dead man’s DNA found on off-duty Carroll Co. deputy’s truck: The DNA of Jackson Kradle was found underneath the vehicle of an off-duty sheriff’s deputy in July, according to testimony during a coroner’s inquest. […] In November, Carroll County Coroner Matthew Jones said Kradle died from blunt trauma to the head after he was hit by a vehicle.

* Daily Journal | Gotion buys more land around its plant: Since buying the former Kmart distribution center in Manteno in 2023, Gotion has continued to purchase land surrounding the plant at 333 S. Spruce St. is transforming the 1.5-million-square-foot facility into a lithium battery manufacturing plant.

* WMBD | Hundreds of tires popping up across Woodford and Peoria County: Amy McLaren with the Peoria County Highway Department said it’s likely more than one person who’s behind this. “If you have this many tires, it can’t be just one person. You have multiple vehicles. If we fill up our large snowplow trucks with tires, it is more than one person. It’s a larger operation that’s just trying to dispose of these.” said McLaren.

*** National ***

* Streetsblog | Alarming Report Shows that Two Auto-Braking Systems Can’t See People in Reflective Garb: The worst systems were on two popular models made by Honda and Mazda. The alarming finding by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety will likely shock millions of American pedestrians … and maybe even force change among the governmental agencies that lay the onus on them for their own safety.

* Fortune | Walgreens CEO describes drawback of anti-shoplifting strategy: ‘When you lock things up…you don’t sell as many of them’: he company plans to close approximately 450 additional stores in 2025, noting that the stores that remain open outperform the ones designated for closure by approximately 250 basis points. Wentworth also acknowledged the ongoing struggle with shrink as a “hand-to-hand combat battle.” After reporting a 52% increase in shrink, or lost inventory, in 2020 and 2021, Walgreens invested in increased security that proved to be “largely ineffective.” And while many drug stores have taken to locking up commonly looted goods, Wentworth admitted, “When you lock things up…you don’t sell as many of them. We’ve kind of proven that pretty conclusively.”

* WSIL | 140 Illinois National Guard Soldiers and Airmen to assist with Presidential Inauguration Security: Information from the Illinois National Guard Public Affairs Office detailed the Soldiers and Airmen which includes 100 Military Police Soldiers from the 933rd Military Police Company out of Fort Sheridan and about 30 Security Forces Airmen from the 183rd Wing based in Springfield, the 126th Air Refueling Wing based at Scott Air Force Base, and the 182nd Airlift Wing based in Peoria.

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New RTA transit proposal called ‘too little, too late half-measure that puts holding on to power above the needs of riders and taxpayers’

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WTTW

The Regional Transportation Authority is pitching what it calls a “historic restructuring” that would grant the agency authority to more aggressively coordinate fare policy, service standards and capital projects among CTA, Metra and Pace — reforms the RTA said could create both cost savings and a vastly improved rider experience.

The proposal comes as the Chicago region’s transit agencies are facing down an estimated $750 million fiscal cliff next year when COVID-19 relief money runs out — and amid conversations in Springfield about tying increased transit funding to major changes to the existing public transit structure. Some lawmakers have floated merging RTA, CTA, Metra and Pace into a single agency, coupled with an additional $1.5 billion in annual funding.

The transit agencies have cheered the proposed funding boost, noting that Illinois invests far less in transit than other states — but have thrown cold water on the idea of a merger, arguing it won’t create the efficiencies or service improvements backers hope.

RTA Executive Director Leanne Redden said the new proposal, set to be outlined by RTA Board Chairman Kirk Dillard in a Wednesday speech at the City Club, is the culmination of more than two years of work that can serve as a roadmap for lawmakers debating transit’s future during the General Assembly’s spring session.

* From the proposal

• RTA leads a one-stop-shop contact center for all rider issues, including Ventra/ticket purchasing, free and reduced rider certification, and ADA paratransit certification
• RTA manages and sets all fare policy, including unified fare products
• RTA leads development of a universal app for all fare payment, consolidates special fare programs, and expands Access pilot for riders experiencing low incomes region-wide
• RTA sets uniform customer information design standards and centralizes deployment of real-time tracking information

It also wants a lot of control over capital spending. But there’s nothing in there about coordinating schedules between the systems beyond setting some minimum performance standards for buses and trains to cut rider wait times “by as much as 50%.”

* The Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition is not happy…

In response to the Regional Transportation Authority’s announcement of their plans to “transform transit” today, the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition released the following statement:

“Illinoisans deserve and want a transformed transit system outlined in the Clean and Equitable Transportation Act (CETA) that coordinates smooth, accessible and equitable service, connects folks to affordable, active modes of transportation, and mitigates air and climate pollution. Today’s announcement from RTA reminds riders of many failed promises over the last decade, and is another too little, too late half-measure that puts holding on to power above the needs of riders and taxpayers. Legislative leaders in Springfield have made it clear there is no new revenue to improve transit without major reforms.”

Its membership list, which includes the Illinois Environmental Council, is here.

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ISP reports 71 percent decrease in expressway/interstate shootings since 2021

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

For the third year in a row, the number of shootings on Illinois interstates has dropped. The Illinois State Police (ISP) is reporting interstate shootings statewide decreased 31% in 2024, compared to 2023. Since a record high in 2021, there has been a decrease in interstate shootings every year:

    • 31% decrease from 2023 to 2024
    • 53% decrease from 2022 to 2024
    • 71% decrease from 2021 to 2024

“The continued dedication of resources, including personnel, license plate readers, Air Ops, K9 units, and investigations, has allowed ISP to reduce crime on interstates and make roads safer,” said ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly. ​ “Although our strategies for crime reduction continue to evolve, ISP’s commitment to protecting the public remains unwavering.”

In 2024, through patrol enforcement and special violent crime reduction missions, we saw a 7% decrease in fatal crashes, a 3% increase in illegal firearms seized, and a 24% increase in vehicles recovered. ​

The use of ISP Air Ops and Automated License Plate Readers (ALPRs) has been a game changer in identifying and tracking those committing crime, as well as reducing crashes. ​ ISP uses its Air Ops to help track vehicles and individuals fleeing from officers, reducing the risk of a high speed pursuit that can result in a fatal crash. ​ ISP also uses ALPRs, not only to assist in apprehending individuals in real time as the crime occurs, like a vehicle hijacking, but also during investigations. ​ Special agents can use ALPRs to identify vehicles that may have been involved in or witnessed an interstate shooting and follow up with those individuals. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​

ISP’s crime fighting strategies will continue to evolve as crime evolves and we are committed to reducing shootings and fatalities, getting illegal guns and drugs off the streets, and preventing fatal crashes.

“Injury-related shootings” have dropped 87 percent since 2021.

Thoughts?

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

Illinois Democratic lawmakers have reintroduced a plan to improve gun storage across the state. The legislation also includes requirements for reporting lost and stolen firearms.

Senate Bill 8 could ban people from storing or leaving a gun outside an owner’s possession or control unless it is unloaded and secured in a lock box. This proposal specifically notes that minors, at-risk people and those prohibited from using guns should not be able to access firearms in the home.

“We need to ensure that all of our gun owners are responsible and they know what they need to do to keep everybody safe, including our youth,” said Sen. Ram Villivalam (D-Chicago). “I want every youth regardless of the community they live in, but especially those communities that have been disinvested in, to feel safe.”

Gun owners could face a fine of $500 to $1,000 if someone prohibited from accessing guns obtains their weapon. The legislation could also create a $10,000 penalty if a minor or at-risk person uses someone else’s gun to injure or kill people.

Rep. Bob Morgan filed HB1365 yesterday

Amends the Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act, the Clinical Social Work and Social Work Practice Act, the Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing Act, the Music Therapy Licensing and Practice Act, and the Professional Counselor and Clinical Professional Counselor Licensing and Practice Act. Establishes temporary licenses for social workers, professional counselors, licensed marriage and family therapists, music therapists, and clinical psychologists whose license application is pending and creates termination conditions for such licenses. Removes good moral character standards as qualification requirements for the licensing of social workers and music therapists. Creates procedures for placing a license on inactive status for social workers and professional counselors. Provides that the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation must allow reasonable exam accommodations for licensed marriage and family therapists and clinical psychologists whose primary language is not English if a test in the therapist’s or psychologist’s primary language is not available.

* 13 co-sponsors were added to HB1226 yesterday

State Representative Patrick Sheehan (R-Lockport) announced that he is sponsoring new legislation aimed at reducing burdensome requirements for some Illinois motorists. House Bill 1226 would raise the age for mandatory behind-the-wheel tests for older drivers renewing their licenses from 79 to 87 amongst other changes to the Illinois Vehicle Code. The bipartisan legislation builds upon House Bill 4431 introduced by Rep. Jeff Keicher (R-Sycamore) in the 103rd General Assembly and seeks to do away with the discriminatory practice of requiring behind-the-wheel tests for seniors based on age as the sole factor.

“House Bill 1226 is a much-belated change to our state’s driving laws and, beyond that, a sign of respect for our seniors,” said Sheehan. “This legislation would align Illinois with the rest of the nation in no longer requiring road tests based on age and would cut costs for drivers in the process. I would like to extend my thanks to the Secretary of State and Representatives on both sides of the aisle for coming together so that we may remove unnecessary requirements such as these and ensure our license renewal process is fair to everyone.”

Today, Illinois requires drivers aged 79 or 80 to take behind-the-wheel tests in order to renew their licenses. Drivers aged 81 to 86 are required to take behind-the-wheel tests every other year and, at age 87, must take the test each year. If signed into law, House Bill 1226 would no longer require road tests for those renewing their licenses at age 79 or 80, only vision exams taken at the DMV. The same standard would also apply to motorists aged 81 to 86 completing their biyearly license renewals. If passed and signed by the Governor, the new law would go into effect on July 1, 2026.

House Bill 1226 was originally filed on January 9 and awaits further discussion in the House Rules Committee. You can track House Bill 1226 here.

* HB1328 from Rep. Robyn Gabel

Creates the End-of-Life Options for Terminally Ill Patients Act. Authorizes a qualified patient with a terminal disease to request that a physician prescribe aid-in-dying medication that will allow the patient to end the patient’s life in a peaceful manner. Contains provisions concerning: the procedures and forms to be used to request aid-in-dying medication; the responsibilities of attending and consulting physicians; the referral of patients for determinations of mental capacity; the residency of qualified patients; the safe disposal of unused medications; the obligations of health care entities; the immunities granted for actions taken in good faith reliance upon the Act; the reporting requirements of physicians; the effect of the Act on the construction of wills, contracts, and statutes; the effect of the Act on insurance policies and annuities; the procedures for the completion of death certificates; the liabilities and penalties provided by the Act; the construction of the Act; the definitions of terms used in the Act; and other matters. Effective 6 months after becoming law.

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Roundup: Madigan ends testimony

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Before he left the witness stand Tuesday after nearly 12 hours of testimony over four days, ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan explained why he kept meeting with then-Ald. Danny Solis, even though Solis had caused him “a great deal of surprise and concern.”

Madigan told a jury he thought he’d effectively delivered a message to Solis “that there would be no ‘quid pro quo’” in 2017. He said he gave the 25th Ward City Council member “the benefit of the doubt” after that, given their lengthy political relationship.

But Madigan, who was regarded as Illinois’ most powerful politician before Solis helped the FBI with the historic corruption investigation that ended Madigan’s reign, also told the jury that “we all have regrets in life.”

“One of my regrets is that I had any time spent with Danny Solis,” Madigan testified.

* WGN

Defense attorney Dan Collins asked Madigan why he continued interactions with Solis.

“Because I thought I had made it clear to him there would be no ‘quid pro quo,’” Madigan answered. […]

Amid Tuesday’s cross-examination, prosecutors say the former Illinois Speaker of the House should have known better.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu: “Sir, you actually voted on bribery laws in the past during the course of your tenure as a public official, right?”

Madigan: “Yes, that’s right.”

* Tribune

Bhachu ended his cross-examination by asking about the effort to get a job for state Rep. Jaime Andrade’s wife, and a recorded call where Madigan asked McClain about possibly putting her on “retainer” with ComEd consultant Jay Doherty.

Madigan testified last week he suggested Andrade’s wife be retained by Doherty’s firm so nobody would know Madigan was behind the move.

“When you didn’t want folks in the General Assembly to know who was behind payments to Jaime Andrade’s wife, the person who came to mind was Jay Doherty?” Bhachu asked.

“I thought of Doherty, yes,” Madigan said.

* WTTW

After Madigan concluded his testimony, jurors heard from his longtime legal partner Vincent “Bud” Getzendanner, who similar to Madigan testified that their law practice had guardrails in place to prevent any conflicts of interest with the speaker’s legislative positions. […]

Specifically, Getzendanner said that potential clients who’d had business with the General Assembly or the House of Representatives would be flagged so the firm would not contract with them. […]

On cross-examination, Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker focused on Getzendanner’s testimony that Madigan was a “big driver” of their firm, focusing on business and client acquisition.

“Fair to say Mr. Madigan was the rainmaker for the firm?” she asked.

“Yes,” Getzendanner answered, adding that Madigan brought in more business than any other single attorney at the firm.

* Federal Courts Reporter Jon Seidel


* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner


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Open thread

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of the world?…

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: RTA Wants Lawmakers to Boost Its Authority to Oversee, Coordinate Chicago-Area Transit. WTTW

    - The proposal comes as the Chicago region’s transit agencies are facing down an estimated $750 million fiscal cliff next year when COVID-19 relief money runs out.
    - The new proposal is set to be outlined by RTA Board Chairman Kirk Dillard in a Wednesday speech at the City Club.
    - “[W]e know there needs to be this governance reform. We think those two — the governance reform that we’re proposing that’s outcome-driven, focused on riders, coupled with the monies — really could allow a transformative vision for transit,” RTA Executive Director Leanne Redden Said.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | Young adults with developmental disabilities face a ‘cliff’ after they graduate high school: When families leave school, they are stopped in their tracks by a patchwork system involving multiple government agencies, service providers and nonprofits — as well as mounds of paperwork, phone calls and convoluted state websites filled with jargon and missing links. “It’s just a lot,” said Lynn Dancy, recalling the years after Adrien graduated from high school. “It’s hard to get answers — just trying to go to this person, this person, this person, and then go right back where I started from in the first place.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | What’s in Giannoulias’ plan to end road test for drivers 86 and younger? Let families report at-risk drivers: “The right to drive should be based on ability, not age,” AARP Illinois State Director Philippe Largent said. Current law requires drivers aged 79 and 80 to take a road exam when their four-year license renewal is up. For drivers aged 81 to 86, it’s every two years, and for those 87 and older, it’s yearly.

* Mark Harris | Oh, say, what will we see on the new Illinois state flag?: That’s where you come in. The commission did get around to picking 10 proposed flag designs and putting up a website — apps.ilsos.gov/stateflag/ — where you can vote for your favorite. There’s even a choice to retain the existing flag. Personally, I think the option of “Nah, let’s skip it,” should be added to more Illinois ballots in the future.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | Illinois Supreme Court asked to toss law prohibiting open carry of firearms: The Illinois Supreme Court is considering whether to find a state firearms statute prohibiting open carry unconstitutional in the case Illinois v. Tyshon Thompson. Thompson was found guilty of violating state law for having a firearm in a vehicle without a permit in 2020. Despite having a Firearm Owners ID card, he was sentenced to 30 months in prison. Tuesday, Eric Castaneda with the Office of the State Public Defender urged the Illinois Supreme Court to find Illinois’ aggravated unlawful use of a weapons statute unconstitutional.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Ratings Agency Downgrades Chicago’s Credit, Pointing to ‘Structural Budgetary Imbalance’: S&P, one of a handful of major ratings agencies, downgraded Chicago’s credit one notch to BBB with a stable outlook on Thursday. A credit rating of BBB indicates a government agency has “adequate capacity to meet financial commitments,” but is susceptible to “adverse economic conditions.” It is two notches above a junk rating. “The downgrade reflects our view that the 2025 budget leaves intact a sizable structural budgetary imbalance that we expect will make balancing the budget in 2026 and outyears more challenging,” S&P Global Ratings credit analyst Scott Nees said in a statement.

* WTTW | Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez on His Firing, Ongoing CTU Negotiations: On his working relationship with Johnson: “We haven’t spoken since last summer when this whole ordeal started. By the way, self-inflicted. When you look at all the work we’ve done, nobody is invested more in our neighborhood schools than myself and my time.”

* Sun-Times | Council faces two more close votes — on 25 mph speed limit and empowering CPD to cooperate with ICE: Stalled proposals to reduce the default speed limit on Chicago streets to 25 mph and restore exceptions to the city’s Welcoming City ordinance face potentially close votes after parliamentary maneuvers to revive both. The speed limit vote could be the more comfortable of the two.

* Sun-Times | U.S. Supreme Court hears appeal by former Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson: Thompson, heir to the Daley political dynasty, asked the justices to take a narrow reading of the term “false statement” in the law used to convict him over unpaid loans. A jury found Thompson guilty in February 2022 of two counts of lying to regulators but also five counts of filing false income tax returns. U.S. District Judge Franklin Valderrama sentenced him to four months in prison, a sentence he has already served.

* Sun-Times | Imagining the ‘next big thing’ in arts and culture in downtown Chicago: Calling themselves “Team Culture,” the group wants to re-imagine major parts of downtown — filling vacant, often shadowy spaces with light and art. “There have been two things in recent history that changed downtown. One was the Theatre District and the other was Millennium Park. It’s time for culture to do it all over again,” said Lou Raizin, president and CEO of Broadway in Chicago, speaking to a Tuesday lunchtime gathering at the City Club of Chicago at Maggiano’s Banquets downtown.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Election finance reports a mixed picture in south suburbs; Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard paying own way in bid for 2nd term: Campaign finance reports filed with the Illinois State Board of Elections show incumbent mayors in Orland Park and Tinley Park with large sums available to spend as election season heats up. Reports show Henyard hasn’t received a campaign contribution since the spring of 2023, and recorded no money coming in for all of last year from outside sources apart from loans she has made to her committee.

* ABC Chicago | High-stakes Thornton Twp. meeting abruptly ends in chaos, blindsiding Henyard: ‘Call the police!’: “The board meeting is over with, so please get out. Do not walk up on me!” said Supervisor Tiffany Henyard. “Call the police! Call the police because we don’t have a board meeting!” For the first time in months, the board of trustees had a quorum, with Trustees Chris Gonzalez and Carmen Carlisle in attendance. The two had been skipping meetings in order to block Henyard from filling a vacant trustee position.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg has big plans for parcel at Algonquin, Meachem road: “The village is in the process of relocating the facility to 2222 Hammond Drive (in Schaumburg), where a new facility will be constructed,” Dailly said during his annual state of the village address to the Schaumburg Business Association. “Eventually the Meacham Road property will be annexed into Schaumburg, which will allow for future commercial development that will enhance this key gateway near Algonquin and Meacham roads,” he added.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Processing, Slaughtering company investing $2.5M in Effingham Co. expansion project: On Tuesday, Governor JB Pritzker, Frichtl Processing and Slaughtering, LLC and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) announced an Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) for Startups agreement for the $2.5 million investment.

* WCIA | City of Decatur receiving nearly $10M to expand transit: Decatur is receiving a large gift in the new year in the form of $9.9 million. The money is coming from the U.S. Department of Transportation, and now the city will use it to add a micro-transit system on Jasper St. This system will operate similar to Uber, but instead of using a private service, users can go on an app connected to the city and order rides there.

* WCIA | Champaign City Council considering Downtown entertainment enhancements for 2025: One of the biggest changes has to do with the plaza near Main and Neil Streets in front of Big Grove Tavern. It’s been under construction for the last several months, and the city has potential plans to put it to use once the work is completed. At Tuesday night’s council meeting, leaders will walk through the highs and lows of last year’s entertainment in the downtown area. That includes discussing and reflecting on Friday Night Live, The Beat, and even the Farmers Market on Tuesdays.

*** National ***

* WSJ | Nearly Half of Adults Worldwide Hold Antisemitic Views, Survey Finds: The study surveyed more than 58,000 adults from 103 countries and territories representing 94% of the world’s adult population, and found that 46% of them—which when extrapolated to the global population would equal an estimated 2.2 billion people—display antisemitic attitudes. A fifth of the respondents haven’t heard of the Holocaust, during which six million Jews were killed, while 21% believe it has either been exaggerated by historians or it never happened.

* NYT | Capital One is accused of cheating customers out of $2 billion: For years, Capital One held interests artificially low in the high-yield product, to 0.30% annually last summer, for instance, even as the Federal Reserve raised rates above 5%. Banks are generally permitted to pay as little in interest as their customers will permit, but Capital One went too far, according to the lawsuit, by deliberately confusing its customers about its products. The bank operated two separate, nearly identically named account options — 360 Savings and 360 Performance Savings — and forbade its employees from volunteering information about or marketing 360 Performance Savings, the higher-paying one, to existing customers.

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

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Jan 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Um…Ok… Indianapolis Star

An Indiana General Assembly bill filed by one of the state’s most powerful lawmakers would set up a commission to “embrace” neighboring counties in Illinois that want to secede and join the Hoosier state.

House Bill 1008, which was unveiled on Tuesday by House Speaker Todd Huston, R-Fishers, would create a so-called “Indiana-Illinois Boundary Adjustment Commission,” with the goal of embracing Illinois counties “that want to join low-tax, low-cost Indiana.”

The House Republicans included the bill on a list of their top priorities for the 2025 session, which specifically noted that dozens of counties in Illinois have voted since 2020 “to secede from their high-tax state.” […]

He said it would require Illinois lawmakers to pass a similar resolution. It’s unclear what the political appetite for that would be.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Institute of Government and Public Affairs | Evaluating Illinois State Agencies and the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act: Although NAGPRA was a significant step, gaps remain in the law that limit its applicability, which could hinder culturally appropriate care and repatriation. For example, Native American Ancestors may be unaccounted for in medical examiner and coroner offices (MECOs). These agencies are typically the first point of contact when unidentified human remains (UHRs) are discovered, and identifying human remains as Native Ancestors is not always straightforward or even possible given limited contextual details. Such identifications would require awareness of NAGPRA (and other relevant laws) and have access to specialists qualified to make such determinations.

* Streetsblog Chicago | “It Was Magnificent”: Illinois legislators take a learning tour of Berlin and Munich transit systems: Sen. Peters said his biggest takeaway from the trip was how easy the German system is to use. “It was as if I could take Metra, get on the Red or Blue line, and then a bus and it was all fluid,” he said. “You couldn’t tell there were different agencies operating different lines. Everything was coordinated: timetable, payment systems. It was magnificent.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Shelter Alliance calls for $100M state funding boost to fight homelessness: With homelessness increasing in Illinois, a coalition of shelter providers and advocates is calling for a $100 million increase in state funding to prevent homelessness and provide shelter to people without homes. That would come on top of the $290 million the state is spending this year on homelessness services.

* WGN | Illinois proposal raises age for mandatory road tests to 87 for older drivers: “Age alone does not necessarily determine if someone should have a driver’s license,” Giannoulias said during a morning press event. “Driver’s ability and medical health should serve as the main determining factors.” Data published by the Illinois Department of Transportation for the last several years indicate the crash rate for drivers aged 70 and older is lower than every other age range of drivers.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* WTTW | ‘I Put the Knife Into Cullerton’: Madigan Details Falling Out With Senate President as Testimony Continues: “Does Cullerton have any association to your son at all?” Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu asked. Madigan confirmed that Cullerton is his son’s godfather and that Madigan and his wife had chosen him for that role. “And you’re talking about putting a knife into Cullerton, is that right?” Bhachu asked. “Correct,” Madigan answered.

* Sun-Times | Madigan talks about his dealings with FBI mole Danny Solis: ‘We all have regrets in life’: Live updates: Without a break, McClain attorney Patrick Cotter steps up to question Madigan, but it ends quickly. Madigan had some harsh words about his longtime friend on the stand on Monday, including telling the jury that “I don’t think I was as loyal to him as he was to me.”

*** Chicago ***

* South Side Weekly | Calls Widen for Police District Councilor’s Resignation: Last summer, the Weekly reported on tensions in the 14th PDC, which represents parts of Wicker Park, Logan Square, and Humboldt Park. (Each of the city’s twenty-two police districts has a three-member council, which were first elected in 2023.) At the time, formal complaints had already been filed against Orlikoff for his behavior. In April, a PDC 14 meeting devolved into a shouting match between Orkiloff and members of the public. During the uproar, he attempted to grab Chairperson Chris Laurent’s gavel, and he kept arguing with attendees after the meeting. In September, Laurent introduced a measure at a citywide meeting of district council members calling on the CCPSA to formally censure Orlikoff. It needed thirty-two votes to pass, and failed by a single vote.

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Meet the new Chicago Board of Education: The Chicago Board of Education is changing. After the city held its first school board elections in history, 10 people elected by their communities will join 11 mayoral appointees to serve for the next two years. The 21-member hybrid school board will be sworn in Wednesday, Jan. 15 — marking an historic shift in governance as 30 years of mayoral control in Chicago comes to a close.

* WTTW | CTU President Stacy Davis Gates on Contract Negotiations, Future of Chicago Public Schools: Contract negotiations between CTU and CPS are still on pause. Part of what the union is asking for is 5% raises annually for the first two years of the contract, and 4% to 5% increases for the third and fourth years of the contract. The district said it’s offering 4% because that’s all it can afford. CTU is also asking for fine arts programs, libraries and librarians, and 20 minutes of prep time for teachers, among other things. Davis Gates characterized negotiations so far as abysmal.

* CO Star | Will this Chicago office sale lead to world’s tallest teardown?: Local investors John Murphy of Murphy Development Group and Gerald Kostelny of InSite Real Estate have a contract to buy the more than 1.3 million-square-foot tower at 311 S. Wacker Drive at a fraction of the more than $302 million it last sold for in 2014. Those investors’ involvement is significant, because they already have been working in recent years with development behemoth Hines on potential ground-up projects for vacant sites on each side of the 961-foot-tall tower at 301 S. Wacker and 321 S. Wacker.

* Crain’s | United Center owners reveal new details of planned 1901 Project: The families that own the Chicago Bulls and Blackhawks will detail their proposed 1901 Project on Jan. 16 for the Chicago Plan Commission, according to a presentation on the city’s website. The panel’s approval is a key step toward final City Council sign-off for a 14 million-square-foot development surrounding the venue at 1901 W. Madison St. that could reshape the city’s Near West Side over the next decade-plus.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | EPA warns of toxic forever chemicals in sewage sludge used on farmland, including thousands of acres near the Chicago area: The findings are particularly relevant for northeast Illinois, where more than 777,000 tons of sludge from Chicago and Cook County have been spread on farmland during the past eight years — in many cases near residential areas. Only the Greater Los Angeles area distributed more sludge to farmers during the same period. Officials at the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago have known their sludge fertilizer is contaminated with forever chemicals since at least 2013, the Chicago Tribune reported in a 2022 investigation.

* ABC Chicago | Mother left shocked by initial $7K bill for daughter’s 11-mile ambulance ride between hospitals:
“Sticker shock was huge. Huge. Because it was over $7,000 for 11 miles. I couldn’t believe it,” Dudzik said. Dudzik says she has excellent insurance under a union, so most of her bill was covered. She was left with a $1,300 balance. “I thought, ‘Oh, my gosh, you know, how is this not regulated?’ I started making phone calls. I called the union who controls our insurance, and they’re like, ‘It is the wild, wild west out there,’” Dudzik said of when she received the initial bill.

* Daily Herald | Elgin launches new webpage to keep residents informed on ‘Tent City,’ homelessness initiatives: Days after the third fire at the “Tent City” homeless encampment since early December, Elgin has launched a webpage to provide up-to-date information on their efforts to relocate the residents and offer ways people can help. The “Homelessness Response” page on the city’s website, ElginIL.gov/EHR, features a donation portal, volunteer opportunities, updates on Tent City, a timeline of the city’s initiatives, a human services resource guide, a community partner directory and a list of frequently asked questions.

* Daily Herald | Rosemont considers sale of publicly owned theater to private entertainment group: But Mayor Brad Stephens emphasized a sale is still only a possibility and that discussions — which have been ongoing for less than a year — continue. “Any good deal for any of our assets is something we have to look at,” he said. Stephens said the private group — an undisclosed “substantial” entertainment firm — came to the village expressing interest in taking over ownership and operations of the 4,400-seat live performance space.

* Shaw Local | McHenry record shop owner is known for helping others. Now he’s the one in need.: Between Thanksgiving and Christmas, Wille posted about a family who was facing eviction, unable to pay their rent, Gasek said. With the help of others on the page, the rent was paid and the residents were able to stay in their home. “He has a good following because he has a good heart,” Gasek said. The community is now stepping up to help Wille. He was hospitalized with pneumonia shortly before Christmas. The illness worsened, and Wille was placed on a ventilator. According to a post to the record store’s Facebook page, Wille was taken off the ventilator last week.

*** Downstate ***

* WCBU | Pekin business park could be home of an estimated $550 million methanol plant: The Pekin City Council voted 5-2 to approve giving Ambient Fuels of New York, N.Y., the opportunity to purchase about 47 acres of a 57-acre site from the city for the plant. Ambient plans to use ethanol, carbon dioxide and green energy like offsite solar to manufacture methanol with a lower carbon footprint than traditional plants. Ambient has a two-year option to purchase the 47 acres for $1 million. The company will make quarterly payments to the city of $7,500 in the first year and $16,750 in the second year while its doing its due diligence for the plant.

* Illinois Times | Adams Street at a crossroads: “The idea of TIF is that the market doesn’t support the full cost of renovation because the project is in a distressed area of town,” said Abby Powell, director of business development for Springfield Sangamon Growth Alliance, who previously served as the TIF administrator for the city of Springfield. “A bank would not be able to lend against the full cost because a project wouldn’t appraise out to get funding from a traditional lender. This is called gap financing because it’s a gap between what the market supports and what the project requires.”

* WGEM | West Central Illinois non-profits receiving additional ARPA funding: In total, $24,000 is set to be divided between agencies in Adams, Brown, Hancock and Pike counties. The money comes from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) and Consolidated Appropriations Act, both from 2021. This round of funding is considered phase 42. The local Emergency Food and Shelter Program (EFSP) board awards the money. United Way of Adams County is the coordinating agency for the local board. Meaning they administer funds to the participating non-profits.

* 25News Now | Free tuition idea rejected by PPS board: The Board of Education for Peoria Public Schools is unwilling to offer free tuition to children of full-time school employees who live outside the district despite claims that the action could help recruit and retain teachers. The board voted 3-3 with one member absent. A tie vote means the motion failed. However, board members might revisit the issue later and vote on a measure offering a steeper tuition discount than what’s currently available.

* WCIA | Sangamon County accepting applications for board member vacancy: After District 21 board member Clyde Bunch died in December, the board is looking to appoint a resident who will serve in his place until a special election in November 2026. To qualify for the seat, candidates must be registered voters in District 21 and have lived there for more than a year. Applicants also must be a member of the Democratic Party, as Bunch was a Democrat.

* Herald-Whig | Hancock County kicks off year-long bicentennial celebration: On a historic day for Hancock County, Brezlynn Taylor made some history of her own. The seventh-grader from Carthage Middle School visited the courthouse for the first time, touring the historic structure Monday as the county kicked off its year-long bicentennial celebration.

* Cannabis Business Times | PharmaCann Cannabis Cultivation Workers Vote to Unionize in Illinois: Cannabis workers at the PharmaCann cultivation facility in Dwight, Ill., have voted overwhelmingly to join Teamsters Local 777. “We already represent over 100 PharmaCann Teamsters throughout Illinois,” said Jim Glimco, president of Local 777. “We look forward to getting these workers a great union contract, just like we’ve already done for PharmaCann retail workers throughout the state.”

*** National ***

* AP | Hanging out at Starbucks will cost you as company reverses its open-door policy: Starbucks spokesperson Jaci Anderson said the new rules are designed to help prioritize paying customers. Anderson said most other retailers already have similar rules. “We want everyone to feel welcome and comfortable in our stores,” Anderson said. “By setting clear expectations for behavior and use of our spaces, we can create a better environment for everyone.”

* NBC Chicago | Meta’s new hate speech guidelines permit users to say LGBTQ people are mentally ill: The company’s new guidelines prohibit insults about someone’s intellect or mental illness on Facebook, Instagram and Threads, as have previous iterations. However, the latest guidelines now include a caveat for accusing LGBTQ people of being mentally ill because they are gay or transgender. “We do allow allegations of mental illness or abnormality when based on gender or sexual orientation, given political and religious discourse about transgenderism and homosexuality and common non-serious usage of words like ‘weird,’” the revised company guidelines read.

  20 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Madigan trial…


Madigan testifying to his efforts to build consensus in state government. He says of state legislators, "either make them happy or don't make them not-happy."

— Dave Byrnes (@djbyrnes1.bsky.social) January 14, 2025 at 1:12 PM

That’s pretty much it.

  7 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like the McKay family, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

  Comments Off      


Pritzker on Bears story: Nope

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fox 32

For the first time, Illinois lawmakers are signaling support for using taxpayer money to assist the Chicago Bears with a potential stadium project—if the team chooses the Michael Reese Hospital site near McCormick Place instead of the lakefront Museum Campus.

House Speaker Chris Welch emphasized that the state is open to funding infrastructure improvements at the Michael Reese location, citing its potential to drive economic development in the area.

“If they choose a site like Michael Reese that could use economic development, that’s a different conversation,” Welch said.

State Senator Kam Buckner, whose district includes the proposed site, confirmed that $466 million in surplus money is available to support infrastructure like roads and bridges.

Governor JB Pritzker is open to talks with the Bears regarding the Michael Reese site, according to sources.

* From Gov. Pritzker’s spokesperson…

Governor Pritzker’s position against public funding for a Bears stadium has not changed. The organization is welcome to explore other options.

I asked Rep. Buckner about the story yesterday and he said, “None of this is correct. The Governor’s folks and I were both disputing simultaneously.”

Neither of the claims were included in the station’s 9 o’clock TV story.

* From that TV story

Reporter: Welch says the Bears have not approached lawmakers about this yet. Says they’d be willing to listen, because a stadium there could lead to development of an underdeveloped neighborhood.

Welch: If they chose a site like Michael Reese, which, that’s a neighborhood in Bronzeville that can certainly use some great economic development. You know, that’s a different conversation. The state, you know, has a road fund that we could probably help with building roadways or improving the roadways around the area. That’s a totally different conversation than what’s being asked right now.

And it certainly isn’t a half a billion dollars.

  33 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias was asked whether he plans to use a digital driver’s license at an unrelated news conference today

Reporter: Is this something you plan to use?

Giannoulias: Yes, because we use our phones. I’m going to the Bulls game tonight. I don’t have a ticket anymore, I’m going to have my phone. [If I] take my daughters to the movie, it’s on my phone. Almost everything we do is on our phones. The world is moving that way. When you go to board a plane, I rarely see people with paper tickets anymore. So everything we do, the way we conduct our day to day lives, is moving more and more towards the digital world. I’m looking forward to using it. And the feedback we’ve heard is people are very, very excited.

The Question: Will you add your driver’s license to your Apple wallet? Make sure to explain your answer.

  50 Comments      


About that new DeVore lawsuit

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here to read the full lawsuit. Center Square

The former Republican Illinois Attorney General candidate is taking the Illinois House Minority Leader to federal court over alleged censorship on her social media page used to communicate government business.

An attorney representing Thomas DeVore, who ran unsuccessfully for AG in 2022, filed the lawsuit Monday in the Northern District of Illinois federal court, alleging Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, is censoring DeVore. […]

A spokesperson for McCombie said they will defend the lawsuit.

“This is a politically motivated legal filing and we look forward to vigorously defending the complaint in court,” the spokesperson told The Center Square Monday evening.

* From the lawsuit

Defendant McCombie was first elected to the Illinois House of Representatives, and took office on January 11, 2017. Defendant McCombie created her first Facebook Page when she was running for the office of State Representative. This Page was created on May 19, 2015 and was titled as “Tony McCombie for State Representative 71st District”. On November 17, 2016, after winning her election as state representative, McCombie changed the name of the Page to be simply “Tony McCombie”, which appears to be the page name today. This Page appears at the URL www.facebook.com/McCombieforIllinois

OK, on the face of it, that’s a campaign page.

Back to the suit

Leader McCombie has utilized this Facebook Page to discuss government business and to interact with users about government business since taking office in January 2017. (Hereinafter this Page will be referred to as the “Primary Public Forum”).

You can talk about some government issues on a campaign page. You cannot post about campaign issues on a government page. It’s like how you can use campaign funds to support your district office operations, but you can’t use your state district office allowance to subsidize your campaign operation.

* Back to the suit

McCombie created an additional public forum of Facebook on September 16, 2024. This Page is labelled “Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie.” The Page appears at www.facebook.com/IllinoisHouseMinorityLeader This Page only has a few hundred followers compared to the Primary Public Forum which has over 17,000 followers. (Hereinafter, this page will be referred to as her “Secondary Public Forum”) […]

For the very first time on January 10, 2025, only after citizens began questioning her blocking and censuring of citizens, including the Plaintiff, on her Primary Public Forum, did McCombie make a public Facebook post on her Primary Public Forum attempting to deflect the criticism of her constituents regarding her blocking of constituents. In these Facebook communication on or about January 10, 2025, she for the first time makes inferences that the Primary Public Forum was not her official page and that it was only her Secondary Public Forum where she could not ban citizens, or otherwise restrict their speech. […]

DeVore expressed critical viewpoints of Leader McCombie’s political actions on her Primary Public Forum in response to Facebook post(s) she had made about government business. As a result of DeVore’s expression of these critical viewpoints, Leader McCombie has banned him completely from her Primary Public Forum and has otherwise deleted his comments. As such, his comments are no longer viewable by the general public, including the over 17,000 followers of Leader McCombie’s Primary Public Forum.

DeVore has frequently posted on his own Facebook page about McCombie’s vote for a bill that prevented health insurance companies from denying certain medical coverage based on an officially changed birth certificate. More on that here.

Just saying, but sometimes when people can’t win races against the other party, they turn on their own party.

* Politico

The GOP leader is just the latest elected official to be sued for allegedly blocking opinions posted on social media. President-elect Donald Trump was sued in 2017 for blocking critics on what was then Twitter. The case ultimately went to the Supreme Court and was dismissed.

In another case, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on when public officials’ social media posts are official, via POLITICO.

Closer to home: Chicago Ald. Jim Gardiner (45th) recently agreed to pay $157,500 to settle a lawsuit filed by critics blocked from his Facebook page.

And a case is pending against state Rep. Charlie Meier, a Republican from Okawville, for hiding “critical” comments on his Facebook page. The case was filed by four people who claimed their First Amendment rights were violated. Their attorney: DeVore.

Anyway, it’s in a judge’s hands now.

  8 Comments      


Roundup: Day two of ex-Speaker Madigan’s cross-examination

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

Michael Madigan last week testified at his landmark corruption trial that he became “very angry” when he learned his associates had been doing little or no work for years after receiving contractor jobs with utility giant Commonwealth Edison.

But on Monday, jurors heard a wiretapped phone call in which the longtime House speaker seemed to laugh off the notion that some had “made out like bandits” while doing essentially no work.

That call was played in court during Madigan’s third day on the witness stand as government prosecutors launched into their cross-examination of the man who had long been Illinois’ most powerful politician. […]

Before Madigan retook the witness stand Monday afternoon, attorneys in the case spent the entire morning arguing over which issues Madigan could actually be questioned on — including the so-called “bandits” tape.

* Tribune

Instead of leaning back in his chair and talking directly to the jury, as he had on direct examination, Madigan was more hunched, peering directly at Bhachu standing at the lectern and at times looking down through the eyeglasses perched at the end of his nose.

He often attempted to answer “yes” or “no” questions by offering extensive context, which prompted Bhachu to repeatedly ask him to listen to what he was asking.

At another point, Bhachu asked if Madigan if he thought another ComEd contractor, longtime 13th Ward precinct captain Edward Moody, was an “honest person.”

Madigan paused for several seconds, prompting Bhachu to interject: “That’s a yes or no question, by the way. Was Ed Moody honest?

“Not all the time,” Madigan said.

* Sun-Times Federal Courts Reporter Jon Seidel

* Sun-Times

Still, the most damaging part of Madigan’s testimony may have come near the end of the day, after Bhachu asked about Madigan’s “low” tone of voice in the meeting with Solis. Jurors first saw the video recording in November, but Bhachu played it for them again with the 82-year-old Madigan on the stand — visibly older and grayer than he was in his exchange with Solis more than seven years earlier.

Solis secretly recorded the meeting after agreeing to work undercover for the FBI in a bid to avoid prison for his own alleged wrongdoing. Madigan can be seen waving his hand before his face appears in the left side of the frame, as he lectures Solis about having used the words “quid pro quo” in a previous chat.

“You shouldn’t be talking like that,” Madigan told Solis on July 18, 2017. “You’re just recommending our law firm. … Because if, if they don’t get a good result on the real estate taxes, the whole project would be in trouble.”

Madigan testified last week that he thought he’d sent a message to Solis, in that moment, that he wouldn’t be part of a “quid pro quo.” But Bhachu on Monday went on to cite at least five other examples of Solis suggesting such an arrangement.

* Courthouse News

Madigan nevertheless told Collins last week he “never heard anything negative” about Solis when considering a recommendation to Pritzker’s administration on his behalf.

“I didn’t hesitate. I had a long history of helping Mr. Solis,” Madigan told Collins.

Bhachu hammered on this apparent contradiction — how Madigan decided to help Solis and said he had never heard anything negative about him, but was still surprised and concerned over what must have looked like Solis’ repeated ethical lapses. […]

Blakey gave Madigan’s attorneys until Tuesday morning to address the question, but said the former speaker “isn’t leaving the stand” until he gets a definitive answer.

* Capitol News Illinois

The courtroom, packed with so many onlookers that court officials opened a second overflow room with a video feed, watched as Bhachu questioned Madigan about his efforts to help find employment for the son of longtime Democratic U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush. […]

“This is a guy I’m gonna wanna help somewhere along the road,” Madigan said of Rush in another wiretapped call in August 2018, a little over a decade after his sentencing. […]

“You knew he’d abused his position of public trust?” Bhachu asked of Rush’s taxpayer-funded job with the state prison system.

“Ten years prior,” Madigan replied, going on to say that he was interested in how Rush was “trying to rehabilitate himself,” noting he’d spent five years doing community outreach for a church on Chicago’s South Side. […]

McClain never found a job for Rush, even after asking a ComEd official about him months later in a phone call jurors heard earlier in trial. But in a newly introduced exhibit Monday, Bhachu showed Rush’s temporary $20-per-hour consultant contracts with one of Madigan’s campaign funds for the fall of 2018 into the beginning of 2019. The former speaker testified that Rush worked on legislative campaigns that election cycle.

  7 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

“For 20 years, I worked as a sex worker here in the city of Chicago,” Reyna Ortiz said at a news conference Monday, surrounded by allies from organizations like Equality Illinois, Brave Space Alliance and the Chicago Abortion Fund. “And for over 20 years, I lived under the fear and threat of violence.”

Ortiz, who chairs the Sex Worker Advisory Group — a coalition of current and former sex workers — is among those advocating for Illinois to become the first state in the U.S. to fully legalize the exchange of money for sex among consenting adults.

Illinois in 2013 reduced the crime of prostitution to a misdemeanor, and Equality Illinois CEO Brian Johnson said that has contributed to a 97% reduction in arrests and prosecutions of sex-related offenses, so fully decriminalizing sex work would be codifying standard police practices. […]

Some Illinois lawmakers have for years talked about removing criminal penalties for sex work, but Johnson said he’s “absolutely hopeful” this attempt will be successful, with state Sen. Celina Villanueva (D-Chicago) and state Rep. Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago) serving as sponsors.

* Sun-Times

The bill, sponsored by state Rep. Will Guzzardi, D-Chicago, and state Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, would remove criminal penalties for adults engaging in consensual sex work, remove arrest and conviction records for sex workers and establish a sex workers’ bill of rights.

Advocates for sex workers said they believe these policy changes would offer sex workers the ability to better vet clients and meet with them in safer places. The proposed policy changes would also allow sex workers to report crimes against them without fear of consequences in their own lives.

“The threat of arrest and prosecution keeps sex workers unsafe and in the shadows, and this threat must be eliminated,” said Brian Johnson, CEO of Equality Illinois. “This law is essential now more than ever.”

Between 45% and 75% of all sex workers worldwide will experience violence at some point in their careers, according to a study published in the American Journal of Public Health. About two-thirds of trans people killed in Illinois in the last decade were sex workers, according to state data analyzed by Equality Illinois.

* HB1284 from Rep. Kimberly Du Buclet

Amends the Public Utilities Act and the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. Prohibits alternative retail electric and gas suppliers from paying incentive-based compensation to people engaged in in-person solicitation or telemarketing. Provides that certain tariffs may be filed by an electric utility with respect to electric utilities providing supply service through an electric aggregation program. Provides that an alternative retail electric utility supplier or alternative gas supplier shall not automatically renew a consumer’s enrollment after the current term of the contract expires when the renewed contract provides that the consumer will be charged a rate higher than the current contract rate unless: (i) the alternative retail electric supplier or alternative gas supplier complies with specified notice and disclosure requirements; and (ii) the customer expressly consents to the contract renewal in writing or by electronic signature at least 30 days, but no more than 60 days, before the contract expires.

* Casino Reports

One of the 37 states where it’s illegal to engage in Super Bowl boxes is Illinois, but if one lawmaker has his way, the fine people of the Prairie State will be able to safely invest their money in Super Bowl squares without fear of Johnny Law breaking down their front door and tearing their 18×24 piece of oak tag paper to smithereens.

Only hitch: It’s about the dumbest law anyone could come up with to govern Super Bowl squares. It’s turning the single most innocent form of gambling — and something that the AGA figures about 36.5 million Americans did last year — into a government money-making scheme.

The bill is called the Social Gaming Act, and was introduced by Rep. John M. Cabello. It would allow Super Bowl squares, but only at existing establishments that are already licensed for video gaming. It would charge board manufacturers a $5,000 licensing fee, distributors a $1,000 licensing fee, and gaming locations a $50 yearly fee. It would also cap the max payout at $1,199.

Obviously, this is made to be a cash grab for the state, which is fine, that’s what states do, but trying to corral Super Bowl squares into an income stream just seems … well, again, dumb.

* Rep. Curtis Tarver filed HB1303 yesterday

Creates the Kratom Consumer Protection Act. Provides that no person shall sell, offer for sale, provide, or distribute kratom leaf or a kratom product to a person under 21 years of age, with requirements for online age verification. Provides that no person shall sell, offer for sale, provide, or distribute a kratom product that contains certain chemical compositions. Provides that an individual, business, or other entity shall not produce, sell, or distribute a kratom product that is attractive to children. Provides that no person shall sell, offer for sale, provide, or distribute a kratom product that is adulterated with a dangerous non-kratom substance. Provides that no person shall offer for sale any kratom product that contains synthesized or semi-synthesized kratom alkaloids or kratom constituents. Requires federal compliance for kratom products and processors. Imposes a tax of 5% on the retail sale of kratom products. Requires quarterly returns for the tax. Provides that a person who knowingly files a false or incomplete return is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. Provides for rulemaking and other powers for the Department of Revenue. Incorporates certain provisions of the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act and the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act. Provides that any person who sells a kratom product in violation of this Act shall be subject to a civil penalty up to $5,000 for the first violation, and up to $10,000 for a second violation. Provides that, for a third violation and each subsequent violation, the person shall be fined a minimum of $10,000, up to a maximum of $20,000, and shall be prohibited from selling kratom products in this State for 3 years. Defines terms. Limits home rule powers. Repeals the Kratom Control Act.

  27 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: CTA President Dorval Carter to step down. Tribune

    - Carter will step down at the end of this month, according to the release, before taking over as CEO of St. Anthony’s Hospital.
    - Carter’s retirement comes as a debate brews in Springfield about whether to combine the CTA with Metra, Pace and the Regional Transportation Authority, and how to fund local transit amid a looming $771 million budget gap once federal COVID-19 relief funding runs out.
    - Mayor Brandon Johnson’s spokesperson said Carter’s interim replacement will be announced at the next CTA board hearing, which is scheduled for Wednesday.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Block Club | City’s Year-Old Food Scrap Dropoff Program Diverted Nearly 250 Tons Of Waste From Landfills: The Department of Streets and Sanitation sent more than 723,000 tons of residential trash to landfills between January and November of last year, including more than 173,000 tons of food waste. That’s more than 555 pounds per household. But more than 6,000 Chicagoans have signed up for the city’s Food Scrap Drop-off program since its launch in October 2023, composting more than 295 tons of food scraps through the end of November 2024, the city reported.

* WJBD | State Representative Charlie Meier announces he has prostate cancer: Meier says there is a stigma around prostate cancer among men, but says it doesn’t have to be that way. His message to this: put down your pride and stay up to date on your regular health tests. If you are over the age of 50, you have a higher risk of prostate cancer and should be routinely checked, even if you do not show any of the symptoms. Meier say early detection for all cancers is important.

* WGN | Illinois House speaker urges Mayor Johnson to reveal Springfield wish list: To enact his progressive agenda, Mayor Brandon Johnson is looking to Springfield for an assist, but powerful Speaker of the Illinois House Emanuel “Chris” Welch warns that money is tight. “The mayor of Chicago and mayors all across this state will have to come to us with realistic expectations. They can expect to hear us say ‘no’ from time to time,” the Democrat told WGN during a Monday sit-down interview. “We’re entering into this budget season with a $3.1 billion projected deficit, that’s billion with a ‘B.’

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | Advocates excited new Illinois law will help non-English speakers in court: Non-English speakers in Illinois will have access to free translators during their administrative hearings starting July 1. Thanks to a law signed by Governor J.B. Pritzker, all administrative hearing notices must include a section in multiple languages that the recipient can request interpretive assistance for the hearing. These administrative hearings include family disputes, non-moving traffic violations, unlicensed businesses and more.

* ABC Chicago | IL Speaker Welch downplays suggestion Chicago mayor does not have good relationship with state: Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch has a warning for Mayor Brandon Johnson: getting help from Springfield this year could be an uphill battle. ABC7 Chicago political reporter Craig Wall talked one-on-one with the speaker about what the state’s financial crisis could mean for Chicago.


*** Statewide ***

* AG Kwame Raoul | Assaults on DEI must be met with reaffirming commitments to equity in the workplace : As ideologically driven organizations continue to pressure companies to abandon diversity, equity and inclusion programs, I stand with my fellow like-minded attorneys general to remind corporate leaders of their previous commitments to prioritize diversity in the workplace and the value these policies add to companies’ cultures and financial bottom lines. The assault on diversity, equity and inclusion policies have even leached into our law enforcement agencies. Following the horrific New Year’s Day attack in New Orleans, instead of uniting our country, U.S. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., issued a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray attempting — without merit — to tie the act of terrorism to diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.

* Tribune | Illinois Congressional Democrats plot ways to blunt policies after Trump takes office: “Trump has not been kind in his descriptions of Chicago,” said U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who represents parts of Chicago and many northern suburbs. “There’s definitely going to be a lot of pushback (from Illinois officials), and it’ll be obvious what Trump is doing: He wants to punish certain blue states.” Still, Illinois Democrats figure they have an avenue for some success in the latest Trump era.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson testing ShotSpotter replacements as alderman tries for his own pilot: As Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration conducts pilot testing on first-responder technologies to replace the ShotSpotter system he discontinued, one skeptical alderman wants to move ahead on a technology tryout he set up himself. Ald. Raymond Lopez, 15th, announced his plans Monday to test a technology that helps police identify and respond to gunshots with tools like acoustic detectors, infrared cameras and even drones. The pilot program would cover half a square mile in the Back of the Yards neighborhood and cost the city nothing, but it can start only with Johnson’s approval, Lopez said.

* WBEZ | CTU, CPS views on large fund balance key in contract talks: The $1.1 billion fund balance is a massive improvement from negative balances almost a decade ago. But although CTU believes, “They have a sufficient amount of reserves,” officials at CPS say, “There is no mythical pot of gold.”

* Zena Naiditch | Stacy Davis Gates’ comments reinforce harmful prejudices about students with disabilities: I was appalled to hear Chicago Teachers Union President Stacy Davis Gates’ recent remarks comparing Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez to a special education student who cannot be suspended. This statement is deeply offensive and perpetuates damaging stereotypes about students with disabilities who are disproportionately suspended and excluded from school. Students with disabilities are legally entitled to, and rely on, individualized education programs (IEPs) to make progress in the classroom educationally and emotionally. Every individual deserves respect, dignity and the opportunity to succeed. Comments such those made by Davis Gates undermine these values and reinforce harmful prejudices about students with disabilities.

* Tribune | Bally’s resumes demolition at Freedom Center as city lowers revenue projections, looks to permanent casino to meet goals: Halted for nearly a month in the wake of a river spill, demolition at the future site of the permanent Bally’s Chicago Casino complex resumed Friday after the city approved a new plan for razing the last vestiges of the Freedom Center. Disappointing results from the first full year at the temporary Medinah Temple facility may make supplanting the former Chicago Tribune printing plant with the planned $1.7 billion gambling palace an even higher priority for both Bally’s and the city, which has reduced its casino tax revenue projection for 2025.

* SBJ | McDonald’s ends NASCAR’s Chicago street race founding sponsorship: NASCAR sought around $2M annually over three years for founding partner positions, including ad time with NBC Sports, SBJ previously reported, but the terms it eventually struck with McDonald’s were unclear. McDonald’s assets included promotional rights; branding in a dedicated section of the 2.2-mile circuit around Grant Park and signage at other parts of the track, fan entrances, concert stages and wayfinding placards; and ad inventory on NBC, Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM Radio broadcasts, and NASCAR’s digital platforms. SBJ could not establish why McDonald’s chose to conclude the relationship, but it remains a major sponsor of 23XI Racing in NASCAR.

* Block Club | Cops Rescue Coyote From Humboldt Park Aldi In Viral Video: A video of the incident shared widely on social media shows two officers standing in a refrigerated section of the store with a broom and dustpan as they move inventory to try to secure the animal. One of the officers then reaches into the refrigerator and grabs the coyote’s tail. The officer pulls on it until the animal is fully removed, but it is then seen immediately leaping back into the refrigerated section, according to the video.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Mount Prospect chamber’s suit against management firm pits mayoral hopefuls of neighboring towns: The suit seeks to block the firm’s access to a $50,000 grant the chamber obtained last year from the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, as well as other damages and legal costs. The litigation pits Trisha Chokshi, the Mount Prospect chamber board chair and a candidate for Mount Prospect mayor, against Arlington Heights mayoral hopeful Jon Ridler, the founder and CEO of the management company.

* Daily Herald | Gurnee native reached for the moon. Now he’ll be steering spacecraft to lunar landing: As a high school student, studying physics in a classroom wasn’t enough for Curtis Szajkovics. So, he and fellow science aficionados designed a giant catapult that won international recognition. On Wednesday, the Gurnee native will aim higher when he serves as a flight controller with NASA contractor Firefly Aerospace, helping to guide a spacecraft to a moon landing.

*** Downstate ***

* WIFR | Former Illinois 67th District Rep. Chuck Jefferson remembered by community, lawmakers: The 79-year-old Jefferson served in the Illinois legislature from April 2001 to July 2014 and acted as Assistant Majority Leader. […] “He was a trailblazer,” said current 67th District Rep. Maurice West. “Little did I know, that…18, 19 years later I was going to follow in his footsteps.”

* WAND | Sangamon County passes vote to have referendum to eliminate County Recorder on ballot: County Board Member Tony DelGiorno proposed a resolution that would add a question to the ballot for the Consolidated election on April 1, 2025, that would eliminate the office of Recorder of Sangamon County, closing officially on April 1, 2026. DelGiorno’s amendment was shot down in favor of Tom Madonia Jr.’s amendment, which moved the question to a later ballot and included contracting a consulting service to evaluate merging tactics.

* WCBU | A stampede of artsy bison heralds Peoria County’s 200th birthday: Edward Barry, vice president of the Peoria Historical Society, said the county’s borders looked very different when it was founded in 1825. “Peoria was the size of the Netherlands, clocking in at over 16,000 square miles,” Barry said at a kickoff event Monday at the Peoria Riverfront Museum. “Including the present day counties of Putnam, Knox, Henry, Tazewell, Mason, Logan, McLean, Woodford, and Marshall”

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