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This aerial shot provides a view of the former Haeger Potteries property on Maiden Lane in East Dundee, which the village now owns and wants to redevelop. (Google maps)

By GLORIA CASAS | Chicago Tribune

The village of East Dundee is ready to redevelop the former Haeger Potteries site and is willing to sell the property for $10 to the company that presents the winning proposal and agrees to demolish the existing buildings.

East Dundee staff are preparing a Request for Proposals announcement soliciting concepts for the property, which consists of five lots on Maiden Lane purchased by the village earlier this year for $600,000.

Potential developers will have until Oct. 24 to submit plans.

The village of East Dundee purchased the former Haeger Potteries property on Maiden Lane earlier this year, and is now ready to seek redevelopment proposals. (Gloria Casas/The Courier-News)

Village Administrator Erika Storlie said the sale price for the land is based on how much the village is asking developers to do.

“Anybody who’s going to respond to the RFP is going to have to put up a lot of money,” Storlie said at this week’s village board meeting.

East Dundee wants the developer to demolish the buildings on the property, remove all debris and remediate the soil. The RFP will specifically seek residential or residential/commercial developments that include green space on the west side of River Street.

“They have to understand we are clear on what we are dealing with, and we’re not having unrealistic expectations of what we want them to do,” Storlie said.

Trustees ironed out the details of the RFP at their Monday meeting, discussing what should be included and how much density should be allowed.

Read more here.

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Cages full of beagle puppies wait to meet their foster families at Anderson Humane shelter on Aug. 9, 2022, in South Elgin. According to spokesperson Juliann Carlson, 91 male beagle puppies between 6 and 10 months old arrived the previous night from Virginia. They were rescued from Inotiv, a Virginia-based research facility, where over 4,000 beagles were removed. All of them have found homes. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD | Chicago Tribune

Score one for the beagles. You might remember two years ago when a Virginia facility that bred thousands of animals for laboratory research got caught badly mistreating its dogs, under the noses of government inspectors.

The Chicago area, which has a world-class animal-welfare network, rose to the occasion and welcomed dozens of the abused pooches to new homes here. About 4,000 were adopted around the country: Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, famously got one, too.

Earlier this month, the feds announced a criminal penalty for the facility’s Indiana-based owner, and it’s gratifyingly severe. In the plea bargain, Inotiv Inc., via its Envigo subsidiaries, pleaded guilty to criminal charges of conspiracy to violate the Animal Welfare Act and conspiracy to violate the Clean Water Act.

This was a rare criminal conviction of a company supplying lab animals, and the financial penalties were the largest imposed in a federal animal-welfare case. Inotiv will pay $35 million, including a $22 million fine. It also agreed to fund an independent “compliance monitor” with oversight powers, among other measures.

The company still will be permitted to sell everything from monkeys and rabbits to rats and mice for drug testing and other experiments, but it will not be breeding dogs again. Inotiv said it shut down its hellish beagle-breeding factory in September 2022 — months if not years too late.

A key whistleblower in this case was People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, better known as PETA, an organization companies love to hate for its undercover investigations of animal cruelty. PETA publicized the sickening conditions at Envigo’s Virginia facility.

Read more here.

Related: “75 more rescued beagles headed to Anderson Humane in South Elgin,” “‘They are starting over now’: Beagles bred for research meet new foster families in South Elgin,” “‘They were found in some pretty bad conditions’: Rescued beagles need foster homes

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Rain clouds form above the Illinois Capitol on May 8, 2024, in Springfield. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD | Chicago Tribune

Here’s the good news: Illinois lawmakers under Gov. J.B. Pritzker passed a balanced budget for the sixth straight year, protecting the state’s credit rating and continuing the relative fiscal stability that’s been consistent since the chaotic years of the Gov. Bruce Rauner-Speaker Mike Madigan political wars.

That’s about it for the good stuff, though. The bad — or at least worrying — news is that lawmakers approved more than $1 billion in new revenues to plug a shortfall for the coming fiscal year and to finance more spending for a wide variety of projects and programs. The budget the House sent to Pritzker in the wee hours Wednesday after a tumultuous night that made sausage-making look good by comparison strikes us as imprudent. The philosophy, if one can be gleaned from chaos, is spend what you can get your mitts on today and worry about tomorrow when it comes.

That’s akin to how some teenagers of our acquaintance think about money. But state leaders are supposed to be the grown-ups, led by the governor, guiding Illinois through what continues to be choppy fiscal waters. The grade we would give this year’s $53.1 billion budget is a C-minus, and that’s generous.

Why? Pritzker and fellow Democrats turned to an unusually wide array of cat-and-dog revenue raisers, aimed at keeping income taxes level for individuals. They included reducing how quickly businesses can write off their net operating losses from the pandemic era, sharply higher taxes on sports betting companies, a cap on the allowance retailers get for collecting and remitting sales taxes (more on that Monday), a new tax on firms that reserve and re-rent blocks of hotel rooms and more. That random assortment is the state-budget equivalent of looking under the couch cushions.

Even some Democrats are growing alarmed at the spending. As lawmakers were preparing to leave Springfield last week, Rep. Fred Crespo, D-Hoffman Estates, warned that next year’s budget is likely to feature yet another revenue shortfall, and that’s before lawmakers have to worry about coming train wrecks like the $700 million-plus funding cliff for Chicago public transit agencies. With Springfield having blown its wad on relatively “painless” revenue raisers this year, Crespo said, “There’s really only one place we can look at getting these revenues, and that’s taxpayers.”

Of course, this year is an election year for state lawmakers. Next year isn’t. Watch your wallets, Illinoisans.

Editorial continues here.

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Gov. J.B. Pritzker delivers his State of the State and budget address before the General Assembly at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield on Feb. 21, 2024. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/pool)

By , , , and  | Chicago Tribune

SPRINGFIELD — Illinois Senate Democrats on Sunday approved a $53.1 billion state spending plan, keeping much of fellow Democrat Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s original proposal in place but boosting expected spending by $400 million while also giving themselves, House representatives and many top state officials a 5% bump in pay.

The Senate worked through most of Memorial Day weekend to resolve differences among the Democratic majorities in both legislative chambers before voting 38-21, largely along party lines, to approve a plan that includes some cuts to the governor’s proposal but is undergirded by almost $750 million in tax hikes.

Amid Democratic squabbling, lawmakers blew past a self-imposed Friday deadline to pass a spending plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1. The Illinois House went home Saturday night with plans to return after the holiday weekend.

With the Senate not planning to return to Springfield until fall, the path ahead will test the unity of the Democratic Party that has full control of state government as the House, led by Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch of Hillside, needs to sign off on all pieces of the budget package without changes in order for them to land on Pritzker’s desk.

“I’m confident the House will be able to pass this budget the way the Senate passed it,” Senate President Don Harmon of Oak Park, who called the budget “a doozy,” said late Sunday. “The governor, the speaker and I agreed that was our path forward. I have no lack of faith in the House’s ability to do it.”

Republicans, who are outnumbered 40-19 in the Senate and lack any significant leverage to influence state spending decisions, argued the Democrats’ plan — particularly items related to the ongoing migrant crisis — ignores important priorities in favor of catering to Pritzker’s political aspirations.

“While this budget is undeniably complicated, the message the governor is sending with it could not be more clear. He’s raising taxes on the people of Illinois, who are already struggling to afford basic needs, and the many job creators fighting hard to keep people employed to pay for the migrant crisis that he has created,” said Senate GOP leader John Curran of Downers Grove. “Unfortunately for Illinois taxpayers, Gov. Pritzker’s political ambitions to position himself on the national stage as the country’s most progressive governor has far (exceeded) state tax revenues.”

Two Democrats, Sens. Suzy Glowiak Hilton of Western Springs and Patrick Joyce of Reddick, joined all 19 Republicans in voting against the budget. In a brief interview, Joyce said he wanted “to keep our spending in check” and also would have liked to have seen more investments that would ease the property tax burden.

Read more here.

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DeAndre Houston-Carson (GettyImages)

By BOB GOLDSBOROUGH | Chicago Tribune

Former Chicago Bears safety DeAndre Houston-Carson and his wife, Elizabeth, in December paid $1.2 million for a five-bedroom, 4,608-square-foot farmhouse-style home on 5 acres in Barrington Hills, three months after the couple sold their five-bedroom, 3,001-square-foot home in Hawthorn Woods for $800,000.

Houston-Carson played for the Bears from 2016 until signing with the Baltimore Ravens as a free agent in 2023. He later joined the Houston Texans and currently is a free agent.

In Barrington Hills, the couple’s new home was built in 1977, with an addition designed by South Barrington-based Reed Architects. Features include 4 ½ bathrooms, three fireplaces, a gallery-style entry, and a kitchen that was updated in 2016 that has a 16-foot island, marble countertops, a Wolf Range, a Wolf double oven, two Bosch dishwashers, custom cabinetry and two sinks with polished nickel fixtures.

Other features include a family room with vaulted ceilings, a screened porch, a mudroom with built-in storage and a four-car, extra deep garage. The house’s primary suite has large walk-in closets and a full basement that is framed out and able to be finished.

Outside on the property are a pool and a patio.

The house had been listed for $1.45 million in May 2023 and was reduced to $1.35 million the following month and then to $1.295 million in August.

Scott Glazer of @properties Christie’s International Real Estate, who represented the couple, told Elite Street that Elizabeth Houston-Carson is from the Chicago area, and that the couple was looking for a new home with acreage and privacy.

“They didn’t want a cookie-cutter subdivision, and in Barrington Hills, the average acreage is 5 acres. And Barrington Hills has great schools,” he said. “The home is very, very nice — it’s their forever home.”

Read more here.

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Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is seen during a news conference at the City of Chicago Public Safety Headquarters on May 3, 2024. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD | Chicago Tribune

Timothy McVeigh, otherwise known as the Oklahoma City bomber, was apprehended many miles away from his heinous crime by a police officer who had merely noticed a yellow Mercury was missing its registration tag. As he approached the driver, the officer noticed the bulge of a weapon under McVeigh’s jacket.

That was years ago, but in everyday Chicago, police view traffic stops as a crucial way of getting dangerous guns off the streets. The documented examples are numerous: a Glock 22 found after a stop for nonfunctional lights; a 9 mm Taurus found after officers noticed a driver going the wrong way down a one-way street; a loaded Ruger found in a car with expired license plates; a KAL-TEC handgun found after police officers noticed a driver blowing through a stop sign.

All of those examples, and we have seen reports of numerous others, represent good reasons why Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s widely reported plan to decline to prosecute gun and drug possession crimes discovered as a result of minor traffic stops, such as the ones listed above, is a terrible idea. In a city that is not awash with gangs totting illegal guns, maybe. But that is not the situation in which Chicago finds itself.

Anyone even passingly familiar with the prevalence of drive-by shootings knows that a gun in a glove box is a gun that might well be the weapon in a pending violent crime. If officers are effectively prohibited from looking for these weapons, more people will die. It’s that simple.

Cartoonist Scott Stantis on Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s new traffic stop policies. (Scott Stantis/For the Chicago Tribune)

Foxx’s argument is that traffic stops disproportionately target Chicagoans of color and rarely lead to arrests. To which we would answer, the violent crime that results from all these guns under seats and in glove boxes also disproportionately targets Chicagoans of color. Most folks living in neighborhoods beset by violent crime want as many guns apprehended and off the streets as possible, whether or not arrests accompany them.

It’s true that traffic stops can be so stressful for all parties that they may have unintended consequences or even cause needless deaths. As we noted in the recent case of Dexter Reed, police should have been reminded by what happened in that instance of the value of cool, calm heads and an awareness of the possibility of a mentally troubled suspect being triggered by officers approaching like this was a military-style assault. You can believe that Reed should not have discharged his weapon and that the police were justified in returning fire and still hope that police leaders now look more closely at what happens in traffic stops and train officers to be more aware of the risk factors of different approaches, both for citizens and for officers.

Editorial continues here.

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In this image taken from a video advertisement, a hydraulic press crushes an array of creative instruments. The recently released ad promoting Apple’s new iPad Pro has struck quite a nerve online. (Apple)

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD | Chicago Tribune

On Tuesday, Apple released the worst advertisement in its long and previously illustrious history of brand creation, extension and promotion. Why? The ad stupidly and arrogantly says the quiet part out loud. It does not so much sell an iPad as evoke discomfort at just what artificial intelligence might do to all of us sentient beings.

In two words: Crush us.

In the advertisement, we see a malevolent force squeezing the life out of a trumpet, cans of paint, a camera lens, a guitar, a piano, a metronome, books, a sculpture, even a fun little kiddy creature whose eyes are literally popped out of its sockets.

And what is that force? A new iPad that happens to be thinner than the rest. Whoop-de-do.

Here is the kind of misstep that surely would have sent Apple founder Steve Jobs into a fury and is sufficient to suggest a company that, as it has aged and fattened up with profits, has forgotten its roots as a fantastic tool for left-brain humans.

Apple had always sold itself as a brilliantly curated collection of devices that humanized technology. In so doing, it revolutionized the creativity of architects, fashion designers, musicians, moviemakers and visual artists and empowered all those in any field who were intimidated by MS-DOS and code. Instead of A drives and crucial colons, we got folders that looked like the ones on our messy desks. We removed files by throwing them in a friendly trash can. A familiar piece of fruit welcomed us to our work. Going to one of Apple’s stores felt like going to a beautiful art gallery with precious works on display.

More importantly, Apple positioned itself as a subservient partner to human creativity. It offered tools to amplify what we did. It made our work better and yet didn’t require credit. In return, the world has showered the company with affection, happily paying premium prices for its products, embracing its lucrative upgrades even though the old stuff was just fine and helping it achieve dominance in pretty much every field it has cared to enter.

How does it now see itself? The advertisement, titled “Crush,” might just tell you all you need to know.

Apple’s Bud Light moment, philosophically far worse, comes with terrible timing. Back in the Jobs era, Apple’s brilliant founder knew that he had to ease the transition from the analog to the digital world, and he knew he had to appropriate its familiar nomenclature to remove customer intimidation. Over time, the comfort Apple offered became ubiquitous, even in early childhood.

Tribune Editorial Cartoonist Scott Stantis on AI’s threat to creatives. (Scott Stantis / For the Chicago Tribune)

What Apple and other tech companies are failing to appreciate is that we’re actually in a moment comparable to that of the 1980s, when computing first entered people’s homes.

The new world of AI is terrifying to many of us. We’re fully aware that it is being trained by purloining content generated by people previously oblivious. We know it might come for our jobs one day. We worry what it will do to our children. Our fear is that it will morph from helper to dictator and, even worse, bring about some kind of new reality that’s half-human and half-virtual, making it difficult for many of us to know the difference. Through all of this, we suspect, Silicon Valley will generate heaps of money while the rest of us end up in one of the trash cans in the corner of our screens.

Read more here.

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Demolition crews hired by the Bears begin knocking down the grandstand at the former Arlington International Racecourse on June 16, 2023, in Arlington Heights. | Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune

By Neil Milbert | Chicago Tribune

During my years as a Tribune sports writer, I covered the Kentucky Derby 33 times and considered it to be one of the most interesting and rewarding experiences of my long career.

Before I joined the Tribune in 1968 and after my full-time employment ended in 2008, I watched the Derby on TV every year, even though I’ve never been a horseplayer and racing isn’t my favorite sport. Watching the post parade to the strains of “My Old Kentucky Home” on the first Saturday in May was a rite of spring.

But starting last year, I vowed never to watch another Kentucky Derby, either in person or on TV.

My boycott comes in response to the vital role the management team at Churchill Downs Inc. (CDI) played in the Bears’ 2023 destruction of the world-renowned and tradition-rich Arlington International Racecourse, one of the precious gems of Chicago sports.

The rubble that remains is a monument to the greed of the people who run CDI and their disregard for the owners and trainers who raced their horses there and the fans and families who made trips to Arlington part of their summer sports and recreation menus.

CDI has tried to hide its motive in forcing the Bears to wipe Arlington off the map, but the obvious reason was to eradicate gambling competition for Rivers Casino, in which CDI holds a 62% interest and which is located in Des Plaines, only 12 miles from the site of the former track in Arlington Heights.

Then known as Arlington Park, the racetrack was built in 1927 and acquired by the late Dick Duchossois and three partners in 1983. In the aftermath of the fire that destroyed the clubhouse and grandstand in 1985, Duchossois bought out his partners in February 1986 and rebuilt Arlington in 1988. After Arlington reopened in 1989, Architectural Digest acclaimed it as “the world’s most beautiful racetrack.”

European horse owners and media who came for the Arlington Million and their counterparts in the U.S. joined in the chorus of praise.

New York sports writer Jenny Kellner told the whimsical tale of a horseplayer who’d gone to heaven and was taken on a tour by St. Peter, who asked, “Well, how do you like the place?”

“Oh, it’s nice,” the horseplayer answered. “But it sure ain’t Arlington.”

Duchossois shut down his palatial track in 1998-99 in a successful attempt to win substantial real estate tax concessions. He reopened in 2000, and that June he merged Arlington and CDI.

The merger made Duchossois Industries by far the biggest shareholder (25%) in the parent company. A string was attached that the share would increase to 31.8% if the litigation-snarled Rosemont casino opened within a few years and — as mandated by the legislature — funneled a portion of its adjusted gross revenue to the state’s racetracks, with Arlington receiving the biggest subsidy. Duchossois Industries also was awarded three seats on the CDI board of directors.

Duchossois predicted that joining with “the best-known brand in horse racing would greatly benefit Illinois racing.”

Instead, the merger ultimately produced irreparable damage to Illinois racing.

For nearly two decades CDI/Arlington joined with the other tracks and thoroughbred and harness horsemen’s organizations to lobby the state legislature for permission to conduct slot machine and table gaming at the track, converting it into a “racino.”

Similar to the Rosemont formula that never came to fruition, a 3% adjusted gross revenue deduction would be allocated for purses. This would significantly upgrade the quality of racing and make the product more attractive to sophisticated bettors in Illinois and in the simulcast marketplace, where races from all over the country are shown at out-of-state tracks and off-track betting locations. Similar racing formulas have proven to be very successful in Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Starting in 2015 the Duchossois family began significantly reducing its holdings in CDI. In 2017 the sale of more stock and the departure of the family’s representatives on the board left the track entirely in the hands of corporate managers headed by CEO Bill Carstanjen.

An obvious proponent of Milton Friedman’s economic philosophy that the sole purpose of a corporation is to increase its profits, Carstanjen shifted CDI’s traditional emphasis on racing to a focus on casino gambling, and in 2018 Arlington’s parent company acquired its 62% interest in Rivers Casino.

The long push for casinos at Illinois racetracks finally succeeded in the spring of 2019, when the legislature passed and Governor J.B. Pritzker signed a massive gaming expansion bill.

But then CDI did a sudden and shocking about-face, announcing that Arlington wouldn’t become a racino. Carstanjen said the subsidy for racing purses made it “financially untenable.” He went on to say: “The long-term solution is not Arlington Park. That land will have a higher and better purpose for something else.”

When interrogated by Illinois Racing Board members concerning the financial windfall that closing Arlington would have on Rivers Casino’s revenue, a CDI representative said he wasn’t privy to any discussions to that effect.

The 360-acre property was put up for sale in 2021, and racing was discontinued after that year’s April 30-Sept. 25 meeting.

The Bears bought Arlington for $197 million in 2023 after CDI spurned at least three offers from groups that sought to perpetuate racing. This wasn’t the first time the Bears contemplated moving to the racetrack property. In 1975 they announced plans to build an 80,000-capacity stadium that would open in 1977 northwest of the old Arlington and would coexist with the racetrack, but the deal with former track owner Gulf & Western fell through.

The consensus is that in addition to prohibiting gambling on the property, the new deal with the Bears included a tacit agreement not to conduct betting on races. Instead the football team planned a $5 billion development with an enclosed stadium, housing and entertainment.

But now the Bears have shifted their focus to building a replacement for Soldier Field on the Chicago lakefront. To reduce the enormous increase in real estate taxes that resulted from the cessation of racing at Arlington after the 2021 meeting, in May 2023 they began the since-completed demolition of the luxurious and historic track. (The team’s late chairman, Ed McCaskey, must have been rolling over in his grave because after Arlington reopened in 1989, he was a summertime fixture in a box seat in front of the press box.)

The destruction of Arlington gave CDI a “demolition derby double” — combining it with the 2015 destruction of another track in its gambling empire, Calder Race Course in suburban Miami.

CDI purchased Calder in 1999, and casino gambling came to the track in 2010 with the stipulation there be 40 days of racing. In 2014 the track was leased to the owner of Gulfstream Park. Even though CDI tore down the grandstand and clubhouse after the 2015 meeting, racing continued under the auspices of Gulfstream until the lease expired in 2020.

Jockey Miguel Mena rides Harmac, left, after they won the Bruce D. Memorial Stakes race during Arlington Million day on Aug. 12, 2017, at Arlington Park in Arlington Heights. | Nuccio DiNuzzo/Chicago Tribune

To perpetuate casino gambling, CDI persuaded regulators to substitute parimutuel betting at the jai alai fronton it had built on the premises for the rule that stipulated 40 days of betting on horses.

While the cessation of racing at Calder had an adverse effect on the thoroughbred sport in Florida, the damage pales in comparison with that inflicted on both thoroughbred and harness racing in Illinois by the absence of Arlington.

It has left the dual-purpose Hawthorne Race Course as the only track in the Chicago metropolitan area. Since 2022 the thoroughbreds and harness horses have had to time-share, dividing the racing calendar. This year thoroughbred racing began on March 23 and will run through Oct. 13. The harness horses concluded a meeting that began Sept. 9 on Feb. 12, and they’re scheduled to return for an Oct. 19-Dec. 30 meeting.

Trying to undermine Hawthorne was a constant when CDI controlled Arlington. In 2012 its racetrack subsidiary Churchill Downs instituted a qualifying race system to determine the field for the Kentucky Derby. Conspicuous by its absence from the list was the most prestigious dirt race in Illinois, the Illinois Derby at Hawthorne. Making the omission more glaring was that 2002 Illinois Derby winner War Emblem went on to win the Kentucky Derby and Preakness.

Included on the long list of current qualifiers are such dubious domestic preps as the Sunland Park Derby in a New Mexico city with a population of 18,032. There also are more than a few far-flung overseas qualifiers such as the UAE Derby in Dubai, the Fukuryu Stakes in Japan and the Cardinal Stakes in Great Britain. There has been only a trickle of qualifiers from overseas, and none has come close to finishing in the top three.

In stark contrast to CDI, NASCAR is trying to get a foothold in Chicago and Formula One is exploring the possibility of holding a race here. The women’s professional franchises, basketball’s Sky and soccer’s Red Stars, also are committed to becoming fixtures on the Chicago sports scene.

But CDI has turned away from the nation’s third-biggest sports market by excluding the Illinois Derby from the Kentucky Derby qualifier list and then committing a far more egregious offense by destroying Arlington.

In writing Arlington’s obituary, it must be emphasized that this beautiful track had one of the richest traditions in the racing world.

Jerry Bailey rides Cigar across the finish line July 13, 1996, in Arlington Heights to win the Arlington Citation Challenge. | AP Photo/Jane Gibson

The great Secretariat made his first start after becoming the first Triple Crown winner in 25 years when he came for an invitational race in 1973. In another invitational in 1996, Cigar equaled Citation’s modern-day record by winning his 16th consecutive race. Citation, the 1948 Triple Crown winner, made Arlington his summer home.

Read more here.

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Vince Burkle, of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, holds an adult spotted lanternfly found in Huntington, Indiana, on Aug. 17, 2022. (Andy Lavalley/for the Post-Tribune)

By AVANI KALRA | Chicago Tribune

While Chicagoans were alarmed to learn the spotted lanternfly had been found in Illinois last year, experts say spring is the time to take action against that insect — as well as another damaging invasive species that has made far more inroads and gotten less attention.

The spongy moth, formerly known as the gypsy moth, has been in Illinois for decades and can strip leaves and kill trees, sometimes defoliating large swaths of land.

Kathryn Bronsky, a national policy manager with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, said while it’s important to stop spongy moths from killing trees in the 20 states in which they are currently established, it’s even more important to limit the insect’s expansion across the United States.

Bronsky said spongy moths usually spread around the country in the form of egg masses.

“Egg masses get laid on everything,” Bronsky said. “They can lay them on your barbeque or your backyard grill, on your patio furniture, things you’d think there’s no way caterpillars could be on.”

Egg masses are usually a cream color, according to Greg Dwyer, a professor of ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago, and appear spongy, with small holes across the surface. Both the spotted lanternfly and the spongy moth lay eggs in masses, but where the lanternfly may lay as many as 60 eggs, the moth can lay up to 1,000.

These eggs begin hatching in spring, and the USDA is encouraging residents to report and destroy any eggs they find before the insects enter more destructive phases.

Dwyer said spongy moths feed on a variety of hardwood trees, including oaks. In some states, including Michigan, the moth has caused significant damage to hundreds of thousands of acres of forest.

“The spongy moth is extremely voracious,” Dwyer said. “And sometimes it gets up to very, very high numbers, and will deploy to vast areas.”

A spongy moth egg mass is seen at Fullersburg Woods Forest Preserve in Oak Brook. (Chuck Berman/Chicago Tribune)

A spongy moth caterpillar crawls along partially eaten leaves of a tree in Trenton, New Jersey. (Mel Evans/AP)

While Dwyer said many insects feed on foliage and trees, the moth poses a particular danger because of its sheer numbers and its preference for hardwood trees. Enough moths can eat the foliage on an entire tree, killing it over several years.

The spotted lanternfly, on the other hand, prefers items like grapes, hops and some hardwoods like walnut trees, according to Matthew Travis, the spotted lanternfly national policy manager at the USDA.

“These things are really important to a lot of communities, certainly to agricultural communities,” Travis said. “People rely on what those plants provide, whether that’s grape juice or wine, and certainly hops and beer. So the spotted lanternfly has been known to really act as a big stressor.”

Read more here.

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By THE EDITORIAL BOARD | Chicago Tribune

Grocery sales taxes are looking like toast. Only 13 states still levy them and even some of that number, such as Kansas, are either reducing them or phasing them out. They’re now widely seen as unacceptably regressive, even by sales tax standards. And the political downside of taxing such staples as milk or eggs is significant.

Add in spiraling food costs and grocery taxes look even worse. Prices for food like carrots and butter saw double-digit increases in the aftermath of the pandemic and while there are signs that food companies are no longer attempting such increases, few expect basket prices to fall significantly. Compared with much of Europe, U.S. prices at the supermarket are astronomical. You now can pay as much as $8 for a simple loaf of locally produced, and inaccurately named, “peasant bread” in a Chicago supermarket, we recently discovered.

So we’re sympathetic with Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desire, as expressed late last month in his budget address, to nix Illinois’ 1% levy on these staples. It’s not a lot on an individuated basis, of course. But it’s a tax that does not need to be there, especially since its absence might contribute in some small way to motivating people to cook healthy meals at home rather than stopping at the local fast-food outlet.

But there’s a wrinkle here. The revenue from that tax goes directly to municipalities, not state coffers. Pritzker thus has the power to nix the tax without having to worry about a loss of cash flowing into his own budget. And that explains why various municipalities have organized in protest, claiming that the loss of said revenue will result in them having to cut services or hike their own taxes. According to the Illinois Municipal League, the bite out of the budget of such Chicago suburbs as Wheaton would be over $2 million, the likes of Naperville would be hit by over $3 million and Chicago itself could lose as much as $80 million.

In predictive response, Pritzker said localities are free to levy their own grocery taxes to restore this revenue. (That’s the setup in a few other states.) But that scenario, of course, means the municipalities would take the political hit themselves. And they’d risk consumers choosing to shop in the next suburb over where they could buy their yogurt tax-free.

Read more here.

Related:Mayors slam Pritzker’s proposal to eliminate grocery tax

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