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* Blago judge: Ruling soon on unsealing documents
The federal judge presiding over former Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s corruption case says he expects to decide next week whether to unseal key documents and wiretap evidence.
* Burr Oak Cemetery hallowed again
Blessings rained down Wednesday upon the defiled grounds of Burr Oak Cemetery as an ecumenical rainbow of leaders from diverse houses of worship re-consecrated what was formerly sacred but now is a crime scene.[…]
“Black and white, Jew and Gentile, Protestant and Catholic, Baptist and Greek Orthodox, we are here, all of us with one voice saying, ‘These grounds are hallow again,’ ” said the Rev. Marshall Hatch of New Mount Pilgrim Church in Chicago
He was among some 50 area religious leaders who converged on the beleaguered Alsip cemetery to tour and bless the sites where corpses were allegedly illegally unearthed and dumped in mass graves as part of an alleged grave-reselling scheme.[…]
The clergy were invited and accompanied by Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, whose office is managing an investigation that has brought the FBI and high-tech equipment that has recovered more than 200 bones or bone fragments from one four-block-wide area alone.
* Investment firm co-owner charged with embezzling $24 million
Federal authorities Wednesday charged the co-owner of a Chicago-based investment firm with embezzling $24 million from union pension funds.
* Man accused of running Ponzi scheme over 22 years
* Teen mother hoping to leave drugs and violence behind with help from CeaseFire workers
CeaseFire is bolstering its efforts to reach women and girls like Rivera who are caught up in Chicago’s violent street life. The strategy marks a shift for the Chicago-based organization, which historically has worked with men, the primary offenders and victims of crime.
* Daley: Get over Wal-Mart gripes, allow jobs in Chicago
Mayor Daley today urged labor leaders hell-bent on preventing Wal-Mart from expanding in Chicago to “come to grips” with the need for jobs.
After accepting a $700,000 Wal-Mart grant to create “green jobs” for ex-offenders, Daley lauded the world’s largest retailer as a “great corporate citizen” that is “responding” to concerns about wages and health care that have fueled union opposition.
The mayor said it’s “up to the citizens” to pressure their aldermen to give Wal-Mart the go-ahead to build its second Chicago store — and first super-center that sells groceries — at a former Chatham industrial site at 83rd and Stewart
* Daley asks unions to stop Walmart gripes
Chicago Federation of Labor President Dennis Gannon has threatened to revive the big box minimum wage ordinance vetoed by Daley if the City Council approves a second Walmart.
* Deal to save city money would allow cops to retire at 55
Chicago Police officers could retire with premium health benefits at age 55, instead of 60, under a deal reached Wednesday that could save the city $23 million and pave the way for an infusion of younger officers.
Nearly 700 officers currently fall between the ages of 55 and 60 and could be lured into retirement, if only they were guaranteed affordable health care, said Fraternal Order of Police President Mark Donahue.
* CPD officers may retire at 55 with benefits
* Vote delayed on proposal to crack down on turning condos into hotel suites
Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) put off a License Committee vote on his proposal to crack down on the practice under pressure from a handful of condo owners, some of whom have hired veteran lobbyist Bill Griffin to plead their case.
“It was represented to them when the building was being constructed that this was a perfectly legitimate practice. Make an investment. Buy four or five units and rent them out. Open your own mini-hotel. And folks said, ‘That sounds great,’ ” Reilly said.
“They came in and said, ‘What gives? We made this investment in good faith.’ And I said, ‘I’m very sorry to report that the developer sold you a bill of goods. This is in direct violation of city code. I’m sympathetic to your situation. Let me see what we can do.’ ”[…]
It would allow condos to be turned into hotel suites, only if owners get prior approval from the condo association, secure at least $1 million in liability insurance and obtain a two-year “vacation rental license” for a $500 fee.
* N. Side drivers may not like this parking plan
For thousands of drivers commuting downtown from the city’s Far North Side and near north suburbs, Ridge Avenue is a time-saving lifeline that picks up where transportation planners left off — funneling traffic to and from the dead end of North Lake Shore Drive.
But it turns out the same fast-moving features that make Ridge the in-the-know route for savvy drivers make it a nightmare for local residents who say they can’t even cross the street.
Now, the alderman who oversees one of Ridge’s busiest stretches says she has decided to open it to parking, essentially shutting down two of the four lanes, except during rush hour, in an effort to slow the cars and divert those commuters elsewhere.
* Hiring freeze no better idea despite layoffs, Davlin contends
The fact that the city of Springfield has issued layoff notices to some employees doesn’t make a hiring freeze any better an idea, aldermen were told Tuesday.
* This garbage worth considering
The issue: Several economically challenged suburbs are banding together to try to bring a high-tech, experimental garbage disposal facility to the Southland.
We say: While it may seem far-fetched or foolish, until more concrete plans for sound economic development are brought to the table, we applaud these mayors for at least seeking a solution. We need far more information to decide is if this a good move. But it’s a fair start.
* Deal would bring more trash, cash
ROCKFORD — William Charles Ltd. and the Winnebago County Board are working on a deal that will bring thousands of tons of garbage to county land and hundreds of thousands of dollars to county coffers.
It could also reduce the life span of the landfill by 20 percent.
* Schaumburg moves ahead with “green” parking lot
Wenger said the $1.5 million project should begin in early August and be done by November.
* Mixed signals over Naperville, Aurora emergency radio change
So after this year, Aurora and Naperville will spend more than $20 million converting their analog radio systems to ones that use digital technology. The new radios will be more reliable and authorities say they will also provide better service from inside buildings and allow all emergency responders to communicate with each other instead of through a dispatcher.
* E-mail messages call attention to debate among officials Buffalo Grove before off-track betting vote
Several e-mail messages were circulated among board members and officials at least a month before the final vote June 1 — correspondences that one expert called a violation of the Illinois Open Meetings Act.
* Arlington Heights Park District installing new skate park
* U-46 superintendent says he will not accept salary increase
* School’s green roots go deep
Tarkington, 3330 W. 71st St., opened in 2005 as the Chicago Public Schools’ first “green” building. Since then, the school system has certified two others and has plans this fall for four new green elementary schools and one high school, said Suzanne Carlson, director of environmental affairs. Five more green schools are scheduled to open in 2010, officials said.
* New jobless claims rise, total rolls fall
Unemployment-insurance claims have declined steadily since the spring, but most private economists and the Federal Reserve expect jobs to remain scarce and the unemployment rate to top 10 percent by the end of the year.
The Labor Department said today that its tally of initial claims for unemployment insurance rose by 30,000 to a seasonally adjusted 554,000. That was above analysts’ estimates of 550,000.
* OSF employees’ salaries frozen
OSF Healthcare System employees were informed Wednesday morning of a yearlong freeze on salaries and other cost-saving measures.
All employees’ salaries will be frozen for 12 months effective this Sunday, Jim Farrell, OSF senior vice president of marketing and communications, confirmed Wednesday. That affects 12,000 employees systemwide.
* Illinois launches program to help home buyers
Under the Illinois Home Start Loan Program, hundreds of residents will be offered a 30-year- fixed rate loan. Available to first-time home buyers, the loan is insured by the Federal Housing Administration.
The program offered by the Illinois Housing Development Authority also gives the home buyers the opportunity to use a second loan to help them make a down payment. This loan allows the first-time buyers an advance loan on the $8,000 federal tax credit that they can pay back once they get the credit.
Besides first-time home buyers, the program is available to veterans and members of the military who are on active duty even if they’ve purchased homes before.
* State debuts new-homebuyers help
Program participants must also pay a $300 application fee, of which they may receive a refund of $100.
* Lottery sales continue to climb during recession
Ticket sales were up a little more than 1 percent over the year before, for the fiscal year ending in June. That meant Illinoisans bought almost $2.1 billion worth of lottery tickets, setting a sales record.
Still, because of the timing of some payouts and other issues, profits for the state lottery were down nearly 5 percent last year. That means less money brought in for the state.
People spent more money on scratch-off tickets but less on more profitable games such as Mega Millions. That means the lottery sent the state about $625 million, down from $657 million the year before, said Jodie Winnett, lottery superintendent.
* FutureGen pays record price for last piece of land
The FutureGen Alliance recently bought the final piece of property needed for the plant for $750,000 from Kurt and Michelle Theriault. The couple paid $155,000 for the wood-frame house and 4.3 acres in 1971.
Coles County Supervisor of Assessments Jean Tipsword says that’s more than anyone has ever paid for a residence in county. The previous record was $548,000.
* Building projects unveiled at LLCC
Work on portions of the $33.8 million construction program — the largest since LLCC moved to its current campus in 1971 — will begin this fall.
* Tribune seeks court approval of bonus plan
In a filing Wednesday, the company proposed continuation of an incentive plan for about 720 employees, including the top 10 executives, with a maximum payout for this year of $45.6 million.
Tribune also has proposed bonuses of up to $10.6 million to be divided among 21 core managers, including the top 10 executives, for operating and restructuring efforts. An additional $1.3 million would be available for lower-level employees.
The Chicago-based company also proposed up to $9.3 million in performance bonuses to be divided among 23 key operations leaders, and permission to pay about $3 million in bonuses earned last year to nine top executives.
* Software group sues CTA over video game ad ban
An association representing computer and video game publishers sued the CTA over the agency’s prohibition of ads for adult-only and “mature 17+” rated games.
The suit, filed in federal court in Chicago today, alleges that the CTA’s ban violates free speech rights.[…]
Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s bid to restrict the sale of violent and sexually explicit video games was rejected by the federal courts as unconstitutional. The state had to pay the ESA $544,550, according to an ESA spokesman.
* NorthShore-U of C program seeks slice of transplant market
* Debt reduction pushes Ford to $2.3B 2Q profit
* Your cell phone is your ID? Feds expand paperless boarding at O’Hare
* O’Hare travelers can check in via smartphones, PDAs
* County hospital system wants your opinion on services
Cook County hospital officials will descend on the Southland next week for the first in a series of public meetings asking what people think of their government-run hospital system.
The South Holland stop Monday on the so-called listening tour comes as the system grapples with potential budget cuts due to the county board’s tax rollback and an increasing number of uninsured patients - all while south suburban activists decry services moving to Chicago’s inner city.
* Chicago South Side mapping project shows neighbors live worlds apart
Three young surveyors for an elaborate University of Chicago project aimed at mapping resources on the entire South Side recently discovered what Woodlawn residents long have known — though only blocks away, their neighborhood is worlds apart from the more celebrated Hyde Park.[…]
“What’s really depressing is what you find. There are a lot of liquor stores; you don’t see a lot of libraries or day-care centers,” said U. of C. senior Ruben Ornelas, 21, who is helping map every store, church, social service facility and health clinic in the area. “When you’re in these low-income communities you see things that aren’t going to help anybody.”
Block by block, by foot and car, these paid fieldworkers — many South Side natives and from various universities — are gathering data that will be uploaded to a Web site, giving the public visual proof of the health-care and resource disparities among South Side communities. The site will be available to residents, social service agencies and advocates to use as a research tool.
* Lettuce recall includes Illinois
* Manufacturers brewing new swine flu vaccine
* Former Sox pitcher Jim Parque confesses: Why I juiced
With my career in jeopardy, I turned to performance-enhancing drugs, like some other players did. I never had needed them before, but with a shoulder that wouldn’t heal, it was realistically the only thing I could turn to.
Work harder, you say? Take vitamins and get in better shape? Did it, and I was rewarded with pathetic Triple-A stats, a fastball now in the low 80s and an average high school curveball.
posted by Mike Murray
Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 8:48 am
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What ever become of the story that the situation at Burr Oaks may be a big misunderstanding - that folks were buried there under “term” contracts that provided them a burial plot for a period of time, to be followed by reburial in a mass grave? And that all of this is a cultural misunderstanding by a white sheriff unfamiliar with the arrangements common in African American cemetries 75 years ago?
Comment by Anonymous Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 9:19 am
The story is still out there. Not sure why you claim it’s gone.
Comment by Rich Miller Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 9:24 am
Jim Parque took performance enhancing drugs? Not so you’d notice.
Comment by wordslinger Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 9:24 am
Ald. Smith putting parking along Ridge…..bad move. and, no, parking is not a traffic calming device. it is a traffic jam creating device. There should be less parking on such routes, not more. we have to figure out a way to get traffic to move around the city. sometimes it is simply not convenient to take public transportation.
Comment by Amy Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 9:33 am
For parents who live in highrises, Alderman Reilly’s proposal is very important. The idea that there might be “hotel guests” in my condo building is a huge concern for us. This one has a direct impact on the safety of my kids.
Comment by Skeeter Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 9:40 am
Thanks for the Arlington Hts shout out, Mike. The kids’ quotes in that article had me spitting out my milk this morning.
What can you do?! [/shrug]
Comment by Rob_N Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 9:42 am
Anon at 9:19,
Have you been paying attention to the cemetery story? There might be those “term” graves out there, but if I’m not mistaken, the crux of the criminal complaint is that the manager took money under the table and then unearthed existing graves and buried new “customers” in the old graves. Even if they were term graves, you can’t unearth remains without family consent or a court order. It’s against the law.
Comment by Chet Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 12:24 pm
I agreed with Daley a couple of years ago when there was the big fight to keep wal mart out of Chicago (the Big Box) ordinance. of course the revenue was needed, as were the jobs, that wal mart brought to the table. and, i still agree with mayor daley on the wal mart issue (and for what it’s worth, I am NO fan of Daley, and I find it funny how pat fitzgerald can preemptively stop a crime in blago’s case, but crimes occur all day and night in the daley administration netting only people around him, and he knows nothing about the crimes that they commit. yeah. ok. whatever. )
it is worth noting that in areas where wal mart stores exist in the chicago area, they have spurred development of other business. so the claims so often made by anti wal mart forces that wal mart kill other businesses is false. the wal mart on chicago’s west side, which was at the heart of the fight two years ago, has seen more development as a result of the store than the creation of a “ghost town.”
the argument that wal mart doesn’t pay well and the workers are miserable, doesn’t jive well either. I have been inside of some of the wal marts in the chicago area (e.g., cicero, matteson etc.), and the workers are typical of retail industry workers. they don’t look miserable to me, contrary to the michael moores of the world. they are not enslaved.
and, retail is by nature comprised of unskilled labor. so, it stands to reason that the wages are low. let that serve as an incentive for people to strive to get an education and better paying professional jobs. wal mart jobs should not be for heads of households, but should exist in a major city like chicago primarily for young people trying to figure out what they want to do with themselves and older people who want to work while retired.
in looking at the issue two years ago as the city council was debating on keeping wal mart out of the west side, it just struck as terrible that forces were trying to deprive poor people access to jobs. the west side was hard hit by economic decline in the late 1960s and hasn’t recovered really recovered.
this is part of the reason why I have concerns about pat quinn as governor because as lt. governor he opposed the building of the wal mart on the west side. so, he didn’t want economic development and jobs for the poor and vulnerable, back then. fast foward to as recent as a month ago, and now as governor he wants taxpayers to foot the bill for social welfare to help the “poor and vulnerable.” I’m not comfortable with the stances that he has taken in either case.
excluding the elderly, young and disabled… bring jobs to the state and the city, and let people work so that they don’t become “poor and vulnerable.” if you want to raise (income) taxes, then people need to be working the first place in for you to do that and for it to yield benefit of somekind.
Comment by Will County Woman Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 1:58 pm
tom dart is fabulous!!!!! he doen’t grandstand and show boat like a lot of politcians. I don’t begruddge politicians for highlighting their good public service efforts, but some, who shall remain nameless, have history/habit of posturing and grandstanding to death.
dart doesn’t go around invoking religion or the the Bible, he’s low-key and just does what he does. he doesn’t hold unnecessary press conferences, he just does his job.
it’s interesting that some politicans huff and puff for upwards of 30 years, and while they have done some good and admirable work, sometimes one wonders if they’re just doing things to get press or are doing things because they are truly worth doing.
tom dart had no way of knowing that his refusal to evict rent-paying tenants from owner foreclosed properties or his investigation into burr oak would generate world-wide media attention/buzz. anyone can just look at him and tell that he does things because they are the right thing to do, and doesn’t calculate about media buzz before he acts.
Comment by Will County Woman Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 2:13 pm
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alderman-howard-brookins/were-mad-and-were-not-goi_b_243577.html
Comment by VoteChatham Thursday, Jul 23, 09 @ 4:49 pm