Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar


Latest Post | Last 10 Posts | Archives


Previous Post: Live coverage
Next Post: Open thread

Isabel’s morning briefing

Posted in:

* ICYMI:The Illinois Rainy Day fund reaches $2 billion dollars. WCIA

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

posted by Isabel Miller
Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 7:47 am

Comments

  1. “Joliet mayor says developments are ‘coming fast’ on project at I-55 and I-80″

    “looking at construction next year and a fall 2019 opening”

    Ummm… It’s fall of 2023, and there’s nothing open there yet.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 7:57 am

  2. I look forward to the online solicitations for ‘Did you attend a convention in Chicago? You may be entitled to compensation. Please get in touch with the XYZ Law Firm.’

    Sometimes, I think laws are partly written here with the plaintiff bar in mind.

    Comment by OneMan Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 8:01 am

  3. ===Sometimes, I think laws are partly written here with the plaintiff bar in mind===

    Sometimes? Partly?

    Heh.

    Comment by Rich Miller Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 8:07 am

  4. Every time I get reminded of the budget impasse, I get reminded of how many lives were ruined or irrevocably changed — including two of my family members’ — and get mad all over again. And of course the Rauner administration didn’t care about undoing the damage or making anybody whole; destroying lives was the point of the whole thing.

    Comment by Suburban Mom Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 8:18 am

  5. Quotes that stood out to me from the WBEZ article:

    —”The only way to know what’s happening in the field is to walk it…”

    “One time I said ‘Grandpa, why you doing this?’ And he goes: ‘For you.’

    In 2020, crop prices were high, and an Ohio-based investor wanted to replace a two-acre windbreak with row crops to earn an extra few thousand dollars. Lieb made a case to keep it, but ultimately gave in to keep the contract.

    “That was very disheartening,” Lieb said. “We farm for people who live out of state, all they see is the check they get in the mail.” —

    As someone who walked our family farm fields in every season and all weather conditions, the importance of that has never left me. The further you are away from the soil, whether just in a pickup cab or just being an absentee landowner who may drive by the land once a year, the less you may view it as something to be preserved, protected, and passed on to future generations as a whole and not a division.

    It was truly ironic that one year the land being farmed next to mine had changed rental hands once again. A Wall Street investor owned it now, and the tenant asked if he could take my pasture fence down to access a portion of one of the fields that was, he thought, landlocked. I said no and pointed out that he had a field crossing over the creek that was big enough for his machinery just about 30 feet from the main road. He had passed it many times but hadn’t seen it because he was in his truck and had never taken the time to step out onto the soil he now rented.

    Comment by Anon221 Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 8:46 am

  6. That Paid Leave measure seems needed and easy, until they include outsiders. What were they thinking?

    Comment by Lurker Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 9:25 am

  7. ‘the employer would have to begin recordkeeping to track when the employee would begin to accrue paid time off during subsequent trips…after spending only two hours in Chicago.’

    Makes Vegas and Orlando look even better.

    Comment by Donnie Elgin Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 9:43 am

  8. Anon221, as a guy who lives near farmland (slowly becoming housing) and had to look at farmland in the collars for something, I was surprised by how ‘broken-up’ the land was and how disparate the ownership was.

    Never realized that what appeared to be ‘one farm’ from a distance was a bunch of different plots, with different owners.

    Comment by OneMan Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 9:49 am

  9. I would love for the Trade Show People to tell me how many employees work for a company that is willing to A) Pay for employees to travel to Chicago to attend a Trade Show but B) Does not already actually provide paid time off to said employees as a part of their regular employment.

    I guess it isn’t impossible for those two things to be true at once, but it isn’t very likely.

    Comment by Benniefly2 Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 10:14 am

  10. “The central plains and Midwest generally warmed the most”

    Noticed in the last decade or so strange happenings in the yard and garden, plants sprouting in winter. Nature is confused.

    Comment by Grandson of Man Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 10:32 am

  11. == I would love for the Trade Show People to tell me how many employees work for a company that is willing to A) Pay for employees to travel to Chicago to attend a Trade Show but B) Does not already actually provide paid time off to said employees as a part of their regular employment. ==

    Yes, but you still have the notification requirement. Also, it enforces a schedule for acquiring sick leave. So, for example, a company may have a different schedule for acquiring it. It appears there is a reporting requirement for employers as well, so if my kid, who is now in Kansas City working for a small manufacturing company, comes to a trade show in Chicago, their employer would now have a record-keeping requirement. That is the case under the old rules.

    Rule MW 1.06 Contents of Records of Employers
    (a) Employers must maintain, at a minimum, the following records for Covered Employees,
    for a period of not less than five years, and shall make such records available for
    inspection upon request by the Department

    Also, the old rules seem to allow rollover, not everyone allows rollover. So how would that work if you get more sick days than you would get under the city ordinance are your ‘city days’ used first or your ‘extra’ days used first in terms of roll-over considerations?

    As I implied earlier, it’s gonna be a field day for lawyers.

    Comment by OneMan Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 10:56 am

  12. There are plenty of industries with commission sales people who pay their own expenses to attend trade shows to meet with customers and prospects

    The Cook County Democrats strike again with their hostility to employers with more regulations and reward their special interest trial lawyers

    Comment by Lucky Pierre Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 10:58 am

  13. @LP

    Why do you hate workers so much? Your level of hatred and shilling for the rich is just pathetic

    Comment by Demoralized Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 11:40 am

  14. It is easy to say laws are written “for plaintiff’s/defendant’s lawyers” until you are a plaintiff or defendant. What’s far worse is a law so badly written nobody actually knows what it means, be it judges or parties counsel.

    As for the ads by lawyers for people suffering loss of vacation/sick time while temporarily working in Chicago for an entire 2.0 hours…I’m sure something is being storyboarded right now.

    Comment by thisjustinagain Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 11:48 am

  15. Employee’s who work in Chicago must accrue one hour of paid leave and paid sick leave for every thirty-five hours worked.
    Just add it to the T&E form and be done with it.

    Comment by Chicago 20 Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 12:00 pm

  16. That is your characterization and of course you have it backwards.

    Chicago used to be one of the top destinations for trade shows that have a huge multiplier effect on our economy. Now we rank #5

    Onerous regulations on businesses, that no other state imposes, will actually hurt workers in Illinois by making Chicago less competitive with competing cities.

    https://www.tradegroup.com/ranked-the-7-most-popular-cities-for-trade-shows-in-north-america/

    https://www.cvent.com/en/press-release/cvent-announces-top-50-meeting-destinations-united-states

    Comment by Lucky Pierre Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 12:01 pm

  17. Lucky Pierre - Next time supply links with quantitative analysis instead of clickbait.
    - Tradegroup - “Chicago is one of the most popular midwestern cities for trade shows, conferences, and events. In terms of cultural influence, it’s only behind New York and Silicon Valley in San Jose, CA. Did you know the first skyscraper was built in Chicago in 1885?” That’s quite an analysis.
    Next your Cvent link is over 11 years old and is more focused on Cvent than actual trade shows.
    Do better.

    Comment by Chicago 20 Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 12:36 pm

  18. ===Do better. ===

    Unpossible.

    Comment by Rich Miller Tuesday, Nov 21, 23 @ 12:42 pm

Add a comment

Sorry, comments are closed at this time.

Previous Post: Live coverage
Next Post: Open thread


Last 10 posts:

more Posts (Archives)

WordPress Mobile Edition available at alexking.org.

powered by WordPress.