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Top cop in tiny town kills canine program, blames state

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* News Channel 20

The Sullivan Police Department says it will not move forward with its K-9 program.

We’re told the main reason is “because of the current laws and attacks in law enforcement.”

The station basically just lifted that “news” from the department’s own Facebook page. Sullivan is a town of about 4,300 people, by the way.

* The Journal Gazette went a little deeper

Chief Andrew Pistorius said the Sullivan Police Department has opted to not move forward with creating a canine program due to new state use-of-force guidelines for law enforcement agencies.

Pistorius said his understanding of the SAFE-T Act that Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed into law in February is that this criminal justice reform law will increase use-of-force guidelines on police canines being used to apprehend subjects. He said law enforcement agencies will be exposed to more legal liability for taking this action. […]

The Sullivan Police Department had planed to obtain a “dual purpose” canine that could handle apprehensions and drug detection, Pistorius said. Moving forward with a “single purpose” canine focused solely on drug detection would not be worth the training and operations expenses, he said. […]

Pistorius said Sullivan will continue requesting assistance from canine units with the Arthur Police Department, Shelby County Sheriff’s Office, Illinois State Police, and other agencies for its police canine needs.

So, Sullivan doesn’t have a drug problem, but it does have a violence problem? Weird. I didn’t realize Sullivan was in such dire straits. Luckily for them there are several other agencies they can rely on during these hard times.

The department’s first police dog died in February of an unexplained “pre-existing condition” after only a week on the job. Maybe they should switch to cats because they have nine lives.

* More to the point, the original SAFE-T Act bill passed in January, but a trailer bill was approved this spring which had the support of the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police and included significant changes to the use of force language.

* Related…

* Hippies are gonna make us kill all our dogs!!!

* When Police Violence is a Dog Bite

* Police Use Painful Dog Bites To Make People Obey

* Police Wanted “A Dog That Would Bite A Black Person”

  25 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** AG Raoul sues Dynegy Midwest Generation over unlawful disposal of coal ash

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

Press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul and Vermilion County State’s Attorney Jacqueline Lacy today filed a lawsuit against Dynegy Midwest Generation, LLC (Dynegy) over the unlawful disposal of coal ash at the site of the former Vermilion Power Station, which led to groundwater pollution surrounding the coal power plant. Raoul and Lacy also filed a motion to enter an agreed interim order that requires Dynegy to, among other things, create a safety emergency response plan for the site.

“Dynegy’s actions created a public health risk by contaminating the area’s groundwater and led to the pollution of Illinois’ only nationally-recognized scenic river and,” Raoul said. “I am pleased to partner with Vermilion County State’s Attorney Jacqueline Lacy and am committed to holding Dynegy accountable for harming our environment and putting the health of Illinois residents at risk.”

“Protecting our environment is critical to the safety and security of our Citizens in Vermilion County,” Lacy said. “Thank you to Attorney General Raoul’s Office for working diligently with our community to ensure the protection of the Middle Fork of the Vermilion River.”

Raoul’s lawsuit is based on a referral from the IEPA.

“The Agreed Interim Order is a vital step in addressing our long-standing concerns with the facility’s coal ash ponds,” IEPA Director John Kim said. “The Order establishes necessary timelines for addressing the impacts on area groundwater and the Middle Fork of the Vermilion River, and provides for more meaningful public participation while moving toward the ultimate closure of the facility’s coal ash ponds.”

Dynegy owns the property in Oakwood, Illinois where the coal-fired Vermilion Power Station operated until November 2011. Dynegy’s operations involved burning coal to generate electricity . The process resulted in the generation of coal ash, which Dynegy dumped in man-made ponds at the site. Coal ash can contain a number of harmful byproducts that may adversely impact groundwater and the nearby Middle Fork of the Vermilion River, Illinois’ only national scenic river under the National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. The river’s banks continue to steadily erode, and Raoul’s lawsuit alleges the proximity of the coal ash ponds in the flood plain further threatens the river’s well-being.

In today’s lawsuit, Raoul and Lacy argue that by placing coal ash into the onsite ponds, Dynegy contaminated the surrounding groundwater and the Middle Fork of the Vermilion River. Raoul and Lacy point out that as long as the coal ash remains in the unlined ponds, it continues to pose a threat to groundwater and the river. Raoul and Lacy argue the presence of coal ash seriously jeopardizes public health and the environment.

Raoul and Lacy also filed an agreed interim order that, if entered, would require Dynegy to prepare a safety emergency response plan for the site that outlines circumstances that would trigger the emergency response and the procedures to be followed in the event of further contamination or erosion. The order also requires Dynegy to create written scopes of work for a groundwater collection trench and dewatering of the ponds, and to conduct riverbank inspections at the site. Dynegy must also prepare reports for public meetings at which the company will discuss plans for closure by removal of the coal ash that is currently in the ponds.

Bureau Chief Stephen Sylvester and Senior Assistant Attorney General Kathryn Pamenter are handling the case for Raoul’s Environmental Enforcement Division.

The lawsuit is here. The proposed agreed interim order is here.

*** UPDATE *** From Vistra…

Since taking ownership of the former Vermilion plant site from Dynegy in 2018, the company has been clear in its belief that work is needed — work that has stalled for too long without resolution or action. That is why we are pleased to have reached a tentative settlement, pending court approval, with the State of Illinois to move forward with environmental protections at the Vermilion plant site.

In accordance with state permits, coal ash was lawfully managed in man-made impoundments located adjacent to the Middle Fork of the Vermilion River. The proximity of the ash ponds to the river has led to concerns that contaminants were migrating from the impoundments to groundwater and ultimately to the river. As such, since acquiring the plant in 2018, we have been working diligently with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to come up with an acceptable solution.

While we believe certain closure alternatives without removal of all the ash would be protective, given the unique nature of the site and to resolve the pending dispute with the State of Illinois, we have agreed to close all of the impoundments by removal. Also, given the proximity of the impoundments to Illinois’ only National Scenic River, the meandering nature of the river, and the recreational uses of the river, we have agreed to take the enhanced measures outlined in the proposed Interim Order.

We believe this is an important step in addressing the public’s long-standing concerns. These measures will address the potential impacts on area groundwater and the Middle Fork and provide for meaningful public participation as we move forward to closing the impoundments.

  11 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some people predicted the fall of civilization. Didn’t happen. Time to cash in

Lincolnwood is rethinking its stance on weed.

The suburb of about 13,000 decided two years ago not to allow recreational marijuana sales. After seeing neighboring Chicago, Skokie and Evanston indulge and reap the tax benefits, Lincolnwood is revisiting the ban.

With the prospect of 119 new pot shops opening up in the city and suburbs after Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs off on changes to the state’s marijuana law, Lincolnwood and other communities that rejected recreational weed sales are now more open to the idea. […]

Roselle and Glen Ellyn are reconsidering bans after voters backed the idea in referendums. Elmhurst is likely to revisit its prohibition. Lake County, which had a one-year moratorium on recreational weed, recently decided to allow sales, cultivation and manufacturing in unincorporated areas.

One forecast predicts sales will double this year to $1.4 billion.

* The Question: In your opinion, has legalization been a net positive or a net negative? Explain.

  56 Comments      


Narrow US Supreme Court decision should have no impact on Illinois’ foster care program

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision could reignite a 10-year-old controversy in Illinois over whether faith-based charities can be prohibited from contracting with the state for foster care and adoption services on the grounds that they refuse to work with unmarried or same-sex couples.

In a 9-0 decision Thursday, the nation’s high court ruled against the city of Philadelphia, which had refused to renew a contract for foster care services with Catholic Social Services, arguing that the church-based agency’s refusal to place children in the homes of unmarried and same-sex couples violated a non-discrimination clause in the agency’s contract with the city.

Illinois went through a similar controversy in 2011, shortly after the state legalized civil unions among same-sex couples, when the Department of Children and Family Services refused to renew a contract with Catholic Charities of Illinois over a similar policy.

At that time, however, a circuit court judge in Sangamon County sided with the state and dismissed a lawsuit brought by Catholic Charities.

“For us here in Illinois, had this decision been on the books when the state of Illinois did what it did back in 2011, the Catholic Charities would have been continuing in foster care,” said Peter Breen, vice president and general counsel for the Chicago-based Thomas More Society, which intervened in the case.

* The big difference between Philadelphia and Illinois is discretion, as the article eventually states. From the opinion

No matter the level of deference we extend to the City, the inclusion of a formal system of entirely discretionary exceptions in section 3.21 renders the contractual non-discrimination requirement not generally applicable

* From the Illinois ACLU…

The short answer is it will have no impact here. The Court’s narrow ruling says only that Philadelphia’s treatment of Catholic Social Services (CSS) violated the agency’s constitutional rights because the City allowed exceptions to its non-discrimination policy for other organizations — but not to CSS.

As opposed to what state courts were being asked to approve in Illinois a decade ago, the Supreme Court did not recognize a general constitutional right to discriminate based on religious beliefs. This decision does not authorize discrimination in foster care or in other taxpayer-funded government programs such as homeless shelters, disaster relief programs and health care.

We know that LGBTQ children in DCFS care already are not getting the support and services they need, as was made clear in a recent Auditor General Report. Allowing discrimination in the placement of these children will only make the problem worse. In fact, DCFS should do more to protect youth in care from insidious discrimination.

  17 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Kevin Bessler at The Center Square

Senate Democrats are making a push to give undocumented immigrants the opportunity to vote in school board elections.

The proposal could require the State Board of Education to create an affidavit helping non-citizens register for school board elections. Current bill language requires potential voters to verify they are a parent, legal guardian or caregiver of a student. They must also live within the boundaries of a school district and intent to stay there until the next school board election.

The bill’s sponsor, Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, said families should have the opportunity to play a bigger role in shaping their child’s future.

“For too long, these families have been systematically excluded from participating in our democracy even at the most basic level,” Villanueva said.

Thomas Bride, spokesman for the Illinois Association of County Clerks and Recorders said the change would create chaos.

“The association has some real concerns about introducing the non-citizen voting into the school board elections primarily from a process point,” Bride said. “The elections are complicated in Illinois.”

Tazewell County Clerk John Ackerman has been joined by a bipartisan group of 20 county clerks in opposition to the measure.

“If this law should pass, even if Tazewell County would have no non-citizen voters, my office would be required to prepare for the chance that non-citizens would request a ballot each election,” Ackerman said in a statement. “As such, we have estimated the cost of the minimum paper ballots at each polling location, preparation for over 150 different ballot styles with Tazewell County, equipment preparation and other administrative tasks to be $15,000 to $30,000 each election.”

Ackerman said he is also concerned about a violation of the current Voter Registration Fraud Prevention procedures.

“We currently require voters to provide two forms of identification, one of which has the current address they are residing and one a photo identification so we can verify the individual is voting in the appropriate election district,” said Ackerman. “This new proposal would remove that physical proof and require just a statement on an affidavit that they reside with the district they wish to vote in.”

The Senate Human Services Committee expects to host several hearings on the proposal before a vote.

Sponsors said they are willing to work with stakeholders to address concerns and make a stronger bill.

The bill is here.

And while it’s just a bill with almost no chance of passage, we can probably expect an enormous amount of publicity about it. Thank Mayor Lightfoot for the idea.

  11 Comments      


Marjorie Taylor Greene heading to Eastern Bloc territory for fundraiser with Mary Miller

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From US Rep. Mary Miller’s campaign website

Again, we’re not related.

…Adding… Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association Executive Director Dan Kovats…

Birds of a feather flock together. This absolutely tracks that Hitler quoting, conservative extremist who refused to honor the bravery of the Capitol Police during the Insurrection, Congresswoman Mary Miller would bring Marjorie Taylor Green to Illinois to raise money. Both Miller and Taylor Greene have lost touch with reality. Their brand of extremism and anti-democracy doesn’t represent Illinois or our country. If Miller had any integrity, she’d ask Taylor Greene to stay home.

  44 Comments      


Not exactly the A Team lining up against Sen. Duckworth

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Journal Courier

The Morgan County Republican Club and Morgan County Republican Central Committee are hosting a Summer Patriotic Celebration from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the AmVets, 210 E. Court St. […]

U.S. Senate candidates Rob Cruz of Crest Hill, Peggy Hubbard of Belleville and Allison Salinas of Pekin are also scheduled to appear.

No Timothy Arview? C’mon! He scored 14.4 percent of the vote in the Republican primary last year against state Rep. Dave Severin, for crying out loud. Let the man speak!

  35 Comments      


Thousands of veterans won’t be left out of Illinois vaccine lottery program after all

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hannah Meisel

The U.S. Department of Veterans’ Affairs is deploying a fix so the more than 89,000 veterans, veteran spouses and others who received their COVID vaccines at federal VA facilities have a chance at winning Illinois’ vaccine lottery.

Gov. JB Pritzker last week announced Illinois’ “All In For The Win” lottery promotion, which will give away $10 million in cash prizes and scholarships to vaccinated Illinoisans in July and August. The lottery, funded by federal stimulus dollars, is meant to be an incentive to boost vaccine uptake in the state after demand was waned in the last two months.

But the contest’s narrow exceptions from eligibility included those who received vaccines at federal facilities like prisons or VA hospitals, saying the feds couldn’t provide the Illinois Department of Public Health with a list of Illinoisans who were vaccinated at those facilities, and it wasn’t possible for those individuals to submit vaccine records to IDPH.

However, after veterans — including State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit (D-Oswego) — raised the issue with Pritzker’s office, the administration asked the VA for help with a fix.

Kifowit didn’t blame Pritzker’s administration on Monday, but said leaving thousands out of the lottery was likely “an indication that not enough veterans are serving in elected office.” She also pointed to state and federal systems that don’t communicate well with each other — an issue that goes well beyond immunization records.

  8 Comments      


“Outlier” Illinois trying to catch up with other states on equity-based higher ed funding

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Northern Public Radio

Illinois K-12 education Evidence-Based Funding takes 27 key elements like the number of nurses or low-income students a school has and calculates an adequacy target for each district. Higher-ed institutions in the state have no defined funding formula.

A recently passed bill looks to completely change how higher education is funded, just like what lawmakers did with K-12 schools four years ago. Kyle Westbrook, executive director of the Partnership for College Completion, says this new equity-focused mindset is long overdue.

“We have institutions in our state who are serving significantly high percentages of low-income students, students of color that, frankly, are being inadequately funded to serve the interests of those students.”

That could start to change with the passage of Senate Bill 815. It creates a commission to research equity-based funding strategies and return to the legislature with a report.

The State Board of Higher Education also just released a strategic plan calling for a new funding formula to close graduation and retention gaps among low-income and students of color.

“I think it’s important to first realize that, nationally, Illinois is an outlier in this regard,” said Westbrook, who gave testimony during a committee hearing for the plan. “The vast majority of other states have a true formula for how they appropriate their state funds every year. And Illinois is one of only a few that does not have a defined formula.”

  15 Comments      


Reeder: “We need to ask how to increase public safety and minimize police shootings”

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here. Scott Reeder is often an interesting columnist because he’s a staunch conservative who’s no fan of unions, but has a strong criminal justice reform bent. He can be very blunt as well as thoughtful. His latest in full…

Police officers are agents of state violence.

There is nothing particularly radical about that notion. After all, they strap on Tasers, nightsticks, pepper spray, handcuffs and guns every day.

Society has bestowed these men and women with an enormous responsibility.

Their job is to keep order. And they have special sanction from the state to use violence to do just that.

Rock Island Alderman Dylan Parker caught heat recently because he referred to cops as “Agents of state violence.”

It was not a diplomatic statement. But it is an accurate one.

In response, 50 Rock Island police officers showed up at a city council meeting in uniform, stood at the back of the chambers and stared down the city’s elected representatives.

It was an intimidation tactic plain and simple.

Sure, the officers have the right – like any citizen – to petition their government for a redress of grievances. Free speech is the foundation of democracy.

But they didn’t show up in t-shirts and jeans, shirts and ties or their other off-duty clothes. They came under the color of law. They were using their state-sanctioned authority to send a message to those who are charged with holding them accountable.

I’ve seen this play out before. In 1991, the police department in Davenport, Iowa, fired Officer Anthony Chelf after authorities found he used excessive force when he beat a man with his department-issued flashlight. Records show the man ran a red light on a motorcycle, and Chelf gave high-speed chase. Chelf beat the man with his flashlight after other officers had subdued him, facedown, on the ground, according to court records.

I was standing in the room when the Davenport Civil Service Commission affirmed his firing. The commissioners were visibly frightened. Hands were shaking and eye contact was avoided. In fact, they voted behind closed doors, not in public as the law required.

Why the fear? Why the refusal to disclose how individual commissioners voted? Well, it might have had something to do with the department’s entire SWAT team standing in uniform in the room glaring at them.

Police unions are too quick to defend the worst in their ranks. Take for instance the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Americans were horrified to see him beg for his life as Officer Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck and slowly asphyxiated him.

But Robert Kroll, the head of the city’s police union, didn’t see it that way at all. In a letter to members, he referred to Floyd as a “criminal” and bemoaned that Chauvin and officers with him had been denied their “due process rights.”

He seemed oblivious that Floyd’s rights were violated.

Labor contracts negotiated by these unions make it difficult to fire even the worst officers.

We employ police officers to make tough, sometimes violent, decisions on the street. It’s an important job that can determine whether someone lives or dies. We know from the deaths of George Floyd and others that sometimes officers use lethal force inappropriately.

And sometimes deadly force is unavoidable.

But what rarely gets discussed is whether deadly force, even that which may be legally justified, could have been avoided. Could a situation have been deescalated that ultimately resulted in police officer shooting someone?

Instead, after every police shooting I’ve covered during the past 33 years, public discourse devolves into jingoes: Back the badge; Blue Lives Matter; The Thin Blue Line.

They’re catchy sayings. But they fail to answer the basic questions: How can we ensure public safety and reduce the number of people police officers kill?

Over the past fifty years, capital punishment has been debated in just about every statehouse in the country. At election time, politicians are routinely asked their position on the death penalty. Theologians, philosophers and ordinary pundits weigh in on the issue.

Last year, 17 inmates were executed in American death chambers. But during the same period 970 people were killed by police officers.

My point?

Almost all state-sanctioned killings happen at the hands of police, not judges and juries.

We need to ask how to increase public safety and minimize police shootings.

The ire of Rock Island officers was raised when a member of the city council dared to raise such questions after a police shooting.

On April 1, four Rock Island police officers engaged in a foot pursuit of DeShawn Tatum who was carrying a gun and attempted to hijack a car. Officers responded by shooting the 25-year-old man four times. He died of his wounds.

The Rock Island County state’s attorney ruled that the shooting was justified. Having watched the videos of the pursuit and slaying, it’s difficult to see it as anything but appropriate. In fact, I believe the officers showed restraint in not shooting him earlier in the encounter.

But Alderman Parker was critical of the department for not having a policy on foot pursuits before this happened. Could the outcome of the encounter have been different if the officers had handled it differently? Were bystanders needlessly endangered when bullets starting flying?

These are questions that need to be asked. And it’s appropriate for a policymaker such as Alderman Parker to be asking them.

After a deadly encounter such as this one, we need to ask not only were the officers’ actions legally justified but if anything could have been done to avoid such an outcome.

Take for instance a March 5 incident in Chatham. Jonathan Small’s mother called police and told dispatchers her son had a knife and was harming himself and threatening others in the family home, according to the Chatham Police Department and Sangamon County State’s Attorney’s Office.

Upon arriving at the residence, a police officer reported that he found Small, 30, holding a knife and attempting to harm himself. According to police, Small did not listen when the cop told him repeatedly to drop the knife and instead advanced toward the officer. The officer shot Small four times. He is recovering from his wounds.

An investigation by Illinois State Police and review by Sangamon County State’s Attorney Dan Wright concluded the officer was justified in his use of force.

While the officer was justified in using violence, we now need to ask ourselves deeper policy questions. Should police departments offer additional training on how to deal with mentally ill individuals? What, if any, steps could officers take to deescalate these situations? Could non-lethal alternatives have been pursued?

And while police officers are sanctioned to, at times, employ violence, it’s an alternative that needs to be turned to far less than it is today.

* Related…

* Can’t get Chicago cops to take your police report on the phone? You’re not alone: Anyone who calls to file a non-emergency police report gets transferred to the Alternate Response Section, staffed by about 220 Chicago cops on “permanent light duty” for medical reasons or there because of a pending disciplinary case that’s seen them stripped of their police powers.

* Civilian police review compromise reached over Lightfoot’s objections

* Chicago Police Department retirements soar, 2021 figure already tops all of 2018, could end up among highest

* Lightfoot calls videotaped killing ‘horrific’ as Chicago police search for suspects: “But as you saw from that horrific video, it wasn’t just one person. There’s one person who dealt the fatal shot but there were others who were standing by, who dragged that poor woman out of the car, the man who was killed literally used his body as a shield and he paid for that with his life,” Lightfoot said.

* Mayor says police know who fatally stabbed Maryland grad student in the Loop and are ‘scouring’ nearby homeless camps: But at a later news conference, Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan stopped short of saying investigators know who the attacker is. “We are seeking the identity and the eventual arrest of the person who stabbed that female,” he said.

* Bailey Delivers Cards to Local Law Enforcement

  39 Comments      


CPS alters its botched janitorial privatization plan

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Allowing CPS to privatize its janitorial services was supposed to be a model for all other school districts. Nope

Hundreds of workers will still be private employees. Service requests will still go to a central staff. There will still be a vendor contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

But after years of outsourced management that featured filthy schools and slow service response times, the cleaning and maintenance of Chicago Public Schools’ 600-plus buildings is coming back under district control in October, with promises from district officials for increased staffing, better transparency and improved response times.

A year after announcing it would transition away from its maligned relationship with Aramark and Sodexo, the district on Monday is unveiling its new facilities management model — including a three-year, $375 million contract with new vendor Jones Lang LaSalle — that officials hope will fix longstanding problems. […]

Under the old model, fully implemented in 2017, vendors Aramark and Sodexo had complete control of CPS’ building upkeep, from janitorial work to landscaping, snow removal and pest control services. Any subcontracts went through those two vendors, as did principals’ service requests. And the vendors had their own management and human resources staffing. […]

Principals still won’t have as much control of their buildings as they did before the work was outsourced — that management will become the responsibility of central office staff. CPS will have a new, district-run online request system for facilities needs where principals can track their ticket, plus a hotline for emergencies.

Maybe just rearranging the deck chairs.

* Meanwhile

Outraged by the layoffs of more than 440 teachers and support staff, Chicago Teachers Union officials on Monday questioned why the city was cutting jobs in underserved communities during the pandemic, as nearly $2 billion in federal education funds were awarded to Chicago Public Schools.

“The mayor continues to be a walking contradiction through her actions, and a classic example of how symbolic gestures ring hollow,” CTU President Jesse Sharkey said Monday in a statement.

“On Friday, she declared racism to be a public health crisis in many Chicago communities disproportionately burdened with poverty, unemployment, housing insecurity and violence. Today, she’s destabilizing those same communities by laying off educators at neighborhood schools,” Sharkey said.

The highest number of the 443 layoffs by ZIP code, said Sharkey, were in North Lawndale and Little Village, which were disproportionately affected by COVID-19 infection and death.

Yeah, I’m sure this won’t have any impact at all on the trailer bill talks for an elected school board.

  15 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

* What do you got?

  9 Comments      


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Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Tuesday, Jun 22, 2021 - Posted by Rich Miller

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