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*** UPDATED x2 - Libertarians won’t be challenged, either *** Republicans won’t challenge McCann’s petition signatures

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some media outlets were predicting they’d be challenged, but I didn’t think they would…



McCann’s operation screened petition circulators to make sure they were eligible, then subjected the end product to fairly rigorous scrutiny and filed 65,000, which was 40,000 more than the minimum. And they filed on the last possible day. Finding enough evidence to suggest almost two-thirds of his signatures were invalid in a week was always gonna be tough, if not impossible.

You can track petition objections by clicking here. The deadline to file an objection is 5 o’clock today.

*** UPDATE 1 *** From the ILGOP…

Hey Rich,

Of the 65,000 signatures McCann submitted, his people struck nearly 30,000 invalid signatures. After our own review, McCann had reached the 25,000 valid signature threshold. Our review also shows that McCann received assistance from individuals close to Madigan’s political organization.

Here’s an interesting tidbit:

Robert Handzik and Terrence Goggin both circulated for McCann. Both have run as “Republicans” against Madigan in his House district, but past news reports have highlighted their ties to Madigan’s organization.

The Handzik and Goggin petitions are attached, and linked below are a few news articles about them:

Robert Handzik

Terrence Goggin

Thanks and let me know if you need anything else on this.

Aaron P. DeGroot

*** UPDATE 2 *** I asked Aaron if they’d be challenging the Libertarian Party’s petitions. His texted reply…

Not challenging those either. They also sufficiently reached the 25,000 signature threshold.

  16 Comments      


Question of the day

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Check out his arms. Looks like he’s been pumping iron

Also, nice hat.

* The Question: Caption?

  52 Comments      


Pre-K funding shocker

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

Dozens of school districts around the state are scrambling to keep preschool programs intact — or to lay off staff — after learning their preschool funding was reduced or zeroed out.

Illinois lawmakers approved $50 million in additional money for preschool this year, so it was a shock to many of the programs to learn their funding was slashed.

“The cuts seem extremely devastating,” said Marcus Alexander, director of teaching and learning at Waukegan public schools, which saw its $3.5 million annual state grant cut to zero. For the past 26 years, Waukegan had received early childhood block grant funds to fund a half-day preschool. Last year, the district served 750 preschoolers who are 3 and 4 years old.

Based on the state’s new K-12 school funding formula, Waukegan is one of the neediest districts in the state. But preschool funding is not channeled through that formula. Instead, preschool block grant funds are given out through a competitive grant application open this year for the first time since 2012. Waukegan scored 42 points out of 100, far below the 60 needed to be funded. […]

In western Illinois, near Monmouth, Regional Superintendent of Education Jodi Scott said she’s preparing to lay off 35 staff members. Her office, which serves a four-county area, received an extra half million dollars in March to expand an infant and toddler program there — now it’s cut completely. […]

Theresa Hawley, senior vice-president of policy and innovation at Illinois Action for Children, a policy and advocacy group, said part of the reason districts were shut out is because public investment in preschool is about $1.3 billion, but need in the state is around $4 billion.

Go read the rest.

  21 Comments      


In which I agree with Ted Cruz

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have always hated Illinois Nazis…



It obviously wouldn’t kill Rauner to restate his beliefs, but he did speak out about this months ago.

* From the piece that re-ignited a story which originally broke in February

Illinois Republicans botched four opportunities to stop an avowed Nazi from representing their party in a Chicago-area congressional district. Now they’re paying the price.

Arthur Jones, a Holocaust denier who will appear on the November ballot as the GOP candidate against Democratic Rep. Dan Lipinski, has become campaign fodder for Democrats as they seek to defeat Gov. Bruce Rauner. And some Republicans even fear the taint from Jones‘ extremist views poses a threat to the party up and down the ticket.

“First, it’s morally wrong and I think it’s really harmful to the party. The guy’s a complete nutcase. He’s a Nazi,” said conservative GOP state Rep. David McSweeney. “This is an absolute political disaster.”

McSweeney’s comments come just days after the filing deadline passed for qualifying a third-party candidate for the general election — which could have provided a safe harbor for Illinois Republican votes. Prior to that, the party had also failed to recruit a candidate to challenge Jones in the primary election, failed to knock him off the primary ballot and wasn’t able to field a write-in candidate against him in the primary. […]

In the meantime, Republicans have one last chance to save face. They can mount a write-in challenge if that candidate notifies three counties in the district of their intent by Sept. 6.

“They didn’t run anyone against him in the primary. They didn’t file an objection to him, they didn’t find a write-in candidate and they didn’t run an independent candidate,” McSweeney said. “We’ve missed four opportunities. We better not miss the fifth.”

Republican legislator (who I love, btw) who always criticizes Rauner criticizing Rauner again? Check. Chiding the ILGOP for not spending hundreds of thousands of dollars and thousands of person-hours to find a candidate who is willing to help gather a minimum of 14,559 valid signatures and then run a full-on and completely doomed independent campaign to make sure a Nazi who is going to lose big loses even bigger? Check.

The biggest mistake the party made was not finding a warm body anywhere in Illinois last year to put up against the Nazi in the primary. But they did spend money on robocalls and mailers warning people who the candidate was and GOP primary ballots dropped by about a third compared to four years ago. Do they deserve grief for letting this clown go unopposed? Heck yes they do. But after that mistake, they weren’t left with a whole lot of doable options.

The Democrats are absolutely loving this bind the Republicans have put themselves in…



* And now the ILGOP says they’re looking to run a write-in candidate in the general. That’s probably the easiest way out of this by far (they only have to notify a few county clerks), so I figure they’ll do it and this story will mostly go away (unless there’s something bad in their new candidate’s history - and you’d better believe the Dems will be looking). But if they don’t find anyone, they could just fall in line with this dude

Ted Cruz Would Rather Illinois Vote for a Democrat Than a Nazi

In other words, recommend to Republicans in the 3rd that they vote for Lipinski. I mean, if you listen to the progressives, he’s practically a Republican anyway. /s

Thoughts?

  16 Comments      


Rauner dodges the “Trump question”

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Bruce Rauner on Bill Cameron’s Connected to Chicago

Bill Cameron: Trump, do you want him to come to Illinois to come and campaign with you?

Rauner: I want every possible support I can. Democrats, Republicans, Independents, Conservatives, Liberals. This election is about the people of Illinois standing up to a corrupt political machine.

Bill Cameron: Maybe Trump at a downstate rally with you before it’s over?

Rauner: Um, you know I was just in Washington, at the White House, this week. I was meeting with Vice President Mike Pence, he’s a good friend of mine. I was there meeting with him to talk about many issues, particularly tariffs and trade. I’m deeply concerned. We do need to change some of the unfair trade deals. America has been taken advantage of by other countries, especially China, and we’ve lost American jobs as a result. So, we do need to change some of those trade deals. That said, trade wars, nobody’s a winner, and tariff wars are devastating. We can’t let a tariff war destroy manufacturing or farmers in Illinois. And I was there to talk about that.

Bill Cameron: What do you think of Trump so far?

Rauner: Well, I’ll say this. What’s, what the White House and the Congress have done to cut and reform our taxes has helped the American economy boom and I applaud them for that. What they’ve done to reduce regulatory burden on businesses around America has mostly, not entirely, but mostly been great and helped the American economy boom. And we’re creating good paying jobs and rising family incomes and I applaud them for that.

Transcript via the DGA.

  16 Comments      


Harold tries to turn ad around on Raoul

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A couple of takeaways from Mark Maxwell’s recent interview of Republican attorney general candidate Erika Harold. First, here’s Harold talking about Sen. Kwame Raoul’s online ad which dings her for allegedly saying years ago she’d rather place a foster child with an abusive heterosexual couple than a loving gay couple

Harold sought to neutralize the attack ad by highlighting a speech Raoul gave in February of 2013.

“I thought it was hypocritical because Senator Raoul, during the course of debating various issues on the floor of the Senate, talked about how his own views had evolved,” she said. “He specifically said that he himself used to discriminate against people on the basis of sexual orientation, but that he had evolved and he was glad to see that. I am glad to see that people evolve. I think it’s disappointing that he would use a different standard to judge me than he would want others to judge himself.

The Raoul campaign responded through a spokesperson, writing in an email, “It’s unconscionable that someone would ever choose to put a child in an abusive home.” […]

“I can confess that, as a boy, I didn’t even believe this was a question of sexual orientation,” [Raoul] said at the time. “I believed it was a question of choice and I was — I discriminated against people based on their sexual orientation.”

The difference here is that Raoul confessed to having these beliefs when he was a boy. Harold was an adult (a young adult, but an adult) when she allegedly made those comments.

* And from the Raoul campaign…

In an interview with WCIA’s Mark Maxwell yesterday, Republican candidate for attorney general Erika Harold reconfirmed her position that abortion should be illegal, even in cases of rape and incest.

Partial transcript:

    Mark Maxwell, WCIA: “Justice Anthony Kennedy is stepping down, the only conservative justice who has voted to uphold Roe v. Wade. We saw Governor Rauner sign HB40 last year which removed the trigger provision, protecting access to abortion should Roe v. Wade be overturned. Is this another area of disagreement with the Governor, this area of abortion?”

    Erika Harold: “My focus is enforcing the law, whatever it is, as I’m attorney general. And I think it’s important in a position like this that you’re not bringing your own personal views into it.”

    MM: “A lot of Republicans in this state have been disheartened by Governor Rauner’s position on this issue of abortion. What are you giving them to vote for, if anything? Is there a pro-life pledge? What do voters need to know about you on the issue of abortion when you’re running for this position?”

    EH: “… I’m not going to be running on a host of issues that have nothing to do with the job that I’m seeking … People know that I’m pro-life. That’s not something that’s a secret to anyone.”

    MM: “In a previous run for Congress, you mention that even in cases of rape and incest - which most Republicans carve those out - you are still opposed to abortion. Have your views at all evolved or changed on that particular issue?”

    EH: “My views are clear. I will uphold Illinois law, and that’s what’s important for voters to know about this.”

“With Roe v. Wade in serious jeopardy, now more than ever we need an attorney general who will be a strong advocate for women and victims of sexual assault, not just a bystander to the attacks,” said Raoul campaign spokeswoman Aviva Bowen. “Erika Harold’s views are shocking and extreme.”

While a candidate for Congress in 2014, Harold detailed her position to the State Journal-Register, saying, “I would not discriminate (against the fetus) based on the circumstance of conception.”

Last year, the General Assembly passed House Bill 40, a measure that allows the state to provide employees and Medicaid recipients insurance coverage for abortions, as well as protect access to abortion in Illinois should the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade.

“HB40 was passed to avoid the very nightmarish scenario we are experiencing with the Trump agenda and the changing composition of the Supreme Court,” said State Rep. Sara Feigenholtz, chief sponsor of the bill. “Illinois voters won’t be fooled by Erika Harold’s obtuse answers. Her anti-choice positions are clear and extreme. Prohibiting a woman from making a personal decision about her health after she’s been violently assaulted is heartless and cruel.”

  26 Comments      


Not every local result is a national trend

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* One thing you can always count on is that lots of political reporters will too often try to make isolated election results into some sort of a national trend.

After conservative Congressman Dan Lipinski won his Democratic primary in March against a Bernie Sanders supporter, many seemed convinced that the Sanders wing of the party was washed up. For instance…

* Centrist Incumbents Edge Out Rivals in Illinois Primaries: The result was championed by centrist activists who said Mr. Lipinski’s victory showed some voters have an appetite for middle-of-the-road politics in the Trump era

* Illinois election shows Democrats can win by embracing the center

* Lipinski win stings liberals

In reality, Lipinski had far superior name ID (mainly from his father) and an experienced, capable, machine-based field organization that managed to drag him across the finish line. Local politics won out over national politics.

* These days, the national media has flip-flopped and is using another congressional primary to warn centrist Dems they’re in trouble. Like Lipinski’s March victory, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s surprising primary win in New York over a machine Democrat is somehow evidence of a new national trend. And Sen. Tammy Duckworth has taken some heat on social media over her recent interview with the Guardian, in which she said that Ocasio-Cortez’s brand of Democratic socialism couldn’t win a national race. But I think the critics are missing her main point

Duckworth said Ocasio-Cortez’s appeal was likely limited to her district, which bridges the Bronx and Queens.

“I think it’s the future of the party in the Bronx, where she is,” Duckworth said. “I think that we, as legislators, need to listen to our constituency and get out there. I think what she did was, she did the hard work. She pounded the pavement, and she was out there talking to every one of her constituents. And I think that was the difference.

“She turned out her voters and reflected the needs of her district.”

Duckworth said the same of Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Democratic senators in states that voted for Trump who are thought likely to support his forthcoming supreme court pick.

The three red-state Democrats “vote in whatever they need to do to take care of the people of their state”, Duckworth said. “They put their constituents first.”

Not to mention that the most liberal Democratic gubernatorial candidate in Illinois (Daniel Biss) had to dump his DSA running-mate because of the guy’s views on Israel.

  20 Comments      


Was June a boom or bust?

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor has done a couple of tweet storms about his record in June. Here’s one

June in Review: It has been a great month for the people of Illinois. Passed a bipartisan FY19 budget with #NoNewTaxes! #twill

June in Review: Historic education initiatives. K-12 funding up by $1.4B since we took office. Early childhood up $200M. Invest in Kids vastly expands school choice with $100M in scholarships. #NoNewTaxes #twill

June in Review: $2B Medicaid waiver puts unprecedented focus on behavioral health. #BetterCareIL will pilot delivery of better service for #mentalhealth, substance abuse. Our 5-year program will transform health spending to improve health outcomes. #NoNewTaxes #twill

June in Review: We made it easier to #adopt children in Illinois with the nation’s biggest adoption tax credit – $5,000. The credit will help thousands of children find caring homes and loving parents. #NoNewTaxes #twill

June in Review: A remarkable $474M @USDOT program will fix the worst rail bottleneck in the country. The investment in Chicago’s 75th Street Corridor will be a boon to shippers – 2M freight cars a year – and commuters – 40 trains a day. #NoNewTaxes #twill

June in Review: Look at what the economy is doing for railroads. Now think what could happen when we unblock the congestion and create $3.8 billion in economic benefit! #twill Link: https://trib.in/2NhUuXu

June in Review: $500M for U of I advances economic development initiative to leapfrog Silicon Valley. Discovery Partners Institute links the creative genius that springs from #Champaign and other campuses – one great asset – to the capital genius of Chicago – another great asset.

June in Review: Signed legislation to secure funding for safety net and rural hospitals. Critical bipartisan hospital assessment program ensures health services for the poor and other vulnerable populations. #NoNewTaxes

June in Review: Got bipartisan support for a new veterans’ home in Quincy to ensure the best care for the people whose service keeps us free. $53M of state money gets the project underway. Read more: https://bit.ly/2tWGqtC #NoNewTaxes #twill

…and the list goes on. Stay tuned for more June in Review! #twill

* JB Pritzker’s spokesperson disagrees in her own tweet storm

June In Review: It hasn’t been a great month for @BruceRauner. Let’s take a look back at a dozen disasters: #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner was sidelined on negotiations and used a pen to sign a veto-proof budget after three years of failure. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: A @ProPublicaIL investigation exposed @BruceRauner’s DCFS for keeping nearly 30% of hospitalized children in its care held beyond medical necessity. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner was confronted by a voter about how he’ll “rectify” the damage he’s done to disability services as governor. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner blamed the weather (and a whole lot more) for his fatal mismanagement in Quincy. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner’s administration lied and said “there has never been any attempt to lay blame” for the Legionnaires’ crisis that took 13 lives. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner failed to retract his commitment to @realDonaldTrump to send troops to the southern border. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner blaming the weather for Legionnaires’ in Quincy was rated FALSE by @PolitifactIL/@BGA and his claims were called “unverified and off-point.” #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @JulianaforLG, @KwameRaoul & Reps. Welch and Davis held @BruceRauner accountable for saying that he’s “not surprised they’re sensitive because the black legislators really have not been serving their community very well.” #ilgov #twill

June In Review: @BruceRauner faced fierce backlash from the Champaign-Urbana community after he badmouthed and insulted the entire region. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: Higher education officials say students are fleeing because of the budget crisis and badmouthing by Illinois leaders. @BruceRauner, of course, manufactured the budget crisis and has been Illinois’ bad-mouther-in-chief. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: Western Illinois University announced layoffs for two dozen teachers because of declining state funding. @BruceRauner starved colleges & universities throughout his budget crisis, making matters worse. #ilgov #twill

June In Review: After @JBPritzker held a three-day Rauner Failed Veterans tour, @BruceRauner’s campaign rewrote history, claiming “when the Quincy Veterans Home needed him, he took action.” Here’s the truth: #ilgov #twill

Links to supporting documentation are in the tweets.

  5 Comments      


Rauner appoints two HGOP legislators to posts in past few days

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Gov. Rauner announced today that Patricia R. “Patti” Bellock has been named director of the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (DHFS). Bellock has served in the General Assembly since 1999 and is recognized as one of the body’s leading advocates for Medicaid, health care and social services, areas she will oversee in her new role.

“Illinois is so fortunate to have an advocate for health and human services as dedicated and talented as Patti Bellock,” said Rauner in announcing the appointment. “She has been instrumental in virtually every health advancement our state has made in the last two decades and I am looking forward to her leadership of the state’s ongoing effort to reform our delivery systems and improve our outcomes.”

Bellock is retiring from the House of Representatives where she became the first woman to serve as Deputy Minority Leader in 2013. She replaces interim DHFS Director Teresa Hursey who stepped in last month when Felicia Norwood left for the private sector. Hursey will remain as Medicaid Director.

Bellock helped to shepherd the recent approval of Better Care Illinois, the state’s landmark 1115 Medicaid waiver approved earlier this year for 10 pilot programs in mental health and substance abuse.

She is known for her bipartisan, collaborative style as a member of two other Medicaid-related groups moving legislation forward to approve the Hospital Assessment and the Omnibus Medicaid bill. She has effectively co-led efforts in the General Assembly in recent years to move Illinois toward managed care. Her extensive work on Medicaid reform in Illinois has been recognized by the Wall Street Journal.

“It is an honor to join the talented and dedicated staff of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services,” Bellock said. “I look forward to working with the Governor and my colleagues in the General Assembly to ensure access to quality health care for Illinois’ most vulnerable population and making our health care delivery systems more efficient and effective.”

Bellock’s distinguished 20-year legislative career had a decided emphasis on health and human services. She was the Minority spokesperson on both the House Human Services Committee and the Human Services – Appropriations Committee. She has also served on committees with three different national organizations working on health care legislation and public policy issues throughout the United States.

Bellock’s signature achievement in the General Assembly was the landmark Save Medicaid Access and Resources Together (SMART) Act reforms of 2012. She served as Chairperson of the Medicaid Reform, Family & Children Committee from 2009-2011 under Speaker Madigan; the group which started the work on improving Illinois’ Medicaid program that culminated with passage of comprehensive reforms in 2012.

Bellock was Chief Co-Sponsor of a 2007 law to protect the health of people in hospitals, nursing homes and mental health facilities against infection by requiring the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) to create rules to reduce rates of multi-drug resistant organisms (MDROs), and other “super bugs.”

The law requires healthcare facilities regulated or licensed by the state, as well as mental health and developmentally disabled facilities overseen by the state to perform annual facility-wide infection control risk assessments; develop infection control policies for Multi-drug resistant organisms (MDRO’s); enforce hand hygiene and contact precaution requirements and incorporate any updated MDRO prevention and control recommendations issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A native of River Forest, Bellock graduated from Saint Norbert College in Wisconsin, where she received a bachelor’s degree in History and American Government. She has received dozens of awards over the years from numerous organizations for her work on various health care policy issues, particularly in the areas of mental health, developmental disabilities, and children’s health.

The appointment is effective July 11, 2018.

* From last week…

Gov. Bruce Rauner today named retiring Illinois State Representative Robert W. Pritchard to the Northern Illinois University Board of Trustees. Pritchard is a long-time education advocate and a graduate of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, whose work in the General Assembly was focused on elementary, secondary and higher education.

“Bob is a very strong addition to the NIU Board,” Rauner said. “He has a working knowledge of the challenges that face higher education and he is well equipped to advocate for the university, its students and the public-at-large on issues ranging from affordability to access.”

Pritchard’s appointment takes effect on July 1, 2018, the same day he retires from the Illinois House of Representatives where he served the 70th Legislative District for more than 15 years.

A recognized leader in education policy, Pritchard was a key contributor to the passage of the state’s new K-12 school funding formula, which increased state levels of school funding and made distributions to school districts more equitable.

His work with the bicameral Higher Education Working Group focused on issues of outmigration and affordability in Illinois higher education and resulted in significant legislation this spring. Pritchard was instrumental in forming the bipartisan Legislative Education Caucus in 2005.

A self-employed farm owner, operator and manager, Pritchard is responsible for a DeKalb county farming operation that is in its sixth generation of family ownership. The corn and soybean operation has doubled in size under his leadership.

“I feel strongly that education beyond high school is an essential component in developing Illinois’ workforce and making the state attractive to employers,” Pritchard said. “NIU – in partnership with local community colleges – prepares students to achieve their dreams and be contributing members of our economy.”

“It has been a pleasure to represent NIU and advocate for the interests of students, faculty, and all higher education institutions throughout my tenure in the House of Representatives. I look forward to continued service to the region and Illinois in my new role as a NIU trustee.”

Pritchard’s wife Mary is a lifelong educator who spent most of her career at Northern Illinois University as a teacher, administrator, and Interim Dean.

  23 Comments      


Is this thing on?

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was a bit shocked at the number of bounce-back e-mails from subscribers who were out of the office this morning. Comments have been lagging all morning and, while I no longer track my site’s traffic, my ScribbleLive program indicates visitors are down by well more than a third.

I was wondering the other day what would happen this week because the 4th is on a Wednesday. I suppose lots of folks took Monday and Tuesday off. I was thinking about maybe taking off Wednesday, Thursday and maybe Friday. I still haven’t decided yet. But I do believe I’m gonna take it a bit easy today (unless something big breaks, of course).

Anyway, how are things looking at your office?

  34 Comments      


Already ahead of the national average, Illinois is poised to add more women legislators this year

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois is one of these states…



* From the story

A record number of women won Nevada’s primaries in June. And there is now a possibility for the Legislature to have more women than men, which would be a first in United States history. Of the states that have had primaries so far, at least eight more have a shot at reaching or surpassing the 50 percent mark in November.

To reach this milestone, however, a woman must win the general election in every district where at least one is running, a difficult feat. Some female candidates are running in districts favoring the other party, and many are challenging incumbents, who historically almost always win. […]

Women now make up a quarter of all state legislature seats in the United States.

In Illinois, women hold 36 percent of seats in the state legislature. This percentage is the sixth highest in the country. Voters would need to elect 26 more female lawmakers for at least half of their state legislature to be women.

And yet, on the surface at least, I don’t ever think I’ve seen women legislators more divided than they are now in Illinois. As subscribers know, the bipartisan, bicameral Conference of Women Legislators has been disbanded. The Senate now has a bipartisan group, but Democratic women in the House have formed their own, separate organization which has had a hiccup or two so far.

Maybe these are just growing pains, or a sign of a much more divisive era (both at the state and national levels). And it’s their shops, so they get to call the shots. I’m not trying to be critical here, I’m just kinda lamenting the apparent loss of legislative comity.

  8 Comments      


The damage done

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dean Olsen at the SJ-R has an excellent and comprehensive look at how social service agencies are still trying to recover a year after the impasse ended

In the 12 months since then, providers of human services and health care that endured historic payment delays said they have recovered to varying degrees and tried to restore services. But many said damage to local and statewide social-service “safety nets” has only begun to be repaired.

Even though Rauner and the General Assembly recently approved a fiscal 2019 budget on a bipartisan basis, human-service providers said still-unfilled gaps in payment and payment delays connected with the impasse only added to what they say is the state’s chronic underfunding of human services, a situation lasting a decade or more. […]

The impasse has had a lingering impact on staff morale and hampered long-term planning efforts for Sojourn Shelter and Services, chief executive officer Angela Bertoni said.

Sojourn, which provides a shelter in Springfield for domestic violence victims, went 14 months without state funding, “so that was difficult,” she said.

The agency had to work hard for a time to dispel rumors among potential clients that Sojourn had closed, she said.

Go read the whole thing.

* Doug Finke takes a look at the state of the government’s finances

During the height of the state’s budget impasse, Comptroller Susana Mendoza’s office regularly had to “triage” bills.

It was a process where businesses or organizations facing severe financial problems had their payments moved to the head of the line to stave off disaster.

Now Illinois has its second full-year budget in a row in place, but the triaging of bills goes on.

“We still get that. We get it all of the time,” Mendoza said last week. “We still continue to get people who, they’ve been so decimated. They’ve tapped out every line of credit. They have a very difficult time building their credit back up. Not a tone has changed for us. It’s just perhaps these cases are invisible because we now have budgets.”

* And Brenden Moore looks at the lingering impacts on the capital city

With about a year having passed since then, many say the Springfield area weathered the storm as well as it could have and is now in recovery. Yet many are taking a wait-and-see approach to determine if this newfound certainty is long-lasting.

“I think it’s going to take really a couple of cycles where the legislature and the governor get their work done on time, the budget is balanced, the time to pay bills continues to go down and get in a more stable place,” Jimenez said.

“Certainty” and “stability” were the buzzwords most often used by business owners and city leaders to describe what has changed in the last year.

“The small businesses where you might stop in and buy a gift or you might buy some clothing or something, that was impacted because there was so much uncertainty with state workers,” said Lisa Stott Clemmons, executive director of Downtown Springfield Inc. “And there’s still a little bit of uncertainty about the AFSCME contract and things like that. But at that time, it was literally at what point is the government going to shut down.” […]

The state still owes the City Water, Light and Power about $1.5 million, according to the comptroller’s office. However, this pales in comparison to 2016 — a year into the budget impasse — when the state racked up as much as $12 million in unpaid utility bills, leading CWLP to threaten to cut off services.

Good work by solid reporters.

  15 Comments      


Wisconsin is not the post-Janus model

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The end of my Crain’s Chicago Business column about the Janus decision

The Chicago Tribune recently published an editorial titled “Bruce Rauner has his Scott Walker moment,” and compared what happened with the Janus case to the Wisconsin governor’s “tussles with public employee unions.” But I don’t think Rauner will realize his dream of killing off public employee unions in this state. At least, not in the foreseeable future.

Public employee union membership in Wisconsin has plummeted since Walker passed what was known as Act 10, which, among other things, allowed state and local government workers to opt out of paying anything to their unions before Janus was decided.

But those “other things” were hugely important to the membership decline.

Unions were forbidden to negotiate on anything except wages, but wage increases were capped. Health insurance, pensions and other fringe benefits were taken off the negotiating table. University employees and government-funded child care and home health care workers were barred from joining unions. Most important, Wisconsin public employers couldn’t deduct union dues from worker paychecks, so workers had to pay themselves for representation that wasn’t worth much.

When Rauner talks about wanting “reforms” to allow the state, schools, universities and local governments to save money, he’s mainly talking about Wisconsin’s Act 10, which has driven down wages and benefits.

This is no secret, by the way. When the governor isn’t trying to be cagey in front of the TV cameras, he’s admitted this is his goal.

Unless Rauner is re-elected and then wins the drawing to decide who creates the new legislative maps in 2021, then picks up solid Republican majorities and enacts those Wisconsin-style “reforms,” I don’t think we’re going to see all that many government workers dumping their unions in Illinois in the near term. Their dues, deducted from their paychecks, will still produce results, unlike in Wisconsin, where dues are hand-collected and unions are toothless.

And Rauner’s anti-union rhetoric and actions have sent nonmembers flocking to unions in droves. AFSCME saw a dramatic increase in workers signing up to pay full dues since Rauner took office, and the same thing has happened with teachers unions.

Ironically, a pro-union governor like J.B. Pritzker might drive down membership over the long term as union members lose their fear and become complacent. We’ll see.

* Tribune

Union membership has cratered in Wisconsin since Gov. Scott Walker moved to reduce collective bargaining rights and won legislative approval for right-to-work rules. Michigan enacted right-to-work legislation in 2012, and also saw a drop, though not as dramatic. Michigan’s law went through years of court challenges before it was fully applied to public sector unions.

A recent report estimating the fallout of the Janus ruling noted a 5 to 10 percent decline in union membership following the passage of right-to-work laws. Robert Bruno, a professor of labor and employment relations from the University of Illinois, and one of the authors of that report, said the steep decline from union ranks in Wisconsin was a reflection of that state’s sweeping anti-union changes, rather than a just a change in right-to-work status.

One reason why the Wisconsin decline was so significant, Bruno said, was there were additional changes to collective bargaining and pension benefits. A better example of what could happen in Illinois could be Michigan, Bruno said, as changes there in 2012 were less far-reaching than revisions in Wisconsin.

Its accompanying graph

* Related…

* As Supreme Court ruling threatens labor, teacher union leader says it’s been adding members: Illinois Federation of Teachers President Dan Montgomery says the union has been growing statewide and nationally despite last week’s expected Supreme Court ruling that stopped the collection of “fair share” bargaining fees from public workers who don’t want to be union members. “Our union is adding members. The AFT (American Federation of Teachers), our national union, is bigger than it’s ever been. We’re adding members here in Illinois all the time. … The graduate employees at the University of Chicago have just voted to join us,” Montgomery said Sunday on WGN AM-720.

  51 Comments      


A closer look at Kwame Raoul’s lead

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

A political action committee run by top officials of Operating Engineers Local 150 reported a $255,000 contribution last week from a “dark money” organization controlled by the same Local 150 honchos.

Fight Back for a Better Tomorrow PAC and its money-raising Fight Back Fund spent $900,000 during the Democratic primary to oppose Rep. Scott Drury’s bid for attorney general. The groups also spent $685,000 to oppose former Gov. Pat Quinn’s AG run. Both expenditures were ultimately designed to help Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago, win the attorney general primary, which he did.

The PAC then filed paperwork to show it had purchased TV ads designed to help Sen. Raoul fend off Republican nominee Erika Harold during the general election. As before, these will be independent expenditures that aren’t coordinated with the Raoul campaign.

The ads won’t begin right away. Instead, the group is reportedly reserving advertising time for later this year. The quarter-million is essentially a down payment on that reservation.

So, how does this race look right now? As I’ve already told you, a recent Capitol Fax/We Ask America poll had Sen. Kwame Raoul leading Erika Harold by nine points, 44-35 with 21 percent undecided. My pollster viewed those results as a sort of generic party matchup. But, let’s take a look at some of the crosstabs today.

Besides her fellow Republican Party members, Ms. Harold led in just a few demographics.

For instance, senior citizens 65 and up preferred Harold over Sen. Raoul 42-38, with 21 percent undecided. Downstaters backed her over Raoul 43-33. And suburban collar county voters narrowly supporter her 42-40. The poll found that Gov. Bruce Rauner led in those demographics with 2 points among seniors and 3 points with Downstaters, but he trailed Democrat JB Pritzker in the collars by 5 points.

The African-American Raoul led the African-American Harold among whites by 1 point, 40-39 (Pritzker led Rauner by 2 among whites). Raoul led Harold with black voters by 53 points, 69-16 (Pritzker’s margin was 50 points).

81 percent of Republicans supported Harold, while 13 percent were undecided and 6 percent said they backed Raoul. 79 percent of Democrats backed Raoul, while 16 percent were undecided and 5 percent backed the Republican Harold. So, the hidden “slack” in the partisan results would seem to show that Raoul will benefit a bit more.

Among independent and third-party voters, Raoul led by 13 points, 38-25, with 37 percent undecided (Pritzker led Rauner by 6 with this group).

Mr. Raoul led Ms. Harold by 2 among male voters, 42-40 (Pritzker led by 6). And he led her by 15 points among women, 46-31 (Pritzker led Rauner by 13).

Chicago resident Raoul led by 57 points in the city, 69-12 (Pritzker led by 40). And Raoul led Harold in suburban Cook County by 15, 45-30 (Pritzker led by 9).

Raoul had a 30-point lead among union households, 56-26 (Pritzker led by 33), and held a 3-point, 42-39 lead among non-union households (Pritzker also led by 3).

Raoul also led among voters aged 18-34 by 21 points, 50-29 (Pritzker led by 19). Raoul’s lead among voters aged 35-49 was 19 points, 48-29 (Pritzker also led by 19). And Raoul led by 5 points with those aged 50-64, 43-38 (Pritzker led by 6).

Also, keep in mind that this poll was taken June 9-11. That’s before President Trump’s numbers precipitously declined during the immigrant family separation crisis at the southern border. The worse he does, the worse his party’s candidates will likely do come November. But then, politics being politics, the president could also do something to help himself before November. The poll of 600 likely voters had a margin of error of +/-3.99 percent.

If Raoul avoids any major controversies, runs a decent campaign and raises enough money to compete, it sure looks like this race is his to lose. But, as always, this is politics. Stuff can change in a hurry.

It should also be interesting to see if the Republicans open up a significant “dark money” spigot to help Ms. Harold. The Republican Attorneys General Association created the Illinois Freedom Fund independent expenditure committee in late March specifically to help Harold, but that group has not yet reported any contributions as of this writing.

Raoul ended March with just under $100,000 in his own campaign bank account and has reported raising about $357K since then. Harold reported having $92K in the bank at the end of March and has reported $208K in contributions since then.

  6 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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

Monday, Jul 2, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a July 12, 2015 Capital Gazette story

Of the hundreds of songs Charlie Richardson has recorded in his decades as a local audio technician, one still stands out for him as the best representation of Maryland.

“The (Naval Academy) Glee Club was singing it and they were singing around the state and I heard the thing at one of the concerts and it caught my attention and ear.”

The approximately two-minute “My Home, My Maryland” was composed and performed in 1976 for the glee club’s bicentennial concerts.

“There’s no finer place on Earth than my home sweet home, my Maryland,” the choir sang, the recording made in the Naval Academy Chapel resounding in Richardson’s living room Wednesday. The Annapolis resident, the founder of Richardson Records, has been recording local songs for about 50 years.

“It doesn’t have all that political stuff in it,” Richardson said.

The actual state song, “Maryland, My Maryland,” has come under fire for its strong pro-Confederate slant — it uses phrases like “Northern scum” and “sic semper.” There have been attempts to change it over the last five decades; all have failed.

It didn’t happen, but click here to listen to the song.

* Also…



You can subscribe to the paper by clicking here.

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Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Why has tuition increased so much? State funding cuts are a big reason

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Before Rod Blagojevich was elected governor in 2002, Illinois had an unwritten rule that higher education received $1 for every $2 received by K-12. Blagojevich believed universities were too top-heavy, so he cut their budgets year after year. That trend continued through two successive governors. From the Illinois Board of Higher Education

2002 was the peak year for state appropriation support for Illinois public universities ($1.5 billion). When accounting for inflation and new, unfunded mandates public university operations funding for Fiscal Year 2018 is less than half of what it was in Fiscal Year 2002 ($736 million in 2018 relative to $1.5 billion in 2002). [Emphasis added.]

Yikes. Let that sink in for a moment. Less than half.

* They now turn to a more recent timeline

In Fiscal Year 2017 general funds covered just 37.8% of public university revenue, with UIF covering the remaining 62.2%. In comparing 2010 and 2017, total revenue is nearly identical in both years (difference of +0.1%) after making an inflationary adjustment using the consumer price index (CPI). The decline in state appropriations to public universities from 2010 to 2017 (-22.8%) roughly parallels the increase in university income funds (+22.2%)

The accompanying graph

* So, adjusted for CPI, overall higher education spending has leveled off, but state funding has plummeted. They gotta pick up the slack somewhere else.

And, according to IBHE, if you adjust for the Higher Education Price Index, total higher education spending has lagged by 4.5 percent, meaning the universities are doing their part to control costs while the state slashes its own funding.

  18 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Post-Janus service charges for non-members?

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Robert Bruno writes in the Sun-Times about what public employee unions can do in the wake of Janus. Here’s one of his ideas

New York recently amended its state public employee’s law. It allows public employee unions to deny representation to non-members in any disciplinary cases as well as any legal, economic or job-related services beyond those provided in the collective bargaining agreement, without violating the duty to fair representation.

The Court majority opinion endorsed this approach by stating that individual “nonmembers could be required to pay for the [grievance] service or could be denied union representation altogether.” In a footnote, Alito cited a California labor relations law as an example. Other states including Oregon, Hawaii, New Jersey and Florida have passed or are considering post-Janus measures. Illinois could do the same.

This is discussed on pages 15-18 of the decision.

Your thoughts?

*** UPDATE *** Hannah Meisel had a similar story at the Daily Line today. They’ve taken it out from behind the paywall

Ed Maher, a spokesman for Local 150, said Alito’s suggestion “seems to leave crack to charge nonmembers for grievance cost, arbitration costs.”

Pierson said that charging nonmembers for such services — which are as high as $5,000 for an arbitrator and $1,000 for one day of work for a court reporter — may cause a nonmember to “think twice about not paying dues,” and to see the dues as an “insurance policy” instead of money taken from a paycheck.

  45 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Earlier today, a Republican operative texted me this question…

If you had to write a headline for Pritzker for the month of June, what would it be?

My answer: JB plays it safe.

* The Question: Your answer?

  40 Comments      


Rauner defends record on veterans, Quincy

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* JB Pritzker has been on statewide publicity tour ostensibly designed to showcase his meetings with veterans. Here’s the end of a Peoria Journal Star article

Alex Browning, a Rauner spokesman, said the governor is committed to helping veterans of Illinois.

“When the Quincy Veterans Home needed him, he took action. He worked hand-in-hand with the CDC from day one and secured $53 million for new construction at the home. Gov. Rauner has also led efforts to help veterans who have fallen on hard times, increased veteran access to education, and created a pilot program for temporary childcare services for veterans who have medical appointments or job interviews,” he said.

* Pritzker campaign

The Rauner campaign is claiming that “when the Quincy Veterans Home needed him, he took action.” Let’s take a look at the real record:

    * In 2015, Rauner’s administration waited six days to publicize the first Legionnaires’ outbreak — even though they recognized it looked like the “beginning of an epidemic.” In a span of weeks, 12 Veterans and spouses died and 54 were sickened.

    * In 2016, Rauner shows up in Quincy to announce “we’re really on top of the situation” as his Veterans Affairs department confirms two new Legionnaires’ cases. Sixteen days later, a third case is confirmed.

    * In 2017, a Korean War Veteran dies, bringing the death toll to 13. Weeks later, three cases are confirmed. In December, a media investigation exposes Rauner’s fatal mismanagement, and Rauner launches into cover-up mode.

    * In 2018, Rauner holds a week-long press stunt at the Quincy Veterans’ Home and proposes a task force instead of concrete, long-term solutions to end the crisis. While Rauner has no regrets and blames Quincy staff for his fatal mismanagement, Rauner’s administration skips a legislative hearing into the Legionnaires’ crisis hours before the fourth case in 2018 was confirmed. Rauner claims “nothing has taken long” days after his administration says it will take “three to five years” before the problem will be solved.

“When Quincy Veterans needed him, Bruce Rauner was busy covering up his fatal mismanagement instead of ending the Legionnaires’ crisis he let spin out of control,” said Pritzker campaign spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh. “It is deeply troubling and frankly a disgrace to the memories of our fallen heroes for Rauner or his campaign to rewrite history on a crisis caused by his failed leadership.”

Links to referenced stories are here.

  10 Comments      


You can’t wish this pension funding problem away, Chicago

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Chicago mayor’s election is next February. Fiscal Year 2020 begins the following January 1st. The city’s pension contributions will rise $400 million (a 31 percent increase from the previous year) because of state statutes requiring minimum funding levels for various pension funds.

The city’s budget this year is $10 billion. So, $400 million is about a four percent budget increase.

Natural revenue growth ain’t gonna cover it and, remember, other spending pressures will increase as well.

* Amanda Kass, one of the most talented numbers people in the business, wondered what the mayoral candidates had to say about tax hikes and here’s some of what she found

* Lori Lightfoot: In an interview with Sun-Times reporter Fran Spielman, Lightfoot stated, “Our taxes are way too high.” Spielman followed-up by asking Lightfoot what choice Mayor Emanuel had since without the tax increases the “pension funds were going belly up.” Lightfoot didn’t directly answer, but said she wanted to “reduce the tax burden on middle-and lower-income people.”

* Gary McCarthy: His campaign website states that, “After years of borrowing against our city’s future, Mayor Emanuel can no longer kick the can down the road. Chicago needs real reform. Shady accounting tricks and constant tax hikes will not help fund our municipal and teacher pensions.” It also states, “Our police, fire and teacher pensions have to not only be protected, but funded in full.”

* Paul Vallas: I haven’t seen anything that’s specific to the City’s four pension systems, but Vallas has explicitly critiqued the Chicago Public Schools’ pension holidays and cited past “failures to think and plan proactively” as a reason he’s running. (CPS is an especially hot topic for Vallas because he was its CEO from 1995-2001. CPS’s pension fund is a whole different topic though, so I’m largely tabling that issue for now.) He also pointed out how the pension holidays ended up costing the City more in the long-term.

As of June 2018, I didn’t see any campaign statements specifically about the City’s pensions and the upcoming pension payments from the other four declared candidates (Rahm Emanuel, Ja’Mal Green, Troy LaRaviere, and Neal Sales-Griffin).

So, the fiery progressive Lightfoot says taxes are way too high. Gary McCarthy is talking out of both sides of his mouth. The alleged fiscal geek Vallas has no plan. And nobody else has even addressed it yet.

* Here’s Phil Kadner with some context

The lowest composite [property] tax rates in Cook County are in Hinsdale (6.5 percent), Burr Ridge (6.8 percent) and Barrington (7.2 percent), according to the Cook County clerk.

The tax rate in Chicago on residential homes is 7.2 percent, according to Orr’s office. The average tax rate in the north suburbs is 9.3 percent. The average in the south suburbs: 11.9 percent, actually a decrease from previous years.

The average tax bill on a single-family home increased 4.78 percent in the south suburbs (an increase of $247), 3 percent in the north suburbs ($213) and 2.75 percent in Chicago ($109), where there has been a lot of squawking about property tax increases.

So, even after the recent increases, Chicago is tied with Barrington for third lowest composite property tax rates in Cook County.

* Meanwhile, you may have seen this story

Homeowners in Lakeview Township, upset by the big increases in assessments they received from Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios in May, have called a public meeting tonight with government officials.

“I’m alarmed by the size of the increases,” said Andrea Raila, who said the assessor’s estimate of her home’s taxable value went up by 57 percent since the last assessment, in 2015.

Raila, who ran for assessor this year, should know better…


There goes Amanda with her pesky facts again.

The Tribune sums up its series of property tax articles

An unprecedented analysis reveals that Cook County’s unique property tax system created an unequal burden on residents, handing huge financial breaks to more affluent homeowners while punishing those who have the least, particularly people living in minority communities.

Translated: Lakeview homeowners had better brace themselves.

* Related…

* The Fiscal Firebomb Looming for Small Cities in Illinois: I would suggest that Illinois also create, as Virginia has, an independent state fiscal oversight commission to assess specific fiscal/budget issues and recommend, if warranted, further assistance to help stabilize areas of concern. It should implement, as Rhode Island did in the wake of Central Falls’ municipal bankruptcy, a quasi-SWAT team of city managers and legislators to provide technical assistance and potential state assistance to assess municipal operations and develop long-range financial forecasts for revenue. And finally, the state should adopt a revenue-sharing program, modeled after the one signed into law by former President Ronald Reagan, which assessed relative fiscal need, local tax effort and population.

  24 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Lots of fake news on Janus ruling

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Belleville News Democrat editorial

Mark Janus was told that he had to pay union dues to the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31 if he wanted to work for Illinois.

Um, no, he wasn’t. He was told he had to pay fair share fees for the benefits he received from the union contract.

* Same editorial

Janus objected to AFSCME spending one-quarter of his roughly $600 a year in union fees on politics, especially when it spent only about 20 percent on representing workers.

I could not find confirmation of that “20 percent” figure anywhere. Perhaps someone else can help.

* Jim Dey

In not paying the equivalent of dues, these non-joiners will no longer have to subsidize the political causes and candidates the union spends dues money to advance.

Fair share fees couldn’t be used for campaigns.

However, because people can now get full union service for free, that could very well cause the union to spend more member dues on servicing the freeloaders. And that, in turn, could cause them to spend less on everything else.

* Tribune editorial

We’re intrigued — and hopeful — about the implications of Janus v. AFSCME Council 31. If government workers don’t have to contribute, maybe this begins a reckoning for the political class of Illinois. We’re not great fans of that symbiosis between one party and the public’s workforce. Unions

AFSCME and the IEA in particular had a long history of backing Republicans. For crying out loud, the IEA endorsed conservative Rep. Dwight Kay (R-Glen Carbon) in 2014. But when Rauner was elected, Kay and others went with Rauner.

Unions, like everyone else, don’t endorse their enemies. To expect otherwise is ridiculous. It’s like wringing your hands over the fact that the NFIB didn’t endorse Jan Schakowsky.

* And finally

The court ruled broadly for the plaintiffs, requiring the unions to adopt an “opt in” system to join up and pay dues rather than merely allowing workers to opt out of doing so. “Nobody out there is going to be paying money to a public sector union unless they affirmatively want to,” said Charlotte Garden, a law professor at Seattle University.

AFSCME already has an opt-in system here. From Anders Lindall…

The court case changes nothing in this regard. In Illinois a represented employee has always had to sign a card to join the union; we provide the signed cards to the employer who then deducts dues.

Despite Rauner trying to sow confusion and drive people to his anti-union web site, it’s critically important that every union-represented employee understand they need take no action: Union members have already opted in by signing a card. Fair share payers aren’t opted in and their fees will no longer be deducted.

The only action necessary is if you were fair share and now want to join the union: You should contact your local union leader or steward, or reach out to Council 31, and we’d be more than happy to provide a membership card for you to sign.

*** UPDATE *** Pat Hughes from the Liberty Justice Center vehemently disagrees with AFSCME…

We interpret the Janus ruling as a sweeping win for government workers. The opt in portion of Justice Alito’s opinion means exactly what it says - post Janus, governments should stop collecting union dues of any kind for any member or non-member. It doesn’t matter whether or not someone previously opted in, the conditions upon which that happened - forced agency fees regardless of whether you opted in- made the decision making process for each state employee very different in a pre-Janus world.

Many thanks to Fran Eaton at Illinois Review for the tip.

  67 Comments      


HFS processing backlog may have killed a nursing home

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Remember yesterday when I told you about the backlog at Illinois’ Medicaid long-term care (LTC) program? LTC covers 55,000 eligible residents in 738 nursing homes. The Illinois Department of Health and Family Services has to approve coverage, and they currently have a backlog of 14,572 pending admissions this month. So, the nursing homes are forced to pay for care out of their own pockets, and that amount has reportedly reached $300 million.

Why is this happening? A few reasons, according to the comptroller’s office (click here). Nursing home residence applications are rising as the population ages. The state has a shortage of case workers. And the snazzy data system launched late last year apparently isn’t performing as well as hoped.

* The delayed payments may have killed a nursing home

Pleasant Hill Healthcare [in Girard] said they will have to almost immediately shut down due to the lack of state funding.

It’s part of the Pleasant Hill Village, which includes the Healthcare and Assisted Living department. The Healthcare department, which includes a Dementia unit and Skilled Care unit, will shut down.

The facility opened in 1905, about 113 years ago. Some residents describe the place as a serene and peaceful home. […]

[Executive director Paulette Buch Miller] said the state owes them over $2 million in pending and approved Medicaid payments.

Aside from the human factor, the worst part of all this is that it’s Medicaid, so there’s a federal match that the state isn’t tapping.

* From the comptroller’s office…

We haven’t had any hardship letters from this nursing home. But we don’t have any vouchers here in our system for them. So even if they did reach out for help through our hardship process, as it stands now, there’s really nothing we can do.

  13 Comments      


It’s “Toilet Week” at the Rauner campaign

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Monday…

Rich,

Pritzker Plumbing t-shirts have been a hit and we’re placing another order this week! Make sure to order yours TODAY to get your name on the list!

By wearing your t-shirt, you’ll help make sure everyone knows about Pritzker’s plumbing schemes. NO TOILETS…NO TAXES!

Thanks for your support.

Ally Check
Social Media Manager

* Tuesday…

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 26, 2018
Contact: xxxx

Where in Illinois are Pritzker’s Toilets?

JB Pritzker disconnected the toilets in his Gold Coast mansion in order to receive a massive tax break after having the home reclassified as “uninhabitable.”

The question remains: where in Illinois are Pritzker’s toilets?

One of them made an appearance last night at the Northfield Township Democrats general election kick off party, where JB Pritzker was making an appearance.

Stay tuned as the toilets continue to pop up across Illinois.

Nothing Wednesday (Janus day).

* Yesterday…

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 28, 2018
Contact: xxxx

#TBT JB Pritzker: “I Certainly Have Discovered the Flaws in the System”

In January, JB Pritzker said “I certainly have discovered the flaws in the system” when he was questioned about removing toilets from his mansion to receive a $230,000 tax break.

In response, the Rauner campaign released a video titled “Flaws in the System.” The video includes quotes from stories covering Pritzker’s scheme to benefit himself at the expense of taxpayers.

Check it out below:

Chicago Sun-Times: “J.B. Pritzker … argued [the house next door] was ‘uninhabitable’ to win what so far have been nearly $230,000 in property tax breaks.”

Chicago Tribune: “Pritzker has benefitted from the reassessment of a neighboring Gold Coast mansion he purchased.”

Daily Herald: “Pritzker is also implicated by buying a mansion next to his posh house in Chicago and letting it fall into disrepair to get a $230,000 property tax reduction.”

* Today

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 29, 2018
Contact: xxxxxx

Where in the world are Pritzker’s toilets? One was spotted outside of the McCallister’s house, made famous by the film Home Alone.

We wonder if the McCallisters called 1-833-TAX-SCAM.

…Adding… Pritzker’s campaign manager…



  53 Comments      


Controversy, confusion over state’s new “Change Union Membership Status” website

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Interesting take

The state webpage, titled “Change Union Membership Status,” begins as a notification that Wednesday’s Janus decision no longer obliges Illinois public workers to pay what’s known as “fair share” fees for the services such as collective bargaining that they receive from unions — the basic substance of the high court’s Janus decision.

But it soon goes on to explore the ramifications if an employee chooses to “opt-out of the union.” That crosses a line, according to unions and labor academics.

Calling the entire website “strikingly partisan,” Prof. Robert Bruno of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign said Thursday that it goes far beyond the high court’s ruling in the Janus decision.

“The most that the state should do, if it’s complying with the letter and the spirit of the court’s decision, is to simply notify employees that fair-share designation no longer exists,” Bruno said.

The Janus decision pertains to “fair share” fees for those who don’t belong to unions, Bruno pointed out. The state-funded website uses that as an entryway to address union members directly.

“Who are they talking to?” Bruno said. “Who is the audience? Well, the audience is not fair-share members. The audience for this is union members. Clearly, clearly the state should not be involved in a campaign to solicit union defections.”

* Sun-Times

But the Illinois Central Management Services Department acknowledged state employees were confused on Thursday. The department said hundreds of employees went onto the website, believing they would have to take action to ensure the fees were no longer deducted. But under the new Supreme Court ruling, the state said they would automatically stop deducting the fees from non-unionized workers.

That apparently caused issues that could impact workers paychecks. But the department said it hoped the confusion would be settled by Monday.

About 75,000 state workers are represented by the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees Council 31, with fewer than 10 percent of that number being non-union members still covered by collective bargaining, according to AFSCME Council 31 spokesman Anders Lindall.

* Meanwhile

Afscme, which in 2015 privately estimated that half the workers it represents could be “on the fence” about whether to pay dues, said it’s trained 25,000 members who’ve helped conduct 800,000 face-to-face conversations with co-workers on the topic.

The American Federation of Teachers said that more than 500,000 of its members in the 10 states most affected by the ruling have recommitted to their union over the past six months, and that educators won’t be swayed by anti-union ads or canvassers funded by right-wing groups. […]

But while such groups as Nevada’s casino union have flourished in the absence of mandatory fees, the big picture for organized labor is bleak following the high court’s ruling. In states with “right-to-work” laws, where it’s illegal to require workers to fund unions that are required to represent them, employees are already half as likely to have union representation—or less.

Such laws, and the Supreme Court opinion, have significant electoral consequences. “Right-to-work” laws already reduce the Democratic Party’s share of a state’s presidential vote by 3.5 percent and cut turnout by 2 percent to 3 percent, according to a working paper published this year by the National Bureau of Economic Research. Those policies, often put in place by Republican-controlled state legislatures, help dampen union political participation—the ultimate goal of anti-union initiatives at all levels of government, labor supporters said.

* Chicago FOP

The Fraternal Order of Police, Lodge 7, would like to advise its members that the recent Supreme Court ruling Janus vs. AFSCME, will likely not have a significant impact upon the membership or finances of our Lodge.

The ruling, which stated that certain union-imposed fees are unconstitutional because they violate the First Amendment rights of union members, will likely not affect Lodge members because our members can only receive legal defense if the officer is a member of F.O.P.

The Supreme Court ruling means that government unions may no longer extract fees from members who do not want to pay them. The members will now choose whether they will financially support their union.

But because the Lodge provides so many crucial benefits to members, particularly legal representation, FOP President Kevin Graham stated that he does not believe many members will opt out of paying their union dues. Lodge members now pay $5 a check for the Legal Defense budget.

Discuss.

  44 Comments      


Ives still snapping at Rauner

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Greg Hinz asks around about how the Janus decision helps Gov. Rauner’s reelection campaign

The decision in the Janus case “gave him a good press pop. It helps him with the conservative base,” which is still outraged that Rauner signed a bill beginning Medicaid funding of abortion, says one top GOP official, who asked not to be named. “But in the end in this year, it won’t make a difference.”

“Maybe it’ll help him get up every morning and realize he’s made a difference,” quipped a top party activist. “It’s still very much up hill.” […]

“I’m surprised he’s as well-positioned as he is,” said [consultant Thom Serafin], noting a recent poll that shows Pritzker leading by less than 10 points. After the big win over organized labor, “He’s got more to talk about” with the GOP’s conservative base, added Serafin. “He’s still got quite a bridge to cross.” […]

Asked if Rauner’s Supreme Court victory is enough to bring her aboard and get her endorsement, [Rep. Jeanne Ives] had a clear answer: “No. I’m not going to endorse the governor. I’m going to let him buy back his voters.”

Ouch.

…Adding… Bernie

Chris Mooney, professor of political science at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said unions have been strongly against Rauner since he made it clear at his inaugural address in 2015 that he was taking on the power of public-sector unions.

“Even if they won this Janus case,” Mooney said, “they would have still been there to fight Rauner tooth and nail. It’s a death match between them.”

But to some conservatives who may not be enchanted with Rauner, Mooney said, “With this, maybe it looks like Rauner [is] not completely ineffectual. Maybe he can get something done.”

* Pearson

Rauner still is looking to unify a socially conservative Republican Party base that split in the March primary over his signature on laws expanding abortion, immigration and transgender rights. His campaign already is touting media coverage of the ruling to help try to heal the rift.

But the court decision on its own may not help unify the party. Third-party governor candidate Sam McCann, a Republican state senator from central Illinois, is a supporter of organized labor who espouses socially conservative views. McCann attacked Rauner over the court ruling, and he symbolizes Downstate areas that are largely Republican but peppered with state institutions and the union members who work there. […]

Yepsen said that while Rauner and “a lot of people who do not like unions … are going to be gloating” about the court decision, “they need to be careful what they wish for.” He and others see the ruling as benefiting Pritzker and Democrats at the ballot box.

“I think it will have an energizing and radicalizing effect on the (union) members. This has been the history of the labor movement all along. You start messing around trying to threaten unions and break unions and what’s the effect of it? It’s a mobilizing effect,” he said. “I think it’s an organizing tool, it’s a mobilizing tool, not just with public-sector unions but with all of labor, which is threatened.”

  34 Comments      


FOP backs Pritzker: “Illinois needs a fresh start”

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Today, the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police endorsed JB Pritzker for governor. The Illinois FOP is the second largest in the nation, representing over 34,000 active and retired police officers.

“I’m proud to have the support of the Illinois FOP and the working families they represent,” said JB Pritzker. “With workers’ rights under assault, Illinois needs a governor who will stand up for working families. Instead, Bruce Rauner has fought against them at every turn, attacking the right to collectively bargain, working to lower wages, and attempting to slash pensions. As governor, I will fight tirelessly to defend the rights of our working families and work with law enforcement to increase accountability between law enforcement and the communities they serve so we can strengthen relationships and ensure safer communities across our state.”

“Law enforcement officers, like all other working men and women in Illinois, want a leader who won’t bankrupt the state by trying to dictate his own personal agenda at all costs. Moreover, it is often law enforcement officers who must pick up the pieces in the aftermath of Bruce Rauner’s manufactured budget crisis that caused deep cuts to key state programs,” said Illinois FOP State Lodge President Chris Southwood. “The 34,000 members of the Illinois FOP have confidence that J.B. Pritzker is the best candidate to shake up Springfield and return civility, decency and a true sense of public service to Illinois. JB is truly different. Illinois needs a fresh start and JB is the man to do it.”

The ILFOP endorsed Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn in 2014, but backed his Republican opponent Bill Brady in 2010. They endorsed Rod Blagojevich in 2002 and 2006.

Rauner’s anti-union stances and the Janus decision no doubt played a role in this, but it is interesting they went with the guy who openly and firmly supports legalizing marijuana.

  37 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Friday, Jun 29, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Question of the day

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Comptroller Mendoza threw out the first pitch at a recent Joliet Slammers game

* The Question: Caption?

  49 Comments      


Rep. Conroy donates kidney, doing well in recovery

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Facebook…


This is from my hero Rep Deb Conroy. She never stops amazing me with her personal strength and heart.

Posted by Kathleen Willis on Thursday, June 28, 2018

* Rep. Deb Conroy explains the image on her Facebook page

The Transplant Team at Rush gave this to me today. When I pinned it on my shirt I found myself looking around the waiting room at all the many patients. Men and women of all different race and age waiting for and not knowing when or where their donor will come from.

From the bottom of my heart I want everyone to know that one week post surgery I feel great, I lost 4 pounds and I now have an answer to a question my little nephew once asked me. Liam asked me once why does God give us two kidneys if we only need one? Well Liam, God had me carry an extra one around and keep it safe until it found a new home with Uncle Tim.

So many people are waiting for the gift of life and through live donation we can give it.

Rep. Conroy has not had an easy year, to say the least, so I’d like to take this opportunity to wish her nothing but the best and the speediest recovery possible.

  20 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Our sorry state

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Great governing

The Associated Press has learned that private Illinois nursing homes are fronting $300 million for residential care because the state is so far behind on determining whether they’re eligible for Medicaid.

Numbers compiled by state Comptroller Susana Mendoza and obtained by the AP show the state has a backlog of 15,000 people who are awaiting Medicaid eligibility determinations. The backlog has nearly tripled since August 2014.

A judge in a federal lawsuit ordered the state to clear up the backlog by Thursday or presume everyone is eligible and put up the state’s Medicaid share of $300 million.

Unbelievable.

*** UPDATE *** Excerpt from the comptroller’s press release…

The Comptroller’s report, which uses Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS) data, found that the number of pending Medicaid eligibility determinations for LTC over 90-days-old rose 143 percent between December 2017 and May 2018. HFS has reported it can only process 60 percent of new, incoming applications in a timely manner and, as of the end of last month, there were 16,378 pending admissions. According to the Associated Press, the estimated cost of these pending admissions is up to $300 million.

These problems are occurring at the same time the Rauner Administration continues to dump tax dollars into a failed technology solution meant to streamline Medicaid eligibility processes. The state has committed $288 million to Deloitte, the global consulting firm, for an Integrated Eligibility System (IES) to modernize enrollment in benefit programs like LTC or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly known as food stamps.

In six years, the cost of the Deloitte IES has doubled from $144 million to nearly $300 million. The IES has been plagued by public failures that have stopped or delayed critical services for eligible, needy families. And the cost continues to rise: Earlier this month, HFS issued an emergency request to outsource its application processing duties. The cost will likely exceed $14 million over the next two years.

The full report is here.

  32 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Supreme Court paves the way for huge lawsuit against SEIU

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hmm…



SEIU could be on the hook for “$32 million it unconstitutionally seized from over 80,000 personal assistants without their consent,” according to the petition.

AFSCME fought SEIU over which union should represent those workers. I’m betting the folks at AFSCME are breathing a sigh of relief right now that they lost.

*** UPDATE *** The Illinois News Network has a story up entitled “Foundation: Janus decision could prompt refund of ‘billions’ in forced union fees”

National Right to Work Foundation President Mark Mix said this is good news for workers.

“We’re going to be able to get the money back for those home healthcare workers in Illinois and we may be able to get the money back for every government employee across the country that has been forced to pay these fees,” Mix said.

* However, this is from the petition

To allow unions to profit from unconstitutional fee seizures will beget more unconstitutional fee seizures. This ramification will be especially problematic if the Court rules this term in Janus that it is unconstitutional to force public employees to pay agency fees. Under the Seventh and Sixth Circuits’ decisions, public sector unions will have little incentive to comply with that ruling and cease their agency fee seizures. Instead, unions will have a strong financial incentive to keep seizing fees from nonmembers until a court forces them to stop, because the unions will be able to retain most of the illegally seized monies. It is thereby imperative the Court establish that unions are not free to keep monies they unconstitutionally seize from nonmembers who have not expressed an objection.

  24 Comments      


WIU lays off 24 teachers, eliminates 62 vacant teaching positioins

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Two weeks ago

Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner said education reforms in the recently passed state budget will definitely help Western Illinois University-Quad Cities.

Appearing before some 100 students, faculty and others Thursday afternoon at the Riverfront Hall in Moline, Rauner said he believes a number of things in the state budget will help the students immediately.

“The immediate thing is we got the budget passed,” he said. “We got the MAP (Monetary Award Program) grants fully funded (for all four years of a student’s education). We got $25 million more coming to our state institutions of higher ed. And we’ve got immediate help on getting the support for this year.”

But, he quickly added, more work is needed. Among the things he plans to tackle are adding more resources while greatly reducing or eliminating mandates, restrictions, requirements and procurement, pension, hiring limitations and bureaucracy.

“Higher education, this is our time,” Rauner said.

* Today…



Hat tip: Jake.

…Adding… The WIU press release is here.

…Adding… Pritzker campaign…

“After state universities were crushed by Bruce Rauner’s 736-day budget crisis, layoffs are still plaguing our higher education system because of his failed leadership,” said Pritzker campaign spokeswoman Jordan Abudayyeh. “Teachers and students’ futures are being jeopardized by a failed governor who puts photo-ops ahead of actually doing his job.”

  46 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Free speech or partisan politics?

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican attorney general candidate Erika Harold…

“The Janus decision strikes a constitutional balance, respecting a person’s choice to join a public sector union while ensuring those who choose not to join are not compelled in violation of the First Amendment to pay fees to support speech and advocacy they do not feel benefits them and with which they disagree.”

* Worth noting…



* But Greg Hinz claims the Janus decision isn’t about “free speech” at all, it’s about partisan politics

Plaintiff Mark Janus was just a patsy. This case was all about politics, about giving one political party and its ideology and its beliefs about who ought to pay how much in taxes a leg up on the other. As Trump tweeted, “Big loss for the coffers of the Democrats!”

Indeed. As the four liberal dissenters on the court wrote, “When the vicious cycle (of union members dropping their membership) finally ends, chances are that the union will effectively lack the resources to effectively perform.” Either as a bargaining agent, or in the political sphere. Take that, Mike Madigan and you evil Democrats! That’s what’s really going on.

Now, in the abstract, I understand the notion that someone like Janus, a child specialist with the Illinois Department of Healthcare & Family Services, shouldn’t be forced to pay partial dues to the American Federation of State County & Municipal Employees. Even though Janus is exempted from paying the share of dues that go toward partisan political activity by AFCME, the court majority held that even contributing to what the union tries to accomplish at the bargaining table might offend his views. Like, for instance, seeking insurance coverage for female union members who want an abortion. Or extra hiring consideration for African-Americans or Latinos. The majority didn’t really say.

But it hinted at one of the sentiments underlying its opinion, writing, “Public sector union membership has surpassed that in the private sector and that ascendancy corresponds with a parallel increase in public spending.” Translation: Rauner is right that unions force up spending and taxes. So we’re gonna give him some help.

* And Aviva Bowen of both the IFT and Kwame Raoul’s campaign agreed with Hinz in her response to Erika Harold’s comment…

Spare me. This case was about politics, not speech. Bruce Rauner and Donald Trump bragged about that yesterday. No one was ever forced to pay fees to support political candidates, and nothing in Janus changed that.

This case was a brazen attempt to further rig the economy and weaken the collective voice of the middle class. And it’s why, more than ever, we need a strong Attorney General like Kwame Raoul who will fight back and defend workers’ rights.

*** UPDATE *** Springfield’s Catholic Bishop…



  64 Comments      


“Most of them won’t be funded this year”

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Civic Federation looks at state appropriations for capital projects

The total appropriation of roughly $17.1 billion is the largest capital bill since FY2015. The roughly $8.1 billion of new appropriations are the highest amount since the passage of FY2010’s Illinois Jobs Now! capital plan.

However, since the FY2019 budget does not raise any additional revenues for capital projects, it is unlikely that a majority of the appropriations will be spent during the fiscal year. Authorized projects that are not completed or started may be rolled forward with reappropriations in future years.

* As does the Bond Buyer

llinois’ new state budget paves the way for the state to pay off swaps tied to $600 million of floating-rate debt and authorizes $1.8 billion in new general obligation borrowing to finance pension buyouts and capital projects.

The new GO authority — $1 billion for the buyouts and $800 million for capital — is lean and falls far short of a fiscal 2019 capital budget that totals $16.8 billion when new authorizations of $7.8 billion are counted along with $9 billion in reauthorized projects. Most of them won’t be funded this year.

Keep all that in mind during the summer and fall ribbon-cutting ceremonies.

* Back to the Bond Buyer

State debt service peaks this year at $4.4 billion and then declines by $1 billion next year as bonds issued in 2011 to cover pension payments are retired. The state owes a total of $32.2 billion in principal and $14.2 billion in interest on $14 billion of GOs for capital, $2.3 billion of Build Illinois sales-tax bonds, the $6 billion of GO bill backlog pay down debt issued last fall, and $9.9 pension-related GO debt. The backlog borrowing carries $1.8 billion of interest and is retired in fiscal 2030.

  7 Comments      


Contribution caps blown in attorney general race

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Missed in yesterday’s hullabaloo over yesterday’s Janus decision was a $255,000 independent expenditure by Fight Back for a Better Tomorrow PAC (click here).

Fight Back for a Better Tomorrow, you’ll recall, is run by top officials of Operating Engineers Union Local 150. The dark money super PAC spent well over a million bucks in the attorney general’s primary against Rep. Scott Drury and former Gov. Pat Quinn. The end game was to help Sen. Kwame Raoul’s bid, and it worked.

The latest expenditure is designated as “Media - television” in support of Sen. Raoul’s general election campaign.

Contribution caps are lifted after a statewide candidate contributes more than $250,000 to his/her own campaign or someone else expends more than that amount to benefit or oppose a statewide campaign.

The Illinois State Board of Elections just formally lifted the caps (click here).

JB Pritzker and Gov. Rauner and other bigtime money-bags are now free to give Raoul and Erika Harold whatever they want.

Discuss.

  16 Comments      


Rauner campaign continues victory lap

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rauner campaign…

What They’re Saying: Governor Rauner’s “Major Victory” in Janus v. AFSCME

Yesterday, the Supreme Court ruled in Janus v. AFSCME to restore free speech rights of government workers. Governor Rauner first initiated the case and has fought for freedom of speech from the moment he was sworn in to office.

Take a look at what they’re saying about Governor Rauner’s victory:

Chicago Tribune:
“In a case with roots in Rauner’s first weeks in office, the court ruled that public workers shouldn’t have to pay fees to a union they don’t want to join.

…Challenging the fees was one of Rauner’s first acts when he took office in 2015. He issued an executive order giving state workers who don’t want to pay permission not to, and he later instructed state agencies to stop collecting the fees on behalf of public employee unions. He also preemptively filed a federal lawsuit seeking to have the matter escalated to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Rauner has used the Janus lawsuit to make the case to voters that he should be reelected to a second term, pointing to it as an accomplishment from his time in office and promising that once the fees are overturned, it will result in ‘transformative change’ for taxpayers.

….You look at how we’re going to transform politics in Illinois, across America, when we win the federal lawsuit against AFSCME that I started,’ Rauner said. ‘That’s transformative. You think that Republicans across Illinois, across America, aren’t excited about how that will change the balance of power between taxpayers and special interest groups inside government?’”

CBS 2 Chicago:
“The 5-4 ruling in Janus vs. AFSCME is a win for Gov. Bruce Rauner, who has fought to weaken labor unions, and once was a plaintiff in the case.”

Chicago Tribune Editorial:
“If government workers don’t have to contribute, maybe this begins a reckoning for the political class of Illinois. We’re not great fans of that symbiosis between one party and the public’s workforce. Unions have a vested interest in the taxing-and-spending status quo in Illinois, which in fiscal terms is a disaster. Democrats have been too happy to go along for the ride, saddling taxpayers with enormous public debts. The results for this state and its economy are political gridlock and disappointment: Illinois has weak job growth, a bleak credit rating and a $130 billion hole in the state’s pension funds. Those are largely byproducts of the hand-holding between unions and Dems.”

WBEZ:
“Rauner, who was in Washington, D.C., praised Wednesday’s decision. ‘For decades, Illinois workers have been forced to pay partial union dues against their will,’ Rauner said in a statement. ‘The practice infringed on the constitutional rights of public sector workers who were asked to give up their First Amendment rights as a condition of employment. This decision fairly reinstates those rights.’”

Grover Norquist, Americans for Tax Reform:
“The ‘Janus’ SCOTUS Case was at the start —AFSCME vs Rauner.
Rauner will soon have changed the world for the better more than most governors in US history ever have”

Andrew Nelms, Americans For Prosperity Illinois State Director:
“This decision is a huge victory for workers not just in Illinois but across the country. Forcing public workers to fund political activity to keep a job and support their family is a violation of the Constitution. This case vindicates our activists who have long asserted that forcing workers to fund political activity without their consent was a violation of the fundamental and unassailable right to free speech.”

ABC News:
“The Supreme Court has ruled in favor of public employees’ First Amendment rights to decline to pay union dues, marking a potential blow to the funding for influential unions of public employees.

The Court found that union fees violate the free speech rights of nonmembers by compelling them to subsidize private speech on public matters, even if they disagree with the message.”

Belleville News-Democrat:
“The U.S. Supreme Court has decided that a Springfield man does not have to belong to a union, in a case that could have far-reaching implications for workers across the country.”

  111 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Thursday, Jun 28, 2018 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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