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Governor appoints acting IDOT Secretary after Osman retires (Updated)

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* News…


* Press release

Today, Governor JB Pritzker announced his appointment of transportation expert Gia Biagi to lead the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), pending Senate approval. Biagi brings decades of experience in urban planning, transportation, and public policy, including previously serving as Commissioner of the Chicago Department of Transportation. The announcement comes alongside Omer Osman’s retirement from IDOT after 35 years of service to the agency.

“As my administration continues our ambitious goals to revitalize transportation across the state, I’m excited to appoint Gia Biagi as the next leader of IDOT,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Her expansive portfolio and unique leadership experience will undoubtedly propel IDOT’s mission forward and strengthen Illinois’ infrastructure efforts. I would also like to congratulate Secretary Osman on his retirement and thank him for so many years of dedicated service to our State.”

Omer Osman began his career at IDOT in 1989, working as a civil engineer, and proceeded to move into more challenging leadership roles. He eventually transitioned to executive management of the agency, overseeing historic projects such as the modernization of Interstate 80 in Chicago area, the I-57/74 interchange reconstruction in Champaign-Urbana, capacity improvements to I-57 in southern Illinois and a renewed focus on multimodalism. He was appointed Transportation Secretary in 2019, where he led the agency through the historic Rebuild Illinois bipartisan infrastructure bill. Osman also championed diversity through all levels of the agency, and strongly advocated for minority- and women- owned businesses in partnership with IDOT. […]

Biagi joins IDOT after four years of service at the Chicago Department of Transportation. She also served as Principal of Urbanism and Civic Impact at Studio Gang Architects, a Chicago-based architecture and urban design practice, where she advised private- and public- sector clients on urban design, community engagement and land use planning. […]

Biagi spent more than 10 years at the Chicago Park District, eventually serving as Chief of Staff after years of various leadership and urban development strategy roles.

She brings unique leadership experience as a board member for the Shared Use Mobility Center, a board trustee of the Chicago Architecture Center, an advisory board member of the Women’s Transportation Seminar, and a former board member of the National Association of City Transportation Officials. Biagi was recently named a Visiting Fellow at the Clinton School of Public Service at the University of Arkansas. She earned her bachelor’s from the University of Michigan and her master’s from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

…Adding… Biagi was interviewed about a year ago, and here’s just a little of what she said

There are two kinds of problems in the world. There are the technical ones and there are the adaptive ones. We’re very good at solving technical problems in this field, like the Rubik’s Cube. I know what it looks like when it’s done and I know how to solve it. Then there are the adaptive challenges. They’re like a hurricane and you can’t really solve a hurricane.

The big challenges that matter are in that camp. It’s not to say that technical skills aren’t needed, but they can’t lead. They fit inside a larger context that is murky. We have to nest that technical work inside that adaptive lens and know what we’re solving for.

…Adding… American Council of Engineering Companies of Illinois…

“Since his appointment to Secretary of the Illinois Department of Transportation in 2019, Omer Osman has been invaluable to rebuilding Illinois. We thank him for his leadership to the department and the entire Illinois transportation sector,” said Kevin Artl, president and CEO of the American Council of Engineering Companies of Illinois. “Governor JB Pritzker has made an excellent choice in his appointment of Gia Biagi as the next Secretary to IDOT. As the Commissioner to the Chicago Department of Transportation, Gia was innovative and forward thinking. With her understanding of transportation needs not only in Chicago, but statewide, Gia will be an outstanding leader to continue rebuilding Illinois.”

  3 Comments      


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

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is investigating a piece of mail sent to state Rep. Barbara Hernandez’s office in downtown Aurora after one of the office’s staff members, who opened the letter, fell ill and was taken to the hospital.

At around 1 p.m. on Monday, the Aurora fire and police departments responded to 1 E. Benton St., which holds a number of offices including Hernandez’s, after an employee reported feeling sick after opening the mail, according to a news release sent by the Aurora Police Department on Monday.

The building was evacuated “out of an abundance of caution,” but it was unclear whether or not the letter contributed to the employee’s condition, officials said in the release.

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service was also at the scene on Monday along with the FBI and the Illinois State Police, according to U.S. Postal Inspection Service spokesperson Spencer Block. He said in an email on Tuesday that inspectors have the letter, which was reported to emit a suspicious odor, and that the investigation is ongoing.

* Crain’s

Walgreens Boots Alliance is reportedly considering selling itself to a private-equity firm that would take the struggling pharmacy chain off the public market.

The Wall Street Journal first reported that Sycamore Partners has been discussing a possible deal with Deerfield-based Walgreens, which could be completed early next year, according to the Journal. Bloomberg, citing unnamed sources, later reported the possible deal, adding that discussions could fall through without a deal materializing.

New York-based Sycamore, which specializes in retail and consumer investments, would likely sell off pieces of Walgreens’ massive business or “work with partners,” the WSJ reports.

Walgreens shares spiked 21% today on the news. The WSJ did not report a potential sale price, but Walgreens’ market cap was up to about $9 billion today from $7.4 billion yesterday.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* 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?”

*** Statehouse News ***

* 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.”

*** Statewide ***

* 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.

*** Chicago ***

* 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.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* 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.

*** Downstate ***

* 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.

*** National ***

* 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.

  3 Comments      


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…

The Illinois Flag Commission selected its Top 10 finalists for the state flag redesign contest with public voting slated to begin in January.

Members of the commission could select up to 10 of their favorite designs – from the nearly 5,000 submissions – prior to their December 9 meeting where they narrowed their choices to 10 overall.

“Having received nearly 5,000 entries, I appreciate the creativity and passion reflected in all the submissions,” said Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, whose office convened the Flag Commission meetings.

Starting in January, the public will have the opportunity to vote online at www.ilsos.gov/stateflag for one of the new designs, or one of three former flag designs, including the current state flag, the 1918 Centennial Flag and the 1968 Sesquicentennial Flag.

After the public voting period, the commission will report its findings and recommendations to the Illinois General Assembly by April 1, 2025, whose members will vote on whether to adopt a new flag, return to a previous iteration of the flag or retain the current flag.

Senate Bill 1818, sponsored by State Senator Doris Turner (48th District—Springfield) and State Representative Kam Buckner (26th District—Chicago), was signed into law by Governor JB Pritzker in 2023, creating the commission to gauge public desire for a new flag.

Click here and tell us which is your favorite.

  56 Comments      


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…

As you already know, Comptroller Judy Baar Topinka passed away last week.

Topinka had a stroke the morning of December 9th, but that’s not what killed her. In fact, by the afternoon, she announced she was going to walk to the restroom. Her chief of staff Nancy Kimme told her not to try because she was paralyzed on her left side. In mocking defiance, Topinka started kicking her no longer paralyzed leg.

By early evening, medical staff told Topinka that she’d be out of the hospital in a few days and would then need three weeks of rehabilitation. The indestructible Topinka appeared to have won again, just like she did after she fell and broke her hip and badly injured her back after giving a speech in 2012. The accident slowed her down, but it never stopped her, never silenced her, never broke her spirit, never stopped her from running for reelection.

What finally felled Topinka was completely unexpected. Hours after her speedy recovery, Topinka fell asleep. A massive clot somehow withstood her blood-thinning medication and got around a clot trap installed beneath her rib cage and entered her lung.

The end came quickly.

In a matter of seconds, we lost not only one of our state’s strongest voices for financial prudence, its most consistently successful female statewide elected official, its most pro-union, pro-gay rights Republican, but also its most human politician.

My brother Doug met Topinka when he was with me at an event. Doug posted this on his Facebook page the day she died: “She was the first statewide elected official I ever met that I thought ‘Hey, she’s just a regular person like the rest of us.’”

Judy only talked down to dunderheads. Everyone else was treated like an old friend, and she just had that way about her that you knew she meant it.

I once had lunch with Judy in her state Senate district. She took me to a local Bohemian place and I barely got to talk to her. She knew, by name, just about everyone at that restaurant. People literally lined up to shake her hand and chat with her the entire time we were there. She’d hug them, ask about their children, their aunts, their cousins, mostly by name. And she never lost that smile, even while she was eating.

She often told stories about when she served in the Illinois House during the height of the Equal Rights Amendment debate. Ultra-conservative women, she’d humorously recall, would often grab her arm, fall to their knees and pray for her.

What did you do? I asked. “I let them pray!” the ERA supporter hooted. She then thanked them for their prayers and continued on her merry way.

Topinka was elected to the Illinois Senate in 1984, after first building a House constituent services program unlike almost anywhere else. Her phone number was always public, and she would get calls at her home at all hours, once from a constituent with a cat up her tree during the middle of the night. She served not only her own constituents, but also those who lived in the neighboring district represented by former Democratic Senate President Phil Rock, who was often too busy with the affairs of state to handle mundane constituent requests.

Born to immigrant parents, Topinka graduated from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She went on to write a column for the Berwyn Cicero Life newspaper called “Let’s Talk.” Former Rep. Jack Kubik, who once represented half of Judy’s district, said it was the most-read column in his family’s newspaper. It was all about political stuff that nobody else was writing about. The two of us were a natural fit.

I first encountered Judy not long after I was hired as Hannah Information’s columnist in 1990. She was fascinated by the company’s “new wave” technology and my “alternative” form of journalism and her Statehouse office quickly became my second home.

We were both “nobody what nobody sent.” Topinka was elected to her first House term over the opposition of the local party bosses. I started writing about Statehouse politics for a little technology startup.

Few would talk to me back then because I wasn’t anybody. But Judy helped teach me how to be successful in this crazy business. She also taught me a valuable lesson about how to treat strangers and acquaintances: like old friends.

I loved that woman.

Neil Steinberg’s column from that time is also definitely worth a read, as is former Senate President John Cullerton’s op-ed.

  26 Comments      


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

Speaker Welch: I think there’s 800 school districts across the state that say we owe them more money. Anyone disagree with that?

Honestly, we have to do a job that represents all of the districts across the state. And, you know, what we’ve done under our leadership is every year we’ve increased the EBF funding $350 million we’re well over a billion dollars in funding since it into effect. We can do better when it comes to funding our schools. As a product of public schools, coming from a local school board. I believe the state can always do better, but we also have to be realistic about that.

Greg Hinz: So does that mean that maybe number 350 and that will be it?

Welch: We’ll see. […]

President Harmon: I owe the bank a fair amount of money on my mortgage, but they’re not getting more than the monthly payment that’s due this month.

* On the mass transit fiscal cliff…

President Harmon: I have expressed to several audiences, I’m relatively agnostic on governance. Leave it exactly the way it is, start from scratch with a brand new governing body, I don’t think that matters nearly as much as service matters. The people that I represent are asking the questions about the service, and we need to focus on the transit system of 2050 and not try to rebuild the one from 1975.

At a minimum. We need to make sure the three branches can coordinate so that you can leave your house and get to school or work without having to cross this barrier between Metra and Pace and CTA. They should work together.

Whether there’s more money, or the same money, the old governing board, the new governing board; what we need to really need to focus on is what does that service look like? As you pointed out, commuting today looks very different than it looked when I was a kid. It’s not a hub and spoke with everybody going to the Loop. We have to reinvent this system so you can get from where you are to where you’re going.

Greg Hinz: That sounds like you do not consider consolidation to be a necessity.

Harmon: Coordination is a necessity. Better service is a necessity. Clean fast trains and busses is a necessity. […]

Speaker Welch: One thing that I know we all agree on, it’s important that we talk about reforms first. What do those reforms look like? We don’t know yet, but it’s important that we talk about reforms before you can get to the other question.

Hinz: Are you of the belief that, assuming you get the reform, that the transit agencies need more money? And if so, where do you get it?

Welch: Well, clearly, they’re operating out of a deficit, but what that number looks like? We don’t know without reforms.

Harmon: I’ve explained this to many people in my office. There’s one puzzle on my desk, all the pieces are scattered around. It includes the state budget. It includes transit. It includes proposals from different sides on pension funding. We can’t solve one without solving all of them, and so what we’re trying to do right now is assemble all those pieces without losing any on the floor, and make sure all the corners fit.

Rich has been telling subscribers about the coordination aspect of transit reform.

* Yep, we’re still talking about the Bears…

Greg Hinz: Another group that has its hand out, there’s a lot of those in Springfield, is that impoverished family, the McCaskey’s who would like the state to contribute billions of dollars for a new stadium in Chicago. Or if that doesn’t work, maybe a lot of road money and some other money for a new stadium in Arlington Heights. Mr. Speaker, let’s start with you on that. These ideas did not appear to have moved very far or picked up a lot of support. Any chance that’s going to change?

Welch: No. let me say this: I don’t know anyone who wants us to give millionaires a tax-funded stadium. That was the case last year, and that’s the case right now.

You know, people are talking about groceries and rent, things of that nature, and for us to give billionaires taxpayer money to fund a stadium would be the last thing voters want us to do. I wore a red tie today because it’s the holiday season. I would love for the McCaskeys to give us two Christmas presents, a winning football team and in privately funded stadium, probably on the Michael Reese site.

Invest in a Black neighborhood that’s long been under invested, like Bronzeville, because I just think publicly funding a stadium makes no sense in this economy.

Hinz: Should the state? Let’s say the McCaskeys have an epiphany and they change their mind and said, ‘Ok, Bronezville won’t raise the capital for the stadium itself,’ should the state contribute money for infrastructure?

Welch: Well, I mean, the state has infrastructure dollars, and that’s a conversation that we could have. That’s a different conversation, but the conversation has, right now, focused on ISFA dollars and I think that’s a misplaced conversation.

* Chicago’s budget…

Greg Hinz: One other party with his hand out in Springfield that I want to talk about is Mayor Johnson, who has been presiding over a, let’s call it, a very messy budget process. He clearly would like some help from Springfield to prop up his budget. Have you had conversations with the mayor? What’s he want? What are you prepared to do? What’s on the table?

President Harmon: I’ve known the mayor for an awful long time. I like him. A great deal of great affection for him. I want him to succeed. I want to see-

Hinz: He worked for you at one point, didn’t he?

Harmon: He worked for me, early on in my time in the Senate, that said, I’m not involved in governing the city, and I have no basis on which to comment as to what’s going on over there. […]

Greg Hinz: Has [Mayor Johnson] given you a wish list.

Both Harmon and Welch: No.

Hinz: No communication at all?

President Harmon: We are committed to the success of the city. At this point the city hasn’t asked for anything in specific, and anything the city asks for we have to put through the filter of how do we how are we equitably dividing state resources and all the municipalities in the state.

Hinz: Hard to give you something if you haven’t asked for it.

Discuss.

…Adding… National Association of Social Workers…


  29 Comments      


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

Mary Hanahan has been a critical pillar within the Senate Dems legal structure for the past 6 years. She has been instrumental in getting all of the energy bills over the finish line and a number of other significant pieces of legislation over the years. She works behind the scenes diligently and has served her caucus well. She will be deeply missed.

Runner-up is Jon Peebles

As previously stated, he just left staff but I know that he will continue to positively contribute to the legislative process. His understanding of his subject matter is top-notch, and he can drill down to the heart of each issue without getting distracted by unnecessary details. He is also a straight shooter, and these factors plus many others are why the SDEM leaders greatly value his take on issues.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best Republican State Senate Staff Member goes to Bill Schneider

He has many decades of legal experience from both staff and previous roles, and he uses it throttle wide open on every assignment he gets. He will have your sides sore with laughter, as he creates humor from the most mundane things.

Honorable mention goes to the relentless Whitney Barnes.

* On to today’s categories

    Best Democratic State House Staff Member

    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!

  17 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Fundraiser list

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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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.

  5 Comments      


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

    - President-elect Donald Trump’s border czar Tom Homan came to Chicago on Monday to implore Mayor Brandon Johnson and Gov. JB Pritzker to “come to the table” and negotiate with him over a mass deportation plan that he declared would start right here.
    - “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.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* 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.

*** Statehouse News ***

* 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.

*** Statewide ***

* 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.

*** Chicago ***

* 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.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* 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.

*** Downstate ***

* 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.

*** National ***

* 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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Bring 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!

* Tribune

[Illinois] is in better shape to withstand a downturn than it was during either the 2007 Great Recession or the 2020 COVID recession, according to the joint study published Monday by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

“No state in the nation is recession proof,” said report co-author Frank Manzo, an economist at the Illinois Economic Policy Institute, a La Grange-based nonpartisan research organization. “But Illinois is better positioned to overcome the challenges and withstand the forces that trigger recessions than at any point in recent history.”

The elimination of the general fund deficit and replenishing the state’s “rainy day” fund with $2 billion lead the list of post-pandemic improvements that should help Illinois weather a possible recession with a little less pain than the previous two, the study found.

Other improvements include a work-share program implemented in 2021 that allows employers to avoid layoffs by temporarily reducing workers’ hours while enabling them to receive pro-rated unemployment benefits.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTVO | These new Illinois laws are going into effect on Jan. 1, 2025: So, starting January 1st, 2025, the Illinois minimum wage will be $15 an hour, according to the Illinois Department of Labor. Tipped workers will also see a minimum wage increase, from $8.40 an hour to $9 an hour. That’s thanks to a state law that says tipped workers must earn at least 60% of the state’s minimum wage.

* WBEZ | More Muslim girls are playing youth sports and celebrating their religion while doing it: In 2021, an Illinois law went into effect allowing students to freely wear hijabs, leggings and long sleeves without having to request a waiver from their school district. Muslim Civic Coalition president Dilara Sayeed, whose group helped draft the bill, said the change gives boys and girls in Illinois the chance “to play in uniforms that meet their faith traditions and not have to constantly be seeking approval to do it.” It was also around that time that a number of basketball leagues in the Chicago suburbs aimed at Muslim girls sprang up. Chaudhary, the coach who prayed with her players, started iDrive Faith + Athletics in suburban Woodridge in 2021 to teach young Muslim girls basketball. […] When she coached girls basketball at a suburban Islamic high school a decade ago, she said referees occasionally inspected the hijabs some of her players wore.

*** Statewide ***

* River Bender | Raoul Issues Statement On Appellate Court Opinion To Stay Injunction On Protect Illinois Communities Act: Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued the following statement after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit stayed an injunction a district court entered regarding the Protect Illinois Communities Act. The stay will remain in place while the appeal is pending. “I am pleased the 7th Circuit has stayed the district court’s injunction. My office will continue to prosecute the appeal, and the Protect Illinois Communities Act remains the law of the land as the litigation is pending in the lower courts. The Protect Illinois Communities Act is an important tool to prevent weapons of war from being used in our schools and on our streets, and I am committed to defending its constitutionality.”

* WAND | IL Farm Bureau President Addresses Rift: At a Saturday afternoon news conference, IFB President Brian Duncan characterized AFBF’s move as demonstrating a preference for quantity of members over quality of member engagement. “By making this choice, AFBF is abandoning 70,000+ farmers over a decision that will ultimately benefit Illinois Farm Bureau, county farm bureaus and Illinois farmers,” Duncan said. “We believe we are taking steps to effectively grow our organization. Our plans are not only in numbers but both in value and influence of our farmer members.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chicago | Game of Zones: So why is it so hard to build multifamily housing here? There isn’t a single culprit, but a big one is the city’s zoning laws. As of 2023, 41 percent of Chicago’s land was zoned for single-family residential, according to the Metropolitan Planning Council, a nonprofit policy group. A change to allow more units requires rezoning approval, a multistep process that includes a review by the Department of Planning and Development, a public meeting, and zoning committee approval before a full City Council vote. Then there’s aldermanic prerogative, the unwritten but prevalent practice of granting alderpersons final say over decisions in theirs wards, including zoning changes.

* Bloomberg | Lyft Urges Chicago Riders to Ask City Hall to Reject New Tax: “The Chicago City Council is considering another tax on rideshare,” according to an email Lyft sent to Chicago riders on Thursday. “If passed, riders like you may face price increases. On top of high costs of living and inflation, this is the last thing riders in Chicago need.” A spokeswoman for the city’s budget department, LaKesha Gage-Woodard, declined to comment on the proposed ordinance or Lyft’s stance, given the city is in the midst of budget negotiations.

* WBEZ | Axing a guaranteed income program to fill the city’s budget hole will cost Chicago long-term, advocates say: As the mayor’s administration works toward a budget deal, about $30 million in COVID-19 relief funds set aside for the Chicago Empowerment Fund is on the chopping block. A coalition of formerly incarcerated residents, immigrants and advocates urged the mayor and City Council members to keep the guaranteed income program in the budget at a City Hall news conference. “Shame, shame, shame on the City Council; shame on our mayor,” said Richard Wallace, executive director of Equity and Transformation (EAT), a group focused on helping returning citizens on the West Side. “We got commitment from the city that this pilot was going to be in the budget in 2025 and for us to find out that this program is slowly but surely getting pushed out, it was something that we could not sleep with.”

* Sun-Times | David Perry, urban planner with a passion for strengthening Chicago neighborhoods, dies at 82: David Perry, a longtime urban planner and Chicago professor who focused on strengthening cities and making urban spaces serve residents, has died at age 82. He died Dec. 2 at home following a long illness, his family said. Mr. Perry was the director of the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois Chicago for nearly 12 years. He was also an urban planning and policy professor at UIC and served as associate chancellor for the Great Cities Commitment. He retired from the university in 2018.

* Block Club | North Side Businesses Struggle Amid Burglary Surge: ‘How Is This Sustainable?’: The Oct. 17 break-in at 2D was the third in 10 months, the couple said. The employee who alerted them — a 19-year-old recent transplant to Chicago, already traumatized from previous break-ins — later quit. That experience, and those early-morning phone calls, have become common for restaurant owners across the city, especially in commercially dense North Side neighborhoods where popular restaurants and bars abound — and burglaries have spiked this year. The stream of news reports and stories from business owners about repeated break-ins has yet to slow down, leaving many frustrated, tired and, in the words of one veteran restaurateur, “numb.”

* Block Club | How Former Bull Joakim Noah Is Building Community — And Preventing Violence — Through Basketball: Basketball has allowed former Chicago Bulls star Joakim Noah to travel the world and compete at the highest level while giving back. But it is his time in Chicago — and the connections he made in the city — that have most informed his charitable work in violence prevention. Noah’s One City Basketball League hosted its third championship tournament Saturday at Wendell Phillips Academy High School, 244 E. Pershing Road. The league, composed of boys and young men ages 16-25, promotes violence prevention and conflict resolution. It also includes programs to develop life skills such as financial literacy and career readiness. Players are paid $50 per game.

* Block Club | Shedd Aquarium’s Wonder Of Water Replaces 53-Year-Old Exhibit — And Gives Lake Life Some Love: Shedd Aquarium’s newest exhibit, “Wonder of Water,” opens to the public Tuesday, replacing the long-running Caribbean Reef exhibit in the museum’s historic rotunda. When the aquarium opened in 1930, the rotunda featured a swamp ecosystem exhibit. In 1971, it was updated to the Caribbean Reef, showcasing tropical fish, stingrays and sharks. Wonder of Water, the latest iteration, includes two massive, 28,110-gallon tanks featuring saltwater and freshwater ecosystems, uniting the parallel worlds for side-by-side discovery.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Jim Dodge to stay on ballot as challenger to Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau after objection pulled: Jim Dodge will remain on the ballot as candidate for Orland Park village president against incumbent Keith Pekau after an objection to his nominating papers was withdrawn Monday. Dodge said he plans a lawsuit to recoup legal expenses he incurred defending the challenge. John Hartmann filed a challenge to Dodge’s nominating petitions to challenge Pekau, claiming paperwork by Dodge, a former village trustee, is confusing as to whether he’s running for mayor or village president, although the terms are often using interchangeably.

* Daily Herald | ‘A completely different look’: $4 million streetscape improvement planned for downtown Lake Zurich: Over the last two years, the village has been replacing old water mains, sanitary sewers and other structures in the area and will be moving above ground as the next focus in the Main Street corridor. As planned, Main Street from Lake to Church streets will be rebuilt as part of a streetscape project to include new landscaping, parking, sidewalks, crosswalks, seating and enhanced signage.

* Shaw Local | Fluoride in the water: Some on McHenry City Council question its presence in city system: “It seems like a hindrance to everybody involved,” Koch added. “I don’t know exactly the reasons … drinking this fluoridated water, breaking down of your immune system. I want to get rid of it,” [Alderman Michael Koch] said. Koch may to be referring to another study from the journal Frontiers in Immunology and found on the National Institute of Health’s National Library of Medicine Website. That study states: “Excessive fluoride intake in water may induce immunosuppression, decreasing the number of immune cells and damaging the immune function of the thymus.” That study refers to levels in excess of 2.4 mg for children 8 to 16 years that it said “may lead to … adverse health effects. Those levels are notably higher than what’s in the local water systems.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County has almost 10K lead water pipes; ‘It’s a known toxin’: While Lake County Public Works’ water system is almost entirely lead-free, there are more than 9,800 reported lead service lines in the county, according to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. Catherine Game is executive director of the Brushwood Center, an environmental justice and health equity nonprofit. Last year, Game said the group released a report on Lake County looking at the intersection of environmental health and social determinants of health. Communities have been impacted by a “kind of legacy of pollution and lead pipes,” she said.

*** Downstate ***

* Press Release | Illinois researchers to kick off new phase of program to explore space-based manufacturing: What is being billed as the most exciting phase of a space manufacturing project called Mission Illinois is set to kick off this month. The project is currently gearing up to send a specialized construction apparatus to the International Space Station to demonstrate space-based or on-orbit manufacturing during the summer of 2026. The mission is backed by four and a half years of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency-funded research in space materials, manufacturing and structural design at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

* SJ-R | ‘A heart of gold’: Clyde Bunch, who served on the county board for 46 years, dead at 88: Clyde Bunch, who was first elected to the Sangamon County Board in 1978 and was recognized as the longest-serving county board member in Illinois, died at Bridge Care Suites in Springfield on Dec. 3. He was 88. Bunch was one of eight Democrats to serve on the 29-member board. He represented District 21, which encompasses the south-central part of Springfield.

* WGIL | Meet Kristi Mindrup, the new and first female president of Western Illinois University: Mindrup has served as WIU’s interim president since April 2024. Prior to that, she served as the Vice President for Quad Cities Campus Operations. Mindrup brings 27 years of experience in higher education, focused on organizational leadership, strategic planning, academic affairs, student services program and partnership development, inclusive campus environments and campus operations. Mindrup also provided leadership for the planning and establishment of the WIU Quad Cities Riverfront Campus in Moline.

* BND | Beyond mayoral challenge, three other Belleville city races will be competitive: Four races for Belleville city offices will be competitive in the consolidated election on April 1, 2025. Mayor Patty Gregory is being challenged by City Clerk Jenny Meyer, who announced her candidacy in late August. In early September, Gregory confirmed her intention to seek a second term. Teacher and Ward 5 Alderwoman Shelly Schaefer will compete for the vacated city clerk’s position against newly elected St. Clair County Board of Review member Irma Golliday.

* PJ Star | Small-town bond between an Illinois football player and injured boy near Peoria: Wettstein was 14 when he suffered an all-terrain vehicle accident on on Aug. 25, 2024, leaving him hospitalized with head injuries. He has endured multiple surgeries and traveled to Chicago for therapy in what has been an ongoing long road to recovery. […] The 6-foot-1, 215-pound Duley arrived at Hank Wettstein’s house and presented him with another No. 31 jersey and a card signed by the Illini team. And he gave him the gift of time together.

*** National ***

* NYT | Most Rural Hospitals Have Closed Their Maternity Wards, Study Finds: Over 500 hospitals have closed their labor and delivery departments since 2010, according to a large new study, leaving most rural hospitals and more than a third of urban hospitals without obstetric care. Those closures, the study found, were slightly offset by the opening of new units in about 130 hospitals. Even so, the share of hospitals without maternity wards increased every year, according to the study, published on Wednesday in JAMA, a prominent medical journal. Maternal deaths remained persistently high over that period, spiking during the pandemic.

* OPB | AI slop is already invading Oregon’s local journalism: The Ashland Daily Tidings — established as a newspaper in 1876 — ceased operations in 2023, but if you were a local reader, you may not have known. Almost as soon as it closed, a website for the Tidings reemerged, boasting a team of eight reporters, Minihane included, who cranked out densely reported stories every few days. And those reporters were covering a lot more than local news. They dove into Oregon’s fentanyl crisis (“Measure 110 might be in for a repeal”), homelessness in Eugene (“All In Lane County homeless program delivers impressive results”), and the food scene in Portland (“The fourth best burger in the U.S. is in Portland”) — essentially any issue that might draw attention from Oregonians. The reality was that none of the people allegedly working for the Ashland Daily Tidings existed, or at least were who they claimed to be. The bylines listed on Daily Tidings articles were put there by scammers using artificial intelligence, and in some cases stolen identities, to dupe local readers.

* Semafor | Dem governors keep their powder dry on Trump at Governors Association meeting: Most of them gathered in Beverly Hills for the Democratic Governors Association’s post-election meeting; none were ready to join Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Colorado’s Jared Polis’ promised coalition against the threat of “autocracy.” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy told Semafor he congratulated Donald Trump after the election and “invited him to cut the ribbon” on a project he approved that got built in the Biden administration.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Dec 9, 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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Question of the day: Golden Horseshoe Awards

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best House Democratic Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Caitlin Anderson

She is one of 4 or 5 current LC staffers with a Masters. Has to be one of the most organized staffers on the 2nd floor. Because she needs to be with all her duties. These include 4 members that worked her with their combined 70 plus bills, all of which Caitlin stayed on top of. She is the support staffer for the HDem Womens Caucus which is the largest sub-caucus. And she’s in charge of team tasked with Identifying, producing materials for, and distributing information on all events and holidays taking place through the state…. to all 78 district offices….on a monthly basis.

Utmost-honorable mention goes to our 2023 winner Liz Moody.

* The 2024 Golden Horseshoe Award for Best House Republican Legislative Assistant/District Office Manager goes to Breeann Steinacher

Bree manages an incredibly busy Ryan Spain, including his scheduling both in and out of Springfield. She is incredibly responsive, never fails to return a call or email, and is always super kind even when she’s telling you no. She is a fantastic part of the HGOP LA Team.

Congratulations!

* On to today’s categories

    Best Democratic State Senate Staff Member

    Best Republican State Senate Staff Member

Nominees can be from the government or the political sides. Please try to nominate in both categories if you can, and don’t forget to explain your nominations or they won’t count.

* We’ve now raised the money to purchase 663 Christmas presents for foster kids. Thanks! But the need is far greater than that. Lutheran Social Services of Illinois helps care for more than 2,500 foster children.

These kids have all been going through a lot at no fault of their own. You don’t become a foster child if you’re living a great life, after all. So, your donation could help brighten the lives of kids who could really use a lift.

Please, click here. Thanks so very much!

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Roundup: Budzinski testifies about the ‘Sphinx’

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Lobbyist Nancy Kimme was briefly back on the witness stand to conclude her testimony

* Tribune

The jury in Michael Madigan’s corruption trial has heard many nicknames given to the powerful Democratic House Speaker, from the obvious, like “MJM” or “Mr. Speaker,” to the more esoteric such as “Himself” and “our Friend.” […]

[Sphinx] was the moniker applied to Madigan by some members of JB Pritzker’s team after Pritzker’s election in 2018, according to U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski, who was a top Pritzker aide before her election to Congress in 2022.

The nickname, a reference to the mythical figure of Egyptian pharaohs typically used to convey strength and ferocity, was used in an email shown during Budzinski’s testimony referencing a job recommendation from Madigan for Pritzker’s new administration.

“Attached is the most recent Sphinx list of recommendations ahead of your meeting today,” read the Dec. 4, 2018, email, which was sent from Budzinski to Pritzker and his soon-to-be chief of staff, Anne Caprara. “We have noted these in our process and they are coming thru our portal.”

* Sun-Times

“We need to call him at least,” Budzinski told people in charge of personnel. “The Speaker raised with JB yesterday.”

Budzinski testified that she felt it important to be “responsive” to Madigan’s recommendations, but that it wasn’t necessary to “act” on them. And when asked if anyone was appointed based on a private payment or benefit to Madigan, she told a prosecutor “absolutely not.”

“Because that would be wrong and we have a process, we would never do that,” Budzinski said. […]

Testimony in the trial ended early Monday, after Budzinski left the stand, due to services for 7th Circuit Judge Joel Flaum, who died Wednesday. Prosecutors are nearing the end of their case against Madigan but told U.S. District Judge John Blakey they now expect to rest early next week.

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner


* Center Square

On cross-examination, defense attorneys took Budzinski through the Sphinx list, pointing out cases where Madigan’s recommendations didn’t get the jobs he had requested. The Sphinx list generally had recommendations from Madigan and Pritzker. Budzinski also said she didn’t feel required to hire Madigan’s recommendations and wasn’t worried about backlash if she failed to hire one of Madigan’s picks.

She also said she only hired people who were qualified.

* Courthouse News reporter Dave Byrnes

* More…

    * State Week | Prosecutors move closer to wrapping up their case against Madigan: After weeks of testimony and recorded conversations, prosecutors have indicated they are inching toward resting in the case against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and his longtime friend and advisor, Mike McClain. The court action has put a spotlight on how Madigan conducted business in the role he held for so long. We get an update on the case so far.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Legislative news

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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It’s just a bill

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Anti-Defamation League…

Leading civil rights groups will hold a news conference TOMORROW, Monday, December 9 at 9:00 AM to discuss a dramatic rise in hate crimes in Illinois and steps needed to protect at-risk communities. The news conference will be held at the headquarters of the Chicago Urban League.

The civil rights groups will call on the Illinois State House of Representatives to pass SB 3552/HB 5368 during January’s Lame Duck Legislative Session. The bill requires all law enforcement in Illinois to receive on-going training and education on state and federal hate crimes laws and how to identify, report, and respond to bias-motivated criminal activity.

SB 3552/HB 5368 is modeled after a 2023 recommendation from the Governor’s Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes, which noted: “A mandate of comprehensive basic and in-service hate crimes training… will help victims of hate crimes and incidents receive appropriate responses, bridge data and investigatory gaps, and develop trust between communities and law enforcement agencies.”

SB 3552 unanimously passed both the Illinois State Senate and the House committee of jurisdiction prior to the General Assembly recessing in June. Passage by the full House of Representatives during January’s Lame Duck Legislative Session is the only remaining legislative step to send the bill to Governor Pritzker for his signature and increase safety among Illinois’ most vulnerable communities. Illinois would become the 15th state in the country to require law enforcement in the state to receive hate crimes training and education.

The FBI’s most recent hate crimes data shows a 22-year high in the number of hate crimes reported across the United States and a 362% increase in the number of hate crimes reported in Illinois from 2019 (70 hate crimes reported) to 2023 (324 hate crimes reported).

* From the press conference

Regional Director of the Midwest ADL David Goldenberg: [The Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board] helped us draft this bill, so the state standard Training Board. Brendan Kelly, who’s the director of the Illinois State Police, serves on the [Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes] with myself and [Jim Bennett]. He has been very involved and supportive of this. It’s often law enforcement usually pushes back against more training. They’re actually embracing this one, and they’re saying, we need it as a policy. They typically don’t endorse a bill, but they filed a slip of no opposition this time.

You can watch the full press conference here.

* From SB3552

The [General and the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board] shall develop or approve a course to assist law enforcement officers in identifying, responding to, and reporting crimes committed in whole or in substantial part because of the victim’s or another’s actual or perceived race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, national origin, or disability, or because of the victim’s actual or perceived association with another person or group of a certain actual or perceived race, color, ethnicity, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, age, national origin, or disability. Each course must include instruction to help officers distinguish bias crimes from other crimes, to help officers in understanding and assisting victims of these crimes, and to ensure that bias crimes will be accurately reported. The Board must, within a reasonable amount of time, update this course to conform with national trends and best practices.

* Related…

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How Madigan is alleged to have corruptly used the legislature to pad his own pockets

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Whenever someone assures you that another person you’re both dealing with “understands” the “quid pro quo,” you’d be wise to run away as fast as you can and never look back.

But that’s exactly how then-Ald. Daniel Solis assured then-House Speaker Michael Madigan in late June of 2017 that their mark — the developers of a West Loop apartment complex — would eventually be convinced to retain Madigan’s property tax appeals law firm.

Solis chaired the powerful Zoning Committee, so the developers had to come through him, and Solis said they would understand the game: The developers hire Madigan’s law firm and their zoning changes would be approved.

“I think they understand how this works,” Solis told Madigan. “The quid pro quo.”

Solis admitted on the stand during Madigan’s corruption trial that what he said to Madigan was “dumb.”

Madigan didn’t know that the federal government was recording all his conversations with Solis. So, what was dumb about what Solis said is that Madigan might’ve immediately cut all ties to Solis, and Solis’ federal handlers would’ve been furious that he let the target get away.

Turns out, the real dummy was Madigan.

Madigan didn’t walk away. Instead, he kept going back to Solis, only gently admonishing him weeks later by telling Solis not to say the quiet part out loud and instructing him in the polite way of conducting business.

And then a few months later, while talking about another real estate deal, Solis asked whether the West Loop developers had signed on with Madigan’s firm. Madigan didn’t say, but appeared to give Solis the go-ahead to process their zoning request.

“You were contemplating processing something,” Madigan said. “You should go ahead and process that.”

The feds are also trying to prove that Madigan’s consigliere, longtime lobbyist and fellow defendant Mike McClain, wasn’t just freelancing without Madigan’s approval when it came to all the demands McClain was making of Commonwealth Edison.

The trial so far has given the feds big wins on that point. Madigan and Solis were in discussions about the state transferring a Chinatown parking lot to the City of Chicago so that it could be developed into a hotel, and Madigan could get the property tax business. So, he told Solis to reach out to McClain.

McClain would give the developer “some ideas about how to go about it.”

A couple of months later, Solis again brought up the Chinatown parcel to Madigan. “Let me get back into it and, and, um, see if there’s some way to find somebody that can talk to IDOT. That, that’s where the decision’s going to be made,” Madigan said.

“I’m trying to figure out a way to approach it,” Madigan later told Solis about the parcel. He appeared to be calculating how he could pass a bill to benefit his law firm without leaving any overt fingerprints.

Madigan eventually told Solis that one of the Chinatown developers would soon be receiving a call from McClain.

The effort to transfer the property extended into the spring of 2018 for several reasons, most importantly opposition from local legislators.

In March of 2018, Madigan told Solis that maybe McClain should talk to the senator who was putting a brick on the land transfer, and then explained to Solis at length how this particular legislation could shorten the time it would take to transfer the property to the city.

From there, jurors heard recordings about the intricacies of passing the bill, including who was blocking it. McClain is heard on a recording briefing Madigan about which legislators were opposing the bill and about how the then-secretary of transportation was “getting squeamish” about it.

Also in March, Solis told Madigan that if Madigan could “take care of that [Chinatown] matter in May,” during the end of spring session, “I’m confident they’ll appreciate it and … sign you up on after May.” Madigan didn’t run away then, either.

But the bill eventually died and a possible payday was missed.

On May 28, 2018, a few days before the scheduled end of spring session when there was still hope the bill would advance, McClain called a member of Madigan’s House staff to tell them about the property tax transfer bill, “that deals with a developer of [Madigan’s].” McClain told the staffer: “He wants to make sure he votes ‘present.’”

In other words, if the feds didn’t have Madigan, McClain and Solis on numerous recordings, Madigan could’ve officially covered his rear by voting “present” on a bill that would’ve potentially padded his pockets and that he’d allegedly been actively pushing behind the scenes for months on end.

And it continued from there.

  27 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

Start your week with kindness by donating to LSSI’s Christmas toy drive and bringing joy to a child in need.

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Kick off your week with compassion—support LSSI’s Christmas toy drive and help make the season bright for kids in need. Click here to donate!

* ICYMI: State anti-book-ban law leads some school districts to forsake grants to maintain local control. Tribune

    - Around 700 school districts regularly applied for state library grant funding in the last two years. Since the law took effect on Jan. 1, about 40 elementary and high school districts opted not to seek the funding from the secretary of state’s office.

    - The state library grants are not large — about $850 for small districts. No district that opted out of applying for funding this year received more than $4,000 in grant money during the last fiscal year, according to state records.

    - Joe Salmieri, superintendent of the Laraway Community Consolidated School District 70C in the Joliet area, said he didn’t want to lose autonomy over his school or library policies by applying for a grant.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* QC Online | See where Illinois cities stand on keeping 1% grocery tax cut by state: East Moline is the first city, voting at the City Council meeting on Nov. 4 to implement its own 1% tax when the state tax expires in 2026. First Ward Alderperson Olivia Dorothy was the only councilmember to oppose the measure, saying at the meeting that taxes on groceries are regressive and hit lower-income residents harder.

* IPM | Illinois law requires transparency when police kill people. Many cases stay in the dark: In most of Illinois’ largest counties — including Cook, DuPage, Lake, Kane, McHenry, Winnebago, Champaign, Sangamon, Peoria, McLean, Rock Island, and Kendall — prosecutors generally seem to comply with the law, releasing reports when they decide not to charge an officer. In fact, of the 15 largest counties in Illinois, just three elected prosecutors appear to fail to meet this requirement: Will County State’s Attorney Jim Glasgow, Madison County State’s Attorney Thomas Haine and St. Clair County State’s Attorney James Gomric.

* Daily Herald | How Illinois generated $2 billion in tax revenue from gamblers in the last fiscal year: The most recent “Wagering in Illinois” update from the Illinois legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability also shows gambling tax revenue crossed the $2 billion threshold for the first time in 2024. The $96 million increase in gambling tax revenue from the previous year represents a 4.8% spike, according to the report. The state’s fiscal year ended in June.

*** Statehouse News ***

* ABC Chicago | Illinois Legislative Black Caucus holding policy summit: The Illinois Legislative Black Caucus will hold its most critical policy summit in Chicago this week. It’s happening as the future of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion programs and the Department of Education face concerns and challenges with the pending Trump Administration.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Tribune | Ex-Rep. Edward Acevedo granted immunity, compelled to testify in Madigan corruption trial: Former state Rep. Edward Acevedo’s name has been thrown around five separate federal criminal trials in recent years involving the sweeping corruption probe of ex-House Speaker Michael Madigan. But Acevedo, 61, a Chicago Democrat and onetime member of Madigan’s leadership team, has never been called to testify — until now. Prosecutors late Thursday filed a motion in U.S. District Court saying they intend to call Acevedo as a witness in Madigan’s ongoing corruption trial, and are seeking permission of the chief judge to compel his testimony if he invokes his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination as expected.

* State Week | Prosecutors move closer to wrapping up their case against Madigan: After weeks of testimony and recorded conversations, prosecutors have indicated they are inching toward resting in the case against former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan and his longtime friend and advisor, Mike McClain. The court action has put a spotlight on how Madigan conducted business in the role he held for so long. We get an update on the case so far.

*** Statewide ***

* Journal-Topics | Del Mar To Step Down Next Year As State GOP Co-Chair To Seek Statewide Office: Palatine Township Republican Committeeman Aaron Del Mar, who also serves as co-chair of the Illinois Republican Party, plans to explore a run for a statewide office and will step down as state party co-chair in January or February, the Journal & Topics has learned. Del Mar said he sent what was to be a private email to party Chair Kathy Salvi informing her of his intention, so she would have time to find a new person to take his place. Del Mar said Salvi then sent an email to all members of the Illinois Republican State Central Committee, informing them of his pending departure.

* Crain’s | New report shows Illinois ranks near bottom for wage gains: Illinois employees who have been in their jobs for at least 12 months experienced a 4.5% increase in wages from November 2023 to November 2024, according to data from ADP Pay Insights. This growth was below the national average of 4.8%; Illinois ranked 44th in the country for wage increases. The median salary in the state was $56,700, below the national average of $59,200, the report found.

* Tribune | Imperiled wetlands save the Midwest billions in flood damage costs, study shows, but they’re disappearing: By absorbing water from storms and flooding, wetlands can effectively reduce the risks and destructive effects of these disasters, which are intensifying and becoming more frequent because of a changing climate. Previous research estimated that 1 acre of lost wetland can cost $745 in annual flood damage to residential properties, an amount that taxpayers fund through local, state or federal assistance programs.

* WGEM | Illinois seeking high schools for student-led initiative to prevent targeted violence and hate: Known as Illinois Invent2Prevent, it’s a partnership between the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and Office of Homeland Security (IEMA-OHS), Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and EdVenture Partners. The program is based off a similar program at the federal level run by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Students in participating schools will be tasked with designing and implementing peer-developed projects, tools and strategies to combat targeted violence and hate according IEMA-OHS.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Study shows ‘promising’ results from Chicago’s mental health responder pilot: The research, conducted by UChicago’s Health Lab, concluded the city’s “ambitious” Crisis Assistance Response & Engagement, or CARE, program showed “promising” results in providing enhanced interventions for mental and behavioral health issues — both high- and low-risk situations — and opioid overdose or substance use-related incidents.

* Block Club | City Clears Humboldt Park Tent Encampment, Vows Enforcement Moving Forward: The closure is part of a city plan that’s been in the works since the summer, said Sendy Soto, the city’s first chief homelessness officer. City officials offered all of the tent residents housing during the Department of Family and Support Services’ accelerated moving event in September, which secured 63 apartments for households living in the park. Those who didn’t get housing were offered shelter beds. On Friday, some said they missed out on housing in September because they weren’t there at the time or didn’t have IDs or documents the city needed.

* Bond Buyer | S&P releases report warning Chicago Board of Education: S&P Global Ratings released a report this week warning that the credit trajectory of the Chicago Board of Education will hinge on the outcome of current contract negotiations with the Chicago Teachers Union and the willingness of the CTU and Mayor Brandon Johnson to cut expenditures at Chicago Public Schools.

* Chicago Reader | Chicago’s first school board election happened. What’s next?: “We should have more Latino parents on the board, more Black parents, at least one Asian parent,” observed Martinez de Ferrer, who also serves on the Kids First Elected School Board Task Force. Regardless of who Johnson chooses, his 11 appointees plus the four CTU-backed elected board members theoretically equal a supermajority on the incoming board for the mayor and his close union ally. But in practice, matters may be more complicated. “Even if there is a majority interest, it’s going to be harder to get there than anybody can assume at this point,” District 2 winner Ebony DeBerry, who was endorsed by the teachers union, told WBEZ’s Reset.

* Edward Keegan | Are Chicago’s latest big projects too big to succeed?: One critical way to evaluate these proposals is a simple one: Are any of these proposed neighborhoods comparable to those that have evolved from Chicago’s basic street and density patterns? And the answer is no. While density of the city’s fabric does vary, two- to three-story-high structures dominate, accommodating residential and commercial construction with aplomb. At its most essential, Chicago’s basic form is simplicity: city blocks subdivided into 25-by-125-foot lots with a service alley behind each property. And while Chicago is rightly considered the birthplace of the skyscraper, most neighborhoods don’t have, or need, many buildings of great height.

* Tribune | ‘Long overdue’: Dick Allen, the 1972 American League MVP for the Chicago White Sox, is elected to the Hall of Fame: The celebration started the moment National Baseball Hall of Fame President Josh Rawitch said “1963 to 1977” as he began to unveil the results of the classic baseball era committee voting on television. Richard Allen Jr. jumped out of his seat and was swallowed in a sea of hugs. His father, the late Dick Allen, had just been elected into the Hall of Fame. “I wanted to hear it, I wanted to see it,” Allen said at a watch party at the Hilton Anatole, where the MLB winter meetings are taking place. “We saw it, just so much to take in.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Electoral Board rules Mayor Thaddeus Jones can be on ballot while state representative; residency challenge continued: Calumet City Clerk Nyota Figgs’ effort to prevent Mayor Thaddeus Jones from reelection was undercut Friday after the city’s Election Board dismissed her claim that he cannot serve as both mayor and as an Illinois state representative. Figgs said she believes that based on a state Supreme Court ruling on Jones’ eligibility to run in 2021, a referendum not certified until after the election would disqualify him from holding top position in Calumet City government.

* Daily Herald | ‘Starved for so long’: Pace wants riders to comment on service revamp, $150 million boost: Pace buses every 20 minutes? Pace buses in every town? Or a hybrid system? It’s in your hands, officials say. As Pace, Metra and the CTA face a looming $771 million shortfall in 2026, the suburban bus service is seizing on the crisis by proposing a Revision initiative. “This is really the first time in my career that we’ve put together a plan that is totally revamping our entire system — not just one piece of it, but the entire system,” said Executive Director Melinda Metzger, who has worked at Pace for 40 years.

* ABC | Labor Department investigating migrant child labor claims at HelloFresh: The U.S. Department of Labor is investigating HelloFresh, the popular meal kit service company, over allegations that migrant children were working at its cooking and packaging facility in [Aurora,] Illinois as recently as this summer, ABC News has learned. At least six teenagers, at least some of whom migrated from Guatemala, were found working night shifts at the facility, said Cristobal Cavazos, the executive director for Immigrant Solidarity, an immigrant rights advocacy group that helped report the matter to federal regulators.

* Daily Herald | Call for action after 2 kids, grandmother hit by vehicle outside Wheeling school: A crash that injured three pedestrians, including two children, during morning drop-off Friday at London Middle School in Wheeling is the latest example of unsafe driving by adults on campus, a school leader said Sunday. “Adults need to start being more conscious of the safety of our students that are coming to and from school, point blank,” said Michael Connolly, superintendent of Wheeling Township Elementary School District 21.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Supreme Court denies emergency motion to move Grayson pre-trial release hearing: An emergency motion filed by the Office of the State Appellate Defender asking for a supervisory order directing the Fourth District Appellate Court remand the hearing of a former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy charged with the July 6 murder of Sonya Massey back to the circuit court was denied by the Illinois Supreme Court.

* WCIA | Urbana brewery gives people a taste of a German Christmas: Riggs Beer Company is offering a little taste of Germany in Central Illinois. The brewery is hosting their annual German Christmas Market, where food, drink and gift vendors are ready to celebrate the holiday. People can warm up with crepes, bratwurst and hot mulled wine.

* Rockford Register Star | When is Illinois vs South Carolina bowl game? Citrus Bowl schedule, date: The Fighting Illini will play the South Carolina Gamecocks in the Citrus Bowl on New Year’s Eve in Orlando, Florida, game officials announced Sunday afternoon. The Illini finished the season 9-3 and are the Big Ten Conference’s highest-ranked team not in the College Football Playoff. They meet the South Carolina (9-3), who finished in a logjam at fourth place in the SEC and left out of the 12-team CFP along with other SEC teams Alabama and Ole Miss.

*** National ***

* Sun-Times | Sen. Dick Durbin will decide if he will seek another term after the first of the year: During an interview on CNN’s “State of the Union,” host Jake Tapper asked Durbin if he has “decided if you’re going to run for reelection.” Durbin replied, “I’ll be making an announcement after the first of the year.” That’s about what Durbin has been saying for months. But now that day is soon coming.

* Fast Company | Why 2023 was the year of the e-bike and not the self-driving car: All signs indicate that a city full of e-bikes would be safer, healthier, cleaner, and less congested than one dominated by cars—no matter how they are driven. And e-bikes really are car replacers: The addition of a battery can enable even mobility-constrained cyclists to conquer hills, haul packages, or beat the heat. Better yet, families can save tens of thousands of dollars by using an e-bike in lieu of a second or third car. And lest we forget: E-bikes are fun.

* WGN | Forever chemicals tainting food supply, destroying American farmers: Maine’s PFAS threshold for drinking water is 20 parts per trillion. Nordell says their soil also tested high. He recalls the terror of that time: “We were in free fall, do we have a business? Do we have a home here?” Then they had their blood tested for forever chemicals. Nordell says his and his wife’s blood levels are higher than chemical manufacturer employees who worked in PFAS factories.

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

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Dec 9, 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. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Dec 9, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

Our LSSI fundraiser is active! So far we’ve raised just over $15,000! 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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