Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar


Latest Post | Last 10 Posts | Archives


Previous Post: Asylum-seeker coverage roundup
Next Post: Legislative candidate says there’s ‘nothing special about this district over every other district’

Isabel’s afternoon briefing

Posted in:

* Ben Szalinski


The state’s down payment on the Smart Start program to boost PreK enrollment and eliminate education deserts created 5,823 new PreK spots. The goal was 5,000 for the first year. #twill https://t.co/NISElSQkvr pic.twitter.com/QrZw5hNrQB

— Ben Szalinski (@BenSzalinski) January 18, 2024

* Press release…

In 2023, the Illinois State Police’s (ISP) modernization of the Divisions of Patrol, the creation of Special Operation Groups focused on criminal interdiction, and the continued implementation of a data-focused command structure led to a decrease in interstate shootings and fatal crashes. These same enforcement strategies also yielded more arrests, as well as increases in gun and vehicle recoveries.

“ISP saw a growing problem in Illinois, used data and first-hand expertise to efficiently address problems, and achieved results—the absolute model of what state government can and should do for its citizens,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “The decrease in fatal expressway shootings and crashes is an important step on the road to a safer Illinois, and I thank ISP for their innovation and dedication to advancing this work.”

“As an agency, we’ve become more nimble and focused on data, making decisions based on where the greatest threats to public safety emerge, rather than following the same old pattern or habits,” said ISP Director Brendan F. Kelly. “Over the past several years, we have really demanded more of ourselves, making the tough decisions, executing, and empowering the most effective law enforcement tool there is – the well-trained, professional, crime-fighting trooper. Challenges remain, but we are headed in a good direction.”

2023-2022 Patrol Enforcement Data:

* From the Illinois Local Journalism Task Force’s report this week

Five of Illinois’ 102 counties have no local source of news, and 33 rely on just a single source, according to The State of Local News 2023, a research project led by Northwestern’s Medill Local News Initiative. The report focused on “news deserts,” which Abernathy defines as “a community, either rural or urban, where residents have very limited access to credible and comprehensive news and information that feeds democracy at the grassroots level and nurtures community.”

The five no-local-news Illinois counties are Pulaski, Alexander, Perry, Hamilton, and Edwards.

Jeff Egbert at the Perry County Weekly-Press begs to differ. “I’ve published a newspaper in Perry County for the last 14 years,” he told Rich via email.

He also pointed out that the McLeansboro Gazette operates out of Hamilton County.

* Mariah Woelfel


Former Mayor Lori Lightfoot is hosting a City Club roundtable on neighborhood investment (her first public event in Chicago since leaving office). Comes as she announces a new non-profit called Chicago Vibrant Neighborhoods Collective to help orgs in disinvested neighborhoods. pic.twitter.com/xJtbQRsF1G

— Mariah Woelfel (@MariahWoelfel) January 18, 2024

* Rockford Register Star

Stellantis’ estimated $4.8 billion plan to build a new vehicle at the Belvidere Assembly Plant, construct a battery production facility and establish a parts distribution “mega hub” could require what officials say is a tremendous amount of additional water, power and sewer capacity. […]

But officials say utilities would have to be extended to an area along Irene Road west of the Belvidere Assembly Plant where Stellantis has told the United Auto Workers it intends to build a $3.2 billion “joint venture” battery production facility.

Four Rivers Sanitation Authority Executive Director Tim Hanson said his office is preparing an estimated $32 million plan talked about for three decades to extend sanitary sewer lines to the area from Cherry Valley to service the Stellantis facility and any suppliers that will be needed. […]

A Winnebago County-based agency that cleans 1.5 billion gallons of sewage a year, Four Rivers has the capacity needed for the project, Hanson said. It would require an agreement in which Boone County owns the pipeline and Four Rivers Sanitation manages it, Hanson said.

How the sanitary sewer pipeline — which would have a main trunk more than 3 miles long and a diameter of up to 42-inches — and an estimated $5 million lift station in Cherry Valley would be paid for remains a question.

* Here’s the rest…

posted by Isabel Miller
Thursday, Jan 18, 24 @ 2:02 pm

Comments

  1. Re: Pitchfork - I know they’re already part of conde nast, but nothing says “indie cred” like being “folded into GQ”

    Comment by lake county democrat Thursday, Jan 18, 24 @ 3:41 pm

  2. Re Lightfoot, Neighborhood Housing Services, Center for Neighborhood Technology all claim my interest in the space you are trying to enter.

    Comment by Amalia Thursday, Jan 18, 24 @ 3:55 pm

  3. =Uvalde school massacre could have been stopped sooner, DOJ report finds:=

    Armed to the teeth, in full tactical gear, all of their armored vehicles,with breaching equipment and they stood around for over an hour right outside the door. They stopped anyone that tried to go in. I just can’t. Thinking about it literally brings me to tears. 21 lives lost. It didn’t have to be that way. Only 5 people have lost their jobs.

    But the 2nd Amendment right?

    Comment by JS Mill Thursday, Jan 18, 24 @ 4:33 pm

Add a comment

Sorry, comments are closed at this time.

Previous Post: Asylum-seeker coverage roundup
Next Post: Legislative candidate says there’s ‘nothing special about this district over every other district’


Last 10 posts:

more Posts (Archives)

WordPress Mobile Edition available at alexking.org.

powered by WordPress.