Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar


Latest Post | Last 10 Posts | Archives


Previous Post: Pritzker to sign anti-book-ban bill on Monday
Next Post: Reader comments closed for the weekend

Afternoon roundup

Posted in:

* I told subscribers about this a couple of days ago

The Illinois House Speaker’s Office says it’s been informed that the complaints against state Rep. Jonathan Carroll “have been resolved and closed” by the “ Legislative Inspector General’s office and determined “unsubstantiated.” Capitol Fax’s Rich Miller scooped the story.

Carroll was accused by former staffer Elly Fawcett-Neal of wrongly firing her because she was pregnant. Carroll had denied the accusations. (See The Buzz.) He did not immediately return a request for comment Thursday.

Carroll has already been appointed chair of the House Police and Fire Committee after being sidelined from a leadership position while the IG investigation was going on.

Still outstanding: Fawcett-Neal told Playbook her complaint is still being investigated by the EEOC and the Illinois Human Rights Commission. “I stand by everything I reported. I think his appointment is premature,” she told Playbook.

* Gov. JB Pritzker signed 90 bills into law today. Click here for the list. RIP my inbox.

* Muddy River News

QUINCY — A Texas man who is the founder of Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn will speak Friday night in Father McGivney Hall at the Knights of Columbus, 700 S. 36th, about the process for achieving a city ordinance that would call for prohibiting abortions in Quincy, a move that would be in direct conflict with state law.

Mark Lee Dickson is a director with Right to Life of East Texas and calls himself a pro-life activist. He claims to have helped 67 cities and two counties in the United States pass ordinances outlawing abortion. The first was in Waskom, Texas, which lies on the border with Louisiana. Waskom has no abortion clinic, but the City Council decided in June 2019 that prohibiting abortion was necessary as a preventive measure.

“What a Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn ordinance does is goes as far as (one) possibly can go in an effort to keep abortion out of a community,” Dickson said in a phone interview. “(Friday night’s) interest meeting will establish the background of what these ordinances do and what the process would look like if they’re in Quincy. Any abortion provider that wants to set up shop in Quincy would not be allowed to under these ordinances.”

Danville is the only sanctuary city in Illinois. City Council members were split 7-7 at a May 2 meeting on an ordinance that would impose fines on anyone shipping or receiving abortion pills or supplies in the mail. Mayor Rickey Williams Jr. made the tie-breaking “yes” vote. […]

“I think it is time for Illinois to let Gov. Pritzker know just how pro-life Illinois really is,” Dickson said.

Somebody is gonna learn something, but I’m not sure it’s that.

* Media advisory…

Harvey city employees to protest Mayor Clark’s refusal to bargain new union contract

Fighting for a new union contract seven years since the last agreement expired—and more than eight years since their last across-the-board pay increase, in January 2015—city of Harvey employees plan to leaflet outside and speak at Monday night’s City Council meeting. […]

Background
About 30 Harvey city workers—primarily public works employees as well as clerical employees in various departments—are represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 2404.

The local’s last contract with Harvey expired in 2016. Three years later, Christopher Clark took office as mayor; his promises of reform after his predecessor’s tenure included finally settling a new agreement. But now, in his second term in office, Mayor Clark refuses to even meet for contract negotiations. The parties last met in November; the city cancelled bargaining dates in December and March, and has refused to schedule any since.

Citing this pattern, the Illinois Labor Relations Board last week issued a complaint against the city of Harvey for failing and refusing to bargain in good faith, a violation of state labor law.

* This week

The Cook County state’s attorney’s office announced Tuesday it will no longer object to waiving court fees for low-income defendants, a move it said was aimed at reducing racial disparities in the criminal justice system.

“One of the tragedies of the criminal justice system is that a disproportionate amount of its financing is shouldered by people of color and those living in poverty,” State’s Attorney Kim Foxx said in a statement. “Rather than end the cycles of racial disparities and criminalization, fees and fines perpetuate them.”

Fines and fees are used to cover court expenses.

That’s odd because more than five years ago, the Illinois Criminal and Traffic Assessment Act set up a procedure for people to request a full or partial waiver of criminal fees and fines based on their inability to pay. Foxx the progressive is only now getting on board?

* I totally understand despising someone for what they’ve done to others. I will never understand hating someone simply because of how they’re born…


That company has really come a long way from firing all their openly gay employees in the early 1990s https://t.co/6Pr4BHwTA6

— Capitol Fax (@capitolfax) June 9, 2023

* Isabel’s roundup…

posted by Rich Miller
Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:24 pm

Comments

  1. When Cracker Barrel and Chick Fil A are too liberal for you….whew.

    Comment by Flyin' Elvis'-Utah Chapter Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:29 pm

  2. “Knights of Columbus” […] ” call for prohibiting abortions in Quincy, a move that would be in direct conflict with state law.”

    Another fine Catholic organization, usurping our public institutions for their internal religious goals.

    Make it a rule in your little club, and that’s fine. This theocracy for all nonsense has to stop.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:38 pm

  3. Re: companies showing Pride — I’ve noticed far fewer shows of support from companies this year. I wonder what the gay people at those companies are thinking about their employer showing support when it was easy and trendy, but taking a step when bigots express their anger.

    Comment by Just Me 2 Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:41 pm

  4. ===I’ve noticed far fewer shows of support===

    Haven’t seen any solid evidence of this yet, but am open to it if you can find the stats. Otherwise, it’s just anecdotes, not data.

    Comment by Rich Miller Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:42 pm

  5. ===After meeting with Chicago and Naperville mayors, Bears president coming to Arlington Heights: Warren’s===

    “Our offer is this… you own the land, you refused to engage before you bought it, now it’s yours.”

    - AH, as they should?

    Comment by Oswego Willy Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:49 pm

  6. Love wins.

    A party that hates. that is unwelcoming, boycotts because they can’t welcome… it’s real time watching a shrinking of bigoted folks too proud to be humbled at others seeming love wins, always.

    Comment by Oswego Willy Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:54 pm

  7. I don’t see how people really think that hateful bigotry in this life is the path to paradise in the next life.

    I’m just disappointed to have missed the Battle of Country Boy Breakfast where the bigots finally lost control of the candle shelf and retreated to the parking lot to regroup the next day over a 4 hour long senior coffee with free refills at Hardee’s never questioning how the Frisco Burger, “the best of San Fransisco,” the burger with secrets, came to be named.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 2:58 pm

  8. =I’ve noticed far fewer shows of support from companies this year.=

    The trend towards inclusion has continued, as it should. Perhaps what you’re noticing is that it’s no longer unusual and has become more imbedded in corporate culture. That probably why there’s been a more vocal backlash to ES&G initiatives in the last few years. The party intent on leveraging hatred as part of it’s foundation has taken this issue on. History tells us that such efforts don’t succeed.

    Comment by Pundent Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 3:00 pm

  9. How dare anyone have respect for other human beings. That obviously calls for a boycott. These sorts of people are nothing but hatemongers and bigots.

    Comment by Demoralized Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 3:00 pm

  10. The K of C offering instruction on moral compasses?

    Hard pass.

    Comment by Flyin' Elvis'-Utah Chapter Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 3:03 pm

  11. I never understood making people who are obviously indigent pay court costs and fines or even restitution. Years ago I was a PD I would tell a judge he has no money he has a PD but cases would keep getting continued for payment. Defendants were often told to budget better. Just odd but not as Wheaton and most judges then had no concept of being broke and or homeless

    Comment by DuPage Saint Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 3:21 pm

  12. I’m not opposed to taking into account people’s ability to pay in the criminal justice system but my concern is what are the consequences then? Being poor should not be an excuse to break the law without consequences. Partial reductions are fine, but total waivers I’m not so sure about, particularly in situations like traffic where the only penalty is a fine.

    Comment by MyTwoCents Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 4:00 pm

  13. MyTwoCents, court fees are not meant to be punishment. They’re meant to offset the cost of running the courts. Over the years, a great many “fees” have been ruled to actually be punitive “fines” with no nexus to the offense.

    Judicially imposed fines are better for what you’re talking about. Those can be converted to things like public service if a person can’t afford to pay cash.

    You can’t get blood from a stone so what’s the point of saddling people with debt they can’t afford? And if the criminal justice system actually works in preventing the offenses from which it derives funding, doesn’t success mean the funding will dry up? That creates some pretty perverse incentives that don’t promote actual public safety.

    Comment by The Opinions Bureau Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 4:05 pm

  14. – Sun-Times | Benedictines’ world leader calls on Chicago-area monks tied to Benet, Marmion high schools to fully report clergy sex abuse –

    That story is… ugh. It’s still going to get worse for the church and some dioceses specifically. They know there is so much more that is yet to come out than what already has, and they are doing everything to slow that down.

    Because it’s still happening.

    —-
    “And the Conference of Major Superiors of Men, a consortium of male religious orders in the United States, has recommended that its member groups post public lists of their child-molesting clergy and brothers.

    Despite those calls, the Benedictine monastery that founded Benet Academy maintains no publicly available list of members who have been credibly accused of child sex offenses.

    The Benedictine monastery that runs Marmion recently published such a list, but it appears to exclude some names.

    Marmion is in the Diocese of Rockford. Benet is in the Diocese of Joliet.
    —-

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Friday, Jun 9, 23 @ 4:14 pm

Add a comment

Sorry, comments are closed at this time.

Previous Post: Pritzker to sign anti-book-ban bill on Monday
Next Post: Reader comments closed for the weekend


Last 10 posts:

more Posts (Archives)

WordPress Mobile Edition available at alexking.org.

powered by WordPress.