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Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My generation’s Elvis

That’s what you get if you go chasing after vengeance

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Sen. Feigenholtz under fire

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Earlier this week…


Issa is one of the same reporters granted an exclusive interview with the Chicago School Board President who posted several anti-semitic and mysoginist comments and promoted a 9/11 conspiracy theory. Rev. Mitchell Johnson resigned the next day.

* Sen. Feigenholtz deleted her comment and then issued this press release…

State Senator Sara Feigenholtz (D-Chicago) issued the following apology regarding her sharing of an offensive social media post:

“Earlier this week, I made a comment on an individual’s social media account that has hurt and offended members of our community.

“I made a mistake and, as a result, I shared a message I do not believe in. It was never my intention to reply to – let alone amplify – that individual’s inflammatory remarks.

“Everyone deserves to feel heard and respected, especially by their elected leaders. I apologize for the pain my action has caused, and I will work with my staff and colleagues to ensure this does not happen again.”

I followed up about her claim that she never intended to reply to the sentiments in that tweet. Sen. Feigenholtz said she made the comment based on a recent speech she’d just watched, not on the tweet itself.

Feigenholtz has close ties to the Jewish man who was shot this week on his way into a Chicago synagogue, so it’s been a really tough week. But, still.

* Sen. Feigenholtz has been a leader on pro-choice activism and LGBTQ+ rights, but she said she was completely unaware of these statements…


* From his Wikipedia profile

Yousef has compared Islam to Nazism, and said he has “zero respect for anyone who identifies as Muslim”.

* Sen. Feigenholtz’s apology was issued at 9:45 this morning. From the Sun-Times this afternoon

Muslim leaders on Friday called for the resignation of state Sen. Sara Feigenholtz over anti-Arab social media posts, including one in which she praises an Islamophobic poster as a “badass truth teller.”

The Muslim leaders, who included two state representatives, said the posts amounted to the same type of hate speech that led to the resignation Thursday of the Chicago Board of Education president, who was found to have written antisemitic posts on social media. […]

[Feigenholtz] claimed the comment this week was in response to the poster’s “address before the European Union Parliament where he spoke out against Hamas and their mission. I do not subscribe to or support any inflammatory remarks made on the post where my comment appeared,” she wrote in the statement.

That speech was, um, quite something.

As noted above, Rev. Mitchell Johnson made several antisemitic posts, as well as other disgusting remarks. That was no one-off comment situation.

The other post she was blasted for was a statement she shared on social media from the late Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir. Click here.

Your thoughts on this?

Take a deep breath before commenting.

…Adding… Dr. Dilara Sayeed, the President of the Muslim Civic Coalition…

We have consistently reached out to engage with Senator Feigenholtz. We met her for hours to help her better understand the Muslim-led businesses and mosques in her district of diverse racial backgrounds, and to connect her with some of the thousands of Muslim residents she represents.

There is no trust or confidence in her leadership as a state legislator when she then goes on to continue a pattern of promoting Islamophobes and posting hate speech that may endanger the lives of her constituents. This is the exact type of dangerous rhetoric that led to the hate and murder of Wadee, an innocent six year old Palestinian boy in our state.

This week, Senator Feigenholtz called on the CPS Board President to resign for anti-Semitic remarks. She should hold herself to the same standard and resign.

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* University of Illinois Institute of Government and Public Affairs

The Illinois Flash Index for October increased slightly to 102.2 from its reading last month of 102. With GDP growth at 2.8 percent for the third quarter, the goal of a soft landing from the strong post-COVID economies remains relatively strong.

“The current situation seems better than the proverbial soft-landing with inflation returning to acceptable levels while not only avoiding a recession but continuing the expansion at a more moderate pace,” said Fred Giertz, Professor Emeritus, Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

Illinois’ unemployment rate remained steady at 5.3 percent, but still well above the national rate of 4.1 percent. The state unemployment rate, still low by historical standards, indicates a slower recovery for Illinois than most other states. For the month, individual income tax and sales tax receipts in the state were down slightly in real terms compared to the same month last year while corporate tax receipts experienced a larger percentage decline for the normally slow month of October.

* IPM Newsroom

People in prison can vote in Vermont, Maine and Washington, D.C.

It’s a right that one incarcerated Illinois man would like to have.

“The incarcerated community is probably the largest group of people who have the most skin in the game, yet we’re not acknowledged as stakeholders,” Raúl Dorado said.

About 29,000 people are incarcerated with the Illinois Department of Corrections on felony convictions, according to data released in October. People in jails, which hold people awaiting trial or serving misdemeanor sentences, have the right to vote.

* Capitol News Illinois

The state’s Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program is accepting applications for all households beginning Friday, Nov. 1. The program offers financial assistance for utility bills to low-income families. Other discounts are also available, even if someone is not enrolled in LIHEAP.

Applications opened on Oct. 1 for adults age 60 and older, individuals with a disability, families with children under age 5, and households that are disconnected from their utilities or energy vendors, have a disconnect date within seven days or whose propane tanks are less than 25% full.

LIHEAP – accept applications on a first-come, first-served basis through the middle of August, although applications will close earlier if funds run out, so those interested in applying should do so sooner rather than later.

Households with incomes lower than double the federal poverty level are eligible for the program. That works out to $2,510 in a 30-day period for individuals, $3,407 for households with two members, $4,303 for households with three individuals and higher for larger households. Higher income thresholds are available at the state’s Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity website.

*** Madigan Trial ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Wiretaps show McClain arranging checks for Madigan loyalist fired after #MeToo allegations: In that moment of relative calm, retired Statehouse lobbyist Mike McClain – whose longstanding friendship with Madigan granted him unparalleled access to the reclusive speaker – made a series of calls to other Madigan loyalists in late August of that year. McClain asked each in that small group if they’d consider cutting monthly checks to Kevin Quinn, a political staffer Madigan had fired in February 2018 in response to allegations of harassment from Alaina Hampton, a 28-year-old campaign consultant.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Some Chicagoans Face Long Lines, Nearly 3-Hour Waits At Early Voting Sites: “I arrived at 5 p.m. and wasn’t done until 7:30,” Lakeview resident Cassie Branderhorst said Wednesday. “I’ve voted early here in the past and was in and out. This is definitely the longest I’ve waited — by far.” It’s common to see lines, even for early voting, as Election Day nears and during presidential elections, which historically have the highest turnout, said Max Bever, Chicago Board of Election Commissioners spokesperson. Location also is a factor, and the lines have been consistently long at Merlo Library at all hours of the day, he said.

* Illinois Answers | Top CPS Official Promoted Invention to Reduce Lead in School Drinking Water — Even as His Name Was on The Patent: Among Chicago Public School employees, no one has been a bigger cheerleader for an invention designed to reduce dangerous amounts of lead in water from school drinking fountains than top administrator Robert Christlieb. […] Christlieb, who makes more than $170,000 a year at CPS, neglects to mention one key detail as he tells the story of the device’s creation. He’s more than just a fan of Noah. He’s listed as the co-inventor of the device he’s been promoting for years. Christlieb and Ramos share the U.S. patent for the Noah device, federal records show.

* WGN | Author and reporter Greg Pratt takes us inside the Lightfoot years with his new book: ‘The City is Up for Grabs’: Lori Lightfoot swept into the office of Chicago Mayor in a surprisingly decisive victory in 2019, the first African American gay mayor made history. In her four years as Mayor, she faced a global pandemic, battles with the police and teachers unions and a host of other challenges. How will history look back on the term of Mayor Lightfoot? Time will tell, but for now, reporter Gregory Pratt shares his reporting in “The City is up for Grabs: How Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot Led and Lost A City in Crisis.” Deeply sourced in City Hall and other political offices, the book presents a thorough description of the tumultuous four years, filled with challenges and successes as well.

* Crain’s | Chicago M&A activity picks up in third quarter, but election gives some pause: “What corporates and CEOs need to do deals is confidence,” Carole Streicher, deal advisory and strategy service group leader for KPMG, said in an interview. “Confidence in the economy and in their business, but also confidence in the political situation in the U.S. and the geopolitical situation overseas. When there is a lack of confidence, they are less likely to pull the trigger on a multibillion-dollar transaction.”

* Sun-Times | From hospital to Halloween haunts, 7-year-old shot in West Pullman just thrilled to be a Ninja Turtle: Zayden Garrett may have dressed as a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle for Halloween, but his speed in recovering from gunshot wounds more resembles Wolverine. Doctors and family members didn’t expect Zayden to be released from Comer Children’s Hospital by Halloween, let alone be able to go trick-or-treating after he was struck by gunfire at his West Pullman home in a shooting that also wounded his uncle a little over three weeks ago.

* Sun-Times | Day of the Dead has become lucrative for Chicago flower vendors thanks to traditional marigolds: Olivera, 38, said marigolds color her yearly Day of the Dead altar at home, too. Her husband, Carlos Miramontes, was the store’s original owner, but after he died of COVID-19 in 2020, the holiday took on a deeper meaning for her. Now his photograph sits among the bright flowers and images of departed loved ones.

* Block Club | Bird Advocates Horrified After Pigeon Hunting Company Traps Hundreds Of Birds In Logan Square, Niles: Volunteers from the Great Lakes Pigeon Rescue witnessed a group of men baiting, trapping and removing pigeons with nets into crates from two parking lots in suburban Niles and a parking garage Thursday morning near Logan and Elston avenues in Logan Square. Volunteers said baby pigeons have been left to starve to death in nests. They’re also worried the birds trapped are without food and water, which is illegal in Illinois, said Jodie Wiederkehr, executive director of the Chicago Alliance for Animals, who was notified about the roundups by members of the Great Lakes Pigeon Rescue.

* Tribune | A chapter has ended, but story not over for bookstore owner thought to have died: ‘People can think you’re dead all they want’: Word traveled fast that the owner of a nearly century-old bookstore had died. Social media posts were made. A news article written. Emails sent. When Rebecca George, the co-owner of a bookstore in Wicker Park, was told the owner of The Gallery Bookstore in Lakeview had died and left behind a store full of books, she mobilized Chicago’s book-loving community. After all, George estimated there were 20,000 or 30,000 books crammed inside the store, which had only ever had two owners and had been under the care of Bill Fiedler since 1989.

* Sun-Times | Planted with love nearly 50 years ago, 54-foot blue spruce will be Chicago’s official Christmas tree: Jim Mulligan’s kids would hide behind the tree, which grew tall next to a historic home in Logan Square where they once lived. The new owners of the house aim to honor his memory by donating the massive tree to the city.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WBEZ | State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is in the final months as Cook County’s top prosecutor: Next week, voters will choose Kim Foxx’s successor. Foxx announced months ago she would not be seeking re-election. She came into office in 2016 with a surge of so-called progressive prosecutors. Her tenure has been marked by almost constant criticism, but it also marked a historic shift in Cook County’s approach to crime and justice. WBEZ criminal justice editor Patrick Smith covered Foxx throughout her time in office and joins Morning Edition host Mary Dixon now.

* Daily Herald | War of words erupts between McHenry County’s top prosecutor and SAFE-T Act advocates: There’s no love lost between outgoing McHenry County State’s Attorney Patrick Kenneally and an advocacy group that helped lead the effort to eliminate cash bail in Illinois. Kenneally last week released a blistering statement criticizing earlier reports praising the first year of the state’s Pretrial Fairness Act, a key element of the SAFE-T Act that made cash bail a thing of the past.

* Sun-Times | Elgin Community College building $85M manufacturing center to help meet demand for more skilled workers: The center, on the northeastern portion of its campus, will more than triple the amount of lab and instructional space for manufacturing and tech programs at the college. Classes at the center are expected to start in the 2026 fall semester.

* Sun-Times | Property owners suing Blue Island over ‘outrageous’ water bills: Two Blue Island property owners are suing the south suburb over late fees for unpaid water bills they say were illegally designed to bring in more money. One lawsuit was filed by a homeowner, the other by the owner of a condominium unit. Both say the south suburb’s practice of charging 10% compounding late fees a month on delinquent water bills isn’t legal in Illinois. They say state law allows municipalities to get “reasonable compensation” for water and sewer services and that “a usurious, 10% monthly compounding ‘late-fee’ penalty or interest charge” doesn’t meet that standard. In Chicago, a penalty of 1.25% is added to late payments on water bills, but the fees aren’t compounded.

* Daily Herald | Des Plaines set to buy downtown building for $1.9 million: The city council on Monday will decide whether to spend nearly $1.9 million for the nearly century-old building at 678 Lee St. and an adjoining parking lot. The properties are on the southwest corner of Lee Street and Ellinwood Avenue. Once known as the Des Plaines State Bank, the three-story, roughly 18,000-square-foot building was erected in 1927, city documents indicate. It has a white marble facade, large ground-floor windows, a mezzanine and other eye-catching architectural features.

* Oak Park Journal | Oak Park operating departments ask for more money : Oak Park’s operating departments, including police, public health, public works, fire, development services and neighborhood services, are asking for more money in fiscal year 2025. The first draft of the proposed 2025 budget, according to Interim Chief Financial Officer Donna Gayden, has expenditures and revenue each at about $87 million. That’s up about $4.8 million from 2024. That increase includes cost of living adjustments, one-time expenses and village board goals.

*** Downstate ***

* STLPR | Southwest Illinois voters to weigh split from Chicago county in secession vote: So far, the 26 counties that have passed these symbolic referendums have all been rural with a total population of less than 500,000. If the referendum passes in Madison County, it will be the first suburban county, home to nearly 265,000 people, to approve at least symbolically leaving the state of Illinois. Advocates think this could signal that the disapproval is not just reflective of an urban vs. rural divide.

* NPR Illinois | Illinois State Museum reopening Nov. 4: The Illinois State Museum will reopen in Springfield on Monday, Nov. 4. The campus was closed in early August for a plumbing construction project. The construction project is ongoing, so several exhibits will continue to be closed temporarily, including the Mary Ann MacLean Play Museum. Visit the museum’s website and Facebook page for updates. The project is expected to be completed by early March.

* SJ-R | Illinois football reveals special helmets for Military Appreciation Game vs Minnesota: The No. 24 Fighting Illini (6-2, 3-2 Big Ten) host Minnesota on Saturday, and their helmets will feature special designs to commemorate the 189 students and alumni that died in World War I. Each of their names are etched into the stripe on Illinois’ helmets for Saturday’s game, just like they are in the columns at Memorial Stadium. There are also 10 stars surrounding the Illinois logo on the helmet, which represents each of the 10 Illinois football players that died in battle, nine of which in World War II and one in the Vietnam War. There’s also an American flag and a Prisoner of War/Missing in Action flag on the back of the helmet.

*** National ***

* AP | Creative ‘I Voted’ stickers branch out beyond the familiar flag design: Two years ago, a New York county’s stickers featuring a wild-eyed crab-like creature created by a 14-year-old boy became an online sensation. This year the smash hit — one of nine designs distributed in Michigan — depicts a werewolf shredding its shirt in front of an American flag. […] In Milton, New Hampshire, 10-year-old Grace was treated like a celebrity when she visited the polls for the presidential primary in January and town elections in March.

* ProPublica | A Pregnant Teenager Died After Trying to Get Care in Three Visits to Texas Emergency Rooms: It took three ER visits and 20 hours before a hospital admitted Nevaeh Crain, 18, as her condition worsened. Doctors insisted on two ultrasounds to confirm “fetal demise.” She’s one of at least two Texas women who died under the state’s abortion ban.

* NPR | With much at stake, labor unions knock on millions of doors in final campaign push: The American Federation of Teachers has sent hundreds of its members from New York to Pennsylvania and from Illinois to Wisconsin to canvass “labor doors.” The United Auto Workers has similarly deployed union members to fellow members’ homes and work sites, in addition to an aggressive phone, text and mail campaign.

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Energy Storage Can Minimize Price Spikes

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Each month, families and businesses pay a capacity charge through their energy bill. It’s essentially an insurance policy that pays energy resources (or “capacity”) to be available for when the grid needs them most. Grid operators project a possible shortage of capacity in the coming years, which means the charge for this insurance policy will rise next year for many Illinoisans.

Batteries, or energy storage, are currently the best solution to minimize this price spike—but building them at the pace we need will require legislation. The added benefit is the ability to store cheap electricity for use when demand peaks during the day—lowering energy bills and making the grid more reliable.

Learn more about legislation that builds urgently needed energy storage here.

Paid for by Counterspark.

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Today’s must-read

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* SIU News

John J. Bird was a well-known and highly respected leader in civil rights, politics and education more than 150 years ago in Illinois. A recently published book about Bird — who lived in both Cairo and Springfield — by Wayne T. Pitard looks to renew interest in a man who broke many racial barriers but whose statewide impact is overlooked. […]

An emeritus professor of religion and director emeritus of the Spurlock Museum of World Cultures at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), Pitard said he became “fascinated” with Bird in 2015 when he came across a brief paragraph on Bird while doing research for a museum exhibit honoring the university’s sesquicentennial. Bird was appointed in 1873 by then-Gov. John Beveridge to the board of trustees of Illinois Industrial University, which later became UIUC, who were otherwise all-white. Pitard became curious and delved further into Bird’s background, and when historians “seemed unaware of him,” he began searching for 19th century information from resources, including newspaper clippings and city directories.

“What I discovered is that there was much more to John Bird than his board appointment and that, although now forgotten, he had been one of the most significant Black civil rights leaders and politicians in post-Civil War Illinois,” Pitard said. “I found him so remarkable that I couldn’t stop looking into his life until I wound up with a book-length manuscript.”

Bird broke another racial barrier when he was invited to speak at the opening ceremonies of then-Southern Illinois Normal University in 1874, “the first time an African American had taken part in and addressed such a celebration,” Pitard said. Beveridge, along with the presidents of Northwestern University and Bloomington Normal School (now Illinois State) and Robert Allyn, the new SINU president, also spoke.

“Bird and Allyn came to be longtime colleagues. In 1889, Allyn wrote a letter to Gov. Joseph Fifer in support of Bird for a state position, in which he refers to Bird as ‘my friend,’” Pitard said. “This honorific occasion was tempered, however, by the fact that the local planning committee, which had made hotel and dining reservations for the other speakers, failed to do so for Bird, who had to walk 2 miles out of town to stay with a friend. This is an instance of the kinds of racist treatment that Bird, as a successful Black man, had to endure.” […]

Pitard said Bird, born in 1844 in Cincinnati, Ohio, to free parents “who educated him well and gave him a strong sense of duty” traveled to Cairo in 1864 “with the intention of aiding and organizing the large population of refugees from enslavement in the South who had settled there into a new, cohesive community,” Pitard said. “He immediately became the primary voice representing this community through the 1860s, ’70s and most of the ’80s. He fought tirelessly for their civil rights and was remarkably successful. He became a role model for activism in the late 19th century.”

Bird’s other accomplishments included:

    - Being elected police magistrate in Cairo in 1873, becoming the first Black elected judge in Illinois.
    - Leading the fight to create the first Black public school in Cairo.
    - Becoming the most prominent Black Republican in Southern Illinois and a leader in the Black convention movement in Illinois from the 1870s through the 1890s.
    - Becoming editor of three newspapers in the 1880s and 1890s, including The State Capital newspaper, which “played an important role in guiding political thought throughout the Midwest.”

* More from SJ-R

John J. Bird became the first African-American trustee of the University of Illinois more than a decade before the school even had any Black students.

Bird’s tombstone in Oak Ridge Cemetery doesn’t mention that distinction, but its text does include an unusual note: the stone was “erected by the 47th General Assembly of Illinois.” And newspaper stories show that two lawmakers from Springfield – Reps. Thomas Lyon and James Morris (both white) – were among the half-dozen speakers at Bird’s memorial service.

None of the stories or other records say why Bird was accorded such recognition. His term on the university may have been part of the reason, but the brief accounts of the grave dedication don’t mention it. The articles describe Bird only as “a colored janitor at the state house.”

What also went unsaid was that Bird had been prominent in African-American organizations statewide for more than four decades, a role he parlayed with political activism to try to push Illinois Republicans to support Black civil rights.

  3 Comments      


Illinois launches ‘Help Stop Hate’ program in response to rising hate crimes

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

The state of Illinois announced a new program aimed at stemming hate crimes and other forms of bias as reports surge across the state and country.

Help Stop Hate will allow victims and witnesses to anonymously report hate crimes, bias and harassment to the state through an online portal and hotline. […]

The program, which has been running since April, isn’t affiliated with law enforcement, but people who report incidents can choose to be connected with police departments. Depending on the nature of the report, callers can also be connected to resources like nonprofit organizations, mental health support, the Illinois attorney general’s office or shelters for people who feel unsafe at home.

Help Stop Hate was partly funded by a $1.1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice over three years. It is also built into the state budget, said Jim Bennett, director of the Illinois Department of Human Rights.

* Capitol News Illinois

According to the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ Chicago branch, there has been a 196% increase in anti-Muslim hate crimes in Chicago since the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. The Anti-Defamation League reports a 379% increase in antisemitic incidents since 2019 in Illinois. […]

The Illinois Department of Human Rights and the state’s Commission on Discrimination and Hate Crimes oversee the program. It allows people who have experienced hate crimes to go to IlStopHate.org or call 877-458-HATE and talk about the incident. They will be directed to a specialized resource based on the nature of the crime.

They can, for example, speak to professionals from their own communities, acquire help dealing with trauma or connect with resources that can provide additional safety measures. The victim can also report the crime to state or local police, who will investigate further. […]

Jim Bennett, IDHR director, said a statewide study on hate crimes will be conducted in 2025.

* More…

Thoughts?

  6 Comments      


Roundup: Madigan corruption trial delves into 2018 sexual harassment allegations

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

After a Michael Madigan ally was fired amid sexual harassment allegations, the former Illinois House speaker’s longtime confidant Michael McClain allegedly sought to collect and conceal payments for that ally under the guise he’d be doing actual work.

Jurors in Michael Madigan’s corruption trial on Thursday heard recorded phone conversations in which McClain detailed his plans to collect money for former Madigan staffer Kevin Quinn through job contracts to make it appear he was being paid for real work “in case the IRS checked us out.” […]

Hours before [Madigan staffer Alaina Hampto] went public with her story, Madigan fired Quinn. Jurors were told about “misconduct” allegations against Quinn, but the specific details were not presented in court following a pretrial ruling by U.S. District Judge John Blakey.

Hampton is set to testify next week, but prosecutors presented evidence Thursday allegedly showing McClain arranged for multiple people to make consulting payments to Quinn because he was unable to find a job after being fired.

* Courthouse News

Both Wednesday and Thursday were short trial days, and Madigan’s defense team only managed to get in one hour of cross-examination before Blakey dismissed jurors at 2 p.m. Thursday for Halloween. In the time he had, Madigan’s attorney Dan Collins attempted to deflate the prosecution’s narrative over how much influence Madigan and his cabinet wielded.

He pointed out that when FEJA came up for a House floor vote in late 2016, multiple Democrats voted ‘no’ on it. He also noted that House Republicans would sub their own representatives off committees, and that it was far from a rare occurrence.

“There was nothing unusual about it, is that fair?” Collins asked Cousineau.

“That’s fair,” he answered.

* Tribune

Publicly, Madigan said there was no place on his team for such behavior. Behind the scenes, however, an effort to kick Quinn some money in his time of need was allegedly being organized by Madigan’s closest confidant, Michael McClain. [..]

But with the heat on, even Madigan couldn’t openly help Quinn until after his re-election as speaker was secure, McClain told Cousineau. The plan, as McClain put it on the Aug. 28, 2018, call, was to quietly recruit a few trusted people to pay Quinn for little to no work, with contracts and paperwork in place to assuage the IRS if they ever came around. […]

Cousineau asked if Quinn would have to register as a lobbyist.

“Oh, no, no, no, this is totally a consultant,” McClain said, and then referred to Madigan by his frequent pseudonym. “And as far as I’m concerned, except for the people signing on, no one else even knows about it except for our friend.”

* Sun-Times

Neither Madigan nor McClain are accused of sexual harassment. But prosecutors say the Kevin Quinn episode is evidence of Madigan’s criminal enterprise, designed in part to enrich and “reward” his allies.

Defense attorneys made a last-ditch effort Thursday to block it from the trial. Madigan attorney Todd Pugh called it a “purely personal situation” — unlike other allegations that people were paid by ComEd and AT&T Illinois to influence Madigan.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu countered that it’s “dead bang” within the racketeering allegations in Madigan’s indictment. “No question about it,” he said.

Blakey agreed, finding defense claims to the contrary “not supported by the record.”

* More…

  11 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  8 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Chicago’s new school board president resigns a week after taking office. Chalkbeat Chicago

    - Rev. Mitchell Ikenna Johnson, resigned Thursday after his past antisemitic and misogynistic comments online resurfaced.
    - The mayor said in a statement Thursday afternoon that he asked for Johnson’s resignation and that he resigned effective immediately.
    - The mayor said that his office would “identify a qualified individual” — he did not provide a timeline — and that the school board would meet as scheduled.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Eye on Illinois | Flag contest provides chance to experience different voting system: No one asked me, but this would be a wonderful opportunity to give Illinoisans more practical experience with ranked-choice voting. We should be further along with this process, but the Ranked Choice and Voting Systems Task Force has yet to formalize its report, which had been due March 1. The idea is spreading slowly in Illinois and throughout the country, but the flag process is a perfect, nonpartisan vehicle for showcasing the concept.

* Tribune | Governors of five states, including Illinois, call for ‘swift action’ on rising electric bills: The governors of Illinois and four other states have signed a letter calling on PJM Interconnection — a company that operates part of the electric grid — to take “swift action” to address record-setting prices for electricity used in times of very high demand. The letter comes after a recent PJM auction for such electricity resulted in a bill of $14.7 billion for consumers in 2025-26, compared with $2.2 billion the year before. That could mean a monthly electric bill increase of roughly $7.50 to $10 a month in northern Illinois, according to a preliminary estimate by the Citizens Utility Board, a nonprofit consumer watchdog.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WTTW | Illinois’ Landmark Law Limiting Credit Card Fees Put to Legal Test: Illinois banks are “freaking out,” their attorney told the chief judge of Chicago’s federal courts Wednesday. Lawyer Charlotte Taylor used the colloquial phrase several times during a more than two-hour court hearing that was otherwise so focused on complex intricacies of banking case law that U.S. District Court Chief Judge Virigina Kendall joked she’ll have to return to law school to make a decision.

* AG Kwame Raoul | Reproductive rights are on the line this election, and Illinois must keep up the fight: When Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022 in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision, I immediately flew to Washington, D.C., to strategize with Vice President Kamala Harris and a group of Democratic state attorneys general. We discussed the tools we could wield against Republicans’ cruel attacks on reproductive freedom. Herself a former state attorney general, Harris was forward-thinking in bringing us together to plan the post-Dobbs fight against these harmful state policies. Since then, I am proud to have championed and defended multiple protections for Illinois patients and providers.

*** Statewide ***

* Crain’s | As open enrollment begins, a transformative shift takes place behind the scenes in Illinois: The state of Illinois is in the midst of a transformative project to establish a state-based health insurance exchange marketplace that it says could help fill coverage gaps and lower plan costs for residents throughout the state. The two-year transition, operated by the Illinois Department of Insurance, won’t change much about the enrollment process this season, which runs Nov. 1 through Jan. 15. Customers will still select and enroll in health plans through the federal government’s website, HealthCare.gov.

* WTVO | Illinois public universities achieve highest enrollment since 2016: The Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE) reported fall enrollment for Illinois public universities was at its highest in eight years. Enrollment increased by 1.6% this fall, which comes out to 185,590 students that enrolled in total at Illinois public universities. The board highlighted that Black and Latino students have been a major reason for the increase overall.

* Tribune | Illinois volunteers try to tip presidential race in swing states Wisconsin and Michigan: The Cape Cods and other modest homes in the Nash Park neighborhood of Wisconsin’s biggest Democratic city were decked out with skeletons and pumpkins in anticipation of trick-or-treaters, but the knock at the door came from 70-year-old Loretta Jackson of Evanston. The retired state employee and Navy veteran arrived on a recent Saturday afternoon, having traveled with nearly 500 others Illinois Democrats across the state line — past the Mars Cheese Castle — to push voters in this key swing state to cast their ballot for Vice President Kamala Harris.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s CPD budget plan cuts constitutional policing, other reform offices: ‘It’s a gutting’: Mayor Brandon Johnson’s 2025 budget plan for Chicago police slashes several offices that are critical to the ongoing federal consent decree, sparking alarm from policing experts who say now is not the time to take the foot off the gas with reform. Johnson’s $17.3 billion spending plan for the city carves out $2.1 billion for the Chicago Police Department, a $58.7 million increase from this year’s allocation. However, it also includes 456 vacant positions being cut — 98 of them sworn and 358 civilian — saving more than $50 million in salary and other costs.

* Tribune | Activists call for more funding for migrant and homelessness services in Chicago’s 2025 budget: Johnson proposed Wednesday a $17.3 billion budget for next year, which includes the largest property tax hike in nearly a decade to help close a more than $980 million budget shortfall. The proposal seeks to cut a $150 million allocation for migrant services, as the city downsizes its bed availability and shifts to one system for all homeless Chicagoans. Veronica Castro, the deputy director of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, believes that “insufficient investments” for programs that support homeless individuals in the budget, coupled with shutting dedicated migrant shelters, will lead to an increase in street homelessness in the city that is “unacceptable.”

* Sun-Times | Hate crime, terrorism charges filed in shooting of Orthodox Jewish man heading to West Ridge synagogue: New evidence indicates the 22-year-old suspect, Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi, “planned the shooting and specifically targeted people of Jewish faith” when he attacked the 39-year-old victim in the 2600 block of West Farwell Avenue Saturday morning, Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling told reporters at a news conference.

* Press Release | Amtrak Receives Federal Grants to Improve Chicago Service and Support Partner Projects across the Midwest: Amtrak and Midwestern partners have been awarded up to $300 million to improve passenger rail service with grants from the Federal Railroad Administration’s Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements (CRISI) competitive grant program. These grants will directly support Amtrak priorities, including the Chicago Hub Improvement Program (CHIP) – an Amtrak-led Midwest megaproject aimed at improving passenger rail service into Chicago – and advance our goal to double Amtrak ridership nationwide by 2040,” said Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner.

* Crain’s | Here’s how True Value went bankrupt: The Chicago-based home improvement company with almost 170 years of history filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in mid-October. It is seeking to sell its business to Do It Best, a hardware rival that offered to pay $153 million in cash for its floundering competitor. True Value has warned that if that deal falls through and it fails to find another buyer, it could lay off 900 employees.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Multiple candidates file in what Homer supervisor says may be ‘dirtiest election Homer Glen has ever seen’: A crowded field of 17 candidates filed petitions this week to run for three open Homer Glen trustee positions, forcing a primary election in February. […] Two slates of candidates for Homer Township offices have filed for the Feb. 25 Republican primary in which the incumbents led by township Supervisor Steve Balich and his Will County Freedom Caucus are challenged by the Homer Township Reset slate led by Homer Glen Trustee Susanna Steilen. While Balich said the race could be clean, he is warning it could be a “nasty” election season, citing a false rumor that he had been arrested.

* Daily Herald | Kane County auditor candidates seek transparency on spending: Republican Gretchen Butler of St. Charles is challenging incumbent Democrat Penny Wegman for the four-year term on Tuesday. Butler wrote in a Daily Herald questionnaire, “By promoting transparency and public comprehension, I aim to foster trust and ensure that all citizens are well-informed about the county’s finances.” Wegman said she will continue to improve the transparency of the office, which posts audit reports and other documents on its website.

* Daily Herald | ‘Somebody dropped the ball’: McHenry County sales tax for mental health falls short: Before McHenry County voters approved a quarter-cent sales tax increase to fund mental health services in a March referendum, officials estimated it would bring in about $1 million a month for the McHenry County Mental Health Board. But when the first month of receipts came in earlier this month from the tax increase that took effect in July, the amount was just above $800,000. County leaders now acknowledge they erred in projecting how much the sales tax would generate because they included revenue from car sales — but the tax doesn’t apply to car sales, per state law.

* Daily Herald | Petitions circulating for mental health board referendum in Palatine Township: Mental health advocates are collecting signatures in an effort to place a referendum for a 708 mental health board in Palatine Township on the April ballot. The initiative follows successful attempts in Schaumburg, Wheeling and Vernon townships. “We’re trying to really get a whole wave of them across the whole Northwest suburbs,” said Hugh Brady, a board member of the National Alliance on Mental Illness Northwest Suburbs Chicago.

* Shaw Local | Stars of HBO’s ‘Somebody Somewhere’ say Lockport setting big part of show’s success: A select group of Lockport residents got to be the first people to see the newest episode of HBO’s “Somebody Somewhere” at a special screening Wednesday to celebrate the show’s final season in the town where it was filmed.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Once called symbol of racism, gates still supported by diverse Signal Hill neighborhood: A “60 Minutes” correspondent traveled to Belleville in 1993 to film an episode on alleged racism, and one of his backdrops was a steel gate across a road leading from Illinois 157 to Signal Hill. More than 30 years later, a Belleville man is upset that the gate on Kingston Drive and another one on nearby Bluff Hill Road are still in place. He believes they were designed to keep people from predominantly Black East St. Louis out of the neighborhood.

* SJ-R | CWLP proposes 4-year contract to lock in coal prices but not everyone is on board: CWLP was proposed the contract by Foresight Coal Sales LLC, for the purchase of coal in a four-year contract for $85.6 million from Foresight’s Hillsboro mine, more commonly known as Deer Run. The contract would set the price of coal at $40 per ton until 2027, when the price would increase to $44.50 per ton and $46.75 per ton in 2028; however, the contract would not include the cost of hauling the coal over fifty miles from Hillsboro to Springfield.

* WSIL | First Franklin County marijuana dispensary opens soon: Ash and Ivy will be the first cannabis dispensary in Franklin County. Store owner Holly Eldridge says it was a long journey getting to the point where they could have their Ribbon Cutting. “We started with an infuser license, which pivoted us to open up the beautiful space that people know as the Luna Lounge. With that, the community grew and three years later we had the opportunity to receive a dispensary license and we are very lucky and excited,” Eldridge said.

* Press Release | Illinois Commitment expands eligibility for tuition-free college to more Illinois families: In order to make an education at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign more affordable to low- and middle-income families, the threshold to be eligible for Illinois Commitment — a financial aid program that provides free tuition and fees for in-state students — has been increased from $67,100 to $75,000. The increase puts Illinois near the top of the Big Ten in terms of the income limit.

* WMBD | PPS Superintendent responds to poor Illinois Report Card elementary school grades: Most of the elementary schools in Peoria did not get the best grades in this year’s Illinois Report Card, but we’re now learning how some of them have actually improved since last year. Superintendent Dr. Sharon Kherat said comparing Peoria Public Schools to other communities like McLean County Unit 5 is like ‘comparing apples to oranges’. At Unit 5, most of the schools received “exemplary” or “commendable”, the top scores on the Illinois Report Card.

* PJ Star | Alleged members of violent Peoria street gang could face long prison sentences: Three members of what investigators have described as a violent street gang operating in Peoria were told Thursday that they are facing possible life sentences in prison for their alleged involvement in violent crimes. Messiah Carpenter, 20; Keon Patterson, 20; and Korion Hopkins, 18, were arraigned in Peoria County Court on charges under the racketeer influenced and corrupt organization act that allege their involvement in a Peoria street gang called “The Snakes” led to a violent crime spree that investigators believe could be tied to three homicides and 12 shootings.

*** National ***

* AP | Takeaways from The Associated Press investigation into sexual abuse of incarcerated women: As part of a sweeping two-year investigation into prison labor, The Associated Press found that correctional staff nationwide have been accused of using inmate work assignments to sexually abuse incarcerated women, luring them to isolated spots, out of view of security cameras. Many cases follow a similar pattern: Accusers are retaliated against, while the accused face little or no punishment.

* WaPo | Georgia official warns of likely Russian interference in presidential election: Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger said that a video purporting to show Haitians claiming that they illegally voted for Kamala Harris is fake. In a post Thursday on the social media site X, Raffensperger said that the video is likely a production of Russian troll farms designed to interfere in the U.S. election. “As Americans we can’t let our enemies use lies to divide us and undermine faith in our institutions — or each other,” he wrote.

* The Atlantic | Throw Out Your Black Plastic Spatula: In 2018, Turner published one of the earliest papers positing that black plastic products were likely regularly being made from recycled electronic waste. The clue was the plastic’s concerning levels of flame retardants. In some cases, the mix of chemicals matched the profile of those commonly found in computer and television housing, many of which are treated with flame retardants to prevent them from catching fire.

* The Atlantic | What Orwell Didn’t Anticipate: 1984 ends not with a bang, but with a grammar lesson. Readers of George Orwell’s novel—still reeling, likely, from the brutal dystopia they’ve spent the previous 300-odd pages living in—are subjected to a lengthy explanation of Newspeak, the novel’s uncanny form of English. The appendix explains the language that has been created to curtail independent thought: the culled vocabulary; the sterilized syntax; the regime’s hope that, before long, all the vestiges of Oldspeak—English in its familiar form, the English of Shakespeare and Milton and many of Orwell’s readers—will be translated into the new vernacular. The old language, and all it carried with it, will die away.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click 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)

Friday, Nov 1, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

[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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WCIA

An incident at a polling place in Champaign County has lead county officials to clear up confusion about what is — and isn’t — allowed at a polling place.

On Saturday, a man wearing a Trump hat walked into the polling location. He was told to take the hat off, because wearing it into the polling location was against state law. […]

State law is clear on the matter. Anywhere within 100 feet of a polling location is a no-campaign zone. That bars political signs, campaign materials and clothing from being allowed within. It is also illegal to openly advocate for a candidate or to try to influence others in any way within that radius. […]

After being told he would have to remove his hat in order to receive a ballot, the man with the Trump hat went live on Facebook. In the video, you hear another person at the polling location tell him to stop recording. After the man taking the video turned the camera to the other voter, he slaps the phone out of his hand. The video does not show what happened next. The man who took the video declined an interview with WCIA.

* ABC Chicago

The 2024 presidential election is unlike any other in American history, and officials are preparing for the possibility of more violence regardless of who wins. […]

“We know that the environment is very fraught and volatile right now. We know that. How’s that gonna manifest itself, we don’t know,” said Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart.

Dart is preparing his officers for any possibility of violence.

From the political side, Dart sent a bipartisan letter to other sheriffs in the state warning “a great number of our citizens will be deeply disappointed in this election’s outcome, requiring us to remain vigilant and vocal in our opposition to political violence.

* Americans for Prosperity-Illinois

Today, Americans for Prosperity-Illinois (AFP-Illinois) filed an ethics complaint with the Illinois State Board of Elections alleging that the Rochester Public Library District is illegally using public resources to conduct a vote yes campaign for a massive 169% property tax hike.

The Rochester Public Library District board and certain staff members have held multiple public meetings to discuss illegally supporting a referendum to raise taxes – known legally as election interference.

Per published Rochester Public Library District board meeting minutes over a period from 2022-2024 board and staff members discussed in public meetings:

    - “Recruiting members for Vote Yes Committee.” (6/8/2023)
    - “Recruit, Train, and support” for the Vote Yes Committee (9/21/2023)
    - “Begin the campaign for the referendum.” (11/9/2023)
    - “The board discussed how to structure the Vote Yes honorary chairs and others who can serve on the committee.” (1/11/2024)
    - “(President) Deen has drafted a campaign plan and will share. (1/11/2024)

The property tax hike referendum, if passed, would…

    - Raise the Library District’s property tax levy by 167%. (Source)
    - Increase the average homeowner’s property tax bill by $444 a year. (Source)
    - Allow for bigger annual property tax levy hikes each year going forward. (Source)

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Illinois veto session set for week after election: Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he has a legislative agenda, but doesn’t expect much until the new General Assembly is seated in January. “Lots of agenda. Not necessarily for the veto session,” Pritzker said at the Governor’s Mansion in Springfield Monday. Typically, veto session is where legislators consider acting on vetoes from the governor, to which there haven’t been any this year of the 469 bills legislators approved.


*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | Changes Underway At CHA As Board Taps Chair As Interim CEO: The agency’s board of commissioners voted unanimously Thursday to appoint Angela Hurlock as the interim replacement for outgoing CEO Tracey Scott until a permanent leader can be found. Hurlock recused herself from the vote. Vice chair Matthew Brewer will now lead the board, at least temporarily. Hurlock was appointed to the CHA board in 2019. She also serves as executive director of Claretian Associates, a South Chicago community group that develops affordable housing and offers programs for homebuyers and others on violence prevention.

* Block Club | Prepare Yourselves: It Will Be Dark Before 5 PM Starting Sunday: The end of daylight savings time in Chicago is Sunday — paving the way for pre-5 p.m. sunsets. Clocks roll back an hour starting 2 a.m. Sunday, and the sunset for that day is set for 4:43 p.m., according to SunriseSunset. The city will continue to lose precious minutes of daylight each day after Sunday for over two weeks, on a slow march to its earliest sunsets of the year: 4:19 p.m Dec. 6-11.


* Block Club | Uptown’s XMarket Vegan Food Hall Closing After 1 Year In Business: “We poured our hearts into creating a space for the vegan community, but the challenges have been real,” the post read. “It breaks our hearts to be here, but in order to keep our other missions alive—running the two largest vegan platforms online—we need to shift our focus.” Ahead of the closure, everything inside the grocery-style bodega is 50 percent off, XMarket said.

* Tribune | For Chicago-area witches and pagans, Halloween ushers in a season of reflection on mortality: Though it’s hard to find a definite count of how many people practice witchcraft in Chicago, one minister whose congregation serves northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin estimated that the Chicago area is home to between 20,000 and 27,000 pagans, whose religions are anchored in the Earth’s rhythms and may employ witchcraft as part of their spiritual practice.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | School expansion and pension reform: Here’s what’s on the ballot in the Northwest suburbs : Barrington Area Unit District 220 is seeking a $64 million tax hike that would help build a new high school auditorium, fund security improvements across the district and enhance the science, math and arts curriculum. If voters approve the plan, the owners of a $500,000 home would see an increase of about $235 a year on the district’s portion of property tax bills, officials said.

* Daily Herald | Marter alleges fraud in U.S. elections, but Underwood insists they’re secure: Democratic U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood of Naperville and the Republican challenger for her 14th District seat, James Marter of Oswego, strongly disagree about whether American elections are secure. In a recent joint candidate interview, Marter claimed election fraud is rampant and “comes in many forms.” Underwood, who has served the 14th District since 2018 and is seeking a fourth term, insisted elections in the U.S. are secure “without a doubt.” But she also said voters remain vulnerable to election misinformation spread electronically by adversarial nations.

* Daily Herald | GOP congressional candidate says terrorism is ‘fundamental’ to Palestinian society: During a discussion about Israel and the war in Gaza, Republican congressional candidate Seth Cohen called terrorism a core part of Palestinian society. “It’s just fundamental to the Palestinian life right now,” said Cohen, a Chicagoan trying to unseat longtime U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky in the largely suburban 9th District. Schakowsky and Cohen, both of whom are Jewish, differ on how best to bring lasting peace to the region. Schakowsky, of Evanston, supports establishing a Palestinian nation alongside Israel. Cohen, of Chicago, opposes the two-state solution.

* Tribune | Oak Park and River Forest students to represent at board meetings: Come January there will be a student at the table during meetings of the Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200 Board of Education after the board unanimously approved a pilot project to include student delegates. While there will be eight student delegates in all, two from each class, only one student, a senior, will sit at the board table during meetings. That student will be able to participate in board discussions but will not, as is required by state law, have a vote. Students will also not participate in closed sessions of the school board and not have access to closed session materials.

* Daily Southtown | Thornton Township bills paid after month-long standoff between Supervisor Tiffany Henyard and trustees: The township continues to operate without a budget, with Henyard’s proposal listed repeatedly on meeting agendas failing to receive adequate support. But after the past two meetings were canceled due to disagreements over meeting location and safety protocols, the board approved bill payments and employee insurance updates. “By (trustees) not paying bills, they have been hurting a lot of department heads, which are here today,” Henyard told attendees after the meeting. “Their board members have not shown up to take care of the business, which is up for vote every two weeks.”

* WGN | ‘We’re giving away $2.2 million’: Trustee walks out ahead of Henyard’s 100% homeowner tax refund proposal: “The business got done,” Gonzalez said. “The bills were paid. The employees will have insurance.” The next items on the agenda are employee bonuses and a 100% tax refund for all homeowners. “We’re giving away $2.2 million to the residents of Thornton Township,” Henyard said.

*** Downstate ***

* WMBD | Peoria County Coroner’s office holding service and burial for unclaimed descendants: Fifty-eight people will, at long last, go to their final resting place. The Peoria County Coroner’s Office will bury 58 cremains of people who were not claimed by relatives or friends this Friday at Springdale Cemetery.

* WCIA | Crews battle ravine fire at Fox Ridge State Park overnight: Ashmore Fire Chief Clay Berner told WCIA he and about 12 to 15 of his firefighters responded, along with the same number from Hutton, at around 9 p.m. A caller reported smelling smoke in the park and firefighters arrived to find a ravine on fire. Berner said the fire’s cause is unknown, but he did say prevailing drought conditions played a role. Firefighters were on both sides of the ravine trying to fight the fire, in dark conditions on the sides of a steep drop-off.

* KSDK | ‘Beautiful and sensitive’: Endangered coral are being grown in southern Illinois, for a cause: “Scientists at SIU’s Center for Fisheries, Aquaculture, and Aquatic Sciences came up with the idea to grow coral, an invertebrate animal, about a decade ago, just as construction was beginning on the initial phase of the Saluki Aquarium in 2012,” the press release said. The aquarium currently houses about 10,000 gallons of research and display tanks, with officials hoping to add another 9,000-gallon marine display and teaching aquarium soon.

* PJ Star | Hollywood star John Travolta shows up at restaurant in small Illinois town: The Uptown Grill has been a mainstay of great food and service for nearly 40 years in La Salle. But over the years they’ve had something else on the menu, too: Celebrity visits. John Travolta, the A-lister with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, also showed up and took a seat in the Uptown Grill for dinner Saturday.

*** National ***

* WIRED | Workers Say They Were Tricked and Threatened as Part of Elon Musk’s Get-Out-the-Vote Effort: In Michigan, canvassers and paid door knockers for the former president, contracted by a firm associated with America PAC, have been subjected to poor working conditions: A number of them have been driven around in the back of a seatless U-Haul van, according to video obtained by WIRED, and threatened that their lodging at a local motel wouldn’t be paid for if they didn’t meet canvassing quotas. One door knocker alleges that they didn’t even know they were signing up for anything having to do with Musk or Trump.

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Caption contest!

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Great shot…


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Pritzker calls on new CPS president to resign, citing ‘antisemitism, misogyny, fringe conspiracy theories’ (Resignation reported)

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker…

Any person charged with the stewardship of the Chicago Public School Board must exemplify focused, inclusive, and steady leadership. The views expressed in the current Chair’s posts – antisemitism, misogyny, fringe conspiracy theories – very clearly do not meet that standard. We owe it to our students, families, and teachers to provide the highest quality education, and that begins at the top by setting a positive example of kindness and inclusivity. Given that he has failed to live up to these values, I believe it is in the best interest of our schools and our children for the Chair to resign.

…Adding… He gone…


From the story

Amid a wave of backlash over troubling social media posts that were criticized as antisemitic, misogynistic and conspiratorial, Chicago’s new Board of Education president is resigning at the request of Mayor Brandon Johnson just seven days after he was sworn into office.

…Adding… From the mayor…

Mayor Brandon Johnson released the following statement today, requesting the resignation of Chicago School Board of Education (BOE).

“Today, I asked Chicago School Board of Education (BOE) President Reverend Mitchell Johnson for his resignation, and he resigned, effective immediately. Reverend Mitchell Johnson’s statements were not only hurtful but deeply disturbing. I want to be clear: antisemitic, misogynistic, and conspiratorial statements are unacceptable.

My administration is committed to upholding the mission of transforming our public education system. It has become clear that his continued participation in the BOE would hinder the important work we need to accomplish for our schools.

We will proceed promptly to identify a qualified individual who shares our dedication to educational excellence and will serve with an unwavering commitment to the values we hold dear. I remain steadfast in my commitment to collaborate with all stakeholders to ensure that every child in Chicago has access to the quality education they deserve. Protecting and empowering the students in Chicago Public Schools remains our North Star.

The Board of Education meeting on Friday will proceed as planned under the current BOE bylaws.”

As Isabel just noted to me, this tone is far different from yesterday’s.

* Let’s look at some background from yesterday

* Missing from that story’s context is incendiary stuff we already knew, like this

* Also missing was stuff most of us didn’t know about yesterday




* His disbarment is detailed here

During Johnson’s representation of Chrapko, Chrapko filed for personal bankruptcy. The trustee in bankruptcy informed Johnson that Chrapko could no longer honor his agreement with Johnson for hourly fees, and could pay for Johnson’s services only on a strict contingency basis. Johnson agreed to modify his fee agreement with Chrapko accordingly. Yet, despite this, Johnson later demanded an additional $1,000 from Chrapko. Johnson told Chrapko that “there were ways around the bankruptcy,” and instructed Chrapko to have a third party issue a check to Johnson on his behalf. Chrapko complied with Johnson’s demand, fearing that Johnson would not otherwise pursue his lawsuit.

* ABC7

The majority of Chicago City Council members are asking for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s brand new, hand-picked school board president to step down after a Jewish publication revealed dozens of antisemitic and anti-Israel posts on his Facebook page. […]

Rev. Johnson released a lengthy apology to the Jewish community writing, in part, “The remarks I posted were reactive and insensitive, and I am deeply sorry for not being more precise and deliberate in my comments posted last year. Since then, I have asked for and received feedback from my Jewish friends and colleagues, who helped me be more thoughtful in the way I address these sensitive matters.”

For now, Mayor Brandon Johnson seems to be standing by his pick.

“These are not sentiments that i subscribe to and i do appreciate Rev. Johnson being willing to be held accountable for statements that he has made that have caused harm,” Mayor Johnson said.

…Adding… The pile-on is gonna be huge…

WGN

A spokesperson for Mayor Johnson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the newly unearthed posts about 9/11 and women.

  66 Comments      


Happy Halloween!

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Happy Halloween! But did you know it’s also Bat Week?

Bats are an iconic symbol of spooky season, and more than 800 people attended the first Central Illinois Bat Festival on Sept. 28 in Urbana for a celebration of all things batty, including exhibits on bat conservation, guest speakers, activities for kids, and an evening bat walk. […]

Illinois is home to 13 species of bats, and about half of them are listed as state-endangered, threatened by changing landscapes, disease, climate change, declining insect populations, and more. Bats provide vital ecosystem services that benefit humans, such as eating hundreds of insects every night, many of which are agricultural pests or have a negative impact on human health.

Joy O’Keefe, associate professor, University of Illinois department of natural resources and environmental sciences and wildlife Extension specialist, was one of several bat experts on hand raising awareness about the issues bats are facing. Her research focuses on understanding bat biology, their roles in ecosystems, and how our conservation efforts may help or harm the unique creatures.

“Bats tend to be personified as scary villains, but bats actually do humans a lot of favors by eating insects and pollinating plants,” said O’Keefe. “It’s encouraging to see public opinion shifting about bats with so many people attending the festival to celebrate them and learn how to help them.”

* The New York Times detailed how Nerds Gummy Clusters were developed in Forest Park

How does a candy brand that was started 40 years ago suddenly become one of the most popular treats in America, with a cult following, a Super Bowl ad and TikTok fame? […]

In 2018, a group of scientists developed a plan to make Nerds relevant again, according to Anna Walsh Olsen, head of research and development at Ferrara Candy Company. The colorful pebbles had long been on store shelves, but their popularity was lagging behind hits like Sour Patch Kids, and other, less messy treats like Starburst candies and Skittles were favored by some customers. […]

For six months, a team of candy scientists and developers at the company’s headquarters in Chicago met almost every day on their quest to create a gummy core that could hold just enough mini Nerds to pack a perfect crunch. A previous Nerds product had been made in hopes of solving that issue — Nerds Rope, a long, gummy rope with Nerds stuck to it — but some had found it messy or difficult to eat. […]

The company saw flaws in the Nerds Rope. It was popular, but it was messy to eat, Ms. Duffy said. Nerds tumbled off the gummy twine when customer took a bite. The Rope was also awkward to eat on the go and the texture could be more satisfyingly toothy.

Gummy Clusters seemed to be the answer. A factory in the Chicago suburb of Forest Park, Ill., where many are made, looks like a multicolor dream world fit for Willy Wonka. Melted gel — slightly different than the kind used in Nerds Rope — gets poured into molds to create small, chewy orbs with a gummy bear-esque consistency. Then, in a stainless steel bowl that looks like a massive KitchenAid with a metal mixing paddle, dots of sugar are spun in a process called panning until “baby Nerds,” smaller than the original candy, are created.

* USDA


* Something I didn’t know

Mohammed Babadoost, a plant pathology professor at the College of Aces, said the significance of pumpkins in Illinois is measurable.

“We grow almost all, at least 90% of canned pumpkins, meaning that if Illinois fails in pumpkin production there would be no pumpkin pie,” Babadoost said.

Other states, such as Indiana, Ohio, New York and California, produce seasonal pumpkins for decoration, but not for processing, he said.

* A throwback to when John Candy visited Carbondale in 1980. When Halloween was official


* More history


* If you’re wondering what to do with your pumpkin, see if there’s a pumpkin smash near you

Interested in a “smashingly” fun activity that also benefits the environment? The University of Illinois Extension in Macon County and Rock Springs Nature Center may have something for you.

On Nov. 2 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. the U of I Extension will host a pumpkin smash. Organizers said that a “variety of smashing methods” will be provided at the event.[…]

After the event has finished, all pumpkins will be sent to a composting facility. According to Illinois Extension, pumpkins produce greenhouse gas when they decompose without oxygen in landfills. They also leak water that moves through trash piles and pollutes waterways.

For the past five years, the Illinois Extension has hosted the Pumpkin Smash event. During that time, they have kept over 50 tons of compost waste out of landfills.

Statewide, the pumpkin smash has been ongoing since 2014. It has reduced carbon dioxide emissions by 926 tons and has diverted nearly 270,000 gallons of water from landfills.

For a full list of pumpkin smashes in Illinois, click here.

* Speaking of pumpkins


* Aren’t we skipping something?

Christmas is coming really, really early this year for Chicagoans.

Radio station 93.9 LITE FM will begin playing Christmas and other holiday music 24/7 starting 3 p.m. Friday, according to a Wednesday announcement. The marathon will begin with two and a half hours of commercial-free music.

Fans can listen on the radio, online or on the iHeartRadio app.

The station has offered a holiday music marathon for decades.

* More…

    * NBC Chicago | Boo! Some of Halloween’s scariest movie characters are from Illinois and the Midwest: The question comes about like clockwork during the spookiest time of year: where is Haddonfield, Illinois? It’s the place where Michael Myers embarked on a reign of terror in the long-running horror franchise “Halloween,” more than a decade after killing his 15-year-old sister Judith Myers — when he was just six years old — on a chilly Halloween night in 1963. Michael returned 15 years later, terrorizing the quaint community with numerous killings over decades.

    * Block Club | South Shore’s HallowHood Night Aims To Spread Spooky Spirit — And Build Lasting Connections: Even as a collection of South Shore community groups prepares a night of horrors and haunts, they are banding together to tell their neighbors: “Don’t be scurred” to trick-or-treat in the neighborhood this Halloween. The HallowHood community crawl takes place 3-9 p.m. Thursday along the 71st Street corridor in South Shore. More than a dozen neighborhood groups will host a day of activities.

    * PJ Star | Illinois teen artist crafts intricate Nirvana-inspired Halloween costume by hand: Leggins, a 15-year-old artist and musician from Glasford, achieved viral status on TikTok this month after she created a wearable version of the cover of Nirvana’s album “In Utero.” The 1993 album is well-known for its cover featuring a Transparent Anatomical Manikin with exposed muscles and organs and angel wings sprouting from its shoulders.

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Roundup: Madigan corruption trial

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGN

Michael Madigan’s legendary control of the Illinois House was a significant topic of discussion Wednesday in his ongoing corruption trial. […]

Wednesday, Oct. 30, was Day 2 of testimony from lobbyist Will Cousineau, who worked for the now-former Illinois Speaker of the House Madigan. Cousineau testified how the 82-year-old would secretly impose his will on legislation with the help of trusted lieutenants like McClain.

“The goal is to make as many people happy as possible,” Madigan said on a private conference call on Dec. 9, 2018, with top advisors, including Cousineau.

“Why did you continue to participate in these meetings?” Assistant US Attorney Julia Schwartz asked Cousineau on the witness stand. The Madigan staffer-turned-lobbyist was no longer on the Speaker’s payroll during the December 2018 strategy session.

“I worked for the Speaker for 18 years,” Cousineau replied. “I just wanted to keep helping.”

* Sun-Times

The federal judge presiding over the corruption trial of former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan agreed to toss a small — but potentially key — piece of testimony Wednesday that put Madigan’s co-defendant in the room with him during discussion of a 2016 ComEd bill.

It’s a limited victory for Michael McClain, the longtime ComEd lobbyist who was also known as Madigan’s messenger around the Illinois State Capitol. But it likely did little damage to the case brought by prosecutors, who seemed to then fend off another attack by defense attorneys later in the morning. […]

The evidence tossed by the judge was delivered by former longtime Madigan aide Will Cousineau, who returned to the witness stand Wednesday. He discussed his role in efforts to pass the Future Energy Jobs Act late in 2016. […]

The bill ultimately passed. But McClain attorney Patrick Cotter seized on Cousineau’s lack of recall, arguing in court that U.S. District Judge John Blakey should toss the testimony. Blakey wound up having Cousineau clarify his answers without jurors present.

* Tribune

Toward the end of the day Wednesday, Cousineau’s testimony turned to his assistance on the state’s massive gambling overhaul, which had been attempted many times before but been tabled by the speaker. This time, Madigan had given a green light to talks and named Rita as sponsor of the bill — an indication that it had his backing.

Through a series of text messages and wiretapped calls, prosecutors portrayed for the jury how Cousineau and McClain played outsized roles in the shaping of the important legislation, even though neither of them worked for the speaker’s office in any official capacity.

Cousineau testified he participated in a May 2018 meeting with McClain, Rita, and others regarding the gaming bill at the now-shuttered Sangamo Club in Springfield.

In text message conversation later that month, McClain and Cousineau update each other on the bill’s status in committee and where Madigan stood.

“Bob (Rita)’s analysis after talking to some members is that games were being played on the vote,” McClain wrote to Cousineau. “We are moving forward on the hearings. … I have had no one whisper in my ear and so I think will just stay on the program.”

* Capitol News Illinois

And before trial broke for the day, Cousineau began testifying about working together with McClain on gambling legislation in the spring of 2018 – more than a year after McClain had officially retired from lobbying. Asked what business McClain had negotiating gambling bills without being a registered lobbyist, Cousineau said he believed McClain was involved at Madigan’s request.

At Mapes’ trial last summer, state Rep. Bob Rita, D-Blue Island, testified that in 2013, Madigan told him that he’d be taking over as the caucus’ lead sponsor and negotiator on all gambling issues. As Rita was leaving the speaker’s office, he said McClain was standing on the other side of the door and Madigan told him, “He will guide you.”

Rita, who began testimony in the current trial late last week, did not return to the witness stand on Monday and his absence has not been explained since.

* More…

    * Center Square | Longtime Madigan staffer spends second day on witness stand in corruption trial: Before the jury entered the courtroom Wednesday morning, Madigan defense attorney Todd Pugh complained to Blakey that prosecutors were getting outside of a narrow focus he felt they were supposed to have regarding discussions with certain witnesses. Pugh said that former Democratic Party of Illinois campaign staffer Alaina Hampton, who has not yet testified, had become a “Swiss Army knife” of a witness. Pugh argued that Hampton should not be allowed to testify about campaign contributions. Schwartz said she expected Hampton to testify next Monday.

    * ABC Chicago | Defense attorneys argue jury being unfairly tainted: For nearly an hour, defense attorneys argued that the jury was being unfairly tainted, as the government tried to paint a picture of an all-powerful speaker, who could withhold campaign contributions to specific House members if they did not vote a certain way. This came as prosecutors tried to convince jurors that Madigan, through McClain, solicited bribes, along with no-work jobs and contracts from ComEd and others in exchange for favorable legislation.

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Question of the day

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Your Halloween plans?

Also, just for “fun,” make sure to take a look at the replies to this White Sox tweet


Oof.

For some real fun, click here to check out a story on Halloween in Ravenswood Manor.

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The word ‘voters’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting in these ‘voter confidence’ stories

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Two recent nothing-burger stories about a few minor errors from the Center Square…

The first story is about a mistake involving a Libertarian candidate that effected 300 out of 160,000 mail-in ballots in one Cook County precinct. The ballots were already remailed. The story also includes a minor glitch reported by McLean County GOP Chair Dennis Grundler that was corrected within a day. Just one ballot was mailed to the wrong address.

The second story is about McLean County GOP Chair Dennis Grundler reporting a minor glitch with a voting machine, causing people to put 34 ballots into lockboxes until the machine could be fixed. The piece also rehashes a minor suburban story from earlier this month.

The main take-away appears to be: “Voters = McLean County GOP Chair Dennis Grundler.”

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Thursday, Oct 31, 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 Dana, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Open thread

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Brandon Johnson unveils $17.3 billion city budget, proposes steep property tax increase. Sun-Times

Chicago property owners reeling from reassessments will be hit with a double whammy — a $300 million property tax increase — to help Mayor Brandon Johnson balance his $17.3 billion budget for 2025 without layoffs.

Johnson chose the property tax increase he campaigned against — and made it the city’s largest in a decade — instead of asking unionized city employees to give a little by accepting mandatory furlough days or targeted layoffs.

Wednesday afternoon, the mayor’s office released estimates of the impact of the tax increase on homeowners. It ranges from $72 a year for a home valued at $100,000 to $481 per year for a home valued at $500,000.

Even after eliminating 743 vacant positions (400 in the Chicago Police Department), the mayor also needed a record tax increment financing surplus of $570 million — $54.1 million more than last year, the previous record. Chicago Public Schools gets $311 million of the TIF surplus. The city gets $132 million.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Local abortion providers predict out-of-state ballot measures won’t quell the surge in patients traveling to Illinois: Dr. Allison Cowett, medical director of the Chicago abortion provider Family Planning Associates, said she’s optimistic voters will generally support abortion rights. In previous ballot measures in seven states — California, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Montana, Ohio and Vermont — voters have favored reproductive health freedoms. “I do feel hopeful that the ballot measures will send a message that the majority of Americans want abortion to be available close to home,” she said. But Cowett noted that abortion rights don’t always translate into access to reproductive care. She cautioned that even if voters support pro-reproductive rights measures in these states, that doesn’t mean abortion will actually be available and accessible there, at least in the short term.

* Release | Advance Illinois Statement on the 2024 Illinois Report Card: There is good news and bad news in the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE)’s 2024 Illinois Report Card. It is encouraging to see improvements in student learning, growth, and achievement, with some measures exceeding pre-pandemic levels. However, recovery from the pandemic and disparities among underrepresented student groups across the K-12 continuum persist and will require ongoing attention and effort.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Ugaste faces rematch from Democrat Robertson in 65th House District: Robertson, a scientist from St. Charles, said she believes the district isn’t being represented in the Democrat-majority House. “I don’t believe the incumbent has a voice at the table,” she said. “I would be able to have that voice.” For his part, Ugaste said he’s helped pass bills with bipartisan support and has been able to work across the aisle on issues that are important to the district.

*** Statewide ***

* NBC Chicago | Why are most Illinois schools closed on Election Day?: Under provisions of an amendment to Illinois’ school code, Election Day is an official state holiday for the 2024 election season, meaning that children in K-12 public schools will not be required to attend classes. The law also holds that any school that doesn’t have instruction on Election Day can be used by local authorities as a polling place.


*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson’s $17.3 billion budget faces pushback in City Council, with a close ally in the opposition: Pilsen Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, said no thanks. “I cannot support a property tax increase,” Sigcho-Lopez said. Sigcho-Lopez is instead calling for the mayor to withhold a $272 million advance pension payment that helps stabilize the city’s four beleaguered pension funds but is above what’s statutorily required.

* CBS | “Extraordinary” amount of money spent in Chicago school board election, experts say: Two education experts who spoke to CBS News Chicago said that nearly $7 million is a lot of money for a school board election, and that kind of money, along with turnout, will make a difference. “That’s an extraordinary amount of money to see put into a school board race, and it’s very atypical,” said Michael Hartney, a research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.

* Tribune | Former Dunbar Career Academy student sues Chicago Board of Ed, alleging it failed to protect him from sexual abuse by security guard: When the teenager was asked if he wanted to share a statement at a court hearing for a former security guard at Dunbar Vocational Career Academy who pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting him when he was a 15-year-old student, he worried that he wouldn’t be able to express his emotions in detail using his voice. So, instead, he wrote a poem — an “alternative route,” he called it. “From poor self-esteem to no sleep, you brought all of this upon me,” the poem said. “Please don’t take me out of another classroom. I hope you feel the deceit, and I hope you don’t have any more access to hurt me.”

* NYT | What Happened When Chicago’s Mayor Followed a Teachers’ Union Playbook: Chicago is in the midst of a radically different experiment: What would happen if one of the nation’s feistiest teachers’ unions was able to elevate the mayor of its choice, who then embraced the union’s agenda almost unequivocally?

* Block Club | Historical Garfield Park Women’s Shelter To Become A Community Center After City Council Vote: onstructed in 1892, the Crittenton Anchorage took over the building in 1949, turning it into a place of housing and respite for single women and their children. Later known as the Living Center for Girls, the complex remained a haven for young women until closing in 1973. It remained vacant for years and was in jeopardy of being demolished when it was purchased last year by Samantha Walton, the wife of Lukas Walton, the billionaire grandson of Walmart founder Sam Walton.

* ABC Chicago | Walgreens announces over 250 layoffs in Chicago: The cuts are not at Walgreens stores; 256 support center positions are being eliminated. The Deerfield-based drugstore chain is also cutting more than 200 open positions. Walgreens has struggled financially in recent years. This is the fourth round of corporate job cuts for the company in the last year and a half.

* Sun-Times | New Google rendering gives an early glimpse of former Thompson Center atrium’s future: Google will refashion the ground floors of the former Thompson Center atrium into a hotel lobby-like space with restaurants, retail, seating and greenery, according to a new rendering obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times. The image shows the building’s main concourse and lower level being turned into an almost single bi-level space linked by open stairs, bleacher seating and overlooks.

* Block Club | 5 Transit Board Appointees Advance, But Some Bristle At Another Pastor With No Transit Experience: Most of the new nominees were lauded for their experience in transit or related fields. All passed through the committee unanimously except Jarixon Medina — a pastor with New Life Covenant Church’s Spanish-speaking campus in Humboldt Park — who was questioned like Acree for having no bonafides in professional transit roles.

* Crain’s | The Jean Banchet Awards are terrified to name the best pizza in Chicago: The Banchet Awards for Culinary Excellence tried last year to introduce a new pizza-specific category to their annual honors of Chicago-area restaurants. It did not go well. “Friendships were ruined,” said Michael Muser, organizer of the awards. The judging panel, made up of food journalists and industry experts, was unrelentingly divided. “It was just the craziest thing. Everybody got frustrated.” They decided to kick the can.

* Block Club | Nonstop Christmas Music Is Back On 93.9 LITE FM Starting Friday: “93.9 LITE FM listeners have spoken year after year — once Halloween ends, they are ready for Christmas music on 93.9 LITE FM,” Mick Lee, 93.9 LITE FM program director and host, said in the news release. “We’re thrilled to celebrate our 24th year as Chicago’s Christmas station, spreading cheer, unity and warmth all season long!”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Indicted Riverdale Mayor Lawrence Jackson seeks reelection, faces 2 primary challengers: Riverdale Mayor Lawrence Jackson filed petitions Monday to run for reelection in the February Democratic primary, but will face two challengers. Three trustees also filed for reelection but face challenges in the Village Board race. Michael Airhart and Rena Poulos will challenge Jackson, who was charged last year with perjury and obstruction of justice in U.S. District Court for allegedly lying in a civil deposition about accepting secret funding for his trucking business from a clout-heavy waste hauling firm.

* Daily Herald | Suburban students make significant gains in English language arts proficiency, report card data shows: Schools across the suburbs have made notable strides in improving English language arts proficiency, mirroring a statewide trend seen in the 2024 Illinois School Report Card data released Wednesday. Statewide, students in third through eighth grades achieved an ELA proficiency rate of 40.9% — the highest ever since they began taking the Illinois Assessment of Readiness in 2019, according to report card data.

* NBC Chicago | First physical Google store in Midwest opening at suburban mall Friday: The first-ever physical Google retail store in the Midwestern U.S. is opening this weekend, with a popular suburban mall serving as the site. Google Store Oakbrook, located at the Oakbrook Center shopping mall, will open its doors for the first time at 10 a.m. Friday, Nov. 1.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Rhetoric ratchets up in election for Sangamon County Recorder: The idea of merging the Sangamon County Recorder’s office with the county clerk has become a hot button campaign issue between incumbent recorder Josh Langfelder and challenger Frank Lesko in the Nov. 5 election. Those aren’t the only sparks flying. Fallout from a contentious 2023 mayoral campaign, involving Josh Langfelder’s brother, Jim Langfelder, still may be lingering.

* Pantagraph | McLean County voters weigh future of auditor’s office: In June, the McLean County Board voted to introduce a referendum asking voters whether the elected office of county auditor, which has been held by Michelle Anderson since 2007, should be eliminated. A similar measure is also on the ballot in Champaign County.

* WSIL | Burn bans across the region: On Wednesday, October 30, several fire departments alerted the public of burn bans and fire dangers. The Franklin County Emergency Management Agency issued a burn ban for Franklin County on Wednesday due to the elevated fire danger. Residents are refrained from burning until further notice.

* WCIA | Bement Public Library puts Narcan box outside to prevent overdose: “We’re hoping to do what we can to prevent deaths,” Bement Public Library Director Donna Techau said. The Bement Public Library has partnered with Piatt County Mental Health to provide boxes with free Naloxone, a medicine that reverses overdoses. Four years ago, the library started carrying it in their bathrooms. Yesterday they took it a step further.


* WCIA | U of I freshman sings national anthem at World Series: Pearle Peterson performed The Star-Spangled Banner in front of 52,000 fans before Game 2 of the World Series on Saturday, Oct. 26. On the field, she represented the Boys and Girls Club of America as a National Youth Talent Ambassador. Peterson said her favorite part about performing at Dodger Stadium was the support from her loved ones and the deeper meaning the song holds.

*** National ***

* Brennan Center for Justice | On Fertile Ground: How Racial Resentment Primes White Americans to Believe Fraud Accusations: In a survey experiment, show that racially resentful white Americans are especially likely to believe accusations of fraud when these accusations are racialized. At a time when America’s multiracial democracy appears fragile, groups poised to lose power draw on rote narratives linking race and criminality to legitimize their own denial of free and fair elections.

* ProPublica | A Woman Died After Being Told It Would Be a “Crime” to Intervene in Her Miscarriage at a Texas Hospital: Barnica is one of at least two Texas women who ProPublica found lost their lives after doctors delayed treating miscarriages, which fall into a gray area under the state’s strict abortion laws that prohibit doctors from ending the heartbeat of a fetus. Neither had wanted an abortion, but that didn’t matter. Though proponents insist that the laws protect both the life of the fetus and the person carrying it, in practice, doctors have hesitated to provide care under threat of prosecution, prison time and professional ruin.

* WaPo | GOP leaders in some states move to block Justice Dept. election monitors: The U.S. government has regularly dispatched hundreds of monitors to voting locations in blue, red and swing states, aiming to protect ballot access, discourage improper partisan influence and act as a moderating force on political campaigns. While the Justice Department has the legal right to request access to polling sites, inflamed partisanship and ideological extremism have contributed to greater resistance to such activities in some GOP-controlled states, legal experts said. Those states have attempted to politicize the process and cast federal monitors as partisans from the Biden administration who cannot be trusted.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click 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)

Thursday, Oct 31, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chalkbeat Chicago

New data released today show Illinois students continue to rebound from pandemic-era academic setbacks in most metrics, but SAT scores continue to drop.

Declining SAT scores mirror a national trend but come as more Illinois students are graduating from public high schools, raising red flags for top state education officials.

The Illinois State Board of Education’s latest report card data show the four-year high school graduation rate at 87.7% at the end of the 2023-24 school year, compared to 87.6% the previous year, and it has been steadily climbing over the past decade. However, graduation rates for Black and Latino students are still low compared with white and Asian American students.

About 31.1% of high school juniors who took the SAT this past spring were considered proficient in reading, while 26.1% met or exceeded state standards in math. That’s a drop from 2018-19 when 36.2% were proficient in reading and 34.4% were proficient in math.

* Daily Herald

Just days after an Orthodox Jewish man was shot while walking to his Chicago synagogue, and amid record numbers of hate crime reports nationwide, state leaders on Wednesday announced a new initiative to help those affected by hate-fueled attacks.

Help Stop Hate features a website, ilstophate.org, and a phone number, (877) 458-4283, where people can confidentially report hate crimes and receive referrals to community resources that offer assistance. […]

The initiative also will allow the state to better identify the frequency and location of hate acts to improve services, strengthen policies and increase resources, advocates say. […]
According to FBI statistics released last month, 11,862 hate crime incidents affecting 14,416 victims were reported across the country last year, the most since the bureau began keeping track in 1991. […]

Illinois bucked those trends last year, with hate crime reports falling from 346 to 319, according to the FBI. But that dip followed a massive surge, from 56 in 2020 and 98 in 2021, to 346 in 2022.

* Dewitt Daily News

It will be a slow veto session in Springfield according to one central Illinois lawmaker.

State Sen. Sally Turner indicates there is nothing to veto in this veto session so she’s not really sure what lawmakers will be doing while they’re in Springfield.

As the legislature turns over a new year coming up, Sen. Turner is focused on some wind farm legislation. She explains they are focused on wind turbines and their location to weather radars as well as proximities to communities.

According to the Lincoln Republican, while there will not be a busy veto session, that doesn’t mean they are standing around doing nothing. She explains they have committee meetings and meet with constituents associated with various groups in Illinois.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | By the numbers: Unions lead the way on funding state elections in Illinois: This year in Illinois, there are no statewide elections. There are no fights over a Supreme Court seat. There are no constitutional amendments. At the Statehouse, more than half of general election races are uncontested. And yet, political campaigns in Illinois raised about $600 million in itemized individual contributions, according to a Capitol News Illinois analysis of state campaign finance data. Accounting for loans, transfers between political committees and other contributions, more than $1 billion changed hands among Illinois’ political organizations between Nov. 9, 2022, and Oct. 15, 2024 – the final required disclosure deadline before the election.

* Rich Miller | The Next Person Who Tries to Sell Ram Villivalam on Transit Funding without Reform Will Get Run Over by Him: “I have said from the beginning that we need to provide adequate funding for public transit,” Senator Villivalam told me. “It is good for our local economy, public health, quality of life, mitigating climate impact, and much more.” However, Villivalam continued, “With that said, I have heard from colleague after colleague. The appetite to vote on this unprecedented amount of funding without reform is just not there. Period.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat | Mayor Johnson’s budget would send Chicago Public Schools $300 million – less than what CPS wants: Facing a nearly $1 billion deficit next year, Mayor Brandon Johnson proposed a city budget Wednesday that would send roughly $300 million to Chicago Public Schools. That’s nearly $140 million more than what CPS already budgeted to receive from the city. But it’s still roughly $190 million short of what CPS wants to help cover critical upcoming costs that have been at the heart of leadership conflicts between the mayor’s office and CPS.

* Sun-Times | City’s record $300 million proposal for CPS budget deficit would still leave shortfall: To fill the CPS budget hole, Martinez asked Johnson for $484 million in TIF funds this year, a request that was always unlikely to be granted because it would have required declaring a more than a $900 million total surplus. That would be politically challenging since City Council members rely on that money to attract development to their wards.

* Tribune | Mailers for school board race go negative — from Project 2025 to attacks on the mayor: “If Trump Republicans and out-of-state billionaires get their candidate — Ellen Rosenfeld — elected,” reads one pamphlet paid for by a CTU Local 1 Political Action Committee. Then, in smaller lettering: “Donald Trump’s 2025 agenda will crush our public schools.” Charter proponents and CTU have been longtime enemies and now their Board of Education fights are spilling into people’s living rooms in the form of these mailers. As all of them are likely Democrats, the labels paint a bizarre picture of the people running for school board seats.

* Crain’s | Chicago’s first apartment building designed for the blind opens in Illinois Medical District: Printed on walls in a new nine-story apartment building on Wood Street are the words peace, joy, family, community and hope, but not everyone can read them. The words are printed in Braille, legible only to those who know this tactile printed language for people who are blind or visually impaired. The wallpaper lines elevator vestibules in a new $47 million building, called the Foglia Residences at the Chicago Lighthouse. It’s the first apartment building in the city designed expressly for people who are blind or visually impaired and living independently

* CBS | How an 1884 painting at Chicago’s Art Institute saved Bill Murray’s life: “I think it’s called ‘The Song of the Lark,’ and it’s a woman working in a field and there’s a sunrise behind her,” Murray said in the clip. Murray said it was early on in his career and he was feeling hopeless after a performance. So CBS News Chicago’s Marie Saavedra went looking for that painting.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Verna Clayton, former Buffalo Grove village president and state legislator, dies at 87 : According to Clayton’s daughter, one of the achievements that she was proudest of was bringing Lake Michigan water to Buffalo Grove through the creation of the Northwest Water Commission, which was formed to build a pipeline to carry water to four northwest suburbs. Lake water began flowing to Buffalo Grove in early 1985. While village president, Clayton also served for a time as the first female president of the Illinois Municipal League.

* Crain’s | Developers try again to remake Highland Park’s former Solo Cup factory: For the third time in six years, the long-vacant 28-acre site of a former Solo Cup factory in Highland Park is in a developer’s sights, this time for residential development that would be half as dense as a plan that dissolved in 2018. The Habitat Co. is in the early stages of proposing a total of 262 units in townhouses and two-flats, with about 11.7 acres of existing trees and wetlands preserved on two sides of the property, which is at Old Deerfield and Ridge roads west of U.S. Highway 41.

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island considers plan to bring a Cook County Fair to former landfill site: Blue Island officials are considering a proposal to convert the long-vacant site of a former landfill into a venue for hosting a Cook County Fair. Former Cook County Deputy Clerk John Mirkovic outlined his plans this month for the multiacre property at 119th Street and Vincennes Road in Blue Island. “I’ve been out there, I’ve looked at it. I think that it is large enough and it’s really great for something of this scale,” Mirkovic told the Blue Island City Council.

* FOX | A look at local election security as 600K Cook County voters have already cast ballots: Around 600,000 Chicago and suburban Cook County residents have cast their ballots early. Chicago Board of Elections spokesman Max Bever says each machine tabulates the numbers at the end of the day, but they are kept secret until the polls close on Election Day. “So they’re going to a secret server – all the voting machines are never connected to the internet – so that’s why we don’t have live voting updates in real time,” Bever said. “We have to take those memory cards and we have to take those paper ballots at the end of each night and put those paper ballots under lock and key in our warehouse.”

* Daily Herald | ‘Vivid creatures’ will be taking over Morton Aboretum next year: Construction already is in progress at the BeGaetz workshop and studio in Portland, Oregon. The pieces — the tallest is 24 feet high — will be made from recycled steel and fiber-reinforced cement and painted with acrylic so the five “Vivid Creatures” can withstand Midwestern weather. “Eighty percent of the steel that they use has been recycled at least once, and steel actually has a lower carbon footprint than most other materials that are used in large-scale sculptures,” Scott said.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Former employee admits embezzling from Dupo School District activities fund: Linda J. Johnson, 58, of Waterloo, faced three counts of theft from Dupo Community Unit School District 196, where she worked. “Stealing funds from student activities directly deprives children of opportunities within their extracurriculars,” said U.S. Attorney Rachelle Aud Crowe. “Although the defendant tried to conceal her crime from school officials by preparing two sets of records, her deceit was discovered, and she will be held accountable.” The loss to the school district is $135,566.80.

* WMBD | Program working to fix childcare shortages in Peoria County: Peoria County is one of 15 counties within the area that has the attention of the Women’s Business Development Center which is working with local leaders to expand its virtual no-cost programs to empower women to run as well as inspire them to open new childcare businesses. According to the center, there are more than 23,000 children under the age of 10 in Peoria County, but the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services says there are only 96 state-licensed childcare facilities. This averages out to 239 kids per facility, which they say is unrealistic.

* SJ-R | Franklin’s Bergschneider elected National FFA president: Thaddeus Bergschneider, who grew up on a fourth-generation farm in Franklin in Morgan County, was elected National FFA President at its conventional and expo in Indianapolis last week. The Illinois FFA State President, Bergschneider is a freshman at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where he is pursuing a degree in agricultural and consumer economics in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences (ACES).

*** National ***

* Today | McDonald’s may finally have a fix for its broken ice cream machine epidemic: McDonald’s often maligned, seemingly perennially-broken ice cream machines could soon become a thing of the past. On Oct. 25, the United States Copyright Office granted a copyright exemption that gives restaurants like McDonald’s the “right to repair” broken machines by circumventing digital locks that prevent them from being fixed by anyone other than its manufacturer.

* AP | 2 New York Yankees fans who were ejected have been banned from Game 5 of World Series: The league and club released a statement saying the two fans who were involved in a ball being pried from Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts’ glove would not be permitted at the game. “Last night two fans were ejected from Yankee Stadium for egregious and unacceptable physical contact with Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts,” the statement reads. “The safety and security of players, fans and Stadium staff is the foundational element of every event held at Yankee Stadium, and it cannot be compromised.

* WaPo | Musk’s plan to cut $2 trillion in U.S. spending could bring economic turmoil: Musk first outlined his highly aggressive target at a raucous campaign rally in New York last weekend, promising to identify “at least $2 trillion in cuts” as part of a formal review of federal agencies that he would conduct if Trump wins next week’s election. But the audacious pledge, which drew rapt applause, belied a harsh fiscal reality: Slashing the budget that steeply would require decimating an array of government services, including food, health care and housing aid — and it could erode funding for programs that lawmakers in both parties say they want to protect, from defense to Social Security.

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IDFPR launches new online licensing system, but only for clinical psychologists, music therapists and nail technicians (Updated)

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for some additional background. WAND last year…

Thousands of health care workers in Illinois are worried about their job security due to unreasonable waiting periods for the state to approve or renew their licenses. State lawmakers believe the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation must be held accountable.

IDFPR is responsible for the routine licensing of your health care providers, but lawmakers and industry leaders argue the state agency is failing in that role.

“Applicants tell us that there’s no real way for them to obtain status updates on their applications or renewals,” said David Porter, the senior vice president of health policy research and advocacy for the Illinois State Medical Society. “There’s virtually no chance to be able to connect with someone at the department by phone or email who could provide such updates.” […]

IDFPR officials told lawmakers that they have spent months trying to find a replacement for the state’s outdated licensing system. Secretary Mario Treto Jr. said the department recently landed a master contract, but the deal is no longer on the table.

* WCIA in May

Some people looking to renew their license through the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) have had to wait months.

“This has been going on for years, and people’s lives shouldn’t be played with,” House Minority Leader Tony McCombie (R-Savanna), said.

In the past, the agency has cited their outdated licensing system for delays. To address that, Governor Pritzker signed legislation in December giving the agency ninety days to enter a contract with a vendor to obtain a new one.

But that deadline has come and gone. […]

Now, the deadline has been pushed to June. In an email to WCIA, the agency said “IDFPR is working through the procurement process towards securing a new state-of-the-art online licensing system; however, as stated during the subject matter hearing on May 8, 2024, the state procurement code prohibits discussion of active procurements. The Department will provide updates to the public as they become available.”

* Today from the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation

The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) announced today the launch of the Comprehensive Online Regulatory Environment (CORE), its new online licensing system, for the first set of IDFPR-licensed professionals. The new online process eliminates the need for paper applications, gives applicants more control over their application materials, and helps prevent deficient applications from being submitted. In addition to creating a streamlined online application process, CORE features a simplified review process for all license applications received by IDFPR.

“Everyone wanting to earn a living in Illinois in the 21st century should have tools of the times available so they can be licensed and get to work as soon as possible,” said IDFPR Secretary Mario Treto, Jr. “Combined with our steps to streamline our current processes, CORE demonstrates our commitment to fulfilling that mission for the betterment of Illinois, and I look forward to our team fully transitioning our services to this new system over the next two years.”

Today’s launch of CORE marks the first completed step of a planned, multiphase approach by IDFPR over the next two years that will ensure applications for more than 300 license types and records for more than 1.2 million professionals are properly transitioned. IDFPR’s CORE is a result of its work with Tyler Technologies, a leading provider of integrated software and technology services for the public sector. CORE is built on their State Regulatory Platform Suite, which allows regulatory agencies like IDFPR to oversee professional and occupational licenses.

Starting today, new applicants seeking initial licensure for three license types (clinical psychologists, nail technicians, and music therapists) will submit their applications online using CORE. IDFPR selected these three license types to test and ensure CORE’s functionality, while preparing to add all other professions licensed by IDFPR across five additional phases over the next two years. The next phases are:



“Today, we write the first chapter of the next success story for all of Illinois,” said Acting Director of Professional Regulation Camile Lindsay. “While all great stories take time to complete, we know how this one will end: redefining the professional licensing process so even more qualified workers can provide essential services to the people of Illinois.”

To create a streamlined review process, CORE features a user-friendly interface with improved communications. Prospective licensees will be notified directly within the system when applications are received, reviewed, and licenses are issued by the Department—eliminating the need for paper mail and email responses from the Department. In addition, enforcement services (including complaint intake and review, document tracking, and investigations) will be transitioned to CORE. IDFPR will make user guides available online as more services are added to CORE, while continuing its diligent work in reviewing and issuing licenses to qualified applicants under its current processes.

“We are pleased to work with the IDFPR to improve the professional licensing process in Illinois with Tyler’s software,” said General Manager, Tyler Illinois Deanna Gronlie Cook. “Our State Regulatory Platform Suite is fully configurable, making it easy for users to add license types, rules, and processes when new legislation or regulatory requirements are enacted. We are confident this application will enhance the licensing process for various professionals in the state.”

IDFPR will make an announcement when each CORE implementation phase is completed. More information about professional licensing in Illinois may be found on IDFPR’s website: idfpr.illinois.gov.

…Adding… Rep. Bob Morgan


  12 Comments      


I don’t get it

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Illinois Policy Institute

Proponents of a push to scrap Illinois’ constitutionally protected flat income tax and add a 3% income tax hike on those earning more than $1 million claim increased revenue could be used for property tax relief.

Don’t count on it.

Analysis shows all new revenue from the tax would likely be consumed by Illinois’ growing pension crisis. That would leave nothing for property tax relief. It would also set up other taxpayers for a much larger income tax hike.

One favorite tactic with groups like this is to just throw everything imaginable at the wall to see what sticks. But there’s zero evidence that lawmakers would use that money for pensions, including in the above “analysis.”

As former Gov. Pat Quinn has noted, the state has a law on the books creating the Property Tax Relief Fund. That’s where the money from the tax hike would go, he says.

And the state of Illinois doesn’t have a “growing pension crisis.” The percentage of the state budget going to pensions has leveled off for years.

* But, even if all the money was used to bring down pension costs, the IPI itself essentially acknowledges that such a move would reduce pressures on the property tax

Growing pension costs at the state and local levels are part of the reason why, despite a nearly $15 billion increase in annual state revenues since 2019, the typical homeowner’s property tax bill has grown by $756.

🤷‍♂️

  21 Comments      


Pritzker asked about new city property tax hike proposal, doesn’t exactly respond (Updated)

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the mayor’s official budget recommendation briefing. Click here for the mayor’s budget address as prepared. Tribune

Mayor Brandon Johnson on Wednesday will propose Chicago’s largest property tax hike in almost a decade as part of his $17.3 billion budget plan for next year.

The $300 million increase that would hit Chicago homeowners, landlords and other property owners is a major flip-flop from Johnson’s campaign vow not to employ the widely unpopular, and often politically toxic, revenue-raising tactic. It is also one his team justified as necessary in order to balance a projected $982.4 million shortfall in 2025, along with sweeping tax increment financing funds and eliminating hundreds of vacant positions across city government. More than half of those will come from the Chicago Police Department.

In unveiling his second budget proposal as mayor, Johnson acknowledged his earlier red line against raising property taxes, but blamed his predecessors for the city’s financial predicament and said the primary alternative — layoffs — would be devastating to the city’s workforce.

“Look, this a very difficult decision, but to be quite frank with you … we’ve just have had irresponsible administration after administration that has kicked the can down the road, and now it’s in front of my door,” Johnson said about his backtrack when talking to reporters Tuesday about the tax hike. “This was a very excruciating process, but it’s one that I recognize in this moment that the alternative is just not acceptable.”

His own budget forecast published a year ago predicted the coming deficit almost to the dollar. Instead of mitigating the upcoming damage, he waited several months to do things like impose a hiring freeze that was nowhere near freezing levels.

* More…


But keep this in mind

Former WBBM-Ch. 2 investigative reporter Pam Zekman on Oct. 21 sold her six-bedroom, Prairie-style house in Uptown’s Buena Park area for $1.5 million. … Zekman … first listed the house on May 7 for $2.1 million, and she reduced her asking price later that month to $1.89 million. … The house had a $15,883 property tax bill in the 2023 tax year.

If you click here and scroll through, you can look up the property tax bills of comparably priced homes in Naperville. Those taxes are far higher.

* NBC 5

In order for a proposal to pass, Johnson needs 26 votes by Dec. 31. As of Wednesday, 14 alderman signed onto a letter to Johnson yesterday, sharing their community’s demands and concerns and saying they would not support a budget that includes a tax hike.

“We cannot support a budget that includes a property tax increase,” the letter read in part. “Period. The recently released poll shows that 90% of Chicagoans oppose increasing property taxes as an action the city could take to raise revenue. Of those 90% of residents, 79% strongly oppose raising property taxes. This is a non-starter for us and our constituents.”

The letter also supported a renewed ShotSpotter contract, finalizing a a contract for Chicago firefighters and keeping the police budget intact.

More from that poll…


Whew.

* Gov. Pritzker was asked about this topic today. Prepare yourself for a very long answer

Q: Mayor Johnson is set to announce a property tax hike today. You have previously said the state has provided enough assistance so that municipalities can lower property taxes. Do you think that’s true in Chicago today?

Pritzker: I would not characterize my comments the way you just did. Enough assistance? [Beginning of optional reading skip] I think that all of us who believe in a better public education for kids across the state of Illinois believe that there are more resources needed for public education, and we’ve been doing that every single year that I’ve been in office. And indeed, I think the total amount of new funding that’s been provided since I took office is more than $4 billion. We’ve added $350 million each year, except for one where we had a lot of federal funding coming in at the beginning of the pandemic, where the state was also challenged. But in addition to that, hundreds of millions of dollars more to education that are not part of the evidence based funding model. So more than the 350 a year.

So as to the question of whether the state should provide more money to local governments, in other ways, I’ve been doing that literally every year in every other way. Schools is one major important part of the issue of property taxes, right? Illinois, just to remind you, this is maybe a longer answer than you wanted, but just to remind you when I came into office, Illinois, the state, was providing 24% of education funding. That’s the worst in the country when I came into office. The rest of it being provided by property taxes, vast majority and a little bit 10% or so from the federal government. Today, we’re up in the 30s, so we’ve gone from 24% to better. The average state is providing 46% of funding from state government, so we have a long way to go, but in the meantime, we’re doing a lot better than we’ve ever done before, putting more resources into schools. And what does that do? It allows local governments to at least abate the pressure to increase property taxes. Many have not taken us up on that, which is just disturbing to me. I know that there’s a need for more funding that people feel like, you know, there isn’t ever enough, but property taxes are already too high, and so the more that attention can be given, and that is by local school boards, including the one in Chicago, but the local school board when it is fully convened and elected, but across the state of Illinois, it’s local school boards that impose property taxes related to schools, and honestly, they’ve received more money than ever before from us. I think that they should take that seriously and try to abate the increases in property taxes.

[End of optional reading skip]

Q: [Tries to refocus the governor on the mayor’s announcement today]

Pritzker: Well, yeah, the city’s in a little bit different position. But look, I you know, property taxes are too high for everybody. I mean, if you’re asking me that question, I think that’s an easy one for everybody. And I understand, though, that there is stress in the city budget. You know, they’ve got to figure out. I have talked about the need for efficiencies, the need to make sure that you’re not, you know, haven’t put your ARPA dollars entirely into your operating budget. And I don’t know what the percentage is for the state, for the city rather, but it’s, it’s a reasonably high percentage. And so that obviously caused problems. We tried not to do that at the state level. We also have, you know, tight budgets, and you know, we’ll continue to but I would like to see some recognition that property taxes already are a burden.

Q: Would you support layoffs and furloughs instead of property taxes?

Pritzker: I can’t tell you what all the levers are. I know that’s been talked about. I you know, nobody wants to lay anybody off. That’s a hardship on the people who get laid off, for sure. I can tell you that when we were faced at the state level, just to go back to a day when it was really hard during my term in office, was when the pandemic hit, and we were in the spring of 2020 and putting forward our FY 21 budget. We had a budget we passed, and then going into FY 21 it was clear, it seemed clear, that we needed to make cuts at that point because, you know, revenues were falling off a cliff, and we didn’t have what ended up being the American Rescue Plan Act. And so we found $700 million of cuts to make. I mean, that is not easy. I’m not suggesting anybody wants to do that, but we did it. We did it without laying people off. But you know, we did it, and I know I don’t want to see anybody laid off. There are lots of solutions to these problems that need to be brought to the fore. I’m sure the mayor is examining all those. I have no idea what he’s saying in his speech today about that.

…Adding… Predictable…


  31 Comments      


Pritzker: ‘More vetting should’ve been done’ on new CPS Board President

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the story. Reps. Morgan and Didech and Sen. Feigenholtz…



* Gov. Pritzker was asked about this today

If you’re asking whether I condone the remarks that were made, I do not. And I must say that to the extent that someone has put up for a position, especially one as important as chair of the Chicago schools, I think vetting is vitally important. That doesn’t seem to have occurred here.

And all I can say is that I think we should hear from the chair more about what his positions really are. He’s written things, but, you know, people can change, theoretically, change their views.

I also think that the record should be more examined. I haven’t seen all the detail, but I understand there’s quite a lot that he has posted online. And so I, there’s more to come. And I think, you know, judgment should be, least a thorough final judgment should be withheld pending a look at that.

Q: Should that have been done before they picked him?

Pritzker: I said that, yeah. I mean, you’re supposed to vet people. Look, can you miss things in peoples’ vets, sure. But it feels like Facebook posts are pretty easy to find. And so, you know, we need to, you do have to ask question, who vetted, you know, and again, sometimes people say things. I just want to be clear, it is possible that people write things or say things that they didn’t mean, you know, in the heat of passion one time or twice. So if that’s the case, the chair should say something about that. If that’s not the case, and this is somebody’s lifelong record, I think, for example, Donald Trump is an example of somebody who has a very long record, and I think it’s fairly straightforward. So I just want to be clear that more vetting should’ve been done.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

  45 Comments      


Oops

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Deleted a post because I screwed up. Sorry about that.

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News coverage roundup: Madigan corruption trial

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Courthouse News Service

The second week of testimony in ex-Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan’s corruption trial thus far has consisted of extensive questioning of just one man: Tom O’Neill, former general counsel for energy utility Commonwealth Edison, more commonly known as ComEd.

O’Neill spent all Monday and most of Tuesday on the witness stand answering questions about ComEd’s efforts to pass key legislation in Illinois between 2010 and 2016. Federal prosecutors accuse Madigan — in one of the five “episodes” to which his 23 bribery, fraud, racketeering and conspiracy charges are related — of helping to pass those bills in exchange for ComEd helping secure jobs and contracts for those in his political network.

ComEd needed the help, O’Neill told federal prosecutor Sarah Streicker on Monday. He testified to the utility’s poor financial situation prior to the 2011 passage of the so-called Smart Grid bill, which overhauled how customers’ energy rates were calculated. The act’s passage, along with a subsequent 2013 trailer bill, resulted in increased energy rates for many customers but also provided ComEd with more stable income to upgrade its electric grid. […]

“What’s important to the Speaker is important to ComEd,” O’Neill said he remembered ComEd ex-CEO Anne Pramaggiore saying.

* Tribune

A former lieutenant for Michael Madigan is expected to resume testimony Wednesday in the ex-speaker’s corruption case, where he’s giving jurors an insider look at Madigan’s influence over legislation in Springfield and Democratic Party politics.

Will Cousineau, who wore dual hats as both Madigan’s issues director in the House and also political director of the Democratic Party of Illinois, was called late in the day Tuesday in Madigan’s trial, which is now in its second week of testimony at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse.

Cousineau, now a high-powered lobbyist, previously testified in the “ComEd Four” case last year, as well as the separate perjury trial of Tim Mapes, the speaker’s longtime chief of staff.

Testifying in a quiet voice and seeming slightly uncomfortable, Cousineau told the jury at the outset of his testimony he was granted immunity by the U.S. attorney’s office, meaning he cannot be charged if he tells the truth.

* Sun-Times

Before Cousineau took the stand Tuesday, jurors heard more testimony from former ComEd general counsel Thomas O’Neill. He previously told jurors about the pressure he felt from McClain to sign and renew a contract for the law firm of Madigan ally Victor Reyes. It happened when ComEd needed House approval for legislation crucial to its bottom line. […]

Asked if McClain was a valuable asset for the utility, O’Neill agreed. He said McClain was hired specifically because of his connection to Madigan, whose historical relationship with ComEd had been “not great.”

Cotter asked if it improved when McClain was hired.

“I would say yes,” O’Neill said.

In fact, Cousineau’s testimony later put McClain in the room with Madigan and members of his staff as they discussed some of ComEd’s key legislation in 2015.

* Capitol News Illinois

Under questioning from McClain’s attorney about how often McClain actually made the recommendations, O’Neill testified that “sometimes it appeared that was all he did” – but immediately added that in reality, it was probably not that frequent an occurrence.

McClain’s persistence when checking in on the status of those recommendations could sometimes be overbearing, O’Neill said. However, he told defense attorneys, he didn’t think the job recommendations were necessarily improper and certainly didn’t feel McClain’s behavior violated ComEd’s code of business conduct.

And McClain was far from the only lobbyist who passed along names from elected officials for job recommendations at ComEd, O’Neill testified. He said he also came to understand that accepting the names and considering them – whether a recommended person was ultimately hired or not – was part of building goodwill with elected officials.

“You have to give to get in most cases,” O’Neill said, following up with a phrase he learned from ComEd’s former top internal lobbyist. “John Hooker used to say that ‘you have to show people you care before they care what you know.’”

* WGN

Part of the afternoon’s testimony was also focused on attorney Victor Reyes.

The government alleges McClain and Madigan illegally and improperly pushed ComEd to hire the politically connected Reyes and his law firm, allegedly in exchange for supporting ComEd’s “smart grid” measure and other energy legislation.

The government alleges Madigan, with help from co-defendant McClain, schemed to arrange for “no-show” jobs to reward political loyalists in exchange for pushing legislation favorable to ComEd. The government said that the alleged criminal conspiracy sometimes included pressure from McClain regarding a dispute about legal work for a Madigan crony.

“You paid them only for the work they did?” asked Madigan’s attorney Dan Collins.

“That’s correct,” O’Neill testified.

* More…

    * ABC Chicago | Former ComEd general counsel testifies on ex-IL Speaker Mike Madigan influence for 2nd day: O’Neill said he spoke with Pramaggiore sometime in 2018 about his concerns over having someone connected to the speaker on the board, but Pramaggiore said it was important he be selected. “It seemed to me bad optics to have someone directly connected to the speaker on the board,” said O’Neill of his conversation with Pramaggiore, adding that, “she acknowledged that, but she was interested in having Mr. Ochoa on the board. She believed there was a need to maintain good relations.”

    * Fox Chicago | Mike Madigan trial: Former ComEd exec testifies on utility rate hikes, political favors: On the witness stand, O’Neill answered questions about internal ComEd emails, and the passage of legislation linked to utility rate hikes in exchange for an upgraded power grid system. Dozens of pages of emails were presented to the jury, including conversations regarding the Smart Grid bill and the Future Energy Jobs Act (FEJA) of 2016, which provided ComEd with financial stability, according to O’Neill.

  5 Comments      


Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, I suppose

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Sangamo Club’s online bankruptcy auction ended yesterday. This giant 170×68 monstrosity was purchased for a whopping $39,050

I tried to convince the club to get rid of that drunken pilgrims painting for years so we didn’t have to look at it, but they always claimed nobody would buy it. Well, they were wrong. Bigtime.

No word on who shelled out that kind of money, but I really hope it wasn’t a restaurant that I frequent.

I miss that place a lot, so I bought a few keepsakes. Nothing quite as expensive as the drunken pilgrims thing, however. Not even close.

  8 Comments      


Uber’s Local Partnership = Stress-Free Travel For Paratransit Riders

Wednesday, Oct 30, 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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Open thread

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Report: Peoples Gas customers face onslaught of record-breaking rate hikes under disputed pipe-replacement program. Citizens Utility Board

    - A controversial proposal by Peoples Gas to continue overhauling its network of underground pipes would leave Chicagoans inundated by recurring rounds of record-breaking rate hikes over the next 15 years, a landmark report released Tuesday found.
    - Peoples customers would continue to incur charges associated with the pipe-replacement program for another 75 years – or more than six decades after the utility currently estimates it will finish revamping its system of gas mains.
    - The report finds that the pipe project could inflict unprecedented costs on consumers, beyond the rapid increase in heating bills they have already experienced over the last decade.

* Related stories…

At 10 am Governor Pritzker will announce a new Help Stop Hate initiative. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Nieman Lab | In 2020, talk of “defunding the crime beat.” Where are we four years later? : The news industry has not, I think it’s fair to say, abolished the crime beat. Many newsrooms continue to publish unverified information from law enforcement in crime logs and the short, often single-source breaking news stories known as crime briefs. (Some legacy newspapers and local TV stations, in particular, seem to have a hard time kicking old habits.)

* Bloomberg Law | Durkin Brothers Wend Through Illinois Legal, Political Worlds: Many brothers attend law school and launch legal careers in the same state, but few have attained the public successes Jim and Thomas Durkin have. Sixty-three-year-old Jim, seven years younger than Tom, was appointed to the Illinois House of Representatives about five years after graduating from law school and became House Republican leader 18 years later.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WGN | Illinois lawmakers scrutinize prescription drug pricing at hearing:
“It’s price gouging plain and simple and it has to stop,” 4th District Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia (D) said. While Democrats point to the “Inflation Reduction Act” as one way they’ve lowered the cost on some of the most essential drugs, it is still a long road ahead for many Americans.

* Daily Herald | Fiscal issues foremost for Villa, Brown in 25th District senate contest: Honoring pension obligations and fully funding schools are among the biggest challenges facing the Illinois General Assembly, state Sen. Karina Villa said during a Daily Herald endorsement interview. State legislators have to consider “how to bring in more money” to solve funding issues, according to the West Chicago Democrat, who is running for a second term representing the 25th District.

* WMBD | State House race for 105th District: The race is between Republican incumbent Dennis Tipsword and Democratic candidate Morgan Phillips. “I decided that we had to be transparent,” said Tipsword. “We had to be open and available and try to get out and talk to our constituents on a timely matter when they needed it. I think over the last two years we have done a really good job of that. There’s always work to be done to try to make it a little quicker and a little better. But we have practices in place now.”

* Advantage | Illinois AI law could have a far-reaching impact on business hiring: Effective Jan. 1, 2026, the Illinois Human Rights Act will be amended to prevent employers from using AI in a discriminatory manner, including using an individual’s ZIP code as a proxy identifier for characteristics. The law also requires notice to be sent when AI is being used in processes related to recruitment, hiring, promotion, renewal of employment, selection for training or apprenticeship, discharge or conditions of employment.

*** Statewide ***

* News-Gazette | After a slow start, sports gambling in Illinois has taken off:
The Illinois State Lottery is the state’s largest contributor when it comes to gambling tax revenue, with video machines coming in a close second. But revenues generated from sports gambling, legal just since March 2020, are growing at a staggering rate. Total sports gambling revenues just jumped from $380 million in the 2020-21 fiscal year to $1.1 billion in FY 2023-24.

* WCIA | Illinois voters to consider advisory question on IVF coverage on November ballot: If you haven’t cast your ballot yet, you’ll see three advisory questions. One of them focuses on reproductive health care, asking voters if insurance plans should cover in vitro fertilization, or IVF, without limits on the number of treatments. “This wonderful science is out there for the taking and we should make it available to everybody because if you want a family, if you want children, you should be able to have one, not just because my plastic card looks different than your plastic card,” Rachel D’Onofrio, who has gone through IVF treatment, said.

*** Chicago ***

* WGN | Calls go unanswered amid continued decline in Chicago police ranks: The number of police officers is at or near record lows and Mayor Brandon Johnson’s campaign pledge to add 200 more detectives is unfulfilled, despite his claims to the contrary, according to a WGN Investigates analysis of police staffing numbers. As of September, Chicago had 1,662 fewer officers than it did in 2018, a decline of nearly 13 percent.

* Chalkbeat | What’s at the heart of the turmoil at Chicago Public Schools? Money.: In many ways, the conflict can be traced back to pivotal decisions made five years ago. The district agreed to an ambitious new teachers union contract after a bruising 2019 strike that followed years of struggles to balance the budget. The Chicago Teachers Union successfully made the case that more staff earning higher salaries would help students in schools that lacked the resources to meet their needs.

* Crain’s | UChicago researchers may have found ‘functional cure’ for Type 1 diabetes: There’s a catch-22 problem in treating Type 1 diabetes — the “standard of care” anti-rejection medicine used to try to cure diabetes is actually known to cause the same disease. UChicago Medicine researchers are hoping they’ve solved it with a new treatment. Medical researchers at UChicago have successfully transplanted pancreatic islets into three patients with Type 1 diabetes, with two achieving insulin independence and a third already decreasing insulin use by 60%.

* Block Club | O’Hare Awarded $20 Million From Federal Government For Terminal 5 Overhaul: The new funds will be used to improve O’Hare’s Terminal 5. The airport has now received a total of $110 million from the federal legislation since it was signed into law in 2021. Terminal 5 includes the highest number of airlines of any terminal at the airport. Air France, American Airlines, British Airways and Air India are just four of the nearly 40 airlines that are based in Terminal 5, according to the National Airport Database.

* Sun-Times | White Sox to hire Will Venable as next manager: Venable, who turned 42 on Tuesday, is a Princeton grad who played nine seasons in the majors and was named a special assistant to Cubs president Theo Epstein in 2017. He was the Cubs’ first-base coach in 2018-19 and third-base coach in 2020.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | With eye on homeless people, Mundelein bans public camping: Violators will face fines ranging from $75 for a first offense to $750, as well as potential jail time. This summer, the Supreme Court found municipalities do not violate the Eighth Amendment’s “cruel and unusual punishment” prohibition by enforcing laws that ban homeless people from camping in public places. […] The ordinance applies to all public property in town. Officials will work with Mundelein Park & Recreation District officials to ensure its properties are included, Police Chief Jason Seeley said in a memo.

* Tribune | In ‘weird’ Cook County state’s attorney’s race, O’Neill Burke — who progressives called a ‘de facto’ Republican — looking to defeat GOPer Fioretti: The Democratic nominee, Eileen O’Neill Burke, prevailed in the primary while pushing back against claims she’s a de facto Republican, while the Republican nominee, Bob Fioretti, was until recently a longtime Democrat who is being backed in the general election by progressive icon the Rev. Jesse Jackson. And after running a robust campaign to defeat the Cook County Democratic Party’s favored candidate in March, O’Neill Burke has made a concerted effort since to largely lay low while Fioretti is trying — and mostly failing — to raise enough money to make the race competitive.

* Daily Herald | Feed producer, Mount Prospect reach interim deal on odor monitoring; parties head for trial: Details of the confidential agreement were summarized in a joint statement on Tuesday from the village, the manufacturer at 431 Lakeview Court and the City of Des Plaines, which is a party to the litigation. Under the agreement, Prestige agreed to random odor testing. If odors exceed certain monitoring standards, Prestige will temporarily halt its operations on the following shift.

* Daily Herald | Safety gates at fatal Barrington crossing on steady but slow track: A Barrington official said the village remains committed to installing pedestrian safety gates at its downtown and Hillside Avenue railroad crossings. However, the village has to follow an administrative process before construction can begin, said Deputy Village Manager Marie Hansen.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘I’ve never seen anything like this’; Early voting turns violent in Champaign Co.: Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons said it started when a man went to vote wearing a hat supporting former President Donald Trump. […] “He was saying he was being denied his right to vote,” Pritchard said. “All they had asked is that he remove his hat. [The election judges] said they were shaken up at the time, the other voters in line were shaken up.”

* WGEM | Gov. Pritzker, Illinois leaders celebrate expansion of Voortman Steel Machinery in state: The Governor‘s Office said Voortman purchased a 27-acre property and will build a 100,000 square-foot building. Voortman plans to invest $51.4 million in the project. Pritzker said it’s possible thanks to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Development through its Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax credit program.

* WICS | New juvenile center wants to engage with Lincoln community: The facility comes as a result of a plan put in place by Governor JB Pritzker in 2020 that focuses on reducing the harm of incarceration of youth. Robert Vickery, the acting director of the Illinois Department of Juvenil Justice says, “At all of our locations,we really emphasize building collaborative relationships with non-profits, with faith-based groups, with higher education, like community colleges, folks that have an interest in serving our kids.”

*** National ***

* Rolling Stone | Musk says Trump win would result in hardship for some Americans: When asked about “tackling the nation’s debt,” he mentioned changing the tax code, and then went on to say there would be some financial difficulty imposed on some Americans. “Most importantly, we have to reduce spending to live within our means,” he said, adding that these efforts will “involve some temporary hardship, but it will ensure long-term prosperity.”

* WaPo | She said she had a miscarriage — then got arrested under an abortion law: Earlier that month, Frazier had shared a Facebook post about the son she lost. She had apologized to Abel, saying she was “so scarred n afraid” and “didn’t know what to do,” court records show. “Why would you be sorry?” asked Jacqueline “Jac” Mitcham, the 31-year-old deputy on Frazier’s doorstep, according to body-camera footage obtained by The Washington Post. “Why would you be sorry, Patience?”

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Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Oct 30, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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