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Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More trouble in Joliet Township

Now, ahead of Tuesday night’s Township Board meeting, the Joliet Park District had issued a statement saying that it is rescinding the lease to the township of the Hartman Recreation Center, which was set to go into effect on Oct. 1. Park District Executive Director Brad Staab said in the statement that the township misrepresented what the township would use the Hartman Center for.

“Until we saw a copy of the grant application and saw the Hartman Recreation Center listed as a Welcome Center, we trusted they were going to do what they said, which was use it for community events, a farmers market, and moving some of their offices from Jefferson Street, NOT a migrant welcome center,” the park district statement said.

Unreal.

* 12th District Republican challenger Darren Bailey issued a statement on the invasion of Israel over the weekend. The NRCC responded…

…Here’s a quote below regarding Darren Bailey’s complete 180 on his stance with Israel/Palestine. As you know, he spoke in front of a map that erased Israel and depicted the entire region as “Palestine.” When asked by the Times of Israel if he would get behind legislation supporting Israel, Bailey “avoided providing an answer.”

“Terrorists are invading Israel to wipe it off the map—which is exactly what Darren Bailey endorsed in his shameless campaign appearance in Chicagoland last year. We live in too dangerous a world to allow flip-flopping politicians like Darren Bailey into Congress.” – NRCC Spokesman Mike Marinella

More background is here.

* Politico completely ignored the Illinois Legislative Jewish Caucus’ statement on Israel and the sharp push-back against Rep. Rashid’s counter-statement, and the resulting “clarifications” issued by at least four (now five) of Rashid’s own co-signers. Subscribers know more

Gov. JB Pritzker condemned the “horrifying attacks on Israel” by the Palestinian Hamas group over the weekend. “In Illinois and across America, the people of Israel are in our prayers,” Pritzker said in a social media statement and reiterating his sentiments on CBS’ Face the Nation.

And 18 members of the Illinois General Assembly signed a letter calling for peace in the Middle East.

“There are people across Illinois, many of whom are our constituents, who are watching this situation unfold and experiencing deep pain as they worry for loved ones,” the members said. “We will not be able to achieve peace when millions of Palestinians are denied basic human rights.”

State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid, the first Palestinian American to serve in the Illinois General Assembly, was among those signing the letter.

* WBEZ has a profile of United Working Families leader Kennedy Bartley

Kennedy Bartley knows her way around 121 N. Lasalle.

Her group, United Working Families, has long sought to shape public policies passed through City Hall. They hold political action events there, attend council meetings to push their agenda, and work to elect grassroots organizers.

But for the first time since UWF’s ascension in Chicago politics, Bartley and the organization she’s been tasked to lead have an influential seat at the City Hall table, with the mayor they helped elect.

Same Kennedy Bartley…


“From the river to the sea” explained by the ADL

Demanding justice for Palestinians, or calling for a Palestinian state should not also mean negating Israel’s existence. This chant can be understood as a call for a Palestinian state extending from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea, territory that includes the State of Israel, implying the dismantling of the Jewish state. Indeed, this rallying cry has long been used by the anti-Israel terrorist organizations such as Hamas and the PFLP, which seek Israel’s destruction through violent means.

* On to other topics. Sen. Durbin had a knee replaced…

U.S. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) today underwent a successful total knee replacement surgery for his left knee. The procedure was performed this morning at RUSH in Oak Brook, Illinois. Durbin will remain in Illinois until he is cleared for travel to Washington by his doctor.

“As a result of my unremarkable high school football career, it was determined that I needed a full knee replacement for my left knee. I’m grateful to the medical staff at RUSH for today’s successful procedure and my new knee. I look forward to getting back to Washington as soon as possible.”

* Got any ideas?…

The Illinois Senate Special Committee on the Chicago Elected Representative School Board is seeking further input from parents, education advocates, community groups and other stakeholders regarding the transition to a fully-elected school board.

The committee will host a public hearing online at 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, October 12 at www.ilga.gov to explore suggestions on how the transition can be done in a way that ensures equitable representation for all of Chicago’s diverse communities. Recent hearings have raised questions about a number of provisions required under current law, including the hybrid period in which some districts will be represented by members who are elected and others will be represented by members who are appointed, as well as the petition and election process for prospective board candidates.

Comments can be submitted prior to the hearing via email at ChicagoERSBCommittee@senatedem.ilga.gov, or online at www.ilsenateredistricting.com. That website also hosts an online map-making portal where anyone can draw and submit proposed district boundaries for consideration.

* Press release…

Governor JB Pritzker joined local and state leaders today to celebrate the ribbon cutting of Eli’s Cheesecake expanded facility. The $10 million investment and 42,000 square-foot expanded facility will increase space for packaging lines and bakery operations for the famous Chicago cheesecake company while creating 50 new jobs for the area.

“A family-owned bakery — three generations strong, Eli’s Cheesecake is an iconic Chicago-staple,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Thanks to a $10 million investment and competitive hiring incentives from our EDGE tax credit program, Eli’s Cheesecake was able to complete a 42,000 square foot expansion—bringing this facility size to a whopping 104,000 square feet. And, of course, more capacity brings jobs for the people of Illinois. More jobs, more customers, more cake: it doesn’t get much better than that.”

“With more than three decades of serving communities, the expansion of Eli’s Cheesecake is an example of how Illinois continues to grow,” said Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton. “We have the talent, the business and the infrastructure to keep our communities moving forward.”

The expanded facility – which is the company’s first expansion in almost 30 years – almost doubles the size of its bakery, allowing for increased bakery operations, including additional production and packaging lines, warehousing, and welfare areas. With a total of 104,000-square-feet, the expanded facility includes Eli’s Corporate Offices and the Eli’s Cheesecake Bakery Café, which is open to the public.

* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…

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City may not get state supplemental; Pritzker avoids question on taking control of aslyum-seeker situation; Governor says White House ‘taking action in a way that they didn’t before’

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The governor was asked today if he thought a supplemental appropriations bill would be introduced during the upcoming veto session. The City of Chicago is hoping to use such a bill to pry loose more state dollars for new arrivals, which isn’t exactly receiving a hearty welcome. Here’s Gov. Pritzker’s response…

I have not heard of a supplemental that will be introduced. That’s certainly something the legislature might think about doing. But there are plenty of other things to consider, including, as you know, looking at a better nuclear moratorium removal, and a few other things that are, you know, the purpose of a veto session.

Doesn’t sound promising. The governor’s office usually is closely tied to any supplemental. They administer the budget, so they know if they need any additional authority.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* My associate Isabel Miller was also at the press conference…

Q: Governor, how many asylum-seekers are in the suburbs? And is there any word of the state taking control the situation through IEMA or any other state agency?

A: Let me be clear that the asylum-seekers are not required to tell us where they are moving to. They might choose to go to a suburb or anywhere Downstate, and some have without us even knowing. And so you would find out only if they’re applying for certain kinds of services, where they are. For us, in order to manage the major services that people need, working with the City of Chicago, we need to have them in locations where we can serve a number of people all at once, and not one family here, one family there, because there just aren’t too many services that many people need.

Sounds like he prefers to have them in Chicago. Also, they can track some of those folks who are being sent to the suburbs. [The governor’s office says that if the asylum-seekers leave the city it’s totally on their own volition, so they cannot track them.]

Isabel tried to ask a follow-up because he didn’t address the second part of her question, but got big-footed by a TV reporter. It happens.

* Asked if there was any news this week about the federal government cooperating on the migrant situation, Pritzker said…

A: I will say that they have moved quickly on a number of items. I think you saw that, shortly after our letter went to the White House, that the determination was made to expand the return of refugees who no do not qualify for refugee status. So that’s one thing. Another is very, very close to discussion about buses that are coming here, whether some of those buses are potentially breaking the law along the way, and working with the government about the logistics of those buses. Where would they go? Is Chicago the only place they can go? New York the only place they can go? And so those conversations are going, and the White House is taking action in a way that they didn’t before. So I’m very pleased about that.

Q: Were they breaking that midnight curfew? Is that the law you’re talking about?

A: No, no, no. This is just folks who do not qualify for refugee status. So remember, when they come here, they get temporary asylum status, they’re seeking asylum. And they have to go through a process. If they don’t meet the requirements for someone who could stay, we’re making sure, the federal government anyway is making sure those folks are returned.

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*** UPDATED x2 *** Pritzker says person who threw rocks at his home may be charged with stalking

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From today’s Gov. Pritzker news conference…

Q: Governor, should a person who was arrested be held in custody that was breaking windows at your home?

A: Should they be held in custody? They should if they meet the requirements. But let’s say, criminal property damage is one thing. Stalking, which is something that it appears that this person may be charged with. Also, this is not the first time they’ve come by our home. And so I don’t know what the state’s attorney is going to do with regard to that. But I can say that, collectively, those could lead to somebody being held in jail and not let out.

*** UPDATE 1 *** ISP…

Illinois State Police (ISP) Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) Zone 1 announces the arrest of 38-year-old Adam A. Dabash of Villa Park, IL for two counts of Stalking (Class 4 Felony) and one count of Criminal Damage to Property (Class 4 Felony).

On October 9, 2023, ISP DCI was requested by the Chicago Police Department (CPD) to assist with a Criminal Damage to Property investigation that occurred at Governor J.B. Pritzker’s residence in Chicago. CPD was able to successfully locate the suspect, later identified as Dabash, on POD cameras and took Dabash into custody without incident. ISP was subsequently able to identify Dabash as the same suspect who left letters at the Governor’s home on two occasions in August.

The joint investigation by ISP and CPD culminated in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office approving the above-mentioned charges for Dabash. Dabash is being held at the Chicago Police Department’s 18th District lockup until his pretrial conditions have been set by a judge. No further information will be disseminated.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Confirmed

A Cook County judge on Tuesday rejected a prosecutor’s request to have a man who allegedly stalked and threw rocks at the home of Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker jailed as a safety threat. Judge William Fahy decided that the public’s safety could be assured by releasing the man, 38-year-old Adam Dabash, on electronic monitoring instead, according to court records.

Assistant State’s Attorney Anne McCord Rodgers told Fahy that surveillance video showed Dabash walking outside the governor’s home in the 1400 block of North Astor around 9:45 a.m. Monday. Dabash allegedly stopped twice to throw baseball-sized rocks at the mansion’s windows, then returned to throw another rock at the windows. She said three of the governor’s windows were damaged, with one rock recovered from inside the mansion and two found outside. […]

Dabash destroyed the mattress in his police holding cell and told officers at the police station that Illinois has a “m****r f****r for a governor.” […]

Rodgers said he has no criminal background.

It’s unclear why they didn’t also charge him with threatening a public official, which is on the list of alleged crimes that qualify for detention.

…Adding… Stalking, I’m told, is also a detainable offense.

  11 Comments      


COGFA: State revenue still growing

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* COGFA

Year to Date

Through the first quarter of FY 2024, overall General Funds revenues are $39 million above last year’s pace. This comparison, however, includes $764 million in FY 2023 Federal reimbursements that will not repeat in FY 2024. Excluding these one-time revenues, FY 2024 “base” receipts are up a noteworthy $803 million or +7.0% through September. But, as mentioned in the previous paragraphs, Illinois’ revenue totals are aided by the timing of reallocations and transfers that slightly distort its year-to-date performance. With that being said, Illinois’ economy has avoided a significant downshift to this point, which has allowed its primary revenue sources to continue to generate respectable totals through the first quarter of the fiscal year.

Personal Income Taxes are up $391 million through September or +$321 million on a net basis. While part of this growth is due to the first of five “true-up” reallocation installments, most of the year-to-date growth stems from steady employment levels and higher wages. The previously mentioned adjustments, as well as modified percentages of current business income tax disbursements, have factored into the slight $12 million decline in Corporate Income Tax receipts through September [-$2 million on a net basis]. Without these adjustments, corporate income tax receipts would be modestly higher through September.

Sales Tax receipts have continued to stay in positive territory through the first quarter of the fiscal year with growth of $57 million [or +$22 million net of non-general fund distributions]. All Other State Sources have combined to grow $92 million through September. This growth is primarily due to the $105 million rise in Interest Income, which has benefitted from comparatively higher interest rates. Other first-quarter increases have come from the Inheritance Tax [+$39 million]; Insurance Taxes [+$12 million]; and the Corporate Franchise Tax [+$3 million]. Other tax sources that are lower through the first three months include Other Sources [-$32 million]; Public Utility Taxes [-$25 million]; the Cigarette Tax [-$9 million]; and the Liquor Tax [-$1 million].

General Funds revenues from Transfers In are a combined $233 million higher through September, again mainly due to the timing of this year’s Income Tax Refund Fund Transfer [up +$259 million]. As alluded to previously, a sharp decline in this transfer category is expected by the end of the fiscal year due to the size of the FY 2023 Income Tax Refund Fund transfer, which was completed in January. Lottery Transfers have performed quite well so far this fiscal year, up $65 million. On the other hand, Other Transfers are down $79 million, mainly due to significantly lower Capital Projects Fund transfers into the General Revenue Fund. Gaming Transfers from casinos are down $10 million, while Cannabis Transfers are $2 million lower.

Despite the September decline, Federal Sources (base) are up $137 million year to date. However, if the $764 million in one-time ARPA Reimbursements receipted in FY 2023 are included in the equation, Federal Sources are down $627 million through the 1st Quarter of the fiscal year.

* More

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Chicago experienced a 50 percent increase in asylum-seekers housed in staging centers last week

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the City of Chicago’s aldermanic briefing on October 6th, which was this past Friday

There’s more, so click here.

* Meanwhile, the mayor’s communications with alderpersons continue to be woefully inadequate. Block Club Chicago

Officials are holding a community meeting this week to share details about a proposed shelter in Ukrainian Village that could soon house asylum seekers.

The city has identified an industrial building at 526 N. Western Ave. for the shelter, according to a map on a city data portal and Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th), whose ward includes the site. […]

Villegas said he’s waiting for additional information from the mayor’s office, but may not learn more until neighbors do at Thursday’s meeting.

“As of today, I don’t have details as relates to how many people are going to be sheltered, what are the plans to provide wraparound services, whether it’s singles or families, how they’re going to be interacting with local schools, the parks, etc.,” he said. “I don’t know what the plans are from the administration.”

Unacceptable behavior.

* It’s no wonder that people in Joliet are upset. All they have to do is look at Chicago and the lack of a coordinated response by the city, state and federal governments

A state grant awarded to Joliet Township would fund services for migrants, but some residents in the southwest suburb are questioning whether the money should be accepted.

Community members say they were surprised to learn recently that Joliet Township applied for funding to aid asylum seekers. Word spread quickly when, on Friday, Sept. 29, Governor J.B. Pritzker announced that Joliet was selected to receive $8.6 million. […]

As controversy brews, a Joliet Township board meeting is scheduled for Tuesday at 5 p.m. There, Sheridan and Brown – among other residents – plan to share their concerns. […]

It’s expected to draw such a large crowd, that it was moved from Joliet Township Hall to the auditorium at Bicentennial Park.

Yikes.

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Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Today’s must-read: Millions in misspent TIF dollars

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Drew Zimmerman at the Northwest Herald

Under TIF, property taxes in a defined geographic area are collected and, over time, as property values rise, the increased tax revenue which would have been collected normally, goes into an incentive pool to grow and be used for specific projects. Traditionally, TIF incentive pool funds go to development or other projects designed to improve buildings or areas within the TIF-defined region which are deemed ‘blighted’ by the TIF Act.

However, many municipalities use the tax dollars to augment their budgets, utilizing the money to pay for administrative and police salaries. Meanwhile, millions more are spent with no officially reported purpose at all, a Shaw Media review of tax increment financing records over the last 10 years has found.

The selective reporting requirements of the Illinois Comptroller’s Office make it nearly impossible to track these expenditures at best, and at worst may be helping to mask millions in misspending. […]

But an in-depth look into the financial reporting within a dozen counties in and around the Chicago area shows numerous other municipalities reporting their spending in a similar fashion to DeKalb and University Park without identifying how they are spending TIF funds – and whether those expenses are TIF-eligible.

For some municipalities such as Kirkland in DeKalb County and Geneva in Kane County, this amounted to hundreds of thousands of dollars in administrative expenses being covered by TIF. But for others, such as East Dundee in Kane County and West Chicago in DuPage County, millions have been allocated to staff salaries.

An analysis of tax increment financing reports filed with the Illinois Comptroller since the 2010 fiscal year identified roughly $10.3 million in unspecified administrative expenses, over $17 million in undisclosed fund transfers and $6 million in completely unidentified expenditures – primarily from University Park. Given the distribution of the Illinois property tax burden, the bulk of those funds would have gone to support public schools.

Go read the rest.

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Study attempts to bust some Illinois population myths

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Contrary to concerns about an exodus of residents due to high taxes, crime and other factors, researchers report that the state has made noticeable gains in certain areas.

“Reports of Illinois’ population decline have been greatly exaggerated,” researcher Frank Manzo IV told the Tribune. “… Data show the Illinois population has been stable, with the Chicago area adding residents and taxpayers.” […]

The analysis of data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Illinois Department of Revenue was conducted by researchers at the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. […]

The new analysis shows that people who moved out of Illinois were younger, more likely to be Black or from downstate, less likely to be Hispanic, and have lower incomes. Nearly 100,000 African Americans left Illinois. Those losses were largely offset by growth in the Chicago area and immigrants from abroad, the report found. […]

From 2013 to 2022, Illinois saw significant growth in its number of higher-paid taxpayers, including an 52% increase in those earning $100,000 to $500,000 per year, and an 80% surge in taxpayers earning more than $500,000 per year.

* ILEPI

In their study, ILEPI and PMCR researchers first used Illinois Department of Revenue tax statistics from 2010 to 2020 to note that Illinois added more than 200,000 taxpayers last decade, an increase of 4%. The tax base grew in the Chicago area while it declined Downstate. The number of tax filers with high incomes grew substantially, as Illinois became a $1 trillion economy: Taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes above $100,000 per year grew by more than 50% over the decade, including an increase of 80% among those earning more than $500,000 annually. Meanwhile, the number of families claiming Earned Income Credit (EIC) government benefits decreased 11% over the decade.

ILEPI and PMCR researchers then used Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement survey data from 2013 through 2022. In this survey, the Census Bureau asks U.S. residents whether they have changed residences in the past year, the state of previous residence for those who moved, and their primary reason for moving.

People who moved into Illinois were better educated and more likely to arrive for college than those who moved out. They were also younger on average than people who have stayed in Illinois. Two-in-five movers cite job-related circumstances as their top reason for moving. Additionally, the data indicated that while Illinois lost residents to “net domestic migration,” or people moving within the United States, these losses were almost entirely offset by immigrants coming to Illinois from abroad.

While outmigrants were statistically more likely to be Black or African American, people moving into Illinois and people who stay in Illinois were disproportionately more likely to be Hispanic or Latinx.

Finally, the data showed that people who stay in Illinois have better socioeconomic outcomes than all migrants. Stayers averaged 16% higher annual household incomes than those who have left Illinois, were more likely to be married, and had homeownership rates of 70%—more than double the rate of those who left the state (30%).

The data revealed that people who have left Illinois tended to be younger males with lower incomes than those who chose to stay. Only 30% of those who left became homeowners within their first year in their new states, and 14% reported relying on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) food stamp assistance.

The full report is here.

  59 Comments      


As city voters object while Chicago’s mayor aimlessly flails and Venezuelan asylum-seekers arrive in the suburbs, the governor needs to step in

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

I sent a top Democratic strategist whom I respect a copy of the Venezuelan migrant-related poll I posted for my subscribers last week.

Among other things, the M3 Strategies poll of 659 likely Chicago voters found that pluralities said they opposed “migrants being housed by the city of Chicago” (49-46), while also saying it’s time to end Chicago’s status as a sanctuary city (46-39). The poll’s margin of error was +/-3.82 percent. This is a Republican pollster, but they very accurately predicted the Chicago mayor’s race results during the first round.

Black and Latino voters really helped drive those poll results, with 49% of Black voters and 57% of Latinos opposing the city’s housing of migrants, and 51% of Black voters and 48% of Latinos saying they want to end the city’s sanctuary system. Several Latino residents have told reporters that they resent the help given to migrants when they received nothing at all after coming to the U.S. Fifty-six percent of Latino and Black voters told the pollster that the migrants made the city less safe.

“Not surprised by any of this,” the operative texted back. Indeed, plenty of Democratic legislators have been getting an earful from constituents about the problem, and not just in Chicago.

The question, he said, “is whether this is just another ‘law and order’ issue that polls well and seems persuasive but actually isn’t,” when you match up actual Republicans with Democrats. He said it would probably have more impact on Democratic primaries.

I suggested that Black voter turnout could be driven down by numbers like these. Seventy-nine percent of Black respondents told M3 Strategies that the asylum-seeker situation is “negatively affecting current Chicago residents who may be in need,” which seems to check out when looking at the strong pushback against housing migrants in Black neighborhoods. And Black turnout was already way down last year.

“Maybe,” the operative said, but added, “Elections are an eternity away with how voters’ memories operate.”

I agreed about the voter memory aspect but countered that his prediction assumes the migrant influx would be resolved a year from now. Some analysts have predicted far more migrants next year.

“Oof,” he replied.

“Support for housing migrants and positive views of the impact on the city is strongest among young, white voters on the North and Northwest sides,” the polling firm reported. Everyone else, not so much.

If this keeps up, there’s no doubt that the anger will spread to suburban communities, many of which have no local sanctuary ordinances. And the migrants have already started to arrive there.

During the uproar after Joliet Township Supervisor Angel Contreras applied for a state grant and more than just implied that he had support from the Joliet mayor and the city’s fire department when he apparently did not, news reports revealed that 2,200 asylum seekers had already been helped by the Spanish Community Center in Joliet.

Rep. Fred Crespo (D-Hoffman Estates), who chairs an appropriations committee, told me that at least one school district in his northwest Cook County district is “looking at bringing back mobile classrooms,” to help deal with the growing influx, and more are complaining that they can’t sustain the pace.

The poll makes it fairly easy to see why the governor and his administration would like to continue defining this as a Chicago administrative problem.

When asked last week about how all these folks could possibly be housed, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said, “This is a challenge I think the city has been facing since the beginning. You know, we don’t do city planning at the state level. This is, you know, a question best directed at the city.”

Pritzker added that the state has been supporting the city “as they have developed plans and as they’ve implemented them.”

What the city has actually done is floated a lot of ideas, but not implemented them and flailed all along the way. And after receiving more than $300 million in state assistance, the city is coming back for more cash, issuing demands in the news media and meeting with legislators.

Unlike Mayor Brandon Johnson, the Pritzker administration has lots of experience dealing with crises. They’re not perfect, but they did manage to help get the state through the pandemic. And Pritzker’s sharp letter to President Joe Biden last month seems to have helped push the president forward. The White House announced it will resume deportation flights to Venezuela.

Despite the governor’s words, this is no longer a Chicago-only issue. And that means the state needs to start taking more of a lead here.

The poll is here.

* Related…


*Hard sigh*

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* I hope you all enjoyed the long weekend! What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Chicago is elimiating submininmum wage for tipped workers. Summary of a Tribune story

    - The new law will shrink the gap between tipped and minimum wages by 8% each year until 2028.
    - The legislation passed 36-19.
    - Restaurant owners worry about the impact of high labor costs.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Nurses unions push for mandatory staff-to-patient ratios: The proposed Safe Patient Limits Act, by Sen. Celina Villanueva and Rep. Theresa Mah, both Chicago Democrats, was introduced in February and was the subject of a joint hearing last week in Chicago by two House committees. It’s an issue that has been discussed in the General Assembly since 2019 but has thus far failed to gain the necessary traction for passage. The latest hearing came just three weeks before lawmakers return to the Capitol for their fall veto session, which begins Oct. 24.

    * Melissa Conyears-Ervin | I was a victim of domestic violence. Other victims should know they aren’t alone: Two days later, my mother and I filed a petition for an emergency order of protection in Coles County Circuit Court, which was granted and remained in effect until early January 1998. I ultimately decided not to proceed with a plenary order. I believed, as so many women do, that the system would protect him and not me. Since then, I’ve never stopped looking over my shoulder or fearing he would follow through on his threats.

    * Tribune | Chicago spent at least $3.5 million for NASCAR weekend and got $620,000 in return: The $3.5 million figure stands in contrast to the $620,000 NASCAR paid the city to transform streets surrounding Grant Park into a 12-turn, 2.2-mile racetrack. NASCAR paid a base $500,000 permit fee to the Chicago Park District in April and in late September cut a final check for the 2023 race for nearly $120,000 to pay the city its portion of ticket sales as well as commissions for food, beverage and merchandise, according to city records.

* Illinois Republicans supporting Ron DeSantis for president announced their statewide delegate slate. Illinois will have 64 delegates, including Sen. Sue Rezin and Awake Illinois founder Shannon Adcock. Click here for the full release.

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

  5 Comments      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Oct 10, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here or here to follow breaking news.

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Reader comments closed for the holiday weekend

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Been thinking about him this week

Let me serenade the streets of L.A.

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Afternoon roundup

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Economist in 2019

On January 28th America imposed its toughest sanctions yet on Venezuela’s regime. It froze the American accounts and assets of PDVSA, the national oil monopoly, and said that it will divert the proceeds of further sales into an account that will be accessible only after PDVSA comes under the control of Mr Guaidó or an elected government. This cuts off the regime from its main source of cash. Already it has defaulted on most of its debt and is short of money to buy the loyalty of the armed forces, maintain oil production and import enough to feed 32m Venezuelans. The new sanctions will make all that even harder.

Venezuela thus finds itself part of a trial of strength. A peaceful transition to a democratic, economically literate government could restore normality to what was once one of the region’s richest countries. Equally, the Trump-Guaidó gambit might lead to conflict between armed groups or simply fail, leaving the regime more dominant than ever. In that case, millions more Venezuelans would join the 3m who have already fled, mostly to neighbouring countries such as Colombia. American prestige, wagered on ousting Mr Maduro, would suffer, too. […]

These measures will accelerate Venezuela’s economic collapse. GDP will shrink by 26% this year, bringing the total decline since Mr Maduro took office to 60%, estimates Francisco Rodríguez of Torino Capital, an investment bank. Bond prices suggest that the markets put the odds of Mr Maduro’s ousting at 50-90%.

Mr Guaidó and Mr Trump are betting that hardship will topple the regime before it starves the Venezuelan people.

Didn’t work out so well.

* Speaking of massive messes

At least two Chicago Public Schools security guards — both former Chicago police officers who had been fired by the department — were suspended last month, raising questions about whether the district’s background check system is operating as intended.

One man, who has been working as a security guard at Lane Technical High School since 2021, was terminated in 2019 by the Chicago Police Department following allegations of sexual misconduct involving a minor, records show. He was suspended on Sept. 11.

The other is a Kenwood Academy security guard who the police department ousted in 2012 because of a string of domestic violence incidents, according to CPD disciplinary files. He was also suspended on Sept. 11.

The public school system hired a security guard who was fired by the same city’s police department after “allegations of sexual misconduct”? What could possibly go wrong?

* Congrats!…

Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs has been chosen as the next president of the National Association of State Treasurers, the nation’s foremost authority for responsible state treasury programs and related financial practices, policies and education. Frerichs, who has been serving as NAST senior vice president, was elected president at the organization’s annual business meeting in October.

His term as president begins on Jan. 1, 2024.

“I’m honored to be chosen by my peers as the next leader of NAST, the leading voice for excellence in public finance,” Frerichs said. “I’m also thankful to outgoing NAST President Josh Haeder of South Dakota for his friendship and leadership in the organization. As I move into this new position, I look forward to building on the good work my team and I are doing in Illinois, and I’m excited about continuing to collaborate with state treasurers from across the nation on public finance matters and helping citizens build a better tomorrow.”

Treasurer Haeder added: “I’m honored to pass the gavel to a friend and colleague who understands the importance and necessity of friendship, conversation, and the collaborative environment that makes up the bipartisan framework of NAST. Our offices have worked together over the years to improve the ability of treasurers to return unclaimed property with ideas such as Money Match in Illinois and Cash It in South Dakota.”

Frerichs just completed his term as president of the National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers (NASACT), a bipartisan organization that brings together state finance officials to address government financial management issues. He was unanimously elected to that post.

* For the bicyclists…

A total of $2,161,000 in grants to help communities develop and improve 13 local bike path projects throughout Illinois was announced today by Governor JB Pritzker. […]

The Illinois Bicycle Path Grant Program is administered by the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. Funding comes from a percentage of the motor vehicle title fees, providing a maximum grant award of $200,000 per project for development projects, with no maximum grant award limit for land acquisition projects.

* ISP…

On October 5, 2023, at approximately 10:02 p.m., Illinois State Police (ISP) officials investigated a two-vehicle traffic crash involving an ISP officer’s squad car that was hit by a motorist who failed to move over on Interstate 94 southbound at King Drive in Cook County.

On the above date and time, an ISP Troop 3 trooper was attempting to make a traffic stop on a stolen black Dodge Charger. The Charger recklessly fled onto the right shoulder and struck the rear of a different ISP officer’s squad car that was stationary with emergency lights activated while on a separate traffic stop. As a result of the crash, the Charger then overturned and three occupants fled on foot, none of which were apprehended. The officer was inside of the squad car at the time of the crash, but refused medical attention.

So far this year, ISP has had 16 Move Over Law-related crashes. In 2022, ISP had 23 Move Over Law-related crashes where eight Troopers sustained injuries. ISP is reminding the public of the requirements of the Move Over Law, otherwise known as “Scott’s Law”. When approaching an emergency vehicle, or any vehicle with their emergency or hazard lights activated, drivers are required to slow down AND move over. A person who violates Scott’s Law, commits a business offense and faces a fine of no less than $250 or more than $10,000 for a first offense. If the violation results in injury to another person, the violator’s driver’s license will be suspended for a mandatory period of anywhere between six months and two years.

* Isabel’s afternoon roundup…

    * Crain’s | City Council OKs minimum-wage hike for tipped workers: After a months-long City Hall fight and years-long advocacy campaign, the City Council approved the measure, dubbed One Fair Wage by supporters, in a 36-to-10 vote. But opponents of the measure filed a complaint with the Illinois attorney general’s office seeking to invalidate Friday’s passage of the ordinance because of a parliamentary action taken at Wednesday’s City Council meeting.

    * Tribune | Illinois Attorney General investigating Yorkville school board over closed meeting complaint after book ‘Just Mercy’ removed from English class: Last spring, a parent of a student in the English II Rhetorical Analysis course at Yorkville High School complained of the use of “Just Mercy” by Bryan Stevenson in the class. The book takes a look at America’s criminal justice system by focusing on two Black men wrongly convicted of murder who spent years on death row.

    * Block Club | O’Hare Airport Shelter Fills Up As More Migrants Come To Chicago By Plane: O’Hare’s bus shuttle center, across the street from the Hilton hotel and near Terminal 1, is one of Chicago’s 24 temporary shelters, called “staging areas.” Migrants are taken to one of the staging areas while they wait for a place inside one of the 23 city-run shelters. More of them are having to wait at O’Hare as police stations, which are also staging areas, have become overcrowded. As of Friday morning, there were 828 people at O’Hare — up from 363 on Sept. 27, according to the Office of Emergency Management and Communications.

    * Naperville Sun | Naperville police hoping to hire two new officers to tackle backlog in confiscating revoked FOID cards: In all, police asked for six additional officers in next year’s budget: four to fill out downtown patrols and two for the department’s strategic response unit, which is responsible for monitoring FOID issues in Naperville. The latter request would take the strategic unit from six officers to eight.

    * WBEZ | Judge denies bid to force opening of relocated General Iron on Southeast Side: That proposed move from mostly white and affluent Lincoln Park to a Latino community surrounded by Black neighborhoods on the Southeast Side was the focus of a federal civil rights investigation by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that concluded the city has discriminatory planning and land-use practices and policies.

    * Sun-Times | FBG Duck killing trial is expected to shine a bright spotlight on Chicago’s gang, rap ties: Odee Perry’s murder accelerated a yearslong Chicago gang war stoked by some of the city’s hottest rappers and sensationalized by bloggers and YouTubers who track the city’s street violence. Perry, 20, was shot to death in August 2011 near the Parkway Gardens housing complex in a violent stretch of South Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive on the South Side that grew to be widely known as O Block in his memory. His Black Disciples gang faction took on the same name — just before Chicago’s drill rap scene exploded in popularity.

    * WICS | Active shooter at Sangamon County Juvenile Center was an inmate, said SPD chief of police: I met with Springfield Chief of Police Ken Scarlette on Thursday to discuss what took place. On Saturday, several law enforcement agencies responded to a 911 call of an active shooter at the Sangamon County Juvenile Center. According to Scarlette, the 17-year-old was an inmate of the Sangamon County Juvenile Center, had a firearm and tried to leave the facility.

    * WGLT | McLean County ZBA postpones carbon sequestration hearing to find a larger venue: Renovations to the boardroom at the Government Center downtown have necessitated a number of substitute locations for meetings normally held there. The work is expected to be completed around Oct. 16. That issue set the stage for Tuesday night’s meeting in another smaller, tightly-crowded room, with zoning board members seated just feet away from more than a dozen members of the public.

    * Marijuana Moment | Illinois Officials Highlight ‘Unprecedented Growth’ Of Legal Marijuana Market As Cannabis Revenue Outpaces Alcohol: All told, the legal cannabis industry brought in about $451.9 million for the state in fiscal year 2023, which ran from July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023, according to separate numbers from the Department of Revenue. As in past years, Illinois made significantly more revenue from cannabis than from alcohol, which brought in about $316.3 million during the same period.

    * Crain’s | Office shedding pushes downtown vacancy rate to another record high: The office vacancy rate in the heart of the city during the past three months rose to an all-time high of 23.7% from 22.6% midway through the year, according to data from brokerage CBRE. The share of available space is up from 21.3% a year ago and 13.8% when the public health crisis began, and has now hit a new record high for the 10th time in the past 12 quarters.

    * Block Club | UChicago Research Center To Pay $95K To Settle Hiring Discrimination Claims: A routine compliance check by the labor department alleged the center discriminated against 107 Asian applicants for positions as coronavirus contact tracers, according to department officials. The research center is an independent organization affiliated with UChicago. The company did not admit guilt, but, as part of the agreement, agreed to review its hiring policies and train all employees with hiring oversight “to ensure they are free from discrimination,” officials said.

    * AP | Stricter state laws are chipping away at sex education in K-12 schools: A dozen state or county agencies have parted ways with tens of thousands of dollars in federal grants meant to help monitor teenagers’ sexual behaviors and try to lower rates of teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases.

    * Daily-Journal | Regatta returns! After 10 years, an event is set for 2024: After a 10-year absence, the former Labor Day weekend tradition in Kankakee will return late summer 2024 when the Kankakee River Valley Regatta Powerboat Races returns. The event was last held on Labor Day weekend of 2013.

    * Pioneer Press | Affy Tapple celebrates its 75th year, dipping apples into caramel at Niles production plant: According to Dye, Affy Tapple goes through nearly 300,000 apples daily during its busy season, typically from the last weeks of August through Halloween. The apples are usually washed at their orchard and washed a second time when they arrive at the factory. A food preserver is added to the apples before workers spike each one with a wooden stick, which becomes the taffy apple’s handle.

    * Block Club | 70-Year-Old Chicago Priest To Run 50th Marathon This Weekend: When the 70-year-old takes off running Sunday, he “doesn’t really care how fast or slow [he’ll] go,” he said. Instead, he’ll focus on praying for people who are going through challenging times, using a list he’ll attach to his arm. The list “is getting long,” and it’s filled with little drawings and phrases that remind Bradley of people who are suffering in the community, he said.

    * Daily Herald | ‘He shook the hand of Lincoln’: Last soldier in Lake County to serve in the Civil War to be honored: Nichols was from Ohio and moved to Lake County in 1889 and became involved in veterans’ activities after his retirement. His military service was short and largely uneventful — except for meeting President Abraham Lincoln.

    * Obituary | Gary Glenn Dahl: As Gary and his wife Deb were preparing for retirement, Gary decided he wanted to make a difference in Springfield for the people of the 38th district by running for Illinois State Senate. Gary spent his “in session” time living in an RV in Springfield, donating his salary to charity and being a voice for the people. In 2010, Gary resigned to spend more time with his family.

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Clown resurfaces, flips on immigration

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fox News

Former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich joined a growing group of Democrats criticizing President Biden’s border policies as the migrant crisis continues to burden major U.S. cities, including Chicago.

“It’s a humanitarian crisis, it’s a national security crisis caused by Biden’s President Biden’s open borders policies, caused by the rhetoric of Democratic governors like our Governor Pritzker – who used to work for me, by the way, when I was a Democratic governor – where they talk about sanctuary cities,” Blagojevich told “America’s Newsroom” Thursday.

First, I wouldn’t call a member of the Human Rights Commission an employee of the governor, but whatever. Also, he’s still calling himself a Democrat? He seems to have departed from that party.

* More importantly, from Fox News back in 2006

Hoisting American flags into the air, tens of thousands of immigrants from the Chicago area marched downtown in a display of support for immigrant rights as a bill to stiffen border enforcement awaits action in the U.S. Senate. […]

Gov. Rod Blagojevich addressed the crowd in Spanish, telling them he is the son of immigrant parents and understands their issues.

The Democrat’s proclamation that “ustedes no son criminales. Ustedes son trabajadores” (”You are not criminals. You are workers”) brought loud cheers.

* 2007

The Homeland Security Department is suing Illinois to undo a new state law the federal agency says would make it more difficult to enforce the nation’s immigration laws.

The law is an amendment to Illinois’s “Right to Privacy in the Workplace Act” which would make it impossible, says Homeland Security, for employers to participate in a voluntary federal program many currently use to verify whether new employees are legally entitled to work in the U.S.

Called E-Verify, the Internet program allows employers to transmit to the federal government certain identity information which permits immigration officials to confirm (or not) whether the employees can be legally employed. […]

Rep. Pete Roskam (R-Ill.) has issued a statement as well, applauding the lawsuit and accusing Gov. Rod Blagojevich of trying to create “virtual sanctuary within the State of Illinois for illegal aliens.”

* In 2005, Blagojevich touted the creation of his “New Americans Executive Order.” Here’s an excerpt from the press release

Since 2003, Governor Blagojevich has taken several executive and legislative steps to protect immigrants and help them be successful, including:

    • Launching the All Kids program that will make Illinois the first state in the nation to provide comprehensive, affordable health insurance to all of the state’s uninsured children.

    • Signing into law a bill that makes Illinois the most aggressive state in the nation in regards to protecting day laborers and going after unlawful day and temporary labor agencies that cheat workers of their hard-earned pay and leave them unprotected at work. The Governor has also announced a number of measures to significantly bring down the number of Latino workers suffering injuries and fatalities in the workplace.

    • Launching the New Americans Initiative aimed at helping thousands of eligible permanent residents become naturalized U.S. citizens. The Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights is administering the Initiative, a $3-million-a-year partnership with the state.

    • Signing legislation that recognizes consular I.D. cards as valid forms of identification in Illinois, similar to a Secretary of State-issued state I.D.

    • Signing into law a bill that allows for undocumented immigrants to attend public universities in Illinois paying in-state tuition rates.

    • Signing into law a bill that protects immigrants from abuse by unlawful notary publics who misrepresent themselves as immigration lawyers and charge excessive fees for their services.

* And we’ll close out with this 2008 letter to the Daily Herald editor from some guy in Arlington Heights that apparently could have been written by our former governor today

Isn’t it wonderful that the Democratic Party is pandering to the Latino population?

The Democratic Party is leaving it up to the Republicans to solve the problem of illegal immigration.

Many states surrounding Illinois are cracking down on illegal immigrants and are cutting off social services and jobs. Since Illinois is a sanctuary state and the Democratic Party is willing to provide billions in social services, these illegals are flooding into Illinois as Rod Blagojevich, Richie Daley and Barack Obama wave them in.

The Latino population in Chicago and the six collar counties is about three million. I see six million Latinos in five years and 10 million in 10 years. Guess what? Your Democratic vote won’t count anymore.

The 2020 Census counted about 2.3 million Hispanic people statewide.

  19 Comments      


Drivers Sign Up To Drive With Uber As A Flexible Way To Manage Rising Costs

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In a recent survey, nearly 90% of new rideshare drivers cite flexibility and financial need as key factors in their decision to sign up. And over 70% of drivers joined Uber to help fill financial gaps caused by inflation.

Whether it’s to supplement earnings or tackle unexpected expenses, Uber offers a flexible way to achieve financial goals.

Watch and learn how drivers earn what they need to make ends meet.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and an update to Wednesday’s edition

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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City wants state to ’shift existing budget allocations’ for migrants

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration is exploring unspecified backup plans should it not hit its goal of setting up tent base camps for new asylum-seekers before winter, a top deputy said Thursday while also pushing back at comments from Gov. J.B. Pritzker that more state funds for migrant services aren’t going to be made available anytime soon. […]

Asked about the governor’s comments, Pacione-Zayas, a former state senator, responded: “We have to continue to educate the General Assembly about this critical point that we’re in.” […]

Pacione-Zayas added that the mayor’s administration has begun meeting with individual state legislators and will ask the state to look for ways to shift existing budget allocations toward an additional migrant appropriation for Chicago, which has taken on the brunt of the new arrivals in Illinois.

If by saying “shift existing budget allocations,” she’s saying “city demands state budget cuts,” then I cannot wait to see that list of cuts.

However, there have already been some shifts. The governor’s full response to the question

As you know, we balanced the budget for this year, and it isn’t as if we’re coming in with, you know, enormous surpluses. And we always have things that are, you know, an opportunity for us to be of assistance. This is not something where we have hundreds of millions of dollars to support.

But remember, we’ve gone above and beyond. We’ve taken some of the programs that have pre-existed this crisis and sort of adjusted them to help with the migrant crisis. Let me give you one example, our Rental Assistance Program, which is very important for helping people [with] the ability to pay their rent. We have provided some of that rental assistance money, which wasn’t originally intended to be about asylum-seekers, for this challenge.

Diverting that money bolsters the argument by Black and Latino activists, who claim that the asylum-seekers are drawing down critical state funding for people who are already here.

* Back to the Tribune story

While she said she would continue to advocate for a federal solution, Preckwinkle said “the state needs to step up as well, because $42.5 million barely covers the city’s costs for a month,” she said, describing the sum that the state recently announced in awards to local governments as a “drop in the bucket.”

This ain’t the pandemic. Money isn’t falling from Uncle Sam’s tree.

* NBC 5 has the numbers as of yesterday

• Total awaiting placement: 3,199

    o 2,382 waiting in CPD districts, 804 at O’Hare, and 13 at Midway.

• New Arrivals Numbers:

    o Chicago has received over 17,000 new arrivals since the mission began.
    o 357 Buses has arrived in Chicago Since, August 31, 2022
    o 256 Buses have arrived in Chicago since Jan 1, 2023
    o 247 Buses have arrived in Chicago since May 12, 2023

* OK, let’s move along. Background is here if you need it. Robert McCoppin writes about the state’s smallish grants to suburban communities to help them deal with migrants

In Lake County, social service agencies reported serving nearly 2,000 asylum-seekers in the last year. State grants of $1 million were to go to three local immigrant aid agencies.

“They’re already here, they are coming to the suburbs,” Mano a Mano Executive Director Dulce Ortiz said. “That’s why we’re so grateful for this funding, because they’re already here and we are meeting their needs.” […]

In Elgin, which was awarded $1.27 million, Mayor David Kaptain said some residents have raised similar concerns. […]

Dianha Ortega-Ehreth, executive director of the Centro de Informacion in Elgin, said her group has been helping a rising number of immigrants.

The number of clients who entered the U.S. in the past year quadrupled to almost 300 in the past fiscal year, she said.

Go read the rest.

* Related…

    * Migrant Crisis Escalates as Johnson Administration Struggles to Identify Locations for Tents: No alderperson has publicly volunteered to have the base camps built in their wards, and efforts by the Johnson administration to open new shelters in facilities like Chicago Park District fieldhouses have faced concerted opposition from residents. Since Sept. 8, when Johnson announced his plan to shelter migrants in massive tents, the number of new arrivals in Chicago has grown by more than 25%, according to city data.

    * As Winter Looms, Venezuelan Migrant Surge Overwhelms Chicago: Some residents feel the city has been too accommodating. Deaundre Miguel Jones, 47, said he had watched with exasperation as the police station in his Old Town neighborhood turned into a place where migrants sleep on cots indoors and outside in camping tents. “These people are eating well — they have better phones than I do, better shoes,” Mr. Jones said, sitting outside his apartment complex. Chicago officials, he said, are doing more to help migrants than they are people who have lived in the city for years. “How are you going to take care of someone else when you’re not even taking care of your own people?” he said.

    * CPS parents offer support, community to new-arrival migrant students at Greeley Elementary: A group of CPS parents at a Lake View school are supporting new-arrivals in their community with school supplies and other necessities. The Greeley Elementary School community is growing. Chicago Public Schools confirms 115 new students are enrolled this year. “They have been very nice to me and I like them and they help me speak a different language,” Greeley student Scarlett Tague said. … “Building relationships to actually make a community that makes a difference we’ve seen so much growth in the last year,” said Joey Yuen, Greenly Elementary PTO member. “It’s helped us to see opportunities at every corner.”

    * Chicago residents to protest proposed migrant shelter: A new shelter for migrants could open in Galewood on the northwest side very soon, but the city is not sure of the exact date. … “The thing that we’re most concerned about is our children, our Black children, the football, the soccer, and all the things that they do, and trying to be constructive citizens. And now they’re going to take this part beautiful part and give it to migrants,” said resident Brooksy Cribs. “Don’t get me wrong, I understand the situation, but that’s not on us.” A community organizer said residents will be staging a protest at the park at 5:30 Friday evening.

    * Fox News: Chicago youth football program kicked out of facilities to make room for migrant housing: Chicago resident Dwayne Truss and alderman Chris Taliaferro join ‘FOX & Friends’ to discuss the community’s outrage after more than 600 residents attended a protest against a new migrant shelter that will displace youth programs.

    * O’Hare Airport Shelter Fills Up As More Migrants Come To Chicago By Plane: Nearly 830 migrants are staying at the airport — more than double the number of people who were staying there just a week ago. The city is also seeing a record number of buses arrive.

    * City seeks donations — and ideas — to provide for migrants as temperatures drop: “Given the fact that we have a change of seasons, we want to make sure that we have donations that are adequate for that with the winter coming,” Pacione-Zayas said during a virtual briefing with reporters.

  18 Comments      


Today’s follow-up

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We talked last month about how the Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame planned to present Gov. JB Pritzker with its Lifetime Contribution to Sport Award. The ceremony was held earlier this week and they played a video highlighting his accomplishments. “Combining political acumen with a passion for sports, JB played a pivotal role in enacting significant legislative changes benefiting Illinois sports communities.”

From the governor’s remarks after he thanked his hosts

This is truly an extraordinary honor.

Now probably no one, most especially me, thought that I would be inducted into the Chicagoland Sports Hall of Fame, especially not alongside really some of the world’s greatest athletes.

But Chicago has produced and shaped some of this nation’s greatest players. And I want to say I’m all too aware that for every Dwayne Wade, Dick Butkus and Candace Parker there are an untold number of young people who are never able to pursue their athletic dreams because of financial or societal limitations. As Governor, I feel a profound sense of responsibility to counter that loss of opportunity. And that’s one reason why my administration has expanded college scholarship funding to record levels, and why I signed legislation allowing NCAA athletes to sign endorsement deals.

Since we enacted the Rebuild Illinois capital plan, we’ve revitalized recreation centers and parks and community facilities where often it all begins. And these are safe places for young people to hang out and develop their skills and their passions, all while staying active.

Looking at this exceptional group of athletes and coaches and supporters and leaders that are here tonight, I’m so proud of the culture and the history of Chicago sports, and even more excited to think of what this ceremony will look like five and 10 and 20 years, and maybe 50 years in the future. The kind of dreams that we’ll be able to fulfill and, of course, the rooms that we’ll fill.

Maybe I can emulate Sister Jean so that years in the future, I could come back on this stage to present this same honor to a Chicagoan who today hasn’t even been born yet. And Sister Jean is one of my heroes, really.

Again, thank you to Chairman Carey, to the board for this truly wonderful honor. And most importantly, thanks to all of you who highlight the accomplishments of so many women and men athletes who set a fine example for the next generation. Congratulations to my fellow inductees and enjoy the rest of the evening. Thank you.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

This post can be considered an Illinois sports open thread.

  7 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

* A Bloomberg reporter yet again repeated the falsehood that Mayor Brandon Johnson has proposed a financial transactions tax within a story about CME Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer Terry Duffy. In the story, Duffy reiterated his threat to pull CME out of Chicago. More

As for the mayor, Duffy said he’s met with Johnson once since he was elected in April and is willing to throw his arms around him to help him succeed. But “we don’t agree on anything,” Duffy said.

This following interview has been edited for clarity and length.

What would you have done if you were Mayor?

I’d be doing things a lot differently. You can’t walk outside and not have commerce in one of the largest cities in the world. Who’s going to pay the taxes on these large buildings that are now vacant? You need to figure out ways to get people back into the cities. Can you imagine trying to convert everything into residential? It’d be unattainable. And that cost would be extraordinary.

I’d like to see us go away from some of the taxes that we already have in place. Let people not pay a sales tax and compete with online. If you want to sell it online then you pay a tax, and in the store where you’re employing people, you don’t pay a tax. But let’s think logically about how we’re going to get people back into work and into a society. We don’t have a society right now.

As usual with corporate types, he didn’t say how he’d make up for the loss of all that state and local sales tax revenue.

* The Question: Do you think state and local government should play a role in moving people back into offices, or should that be on employers? Explain.

…Adding… Something you may want to consider from Crain’s

According to a new analysis prepared exclusively for Crain’s by the Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation and the Center for Municipal Finance at the University of Chicago, the property tax bill paid by the average Chicago homeowner could rise hundreds of dollars a year as office tower owners pay less because of the depressed value of their property. Homeowners effectively would pick up a bigger share of the tax load.

For instance, if the tax value of downtown office buildings drops 20% — a figure that’s substantially lower than actual reality, according to some industry experts — the bill for the typical Chicago home would rise from $5,244 to $5,424. If there’s a 40% decline, the average residential bill would go up almost 10%, from $5,244 to $5,723, assuming taxing bodies don’t change their gross levy, the study found.

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

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Open thread

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* It’s Friday! What’s going on in your part of Illinois…

  16 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Johnson is exploring backup plans for his migrant tent cities idea. Summary of a Tribune story

    - Winter is fast approaching with no start date on tent encampments.

    - Pritzker told reporters Thursday that more state funding is unlikely.

    - Johnson’s administration has been meeting with individual state legislators to ask for additional support.

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

    * Time | State Legislative Staffers Across the U.S. Push to Unionize: “We’re not going to negotiate for anything crazy. We’re not going to ask for million-dollar salaries,” says Kelly Kupris, a policy analyst focused on K-12 education and a member of ILSA’s organizing committee. “We just want to be treated what we’re worth, listened to, and know that we have a safe workplace that is able to put food on the table at the end of the day.”

    * Tribune | Almost 1,000 migrating birds die Thursday in Chicago after crashing into McCormick Place Lakeside Center, a 40-year record: “It was just discouraging as can be,” said [David Willard, a retired bird division collections manager at the Field Museum]. “You’re looking at a rose-breasted grosbeak that, if it hadn’t hit a Chicago window, would have made it to the Andes of Peru.” Willard blamed the worst day in 40 years of bird monitoring on an array of factors, including weather patterns, badly timed rain and lit windows at Lakeside Center.

    * Tribune | ‘He was Chicago’s son’: Dick Butkus, the Hall of Fame Bears linebacker known for his toughness, dies at 80: “After football, it was difficult for me to find what I liked second-best,” Butkus once told the Tribune. “Football was always my first love. That certainly didn’t mean I couldn’t find something else. And the proof of the pudding is where I have ended up today. “I guess I could have been one of those guys who didn’t prepare to quit. But things happened and through hard work I found out that, hey, there are other things besides football

* Last year I met Jessica Handy from STAND for Children Illinois at a reception and we talked a bit about her love of creating crossword puzzles. Jessica told me yesterday that STAND now includes original, Illinois-themed crossword puzzles in its legislative newsletter. Click here to check them out!

Added by Rich Save the date!…

    Illinois Third House Annual Holiday Party

    Wednesday, December 13, 2023

    11:00 AM to 1:00 PM

    Palmer House Hilton

    17 E. Monroe, Chicago, IL

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

    * Tribune | lllinois presidential primary process starts Saturday with petitions for candidates and delegates: While Illinois in recent general presidential elections has been flyover country due to its solid status as a blue state, the preparations necessary ahead of the March 19 primary still provide an organizational test for campaigns. The nitty-gritty details of the presidential primary process start Saturday, when candidates’ campaigns can begin seeking signatures from voters to place both the presidential hopefuls and candidates for national nominating delegates on the ballot.

    * WJBC | McLean County Zoning tables CO2 sequestration drilling impacting Mahomet Aquifer: “Drilling a well that goes through the aquifer is not a good idea. Beyond that, they want to store liquid CO2 beneath the aquifer. And we know that leaks happen, especially over time,” said Julie Prandi. Danielle Anderson, Public Relations Manager for Navigation CO2, the company pushing for the drilling said the well would protect the groundwater.

    * WTTW | CPS Suspended 2 Security Guards Last Month. Both Were Previously Fired Police Officers and Named on Chicago’s Do-Not-Hire List: One man, who has been working as a security guard at Lane Technical High School since 2021, was terminated in 2019 by the Chicago Police Department following allegations of sexual misconduct involving a minor, records show. He was suspended on Sept. 11. The other is a Kenwood Academy security guard who the police department ousted in 2012 because of a string of domestic violence incidents, according to CPD disciplinary files. He was also suspended on Sept. 11.

    * Crain’s | Johnson to join UAW picket line on Saturday: Johnson will join Fain and other union leaders, including Association of Flight Attendants President Sara Nelson and Chicago Teachers Union President Stacy Davis Gates, according to a UAW press release. Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter confirmed to Crain’s he’ll also be in attendance.

    * Crain’s | Why Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg are spending $250M on science in Chicago: Chan praised “the tenacity, the grit, not incidentally the enthusiasm of the city’s leadership” today when she visited the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub’s home being built out at Fulton Labs. It was her first visit to Chicago since the biohub’s announcement in March. She also noted that Gov. J.B. Pritzker “showed up at the applicant interview day as the top cheerleader of the team presenting their case for a biohub” a year ago. He also offered $25 million in state support.

    * Sun-Times | Secret recordings cite ties between Berrios relative, Chicago mobster: ‘Jimmy and Frank were good friends’: “Jimmy and Frank were good friends,” Joseph Weiss said in that recorded conversation, according to federal prosecutors. “And some Russians were muscling Jimmy, but Frank was on the run. Frank was in hiding, and Jimmy called Frank and said, ‘Hey,’ ’cause they were partners. And Jimmy says, ‘Hey, man, these guys just busted up my f—ing store. Scared the f— out of the girls, this and that, you know, I need your help, where the f— are you?’ ”

    * WAND | Cresco Labs settles with employees for back wages: As part of the job, Emperor was required to pick up personal protective gear at the company storage shed and walk to a changing room to put it on — before clocking in. “It was another coworker of mine, who changed behind me, and he brought to my attention that ‘you know we should be getting paid for this time’,” Emperor said. He was let go in 2022 and realized those 15 minutes here and there added up, and he was owed thousands of dollars in back wages.

    * SJ-R | Bringing home the bacon: What do top 10 paid Springfield, county officials make?: The only official to make more than $250,000 is Doug Brown of City Water, Light and Power. His 2022 base pay was $253,844 according to public records. Brown serves as Chief Utility Engineer, where he is tasked with oversight of the Electric, Water and Finance divisions and Regulatory Affairs. He has worked for the utility since 1994, previously serving as the Major Projects Development Director.

    * WCIA | U of I Extension urges caution as risk of farm fires rises for harvest season: Equipment fires, especially combine-related fires, are one of the most common and costly types of farm fire incidents. Trent Ford, state climatologist with the Illinois State Water Survey at the U of I, said this season’s increased risk is due to severe drought conditions in parts of the Midwest. A lack of precipitation, low soil moisture and dry vegetation paired with hot running farm equipment could increase chances of a fire.

    * WBEZ | Chicago Public Library unveils public art piece taking on banned books: The newly-installed permanent Altar for the Unbanned by Theaster Gates sits in the middle of the third floor of the Harold Washington Library main branch. It features spiral shelves of books that have been banned in different periods of American history — titles like Antelope Woman by Louise Eldirch and The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood are part of the current piece. Atop the stacks of books sits a bright, neon sign that reads “Unbanned” in all capital letters.

    * AP | Pennsylvania’s Democratic governor, a rising political star, crosses partisan school choice divide: Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro — a first-term Democrat seen by his party as a rising star nationally — forcefully put his weight behind a Republican-backed proposal to send $100 million to families for private school tuition and school supplies.

    * Sun-Times | Joyce Chapman, Far South Side community activist, a Lori Lightfoot Chicago Board of Ed appointee, dead at 67: Ms. Chapman’s appointment last year to the Chicago Board of Education was a momentous day for her, having spent years coming before the board to push for better education policies. “To sit on the other side of the podium, she knew she had a chance to make a difference, and she was proud to be there,” Amina Brooks said. […] Ms. Chapman left the board this year after Mayor Brandon Johnson was elected.

    * Sun-Times | Dick Butkus a Bears legend for all generations: Butkus was a Chicagoan who played football like all of us wanted to — with grit, ferocity, anger and relentless aggressiveness. Through all those losing seasons, he played the game as if he felt our pain.

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Friday, Oct 6, 2023 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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