Protected: Subscribers Only - Legislative news
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Thank you to all who have donated! We’ve raised just under $26,000, that’s around 1,032 presents for children in foster care. But LSSI serves 2,530 children in Illinois. We have a long way to go. So please, donate today. * Crain’s…
* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* Capital B News published a great write up of the ‘sewage crisis’ in Cahokia Heights…
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
* Illini News Bureau | Illinois historian says Midwest played a crucial role in Black freedom movements worldwide: The Midwest played a central role in the growth of Black freedom movements in the 20th century. It was a key site for incubating and expanding the ideas of political activist Marcus Garvey, not only in the U.S., but globally, said University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign professor of African American studies and history Erik S. McDuffie. McDuffie examined the influence of Garvey and the importance of the Midwest in the growth of Black internationalism and radicalism in his new book, “The Second Battle for Africa: Garveyism, the U.S. Heartland and Global Black Freedom.” * Tribune | What to know about tonight’s Chicago Board of Education meeting: CTU to rally before contract discussion: An hour before the meeting begins, the Chicago Teachers Union will demonstrate outside the district’s administrative offices in Greater Grand Crossing demanding their four-year contract be settled before the Trump administration is sworn in. They are tying their contract demands to fears of changes on the federal level due to Project 2025. Once the board is seated, among the most salient topics is a discussion on the district’s response to the planned closure of seven schools operated by the Acero charter network at the end of the school year. The district will present options for the families of the approximately 2,000 predominantly Latino students impacted, according to the meeting agenda. Whether ongoing political tension over the Chicago Teachers Union contract negotiations will come to a head remains to be seen. * WBEZ | ‘Shame on you!’ Acero Charter community tells charter leaders: During the board meeting, which was held inside the school’s gymnasium, Acero officials ceded their speaking time to allow more time for public comment. It was the first time since the closures were announced that families had a chance to face the board, CTU leaders said. More than 200 people packed the gym. Speakers, including several young children, had harsh words for Acero leaders.
* WTTW | Jury Awards Nearly $80M to Family of Girl Killed During 2020 Chicago Police Chase: A spokesperson for the city’s Department of Law said officials are “reviewing the verdict.” If the verdict is upheld, it would nearly equal city’s annual $82 million budget to cover the cost of police misconduct lawsuits. In all, Chicago taxpayers have spent more than $73 million from January 2019 to August 2024 to resolve two dozen lawsuits filed by Chicagoans injured during police pursuits, according to an analysis of city data by WTTW News. * Sun-Times | Bitter cold cracks CTA Brown Line rail, service fully resumed: “The cracked rail was likely caused by the cold,” said Gonzalez. “They did make the repair.” Shuttle buses were made available between Kimball and Southport to provide connecting service through the affected area, the CTA said. * Chicago Mag | Why Does the City’s Border Extend North of Howard Street in Rogers Park?: When Rogers Park was annexed to Chicago, in 1893, Howard Street became the city’s boundary with Evanston. The little 80-acre neighborhood just north of Howard along the lake was known as Germania, after the German immigrants who had settled there. But Germania had a problem. It was cut off from the rest of Evanston by Calvary Catholic Cemetery to the north and later by the L tracks to the west. That made it impossible for the suburb to extend electrical or sewer lines to its southeasternmost district. “The territory received almost no services from Evanston,” the Tribune reported at the time. As a result, Germania picked up a new nickname: No Man’s Land. * Daily Herald | Elgin Salvation Army ‘very afraid’ of not having enough toys for area kids at Christmas: More than 1,700 children from 540 families are signed up to receive what could be their only Christmas gifts this year. “Many families are debating between buying Christmas presents or buying food,” Viquez said. “A lot of people rely on us. They really need it, and we need support from the community.” * Naperville Sun | Naperville Riverwalk expansion, renovation plans for 2031 anniversary making progress: There are a total of 12 projects the city wants to tackle over the next seven years to help ring in the Riverwalk’s 50th birthday. Work is laid out in the 2031 Riverwalk Master Plan, which was endorsed in fall 2020 to guide future development. Aspirations are big and small, ranging from building out new sections of the Riverwalk to ecological restoration along its riverbank. The multistep, multimillion-dollar initiative is split between capital and enhancement projects. There are six of each, according to the city’s master plan. * WSIL | New inmate work detail program announced in Williamson County: The new program at the jail went into effect on December 12, and will take non-violent offenders, with low-level offenses, and they will help as volunteers to pick up trash and clean up the area. While out on the site, the sheriff’s office will alert citizens of their presence in the area to let them know they are working. * Smile Politely | A loving tribute to the valiant guardians of Illinois Terminal: Try as I might, I could not find any information about this massive frieze and these two sculptures. There’s no plaque or anything nearby giving artist information, and the internet yielded nothing. I must assume that these powerful artifacts have always been here, and the Illinois Terminal was simply built around them. * WCIA | Kofusion under investigation after employees allege owners pocket percentage of tips: Kofusion, an Asian restaurant located on Main Street, is under investigation by the Illinois Department of Labor for wage-related violations, a spokesperson with the agency confirmed. WCIA obtained documents from several investigations through a Freedom of Information Act request. The claims are related to the amount tipped employees, both current and former, are paid. Receipts submitted by employees to the IDOL show that employees have to tip out between 5-8% of their earnings if they reach a certain total in sales each shift. * WSIL | Rend Lake College welders partner with Cedarhurst for holiday display creation: Rend Lake College’s welding program, along with their instructor Mike Meinert, created a partnership with Cedarhurst Center for the Arts to help with a decoration at the Lights at Cedarhurst. “We have partnered with Cedarhurst for the last two years, helping them with their Christmas decoration display,” says Meinert. “Asking us to partner with them has been great for both the students in welding as well as the college being able to display the program’s potential in creative design.”
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Energy Storage Brings Cheaper Electricity, Greater Reliability
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois’ economy is growing and as a result, so is electricity demand. This rising demand is projected to outpace supply, which means higher costs and the potential for reliability issues. The solution? Build more clean energy resources while lowering demand peaks. By expanding small- and large-scale energy storage and renewable energy, Illinois can ensure the economy has the electricity it needs to fuel growth. What’s more, renewable energy is low-cost while energy storage optimizes supply and demand, lowering costs for all Illinoisans. Illinois can’t make a successful transition away from expensive fossil fuel plants without enough energy storage. Support comprehensive renewable energy and energy storage policies; learn more here. https://www.solarpowersillinois.com/legislation-hb-5856
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Roundup: Testimony focuses on ex-aides loyalty to Madigan
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Tribune…
* Tribune courts reporter Jason Meisner…
* Related…
* Tribune | Judge denies acquittal bid for ex-AT&T boss accused of bribing Madigan: The ruling by U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman not only sets the stage for a potential retrial for La Schiazza, but also comes as jurors in Madigan’s own corruption trial are hearing the same evidence of the alleged scheme to steer a do-nothing contract to ex-state Rep. Edward Acevedo to help win the powerful speaker’s support on key legislation in Springfield.
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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
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Some not-great state flag redesign contest feedback from WGN
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. With a hat-tip to a commenter, WGN’s B-Team wasn’t all that overwhelmed with the Illinois state flag redesign contest nominees… Oof. * They didn’t appear to notice however that the state’s 1918 Centennial Flag is eligible… ![]()
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Government Spokesperson/Comms goes to the overwhelming crowd choice Jordan Abudayyeh…
Also this: “She hates to lose and works around the clock to make sure that doesn’t happen.” Yep. She coulda been a power forward. * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statehouse-Related Public Relations Spokesperson is once again a tie. Bridget Shanahan…
And Becky Carroll…
Congratulations to our winners! * On to today’s categories…
Best Republican Illinois State Representative As always, do your best to nominate in both categories and explain your nominations. Thanks. * We’re almost to $26,000 in our annual drive to buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks! But we need to keep it going. Lutheran Social Services of Illinois has lots and lots of foster kids in their care network and we’ve raised enough to buy presents for about 40 percent of them. So, please, click here and give whatever you can. Thank you!!!
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Pritzker: Gia Biagi signals a “new era” at IDOT
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * I asked Governor Pritzker yesterday at an unrelated news conference whether Gia Biagi’s appointment as transportation secretary signals a shift toward a more pedestrian- and bike-friendly IDOT…
* Background on Biagi from the Sun-Times…
* Daily Herald…
* Yesterday, the governor was asked if he’s satisfied with the pace of construction on the Kennedy Expressway…
* Some social media react…
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Open thread
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?… Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $24,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. * ICYMI: Pritzker to take aim at hemp-derived delta-8. Crain’s…
- Pritzker has previously said he favors regulating hemp-based products. -The Illinois Senate passed a bill earlier this year that would allow only licensed dispensaries to sell delta-8 products. But the bill didn’t receive a vote in the House. Subscribers were told about this yesterday morning. * At 2 pm the governor Pritzker will announce a new business development initiative. Click here to watch. * Injustice Watch | Property records raise new questions about influential Cook County judge : Judge E. Kenneth Wright Jr. acquired a handful of Chicago homes from the estates of deceased clients when he was a solo law practitioner in the 1990s. Now, two families claim he took advantage of his elderly clients. * WBEZ | What to know about an effort to make college in Illinois more affordable: A group of Illinois legislators and advocates is proposing groundbreaking legislation to try and address the problem. The bill has largely flown under the radar, perhaps because of its very unsexy name: the Adequate and Equitable Funding Formula for Public Universities Act. Or maybe it’s because the formula it prescribes, by necessity and design, is incredibly complex. * WTVO | Pritzker signs Executive Order to explore cheaper home ownership in Illinois: The order creates an Illinois Director of Housing Solutions, who will oversee the exploration of “how Illinois can accelerate plans to expand the supply and access of housing for working families,” according to the Governor’s Office. Nearly one third of Illinois households spend more than 30% of their income on housing, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. * Crain’s | Illinois pensions face near-record $144B funding hole — but show some signs of progress: A new report from the General Assembly’s research unit indicates that, as of June, the five funds collectively were short $143.7 billion of the funds needed to pay promised benefits to current and future retirees. That combined unfunded liability was up $1.5 billion from last year and just $500 million below the high set in 2021. * WAND | Lawmakers fight for affordable housing tax credit, Pritzker signs housing executive order: As more companies locate to Illinois, lawmakers and business leaders know the state needs more housing for workers. Illinois could become the twenty-sixth state to create a tax credit for building affordable housing. The Illinois Housing Council has reported the state has lost 20% of its low-income apartments since 2011. Experts believe the demand for new housing will continue to grow each year, and business leaders said housing is essential to the future of the economy. * NBC Chicago | New Illinois law could impact your job searches in 2025: Under the provisions of HB 3129, which amended the state’s Equal Pay Act, most Illinois-based businesses will be required to include information on pay scale and benefits on job listings beginning on Jan. 1. According to the law, the requirement will apply to all companies with at least 15 employees. * Sun-Times | Pritzker ‘open’ to meeting with Trump border czar, but vows to protect undocumented from deportation: Gov. JB Pritzker said he’ll continue to protect the state’s documented immigrants, migrants and immigrants lacking legal status against the pending deportation plan. “I believe it’s my obligation to protect them too. Those are residents of the state of Illinois.” * Capitol News Illinois | Recent incidents prompt heightened Statehouse security: “Unfortunately, the world is not getting safer,” Amy Williams, senior legal advisor in the secretary of state’s office, told a legislative oversight committee Tuesday. One of the more serious threats, Williams said, occurred in March when security officials were notified of an active shooter threat, prompting a lockdown of the complex. The lockdown was lifted after investigators determined there was no credible threat, according to reports at the time. * WICS | Changes coming to drivers’ licenses in Illinois: The Secretary of State is making adjustments to the way driver’s licenses operate in Illinois. A new law states that by July 2027, the Secretary of State will allow qualified drivers the option to be issued 8 year licenses instead of the common 4 year licenses expiree period. The 8 year license will require a fee of $60. * NBC Chicago | Big changes coming to Illinois driver’s licenses, but there’s a catch: Another significant change will impact Illinois residents sooner than that, with the Secretary of State’s Office having the ability to issue mobile ID cards and driver’s licenses by the end of 2025. The new policy would allow motorists or residents to download a specialized app that would display their identification cards on a mobile device, with law enforcement and other entities required to accept that type of identification. * Block Club | Red Line Extension Zoning Changes Approved By City Council: The 5.6-mile Red Line Extension project aims to move the end of the CTA’s South Side Red Line from 95th Street to 130th Street. The agency plans to build new stations at 103rd and 111th streets near Eggleston Avenue, at Michigan Avenue near 116th Street and at 130th Street near Altgeld Gardens. The zoning changes are needed “to secure permits in advance of construction, which is anticipated to start late next year and [be] completed by 2030,” according to Sonali Tandon, senior manager of strategic planning for the CTA. * Sun-Times | Red Line extension, quantum computing campus get final zoning approval: Ald. Scott Waguespack briefly threatened to block any vote on items sent to the Council by the Zoning Committee because that committee’s report did not include its rejection of a Sterling Bay proposal in Lincoln Park that Waguespack opposes over concerns about traffic, parking and height of the buildings. * NBC Chicago | Organizers reveal secret hack for avoiding major crowds at Christkindlmarket: Leila Schmidt, a manager with the market, told NBC Chicago’s Matt Rodrigues that guests can book what is called a “Culture and Cheer Tour” in Chicago. The tours allow guests in at 10:15 a.m., before the market opens at 11 a.m. It takes attendees on a tour with a German-speaking Christkindlmarket team member “for a behind-the-scenes journey through Daley Plaza before the market opens to the public.” * Crain’s | Michael Jordan’s house sold, at last, for $9.5 million: ordan let go of the Point Lane property, a 56,000-square-foot house on about seven acres, for less than one-third of what he was asking for it in 2012. On Feb. 29, 2012, Leap Day, the basketball icon known for his vertical leap put the home on the market at $29 million. By the time the estate went under contract in September, Jordan had cut the asking price by close to half, to $14,855,000. * Tribune | Candidates for Oak Park and River Forest School Board challenged: Three of the six candidates running for the Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200 School Board have had their nominating papers challenged in an attempt to knock them off the April 1 ballot. Two of the objectors are fellow candidates. Candidate Josh Gertz objected to the nominating papers of Tania Haigh, alleging Haigh did not file the required statement of candidacy. Candidate Nate Mellman has objected to the nominating papers of incumbent Audrey Williams-Lee, the only Black member of the School Board and the only Black candidate in the race, claiming Williams-Lee’s nominating petitions doesn’t state whether she is running for a full term or to fill a vacancy and refers to the 7th District, presumably the 7th Congressional District, instead of OPRF District 200. * Daily Herald | Old Rosemont village hall to meet wrecking ball — but glass mosaic will be saved: The 1960s-era office building, which housed Rosemont’s government offices and public safety department from the 1980s until this year, is across the street from Rivers Casino in Des Plaines. Such a location could be well-suited for one or more restaurants, an entertainment venue, or new office structure with better floor layouts for businesses looking to relocate, said Mayor Brad Stephens. * Daily Herald | George Dunham, Schaumburg’s longest-tenured trustee, stepping down after 33 years: “I am beyond honored and beyond privileged to have served with all of you and with a number of other people that have gone before,” Dunham told his fellow trustees Tuesday while running his final village board meeting on behalf of absent Mayor Tom Dailly. “I will miss this responsibility a great deal, but due to some life changes and some other things, it is time for me to move forward,” he added. * WTVO | Affordable housing, state budget deficit at issue as Northern Illinois lawmakers meet with Rockford-area leaders: Legislators from both Republican and Democratic parties agreed that they would have to make some tough decisions. Rep. John Cabello (R-Machesney Park), said, “The taxpayers just can’t afford to pay any more. So there’s just going to have to be some cuts. And the state has never had a revenue problem. It’s always a problem. So we’re looking forward to trying to help find those cuts that will be as harsh. But there’s got to be some cuts.” * BND | Most of the world’s horseradish is grown in southwest Illinois. What makes area special?: J.R. Kelly Company says “about 2,000” acres of horseradish are farmed in the metro-east. From those farms comes 70% of the United States’ supply, the other 30% coming from California and Wisconsin. That means roughly 16 million pounds of horseradish comes from the metro-east each year. * SJ-R | Springfield-area dive bar named one of best in nation for food: The Curve Inn, 3219 S. Sixth St. Road, is a historic bar and grill established in 1932. Bought in 2002 by husband-wife duo Ray and Ami Merchant, the locale is known for its vibrant atmosphere, the love of all things grunge, pony shoes and national acts on its state-of-the-art beer garden stage.
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Live coverage
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. 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)
Thursday, Dec 12, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $24,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Our work isn’t finished. We’re still raising money to buy presents for foster kids. So, please, click here and contribute if you haven’t yet done so. Thanks! * Governor JB Pritzker…
* WCIA…
* WTTW | More Than 155,000 Standard IDs and Driver’s Licenses Issued to Illinois Noncitizens in 5 Months Since Law Went Into Effect: The law, which went into effect in July, grants noncitizens regardless of immigration status the ability to obtain a standardized state driver’s license replacing the Temporary Visitor Driver’s License, which displayed a purple banner and the words “Not Valid For Identification.” “That purple marker has become a Scarlet Letter, potentially exposing [noncitizens] to judgment, discrimination or immigration enforcement,” Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said during a news conference in July, adding the standard licenses also aims to make roads safer by encouraging more motorists to obtain a license. * WBEZ | Chicago and Illinois have sanctuary laws. What does that actually mean?: There is no legal definition, but it has become an unofficial term for any jurisdiction — whether a state, county or city — that discourages local law enforcement from cooperating with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, officials. That usually means not collecting or providing information about residents’ immigration status — including anyone held at a local jail or prison — unless that person has a federal criminal warrant. * WTTW | Chicago’s Compliance With Consent Decree ‘Unsatisfying’: Federal Judge: U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer’s remarks came during the first status hearing in the federal court case since WTTW News and ProPublica reported that the effort to implement the reforms required by the federal court order known as the consent decree is at a tipping point, with advocates for police reform losing faith in the process and increasingly concerned the opportunity for lasting reform is slipping away. “The level of compliance is unsatisfying to the public,” Pallmeyer said, calling for an “aggressive” reform effort. “I am determined that we will be seeing good progress … in 2025. Let’s accelerate the progress. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson releases 2023 tax returns. Here’s what they say: Johnson’s tax returns show his family brought in just over $176,000 in wages for 2023, his first year as mayor of Chicago. His annual salary was $216,210 that year, and he began his term mid-May. After claiming the standard $27,700 deduction for filing jointly with his wife Stacie and a $6,000 child tax credit, records show Johnson paid $17,302 in federal taxes, an effective tax rate of 11.65%. Johnson didn’t claim any other income from investments, retirement fund distributions or capital gains in 2023. * WGN | Chicago City Hall evacuated due to fire: According to the Chicago Fire Department, a small fire broke out around 11 a.m. on the third-floor of the county building at City Hall, located at 118 North Clark Street. The fire was in a records storage area and was quickly extinguished by crews. * Block Club | Dion’s Chicago Dream Brings Free Fresh Produce Locker To Chatham: Adding a Dream Vault to Discover’s South Side call center is “deepening our ties with Chatham and continuing our mission to make a long-lasting impact,” April Williams-Luster, senior manager of community affairs at Discover, said in a news release. Leaders at Discover Customer Care Center have hired over 1,000 employees from Chatham and surrounding South Side communities to work at the credit card company’s local office, according to a news release. * Block Club | Young West Siders Turn Former Drug Spot Into Art Gallery, Gathering Space: A new community art and gathering space commemorating Austin’s Pink House has taken over a vacant lot near the historical home, looking to add another bright spot to the block. Creating Space, 557 N. Central Ave., features benches, a community-painted shipping container and a model of the Pink House. The iconic neighborhood landmark across the street from the art space fell into disrepair before being sold and refurbished —and painted green — in March 2023. * Block Club | The Onion’s Purchase Of InfoWars Rejected By Bankruptcy Judge: Last month, The Onion announced its acquisition of Jones’ InfoWars with a winning bid of $1.75 million in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation auction. The Onion and parent company Global Tetrahedron worked in cooperation with Jones’ current creditors: several Sandy Hook families who recently won about $1.4 billion in damages in a defamation lawsuit against Jones in 2022. However, the other bidder for Infowars — a Jones-affiliated company called First United American Companies — contested the sale, arguing that the bidding process was fraudulent and that the court-appointed bankruptcy trustee, Christopher Murray, made a bad-faith decision to favor The Onion’s bid for political purposes over First United’s much-higher bid of $3.5 million. * Bloomberg | Lion Electric’s president is gone as EV maker searches for cash: Nicolas Brunet stepped down from the post he’d held for little more than a year, according to a company filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission dated Dec. 1. The same day, Lion Electric announced it would lay off about 400 of 700 employees and suspend work at a plant in Joliet. Lion’s lenders, which include National Bank of Canada, gave the company temporary help to get through Dec. 16, suspending for a second time the covenants on a credit line. The maturity on a separate loan was pushed back to the same date. The extensions were granted to buy time for Lion Electric to find new investors or a buyer. * Tribune | Pairs skater Deanna Stellato-Dudek — a Park Ridge native — becomes Canadian citizen, clearing way for Milan Olympics: Stellato-Dudek began her career as an accomplished individual skater representing the U.S., finishing second at the world junior championships and winning the junior Grand Prix Final. But after suffering a series of hip injuries, she decided to retire in 2001, only to make a comeback as a pairs skater with American partner Nathan Bartholomay in 2016. The pair twice finished third at the U.S. championships before splitting in 2019, and that’s when Stellato-Dudek teamed up with Deschamps, who had separated from his American partner Sydney Kolodziej the previous year. * WBEZ | This Northwestern music detective resurrected a trove of 400-year-old Christmas music: What did “Christmas past” sound like, exactly? Courtesy of a Chicago-area music scholar with a talent for digging up the past, local audiences will be the first in centuries to hear a series of old carols that trace back to 16th and 17th–century Mexico and Guatemala. * TSPR | No change in mindset for WIU president now that she’s no longer ‘interim’: “I think I personally have the same mindset that I’ve had all along, which is to continue to advance WIU.” [Western Illinois University President Kristi Mindrup] said removing interim from her title demonstrates there is stability at WIU. She said the administration will continue working on WIU’s finances and bringing people together for strategic planning. * Bloomberg | Albertsons sues Kroger for breach of contract in failed deal: In a statement, Kroger said Albertsons’ claims are baseless and without merit. It added that Albertsons isn’t entitled to the merger break fee and that Albertsons is seeking to “deflect responsibility following Kroger’s written notification of Albertsons’ multiple breaches of the agreement.” Kroger’s board is evaluating the next steps for the company. Kroger and Albertsons had agreed to the tie-up in October 2022 , saying it would help them compete better against Amazon.com Inc., Walmart Inc. and other bigger, non-unionized rivals. It would have united Kroger, the nation’s biggest grocery company, with Albertsons, the second biggest, to create a company with more than 4,000 stores across 48 states and Washington, DC.
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Roundup: Ex-Rep. Eddie Acevedo must testify at trial, Madigan judge says
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Tribune…
* Sun-Times…
* WTTW…
* More…
* Tribune | ‘What is the story on this?’: Jury in Madigan corruption trial hears more on alleged Chinatown land transfer scheme: In the final days of the spring 2018 legislative session, a lobbyist approached then-Illinois state Rep. Avery Bourne with a slightly cryptic request to add an amendment to the otherwise ordinary land transfer bill she was sponsoring. The amendment would have included the transfer of a state-owned parcel of land in Chinatown to the city, so it could be developed into a mixed-use high-rise. After being handed the draft language, Bourne, a downstate Republican, scribbled some notes, including “Have you spoken to the department?” and “What is the story on this?” It turns out the story was much more convoluted than Bourne could have possibly predicted.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Democratic State House Staff Member goes to Kat Bray…
Kendra Piercy, our 2023 winner, deserves super-honorable mention for her work this year. * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Republican State House Staff Member goes to Dane Thull…
Jen Passwater, the 2023 winner, has been her usual awesome self this year and deserves another shoutout. * On to today’s categories…
Best Statehouse-Related Public Relations Spokesperson As always, do your best to nominate in both categories and please explain your nominations or they won’t count. Have fun! * I told you yesterday that I hoped we could reach $20,000 in our fundraiser to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Well, we exceeded that by a lot and are now at $24,000. Much of that was due to an anonymous donor who contributed $5,000, our largest contribution so far. Many, many thanks to that generous person. But you don’t need a spare $5K to make a difference. Every little bit helps. If $25 is all you can afford, that’s wonderful. Please, click here and help put a smile on the face of a kid whose life has been turned upside down.
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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - 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 Richard, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.
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It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Sen. Rachel Ventura…
* 25 News Now…
* Farm Week…
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This flag might possibly be maybe, kinda, sorta starting to grow on me, but I could change my mind
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. I’ve been thinking that the new state flag should be the Centennial Flag from 1918… ![]() Clean, efficient, gorgeous. * But, as this post’s headline says, this one might be kinda starting to grow on me… ![]() On the minus side, I can easily see why non-Illini fans would hate it because of that “I” - and it is pretty college-looking. But that “I” represents our state’s flagship university and would be recognizable. And there is no orange in it. Also, I think I would fly that flag on my porch and my pontoon boat. On the other hand, meh, I dunno. I just gotta say that this whole state flag commission thing is a complete letdown. Illinois has some of the best commercial and graphic artists in the world, but these ten choices are the best we can do? C’mon. * The opportunity to change a state flag doesn’t come around all that often. But the commission has given us some really lame choices. For instance… ![]() ![]() ![]()
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Speaker Welch on projected deficit: ‘Don’t come in the door looking to spend more money’
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * More from yesterday’s Crain’s Chicago Business breakfast forum…
Please pardon any transcription errors.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please… * This holiday season, your $25 gift can light up a foster child’s Christmas—join us in supporting the 2,530 kids served by LSSI. Click here to donate.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * “With $24,000 raised so far, help us bring Christmas joy to the 2,530 children served by LSSI—just $25 provides a gift for a child in need!” * ICYMI: Pritzker brushes off Trump ‘border czar’ promise to start deportations in Chicago. WGN…
* Related stories… * WCBU | Illinois’ Secretary of State is ’screaming from the rooftops’ to register for REAL ID: “We’ll keep coming back, and again, we are really trying to bring awareness,” Giannoulias said. “We do not want people to get stuck at the airport in May and not be able to board their flight.” In addition to flying domestically, those without a REAL ID won’t be able to visit military bases or secure federal facilities, like nuclear power plants. * WTTW | Amid Concerns Over Paper, Illinois Prisons Would Be Able to Electronically Scan Mail Under New Contract: The contract with ICSolutions, a telecommunications company for correctional facilities across the U.S., states that tablets will be supplied to those in prison with “all necessary hardware, software, and functionalities pre-installed to enable secure and reliable delivery of digital correspondence and mail through the tablet on an individual basis.” * WTVO | New Illinois law will require police training to recognize signs of autism: Hundreds of new laws are set to go into effect in Illinois on January 1st, 2025. One requires police to take specialized training to learn to interact with people with autism. People with autism can sometimes be nonverbal or easily agitated, making stressful situations — like encounters with law enforcement — especially dangerous. * Capitol News Illinois | First look: New Illinois state flag designs unveiled: The Illinois Flag Commission this week released 10 potential new designs for the state flag after lawmakers moved in 2023 to explore replacing the current banner. The commission is planning on setting up a voting system to collect public input on the designs, which it will launch in January. The online vote will be non-binding but will inform a report that the Illinois Flag Commission is set to release in the spring. After the commission delivers its final report – with a recommendation as to whether the state should adopt a new flag – the Illinois General Assembly will have the choice to adopt a new flag or keep the old one. * Tribune | Illinois workers can claim unpaid wages totaling more than $4.2M: More than 5,500 Illinois workers owed back pay totaling more than $4.2 million can claim their unpaid wages online, the U.S. Department of Labor said Tuesday. The funds are the result of investigations by the department’s wage and hour division, which recovers back pay for workers when they are underpaid in violation of laws, including minimum wage and overtime laws. * Farm Week | IFB partnership expands ag news coverage, helps local newspapers: While the press association was thinking about the needs of the newsroom, they were already running Capitol News Illinois, covering state government issues and distributing stories for Illinois newspapers to use as their own content. “We thought, why can’t we do the same thing with agriculture from FarmWeek,” he said, adding that is why IPA and IFB started the Ag News Service, with the first story sent out May 19, 2021.
* Center Square | Johnson says billionaires and visitors would pay for a new football stadium: Even with the city facing a budget deficit of nearly $1 billion, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson says he still favors a new lakefront stadium for the Bears. Johnson said he remains committed to keeping the National Football League club in the city. “The $600 million debt that’s owed on the old stadium is a depreciating asset,” the mayor said. * Sun-Times | High-ranking Chicago cop faces suspensions for disparaging gays, leaking kids’ records to deputy mayor: The first disciplinary case centers on a March 21 incident at City Hall, where Jerome “disseminated a list containing juvenile records” to one of the city’s deputy mayors, according to a summary report of the probe. Internal investigators found that he violated rules that bar cops from improperly handling or releasing records, disobeying an order or directive, and discrediting the department. * Sun-Times | CPS School Board is not expected to act on CEO Pedro Martinez’s contract on Thursday: The Board of Education has not scheduled a vote to fire or otherwise push out Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez this week, which threatens to prolong the drama around his job status through the holidays and into the new year. A meeting agenda posted Tuesday afternoon for the school board’s Thursday evening meeting does not list action toward Martinez’s dismissal or for a separation settlement. The board offered Martinez a buyout last week, but he has so far opted to remain in his role. * Tribune | Training for newly-elected Board of Education members postponed without explanation: After receiving news of the postponement, the new board members expressed frustration with the late notice and their lack of the appropriate background to jump into high-stakes board meetings when they will be seated in January. “I’m ready to do the work that I was elected to do, and I want to learn what I need … to do it right with integrity and honesty, transparency, accountability,” said new board member Ellen Rosenfeld of District 4. * Sun-Times | Scenes of Gov. JB Pritzker aboard the CTA holiday train: Gov. JB Pritzker boarded the Santa’s Express car on the CTA’s Holiday Train on Tuesday at the Clark and Lake station, greeting passengers, handing out candy and taking photos with them. The governor mingled and chatted and met Santa Claus until the train reached the Kedzie station. * Tribune | Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association receives $50 million donation: The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Association on Tuesday announced that it had received a donation of $50 million from benefactors Helen and Sam Zell on behalf of the Zell Family Foundation, with the money planned for the long-term financial health of the orchestra. According to the announcement, the money will “allow the CSOA to continue to advance its strategic goals.” Among those goals are reducing the CSOA’s debt, increasing its endowment and funding musician and staff retirement benefits. The donation will also help support the orchestra’s domestic and international touring, pay for marketing initiatives and go to “special artistic projects shaped by CSO music directors.” * Tribune | After decades of trying, DuPage acquires horse farm link to Morton Arboretum: DuPage County Forest Preserve District officials finally acquired a long-sought, 34.9-acre horse farm in unincorporated Wheaton that the district viewed as a keystone parcel between the 797-acre Danada Forest Preserve and the 1,700-acre Morton Arboretum. The district closed on its $12 million acquisition of the Gladstone Ridge horse farm, at 3S325 Leask Lane on Nov. 26 after decades of attempts at acquiring it from the Bolger family, which had owned the land since 1966. * Daily Herald | ‘So much to be done’: Arlington Heights pastor, 90, reflects on decades of fighting for civil rights: After more than six decades of following in the footsteps of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and promoting his legacy, the Rev. Clyde Brooks doesn’t feel he has accomplished as much as he would have liked. “I don’t think I’ll ever retire because there’s so much to be done … but I am tired,” the 90-year-old Arlington Heights pastor said of his activism, which he started right out of college, largely inspired by King. * Daily Herald | 1,400 council meetings later: Palatine honors Solberg for 37 years of service: Solberg recently stepped down from his post after 37 years of service. Joe Falkenberg stepped in to succeed Solberg in District 4. Mayor Jim Schwantz calculated Solberg attended approximately 1,400 village council meetings and approximately 450 liquor commission meetings. “An unbelievable amount of time spent serving the Village of Palatine,” Schwantz said. * NYT | R.F.K. Jr.’s War on Corn Syrup Brings a Health Crusade to Trump Country: “It’d have a huge impact,” a 37-year-old electrician who would identify himself by only his first name, Tyler, said of Mr. Kennedy’s declaration of war on corn syrup and corn oil. He was grabbing lunch at Debbie’s Diner in the shadow of the mills. “That shuts down Central Illinois, if A.D.M. shuts down.” * PJ Star | Chemical plant given approval to build facility along Illinois River in Peoria: A chemical plant that Peoria officials say will bring practices that are “sensitive” to environmental concerns will be allowed to build a new facility along the Illinois River. The Peoria City Council voted 9-1 to allow Viridis Chemical to move its operations from Columbus, Nebraska, to Peoria and construct a new facility behind the existing BioUrja ethanol facility off Southwest Washington Street. * Semafor | Arctic emitted more carbon than it stored for first time in 2024, US report finds: About 1.5 trillion tons of carbon remains stored in permafrost, which is more carbon than in all the trees in all the world’s forests, according to NPR, and unleashing that carbon could significantly accelerate the effects of climate change. The warming arctic is already having noticeable ecological impacts: Inland caribou populations have declined by 65% over recent decades, according tot the NOAA report. * The Atlantic | Why Democrats Got the Politics of Immigration So Wrong for So Long: The election of Donald Trump this year shattered a long-standing piece of conventional wisdom in American politics: that Latinos will vote overwhelmingly for whichever party has the more liberal approach to immigration, making them a reliable Democratic constituency. This view was once so pervasive that the Republican Party’s 2012 post-election autopsy concluded that the party needed to move left on immigration to win over more nonwhite voters.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. You can click here and here to follow the Madigan trial. Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $24,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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Governor appoints acting IDOT Secretary after Osman retires (Updated)
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * News…
* Press release…
…Adding… Biagi was interviewed about a year ago, and here’s just a little of what she said…
…Adding… American Council of Engineering Companies of Illinois…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Don’t forget about our LSSI fundraiser to give foster kids Christmas presents! Donate by clicking here. * Tribune…
* Crain’s…
* Tribune | ‘What is the story on this?’: Jury in Madigan corruption trial hears more on alleged Chinatown land transfer scheme: In the final days of the spring 2018 legislative session, then-Illinois state Rep. Avery Bourne had a lobbyist approach her with a slightly cryptic request to add an amendment to the otherwise ordinary land transfer bill she was sponsoring. The amendment would have included the transfer of a state-owned parcel of land in Chinatown to the city, so it could be developed into a mixed-use high-rise. After being handed the draft language, Bourne, a downstate Republican, scribbled some notes, including “Have you spoken to the department?” and “What is the story on this?” * Crain’s | Welch, Harmon tell Bears, Sox to look elsewhere as tough budget year looms: “I don’t know anyone who wants us to give billionaires a tax-funded stadium,” Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said this morning during Crain’s Chicago Business Power Breakfast. “People are talking about groceries and rent. For us to give billionaires taxpayer money to fund a stadium would be the last things voters want us to do.” Senate President Don Harmon added, “There is absolutely no appetite in Springfield to spend taxpayer dollars to subsidize billionaire sports franchises—plural. If this investment should be made, it should be made privately. Both the White Sox and the Bears are playing at perfectly serviceable facilities that the taxpayers have paid a large chunk for, and we haven’t even paid them off yet.” * Chicago Reader | Illinois is a haven for reproductive rights: The Reproductive Health Act stipulates that state-regulated insurance policies that provide pregnancy care must also cover pregnancy termination, both pharmaceutical and surgical. There’s nothing in the Reproductive Health Act that would force the individual plaintiffs in this case, or anyone else, to have an abortion. Theirs is a more subtle complaint: they may never have to personally experience an unwanted pregnancy and childbirth (most of them are men), but they are all suffering pangs of conscience. * Capitol News Illinois | As budget tightens, report finds Illinois better prepared for recession than in recent past: No state is immune from the negative effects of an economic downturn, but Illinois is more prepared today than it was for the Great Recession of 2007-2009 or the COVID-19 recession of 2020, according to a new report from the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign’s Project for Middle Class Renewal. * Sun-Times | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s $68.5 million property tax increase squeaks through Finance Committee: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to balance his revamped $17.3 billion budget with a $68.5 million property tax increase — and by raising taxes on everything from cloud computing, streaming services and parking to downtown congestion and plastic bags — squeaked through a City Council committee Tuesday. The Finance Committee’s 14-12 vote sets the stage for the marathon budget stalemate to potentially end Friday, averting what might have been Chicago’s first budget shutdown. * WBBM | Chicago union workers rally against hotel tax funding possible new sports stadiums: They’re calling for the elimination of the tax, with the money instead going towards the paychecks of Chicago hotel room attendants. “That would mean an extra $14,000 per year for me and my family,” said Blackstone Hotel room attendant Latonia Marshall. “I would be able to help my son through college. I would be able to keep up with the rising property tax.” * Crain’s | Walgreens sale would end century-plus saga for one of Chicago’s most iconic brands: The potential sale of Walgreens to a private-equity investor would bring an end to one of the Chicago business community’s most enduring success stories. Not that the Walgreens brand would disappear. It’s likely the name will endure well beyond a potential sale to Sycamore Partners — or any other private investor, for that matter. But such a deal would end local control of a Chicago institution — one that has been an independent entity since Charles Walgreen Sr. purchased the Chicago drugstore where he worked as a pharmacist, and which now stands as the Chicago area’s largest publicly traded company. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson says top adviser voting in Texas is ‘personal matter’: During his first remarks to reporters since the Tribune reported last week that Jason Lee voted in the November presidential election in person on Election Day in Houston, Johnson said “this is a matter that is being looked into” but did not elaborate on what he meant. Asked who is investigating Lee’s voting and residency history, Johnson said, “As I understand, this will be the responsibility of the state of Texas to make some level of determination.” * Chicago Mag | Steve Newcomb: The Highway Hero: It was just before 2 a.m., and Illinois Department of Transportation minuteman Steve Newcomb was driving his tow truck along the Kennedy Expressway, a few hours into his shift patrolling the area’s highways. During his five years in this role, the Plainfield resident has helped motorists with all manner of breakdowns and mishaps. On this particular morning in March of this year, he spotted a car with its hood in flames under the overpass at Addison Street. His first instinct was to push the car out of the way so the fire wouldn’t damage the structure. “If it gets too hot, the beams get compromised or the electric can burn up,” he explains. * Daily Southtown | Homer Glen Electoral Board removes candidate, finding nickname was a slogan: The Homer Glen Electoral Board ruled Monday village trustee candidate Heidi “Hadley” Pacella would not appear on the ballot because her name on her nominating petitions amounted to a political slogan. Pericles Abbasi, an attorney for Craig Carlson who objected to 14 petitions, said Pacella using “Hadley” in her nominating petitions runs afoul of state election code, which bars political slogans in candidates’ names. * Tribune | Wind Creek opening boosts Illinois casino revenue in November as Bally’s Chicago numbers drop: Wind Creek Chicago Southland generated some big numbers during its first three weeks of operations in November, boosting statewide casino revenue to its best month of the year. The new south suburban casino, which opened Nov. 11 to large crowds, ranked fifth last month among the state’s 16 casinos with nearly $10.2 million in adjusted gross receipts, and drew more than 141,500 visitors, second only to perennial leader Rivers Casino Des Plaines. * Sun-Times | Labor department investigating HelloFresh for child labor violations at Aurora facility: An Aurora facility for meal-kit delivery service Factor75, owned by HelloFresh, is under federal investigation for allegedly working with underage migrants, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Labor confirmed. Cristobal Cavazos, an activist with the suburban group Immigrant Solidarity DuPage who helped report the alleged violations to federal authorities, told ABC News that several teenagers, some of whom immigrated from Guatemala, were working nights at the facility run by Midway Staffing, a Hillside, IL-based temporary staffing agency. * Tribune | Shuttered Catholic Charities food pantry makes ‘serendipitous’ freezer donation to Maine Township: Maine Township Supervisor Karen Dimond told Pioneer Press the food pantry received two large freezers in November, which are approximately 6 feet tall and roughly 4 feet wide, after Catholic Charities – a nonprofit community organization – closed a facility at 1717 Rand Road in October. “It was sort of serendipitous,” she said. “We did get freezers and some other furniture from Catholic Charities. They were very generous in getting those to us and we are able to use them.” * Animal Legal Defense Fund | Evanston, Illinois Passes Ordinance Prohibiting Cat Declawing: This week, the Evanston City Council passed an ordinance to prohibit the declawing of cats. Cat declawing is an invasive surgical operation that is akin to cutting off the last knuckle of a human finger. Declawing can cause lifelong medical issues for cats, including permanent disability, nerve damage, chronic back pain, and lameness. “We are grateful to the Evanston City Council for prohibiting cruel cat declaw surgery, which causes chronic injury and pain,” said Animal Legal Defense Fund Strategic Legislative Affairs Manager Alicia Prygoski. “Cats need their claws to carry out many different natural behaviors and their health should not be jeopardized for the convenience of their owners.” * Patch | Lake Forest Space Pioneer Jim Lovell Honored By Illinois Senate With Statewide Recognition: The Illinois State Senate has declared Dec. 21, 2024, as Captain James A. Lovell Day in honor of the Lake Forest resident and oldest living NASA astronaut. Senate Resolution 1280, recognizing Lovell for his leadership and his decades of service to the nation, was adopted Nov. 21 and sponsored by Sen. Julie Morrison, a Lake Forest Democrat, with chief co-sponsor Sen. Steve McClure, a Litchfield Republican. * KSDK | An Illinois mayoral candidate didn’t staple her documents together; now she can’t run: Mayor Parkinson declined to answer questions about Millas’ involvement in mounting the objection, other than to redirect questions to her. Neither Millas nor her mother offered any explanation for their interest in the race, nor did they describe how they became aware of the absence of a staple in the nominating papers. * WSIL | Locals react to Little Grassy Lake being drain due to safety concern for local communities: Soon the Little Grassy Lake will be looking different. It will have a lot less water than it has now. Officials with the National Wildlife Refuge say it’s to protect nearby communities. Justin Sexton is the manager at the Crab Orchard Wildlife Refuge. He says the spillway on Little Grassy Lake was originally built in 1942, and it has reached its life expectancy. He says it could fail during an extreme weather event. * WCIA | AT&T to ditch old copper phone lines for most: How will you be impacted?: If you’re still using a landline phone, a change by AT&T may soon impact you. During its recent Analyst & Investor Day, AT&T announced it is “actively working to exit its legacy copper network operations across the large majority of its wireline footprint by the end of 2029.” The company cited its ongoing fiber expansion, saying it “will greatly increase [AT&T’s] opportunity to serve customers how they want to be served.” * AP | US wildlife officials plan to label monarch butterflies as threatened species: U.S. wildlife officials announced a decision Tuesday to extend federal protections to monarch butterflies after years of warnings from environmentalists that populations are shrinking and the beloved pollinator may not survive climate change. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service plans to add the butterfly to the threatened species list by the end of next year following an extensive public comment period. * The Atlantic | The ‘Mainstream Media’ Has Already Lost: Nothing symbolizes the changed media landscape of this past election more than Rogan’s casual brush-off. Within a week, his interview with Trump racked up more than 40 million views on YouTube alone, and millions more on other platforms. No single event, apart from the Harris-Trump debate, had a bigger audience this election cycle. By comparison, Harris’s contentious interview with Bret Baier on Fox News, the most popular of the cable networks, drew 8 million viewers to the live broadcast, and another 6.5 million on YouTube.
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Ten finalists chosen in state flag redesign contest
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here to see the ten finalists. Press release…
Click here and tell us which is your favorite.
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RIP JBT
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Ten years ago, I received a phone call in the middle of the night to inform me that Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka had died…
The blog post I wrote later that morning is here. * My weekly newspaper column…
Neil Steinberg’s column from that time is also definitely worth a read, as is former Senate President John Cullerton’s op-ed. ![]()
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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Pace Rideshare Access Program subsidizes Uber trips, leaving riders with a co-pay of just $2. The impact: “This program has been a godsend for me. It offers flexibility, independence, freedom and the ability to maintain a beautiful life on so many levels,” says one rider. CTA: See how it works.
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Welch and Harmon squash expectations on most big Chicago-related asks (Updated)
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * House Speaker Chris Welch and Senate President Don Harmon sat down with Crain’s Chicago Business’ Greg Hinz this morning. Let’s start with the CTU’s demand for $1.1 billion from the state…
* On the mass transit fiscal cliff…
Rich has been telling subscribers about the coordination aspect of transit reform. * Yep, we’re still talking about the Bears…
* Chicago’s budget…
Discuss. …Adding… National Association of Social Workers…
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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Democratic State Senate Staff Member goes to Mary Hanahan…
Runner-up is Jon Peebles…
* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Republican State Senate Staff Member goes to Bill Schneider…
Honorable mention goes to the relentless Whitney Barnes. * On to today’s categories…
Best Republican State House Staff Member This is for both the campaign and government sides. Please try to nominate in both categories if you can and explain your choices or they won’t count. Thanks. * A big thank you to y’all from LSSI…
It may not be possible, but I would really like to see us reach $20,000 today. I don’t want any foster kids left out of our Christmas present drive, and reaching that temporary goal would get us about a third of the way there. So, please, click here. Thanks!
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Open thread
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois? Start your morning with kindness by donating to LSSI’s Christmas toy drive and bringing joy to a child in need.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Start your morning right by bringing joy to a foster child this holiday season. Your donation helps provide gifts and spread warmth to children in need. Make this season magical—click here to give today and brighten a child’s holiday! * ICYMI: Chicago to be ground zero for mass deportations, Trump border czar tells Illinois Republicans. Sun-Times…
- “Chicago’s in trouble because your mayor sucks and your governor sucks,” Homan said to cheers. Later, he called both “terrible,” while also telling them to “come to the table.” - Homan threatened to arrest people who are found with the criminals he is targeting — regardless of whether he has cooperation from the city. The governor will be at the CTA Pink Line at 3:10 pm to celebrate the holiday season with the CTA Holiday Train. * Capitol News Illinois | Appeals court keeps Illinois’ assault weapons ban in place: In a brief, two-page order issued Thursday, Dec. 5, a three-judge panel of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago granted the state’s motion to delay the order, noting that just a year earlier the circuit refused to grant a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the same law. * WBEZ | Chicago mayor’s chief of staff says ‘peace circle’ plan was for other problems a former top staffer faced: In an interview with WBEZ, Cristina Pacione-Zayas defended the actions she took in response to three complaints made against Reese but said the “peace circle” idea was meant to address other broader communication and management issues that Reese faced. She said those broader issues put Reese on a performance improvement plan, and Pacione-Zayas indicated those issues predated the allegations of misogyny or sexual harassment. * Capitol News Illinois | Prosecution could rest next week in ‘Sphinx’ Madigan’s corruption trial: Though the visual representation of a sphinx is often associated with the massive Egyptian statue near the Great Pyramids of Giza, representations of sphinx-like characters in popular culture come from Greek mythology. “Oedipus Rex” depicts a sphinx as creature that won’t let anyone past unless they answer a riddle, and if answered incorrectly, the sphinx kills and eats the target. Madigan attorney Lari Dierks tried to draw the rationale of Madigan’s “Sphinx” nickname out of Budzinski, asking if it was a joke about the speaker’s reputation in Springfield. But Budzinski demurred, saying it wasn’t her nickname and she never had conversations with other campaign staff about its origins. * ABC Chicago | State representative’s staffer sickened, hospitalized after opening mail at Aurora office: The Aurora building housing State Rep. Barbara Hernandez’s office was evacuated on Monday afternoon. Police confirmed that one of her staffers became sick after opening a piece of mail. That employee was taken to the hospital in stable condition. Police said they are still working to find out what a substance in the mail was and whether that was what made Hernandez’s staffer sick. * Patch | Advocates Push For Passage Of Bill Mandating Hate Crime Training For Police In Illinois: At a news conference convened at the Chicago Urban League, the coalition of groups called for state representatives to pass the bill during January’s lame duck session. The push comes as Illinois has seen a 362 percent increase in reported hate crimes in recent years, rising from 70 incidents in 2019 to 324 incidents in 2023, according to data voluntarily submitted to the FBI by law enforcement agencies. * Sun-Times | IHSA reacts to public outcry, switches to a one-year classification cycle: “The IHSA Board of Directors has heard the concerns from the public, and more importantly, from our member schools in the days since the completion of the IHSA’s fall state tournaments. As a Board, we recognize certain trends and data within IHSA sports and activities that lead us to believe that some changes are necessary.” The previous two-year classification cycle occasionally led to large schools competing against significantly smaller schools in state competitions. The IHSA determined which class a team would play in by the average of the school’s enrollment during a two-year period. That enrollment number was then used for two years. * WTTW | Mayor Brandon Johnson Says City Should Not ‘Tolerate’ Budget That Fires Workers, Cuts Services: Johnson said his latest budget proposal, which faces two key tests on Tuesday, meets Chicagoans’ critical needs at a difficult economic moment. “The other thing that’s important in this budget is that clearly there are a lot of human needs and these human needs are rights and so one of the other things that’s important about making sure that we meet the human needs of individuals is that we don’t cut services and lay people off,” Johnson said at an unrelated news conference. “A budget that would lay off workers and cut services is just, you know, one that should not be tolerated by any Chicagoan. And I know these are difficult financial times, not just in Chicago, but around the globe.” * ABC Chicago | City Council Finance, Budget committees set to consider Mayor Brandon Johnson’s proposal: Both the city’s Finance and Budget committees meet Tuesday to review the proposed budget. The proposed budget must pass through the committees before a full City Council vote, which could come as soon as Friday. The proposed budget includes a $68/5 million property tax hike, but no layoffs. * Tribune | City delays permit decision for Pilsen scrap metal shredder, residents feel neglected: Missing its own deadline Monday, the city yet again delayed a decision on the fate of a scrap metal shredder in Pilsen with a history of environmental violations. The permit is largely retroactive at this point, covering operations from 2021 to 2024, but the city’s inaction has left the shredder’s neighbors concerned for their health. Sims Metal Management’s operating permit for its facility at 2500 S. Paulina St. expired in November 2021. A month earlier, it was sued by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul for failing to show it was reducing air pollution there. This came after Sims was fined in 2018 by the U.S. EPA for emitting high levels of harmful particulate matter. * WTTW | Chicago Police Oversight Board President: I’ve Been Pulled Over 5 Times in 2024 by CPD: Driver told WTTW News officers stopped him twice for having an expired license registration sticker and once on suspicion of making an unsafe lane change. Driver said officers refused to give him a reason for the other two stops. Driver was not ticketed during any of the stops, he said. * Crain’s | Chicago hospitals earn high marks in maternity care ratings list: New this year, U.S. News said in a press release, is an increased emphasis on racial and ethnic disparities in treatment. How transparent hospitals are about reporting disparities now accounts for 10% of their scores, an increase from 5% in previous years. U.S. News also introduced measures of labor and delivery representation by race and ethnicity, which it said describe how well the racial and ethnic makeup of the babies born at a hospital reflects the racial and ethnic makeup of young children in the surrounding community. However, that measure is not yet included in the list’s scoring methodology. * Crain’s | Facility to turn Chicago’s waste into renewable natural gas planned for northwest Indiana: he facility, expected to be operational by the end of 2026, will receive waste in a variety of forms, including low-strength materials such as liquids. The contents will then go into a tank and be converted into bio-methane, which will be injected into a pipeline on the facility. “At the highest level, what we’re doing is building a facility that will accept waste from the greater Chicago area and convert it away from landfills… The byproduct of when we extract the bio-methane is a high-ratio fertilizer product, which will go back into the soil as an organic product,” Roshan Vani, CEO of Nexus W2V, told Crain’s. * Block Club | Rogers Park Men’s Homeless Shelter Opens On Clark Street: The 10,000-square-foot building, which used to be a medical office, has 35 rooms, each with two beds, to house 70 men, North Side Housing Board President Peter Marchese said. The facility also has a commercial kitchen to serve residents three meals a day plus space for 24-hour wrap-around services, showers, laundry and more, Marchese said. * Crain’s | The Michelin stars are out and Chicago has a new entrant: Cariño, a Mexican- and wider Latin American-inspired concept in Uptown by chef Chef Norman Fenton, is the latest Chicago restaurant to gain a Michelin star. The restaurant, which is Fenton’s first venture, opened at the end of 2023. “The inspectors were unanimously impressed with Chef Norman Fenton’s creations, which celebrate Mexican cuisine in an ambitious manner,” wrote Gwendal Poullennec, the international director of the Michelin Guides. “Our inspectors were delighted by the bold and creative tasting menu in addition to the diligent and engaging service from the restaurant’s staff.” * Sun-Times | Are you ready for some misery, Bears fans?: The Bears are 4-9 and have lost their last seven games, sometimes in ways that are almost incomprehensible. They were beaten so badly Sunday by the 49ers that you wished a peewee-league slaughter rule were in effect. Four yards of offense in the first half? A defense that gave up 319 yards in the first half? A 38-13 final score? It was a failure on every level, like a Christmas pie gone bad and served to everybody in the organization. * Crain’s | JB Pritzker’s property tax bill will be nearly $1.29 million: In the wake of their recent purchase of $19 million worth of Gold Coast condos, Gov. JB Pritzker and first lady MK Pritzker can expect to receive property tax bills totaling almost $1.29 million in early 2025. This makes the Pritzkers the biggest residential property taxpayers in Cook County by far. The next-highest bill, according to Crain’s research, is the $635,620 total for Citadel chief Ken Griffin’s three yet-unsold downtown penthouses. * Press Release | Reform for Illinois is Appealing Court Ruling Limiting Local Adoption of Ranked-Choice Voting : Reform for Illinois (RFI) will appeal a recent court decision limiting the power of Illinois municipalities to adopt ranked-choice voting – and potentially other reforms – for their local elections. RFI, which advocates for empowering voters with fair, accessible elections, filed a notice of appeal following a November 12 ruling by Cook County Judge Maureen Ward Kirby, which dismissed the group’s lawsuit seeking to require the Cook County Clerk to implement ranked-choice voting in Evanston. * WSPSY | Kane County prosecutor denies wrongdoing in crash case involving deputy’s death: The Kane County State’s Attorney says she will welcome any review or audit of the case involving Nathan Sweeney, who is accused of causing a crash that killed a DeKalb County deputy in the spring. State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser was accused in a letter from the Illinois Secretary of State’s Office of illegally “masking” a past DUI conviction against Sweeney, which should have prevented him from holding a commercial driver’s license. Sweeney was driving a semi-truck at the time of the crash that killed Deputy Christina Musil. He is charged with DUI and reckless homicide. * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights board inks deal to lower Bears’ tax bill until stadium construction begins: The 8-0 vote of the mayor and trustees is the first step in the approval process for the 12-page memorandum of understanding, which would lower the Bears’ tax bill at the 326-acre Arlington Park property at least through 2027. The Palatine Township Elementary District 15 school board will consider the agreement Wednesday night, and the boards for Northwest Suburban High School District 214 and Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211 will take votes Thursday night. * Daily Southtown | Book banning remains relevant topic in Lockport High School District 205 board race: The district saw two candidates backed by the conservative group We The Parents Illinois win board seats last year, Martin Boersma and Sandra Chimon Rogers. However, neither candidate finished his or her term, as Boersma resigned seven months into his term and Chimon Rogers died in June after a long-term illness. Candace Gerritson and Lance Thies were appointed to the vacancies, and both are seeking to keep those seats in April. “We have an unusual election,” Lockport 205 Superintendent Robert McBride said, due to the changes in board seats between election years. He said appointments must be voted on in the following election cycle, which is why so many seats are open up next year. * Daily Herald | Bodycam video shows moment garbage truck exploded in Arlington Heights, injuring first responders: A shock wave from the blast caused significant property damage throughout the area and debris from the explosion was located several blocks away. The cause of the explosion remains under investigation. However, investigators believe trash in the garbage truck’s hopper fueled the fire, which in turn caused heat to rise to the roof, which is where the vehicle’s compressed natural gas tanks are. * SJ-R | Springfield school buses see improved staffing, wage increases: While the COVID-19 pandemic created staffing shortages for school bus companies; First Student Inc. that services Springfield District 186 schools is nearly fully staffed again. 185 drivers are now employed to operate across 175 routes in place for District 186, marking the first time in years that all routes are consistently covered, and with spare wheelmen and women available to assist with arising day-to-day needs. * Illinois Times | Amazon hub is coming to Springfield: Work on the former farm field began Dec. 2 to prepare the site and contain any erosion, Keith Larreau, a superintendent for California-based general contractor KPRS Construction Services Inc., told Illinois Times when a reporter visited the site Dec. 6. Ryan McCrady, president and chief executive officer of Springfield Sangamon Growth Alliance, “We’d be very excited to have Amazon as part of our community.” * WAND | Fire at former Jacksonville Developmental Center sparks frustration from city: Since August, there have been two large fires on the JDC campus, and Jacksonville city leaders are reaching a breaking point. They are tired of being responsible for the state-owned facility. “It’s somewhat of an unfunded mandate to the city that, ‘Hey, it’s our building but you’re going to have to put the fire out. And if things happen, it’s on you,’” said Jacksonville Mayor Andy Ezard. * Pantagraph | Shelby County coroner’s cause of death was drowning; funeral services set: Shelby County Sheriff Brian McReynolds, speaking with the Herald & Review, listed drowning as the “preliminary cause” after an autopsy in Bloomington Saturday. But he said that did not rule out some sort of preceding medical event. “That is a possibility, but we don’t know at this time,” said McReynolds. “I think they are waiting on other blood tests that might show enzymes and proteins in the blood that could answer that question,” he added. “But at this time we don’t know if (some kind of medical emergency before the drowning) is possible.” * ABC Chicago | Illinois man accused of threatening to kill Presidents Joe Biden, Barack Obama; Jill Biden; Mayorkas: Charges have been filed against an Illinois man for allegedly threatening to kill President Joe Biden and others. Authorities say Jacob Sterr of Springfield made death threats on social media against the president, first lady, former President Barack Obama and Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas last month. * CNN | Google says it has cracked a quantum computing challenge with new chip: The results released Monday came from a new chip called Willow that has 105 “qubits,” which are the building blocks of quantum computers. Qubits are fast but error-prone, because they can be jostled by something as small as a subatomic particle from events in outer space.
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here to help LSSI bring Holiday joy to children in foster care. 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, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $17,000! Thank you to all those who donated! But there’s so much more Holiday joy to spread, so please give if you’re able.
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