Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Um…Ok… Indianapolis Star…
* 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. * 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.” * 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. * 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: * 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. * 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.” * 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.
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Today’s quotable
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Madigan trial…
That’s pretty much it.
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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.
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Pritzker on Bears story: Nope
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Fox 32…
* From Gov. Pritzker’s spokesperson…
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…
And it certainly isn’t a half a billion dollars.
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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…
The Question: Will you add your driver’s license to your Apple wallet? Make sure to explain your answer.
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About that new DeVore lawsuit
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here to read the full lawsuit. Center Square…
* From the lawsuit…
OK, on the face of it, that’s a campaign page. Back to the suit…
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…
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…
Anyway, it’s in a judge’s hands now.
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Roundup: Day two of ex-Speaker Madigan’s cross-examination
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WTTW…
* Tribune…
* Sun-Times Federal Courts Reporter Jon Seidel…
* Sun-Times…
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WTTW…
* Sun-Times…
* HB1284 from Rep. Kimberly Du Buclet…
* Rep. Curtis Tarver filed HB1303 yesterday…
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: CTA President Dorval Carter to step down. Tribune…
- 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…
∙ Streetsblog Chicago: Ald. Vasquez, CTAction, and ATA’s Amy Rynell weigh in on the long-demanded departure of Dorval Carter ∙ WGN: CTA President Dorval Carter Jr. to retire from agency to become hospital CEO * 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.’ * 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.
* 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. * 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. * 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. * 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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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jan 14, 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)
Tuesday, Jan 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Speaker Welch announces new committee chairs, picks Republican to lead Veterans Affairs Committee
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
The full list of new chairs is here. The previous committee chairs are here.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WGN’s Tahman Bradley…
* From Heather Wier Vaught’s excellent newsletter…
* Tribune | Debate over the future of CTA, Metra, Pace, RTA to heat up in Springfield this year: Discussions about the way transit is overseen and how to fund it are likely to gain steam during the new legislative session but the path forward is shaping up to be contentious. A proposal in Springfield to combine the CTA, Metra, Pace and the Regional Transportation Authority has been met with pushback, and a coalition of labor groups is working on an alternate option. The push to boost funding for transit could be complicated by a projected multibillion-dollar deficit in Illinois’ next budget and competing requests from Chicago, such as a potential ask for more Chicago Public Schools funding and a package for a new Bears stadium. * The Triibe | Will Illinois restore voting rights to incarcerated people?: Chicago Votes is the lead organization behind the proposed Reintegration and Civic Empowerment (RACE) Act, or Senate Bill 3482. If passed by the Illinois House and Senate, then signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker, RACE would give the right to vote to people who are incarcerated in Illinois prisons and require civic education courses be available to them while they’re incarcerated. “The reason why it’s the norm for people in prison not to have the right to vote stems directly from slavery, Black laws and Jim Crow. It doesn’t take much intellect to see the inequities and to draw that correlation,” Chicago Votes co-executive director Stevie Valles said. The nonprofit organization aims to build an inclusive democracy by putting power in the hands of young people. * Bloomberg | Illinois House Adds Pension Panel With Budget Shortfalls Growing: Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch wants to vet the state’s underfunded pensions through a budgetary lens as the legislature looks to close a potentially $3 billion deficit for the year ahead. The chamber passed rules Thursday that included creating a new standing appropriations committee for pensions and personnel. Welch, a Democrat who has led the state House of Representatives for four years, said the new panel will hone in on appropriations and will be separate from an existing committee that focuses on pension policy. * Crain’s | Contractors brace for the demise of diversity initiatives: Contractors already are seeing changes. The Illinois Department of Transportation recently republished a solicitation for roadwork without a diversity goal as a result of a directive from the U.S. Department of Transportation stemming from litigation in Kentucky. In that case, two white contractors challenged the Transportation Department’s Disadvantaged Business Enterprise program, leading to an injunction covering any state in which the white contractors might bid for federally funded work. The December IDOT bid solicitation was the first in recent memory without a diversity goal. * WGN | Illinois will give you a $4K rebate to purchase an electric vehicle in 2025: The Illinois General Assembly appropriated $14 million for the rebate program, which opens January 21st, 2025, and will remain open until April 30th, or until the funding runs out. The money was made available by the Illinois Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. Illinois residents who purchase a new or used electric vehicle from an Illinois licensed dealer can apply for $4,000 for cars, trucks, and SUVs, or $1,500 for an electric motorcycle. * Crain’s | Supreme Court won’t stop DOJ from probing National Association of Realtors: The U.S. Supreme Court turned down an appeal from the National Association of Realtors, leaving the embattled Chicago-based trade group open to a Department of Justice investigation of its commission practices. The court’s announcement affects homebuyers and sellers, because it will likely prolong uncertainty over what new standards will be developed to replace the NAR’s decades-long commission practices that led to allegations of price-fixing. * Crain’s | Salt Shed brings hemp drinks to its bars: The Salt Shed, a music venue next to Goose Island, joins bars and restaurants in offering hemp-derived THC drinks alongside traditional alcoholic beverages. Bars at the venue will start selling Señorita, a THC margarita beverage, tomorrow. “We’ve seen (nonalcoholic) drinks as a whole carve out market share, and hemp-derived THC drinks are popping up and gaining notoriety,” says Natalie Labriola, director of business development and sponsorships at 16 On Center, which operates the Salt Shed. “As a whole, the venue wants to have as many NA options as we can.” * Sun-Times | ASPIRA charter to shut Haugan Middle School over enrollment drop, nearly ‘million-dollar deficit,’ CEO says: The ASPIRA network, which operates three publicly funded but privately managed charters under Chicago Public Schools, approved closure of its ASPIRA Haugan Middle School campus by a unanimous 6-0 board vote Wednesday. Located in Albany Park on the Northwest Side, the school enrolls 89 students in grades 6 to 8 this year and is set to close at the end of June. * Tribune | Four Chicago magnet schools awarded $15 million grant to implement personalized learning : Avalon Park is among four Chicago magnet schools that have received a $15 million grant over five years to implement this model, allowing students to create their own learning paths, explicitly tailored for them. The instructional model allows students to work with teachers to co-design their learning path, pace and environment based on their strengths, needs and interests. * Block Club | Bitter Cold Blankets Chicago, But (Brief) Reprieve To Come Friday: There will be bitter cold in the city to start the week before temperatures warm back up to the 40 degrees by Friday. High temperatures Monday and Tuesday won’t go higher than the teens, with overnight lows dropping into the single digits, said Mark Ratzer, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. * Tribune | Zach LaVine is having the best season of his career. So why is the Chicago Bulls star overlooked?: The Chicago Bulls guard is cruising through a six-game streak with 30 or more points. He’s shooting better than ever in a completely reimagined offense. But around the league — and, even more important, in the trade market — the response to the best season of the two-time All-Star’s career feels tepid at best. That leads his teammates to ask the same question every week: Are any of you even watching this guy? “I don’t understand it,” Lonzo Ball said. “(He’s) definitely a top-three shooting guard in the NBA right now. I don’t understand why people talk down on him. He’s a true professional.” * Crain’s | Fermilab’s first female director steps down: Lia Merminga, director of the Fermi National Laboratory in Batavia, has stepped down from the job. Merminga was the first woman to lead Fermilab, a physics research facility that’s home to an advanced particle accelerator, when she was appointed in 2022. University of Chicago physics professor and former Fermilab Deputy Director Young-Kee Kim was named interim director, and the lab is launching a search for a permanent replacement for Merminga. * WGN | Tiffany Henyard asks judge to force trustees to show-up to meetings: Trustees Chis Gonzalez and Carmen Carlisle have previously said they were refusing to attend board meetings due to security concerns and fear that Henyard would use meeting to fill a vacancy on the board and shift control back into her hands. As a result of the stand-off, Henyard says the township was unable to renew insurance policies forcing her to lock the township building in South Holland and suspend bus service. * Daily Herald | Bell Works ‘Metroburb’ leads renaissance of repurposing abandoned corporate HQ sites: Hoffman Estates village officials and the developer say 2025 could be the tipping point for realizing an ambitious vision — turning the former AT&T headquarters into the self-contained “Metroburb” of Bell Works Chicagoland. Inspired by Somerset Development CEO Ralph Zucker now admits there was a major decision to be made whether to stop or push ahead at the height of the pandemic nearly five years ago. * SJ-R | Grayson appears in court while Illinois Supreme Court mulls state petition: The former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy charged with first-degree murder in the July 6 fatal shooting of Sonya Massey in an unincorporated neighborhood of Springfield has a new court date while the Illinois Supreme Court decides whether to take up a State’s petition over his pre-trial detention. Sean P. Grayson of Riverton again appeared before Presiding Circuit Court Judge Ryan Cadagin by Zoom Monday morning as Massey’s family members and supporters, including her mother, Donna Massey, packed the small courtroom in the Sangamon County Complex. * WCIA | Urbana mayoral candidates face off: Williams and Adams went back and forth talking about funding plans, city services, youth engagement and more. “What I’m most interested in is creating a safe, connected and affordable Urbana, and I want to make sure everybody feels like they are welcomed and that everybody can come to Urbana,” Adams said. They both said Urbana should be inclusive and inviting to all. * WTVO | Wrongfully convicted man awaits approval for $9.5M settlement from City of Rockford: Jon Horton, a man wrongfully convicted of murder in 1993, awaits approval from city council members to confirm that he will receive a $9.5 million settlement on January 13th. The 48-year-old spent more than two decades in prison for a crime he didn’t commit. Horton has been out since February 2017. * NYT | Dementia Cases in the U.S. Will Surge in the Coming Decades, Researchers Say: The number of people in the United States who develop dementia each year will double over the next 35 years to about one million annually by 2060, a new study estimates, and the number of new cases per year among Black Americans will triple. The increase will primarily be due to the growing aging population, as many Americans are living longer than previous generations. By 2060, some of the youngest baby boomers will be in their 90s and many millennials will be in their 70s. Older age is the biggest risk factor for dementia. The study found that the vast majority of dementia risk occurred after age 75, increasing further as people reached age 95.
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Get well soon, Charlie!
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * I really like this man and wish him nothing but the best…
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Roundup: Prosecutors begin questioning Madigan, jurors hear ‘Bandits’ recording
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * For live updates from journalists in the courtroom, click here and here. Tribune…
* Reporter Jon Seidel has the background on the “Bandits” recording…
* Sun-Times…
* Courthouse News Reporter Dave Byrnes… ![]() * Click here for some background on Ed Moody. The Tribune’s Jason Meisner…
* More…
* Sun-Times | Meet the prosecutor challenging Michael Madigan on the witness stand: Soon after the feds’ latest campaign against Chicago corruption began to roil local politics and dominate the headlines, Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu stepped off a crowded elevator one day at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse. When the elevator doors had closed and Bhachu was gone, a man inside quipped, “good thing I’m not a politician.” By that time years ago, word was out that the no-nonsense prosecutor was at the center of an investigation swirling around some of the most powerful politicians in Chicago including, most notably, then-Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan.
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JG-B releases statement after leadership demotion
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Politico doesn’t appear to know the difference between a leadership team and committee chairs…
The same claim about committee changes was made last week, but Welch hasn’t yet released a list of new committee chairs. He has, however, reshuffled his leadership team. Click here for the full memo he sent his members. * Anyway, Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth has released a statement after her demotion from Speaker Pro-Tempore to Assistant Majority Leader…
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A statement not in evidence
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Tribune…
One of the only people in the state saying that a state takeover “is not… out of the question” is the Civic Federation’s Joe Ferguson. Nobody in any major leadership position is saying such a thing, or even hinting it. Also, state money, unlike federal money, doesn’t grow on trees; the state has its own budget problems, and CPS is leaving a ton of savings on the table. I mean, is this “debate” gonna be like Bears Stadium 2.0, where a bunch of Chicago bigshots and pundits just assume the state is running to their rescue? The bottom line is CPS spent temporary federal COVID money like it was permanent money. And now they’re deep in a hole at the same time the state finds itself in a hole. They also have a hugely unpopular mayor, a bitter internal fight over the superintendent’s fate, a very tough teacher contract dispute, a super-controversial teachers union leader and are in a regional mass transit system that is also in desperate need of funds. * Context from the Civic Federation report…
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Giannoulias says driver’s licenses and state IDs could be in Apple Wallet by end of year
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
I refuse to use Face ID and Touch (fingerprint) ID. Unlike a password, you can’t change your own biometrics after a hack. Anyway, your thoughts?
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‘Students with disabilities and our community in Chicago deserve better than this’
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
She compared him to a “terrible student” with an IEP? What? * But she didn’t “immediately” apologize, according to WBEZ…
So, apparently, she had to be urged to issue the apology. And SDG should’ve known that her ugly slam wasn’t even accurate…
This is truly not good on every level. * And then there was this recently-deleted post… ![]() According to Mayor Johnson, among others, that’s also a slur. * The leader of a very large disability service provider, Access Living’s CEO Karen Tamley, had this to say…
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Dorval Carter to step down from CTA (Updated x3)
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* Tribune…
This post will likely be updated. But it’s kinda ridic for the mayor to threaten war with the General Assembly over the embattled Carter just a few days ago when he was gonna quit today. …Adding… Block Club Chicago…
…Adding… One of the legislators working on transit reform… ![]() * Sun-Times…
…Adding… Sen. Villivalam…
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It’s just a bill
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Rep. Suzanne Ness introduced HB1146 last week…
* Crain’s…
* HB1178 filed by Rep. Rita Mayfield…
* Rep. Maurice West filed HB1272…
* Crain’s…
* Shaw Media columnist Scott Holland…
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Drama over hemp regulation bill is a snapshot of statehouse power dynamics
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
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Open thread
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Brenden Moore breaks down lame duck sessions and previews the challenges ahead for the General Assembly…
- Speaker Chris Welch announced that his chief of staff Tiffany Moy was leaving. Word soon spread that three more top staffers — legislative director Kylie Kelly, chief counsel Kendra Piercy and spokeswoman Jaclyn Driscoll — were resigning. - Then came Welch’s decision not to call for a vote on proposed new hemp industry regulations supported by the governor. * Related stories…
∙ WCIA: Hemp bill leads to heated arguments, political rifts between top state officials * Tribune | Ex-Speaker Michael Madigan is walking a tightrope by testifying. Will the gamble pay off?: Testifying on your own behalf in a high-profile case is a rare move that is fraught with risk, and one Madigan, a lawyer and legendary tactician, surely considered from every angle. The decision appeared to catch even prosecutors by surprise, though by the time Madigan faces cross-examination, they will undoubtedly be loaded for bear. * WCIA | State’s medical debt relief program off to strong start: “That’s why our $10 million state investment can turn into $1 billion in relief ultimately,” Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services Lizzy Whitehorn said. “But people don’t apply for it. Individuals don’t apply for it. When undue medical debt enters into an agreement with one of these health care providers with the hospitals, the hospital will then send a file with all of their their debts.” So far, the $10 million from the state has turned into $72 million dollars of medical debt relief. Over 50 thousand people have gotten some form of relief from the investment. * ABC Chicago | Kennedy Expressway reversible lanes reopen to traffic: More than 275,000 drivers use the Kennedy every single day. After a delay, the reversible express lanes are finally open. Work on the express lanes was part of the second phase of the Kennedy construction project, which included pavement patching, installing new signage, lighting upgrades and bridge structure replacements. * The Comptroller’s office is hiring a drone operator. Click here to apply. * Shaw Local | Newly-inaugurated state Rep. Briel aims to tackle community needs: “This is about building a stronger Illinois, a place I’ve called home my entire life,” Briel said in the news release. “I’m honored to have been passed the torch and take on this responsibility to address the climbing cost of living, access to affordable health- and childcare, and drive policy that invests in public safety, health and education.” In addition, Briel aims to support workers’ rights, safeguard women’s health protections and cut government waste, allowing more resources and funding to be pooled into services communities rely on. * WIFR | Illinois union leaders celebrate AFL-CIO, SEIU reunification after 20 years apart: By joining forces, SEIU brings 2 million workers to AFL-CIO; around 15 million workers will fall under the combined labor group’s umbrella. “Workers are organizing in Starbucks and all over the place,” says Greg Kelley – SEIU Illinois’s president. He describes an evolving economy as a motivating factor to reconvene. * The Triibe | New lawsuits against ComEd allege racist and retaliatory behavior: Electric utility company ComEd made headlines last year after Chicago historian Shermann “Dilla” Thomas, who once was a ComEd lineman, said he was lured out of his safe union job by the CEO and then promptly fired. The company, headquartered in Chicago, is making workplace news again now that several employees are openly talking to The TRiiBE about lawsuits filed against the utility, alleging civil rights violations, a hostile work environment and unlawful employment practices. * Tribune | Former high-level assessor’s office employee under Berrios charged with taking bribes from lawyer: A former high-ranking director in then-Cook County Assessor Joseph Berrios’ office has been charged with accepting sports tickets, restaurant meals and other bribes from a lawyer in exchange for help with property assessments. Francisco Perez, 50, of Chicago, was charged with one count of bribery conspiracy in a criminal information made public Friday. A court date has not been set, but defendants charged by way of information, rather than by grand jury indictment, typically intend to plead guilty. * Sun-Times | City Hall insists ‘full-blown’ River West casino will thrive despite lackluster temporary casino performance: [Chief Financial Officer Jill Jaworski] acknowledged that the temporary casino generated just $16 million in gaming tax revenue for the city last year, less than half the $35 million Johnson’s first budget anticipated. The Medinah casino also came up short — at 80% and 65% respectively — on two other key measures: overall foot traffic and gaming revenues-per-admission. She blamed a “larger than expected impact from a lack of amenities and on-site parking” needed to “keep people in the casino longer.” * Tribune | Chicago students pitch safety improvements for youth pedestrians and cyclists: High school students participating in the nonprofit West Town Bike’s after-school program told the Tribune that while they prize the time with friends, exercise and freedom to travel the city that they get from cycling, their routes don’t always feel safe. To make Chicago streets safer for young people to walk and bike, the students proposed a range of solutions, from fixes on specific roads to encouraging city planners to experiment with new ways to separate bikes from traffic. Their ideas didn’t always require changes to the built environment but rather a shift in perspectives. * NBC Chicago | Sub-zero wind chills likely in Chicago area as bitter cold arrives: The Chicago area is expected to wake up to sub-zero wind chills and extremely chilly temperatures as a cold front moves through. Temperatures will drop into the teens, creating wind chill values that could reach as low as -4 degrees, NBC 5 Storm Team Meteorologist Pete Sack said. * Block Club | Here Are The 50 Finalists For Chicago’s ‘You Name A Snowplow’ Contest: Past winners include “Skilling It,” “Ernie Snowbanks,” “Mrs. O’Leary’s Plow,” “Sears Plower,” and “Sleet Home Chicago.” “Each year, city staff looks forward to reviewing all the fun and imaginative names submitted by Chicago residents for this contest,” Cole Stallard, streets and sanitation commissioner, said in a statement. “It’s wonderful to see the creativity and engagement across the City, and we encourage all Chicagoans to take the time to check out the finalists and vote for their favorite snowplow names.” * WBEZ | Cook County judge who shared racist meme faces state probe, reassignment and bias training: In a screenshot obtained by WBEZ, Glennon-Goodman shared a meme that depicts a smiling young Black boy and a Black child’s leg with an electronic monitor on it. The meme is headlined “little tiks [sic] … My First Ankle Monitor.” Glennon-Goodman wrote on the post, “My husband’s idea of Christmas humor,” according to the screenshot. * Daily Southtown | Seven candidates compete for four seats on Thornton Township High School Board: A 22-year-old recent college graduate and the mother of a star basketball player who died in 2018 are among those hoping to clinch seats on the Thornton Township High School District 205 Board this spring. Though much voter attention has been on the Thornton Township and Dolton municipal elections in February, four 4-year school board seats will be on the ballot. District 205 includes Thornton High School in Harvey, Thornwood High School in South Holland, and Thornridge High School in Dolton. * Daily Herald | Another fire breaks out at Elgin homeless encampment, as city moves closer to relocating residents: It was the third blaze to break out at the encampment since early December. The fires have prompted Elgin to launch a $2.5 million plan to offer residents of the encampment rooms at the Lexington Inn & Suites for four months. That would enable the city to clear and remediate the roughly 8-acre area on the west bank of the river. * Daily Herald | Suburban school districts slowly rolling out electric school buses: Susan Mudd, senior policy advocate for the Environmental Law & Policy Center, said Illinois districts and transportation companies have used grants and incentives to purchase about 700 electric school buses. Among those with electric vehicles: River Trails District 26 in Mount Prospect, which uses one electric vehicle; Naperville Unit District 203, which owns four electric buses; and Huntley Community Unit District 158, which has four electric buses and is looking to add six more in the next year or so, Chief Financial Officer Mark Altmayer said. * ABC Chicago | Illinois State Police squad car struck while assisting crash in Barrington, officials say: Illinois State Police said the trooper was helping officers with traffic control while they investigated a crash. The trooper put on his emergency lights, but another car hit his squad car. The occupants in the other car are also hurt in the collision. All are expected to be okay, including the trooper, ISP said. * WICS | Push for voters to be able to recall a Sangamon County Sheriff continues: Since introducing the resolution to give Sangamon County voters the ability to recall a sheriff, Sam Cahnman’s proposal has received support from the public and the Massey Commission. In November, the Massey Commission sent its first two resolutions to the Sangamon County Board for consideration including what the Democrat, Cahnman, has been pushing for. Cahnman says, “The people of Sangamon County overwhelming want recall. Public opinion polls in Illinois last year show that 80 percent want recall. And among Republicans, it’s actually 90 percent.” * SJ-R | King Breakfast at 50: Illinois Supreme Court justice to keynote event at new location: Frontiers member Allan Woodson said the core purpose of the breakfast is “to foster and promote racial harmony by bringing together diverse ethnic groups from the Springfield metro area to fellowship, celebrate and keep the King dream alive. “Each of the past 49 years, our members have identified and invited individuals to come share their experiences and visions with a focus on how Dr. King’s life and beliefs have impacted today’s world.” * Jim Dey | Don’t bet rent on Decatur getting a ‘racino’: But no one should hold his breath waiting for groundbreaking. The Herald-Review noted that required legislation authorizing the facility has “yet to be filed.” The newspaper also wrote that a new gambling license would “technically be open to any group that applies for it.” * Fox 2 Now | Illinois seeks compensation for residents exposed to radioactive waste: Some Metro East elected leaders are pushing for compensation for hundreds of residents who have been exposed to radioactive waste over the decades. On Sunday, those leaders announced they’re on a mission to do the right thing. “What was once a symbol of our nation’s strength has been a reoccurring nightmare for this community,” U.S. Representative Nikki Budzinski said.
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Live coverage
Monday, Jan 13, 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)
Monday, Jan 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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