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Early afternoon roundup

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…Adding… From the comptroller’s office…

Comptroller Susana A. Mendoza announced Monday that Illinois’ total General Funds accounts payable has been paid down to less than $1 billion for the first time in 15 years.

April is generally the state’s best month fiscally as residents and businesses pay taxes. As of Monday morning, the accounts payable stood at $941 million, the lowest it has been since August 2008.

“Over the 6½ years I have been Comptroller, I have looked for every opportunity to steadily pay the state’s unpaid bills from a high of $16.7 billion – as a result of the budget impasse under a former governor – to where we have been for the past year, which has been generally less than $3 billion,” Comptroller Mendoza said. “That included refinancing some debt at a much lower interest rate and seeking out every opportunity for federal matching funds the state used to leave on the table.”

The steady repayment brought the state’s backlog of bills down to around $3 billion before a penny of the federal ARPA stimulus dollars landed in state coffers. The stimulus dollars went to pay the state’s COVID-related expenses, all of which can be tracked on the Comptroller’s website.

“During the impasse, state vendors often had to wait 210 business days to get paid,” Comptroller Mendoza said. “Today, my oldest bill is 16 days old. The state of Illinois is paying faster than the private sector. We’ve been on this shortened payment cycle for more than two years now, proving that Illinois is on a strong path to fiscal stability and predictability.”

* Bond Buyer

Illinois navigated a rocky market to clear its $2.5 billion general obligation sale Wednesday, paying more on the shorter end than its bonds have been trading, but seeing healthy demand on the long end for the newly stamped-A level rated paper.

The mostly tax-exempt transaction took center stage this week amid a total of $11.5 billion of supply. The state received nearly $12 billion of orders on the sale from more than 130 investors including retail buyers, which the state attributed to being “a direct benefit of stronger ratings in the A category,” Paul Chatalas, capital markets director, said in a statement.

Market participants said the oversubscription came on the long end, which was reflected in the repricing to lower yields there in the final pricing scale. Some earlier maturities struggled and additional concessions were needed, reflecting the market’s current appetites and a correction that’s hammered the front end.

I need to find an AI translator to help me figure out what these stories actually mean. /s

* Good news…


"The upgrade reflects our view of the state's financial recovery as well as WIU's stabilized enrollment, improved operations, & improved debt ratios," said analyst Megan Kearns.

— yvette.shields@arizent.com (@Yvette_BB) April 19, 2023

* Missouri political analyst John Hancock on St. Louis’ Fox 2 regarding JB Pritzker and the presidency

I’ll tell you what he would do from a historical standpoint. He would give William Howard Taft a run for his money.

That comment is basically one step above a common Twitter troll. Difference is, common Twitter trolls don’t get paid for their opinions.

* ComEd Four prosecutor…


She points to McClain's comment to Fidel Marquez at Saputo's on 2/7/19, that if Joe Dominguez has "his ex-prosecutor hat on, he's gonna say we can't do this."

"What more do you need to show that McClain understood exactly the illegality of what is going on?" MacArthur asks.

— Jon Seidel (@SeidelContent) April 24, 2023

But it did continue and Dominguez was never indicted.

* Weighted vote (added back after I cleared up some confusion)…


Here’s the group of Dem committeepeople who will be filling the Senate seat to be vacated by ⁦@CPZ4Senate⁩ as she joins the Johnson administration.
@ward32chicago⁩ edges out ⁦@ClerkIYMartinez⁩ for the biggest vote share & will control the process. pic.twitter.com/DBPiFdE9n3

— Alex Nitkin (@AlexNitkin) April 24, 2023

* Good news at NEIU…

The following is a joint statement from the Northeastern Illinois University Board of Trustees Chairman Jose Rico, Northeastern Illinois University President Gloria J. Gibson, and NEIU UPI President Nancy Matthews, Ph.D.

After a productive bargaining session today, we are pleased to announce that the university has reached a tentative agreement with the faculty union, UPI Local 4100. The union’s members will vote on ratification of the tentative agreement in the coming days, after which further details will be available.

* Press release…

State Rep. Sonya M. Harper, D-Chicago, is inviting citizens and stakeholders alike to the first Illinois Black Farmers & Growers Lobby Day, at the Illinois State Capitol, Wednesday, April 26 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

“Agriculture is Illinois’ largest industry, and no state has a larger percentage of its land area under cultivation than we do,” Harper said. “And yet, we’ve continued to see that this industry faces widespread inequality in terms of access as well as outcomes for those members of minority communities who are a part of it. That has to change, and that’s why I’m leading the push for new policies aimed at promoting equity in agriculture.”

Throughout her career before and since becoming a legislator, Harper has been one of the strongest proponents in the state for policies to promote equitable and expanded access to healthy foods and for equity in the food and agricultural supply chain.

Wednesday’s event will include breakfast, a meet and greet as well as a press conference. Sponsors include the Black Oaks Center, Illinois Stewardship Alliance, Growing Home, Grow Greater Englewood, Urban Growers Collective, Green Era Campus, Cannabis Equity Illinois, Mia’s Heart Hemp Life and State Innovation Exchange. Lt. Governor Julianna Stratton and Director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture Jerry Costello II are also expected to attend.

* Press release…

Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias released his First 100 Days report today, highlighting his administration’s accomplishments since taking office in January.

The 16-page report reflects how the new Secretary has pursued an aggressive agenda to improve customer service, enhance services, protect consumers, and upgrade technology.

From implementing a comprehensive Executive Ethics Order on Day One to finding ways to reduce the Time Tax, which decreases the time spent waiting for government services, and from moving to overhaul the office’s archaic technology systems to pushing an aggressive legislative agenda, Giannoulias’ team has made significant strides to improve the lives of Illinois residents.

Click here for the list.

* I wrote up a piece for subscribers this morning on the Vallas lawsuit after spending part of the weekend kicking over rocks. When I finished, I realized I just didn’t care that much. But I do expect more fireworks in the future…


Even if enyia did what he said — take down signs and put them up — anyone who’d agree to pay $700,000 for that probably can’t manage the nation’s third largest city https://t.co/ZE4t7nUld9

— Gregory Pratt (@royalpratt) April 22, 2023

* Elon’s deliberate chaos has ensnared at least one Illinoisan…


This is EXACTLY my point @elonmusk .
Twitter has become a stain.

You owe @WalshFreedom an apology.
A fake account tweets out something attributing it to Joe Walsh.
Thousands fell for it and retweeted the disinformation.

I know Joe Walsh well.
That's not him. pic.twitter.com/pk0Cco4Drt

— Brian J. Karem (@BrianKarem) April 24, 2023

So Joe Walsh prefers murderering 6,000,000 Jews and millions more innocent civilians to a mean Tweeter. That says more about him than Hitler or Trump. Unexpected honesty of an evil idiot. https://t.co/YFFHwF0Ms9

— Admone (@Admone7) April 24, 2023

* Isabel’s roundup…

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 12:56 pm

Comments

  1. The Twitter impersonation problem will only get worse. Walsh is just one of many in terms of this problem.

    Comment by Friendly Bob Adams Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:01 pm

  2. “But it did continue and Dominguez was never indicted.”

    Not only that, he signed off on the strategy. Just because McClain thought it was kinky, doesn’t mean it was illegal.

    Comment by Bucknell Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:04 pm

  3. IF all the moderates stick together they can appoint a moderate senator. Interesting.

    Comment by regular democrat Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:17 pm

  4. ===IF all the moderates stick together===

    I don’t think there’s enough.

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:32 pm

  5. ==IF all the moderates stick together they can appoint a moderate senator. Interesting.==

    Who are you including as a moderate? I think you should have significant doubts about the ability to keep a coalition with Gardiner together, lol.

    Honestly, tho, this kind of thing usually doesn’t turn on ideology, except to the extent that ideology breeds relationships.

    Comment by Arsenal Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:47 pm

  6. ===But it did continue and Dominguez was never indicted.===

    It did continue and he was not indicted.

    But ComEd pled no contest and paid a $200 million fine. So somebody at ComEd/Exelon decided what its management did was outside the lines enough for it to agree to the plea deal. And IIRC, that’s what cost Dominguez his job.

    It’s important to note that the jury in this case has not heard anything about the ComEd plea arrangement.

    Comment by 47th Ward Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:47 pm

  7. ===I need to find an AI translator to help me figure out what these stories actually mean. /s===

    Like so many other professionals, financial professionals / economists use “confusing” terms to keep outsiders at bay.

    Remember economics professors being “offended” by describing interest rates as the “rental fee” for money. And, like many things, it is set by demand, which can vary over time.

    Comment by Anyone Remember Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 1:51 pm

  8. Reboyras, Cardona, Martinez, Villegas and Gardiner gets u over 22487.

    Comment by regular democrat Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 2:29 pm

  9. regular democrat, I didn’t check when I posted that tweet, but those numbers don’t align with CPZ’s 2022 general election vote.

    Reboyras, Cardona, Martinez and Gardiner gets you 21,292. She got 44,972. According to the Board of Election page, 36 was not part of the district last year.

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 2:54 pm

  10. == During the impasse, state vendors often had to wait 210 business days to get paid. Today, my oldest bill is 16 days old. ==

    The Party of Fiscal Conservatism.

    Comment by H-W Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 3:15 pm

  11. ===Market participants said the oversubscription came on the long end===

    I’ll translate. Oversubscribed means we paid too high of an interest rate to borrow this money. Just like all of the other bond offerings that have been oversubscribed.

    Whoever it is that sets our interest rate on bonds is letting us get screwed out of many of millions of dollars of debt service that we otherwise wouldn’t be paying.

    Our GO Bonds have never been a risky investment instrument. Ever. If there had been any real risk behind those lower bond ratings we wouldn’t have seen them bounce back so quickly but it was always a bunch of malarkey.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 5:08 pm

  12. Corrupted social media outlets are increasingly untrustworthy.

    Comment by Dotnonymous Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 5:16 pm

  13. Saw the northern lights last night; although the display was somewhat muted by the clouds.

    Comment by Pot calling kettle Monday, Apr 24, 23 @ 6:41 pm

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Previous Post: State Labor Board knocks down Chicago’s vax mandate on unionized workers
Next Post: Help Illinois Colleges And Universities Go Green. Support Renewable Energy Credits.


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