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Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As I write this, we have raised $44,742 to help Lutheran Social Services of Illinois buy Christmas presents for foster kids. I didn’t expect we’d raise that much because we didn’t have the $10,000 matching donation we received last year. So, we should all be pleased at what we’ve done.

It’s not too late to donate, though. Click here if you’ve been putting it off. Thanks!!!

* Once again, it’s time for our annual tradition of Christmas songs loved by my mother when she was a child. Here’s Frosty the Snowman, Suzy Snowflake and Hardrock, Coco and Joe

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And the winners are…

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The 2024 Wordslinger Golden Horseshoe Award for Best CapitolFax.com Commenter goes to Stephanie Kollmann

“Stephanie Kollmann is always brilliant, always bold, and doesn’t even hide behind a fake name like the rest of us cowards.”

I would like to add my name to the ranks of “Cowards for Stephanie Kollmann.”

In a world of self-righteous loudmouths [double thumbs pointing back at himself], she’s a source of genuine subject matter expertise and her virtuous advocacy has never been more necessary (and admirable).

We’re all better for her participation.

– MrJM


[From Rich: That was one heck of a nomination from a previous Wordslinger award-winner. Congrats, Stephanie, you earned it.]

* Congratulations to everyone who won this year…

    Best Place to Gather for Dinner During Session Weeks: Saputo’s

    Best Place to Gather for Drinks, Etc. During Session Weeks: JP Kelly’s

    Best Senate Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Dana Hooven

    Best Senate Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Thera Bond

    Best House Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Breeann Steinacher

    Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager: Caitlin Anderson

    Best Republican State Senate Staff Member: Bill Schneider

    Best Democratic State Senate Staff Member: Mary Hanahan

    Best Republican State House Staff Member: Dane Thull

    Best Democratic State House Staff Member: Kat Bray

    Best Statehouse-Related Public Relations Spokesperson: Bridget Shanahan and Becky Carroll

    Best Government Spokesperson/Comms: Jordan Abudayyeh

    Best Republican Illinois State Representative: Rep. Jeff Keicher

    Best Democratic Illinois State Representative: Rep. Lindsey LaPointe

    Best Republican Illinois State Senator: Senate Republican Leader John Curran

    Best Democratic Illinois State Senator: Sen. Patrick Joyce

    Best Contract Lobbyist: Liz Brown-Reeves and Litesa Wallace

    Best In-House Lobbyist: Frances Orenic

    Best Legislative Liaison: Wendy Butler

    Best Do-Gooder Lobbyist: John Amdor

    Best Statewide Staffer: Anne Caprara

    Best State Agency Director: Kristin Richards

    Best Statewide Officer: Auditor General Frank Mautino

    Best US Representative: Lauren Underwood

    Wordslinger Golden Horseshoe Award for Best CapitolFax.com: Commenter Stephanie Kollmann

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to previous editions

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker signed seven bills into law today…

Bill Number: SB0688

Description: Clarifies the service fee collection process for the Cook County Sheriff’s Office.

Action: Signed

Effective: January 1, 2025

Bill Number: SB2703

Description: Extends the estimated dates of completion of redevelopment projects located in tax increment financing districts and retirement of obligations issued for various municipal ordinances.

Action: Signed

Effective: December 31, 2024

Bill Number: SB3410

Description: Extends various reporting deadlines and task forces expiration dates, and amends the Unemployment Insurance Act to amend effective date of changes to benefits and remove contingent provisions.

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediately

Bill Number: HB0222

Description: Makes changes to the civil law to establish that no contributory fault can be attributed to a plaintiff for personal injury actions based on childhood sexual abuse.

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediately

Bill Number: HB0814

Description: Requires that a current survey of day care facilities conducted by the Department of Human Services be updated every four years and include stakeholder feedback in the survey update process.

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediately

Bill Number: HB4636

Description: Amends the Illinois Income Tax Act to clarify eligibility for tax credits for wages paid to returning citizens, amends the Live Theater Production Tax Credit Act to insert correct cap and exemption for credit, amends the DCEO Music and Musicians Tax Credit and Jobs Act to make definitions and requirements consistent, makes technical changes to the Use Tax Act with respect to trailer leases, makes technical change to the Tobacco Products Tax Act with respect to license validity, amends the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act with respect to prepaid telephone calling arrangements, changes deadline to report an ordinance or resolution imposing a tax to the Department of Revenue to April 1st (previously May 1st), and provides that a non-home rule municipality may use the proceeds of the municipal retailers’ occupation tax or the municipal service occupation tax for municipal operations in addition to or in lieu of any expenditure on public infrastructure or for property tax relief.

Action: Signed

Effective: Immediately

Bill Number: HB5172

Description: Codifies the right to language access services throughout the administrative hearing process.

Action: Signed

Effective: July 1, 2025

* A little piece of Illinois history

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | State lawmakers consider Tier 2 pension changes as new session approaches: Lawmakers are tentatively scheduled to be back in Springfield on Jan. 4 for a lame duck session before new lawmakers are sworn in on Jan. 8. “Whether that will all come together in a fashion that is ready for lame duck or not remains to be seen,” Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, D-Oswego, told Capitol News Illinois. “I do think we’re closer than we were than at the beginning of the legislative session.”

* WSPY | Legislation adjusting weight limits for vehicles with alternative fuel sources part of Benton’s busy spring legislative session work: One piece of legislation Benton has been working on is House Bill 5882, which would amend the state’s vehicle code to increase the weight limit on vehicles that run on alternative fuels. He says one company in his district is looking at rolling out a hydrogen-powered vehicle as a transport between their facilities in Plainfield.

*** Statewide ***

* IPE Real Assets | Illinois Firefighters pension fund adds $80m to new infrastructure allocation: The Firefighters Pension Investment Fund (FPIF) of Illinois has continued to build up its new infrastructure allocation by investing $80m (€76.1m) in infrastructure funds managed by Stonepeak and Global Infrastructure Partners. The pension fund confirmed to IPE Real Assets that has committed $40m to Stonepeak Fund V and invested the same amount in GIP Fund V. The moves follow a request for proposal issued earlier this year to select one to three infrastructure fund managers.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Attorney for CPS CEO Pedro Martinez threatens to sue school board if they move forward with firing: The attorney for embattled Chicago Public Schools chief Pedro Martinez sent a letter to the sitting school board Friday asking for clarification about whether they will move to fire the CEO by 2 p.m. and threatening legal action to prevent it if so. Any action against Martinez taken Friday would be a breach of their fiduciary duty, wrote Maritnez’s lawyer William J. Quinlan of the Quinlan Law Firm LLC, and raised a host of other concerns, including whether the new board members had the authority to fire him or appoint a co-CEO to work alongside him.

* WGN | Nearly 4 million expected to pass through Chicago airports for holidays: An estimated 3.6 million travelers are expected to pass through Chicago’s two airports between Friday and January 2. The busiest days are expected to be Monday at O’Hare and the following Sunday at Midway. Friday morning flights out of O’Hare were delayed due to a ground stop caused by snow and ice.

* Block Club | 94-Year-Old Midway Airport Volunteer Wants To Ease Your Holiday Travel Dread: ‘You Got To Be Cool’: Robert Garrison takes work where he can get it. Busboy. Dining car waiter. Librarian. Taxi driver. Mail sorter. Doorman. House cleaner. “I do the best I can with them,” Garrison said. “You put yourself into it, you like what you’re doing at the moment … it keeps you healthy.” But for the past year, the gregarious service worker, who turned 94 in August, has settled into what he says may be his last job: manning the information desk in the lower-level baggage claim area of Midway Airport.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Injustice Watch | Sheriff Tom Dart skips hearing on Cook County Jail deaths as families offer tearful testimony: Commissioner Tara Stamps said testimony from Sampson and the other families turned the hearing into “one of the heaviest meetings I’ve participated in.” […] “My first question is where is Sheriff Dart? Is he supposed to be here?” Stamps asked jail officials representing Dart’s office at the hearing. “This is one of the times that I personally would have wanted him to be present — to hear the testimony, the hurt of the families who’ve been impacted by the deaths of their loved ones in his care,” Stamps said.

* WBEZ | Cook County Board of Review fires aide with criminal background: Board of Review Commissioner Samantha Steele initially defended giving Jon Snyder a job on her staff at the obscure but influential agency, where Steele is one of three commissioners with power to decide property tax appeals across the county. But Steele suspended Snyder in June and initiated an internal investigation after a reporter asked her about his past. And in confidential documents obtained by WBEZ, Board of Review investigators alleged that Snyder “has had multiple violations” of a policy regulating side jobs for agency employees.

* Streetsblog | Tribune claimed Elston, Milwaukee PBLs “reduced… vehicular capacity.” Editor declined to run retraction. CDOT confirmed editorial was inaccurate: Except that the Tribune’s claim that Elston and Milwaukee are more likely to jam up nowadays because the installation of protected bike lanes “reduced their [motor] vehicular capacity” isn’t true. The stretches of these two avenues where there are now PBLs have one mixed-traffic (”travel”) lane in each direction. They also generally had one “car” lane in each direction before the protected lanes were installed. So there was no major reduction in motor vehicle capacity!

* Daily Herald | A year after Invest in Kids’ demise, Catholic schools work to fund scholarships: A year after the state eliminated a tax credit that helped students from lower-income families attend private schools, Catholic schools in the suburbs are seeking other ways to fund scholarships. Among them is St. Hubert School in Hoffman Estates, where school leaders created the Fr. Mike’s Kids fund to help address a $130,000 shortfall that directly affects the tuition of 24 students.

* Taylor Media | Rep. Rita Named Township Officials of Illinois Legislator of the Year: State Representative Bob Rita has been named the 2024 Legislator of the Year by the Township Officials of Illinois (TOI) in recognition of his commitment to township government and community service.

* WGN | Kane County authorities deploy new tool to stop fleeing drivers: Faced with the potential for injury and death, not to mention millions in liability, the sheriff’s department here is deploying a new tool to stop fleeing drivers in their tracks. Video of a test shared with WGN Investigates shows a police vehicle get close to a car in front when a deployed cable attaches onto the wheel or undercarriage of the fleeing car. The officer then hits the brakes, forcing the speeding car to stop.

* Shaw Local | From Arrest to Commutation: The Full Story of Rita Crundwell: Rita Crundwell, the former Dixon comptroller, committed one of the largest municipal frauds in U.S. history, embezzling more than $53 million over two decades. Her actions devastated the city but also led to a remarkable recovery story.

* ABC Chicago | Teamsters say ‘momentum continues’ as Christmastime strike against Amazon enters 2nd day: Amazon said the strike was not expected to impact operations and claimed the strikes were being attended by outside organizers. Kelly Nantel, director of Global Corporate Issues and Media Relations at Amazon, said the company had not seen an impact on deliveries.

* Shaw Local | St. Charles water makes splash with 1st place for taste: About 150 brawny men, most of them bewhiskered and some sporting reflective safety vests, packed into Global Brew Tap House in St. Charles Thursday for Kane County’s who-has-the-best-tasting-water contest. Three judges sat at the bar, scoresheets at the ready, each grimly facing nine glasses of water from nine municipalities brave enough to put up their product for what is the Academy Awards of water: the 2025 Taste Test for Kane County Cities and Villages.

*** Downstate ***

* WTVO | Rockford continues to climb the ranks as one of the nation’s hottest real estate markets: The ranking comes partly because Rockford boasts the third-lowest median home price among the top 20 markets. Another reason for the boom was due to Rockford’s housing inventory increase over the past seven months, making it the first stretch of this magnitude in 15 years.

* WCIA | Macon Co. father accused of threatening school officials with gun: Sergeant Scott Flannery said the incident happened at Argenta-Oreana Elementary School after students left for the day. The investigation revealed that a verbal altercation happened between students on a bus and one of their fathers — identified as 33-year-old Michael Evans — went to the school after. Flannery said Evans demanded the names of the other children involved in the altercation with his child. When staff refused to tell him, Evans allegedly made a threatening statement and lifted his clothes to reveal a gun tucked in his waistband.

* Muddy River News | ‘We don’t deserve this’: Employee threatens legal action after embattled Park Board commissioner refuses to resign: The Quincy Park Board approved a resolution during a special meeting Thursday afternoon that censured long-time Commissioner John Frankenhoff for conduct that President Mark Philpot described as “unbecoming of a commissioner.” However, the employee who formally lodged a complaint against Frankenhoff wants more. Marketing Operations Director Marcelo Beroiza said during a six-minute statement to the Park Board that he wanted Frankenhoff to resign after Thursday’s meeting. “If he doesn’t, I’ve been reaching out for some support, and my intention is to contact the Illinois Human Rights Commission and the NAACP, file an order of protection against John and seek legal counsel,” Beroiza said.

* BND | How a Collinsville teen found himself performing with country music star Zach Bryan: Rainn Hoelting, 15, of Collinsville was a fan on a mission. A budding musician, he knew country artist Zach Bryan often brought youngsters on stage to play with him on the song “Heading South,” which is about never giving up on your dreams. So, Rainn enlisted his family to help make his dream come true on Dec. 12 in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

*** National ***

* New Republic | The Democrats Have a Crime Problem. Blame the Media: A 2022 analysis of media coverage of crime in New York City paints a damning picture of how the news distorted people’s perceptions. Toward the end of the analysis, a graph compares two values: actual shootings in New York City and mentions of shootings in local media, from 2019 to the end of 2022. For most of the graph, the two are uncorrelated at best; spikes in shootings often produce no change in coverage, and coverage sometimes spikes even as shootings remain flat. In 2022, in the run-up to a crucial federal midterm election, however, the picture becomes much worse: Shootings themselves remain almost completely flat, but the coverage of them soars, hitting levels about three to four times higher than during previous periods with similar levels of gun violence.

* NPR | Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots: A group of high-level managers at the Louisiana Department of Health walked into a Nov. 14 meeting in Baton Rouge expecting to talk about outreach and community events. Instead, they were told by an assistant secretary in the department and another official that department leadership had a new policy: Advertising or otherwise promoting the COVID, influenza or mpox vaccines, an established practice there — and at most other public health entities in the U.S. — must stop.

* ABC | Oops, wrong number! The real story behind NORAD’s Santa tracker: In 1955, Sears Roebuck & Co. ran an advertisement in a Colorado Springs-area newspaper with a phone number that children could call to speak with Santa. But rather than being a direct line to the North Pole, the misprinted number instead connected to a telephone on the desk of the Continental Air Defense Command’s director of operations, Col. Harry Shoup.

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Report: Far-right Illinois billionaires may have skirted immigration rules

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Guardian

A company owned by two of Donald Trump’s top mega-donors has routinely brought dozens of its workers from Mexico to staff its warehouses in Wisconsin and other locations even though they do not appear to have permission to work in the US, according to a Guardian investigation.

Uline – a giant Wisconsin-based office and shipping supply company controlled by billionaires Liz and Dick Uihlein – shuttles in its own workers from Mexico, who are using tourist visas and visas meant for employees who are entering the US temporarily to receive professional training, known as B1 visas. But instead of being part of a dedicated training program, the Mexican employees stay for one to six months and – sources with direct knowledge of the matter allege – perform normal work in Uline’s US warehouses.

Lawyers and immigrants’ advocates told the Guardian they believed the alleged practice is likely illegal and could be exploitative of the workers enrolled in the program.

The company has allegedly used employees without proper work permits even as Dick Uihlein’s Super Pac, Restoration Pac, supported Trump’s presidential campaign with a TV advertisement attacking his opponent Kamala Harris for allowing an immigrant “invasion” at the US-Mexico border. The Uihleins have emerged as a major force in rightwing politics, spending tens of millions of dollars supporting candidates, including president-elect Trump and other rightwing politicians, who have called for a mass deportation of immigrants. They were the second-largest political donors in this year’s election, giving more than even Elon Musk, the world’s richest man. […]

One Uline document seen by the Guardian, which was used by a Uline employee in Mexico to enter the US, said the employee would be receiving training in warehouse safety, understanding how to use vehicle-mounted unit devices, and understanding how to identify warehouse locations. Legal experts said B1 visas are intended to be used for short-term visits – no longer than six months – and that workers are not meant to engage in “productive employment” in that time.

Once the Mexican workers enter the US, sources alleged, they work regular shifts in Uline warehouses alongside their American counterparts.

“They are actually doing work. Not training,” said one person with direct knowledge of the situation. The person added that Uline was “very careful” with the amount of time the Mexican employees stayed in the US.

Apparently, the Uihlein’s have such a strict anti-drug policy that, according to the report, they were having a tough time fully staffing some of their warehouses, including in Pennsylvania. Hence the Mexican workers, who are paid in Mexico and allegedly receive far less in wages than their American counterparts.

You should really read the whole thing. It’s quite interesting. And even if they’re not violating the law (and I assume they have lawyers who can back them up), this Mexican worker shuttle service the company is alleged to be running is a pretty clear advance warning of the dangers of severe worker shortages if we see mass deportations. Most companies can’t afford such a thing.

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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards (Updated)

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best US Representative goes to Lauren Underwood

She is active in her community and Washington alike. She connects with and supports constituents across the ideological spectrum, deservedly outperforming other Democrats by significant margins electorally. In Washington, she is focused on major initiatives, including on Black maternal healthcare, and has a proven track record of working across the aisle to pass meaningful legislation, something that will be critical in the coming years. Not only that, but Congresswoman Underwood is a strong supporter of growing our party and engaging the next generation — she uplifts local candidates through her Farm Team PAC, and is even a big part of why I became politically involved. We need more Democrats like Underwood who focus on uplifting others and true public service.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statewide Officer goes to Auditor General Frank Mautino

Most of what he and his team do is behind the scenes, but it is vital. Throughout the year, they report on the good, the bad, and the ugly, which allows the agencies, the General Assembly, and the other state-wides to identify and address areas in need of improvement. Mautino’s depth of understanding about state government allows him to assist anyone who asks “what,” “why,” “which,” and other questions about the various machinations of state government. Mautino’s demeanor suits the position well.

Congrats to both.

* Our final category…

    The Wordslinger Golden Horseshoe Award for Best CapitolFax.com Commenter

Please make sure to explain your nomination or it won’t count.

* As Isabel has told you, today is the last day we’ll be reminding y’all about donating to Lutheran Social Services of Illinois to help them give Christmas presents to foster kids. You can give after today, of course. But if you’ve been procrastinating, or have a few extra bucks left in your holiday budget, now would be a good time to give. Please, click here. Thanks!

*** UPDATE *** An anonymous donor has just contributed $5,000 to help buy Christmas presents for foster kids. Many thanks! We’re now up to $43,442. That’s great!!! But, you know, LSSI could always use more. We’ve raised enough to buy presents for 1,738 kids, but there are hundreds more out there. Please, click here.

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Energy Storage Brings Cheaper Electricity, Greater Reliability

Friday, Dec 20, 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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Open thread

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?…


It’s our last day bugging you, but the fundraiser will stay open! Click here to help bring joy to kids in foster care.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Help make the holidays brighter for foster kids in Illinois

We’re shutting down for winter break on Friday, but there’s still time to help LSSI bring joy to children in foster care. While we won’t be here to nudge you, your support can make a world of difference.

These kids have faced so much chaos in their lives. A simple gift can bring them comfort and remind them they’re cared for.

Let’s spread some love and light this holiday season. Click here to donate if you are able.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois’ first drive-thru DMV kiosk opens in Lombard: The state’s first drive-thru DMV kiosk opened this week at the Lombard driver services facility at 837 Westmore-Meters Road, offering 24/7 access to renew registrations and licenses, and to obtain license plate stickers. “This creates a better environment for folks who visit our office, and just adds a new level of convenience for people to fit things into their busy schedules,” Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said ahead of Friday’s grand opening.

* Tribune | ICC approves amended ComEd grid improvement plan with $600 million rate hike: The decision comes a year after the ICC rejected another grid plan from ComEd — which would have been more costly for consumers — for reasons that included a failure to show the cost-effectiveness of proposed system investments and not fully complying with the clean-energy goals set by Illinois’ ambitious Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. At the time, the utility’s plan projected a fivefold jump in solar power systems, increased demands from electric vehicles and the need for infrastructure upgrades to address severe weather caused by climate change.

* Capitol New Illinois | Worried about grid reliability, state officials seek to boost renewables, energy storage: Several experts – including those involved in crafting the state’s energy reform, current and former regulators, and those in the renewable energy industry – are warning that prices will spike this summer and rolling blackouts could become necessary in the coming years. That is, unless the state takes action to make sure enough electricity is available – in the right place and at the right times of day.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Bloomberg | Pritzker Scores $820 Million Green Fuel Investment for Illinois: Avina Clean Hydrogen Inc. will build an $820 million sustainable aviation fuel facility in southern Illinois, in the latest investment as Governor J.B. Pritzker moves to position his state as a center for new technologies and clean energy. The investment announced Thursday will generate at least 150 new jobs, but the company is still working to finalize the location for the facility, a spokesperson for Pritzker said. Avina will get about $38.2 million in incentives from the state’s Reimagining Energy and Vehicles incentive program.

* WAND | New Illinois law will establish emerging adult program for young prisoners: The law requires the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice to establish an emerging adults program for 18 to 21-year-olds in prisons. These people can be transported to the juvenile justice center in Harrisburg to participate in therapy sessions, case management, vocational training and higher education opportunities.

* Center Square | Taxpayers to buy $19.9 million in electric school buses for Illinois: On Thursday, Pritzker’s office announced the Illinois State Board of Education awarded a $19.9 million grant from the Clean Heavy-Duty Vehicles Grant Program funded by federal tax dollars as part of President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. Troy Community Consolidated School District 30-C is set to get 32 school buses and charging infrastructure. Joliet Township High School District 204 and Zion-Benton Township High School District 126 will each get 10 school buses and charging infrastructure. Six other districts will also get at least one bus and charging infrastructure.

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | Integrity in Death Care Act: New Illinois funeral home regulations take effect Jan. 1: Gov. JB Pritzker signed the Integrity in Death Care Act to require an identification system for human remains to ensure funeral homes never mishandle human remains again. Under the law, anyone intentionally violating preparation room procedures and rules could face a Class 4 felony. People engaging in funeral directing or embalming without a license would be charged with a Class A misdemeanor.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Money, missteps behind the monthslong CPS saga: The costs of even a modest CTU contract, plus a pension payment for non-teacher CPS employees that Martinez has refused to take on from City Hall, are still expected to cause a mid-year budget deficit. A record tax increment financing surplus is helping fill some of that gap. But without an additional solution, an estimated $140 million hole will remain, and budget cuts could come in the second half of the school year.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson adviser told CPS board he wanted CEO Pedro Martinez out by late September: In a Sept. 12 email sent to Jianan Shi and Elizabeth Todd-Breland, the board’s president and vice president at the time, Deputy Mayor for Labor Relations Bridget Early wrote, “Here’s what lies ahead for the Board for the remainder of this term: CEO out by 9/26 … Land contract, current leadership is not on track to getting this done before a strike.” Early’s email laid out a series of “talking points” she said included “board expectations from the mayor.” As her last bullet point under the section for board member talking points, Early wrote: “Exit option — ‘I have told the Mayor that I am committed to landing these items before the end of the term. It is okay if this is a lot to take on. If this feels like too much, we can work on an exit plan.’”

* The Triibe | ‘Santa looks like me’: How Santa Larry brings representation to Chicago for Christmas: “When [Black] children come to the museum, they’re not expecting to see me, but when they do, they freak out,” Santa Larry told The TRiiBE. “They say, ‘Oh my God, Santa Claus, you look like me,’ and I say, ‘Yes, I do.’” Since 2019, Santa Larry has been spreading holiday cheer across Chicago. As an additional treat, some of Santa Larry’s youngest visitors have said they would go the extra mile to prepare milk and a full meal to ensure he’s got enough energy to deliver maximum presents.

* Tribune | How Chicago’s zoo animals stay warm during cold, snowy winters: A chilly Chicago winter doesn’t necessarily mean the African lions at the Lincoln Park Zoo have to go inside. In fact, as temperatures dip — even as cold as 10 degrees or in the snow — the pride may huddle up on heated rocks in their exhibit to spend more time relaxing outdoors. “They also have access to indoor holding areas in the winter, so if they want to go into a space that’s completely enclosed and warmer, they can go in there whenever they like,” said Dave Bernier, the zoo’s general curator. “We give them the choice, and luckily, they choose the exhibit spaces a lot more than they choose the holding spaces.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Dozens of elected officials demand Cook County chief judge make immediate changes in domestic violence court: Almost 30 Chicago-area elected officials — from alderpersons to district councilors — signed a letter Thursday demanding Cook County Chief Judge Timothy Evans move quickly to permanently reassign Judge Thomas Nowinski and begin a review of all pretrial services procedures at the Domestic Violence Courthouse. “Through these actions, you can help to restore trust among survivors in the court system, and most importantly, you can ensure that you are truly doing all you can to protect lives and prevent more tragedy,” the letter states.

* Sun-Times | Far-right provocateur Nick Fuentes says a ‘would-be assassin’ came to kill him at his suburban home: Fuentes’ account aligns with a statement released by Berwyn police, which said a man wanted in a triple homicide downstate was killed in a shootout with officers near Fuentes’ home.

* Patch | Booze, Cigars Purchased On Elmhurst D205 Credit Card, Records Show: The official was the district’s facilities director, Todd Schmidt, who resigned earlier this month after being arrested on unrelated felony charges in Rockford. From 2020 to 2022, Patch counted $47,615 in personal expenses on Schmidt’s district-issued credit card, also known as a P-card.

* Daily Herald | Will County Board appoints Lockport construction company owner to vacancy; forest preserve board organizes: The Will County Board voted unanimously Thursday to appoint Lockport Republican David Oxley as a 5th District board member to fill the position vacated when member Annette Parker was elected county clerk in November. Oxley is a lifelong Lockport resident, who has served on the city’s Plan Commission for 32 years, including the last eight years as chair. He is the owner of Oxley Construction, a concrete and carpentry company. He is married with three children and six grandchildren.

* Daily Herald | Barrington plans to spend big to transform village infrastructure: More than $13.2 million is budgeted for capital improvements. That’s nearly $5 million more than the village expects to spend on capital improvements this year, and a significant amount for a village that has a $50 million annual operating budget. One big-ticket item is an upgrade to the village’s wastewater treatment facility located at 302 N. Raymond Ave., behind the public works garage. The plant treats an average of 2.5 million gallons of wastewater per day and more than 900 million gallons per year.

* Tribune | La Grange Area League of Women Voters celebrate century of participation: Exactly one century ago, the La Grange Chapter of League of Women Voters was founded, in 1924, by Francis Kidston, and grew over the last 100 years to include 120 members from 12 different suburbs, including La Grange Park, Brookfield, Countryside, Lyons, McCook, and Riverside. Now called the La Grange Area LWV, the organization celebrated its centennial Dec. 9, starting with a proclamation from La Grange Village President Mark Kuchler.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | City of Champaign plan working to reduce gun violence: The Community Gun Violence Reduction Blueprint works to prevent gun violence, support the community and use data to inform decisions. It’s something that’s been in the works since 2016 when city officials said Champaign saw an increase in gun violence. The plan passed through the city council two years ago. The more than $3 million budget aims to prevent gun violence before it starts. It maps out the root causes of gun violence and the areas of the city that have been most affected.

* WCIA | Mahomet community remembers the Masons following triple homicide: As the Mahomet community comes together…they’re also left wondering with just as many questions following the triple homicide that took place Wednesday night. WCIA is working to find answers and bring some clarity to the situation. At this time, Illinois state police is handling the investigation.

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

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Dec 20, 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)

Friday, Dec 20, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $36,000! 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

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Background is here if you need it. Illinois Commerce Commission

Today, the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) approved Commonwealth Edison’s refiled multi-year grid plan (2024-2027) with modifications. The Commission approved $3.3 billion in investments and system improvements needed to strengthen power grid reliability and support the ongoing electrification of the state’s power system. The decision cut the utility’s proposed $4.5 billion in spending by approximately 25 percent.

The Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA) required the state’s largest investor-owned electric utilities to file grid plans designed to accelerate progress toward Illinois’ clean energy goals and hold electric companies accountable for their performance.

“After extensive review, the Commission is confident that both ComEd and Ameren have the tools necessary to make needed investments to drive the clean energy transition and continue modernizing Illinois’ electric grid. These plans are a key component to meeting the goals of CEJA and represent significant improvement in meeting its requirements,” said ICC Chairman Doug Scott. “The investments approved today will deliver significant benefits to the utilities’ customers in an affordable, cost-effective manner.”

ComEd was required to refile its grid plan earlier this year after the ICC rejected the utility’s initial proposal in 2023, finding the original plan failed to comply with several consumer affordability and environmental justice components of CEJA.

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul

Attorney General Kwame Raoul is warning Illinois residents seeking to purchase GLP-1 medications – including Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound – to be aware that many sellers advertising these name brand medications are instead offering unapproved versions of these products that may put people’s health at risk. Raoul is strongly urging people to obtain prescriptions for GLP-1 medications from a trusted health care provider and to fill those prescriptions at an appropriately-licensed pharmacy.

Attorney General Raoul is warning consumers about misleading advertising by med spas, wellness centers, online retailers and social media sellers that states or implies they are offering name brand GLP-1 medications or generic versions of name brand medications, when in reality they are offering compounded drugs. Compounded drugs are not the same as generic drugs. They are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as they are often produced on site and by prescription for individual patients who are unable to take a drug in its FDA-approved form. However, when a drug is in short supply, the FDA allows certain larger pharmacies to use the active ingredient in that drug to produce compounded versions of the drug in order to meet public demand. The FDA does not review compounded drugs for safety, quality or effectiveness, however, and these drugs may pose health risks.

“Millions of Americans are looking for help losing weight, and for reasons ranging from the costs to the availability of prescription drugs, they are looking for alternate means of buying what can be lifesaving medications,” Raoul said. “This month, my office issued cease and desist letters calling on five med spas to stop using language that misleads consumers about the products they are purchasing. With scammers and bad actors marketing untested products using brand names, it is critical that consumers obtain prescriptions for GLP-1 medications from their health care providers and fill them at a licensed pharmacy.”

According to Raoul, unscrupulous sellers are also making misleading health claims and promoting GLP-1 products in formulations that have not been evaluated by regulatory agencies or tested in humans at all, such as drops, skin patches and nasal sprays. The FDA has issued warnings to try to stop the distribution of illegal versions of GLP-1 products. Some GLP-1 medications are being sold directly to consumers without prescriptions or are research-only products that should never be used by humans.

* Bloomberg

In recent months, the United Auto Workers reached an agreement with Rivian Automotive Inc. that would make it easier to unionize the company’s workforce — contingent on the electric-vehicle maker ever reaching profitability.

Under Rivian and the UAW’s confidential pact, the automaker would adopt a neutral stance toward efforts to organize workers at its Illinois factory where its vehicles are made, according to people familiar with the matter. The neutrality commitment will only take effect once the company reaches certain criteria including profitability metrics, said the people, who didn’t elaborate on what those metrics were and spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the private terms.

The previously unreported neutrality commitment could help pave the way for the UAW to organize workers at Rivian, a longtime target in the union’s uphill struggle to unionize the EV industry. But that opening could still be far off: Rivian has never posted a quarterly adjusted profit. That goal has been elusive as the company struggled with supply-chain snags and a broader slowdown in EV demand.

* The Tax Foundation…

Thirty-nine states will ring in 2025 with notable tax changes, including nine states cutting individual income taxes, three states cutting corporate income taxes, and two states adopting new first-year expensing provisions.

The Tax Foundation just released an all-in-one guide highlighting all the changes set to take effect, including in Illinois. CLICK HERE to see the full breakdown. Key points below.

State Tax Changes Effective in 2025

    - Illinois will increase its franchise (capital stock) tax exemption from $5,000 to $10,000, effective January 1, 2025. Notably, however, Illinois had once been on track to eliminate this tax altogether, a policy that has since been paused.

    - Illinois will also broaden its sales tax base to include retail leases of tangible personal property except motor vehicles, watercraft, aircraft, and semitrailers. Additionally, sales tax assessed on acquisitions by retailers who lease tangible personal property will be paid over the lease term by the final lessee of the TPP, rather than by the business at the time of acquisition of the TPP. This moves Illinois’ state sales tax into conformity with the majority of other states’ sales tax structures as it applies to leases of TPP. This change will also ensure that sales tax is paid by the final consumer of the eligible products, moving Illinois’ sales tax closer to that of a well-structured consumption tax.

    - Additional changes to Illinois’ sales tax include changes made under SB 3362, enacted August 9, 2024. Under this new law, Illinois will transition to destination-based sourcing for retailers that are responsible for remitting sales taxes on retail sales of tangible personal property that occur outside of Illinois but that are made by a business with a physical presence in Illinois.

    - Further, to partially offset the costs to retailers of complying with sales tax collection and remittance laws, Illinois allows retailers to retain 1.75 percent of sales taxes collected. However, beginning January 1, Illinois will cap the retailers’ discount on sales due at $1,000 per month.

    - Finally, effective January 1, 2025, the General Assembly is commissioning a study of the state’s property tax system, with recommendations for improvement due July 1, 2026.

* Congrats Mona!

*** Madigan Trial***

* Tribune | After prosecutors rest, defense in Madigan corruption trial calls ex-AT&T exec about deal to hire Eddie Acevedo: Defense attorneys are likely to call far fewer witnesses, but with a break next week for the Christmas holiday, it appears the defense phase of the trial will stretch into the new year. Prosecutors have indicated they will call at least one witness in rebuttal. The alleged scheme by AT&T to bribe Madigan makes up just one of the 23 counts of the indictment, but it has taken up a good portion of the last two weeks of testimony.

*** Statewide ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois scholarship program aimed at getting more teachers of color faces court challenge: Now, even as advocates say more needs to be done to increase the number of teachers of color in classrooms, the Minority Teachers of Illinois Scholarship program has become the target of a lawsuit claiming it discriminates against white students by limiting awards to Black, Latino, Asian American, and Native American students. Despite the lawsuit claims, numbers show that the majority of the teacher workforce in the state remains white and initiatives such as the scholarship program have made only a small dent in diversifying the ranks. In 2024, 80% of Illinois teachers were white, compared to 85% in 2010. Currently, about 6.4% of the teacher workforce is Black, 8.9% is Latino, and 2.2% is Asian American, according to the Illinois State Board of Education’s 2024 report card data.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | The Never-Ending Line: Migrants Wait For Benefits That Never Come: The families line up outside the state government office at North and California avenues as early as 4 every morning, several hours before it opens, to secure their spots. […] The families know the wait can be long, sometimes up to 10 hours. And they know it can be fruitless. In many cases, they leave with merely a piece of paper reminding them when they’ll have to come back. When they return, they start the process all over again.

* Tribune | Martinez remains mum as alderman, advocates, call for special Board of Ed meeting to be rescheduled: Chicago Public Schools Chief Pedro Martinez didn’t address the controversy surrounding a special board of education meeting called to oust him, instead focusing on congratulating the Luther Bank Elementary School community for earning a rare designation, in being inclusive of students with disabilities as a Special Olympics Unified Champion School. Speaking in English and Spanish to a packed auditorium Thursday morning, Martinez thanked staff for their hard work and encouraged students to continue cultivating a culture of respect. “We need to be treating each other with kindness, with empathy,” he said. “Our children need our support. Our parents and family members need that support.”

* Sun-Times | CTA locks down Red Line extension funding before Trump takes office: The Federal Transit Administration intends to sign an agreement that will contractually obligate the $1.9 billion in federal grants to the project, according to an announcement from Illinois’ congressional delegation. U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin called the funding commitment a “significant milestone.”

* Unraveled | Abusive cop named in whistleblower suit convicted of assault: A Chicago cop recently found guilty of assault is also the subject of a whistleblower lawsuit against the City of Chicago that alleges the police department failed to address his “history of violence and misconduct directed toward female colleagues.” According to an October 2023 complaint filed by an anonymous Jane Doe, first reported by the Chicago Sun-Times last year, Chicago police officer Marco Torres became intimately involved with the complainant, a fellow CPD detective, in 2022. His behavior quickly escalated to multiple instances of “aggravated assault, aggravated battery, stalking, intimidation, and criminal sexual assault,” according to attorneys representing Doe. Torres was arrested March 14 of this year on domestic battery and assault charges.

* Block Club | Bally’s Casino Apologizes After Demolition Debris Spills Into Chicago River: The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, which oversees stormwater and wastewater treatment across the Chicago area, confirmed that Bally’s Chicago and the Chicago Community Builders Collective — the general contractor building the new casino — accepted responsibility for the demolition debris. “A multi-phase clean-up has been initiated by the construction company,” Fore said in an email to Block Club on Monday. “An oil boom was installed below the Chicago Avenue Bridge to collect any flowing debris, and a barge is now positioned at the site to stop additional debris from entering the river.”

* Sun-Times | Sammy Sosa and Cubs begin reconciliation: A rift between the two, rooted in Sosa’s ties to the steroid era and refusal to admit that he used performance enhancing drugs, has kept Sosa out of Cubs events and away from Wrigley Field. But on Thursday, Sosa sent out a revealing statement. “There were times I did whatever I could to recover from injuries in an effort to keep my strength up to perform over 162 games,” he said in part. “I never broke any laws, but in hindsight, I made mistakes and I apologize.”

* Tribune | Are the Chicago Bulls and Boston Celtics ruining basketball? ‘We just have to play our generation of basketball.’: The main source of this panic is simple. Ratings are down. Fewer fans are tuning into games on television. And never mind that gate revenue and attendance remain steady — this loss of national viewership has thrown up panic flags for fans and executives alike across the league. The underlying fear behind this panic is more intense, more intimate: a sense that basketball itself is devolving into something lesser and unwanted.

* Daily Herald | Does Bears GM Ryan Poles deserve to be next scapegoat? Here’s a look at his record: The first Poles draft was 2022 and he actually got off to a great start, choosing Kyler Gordon and Jaquon Brisker with his first two picks, both in the second round. Reminder: The worst Bears mistake this season was letting Brisker stay in the game after a brutal helmet-to-helmet hit against Carolina. The safety has been sidelined ever since. The rest of that draft isn’t looking great. Velus Jones is gone, Braxton Jones made an impressive rise from fifth-round pick to starting left tackle, but still doesn’t look cut out for that job. The rest of that class has one pleasant surprise in DB Elijah Hicks.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Amazon delivery drivers in Skokie, six other facilities go on strike: ‘We’re the ones who move the packages every day’: Driver Luke Cianciotto called Amazon’s refusal to recognize the drivers as employees a “ruse.” “Everybody can see through it,” Cianciotto said. “If anybody is an Amazon worker, it’s us. We’re the ones who move the packages every day.” “I wear Amazon clothing. I deliver Amazon packages in Amazon vans to Amazon customers who order on an Amazon website,” said Ash’shura Brooks, another driver. “I just feel like it’s not right.”

* Press Release | Former Head of Suburban Chicago Public Library Sentenced to Two Years in Prison for Embezzling More Than $770,000: From 2009 to 2019, XAVIER MENZIES misappropriated approximately $770,715 from the library. Much of the money was initially received by the Markham library from the public library district in nearby Posen, Ill., which paid Markham for allowing Posen residents to access the library and use its services. Menzies opened bank accounts in the name of Markham Public Library and deposited checks made out to the library. He later withdrew the funds and used the money for personal expenses, including mortgage payments, ticket purchases, and auto repairs. Menzies concealed the scheme by routinely misrepresenting the library’s financial condition to the Markham Public Library’s Board of Trustees.

* Sun-Times | Far-right provocateur Nicholas Fuentes appears for first hearing on battery charge: Simple battery, a Class A misdemeanor is punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine. Battery offenses are eligible for pretrial detention in Illinois if prosecutors ask for it and a judge makes certain findings in the case, but defendants in Illinois have the presumption of release. Fuentes, his attorney and Rose each appeared for the brief hearing via the live-streaming service Zoom before Judge Shawnte Raines-Welch at the Fourth District courthouse in Maywood.

* WGN | Judge rules against Tiffany Henyard’s power grab: Judge Thaddeus Wilson said Henyard’s lawyer chose not file an answer to trustees’ complaint that she was acting beyond her authority to appoint people for key village positions without their advice and consent. The permanent injunction entered this week specifically says Ronnie Burge, Sr is restrained from “holding himself out at the Village Police Chief or conducting any duties.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor Richard Irvin focuses on innovation, technology during fourth State of the City address of year: The mayor decided to break his State of the City address this year into quarterly speeches, each focusing on a different theme. During the speech on Wednesday, which was held at the Aurora factory and headquarters of Gripple Inc., Irvin said that Aurora has a history of innovation, such as its early adoption of electric street lights, and the city is continuing to embrace that spirit as it heads into the future. “Aurora is no longer simply the City of Lights. We are becoming a city of bytes, bandwidth and breakthroughs. We’re becoming the City of Light Speed,” he said.

*** Downstate ***

* WMBD | Peoria’s airport to have daily flights to Denver: United Airlines will have daily roundtrip flights to Denver that will leave at about 8:50 a.m. each day and then return 12 hours later. This will allow passengers to connect to various places out west as well as some international locations.

* WCIA | ‘I think I’ve done pretty good’; Mattoon man donates 25th gallon of blood: David Myers has donated 25 gallons of blood over the last five decades. “I was trying to get my five, and then I was trying to get my ten, and 20 was my goal,” Myers said. A pint of blood can save about three lives. ImpactLife blood center in Mattoon says Myers’ 25 gallons can save about 600.

*** National ***

* AP | California declared an emergency. How serious is bird flu?: Officials with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stressed again this week that the virus poses low risk to the general public. Importantly, there are no reports of person-to-person transmission and no signs that the virus has changed to spread more easily among humans. In general, flu experts agreed with that assessment, saying it’s too soon to tell what trajectory the outbreak could take.

* Popular Information | Lies, damn lies, and shoplifting statistics: But this year, the [National Retail Federation] announced it would not release its annual survey. What happened? Mary McGinty, NRF vice president of communications and public affairs, claims that “a broad study about retail shrink is no longer sufficient for capturing the key challenges and needs of the industry.” In other words, the survey did not reinforce the industry’s preferred narrative that shoplifting is a growing problem that demands an aggressive state and federal response.

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Illinois Supreme Court: Judges and attorneys can use AI tools, with limits

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Reuters

Judges and attorneys in Illinois are allowed to use artificial intelligence tools in their work under certain conditions, the state’s top court said in a new policy.

The use of AI by lawyers, judges, self-represented litigants, clerks and other court officials “may be expected, should not be discouraged, and is authorized provided it complies with legal and ethical standards,” the court said in a policy, opens new tab issued on Wednesday that takes effect Jan. 1. […]

The policy does not require lawyers to disclose the use of AI in filings. An accompanying fact sheet, opens new tab said attorneys will be subject to sanctions for submitting “legally or factually unfounded pleadings.”

Other courts have mandated disclosure of AI, and judges in several have sanctioned lawyers whose AI-assisted filings contained errors or made-up case citations. […]

Lawyers and judges who use AI technology are accountable for the final work product and must review all AI-generated content, the court said. AI tools also must protect sensitive information.

From the court’s policy

The Court acknowledges the necessity of safe AI use, adhering to laws and regulations concerning privacy and confidentiality. AI applications must not compromise sensitive information, such as confidential communications, personal identifying information (PII), protected health information (PHI), justice and public safety data, security-related information, or information conflicting with judicial conduct standards or eroding public trust.

This policy reflects the Illinois Supreme Court’s commitment to upholding foundational principles while exploring the potential benefits of new AI technologies in a dynamic landscape. The Court will regularly reassess policies as these technologies evolve, prioritizing public trust and confidence in the judiciary and the administration of justice. Judges remain ultimately responsible for their decisions, irrespective of technological advancements.

Click here for the fact sheet.

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Are we really doing this again?

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A year ago, the Registrar and the Director of Research at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum voted against approving the purchase of a $15,625 flag, after it had already been bought in violation of ALPLM policy. Purchases above $2,000 must be reviewed by a collections committee in advance.

One of the objections raised was the flag’s provenance. In an eerie flashback to the now-infamous Lincoln stovepipe hat, the flag’s authenticity has been challenged. More on that here.

* In May, the Associated Press reported that one of the two “no” votes, Registrar Eldon Yeakel was fired by the ALPLM

The museum fired Yeakel May 6, citing his poor performance and rules violations, but he blamed his “no” vote.

* And now we’ve learned that the Director of Research, who was the other “no” vote, was also fired

A historian and director at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum who voted against the ALPLM’s purchase of a controversial flag last year was fired last week.

Brian Mitchell ran a number of community-based history projects in the area around the 1908 Springfield Race Riot, the New Philadelphia National Historic Site and the Freedom Corridor, linking together a number of Underground Railroad sites, in addition to his work as director of research and interpretation at the ALPLM. […]

Mitchell was fired in a meeting Thursday after a scathing performance evaluation, which he provided to The State Journal-Register. … Mitchell’s evaluation cited his “unwillingness to act as a front-line supervisor.” […]

Mitchell said he was told shortly after his arrival in Springfield that “one of my primary responsibilities was to make sure those sorts of things [the stovepipe hat] don’t happen. Four people told me that, including [ALPLM executive director Christina Shutt].”

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Madigan trial roundup: Defense calls ex-AT&T exec about deal to hire Acevedo (Updated)

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

After calling 50 witnesses over the last two months, prosecutors in former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan’s federal corruption trial rested their case Wednesday, followed immediately by defense attorneys calling their first witness.

Lawyers for Madigan’s close friend and co-defendant, longtime Statehouse lobbyist Mike McClain, called a witness the government dropped off its own list last week: retired AT&T Illinois lobbyist Steve Selcke.

Prosecutors had closed out their case detailing a 2017 episode in which AT&T hired newly retired Democratic state Rep. Eddie Acevedo as a consultant while the company was pushing for major legislation. The feds allege Acevedo’s $22,500 no-work contract was meant as a bribe to Madigan in exchange for the powerful speaker’s help pushing the legislation through the General Assembly.

But Selcke insisted neither he nor any of his colleagues believed hiring Acevedo had any bearing on the passage of a bill AT&T had been working on for the last six years, except to prevent against “rocking the boat” with Madigan’s office.

* Sun-Times

Selcke spent three and a half hours on the stand Wednesday, giving testimony similar to what he offered in September. He said that, as a lobbyist, he found it important to respond when an elected official recommended someone for a job — and it “was great” if the response could be positive.

Mitchell asked Selcke if he thought Madigan would allow passage of AT&T’s bill “in exchange” for Acevedo’s money. Selcke told him, “I did not have a feeling that that would result in the Speaker allowing passage.”

Madigan attorney Todd Pugh later pointed out, through Selcke’s testimony, that Madigan’s office moved to add less popular 911 reform language to AT&T’s bill after Acevedo was hired. […]

But before testimony ended for the day, Selcke told Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Schwartz there “was a concern” that not hiring Acevedo “might trigger a negative reaction from the Speaker’s office.”

* Courthouse News Illinois

Jurors have also seen a Feb. 14, 2017, email from McClain to AT&T lobbyist Bob Barry, asking if there was “even a small contract” for Acevedo. A separate email from then-AT&T Illinois President Paul La Schiazza two days later informed AT&T’s legislative team that Madigan had assigned McClain to work on the company’s COLR relief efforts as a “special project.”

McClain’s attorney John Mitchell tried to reframe this evidence. He had Selcke confirm on the stand it isn’t unusual for lobbyists to help lawmakers with “requests” to build up relationships, or to consider job recommendations. Selcke brought up helping with a youth sporting event, or working out a service payment plan for an elected official’s financially struggling constituent, as examples of legislator requests lobbyists might address.

Selcke also confirmed AT&T tried to lobby the speaker’s office in 2017, and that he knew McClain and Madigan were close. But he told Mitchell he wasn’t aware of McClain ever threatening Madigan would kill the COLR bill if Acevedo didn’t get his contract.

In exchange for the $22,500 contract, Acevedo was ostensibly meant to prepare a report on the “political dynamics of the Latino Caucus of the General Assembly and the City of Chicago.” Prosecutors say Acevedo never made that report, which Cullen himself called “busy work” on the stand last week.

Selcke said Wednesday that such a report would have benefitted AT&T, but also told Mitchell “I don’t recall ever getting any report … relative to Mr. Acevedo’s contract.”

* Tribune

Selcke also testified about Acevedo’s tendency to be overly partisan, which alienated many Republicans, as well as his extracurricular behavior that was the cause of many whispers around the Capitol.

“Eddie, after session, tended to go out in Springfield and occasionally would have too much to drink, and when he had too much to drink he could become belligerent and to a degree loose-lipped,” Selcke said. […]

Schwartz also revealed in her questioning that McClain had previously asked AT&T to expand two other consulting contracts, including one for former state Rep. Annazette Collins, another ally of the speaker who had gone into lobbying.

Schwartz was about to show the jury an exhibit pertaining to Collins — who was convicted of tax fraud related to the Madigan probe and is currently serving a one-year term in prison — but Pugh objected.

After a lengthy sidebar discussion, the judge told the jury the exhibit was not being admitted at that time.

…Adding… McClain rests his case


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State spending pressures abound

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Andy Krupin, ISBE’s director of funding and disbursements, explained that the state often does not fully fund MCAT [mandated categorical] expenses and thus “prorates” the amount it reimburses districts for those expenses. The level of proration varies depending on how much the General Assembly appropriates in each category.

Based on the agency’s estimate of next year’s costs, Krupin said, the General Assembly would need to add another $142.2 million to its PreK-12 budget just to maintain the same level of proration as this year.

Combined with the $350 million increase called for under the EBF formula, that would be a total increase in PreK-12 spending of $492.2 million next year [GOMB’s projection of a $3.2 billion deficit assumed a $444 million increase in school spending].

But ISBE has received requests for even more funding increases than that. During a series of public hearings on the budget in October, officials said, the agency heard numerous proposals adding up to about $2.2 billion in funding increase requests. Those included proposals for a $550 million increase in EBF funding and a $10 million increase in career and technical education funding, among other requests.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Thursday, Dec 19, 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 Janet, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Illinois education officials want lawmakers to revise student discipline, ticketing

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chalkbeat Chicago

During their monthly meeting on Wednesday, [members of the Illinois State Board of Education] approved a list of agenda items that they will push in Springfield once lawmakers are back at the Capitol for the spring session, which is expected to start in late January. Board officials will still need to draft language for bills and find a lawmaker to carry their bills during the session.

While board members approved most of the agenda without much discussion, there was spirited debate around ticketing kids at school and student discipline. For student ticketing, the state board says it will work on a measure to close loopholes in state law to prevent schools from issuing fines or referring students to local police for disciplinary issues. […]

For student discipline, the state wants to outlaw expulsions for students in kindergarten through second grade and require superintendents to only issue suspensions for those students, while making changes to disciplinary practices for students in third through fifth grades. […]

A spokesperson for the state board said that the proposed measure would not ban or stop law enforcement from stepping in if a student breaks the law.

* From ISBE’s legislative agenda

Licensure

This measure is a continuation of the agency’s efforts to decrease the teacher vacancy rate and strengthen the teacher pipeline in Illinois. It would create a paraprofessional pathway program to provide an expedited pathway for individuals to earn their license in a specific content area; streamline educator licensure requirements for individuals who seek to work as school support personnel and already hold an active and current professional license, strengthen procedures for out-of-state educators by ensuring they pass the content test prior to obtaining full licensure, remove coursework requirements for educators trained in other states or countries to instead require that the topics be covered in the exam individuals seeking licensure must pass, and omit references to incorrect preparation standards for out-of-state educators. This measure
aligns to Goal 3 of the Strategic Plan. […]

Educator Misconduct

This measure would increase transparency and better equip districts in instances of educator misconduct. This proposal allows the state superintendent to release information of a pending investigation to a licensee’s current employing school district. This measure aligns to Goal 2 of the Strategic Plan.

* Related…

    * ProPublica | Illinois’ AG Said It’s Illegal for Schools to Use Police to Ticket Students. But His Office Told Only One District: Despite the attorney general’s declaration that Illinois schools should stop using police to discipline students, officers statewide continue to ticket kids with costly fines. One lawmaker will again pursue legislation to end the practice.

    * Word In Black | What Illinois’ Ticket Crackdown Means for Black Students: School-based ticketing is a growing concern nationwide, and its data has consistently shown the alarming impacts of such policies. While it’s unknown exactly how many schools or districts use the practice, it’s a particularly acute problem in Illinois. According to the Illinois Department of Education, Black students make up just 17% of the state’s public school population but account for 42% of ticketed incidents. In the 2021-22 school year, Illinois’s Black and Hispanic students received about 68% of the tickets issued at school, even though they make up about 33% of district enrollment.

    * Chalkbeat | Chicago to change how it flags disruptive behaviors for its youngest students: Chicago Public Schools did away with suspensions in preschool through second grade in 2014 — with one exception. A district official who oversees networks of schools can sign off on a one-day suspension in situations when school leaders fear a student presents a danger to peers and staff. In the school year before the change took effect, schools suspended students in those grades about 2,240 times, including 1,830 out-of-school suspensions. That was out of more than 5,000 times that students were flagged for misconduct under the student code of conduct that year.

    * USA Today | Young children misbehave. Some are kicked out of school for acting their age: An analysis by The Hechinger Report of school discipline data from 20 states found widespread use of suspensions for students of all ages for ill-defined, subjective categories of misbehavior, such as disorderly conduct, defiance and insubordination. From 2017 to 2022, state reports cited these categories as a reason for suspension or expulsion more than 2.8 million times.

    * Education Week | What Happened When a State Banned Suspensions for Young Students: A statewide ban on suspensions for some of the youngest learners in Maryland successfully reduced the use of the practice—but didn’t address how exclusionary discipline affects students of color or students with disabilities, researchers concluded in a recent study.

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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rich is taking the morning off, but he asked me to give out the awards today…

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best State Agency Director goes to Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity Director Kristin Richards

Krisitin Richards is a force who understands government in and out. You need someone like her running an agency where complicated deals with the private sector rely on someone who can bridge the gap between the antiquated and complicated state government systems and large corporations. Kristin is the best at what she does, and it shows in all the successes the state has racked up.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Statewide Staffer goes to Anne Caprara

Anne’s ability to bring together the best people in State Government is unmatched. Look at her lineup of talent in the Gov’s Office. Anne’s strategic advice around policy, communications, legislation and yes politics has been the guiding light for the Governor’s Office for the past six years. Speech Writing - Check (See Pritzker’s Northwestern Commencement Address), Public Speaking - Check (Her panel discussion post election at the City Club was heartfelt and inspiring) and Tenacity - Check (Pritzker has publicly given Caprara credit for organizing and going after the DNC in Chicago). If you dont know - Anne - you should - she is one of the most inspiring people you will ever meet.

Congratulations!

* On to today’s categories

    Best US Representative

    Best Statewide Officer

Please explain your nominations or they won’t count. Also please nominate in both categories. Thanks!

* A reminder! We’re shutting down for winter break on Friday, but there’s still time to help LSSI bring joy to children in foster care. While we won’t be here to nudge you, your support can make a world of difference.

These kids have faced so much chaos in their lives. A simple gift can bring them comfort and remind them they’re cared for.

Let’s spread some love and light this holiday season. Thank you for being part of this effort! Please click here and donate if you are able

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Open thread

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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


Every child deserves a little holiday magic. Help LSSI bring joy to kids in foster care this Christmas—donate today.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Dec 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Make this Christmas special for a child in foster care—your support can bring joy and hope this holiday season. Donate now!

* ICYMI: CPS board moves to oust schools CEO Pedro Martinez. WBEZ

    - The board placed two voting items on its agenda and could choose to pursue either: Martinez’s termination or a buyout agreement.
    - Martinez has already fought off two attempts to remove him from what he has called his “dream job” at the helm of the nation’s fourth-largest school system.
    - Sources have said Martinez wanted to stay until at least the end of the school year.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | How would Pritzker’s crackdown on delta-8 affect sales? These states’ track records offer clues.: More than a dozen states have passed laws to regulate or ban delta-8 products made from hemp, a cousin of cannabis that ordinarily contains low levels of THC, the chemical associated with marijuana’s high. In delta-8 products, the levels are concentrated to have increased potency.

* Capitol News Illinois | Budget pressures could impact K-12 funding: With budget forecasters predicting flat revenue growth over the next year and continued demands for increased spending in other areas of the budget such as pension costs and health care, members of the Illinois State Board of Education were told Wednesday that they are now in a different fiscal environment. “I do not envy anybody involved in that process because it won’t be a fun time,” Eric Noggle, revenue manager of the legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability, or COGFA, told the board.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Starting Jan. 1, IL media companies must report 120 days before out-of-state sale: Senate Bill 3592 passed the Senate in April. Sponsor of the bill state Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Rockford, said it requires local media outlets looking to sell to an out-of-state buyer to provide a 120-day notice to the state and their staff. “Private equity firms are coming and buying newspapers, consolidating them until they provide very little local news content with no local journalist and sometimes those newsrooms are shut down as what happened in southern Illinois not that long ago,” Stadelman said in April.

* WAND | Illinois Democratic lawmakers, advocates argue housing is a human right: Gov. JB Pritzker signed an executive order last week to tackle the lack of affordable housing across the state. However, some Democratic lawmakers believe the state should treat housing as a human right. Nearly one-third of Illinois households spend more than 30% of their income on housing and the state has a shortage of roughly 290,000 homes affordable for low-income families.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Illinois sees most significant wage drop in the country since 1935, data shows: Illinois nearly 100 years ago could boast the highest national average for an entry level hourly wage, but it is currently ranks close to last amongst other states. Coming from the top spot in 1935, Illinois now ranks 39th. Average entry level workers earn $14.06 hourly in Illinois, but in 1935 they would have earned $15.43 hourly with inflation adjustments.

*** Chicago ***

* Bloomberg | Chicago Faces More Fiscal Pain Even After Budget Narrowly Passes: Higher wages, pension bills and inflation are still weighing on the city as Covid-era funds used to help plug the 2025 deficit are ending. That means less cushion for future shortfalls, and the outlook for more state and federal aid is uncertain. Johnson said that he’ll keep pushing for progressive revenue like higher levies on the rich, a campaign vow that hasn’t panned out yet.

* Sun-Times | Wall collapses at future Bally’s casino site sending debris into the Chicago River: Looking out her window early Saturday afternoon, Michele Berman noticed something that looked like black-mesh netting across the river, partially blocking demolition of the former Chicago Tribune’s Freedom Center printing plant. Within a couple of hours, she said, a wall collapsed, sinking the netting into the Chicago River while debris and a sizable amount of white substance dumped into the water.

* ABC Chicago | Advocate investing $1B on Chicago’s South Side in new hospital at IL Quantum, Microelectronics Park: One billion dollars is going toward healthcare on the South Side of Chicago. It’s a monumental investment by Advocate Health Care, changing the lives of some of those who need it most.

* Block Club | After School Matters Opening Huge Teen Center Near Cabrini-Green: After School Matters, a nonprofit that provides after-school and summer programs for CPS high school students, is overhauling a 36,000-square-foot building near the site of the former Cabrini-Green public housing projects. The renovated space, located inside a former Catholic school at 1065 N. Orleans St., will mark a significant expansion for After School Matters, allowing the organization to offer opportunities there for up to 1,500 teens annually. The facility will host classes in STEM subjects, the arts and culinary arts, as well as expanded sports programming.

*** Chicago’s Mass Transit ***

* WTTW | CTA Officially Secures $1.9B in Federal Funding for Red Line Extension: The 5.6-mile extension will add new stations at 103rd Street, 111th Street, Michigan Avenue near 116th Street, and 130th Street. In August, the transit agency’s board of directors awarded a design-build contract for the project to a coalition of firms with extensive transit experience, including work on the CTA’s ongoing Red and Purple Modernization effort on the North Side.

* Sun-Times | CTA increasing bus service to pre-pandemic levels: The CTA’s winter schedule adds more weekday buses on 19 lines and additional weekend buses on six lines, the agency said Wednesday. The CTA has been increasing the frequency of its trains and buses since the COVID-19 pandemic sent ridership tumbling. The agency has struggled to hire and retain operators but has doubled its hiring efforts in the last year.

* Block Club | South Side Metra Stations Get Accessible Upgrades For First Time In 100 Years: The 79th St./Chatham Metra Electric Line station resumed service Monday, over a year after closing for construction in summer 2023. The station is now equipped with ADA-accessible street-level entrances, lobbies with elevators and new stairs, deck platforms, lighting and signage, according to a news release.

* Block Club | White Sox Change Stadium Name To ‘Rate Field,’ Fans Collectively Boo: “There’s apathy, more than anything,” one fan said about the anticlimactic name change. The White Sox’s naming rights deal with Chicago mortgage company Guaranteed Rate runs through 2029.

* Daily Herald | ‘It does affect me’: Williams trying to deal with Bears’ losing streak: The Bears fired offensive coordinator Shane Waldron, then fired head coach Matt Eberflus. Still, the team keeps losing. After Monday night’s 30-12 loss to the Vikings, Williams called this season “frustrating and encouraging.” He said he’s encouraged by the Bears’ fight. The frustrations come from, well, all the losing.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘A big, bold undertaking’: Elgin plans to move ‘Tent City’ residents to hotel, tear down encampment: The city’s agreement with Litchfield Motel, Inc., the business operating the hotel at 1585 Dundee Ave., calls for a block of 50 rooms for four months at $65 per day for single occupancy. Provisions in the agreement will provide scaled rates for partnered individuals and those with pets.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg’s 5-year, $412.7 million capital improvement plan envisions no tax hikes: Schaumburg’s ambitious five-year, $412.7 million capital improvement plan includes replacements of village hall and the police station, renovations to two fire stations and the Al Larson Prairie Center for the Arts as well as extensive road maintenance, all without raising taxes. In fact, no property taxes are included among the revenue sources at all apart from eligible allocations from tax increment financing (TIF) districts.

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen Village Board race finalized with 9 candidates for 3 trustee positions: Objections were filed to nominating petitions for 15 of the 17 interested candidates who filed to run for three trustee positions. Pericles Abbasi, an attorney to Craig Carlson who objected to 14 of those petitions, withdrew the five outstanding objections to petitions from Ruben L. Pazmino, Kevin Koukol, John Hayes, Katie Surges and Kyle Surges. Because their objections were removed, they will appear on the April 1 ballot.

* ABC Chicago | Teamsters union strike against Amazon to impact Skokie facility amid holiday shipping season: Workers in Skokie will be joining other amazon employees across the country in California and New York to put pressure on the company to reach a labor agreement. All of this taking place just days before Christmas. The unions said it gave Amazon a December 15 deadline to come to the bargaining table and negotiate a contract with better pay and working conditions.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | WCIA holds blood drive in memory of two former employees: For 10 years WCIA has been encouraging viewers to donate blood during our gift of life drive. It’s in honor of Robert Reese and Dave Benton. Jennifer Roscoe talked to their families this week about their legacy that lives on. We lost Robert Reese 12 years ago, and Dave Benton nine years ago. Both to cancer, both too soon.

* WSIL | More than 82,000 deer harvested during Illinois firearm deer season: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources says hunters harvested a preliminary total of 82,496 deer during the seven-day 2024 Illinois firearm deer season that concluded December 8. That’s compared to 76,494 deer during the 2023 firearm season.

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Live coverage

Thursday, Dec 19, 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 19, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised over $36,000! 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
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* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts (Updated)
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
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