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Seeing the whole elephant

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* Stories about the governor’s press conference yesterday represent a study in truly stark contrasts. It’s days like this when I’m reminded how lucky we are to live in the Internet Age, not back in the days when most of us were confined to one newspaper and the local TV and radio.

* Let’s start with the Associated Press, which has a noticeable Blagojevich spin in its story

State troopers have quietly started helping Chicago Police fight crime. That follows a noisy war of words in recent weeks between Governor Rod Blagojevich and Mayor Richard Daley about the possibility of cooperation. State police made several arrests yesterday in the city and tracked the movements of a handful of gang members.

Illinois State Police Director Larry Trent says he’s worked closely with Chicago Police Superintendent Jody Weis to develop a plan of cooperation. Weis says he is “very happy” to have the help.

* “Very happy,” eh? The Tribune isn’t so gushing

Gov. Rod Blagojevich produced his plan Thursday for state troopers to give Chicago police a hand, but the city’s top cop said it’s not going to free up any more officers to patrol the streets. […]

Chicago Police Supt. Jody Weis said most additional Illinois State Police efforts will be focused along the Dan Ryan and Eisenhower Expressways that the state long has patrolled: “It’s going to help overall law enforcement in Chicago, but it really won’t free up any more Chicago police officers,” Weis said. […]

The administration plans to use Chicago-area troopers rather than shift officers from Downstate, according to State Police Sgt. Brian Ley.

* And how does one define “Chicago-area troopers”? The Daily Herald explains

Gov. Rod Blagojevich is siphoning state police out of the suburbs to concentrate on crime in Chicago.

Under his plan to beef up Windy City security following a rash of violence, Blagojevich has moved one “team” of state troopers from the Elgin-based second district to Chicago. The troopers make up one of two teams that normally roam the suburban area targeting gang problems and roads with high fatality rates.

In addition, two similar teams that roam the Chicago and Cook County suburban region will now be confined to city limits, said state police Lt. Luis Gutierrez.

* The press conference was about the governor’s new idea to put cameras on expressways and interstates to pay for more state police officers. CLTV takes the traffic angle

A traffic nightmare on the Kennedy Expressway this afternoon, much earlier than rush hour. The reason? Well, there was a press conference. […]

Gov. Rod Blagojevich was there to tout a new plan to install state highways to get drivers to slow down. Well, seems it worked. Traffic was delayed an hour in each direction on the Kennedy Expressway because everyone slowed down to see what was going on there.

* ABC 7 went with “Big Brother”

Cameras, cameras and more cameras…Big Brother is not only watching on Chicago street corners and highway work zones, but if Governor Blagojevich gets his way, the interstates will be camera ready to snap speeders.

* The only House member to show up for the press conference had her say on NBC 5

State Rep. Elga Jefferies, a Democrat from Chicago, also threw her support behind the idea.

“This program is going to kill two birds with one stone. It’s going to curb the crime and help save lives on our highways,” she said.

Jefferies lost her primary race in February and is likely in need of employment. Rep. Ken Dunkin, the governor’s usual Chicago House guy, must’ve been otherwise occupied.

* The Sun-Times made this point

The governor will have to convince the General Assembly, which has opposed many or most of his other proposals, to approve his plan.

* Lee Newspapers expounds on that point

Don’t expect to see cameras catching speeders on Illinois interstates any time soon.

Although Gov. Rod Blagojevich called Thursday for installing cameras in high-accident corridors across the state as a way to improve traffic safety, Illinois lawmakers have shown an aversion to similar programs in recent years.

In May, the latest effort to allow a handful of downstate communities to install cameras at intersections was defeated in the Senate after it had narrowly been approved in the House.

* And the NorthWest Herald editorializes

First, Blagojevich has openly stated that the cameras would be a source of revenue – up to $50 million a year. The goal of such enforcement should be improved safety, not a way to cash in.

Second, we doubt that the cameras will be used appropriately and fairly. The governor’s office said that the cameras only would be used to catch speeders going at least 80 mph. Would that be written into the legislation? Would that pledge hold 10 years from now?

Remember that seat-belt violations were to be ticketed only if violators were pulled over for another offense. Now motorists actually get pulled over for not wearing a seatbelt. Give an inch, government tends to take a mile.

I love this country.

posted by Rich Miller
Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 3:13 am

Comments

  1. State Rep. Elga Jefferies, a Democrat from Chicago, also threw her support behind the idea.

    “This program is going to kill two birds with one stone. It’s going to curb the crime and help save lives on our highways,” she said.

    SO, HOW MANY LIVES ARE LOST ON THE KENNEDY EACH YEAR AND IS THAT NUMBER OUT OF PROPORTION WITH THE NORM?

    Comment by Traffic_Man Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 6:23 am

  2. The Tribune taking a negative angle on a gov story? I dont believe it. You must have made that one up.

    Comment by Anon Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 6:59 am

  3. Wow…more cameras = more security AND more revenue! but it is being proposed by Blago, who we all hate, so the idea must be bad…

    Aaahh!

    Heh..good thing a more desirable politician didn’t propose this. Otherwise, the Trib would be like “Greatest.Idea.EVAH”

    Personally, I am all for road side cameras. The sooner we reach totalitarianism, the faster we can have a revolution to throw off the yoke of oppression, and finally get back to being rugged individualists.

    Comment by Johnny USA Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 7:42 am

  4. More utterly wretched drivel spreading over the AP wire, as usual. Sorry to see that their local reporting is just as slovenly as their national reporting. Unless of course this can be traced to a member newspaper . . . .

    But any organization that has advanced the careers of John Solomon, Nedra Pickler and Ron Fournier simply cannot be trusted on “news” — it can only be trusted to produce opinionated spin.

    As for Blagojevich, no surprises there. Once a sociopath, always a sociopath.

    Comment by Angry Chicagoan Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 7:50 am

  5. “The troopers make up one of two teams that normally roam the suburban area targeting gang problems and roads with high fatality rates.”

    SO um the solution to stopping violence is to take the officers who keep the gangs presence and abilties limited in the greaer cook county area and the suburbs, and get rid of them. Would that not just encourage violence? So now instead of the city of chicago having violence problems we will see porblems in cook county and the suburbs. The Gov claims he helped reduce crime in the City and ignores the new problems he is creating. This is like the Governors lottery plan. It tries to fix one mess by creating aother bigger mess elsewhere (our future).

    The best part, the Gov wants millions for cameras for safety, but he has never attemtped to put back the 9 mil he slashed from cease fire. After cutting cease fire to the bone, there was a large increase in the crime areas they were servicing. How about instead of cameras, moving gang task forces away from the ganag they are inhibiting, and money to employ politcially connected kids, the Gov put the cease fire funding back!!

    The Gov would rather beat his wings in defiance and stay locked frozen into the mess he has made then end his defiance and fix the mistake he made cutting ceaese fire.

    Comment by Ghost Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 8:26 am

  6. In addition, two similar teams that roam the Chicago and Cook County suburban region will now be confined to city limits, said state police Lt. Luis Gutierrez.
    I thought Luis Gutierrez was a conservation officer with DNR ?

    Comment by Maggie Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 9:46 am

  7. I am so glad that the crime and gang problems in Aurora, Elgin , North Chicago and Waukegan have ben solved.

    You would only take police protection away from an area after the gang crime issues have ben solved………..

    Comment by Plutocrat03 Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 9:58 am

  8. Amazingly, the NW Herald hit the nail on the head. And the fact is, it is not whether the idea is good or not. It is that we can not trust our government to do what they say. Not that I would think government sponsored spying is a good thing, but if the government were more trustworthy I could see where people would go along with it… like they do in Britain. The real question is, where in the heck is the ACLU?! They complain about the patriot act, but when something happens that they have the power to stop they don’t even bother. Honestly, it shows you the partisan leanings of the group. Democrats first, civil libertarians second.

    Comment by Heartless Libertarian Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 10:19 am

  9. Before I saw the news coverage of the gov’s presser, a friend of mine was telling me the story of being stuck in traffic on the Kennedy yesterday afternoon. He couldn’t understand why traffic was so bad, until he drove past Blago standing there. He was 1/2 hour late for the meeting he was going to.

    Comment by Don't Worry, Be Happy Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 10:48 am

  10. Let’s talk math. According to ISP, those speeding 15-30 miles over the limit receive a $95 ticket. Those speeding 31 miles or more over the limite receive a $105 ticket.

    For the sake of argument, let’s say that everyone who is nabbed with the camera system gets stuck with a $105 ticket and pays the ticket (remember, you’ll have to discount the out-of-state drivers because their face can’t be matched). Simple math tells us that in order to generate $50M, ISP will have to write more than 476,000 tickets annually.

    By some estimates from Troopers wandering around the State Fair today, ISP writes a bit more than 100,000 tickets a year right now. Just to cover the $4M cost, they will have to write an additonal 38,000 tickets at $105.

    Comment by SangamoGOP Friday, Aug 8, 08 @ 2:17 pm

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