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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* “Many Illinois county clerks have left amid mistrust, threats associated with 2024 election,” by CBS 2 Chicago

“I don’t have bulletproof glass between me and my constituents,” said Knox County, Illinois Clerk Scott Erickson. “That’s not how we should be operating.” […]

After the 2020 election, the Capital riots of Jan. 6, 2021, and threats against election workers, Erickson said many clerks had enough. CBS News Chicago called each county clerk’s office in Illinois, and found since 2020, 39 of the state’s 102 counties reported they are now under new leadership.

That amounts to a nearly 40% turnover rate.

“They’re saying: You know what? I’m done. It’s crazy enough. I don’t want to deal with this anymore. I put up, I put in my time. I’m just going to walk away and not worry about elections,’” said Erickson.

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner, the Sun-Times’ Jon Seidel and Hannah Meisel from Capitol News Illinois are live tweeting Paul La Schiazza’s bribery trial. Assistant US Attorney Paul Mower had this jab this morning


* Crain’s

Stellantis is investing more than $406 million into three Michigan plants to build electrified Ram pickups and Jeep Wagoneer SUVs.

The company’s shuttered assembly plant in Belvidere, which it pledged to reopen for EV production in an agreement with the United Auto Workers last year, was unmentioned in the announcement of new investments. Stellantis said last month it was delaying initial plans to restart the plant just east of Rockford after facing accusations from the union that it was breaching their agreement.

The automaker said it will spend $235.5 million updating the Sterling Heights Assembly Plant to build the fully electric Ram 1500 REV and range-extended electric Ramcharger on the same assembly line as the gasoline-powered Ram 1500 pickup. To do this, the company said it partnered with “equipment suppliers and contractors to carefully plan and execute the installation of a new conveyor system, new automation for BEV-specific processes, and the retooling and rearrangement of workstations in general assembly.”

Stellantis said the Sterling Heights facility will be its first U.S. plant to make electric vehicles. Production of the Ram REV is scheduled to begin before the end of this year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois AG Kwame Raoul, local Haitian Americans, deride Trump’s false accusation of Haitians eating pets:“My initial reaction was, I don’t even want to get offended, because that would reflect me recognizing it as a statement that was coming from somebody that was competent,” Raoul said.

*** Statewide ***

* The Times Weekly | Teen voter registration surges after Illinois’ pre-registration law took effect: Marking National Teen Voter Registration Day, Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias reported that nearly 50,000 16- and 17-year-olds have taken advantage of a new law that enables them to pre-register to vote before turning 18. National Teen Voter Registration Day is a nationwide push to get teens involved in the democratic process, with many communities hosting voter registration drives at local high schools.

* WSIL | The Mississippi River is running low again. It’s a problem for farmers moving beans and grain: It was just two months ago that much of the Mississippi River was above flood stage north of St. Louis. Since then, the river level has dropped steadily. The area south of St. Louis has been hit especially hard, mirroring low-water concerns that began around this same time of year in both 2022 and 2023. As part of the fallout, barge companies are forced to limit the soybeans, grain and other cargo they carry to prevent barges from potentially getting stuck. That means less profit for farmers.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Three City Council leaders demand ouster of top mayoral aide who called police ‘f—ing pigs’: Ald. Chris Taliaferro (29th), the former Chicago Police sergeant who chairs the Council’s Police Committee, was so outraged by Bartley’s “disparaging” comments about the police, he demanded that Johnson take immediate action against her. […] Public Safety Committee Chair Brian Hopkins (2nd) argued that it is “incumbent on all city employees to support our first-responders” and Bartley’s comments are “incompatible” with that imperative.

* Chicago Reader | The Cook County state’s attorney’s Brady list is missing more than 100 cops who made false or misleading statements.: Reporters found that police officers are rarely investigated for making false reports alone. A review of more than two dozen COPA summary reports with sustained Rule 14 violations showed an overwhelming majority included disciplinary findings related to other rule violations. Many came in the context of serious misconduct allegations, such as excessive use of force, unlawful search or arrest, or wrongful discharge of a firearm.

* Block Club | After Lincoln Square Gym, Nearby Mosque Shot At, Muslim Chicagoans Fear ‘Targeted’ Attacks: Members of Chicago’s Muslim community are asking police to investigate whether multiple incidents where someone damaged windows and doors at an Irving Park mosque and a Muslim-owned martial arts gym in Lincoln Square in the past three months were targeted attacks. […] “I don’t understand. This is the second time we have camera footage of someone driving by and someone from the passenger side shoots at the gym. We made a police report and gave police footage back then,” Idriz Redzovic said.

* Chalkbeat | Special education advocates file new state complaint on bus service in Chicago Public Schools: The advocates say CPS is violating a federal law that requires districts to provide transportation for students with disabilities if it is in their Individualized Education Programs. They say students need reliable transportation to go to school without disruptions and are urging the state board to monitor the district as it did in 2021 and 2022. As of Sept. 4, the district reported 2,226 students with disabilities had yet to be routed. A spokesperson said the latest number includes new transportation requests, students who have been permanently approved for a stipend, and students who have been temporarily approved for a stipend but are waiting for a route. The district reported that 9,232 students had bus service as of Sept. 4, up from 8,782 students on Aug. 21.

* WBBM | Chicago to close three migrant shelters by end of October, officials say: Chicago, which at one point had 26 shelters, is down to 17. People in the shelters being closed will be offered places and service at one of the remaining shelters. City leaders said the decision to trim excess beds was made in the interest of fiscal responsibility.

* Sun-Times | Parting shot? Last-ditch effort seeks to let Chicago’s top cop extend ShotSpotter deal: Ald. David Moore (17th) introduced the ordinance in mid-July, pushing to give Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling the power to extend the existing deal with ShotSpotter’s parent company, SoundThinking, or enter into a new contract for similar technology. Moore told the Sun-Times he plans to use a parliamentary maneuver at next week’s City Council meeting to force a vote on the ordinance, which has languished in the rules committee, where legislation often goes to die.

* WTTW | Ex-Ald. Carrie Austin Set to Stand Trial Nov. 3, 2025 — More Than 4 Years After Indictment: However, it remains far from certain that Austin, 75, will ever face a jury. U.S. District Court Judge John F. Kness ordered Austin to undergo a physical examination by an expert doctor to determine whether she is too ill to stand trial, as her lawyers insist. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois say the evidence shows Austin is “alert, lucid and responsive” and fit to stand trial.

* City Bureau | ‘I Know What I’m Worth’: The Joys and Struggles of Chicago’s Migrant Go-Go Dancers: At this particular nightclub, about seven dancers are Venezuelan or Colombian. A bar patron in town from Texas said he noticed this same trend in male strip clubs down south, as well. The shift, in some ways, is tied to cultural tropes of Latino passion, says Héctor Carrillo, a professor of sociology at Northwestern University who studies sexuality, immigration and health. His 2017 book, “Pathways of Desire: The Sexual Migration of Mexican Gay Men,” tells the stories of gay Mexican immigrants in San Diego, before and after their journeys to the United States.

* Crain’s | Obamas’ old Hyde Park condo hits the market: Kurt and Jennifer Elling are asking $550,000 for the four-bedroom condo in East View Park, a block-long row of brick six-flats that share a big private greenspace and face a quiet stretch of public park west of DuSable Lake Shore Drive. The first-floor condo, which still has the green tile fireplace Michelle Obama is pictured with in an early 2000s portrait shot by Katrina Wittkamp for Chicago magazine, is going on the market today.

* Tribune | At Chiu Quon, Chicago’s oldest Chinese bakery, mooncakes take center stage for the Mid-Autumn Festival: The moon-shaped pastries are not just desserts but symbols of the harvest season carrying with them the cultural heritage honored across Asia, said Joyce Chiu, owner of Chiu Quon Bakery. “Moon festival is a time for families to get together, have a nice meal together and sit around sharing mooncakes,” Chiu said. “And all the little details, the packaging, and the design are always super intentional.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Thornton Township trustees vote to cancel events planned by Supervisor Tiffany Henyard: During a combative meeting Tuesday night, Thornton Township trustees refused to approve events they say invite reckless spending on the part of Supervisor Tiffany Henyard, who has been under consistent scrutiny for financial mismanagement as township supervisor and Dolton mayor. Henyard railed against Trustees Chris Gonzalez, Carmen Carlisle and Gerald Jones for voting to cancel the upcoming Gospel Fest, House Fest and bingo, saying the events predate her administration. The board approved the monthly Tech Savvy event that provides technology skills training with a reduced budget.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora gathers to reflect on those lost during Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks: ‘Never forget’: Former Aurora resident Miguel Munoz, who now lives in Kentucky, was in town this week to visit his wife’s family and decided to bring his 9-year-old daughter Rin to Aurora’s event on Wednesday honoring those who lost their lives 23 years ago during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. “I wanted her to be here because I think it’s important for her to know the history,” Munoz said about his daughter as they waited for the start of the ceremony held outside the Aurora Police Department headquarters at 1200 E. Indian Trail. “Eventually, she is going to start learning about this in school, but I wanted her to have a first-hand experience about how people felt during that time – people who were there and people who were around then.”

* Daily Herald | Sugar Grove OKs controversial 761-acre development proposal: Despite passionate opposition from some residents, the Sugar Grove village board on Tuesday approved the controversial mixed-use The Grove development. The board voted 4-2 to annex 761 acres at I-88 and Route 47, and create a planned development district with housing, offices, stores and businesses that could include warehouses and data centers.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Williamson County Supervisor of Assessments to Resign: The Williamson County Supervisor of Assessments Alex Simpson stated he was asked by the Williamson County Commissioners to resign his position. This resignation letter was dated for September 11, 2024.

* SJ-R | ‘Moved’ by SPD chief’s speech, family of crash victim wants transparency in investigation: An emotional Springfield Police Chief Ken Scarlette said Tuesday that a retired police sergeant charged in a crash involving two people on a motorcycle last week “failed his oath” and “embarrassed the profession of law enforcement.” Scarlette also apologized for “the lack of compassion” shown by officers at the crash site near Lake Springfield where many believe Michael Egan, who was on the last day of his job but off duty, was shown favoritism.

* NPR Illinois | UIS sees a slight drop in fall enrollment: The University of Illinois Springfield has 33 fewer students on campus this fall compared to a year ago. The school announced its official enrollment numbers Wednesday. The drop ends a two year run of enrollment increases. Last year, the number of students jumped 11%.

* WCIA | Crunching the numbers of U of I’s record-breaking enrollment: University officials said total student enrollment for the fall of 2024 stands at a record number of 59,238. This number consists of 37,140 undergraduates and 20,765 graduate students who attend in-person, on-campus classes and classes online. The freshman Class of 2028 consists of 9,008 students, also a new record. Within this number:

* STLPR | East St. Louis forum attendees propose community-driven solutions to child poverty: Children’s Advocates for Change, a Chicago-based nonprofit organization, hosted a forum aimed at addressing child poverty in East St. Louis, where the poverty rate for children is three times the national average. More than 100 educators, religious leaders, metro-east officials and others gathered at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville’s East St. Louis Learning Center to discuss potential solutions.

*** National ***

* AP | Election officials warn that widespread problems with the US mail system could disrupt voting: In an alarming letter, the officials said that over the past year, including the just-concluded primary season, mailed ballots that were postmarked on time were received by local election offices days after the deadline to be counted. They also noted that properly addressed election mail was being returned to them as undeliverable, a problem that could automatically send voters to inactive status through no fault of their own, potentially creating chaos when those voters show up to cast a ballot.

* Missouri Independent | GOP legislator’s son asks Supreme Court to order inquiry into donations to Missouri AG: Eight months into his term as Missouri’s attorney general, Andrew Bailey withdrew his office from defending a state agency being sued by a legislator’s son for disability discrimination. A few months earlier, his campaign and an affiliated political action committee accepted more than $150,000 in donations connected to a witness in the case.

  6 Comments      


Map shows historical decline of county populations, with about a third peaking between 1870 and 1900

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This map is from a PowerPoint displayed at a recent faculty Senate meeting at Western Illinois University. Click the pic for a larger image…

The full document is here.

Discuss.

  36 Comments      


Question of the day

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AG press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul, as part of a bipartisan coalition of 42 attorneys general, is calling on lawmakers to pass legislation requiring a U.S. surgeon general warning on all algorithm-driven social media platforms. Raoul and the coalition issued a letter to Congress amid growing scrutiny of social media companies for their role in generational harm to young people’s mental health.

“Our children should be aware that social media platforms utilize features to make their platforms more addictive to young people. These algorithm-driven platforms can interfere with sleep and education, enable cyberbullying and contribute to depression, anxiety, body dysmorphia and thoughts of self-harm,” Raoul said. “I am committed to holding responsible actors accountable for putting profits ahead of mental health and well-being of our children.”

In the letter, Raoul and the coalition highlight growing bodies of research that link young people’s use of social media platforms to psychological harm, including depression, anxiety and even suicidal thoughts in children and teens. The attorneys general also note how platforms feature irresistible algorithm recommendations, infinite scrolling and a constant stream of notifications that are designed to keep kids relentlessly engaged on the platforms, even at the expense of taking breaks, engaging in other activities or sleeping.

This is Raoul’s latest action to hold social media platforms accountable for the harm they have caused young people. In 2023, Raoul joined a lawsuit against Meta Platforms Inc. (Meta), the company that owns and operates Facebook and Instagram, for its harmful business practices targeting children. Earlier this year, Raoul led a bipartisan coalition calling on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to update and strengthen the rules technology companies must follow under the federal Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA).

Despite these efforts to address the harms caused by social media platforms, Raoul and the attorneys general say the need for federal action is clear. The coalition said in the letter that more action is necessary because, “social media platforms have demonstrated an unwillingness to fix the problem on their own.”

Joining Raoul in submitting the letter are attorneys general of Alabama, American Samoa, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

The letter is here.

* The Question: What do you think about this proposal? Explain.

  12 Comments      


23 years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Illinois remembers the lives lost

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Governor Pritzker


* Patch

In the days immediately following the tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001, Oak Lawn police officers and firefighters traveled to assist the beleaguered New York City first responders where 343 firefighters and 72 police officers died responding to the World Trade Center attacks.

Nine years later, some of those same Oak Lawn first responders went to New York to escort four beams from the fallen towers back to Oak Lawn. For those unfamiliar or to young to remember the installation of the 9/11 memorial in front of the train station, here is a timeline: […]

    Four WTC beams arrived in Oak Lawn on a flatbed truck Dec. 17, 2010. The beams were escorted by four Oak Lawn first responders who had volunteered to assist in the aftermath in New York City. Prior to that, Ground Zero debris was being held as crime scene evidence by the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, which owned the trade center. The port authority was granted permission by the courts to make pieces of the wreckage available to communities for 9/11 memorials nationwide.

    Prior to the beams’ arrival, the Oak Lawn Village Board entered into an agreement with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey to bring remnants of the World Trade Center to the village. […]

    Footing the costs for transporting the beams from New York and New Jersey were the Oak Lawn Police and Fire Clubs, and the International Union of Operation Engineers Local 150. […]

    Renowned sculptor Erik Blome, whose works dot the North American landscape —including the larger-than-life-sized bronze bust of Jean-Baptiste Pointe DuSable on Michigan Avenue – was hired to create the memorial with the help of students from the Academy of Art University in San Francisco. […]

    Embedded into the obelisks are likenesses of hands and faces of people: police officers, fire fighters, and civilians who came to the aid of strangers.

* Winnetka annually plants 2,977 American Flags to remember victims

* Chicago Fire Department


* More…

    * SJ-R | ‘I’m not sure if it ever, ever sunk in’: Harvel World Trade Center survivor remembers 9/11: When a plane initially hit Tower 1 of the World Trade Center at 7:46 a.m. on Sept. 11, 2001, Shelley Lebeck felt the building go sideways and then right itself. Lebeck, a Harvel native working on the 44th floor as an office manager for a trade group for Wall Street technical analysts, said she thought it was an explosion. A small plane flying into the building also crossed her mind. […] “I’m not sure if it ever, ever sunk in, that it was all gone like that,” Lebeck said of the twin towers.

    * WILL | 800 Miles from Ground Zero: 9/11’s Impact on Central Illinois: The first plane hit the World Trade Center in NYC at 7:46 CST in 2001. In this first episode of 800 Miles from Ground Zero: 9/11’s Impact on Central Illinois listeners hear memories from this day and the weeks following from a variety of people currently living in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois who recount their experiences during a time that horrified, traumatized, and brought together a nation.

    * NBC Chicago | From the Archives: Survivor Recalls His Viral 9/11 Email: Adam Mayblum worked on the 87th floor of the World Trade Center’s north tower, just below where American Airlines Flight 11 struck, and he was one of the few who made it out. Shortly after he walked down all those flights of stairs, past firefighters going the other way, he wrote an email to family and friends describing his experience. It quickly went viral, and Mayblum’s words resonated around the world as people were able to relive those moments he spent inside the tower.

    * Patch | 9/11 Remembrance Events Scheduled For Glencoe, Northfield, Winnetka: In communities around New Trier Township, ceremonies are being held to honor those slain. In Glencoe, the public safety department has partnered with the Am Shalom synagogue to host a memorial service at the flagpole at the coroner of Vernon and Lincoln avenues. It begins at 7:46 a.m. on Wednesday.

    * WGN | CFD hold memorial tribute on 23rd anniversary of 9/11 terrorist attacks: The Chicago Fire Department held a memorial tribute on Wednesday at Engine 42 headquarters on the Near North Side to mark the 23rd anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. A moment of silence is scheduled occurred at 7:46 a.m.

    * Shaw Local | 9/11 remembrances will mark anniversary in McHenry County: Algonquin: The Algonquin-Lake in the Hills Fire Protection District will host a public remembrance ceremony at 7:30 a.m. Wednesday at Riverfront Park, 201 N Harrison St., Algonquin. Carpentersville: Join the Carpentersville Fire Department in the 23rd anniversary of the National Day of Service and Remembrance 8:30 a.m. Wednesday at Carpentersville Fire Station 91, 213 Spring St.

    * WSIL | Benton School Honors Victims of 9/11 Attacks: A local school is honoring the victims of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The Benton Consolidated High School is displaying 2,977 American Flags on their front lawn and joining campuses across the nation this week in honoring the victims. This is part of the Never Forget Project with the Young America’s Foundation which launched in 2003.

    * Daily Herald | Sept. 11 observances across the suburbs: Evanston 9/11 Ceremony: 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 11, at Firemen’s Park, Simpson Street and Maple Avenue in Evanston. The Evanston fire and police departments will honor the brave men and women who lost their lives on Sept. 11, 2001.

    * KMOX | Saluki Stair Climb in Southern Illinois set to honor 9/11 victims: Lt. Col Chay Derbigny, commander and professor of aerospace studies for SIUC’s Air Force ROTC detachment 205, explained that his predecessor originally came up with the idea. “She had the idea last year and she ran it. I mean that was her baby and she made it an incredible event that doubled the pot of people that they were expecting to participate just out of her marketing efforts,” said Derbigny.

  5 Comments      


IDOC responds to more Menard claims from Sen. Bryant

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some background is here if you need it. Sen. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro) was on Will Stephens’ WXAN radio show on Monday and said this about Menard Correctional Center, which is in her district

Last week, the director [of the Illinois Department of Corrections] went to the facility on Thursday. These are the reports that I’m receiving. When she got there, she brought an entourage with her. They decided to go on to the North 2 Seg Unit, which is where a lot of the problems are being found.

And when they went on the unit, they all wore face masks. That angered the offenders, because they don’t have face masks. So they began acting out. Set some mattresses on fire, began flooding the cell house. I’m told that they actually had to bring the TAC unit on to get them to escort them off the gallery. And then the next morning, the statewide TAC team showed up, did a shakedown of North 2.

The reports that I’m receiving are that they found K2, they found a bunch of other contraband, maybe a shank.

And then I’m also hearing that in the mail room, they found some fentanyl coming in through the mail. There were multiple individuals, again, taken to the hospital, some by ambulance on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There are some unofficial reports coming out today, on Monday, that there’s another fentanyl exposure at Menard today, and I’m scheduled to go to Menard tomorrow to tour the facility. Let’s see if that happens. I’m willing to go. I don’t know if they willing to let me in, so I should find out later today if that happens.

* So, I reached out to IDOC for a response and received this late yesterday afternoon…

On Thursday, 9/5, Acting Director Hughes and executive staff members made an unannounced visit to Menard Correctional Center. As is standard practice, the director and staff were escorted by the Emergency Response Team (ERT), who were on-site for scheduled work that day. The Department maintains a long-standing practice, especially at a maximum-security facility, that assigned security staff and administrative staff escort the director and executive staff members during their visits.

The Department is currently urging all staff to utilize PPE including masks and the Acting Director and staff followed that protocol. All individuals in custody can request masks, and one individual did during the tour and his request was promptly granted. During the tour, the group visited a housing unit floor to speak with individuals in custody. There were reports of individuals in custody flooding their cells in North 2, and water was observed on the floor in North 2. Additionally, there were reports of some individuals burning items, but none of the incidents necessitated using fire extinguishers or hoses. No events occurred during the visit that required the Emergency Response Team (ERT) to escort the group out of the gallery or any other part of the facility. The facility has been on a level 1 lockdown since August 28 to allow for a thorough investigation of ongoing challenges related to employees reporting medical symptoms. Individuals in custody have expressed their concern to the director, and IDOC is working to return to normal operations as soon as possible.

On Friday, 9/6, the TACT Team began their previously scheduled searches as part of the ongoing investigation at Menard. During the searches, the team discovered a piece of paper, which yielded a preliminary positive result for synthetic cannabinoids. An additional discovery from the mailroom revealed a book with several pages being covered in an oily substance, which yielded a preliminary positive result for Fentanyl.

On Saturday 9/7, TACT continued searches and confiscated two improvised weapons and made two separate discoveries of pieces of paper that yielded a preliminary positive result for synthetic cannabinoids.

During cell searches on Sunday 9/8, the TACT team located a liquid substance in a nasal spray bottle, but preliminary testing did not yield any known substance. Additionally on Sunday 9/8, the team located pieces of paper saturated in an unknown substance, which yielded a preliminary positive result for synthetic cannabinoids. The Department is working with the Illinois State Police (ISP) to conduct further testing of those items. All substances located during the searches on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday were sent to ISP for additional testing.

On Monday 9/9, TACT continued searches and made three different recoveries of pieces of paper that yielded a preliminary positive result for synthetic cannabinoids. These items were sent to ISP for additional testing.

In a separate incident on Monday, 9/9, one staff member from the mailroom started exhibiting symptoms while opening mail and was transported to an outside hospital via ambulance. The remaining staff in the mailroom were then relocated to the facility’s warehouse. While in the warehouse, another mailroom employee exhibited symptoms and was transported to an outside hospital via ambulance. Subsequently, two other staff members, who were not in the mailroom but came in contact with the first two mailroom employees, started exhibiting symptoms and were taken to the outside hospital via ambulance. Later, one mailroom staff member reported feeling ill and was transported to an outside hospital via state vehicle. Another mailroom staff member was taken to the hospital by state vehicle without symptoms for precautionary measures. All impacted staff were treated and released. A team consisting of members of the Illinois State Police (ISP), supported by members of the Illinois National Guard, were on-site to assist with testing items of concern in the mailroom. The investigation into the recent events at Menard are ongoing.

  13 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  17 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Opening statements are scheduled to begin this morning in the federal corruption trial of Paul La Schiazza. Capitol News Illinois

    - The former AT&T Illinois president accused of bribing longtime House Speaker Michael Madigan.
    - The 12-member jury and three alternates were chosen from a pool of 60 from Chicago and its suburbs. The final group includes nine women and six men ranging from recent college graduates to sexagenarians.
    - In an unusual move, the prosecutors’ and defense attorneys’ peremptory strikes were not made in open court, but each side exercised their right to nix members of the pool before Gettleman announced the final group.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WAND | Illinois agency criticized for implementation of child care provider grant program: The Smart Start grant program was created to help day care providers recruit and retain workers without burdening families by raising tuition or co-pays. However, the Illinois Department of Human Services implemented the grant program without a top committee of state lawmakers approving the rules. JCAR members noted that DHS did not file rules for the grant program until July 5, 2024. Yet, the agency had already opened and closed the application process for the grant program before filing the rules. “While the department cited the need to negotiate with stakeholders and obtain appropriations for the program as the reason for the delay in promulgating rules, the consultation and rulemaking processes could have been started any time after the public act became effective,” JCAR wrote.

* PJ Star | ‘Serious criminal charges’ possible as Peoria police investigating anti-violence group: Peoria Mayor Rita Ali said she has not yet had any discussions with the City/County Board of Health about its decision to cut ties with the Cure Violence initiative but did say she “respects their decision” and understands that there were “capacity issues” with some of the non-profits awarded money. “I think there became some problems along the way from what I understand, again without many real details, I think there were some capacity issues,” Ali told the Journal Star. “I was disappointed, of course, that Cure Violence is not likely to continue or happen for Peoria. It is a national and international strategy and project that has happened very successfully in other cities across the world and across the nation.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Supreme Court hears cases pertaining to detention under the SAFE-T Act: The second case the court heard Tuesday concerned Christian Mikolaitis, 19, of Elwood, who was arrested in December 2023 and charged with attempted first-degree murder and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon for allegedly stabbing another individual during a drug deal. Prosecutors filed a petition to hold Mikolaitis pending trial, arguing that he continued to pose a real and present danger to the victim. But they did not make an argument as to why conditions of release could not mitigate the risk he posed.

*** Chicago ***

* Block Club | City To Close Troubled Pilsen Migrant Shelter, 2 Others As Pace Of New Arrivals Slows: The city is closing three more migrant shelters — including one of its largest and most troubled — as a federal order slows border crossings and a pledge to send more buses during the Democratic National Convention did not materialize. Next month, the city will close the three shelters located at a Pilsen warehouse, 2241 S. Halsted St., a West Loop office building, 344 N. Ogden Ave., and Kenwood’s Lakeshore Hotel, 4900 S. DuSable Lake Shore Drive, a Department of Family and Support Services spokesperson said in a statement.

* Tribune | As shelters close, a CPS migrant family sleeps in a truck to stay close to school: Facing pressure to leave the shelter from city officials but wanting to stay near his son’s school, Reynaldo’s father Yohan Perdomo, 37, made the decision to sleep in the truck instead of move elsewhere. “If I had a job, I would rent an apartment and move us there,” said Perdomo, who has struggled to find stable work for the past eight months to move them out of a migrant shelter on the Lower West Side.

* Fox Chicago | One of Chicago Mayor Johnson’s top aides calls police ‘f—ing pigs’ in 2021 podcast: Kennedy Bartley allegedly made the comments during a 2021 podcast interview. She is currently Johnson’s Managing Deputy for External Relations, a position that was created for her back in May. […] The comments came as part of a conversation about the killing of Elijah McClain, a suburban Denver man, at the hands of police and paramedics.

* Sun-Times | Victim recalls tire-cutting that led to charges against 2 Chicago cops: ‘They just started slashing’: Police officials sought felony charges against the officers, but they weren’t approved by prosecutors. “After a thorough review of the information presented to us by police, it was determined that the evidence was insufficient to meet our burden of proof to file felony charges,” according to a spokesperson for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office.

* ABC Chicago | Northwest Side residents ask city to remove homeless encampment from Gompers Park: ‘It’s not safe’: Members of the Restore Gompers Park Coalition delivered petitions to the alderperson’s office Tuesday morning, asking that the city begin moving them out of the park. They say those living there are part of the unhoused population and are not migrants or recent arrivals. “We want proper housing for these individuals. We’re not saying kick them out and put them on the street,” said Gail Fritz with the Restore Gompers Park Coalition.

* Sun-Times | Transgender woman slain on West Side; family calls for hate crime investigation: Redd is the first trans woman killed in Chicago this year, though violence against trans women is often underreported. At least 14 transgender and gender-nonconforming people have been killed in Chicago since 2016, according to data compiled by the Sun-Times, and the majority of those cases remain unsolved.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Hot mic still smoldering? Former judge caught insulting lawyer is facing state complaint: The complaint against former Associate Judge William Raines was filed in August by the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission, which accused him of violating its code of conduct. […] After Bonjean left the Zoom hearing, Raines began talking to others in the virtual courtroom, describing Bonjean’s demeanor during the proceedings as “entertaining.” “Did you see her going nuts? Glasses off, fingers through her hair, the phone’s going all over the place. It’s insane,” Raines said, according to the commission’s complaint filing.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County Clerk asks for private attorney to represent her: The DuPage County state’s attorney’s office last week filed the lawsuit that claims Kaczmarek is breaking state law because she has refused to indicate from where in her budget a bill should be paid when the dedicated budget line item does not have enough money to cover a bill’s payment. Kaczmarek’s request for a private attorney comes days after DuPage County State’s Attorney Bob Berlin filed a motion requesting that a special state’s attorney be appointed to represent the clerk since his office cannot represent both her and the county in the legal dispute.

* AP | Protections sought for prison workers in closing of aging Illinois prison: On Tuesday, 187 inmates remained at Stateville, AFSCME spokesperson Anders Lindall said. When plaintiffs in the case sought an injunction in July to shutter Stateville, AFSCME expected Corrections to oppose it, according to the complaint. It says that days before Wood’s ruling, AFSCME and the Department of Central Management Services, the state’s personnel agency, agreed that bargaining over the employee impact of Stateville’s shutdown was premature because Corrections’ plans were not finalized.

* Naperville Sun | Changes in state legislation prompt Naperville Park District to consider ban on e-scooters, altered drone regulations: The modification is in response to a state measure that Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed into law last month. The legislation — Senate Bill 1960 — created a definition for “low-speed electric scooter” in Illinois Vehicle Code and provides a regulatory framework for the operation of electric scooters by local governments that authorize their use by ordinance.

* Shaw Local | Joliet, Lockport bridges top list of IDOT projects for Will County: Bridge repairs and replacements top the Illinois Department of Transportation’s ongoing and planned infrastructure projects in Will County over the next six years. Ten projects across the county represent a total investment of $118 million through the Rebuild Illinois capital program, according to a news release from IDOT.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Springfield Police Chief says disgraced Sgt. failed his oath: The chief said during the meeting, “That oath doesn’t end the day that you retire, that oath is something you take with you to your grave. That man failed this oath, that man embarrassed the profession of law enforcement. That man should be ashamed of his actions, his selfish actions that led to such a horrific crash.” Egan had just retired. Chief Scarlett also reiterated his commitment to a transparent internal investigation of his office.

* SJ-R | Former Springfield Police sergeant pleads not guilty in aggravated DUI case: Egan, said Sangamon County State’s Attorney John Milhiser, was released from custody with conditions after the hearing. Egan cannot legally drive a vehicle or go to any bars. He must undergo a drug and alcohol assessment and cooperate with probation. Braud set an Oct. 3 preliminary hearing for Egan, who faces 1 to 12 years behind bars if convicted. The charge is probation eligible.

* WAND | Springfield bridge to be renamed “Massey Memorial Bridge”: During Tuesday night”s Springfield City Council meeting the council approved a measure to commission a mural for the Jefferson Bridge, and work with IDOT to rename the bridge in her honor. Springfield Alderwoman Erin Conley spoke at the meeting and stated, “Sonya Massey’s mom is in the audience tonight and I just want to say this is a very small gesture in terms of everything, but we’re honored to have her name as part of our city. We will keep her in our hearts and in our thoughts.”

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford has a $23 million budget surplus. Here’s how it hopes to spend the money: Rockford could use a $23 million 2023 budget surplus to give a one-time boost to its neighborhood road program, close TIF Districts that are in the red and complete several road resurfacing projects. Collections of income taxes and corporate replacement taxes that flowed into the city from the state of Illinois far exceeded expectations last year, Finance Director Carrie Hagerty said. The city also saved money because of vacancies in the Rockford Police Department.

* WREX | Hard Rock Casino Rockford says things are going well less than two weeks after opening: “It’s more about just watching people feed into the building and see how they utilize the space and how they move around and navigate the space. We’ve identified some areas that are a little bit busier than we had thought they would be and probably should have bigger aisleways,” President, Geno Iafrate said. […] “Occupancy and visitation has just been through the roof. We actually twice on opening weekend, we exceeded capacity and had to stop letting people in the building, which I wish that wasn’t the case but at the same time that’s pretty exciting that you got more people than we can actually fit in the building,” Iafrate said.

* WQAD | City of Rock Island approves purchase of drones for police department: The Rock Island Police Department will be receiving three drones after city council members voted to approve the purchase on Monday, Sept. 9. All three devices will cost just over $53,000. The city plans to use part of its American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds for the purchase. RIPD will now join numerous other Quad Cities agencies using the technology, including the Moline Police Department, East Moline Police Department, Rock Island County Sheriff’s Office, Scott County Sheriff’s Office, Bettendorf Police Department and the Rock Island Fire Department.

* WAND | One year of progress at Scheels Sport Park: While the over 50 acre plot of dirt behind Scheels might not seem like much, a lot of work has happened in the lot since the groundbreaking occurred a year ago. Construction crews have laid more than two miles of underground piping, set up electrical wires for overhead lights, and built drainage systems for the outdoor fields. Soon crews will start building the foundation of the building and prepare to place the dome. A new General Manager was added to the Sports Park team today. Brandon Doherty will lead the facilities team for the rest of the construction, and when the building is completed.

* PJ Star | Peoria’s Brat Summer? Pop star Charli XCX shares TikTok while rehearsing in Illinois: Iconic English singer and songwriter Charli XCX — whose album Brat was a pop culture phenomenon this summer — was apparently in Peoria, Illinois, this week while rehearsing for her upcoming tour with fellow pop star Troye Sivan. The two filmed a TikTok on the streets of Downtown Peoria, posted Monday, in which the duo walks down Main Street near the intersection of Perry Avenue. The words “sweat tour rehearsals lfg” are on screen.

*** National ***

* WaPo | 42 state AGs endorse federal plan to add warning labels on social media: A coalition of over 40 state attorneys general urged Congress on Tuesday to place labels on social media platforms warning of their potential risks to children, rallying substantial bipartisan support behind a proposal championed by U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy. In a June op-ed, Murthy called on federal lawmakers to pass legislation authorizing the placement of tobacco-style surgeon general’s labels “stating that social media is associated with significant mental health harms for adolescents.” Murthy said the move would help tackle concerns that social media is fueling real-world harms among kids and teens.

* WaPo | Elon Musk’s misleading election claims reach millions and alarm election officials: A separate analysis found that 50 of Musk’s false or misleading claims about the U.S. election between Jan. 1 and July 31 were debunked by independent fact-checkers and still generated almost 1.2 billion views, according to a recent study from the Center for Countering Digital Hate. None displayed community notes, X’s term for user-generated fact checks that Musk has promised serve as an “immediate way to refute anything false” that is posted on the platform.

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Energy Storage Now!

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

Officials announced Tuesday they will move 1,200 migrants out of three shelters across Chicago as the crisis that has sent nearly 48,000 men, women and children to the city from the southern border enters a new phase.

Shelters in Little Village and in the West Loop will close Oct. 1 and a shelter in Hyde Park will close Oct. 24. All of the residents will be offered space in one of the 14 shelters the city will continue to operate, officials said.

In all, the closures of the shelters at 2241 S. Halsted Ave., 344 N. Ogden Ave. and 4900 S. Lake Shore Drive will reduce the city’s migrant shelter capacity by more than 3,000 beds.

After the three shelters close, the city will have approximately 2,000 additional beds, officials said. That will ensure that the city could handle an unanticipated surge in the final eight weeks before the presidential election, officials said.

* WCIA

The Springfield government has stopped its effort to criminalize homelessness.

An ordinance filed by Springfield mayor Misty Buscher and Alderwoman Lakeisha Purchase to set up fines for “public camping” was filed for emergency passage last week. After hours of public comment, the council decided to remove the emergency passage language and scheduled to discuss it further at the committee.

Now, they do not want the ordinance considered at Tuesday evening’s Committee of the Whole meeting.

“We understand and respect the concerns raised by local advocacy groups, stakeholders, and members of our community regarding Ordinance 2024-376,” they said in a joint statement Tuesday. “In light of these concerns, we, as sponsors of the ordinance, have decided to request that the ordinance be withdrawn from committee consideration.”

*** Statewide ***

* Fox 2 Now | Over 180 electric vehicle charging ports to be built along Illinois interstates: Gov. JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Transportation announced Monday that the state will be investing $25.3 million in vehicle charging stations. According to a news release, the grants will be going toward the construction of 182 new charging stations along Illinois interstates. Madison County will receive $649,240 in grants to install charging ports.

* The Atlantic | Why Police Officers Rarely Change Jobs: Why do police officers like Grayson keep getting hired? Part of the answer comes from today’s guest, UChicago law professor John Rappaport, whose research on “wandering officers” revealed the extent to which previously fired officers find jobs in new departments and the structural incentives of small departments to keep hiring them.

* Farm Week Now | Monarch sightings vary across Illinois: With monarch butterfly populations reported at historically low ranges last winter, experts and gardeners watched closely to see what that would mean to this summer’s populations in Illinois. Reports have been mixed with some people noting an absence of the colorful butterflies. “In Clark County, we’re pretty consistent with butterfly numbers this year,” said Don Guinnip, who has been active with sustainability and environmental issues with various commodity groups and farm organizations for years.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago Parking Meters LLC accused of violating city’s minority participation requirements: The 75-year lease requires CPM to utilize certified minority- and women-owned businesses for “at least 25% of annual expenses tied to operating the parking meter system, excluding construction contracts.” But that’s not what has happened. From 2011 to 2018, CPM “claimed MBE credit for a vendor that was not MBE-certified,” Witzburg said.

* Sun-Times | Jury awards $50 million to Chicago man who spent 10 years in prison after wrongful conviction: Brown was convicted at age 18, and spent around 10 years in prison before being exonerated in 2018. Information used to convict Brown was “obtained in clear violation of law,” the suit stated, continuing a pattern of Chicago police detectives using coercive interrogation tactics and targeting young Black men. The lawsuit argued that the defendants violated Brown’s fifth and 14th amendment rights by conducting an unconstitutional interrogation and infringing on Brown’s right to due process.

* Block Club | CTA Worker Who Witnessed Red Line Shooting Says Agency Leaders ‘Don’t Care About Our Safety’: “A manager insulted me right after, asking if it was because I owed somebody some money,” said Griffin, who was uninjured and now taking leave. Griffin said he had voiced concerns “ignored by management” that it was unsafe for switch workers to clock in and out at odd hours at the station instead of their work location a block away, which is inaccessible to the public.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Public Schools fires sports director David Rosengard: Rosengard’s time in charge was mired by several basketball scandals. In March, five Kenwood players, head coach Mike Irvin and two assistant coaches were ruled ineligible for violating Illinois High School Association rules. Chicago Public Schools’ Office of the Inspector General presented evidence and documents to the IHSA on Jan. 25 that revealed potential residency rules violations for multiple Kenwood basketball players. The IHSA investigated further.

* Tribune | Art Institute announces $75 million gift to create new gallery building on Michigan Avenue campus: The largest single naming gift in the Art Institute’s history will create the Aaron I. Fleischman and Lin Lougheed Building, which will house the museum’s collection of late 19th century modern and contemporary art, according to a news release. While the design and location have yet to be finalized, the building will offer “spectacular views of the park, the city and the lake,” and begin the process of “re-envisioning” the campus layout as part of a five-year old conceptual plan, according to the news release.

* Crain’s | JPMorgan Chase loans $10 million to jump-start South, West Side affordable housing projects: The loan is part of a broader commitment the financial giant made beginning in 2017 to provide $200 million in philanthropic capital and low-cost loans to address decades of disinvestment in Chicago’s poorest neighborhoods. The investment is modeled on an effort Chase pioneered in Detroit to help restore that city. CCLF, a nonprofit providing financial and technical assistance for community development, can leverage the capital from the loan multiple times over, creating as much as $40 million in financing for community projects, said Kevin Goldsmith, managing director of community development tax credits and intermediaries lending at JPMorgan Chase.

* WGN | Lincoln Square martial arts studio hit by vandals twice in 2 months; CAIR calls on CPD to investigate as hate crime: The studio’s owner, Eddie Redzovic, is a well-known YouTuber on The Deen Show where he frequently talks about his Muslim faith. […] The Center for American Islamic Relations, or CAIR, is calling on the Chicago Police Department to investigate this latest incident, and another nearby, as possible hate crimes. “It’s really concerning to us because we just got a case from the Muslim Community Center, about 10 minute walk from here, that something very similar happened to them a few days ago. If you look at the security footage, it appears to be the same car. Kind of the same manner in which the attack was taken out. So we’re very suspicious of this that this is the same person,” said Maggie Slavin of CAIR Chicago.

* Crain’s | Southwest Airlines cuts more flights at O’Hare: The low-cost carrier is flying about 14 flights on peak days at O’Hare, down from 18 in June, according to data from aviation-research firm Cirium. The cutback comes after a reduction in summer flying, which the carrier blamed in part on delays in getting new aircraft from Boeing. The new schedule is less than half the capacity Southwest was offering a year ago. The airline says the changes are in response to customer demand but “we remain committed to serving our Chicago-area customers from the airport they prefer.”

* Crain’s | Law firm planting new flag on Wacker Drive, cutting office footprint: The deal adds to the space-shedding movement that has battered downtown office landlords since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and fueled a historic wave of distressed properties in the heart of the city. It also shows how the newest and most-updated office buildings continue to outperform older ones as companies hunt for workspace that will help get employees to work in-person rather than remotely on a more regular basis.

* Block Club | Could Chicago’s Next Weird Tourist Attraction Be This Purse Full Of Lucky Charms?: Chicagoans are already going out of their way to visit the Lucky Charms purse, making sure the unofficial art installation remains undisturbed. […] A Block Club reporter checked out the Lucky Charms purse Monday afternoon and confirmed it was still hanging from the pole, undisturbed.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | S&C Electric opens massive Palatine manufacturing facility amid growing electric grid demand: Longtime Chicago company S&C Electric Co. held a ribbon cutting Tuesday to officially unveil its massive facility in Palatine that will meet the growing demand for its products and help increase its innovation efforts. The 275,000-square-foot manufacturing facility at 200 Sellstrom Drive opened earlier this year, and the company has steadily moved some of its production from Rogers Park, where it’s headquartered, over to the facility.

* Sun-Times | Ford Heights mayor’s corruption case is nearing a conclusion — six years after he was charged: Six years after Ford Heights Mayor Charles Griffin was charged with embezzling nearly $150,000 from the tiny cash-strapped south suburb, his case could soon come to a conclusion. A trial before Cook County Judge James Obbish quietly got started in recent months and, after a break in June, is slated to resume next Monday.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | ‘Our blood bleeds the same.’ Favoritism of former police sergeant cited at crash: Jason Rule said Monday he started following Farley and Hopkins around Taylor Avenue at Stevenson Drive going towards the lake. Rule witnessed the accident, including Egan swerving from the driving lane across the turn lane into the Anchor Boat Club. […] “It was just atrocious to see everything that happened and the way they treated that guy. He’s laughing and smiling and giving high fives and dabs, laughing about the whole thing. It was ridiculous.

* WCBU | Peoria, East Peoria mayors tight-lipped on potential casino move: Speaking at the unveiling of a new downtown mural Tuesday, Peoria Mayor Rita Ali declined to speak at length about the city attempting to persuade Boyd to relocate the casino. “There’s an agreement that was signed many years ago that if land-based casinos were to come to this area, that they would be in Peoria. That’s basically all I have to say about that,” Ali said.

* WCIA | 50-pound pumpkin stolen from FFA plot of Rantoul school: Todd Wilson, the principal of Rantoul Township High School, posted on his Facebook page that a 50-pound pumpkin was stolen from the plot. Along with the theft of the pumpkin, Wilson said the vines of the plot were trampled, which he sarcastically called “a nice touch,” and “might make it easier for us to harvest the other pumpkins and gourds.”

*** National ***

* IGN | A Prominent Accessibility Advocate Worked With Studios and Inspired Change. But She Never Actually Existed.: According to the source, Craven allegedly received gifts and consistent praise and attention every time he would post about Bank’s ailments or recoveries. In order to prevent any legal ramifications, particularly if Craven was misleading clients, the source hired a private investigator, a retired Chicago police officer, who previously worked with an associate of the source. The goal of the investigation was to find concrete proof of Banks’ existence. Several days later, the investigator returned with no information. No immigration record, address, employment record, marriage license, or birth certificate was found. Banks, according to the investigator, was not a real person. IGN received the receipt of the investigation and can confirm the source was billed for these services.

* FOX Chicago | Recall of eggs, apple juice and deli meat: Recent list over various health concerns: The Boar’s Head recall involving more than 7 million pounds of deli meat is the most serious among the recent grocery recalls. The meats were recalled over serious listeria concerns. At least nine people have died and another 57 have been hospitalized, according to U.S. officials, marking the largest listeria outbreak since the 2011 outbreak linked to cantaloupe.

* NYT | Doctors Give Black Women Unneeded C-Sections to Fill Operating Rooms, Study Suggests: That’s the conclusion of a new report of nearly one million births in 68 hospitals in New Jersey, one of the largest studies to tackle the subject. Even if a Black mother and a white mother with similar medical histories saw the same doctor at the same hospital, the Black mother was about 20 percent more likely to have her baby via C-section, the study found.


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Another day, another Henyard revelation

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WGN last week

South suburban politician Tiffany Henyard threw a party over the weekend that included a heavy serving of damage control. […]

The event was promoted as the “Friends of Tiffany A. Henyard Picnic,” which immediately set off alarm bells among her opponents, who noted that “Friends of Tiffany A. Henyard” is also the name of the embattled politician’s campaign fund. […]

Trustees in Dolton – where Henyard is the mayor – and in Thornton Township – where she’s the supervisor – tried to block efforts to have public money pay for the gathering. […]

Henyard’s attorney, Beau Brindley, tells WGN Investigates the picnic was not a campaign event and that Henyard paid for some of the food provided out of her own personal funds.

She may have picked up part of the food tab herself, but taxpayers paid for the bulk of it.

* WGN today

WGN Investigates filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act for expenses related to the one day event. Records show Keke Wyatt was paid $30,000 to sing for 30 minutes. J. Holiday was paid $20,000 for a half-hour set. The township spent $6,600 to rent inflatable bounce houses. Other costs billed to township taxpayers include for everything from comedians to a sound system, staff to equipment and bring the total to at least $85,769. […]

Henyard has defended her taxpayer funded events as important to the 17 suburbs the township covers. “This is all for the babies,” Henyard said in a Facebook video she posted from the event. “They don’t show you this side of Tiffany Henyard: The productivity.” Her lawyer did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

After a year’s worth of WGN Investigates reporting detailing first-class travel, meals and more that’s now sparked a federal investigation, trustees in the two governments run by Henyard have tried to stop the spending. […]

Most of the contracts for the Taste of Thornton Township were signed before trustees put spending controls in place.

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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In less than one year, a new law will create credit card chaos for millions of Illinois consumers, small business owners and workers who rely on tips. The law changes how your credit card is processed and has never been done anywhere in the world. The end result is windfall for corporate mega-stores paid for through costly operational hurdles for small businesses and a loss of convenience and privacy for consumers who could have to pay tax and gratuity with cash. There’s still time to protect Illinois small business owners, consumers and workers by repealing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act now! For more information, visit guardyourcard.com/Illinois.

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Pritzker says he has not had any discussions with city about its budget deficit

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* First, some background from the Sun-Times

Mayor Brandon Johnson on Monday froze hiring and travel in all city departments — including police and fire — and eliminated overtime “not directly required for public safety operations” to begin to confront Chicago’s burgeoning budget crisis. […]

He’s got just four months to fill a $223 million gap in 2024 caused, in large part, by the Chicago Board of Education’s refusal to absorb a $175 million pension payment for non-teaching school employees. After that, Johnson faces a $982.4 million deficit in 2025.

The mayor has warned “sacrifices will be made.” Those sacrifices will include freezing hiring at a $2 billion-a-year Chicago Police Department that already is roughly 2,000 sworn officers short of the strength it had just a few years ago.

It also means no new hires at the $663.8 million-a-year Chicago Fire Department, which is so short of paramedics and ambulances, the 80 ambulances it does have are “running night and day,” according to Pat Cleary, president of Chicago Fire Fighters Union Local 2.

* From the governor’s Q&A today

Q: Have you had any discussions with the City of Chicago about their budget, if they’re seeking any help or relief from the state?

Pritzker: No.

Q: No?

Pritzker: They have not approached us about any of it. I’ve read things in the newspaper by, I think, mostly by advocates, not really the city, about what they might want. But, no.

Q: Is that something your budget team is discussing on concentrating?

Pritzker: as you know, we don’t plan our next budget until you know, I introduce it in February and I don’t think there’ll be any supplemental that’ll be discussing what the city would want, that we haven’t been asked.

Q: How are you feeling about that deficit that we’re dealing with a higher increase, Governor, I’m assuming [you have] an eye on that?

Pritzker: Well, listen, we’ve faced a lot of challenges at the state level. As you know, when I came into office, we had a lot of bills to pay off. We had to balance the budget anyway. And then, you know, we’ve managed, sometimes through tough times. You may remember, mid-year we had to cut $700 million from our budget because, frankly, revenues were going off a cliff during COVID. So we’ve been in situations like this. It’s very, very difficult and challenging, but you know, it’s something you can tough your way through, and then you’ve got to plan for years to come. You know how you’re going to manage the balanced budgets going forward without, you know, raising, broadly, taxes on the people of Illinois, and we managed to do that.

Q: The mayor’s been calling your name out and that of the state saying ‘Billion dollars, if the state cared they’d come up with it.’ Do you feel like they’re trying to make you the punching bag?

Pritzker: All I know is that I think mostly they’ve been talking about education dollars, and I’m the first person to want to put dollars into education. So if we had extra money, it would go to education. But remember, Chicago is 20 percent of the population of Illinois, so when we put money into education, it’s got to go to the other 80 percent also. And so we are, we always look to do that. We’ve been increasing education spending at the state level already during my tenure, if you include higher education, to $3 billion and so if we had extra dollars, believe me, that’s the first place we would look to put it.

Q: Is that causing a rift in your relationship at all, though? I mean, he’s using your name in public spaces like this…

Pritzker: Well, I know that the press likes to talk about some rift. The mayor and I actually get along very well. And there are challenges that we both have dealing with, you know, making sure we balance our budgets. And so I know how difficult this situation is, and I certainly sympathize with it. The State of Illinois provides billions of dollars to the city of Chicago every single year, and we’re going to continue to do that, but we can’t just, you know, snap our fingers and somehow money, we don’t print money at the state level, as you know, they do at the federal level, but at the state level, we can’t do that. We just have to make sure we’re, you know, getting through these difficult times.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* Quick video of that first question and his super-rare one-word response

Heh.

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Pritzker doesn’t think city and state currently need as much migrant shelter capacity

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune reporter…


* Gov. Pritzker was asked by a reporter whether that means no more migrants were coming or whether the state was going to close its shelters as well

Look, we’ve been prepared for the idea that Texas, that the governor of Texas, is going to, as he has, in a way that I find reprehensible, just load people onto busses and send them to cities. So we’re always prepared for the idea that that could happen. It hasn’t happened. It appears that the number of people crossing the border has been significantly diminished because of the policies of the Harris/Biden administration. And so I feel like, you know, we’ve got to be prepared and have some capacity, but I don’t think quite as much capacity as we had needed before. So hopefully that reduces some expenditures by the city, the county and the state. But importantly, we’ve got to be ready for, you know what is a humanitarian crisis if it comes.

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Rate the Nagel ad

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I told subscribers about this ad last week. Here you go

* Script

Hi, I’m Phil Nagel. As the son of a steelworker, a father and an Air Force veteran, I am nothing like that guy, Patrick Joyce, a career politician only looking out for himself. Joyce is controlled by the Chicago party bosses who gave him multiple pay hikes while we struggle. Joyce loves to raise our taxes but failed to pay his five separate times. Want to lower the cost of living? He’s not your guy. I’m Phil Nagel. Together, let’s change Springfield.

* I’m not sure how three of these folks had anything to do with Joyce’s Senate salary, but this is from the spot…

Nagel lost to Joyce by 10 points two years ago.

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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.

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Jury selection underway in the trial of former AT&T boss La Schiazza

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Jury selection is set to begin Tuesday in the trial of former AT&T Illinois president Paul La Schiazza, who federal prosecutors allege bribed once-powerful Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan in exchange for favorable legislation in Springfield.

It’s the last in a series of related trials that have played out in Chicago’s Dirksen Federal Courthouse over the last 18 months leading up to Madigan’s own bribery and racketeering trial, which is scheduled to begin Oct. 8. A jury last year convicted four former executives and lobbyists for electric utility Commonwealth Edison on charges that they bribed Madigan with jobs and contracts for his allies over a nine-year period to help the utility win its legislative battles.

La Schiazza is accused of a similar scheme, albeit much smaller in scale. Instead of dozens of jobs and contracts for Madigan allies, AT&T’s alleged bribery involved the utility funneling payments to one man: former Democratic state Rep. Eddie Acevedo, who was also a subcontractor lobbyist for ComEd for nearly a decade.

Acevedo, who allegedly did little to no work for either utility, already served a brief stint in prison for tax evasion connected to the larger federal probe of Madigan’s world and is expected to testify in the former speaker’s trial.

CNI’s Hannah Meisel is in the courtroom today.

* The Sun-Times’ federal court reporter Jon Seidel


* Tribune

Among the new evidence will be testimony from former Madigan insider Tom Cullen, a lobbyist who prosecutors allege served as a go-between for the payments from AT&T to former state Rep. Edward Acevedo. Another witness, former AT&T lobbyist Stephen Selcke, is expected to offer a behind-the-scenes look at the utility’s efforts to get in Madigan’s good graces.

Prosecutors also want the jury to see email exchanges showing Madigan’s son, Andrew, asked La Schiazza to sponsor a nonprofit event in July 2017, less than two weeks after AT&T Illinois’ bill to end mandated landline service became law, allegedly with his father’s assistance.

Andrew Madigan wrote that the idea came “at the suggestion of our good friend, Mike McClain,” a former lobbyist and Madigan’s longtime confidant, according to a prosecution filing earlier this year. La Schiazza forwarded the request to a colleague in the legislative affairs department on July 12, 2017, writing “this will be endless,” according to the filing.

“I suspect the ‘thank you’ opportunities will be plentiful,’” the colleague allegedly emailed back, referring to the recent passage of AT&T’s coveted landline legislation, known by the acronym COLR, which was expected to save the company millions of dollars.

“Yep,” La Schiazza allegedly responded. “We are on the friends and family plan now.”

* Sun-Times

Prosecutors say that quip helps prove the $22,500 amounted to a bribe. But soon, it’ll be up to a jury to decide whether they’re right. La Schiazza faces trial Tuesday on a five-count indictment handed up in October 2022 amid the feds’ larger Madigan prosecution.

The trial, expected to take three weeks, is the last of a series of trials set to play out before Madigan faces his own racketeering trial Oct. 8. The once-powerful Southwest Side Democrat is also charged in the alleged scheme involving La Schiazza and AT&T Illinois. The utility previously agreed to pay a $23 million fine.

Other key players in La Schiazza’s case include Madigan’s longtime confidant, Michael McClain, and former state Rep. Edward “Eddie” Acevedo, recipient of the $22,500.

Acevedo, who allegedly did no work for that money, already has gone to prison for tax evasion. McClain faces trial alongside Madigan next month over the AT&T allegations and other charges.

But La Schiazza’s defense attorney argues his indictment is flawed. Tinos Diamantatos has said it “does not allege that Madigan even knew of AT&T’s hiring of Acevedo.” There’s no evidence of a so-called “quid pro quo,” he said, nor that La Schiazza knew he was acting unlawfully.

  7 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Head of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s legislative affairs team resigns amid staff shakeup. Crain’s

    - Sydney Holman, the city’s deputy mayor of intergovernmental affairs, submitted her resignation yesterday.
    - According to sources, two of Homan’s deputies also left the team as part of a larger upheaval within the close-knit team charged with building relationships across the City Council and whipping votes to secure Johnson’s progressive agenda.
    - The mayor’s office circulated an internal organizational chart late last week that showed Holman’s team and staffers in community engagement would report to Kennedy Bartley, a leader in Johnsons’ progressive movement hired into the administration in May. Holman had previously resisted having to report to Bartley.

* Related stories…

Governor Pritzker will be at the Aspire Center for Workforce Innovation at 12:30 pm for a grant award presentation. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WCIA | By the numbers: Illinois State Fair Grandstand Acts: WCIA obtained the number of tickets sold for each Grandstand Act at the 2024 Illinois State Fair from the Illinois Department of Agriculture. After the record breaking crowd for Lil Wayne’s concert, the next most popular acts were the pop boy band Jonas Brothers with 9,952, then country singers Keith Urban with 8,778 and Miranda Lambert with 8,216.

* SJ-R | Former Springfield police sergeant arrested after crash as residents protest: Michael A. Egan, 50, has been charged with aggravated DUI causing great bodily harm, a Class 4 felony. Authorities said Egan’s vehicle was traveling northbound on East Lake Shore Drive and made a left turn in front of a motorcycle which crashed into Egan’s SUV. Egan was taken into custody by Illinois State Police troopers and U.S. Marshals around 12:45 p.m. Monday. Egan will make his first appearance in Sangamon County Tuesday afternoon.

* RIP James Earl Jones



*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | When it comes to funding state-level campaigns, Pritzker in a league of his own: Even though he’s not running now, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has donated a whopping $25 million to his campaign committee this election cycle, according to Illinois State Board of Elections data. None of the Illinois residents on the nonprofit group OpenSecrets’ list of Top 100 donors at the federal level comes close to that kind of in-state giving ahead of the Nov. 5 election.

* WGEM | New Illinois law mandates coverage for medically necessary jaw treatments: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker (D) signed legislation Aug. 9 requiring insurance companies cover all medically necessary treatments for major jaw injuries. This includes oral and facial surgery, dental implants and prosthetics. “This law closes a major loophole for patients requiring necessary medical treatments for a life-threatening disease. It ensures that in a time of crisis, no one has to experience financial roadblocks to receiving medical care,” said state Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview, the bill’s Senate sponsor.

* SJ-R | Insurance coverage of abortion care protected by Illinois judge. What to know: A Sangamon County judge upheld a provision of the Illinois Reproductive Health Act in a ruling last week, maintaining that state-regulated health insurance plans that cover pregnancy care must also do so for abortion services. The Illinois Baptist State Association filed suit in 2020 against the law passed by state lawmakers in the prior year, claiming it violated their religious beliefs. Named in the suit was the Illinois Department of Insurance.

* Sun-Times | After Georgia school shooting, Illinois lawmakers, firearms safety advocates push stronger gun storage law: Illinois Democrats are calling for stronger gun storage legislation just days after 14-year-old Colt Gray allegedly killed two teachers and two students at a Georgia high school with an AR-15 style rifle purchased by his father. The legislation, sponsored by state Sen. Laura Ellman, D-Naperville, and state Rep. Maura Hirschauer, D-Batavia, would require gun owners to securely lock weapons in homes with anyone aged 18 or younger. Current state law requires storage in homes with those 13 or younger. Similar legislation was introduced in the spring session, but Hirschauer said she’s hoping to pass a new version — with some changes negotiated with Gov. JB Pritzker’s office, during the November veto session or in early January.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Wheatland Tube closes Southwest Side plant, will lay off nearly 250 workers: Wheatland Tube reported the closure of its 4435 S. Western Blvd. factory in accordance with Illinois’ Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, which requires companies to report certain mass layoffs and plant closures two months in advance. Layoffs at the factory will begin about Nov. 1 and continue on a rolling basis through next year, a company spokesperson said. The company did not provide an exact date on which the factory would close.

* Block Club | Cleaning Up Contaminated Acme Steel Site Could Take Years, Feds Say As Neighbors Focus On Its Future: The property is contaminated, threatening nearby wetlands and waterways, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Neighbors may be exposed to contamination if they trespass on the site, officials said. Past studies and cleanups have found compounds which can cause cancer, reproductive disorders and nervous and immune system issues, as well as soil contaminated with cyanide.

* WTTW | Chicago Taxpayers Have Already Paid $1.1M to Fight Lawsuit Filed by Family of Adam Toledo as Trial Approaches: Chicago taxpayers have already paid more than $1.1 million to fight a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of Adam Toledo, the 13-year-old shot and killed by a Chicago police officer after a brief foot chase in March 2021, according to documents obtained by WTTW News. Three and a half years after Adam’s death spurred demonstrations and renewed calls for police reform, the lawsuit filed by his parents is set to go to trial Nov. 6, ramping up the pressure on lawyers for the city to negotiate a settlement in the high-profile case or face the possibility of a trial that could lead to a multimillion-dollar jury verdict.

* ABC Chicago | Jury awards $50M to man who spent 10 years in prison for Chicago murder he didn’t commit: Marcel Brown sued the City of Chicago, alleging he was coerced into making a false confession to an August 2008 murder. […] Brown was released from prison in 2018 after his sentence was vacated.

* Tribune | Chicago White Sox are ‘not going to rush into anything’ regarding managerial search, says GM Chris Getz: “I think if you would have told me (before the season) we were going to end up flirting with the (major-league) record (for losses) I would have been a little surprised,” Getz said Monday afternoon at Guaranteed Rate Field. “Now if you would have told me prior to the year that we would have ended up with over 100 losses, 105, 110, I wouldn’t have been as surprised. But this is the cards that we’ve been dealt at this point.

* WGN | Angel Reese uses social media to explain wrist injury that will sideline her the rest of WNBA season: “I fell on my hand when I got the and-one, when I fell back (and) fell on my hand and it is a small crack in my bone,” Reese said in a video posted to her TikTok late Sunday night. “Basically, the doctors told me that I could either not get surgery or have surgery. The risk of not having surgery – I could literally have arthritis at 22 years old. That wasn’t an option. The bone could literally crack and completely shatter. Right now, it’s like a hairline… They’re going to put a small screw in it. And I wasn’t going for it getting any bigger.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Union says Palatine wrongfully terminated public works employee: The International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150, AFL-CIO, announced it has filed a grievance in the termination of Charles Swanson, a seven-year employee. In a release, the union said the “village’s actions raise questions of workplace fairness and the value shown to employees working at the municipality.” Swanson suffered a workplace injury that required back surgery in January 2023, the union said.

* Daily Herald | Lake Zurich sales tax hike to help defray cost of $154 million Lake Michigan project: Village officials recently authorized a local sales tax increase of 0.5% to help defray scheduled rate increases associated with a pending switch to Lake Michigan water. The increase will bring the municipal sales tax rate to 1% or a penny on every dollar of goods sold in town. The overall sales tax rate will increase to 8% as it is in Buffalo Grove, Deer Park, Barrington and Highland Park for comparison. Village officials say the rate increase will generate an additional $2.5 million annually to be used for project-related expenses and debt service of the $154 million Lake Michigan water project.

* Daily Herald | Judge denies Mount Prospect’s request to halt operations at malodorous business: A Cook County judge Monday denied Mount Prospect’s emergency request for a temporary restraining order against animal feed producer Prestige Feed Products. Although the village provided ample testimony from neighbors about noxious odors reaching them from the plant at 431 Lakeview Court in Mount Prospect, Circuit Judge Clare Quish said the facts did not show “irreparable harm” without the emergency relief.

* Daily Southtown | Sept. 11 ceremonies set for some south and south suburban communities: Observances are planned in some south and southwest suburbs Wednesday in remembrance of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 1, 2001. Southland communities will gather at firehouses, city halls and memorials to observe the 23rd anniversary of the attack, which killed nearly 3,000 people after al-Qaida hijackers sent two planes into New York’s World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon and another into a field in Pennsylvania.

* Daily Herald | ‘Big Boy’ chugs through the suburbs, delighting observers: Thousands of spectators lined the tracks to photograph and view 4014’s passage. It is the second time massive black-and-graphite painted “Big Boy” has visited the area — the first was in 2019, shortly after the engine’s restoration to service. Sporting a 4-8-8-4 articulated wheel arrangement and stretching to a length of more than 132 feet, the engine is one of 25 examples of the largest successful steam locomotive ever built and is the only one of the eight remaining operable. The locomotives were produced by the American Locomotive Company between 1941 and 1944 and used by the UP for heavy freight service on Sherman Hill, west of Cheyenne, Wyoming.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Family of motorcycle crash victims meets with mayor and police: Caitlin Weiss and Cicely Leonetti — Farley’s sisters — said that she is currently sedated and on a ventilator. “We have a huge road to recovery.” explained Weiss. “He completely smashed my sister, so her pelvis was completely broken as an open loop fracture. She had broke her hip. She’s broke her clavicles and, maybe some internal organ injuries that they found when they opened [her] up during surgery.”

* Herald-Whig | Southern Airways officially objects to city request for new airline, denies safety issues: In a new letter to the U.S. Department of Transportation, Southern Airways Express objects to a request for the early termination of its contract with the city of Quincy. “Southern fully intends on not only serving the remainder of our current contract but also garnering (public support) as airline proposals are reviewed (for the next contract period),” reads the Sept. 4 letter from Southern Airways Chief of Staff Keith Sisson. “To this end, we respectfully ask the Department to allow the improvements and investment Southern is making in the marketplace to be realized … we implore the Department to resist the urge to comply (with the city of Quincy’s request) as such drastic action would lead to a globally unsustainable and damaging precedent for the EAS program and the airlines which serve its needs.”

* WCIA | Champaign high schools locked down after ‘unfounded’ 911 call of armed person: Officials said that as details of the call developed, the story the caller gave had several inconsistencies. No threat was found, and the lockdowns were lifted at 2:30. The Champaign Police Department is investigating the source of the call and is looking for any information that may assist in the investigation. At this time, no one has been arrested.

* WAND | Unit 4 board approves audit of special education department: Parents and advocates say there is a disconnect between special education teachers and leaders, the school principal, and district officials. One advocate claims an Elementary special education student was assaulted last month, stating during the public comment section, “The audit is a good audit, but its going to take time, and meanwhile we’ve got broken bones. And the same thing that happened to that little boy at Bottenfield, that same system happened again- we did not learn from that boy that was out of school for six months.”

*** National ***

* NYT | He’s Known as ‘Ivan the Troll.’ His 3D-Printed Guns Have Gone Viral: Court documents, corporate records and information posted on his social media accounts link the Ivan the Troll persona to a 26-year-old Illinois gunmaker named John Elik. The nephew of a state representative, Mr. Elik has emerged as one of the most important figures in the nascent international industry of 3D-printed guns. […] Dr. Basra and a security researcher, Nathan Mayer, first linked Mr. Elik to the Ivan the Troll accounts using online clues after he was identified in a lawsuit as an owner of a website promoting 3D-printed guns. The Times replicated and built on that research, using photographs and videos that Mr. Elik posted of his home and shooting ranges on his family’s property, including his aunt’s.

* DNYUZ | Greed, Gluttony and the Crackup of Red Lobster: New management had arrived in 2020 and tried to revive the chain with the corporate version of heart paddles. Thai Union, a seafood giant based in Samut Sakhon, Thailand, administered the shocks in the form of stern lectures, surprise inspections and cost-cutting measures that strained the staff to its breaking point. Now, by unveiling perpetual Endless Shrimp, Thai Union wanted Red Lobster employees to work even harder. “When they dumped this on us in June, we’d already been squeezed to the bone,” said Malcom Clarke, then a service manager at the Red Lobster in Orem, Utah. “We got emails from corporate saying: ‘This is a free-for-all. Get that shrimp out as fast as you can.’”

  33 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and some debate stuff

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.

  1 Comment      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Sep 10, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  1 Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Do better
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

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