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Archive for the ‘Pritzker’s Rules of Order’ Category

In the wake of many instances wherein The Observer has set forth the conflict of interest and the blatant violations of D220’s Code of Conduct and Board Policies by Board Member Erin Chan Ding, we have recently learned that Chan Ding’s violations continue and, due to complete lack of accountability by District Superintendent Winkelman and Board President Ficke Bradford, Chan Ding has actually been emboldened.

You’ll recall that at the July 15th Board of Education meeting, President Ficke Bradford asserted:

“As many are aware, District 220 Board Member Erin Chan Ding has declared her intent to run for State Representative of the 52nd District, and it’s within Erin’s right to do so, and Erin is aware of the Board policies and the laws that are in place.

We have consulted with our counsel, um, to confirm that merely running for an office, um, for political office, while refraining from engaging in any prohibited political activity while acting as a Board member or on School District property does not constitute a violation of the Board’s Code of Conduct. Erin and all Board Members are aware of the policies the Board does have in place.”

In fact, there are D220 Policies that specifically address these issues (in addition to those we have previously brought to the readers’ attention):

8:25 Advertising and Distributing Materials in Schools Provided by Non-School Related Entities
Political Candidates or Parties

Candidates and political parties will not be accepted for posting or distribution, except when used as part of the curriculum.

And,

2:105 Ethics and Gift Ban
Prohibited Political Activity

The following precepts govern political activities being conducted by District employees andBoard of Education members:

2. No Board member or employee shall intentionally use any District property or resources in connection with any political activity.

Yet, despite the direct admonition of Board President Ficke Bradford, and the explicit prohibition of political activity by two Board policies, we are given to understand that Board Member Chan Ding, in her dual capacity as a D220 Board Member and as a political candidate for the Democratic nomination for the 52nd District, attended both the Barrington High School and the Station Middle School Back to School nights, on School District property, where she handed out her political flyers for her run for the 52nd District and solicited signatures for her petitions to get on that ballot.

Craig and Sandra, your credibility is shot. You continually allow Chan Ding to flagrantly violate Board policy without any admonition, abusing her power, departing from the Board’s purpose, and destroying the public trust.

Shame on you.

Related: District 220 Board of Education meets tonight (9.15.25),” “District 220 posts Notice of Tentative Budget Public Hearing,” “Dual School Board and State Rep Positions Legally Incompatible,” “D220 Abuses Taxpayer Funds in favor of Partisan Campaign,” “Ding In Her Own Words – CONFLICTED!,” “District 220 Board of Education meets this evening (07.15.25)” “Ding Doubles Down,” “Ding’s D220 Deception,” “Chan Ding running in Democratic primary in 52nd,” “Three (3) Democratic candidates queued to run for the IL 52nd District House seat in 2026

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The District 220 Board of Education meets Tuesday evening at 6:00 PM at the District Administration Center, 515 W. Main Street. Items on their agenda include:

A copy of the agenda can be viewed here. The meeting will be live-streamed on the district YouTube channel.

Related: “District 220 posts Notice of Tentative Budget Public Hearing,” “Dual School Board and State Rep Positions Legally Incompatible,” “D220 Abuses Taxpayer Funds in favor of Partisan Campaign,” “Ding In Her Own Words – CONFLICTED!,” “District 220 Board of Education meets this evening (07.15.25)” “Ding Doubles Down,” “Ding’s D220 Deception,” “Chan Ding running in Democratic primary in 52nd,” “Three (3) Democratic candidates queued to run for the IL 52nd District House seat in 2026

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If Illinois state lawmakers are not going to spend the $3.3 billion sitting in the state’s road fund, drivers should get a break from the taxes going into it. Illinois gasoline taxes are No. 2 in the U.S.

By Ravi Mishra | Illinois Policy Institute

An accumulation of over $3.3 billion of unused dollars in Illinois’ road fund shows Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s automatic gasoline tax hikes are not necessary, and lawmakers should halt them.

Illinois      drivers have been paying more for gas every July since 2019, when Pritzker doubled motor fuel taxes and tied annual tax hikes to inflation. The state gas tax is now 48.3 cents per gallon, costing each driver an extra $143 annually and ranking Illinois as No. 2 in the country for highest gas taxes.

Road Fund balance has ballooned in the past six years

From 2018 to 2024, state road spending increased nearly $1 billion, but because of constant tax and fee hikes, revenues have surged even faster and grown nearly 95% in the same period. In 2024 alone, the state’s road fund collected over $5 billion while spending under $4 billion.

The fund reserves have ballooned. Cash balances grew from $624 million in 2018 to $3.3 billion as of 2024, a 428% increase. Balances are projected to continue growing to nearly $3.5 billion by 2026. Illinois’ “lockbox” amendment prevents these funds from being redirected to other expenses, yet lawmakers continue to allow automatic gas tax hikes regardless of need.

Drivers are paying more than necessary

Motor fuel tax rates were doubled in 2019 from 19 cents per gallon to 38 cents. Since then, rates have risen automatically to match inflation, ballooning to 48.3 cents in 2025, the second highest in the nation.

Read more here.

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Third grade is a critical year for young readers, predicting the success of their future education. See how well your local schools are doing at producing proficient readers by the end of third grade.

By Hannah Schmid | Illinois Policy Institute

Students are back in school, so how well is your local public school preparing children to read by the critical third-grade milestone?

In Illinois, 7 of 10 third graders can’t read at grade level. That means there’s trouble awaiting most Illinois students.

If a child has not learned to read by the end of third grade, that child is likely to struggle throughout his or her education. That’s because fourth grade is when students move from learning to read to reading as their main method of learning.

Read more here.

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Apple’s new iPhone launch on Sept. 9 may be a celebration for tech consumers, but it also makes the Illinois taxman smile. Illinois already had the nation’s highest tax rate on cell phone plans before it bumped up even more July 1.

By Dylan Sharkey | Illinois Policy Institute

With the new iPhone launch Sept. 9, Illinoisans’ excitement may quickly fade as they realize they are charged the highest state and local taxes on cell phone bills in the nation.

Illinoisans already paid the nation’s highest wireless taxes, but then the taxes were pushed even higher July 1 by state leaders. Illinois increased its share of wireless taxes from 7% to 8.65% to support a 9-8-8 suicide and crisis hotline.

Families in Illinois pay an effective 37.7% tax rate on their cell phone bills. No other state is even above 35%. That includes 24.9% in state and local taxes and 12.8% in federal taxes. For a family of four sharing a $100 plan, taxes add nearly $38 a month. That’s $456 a year, compared to the U.S. average of $320.

Chicagoans pay even more. Illinois allows local per-line taxes of $5 per phone in the city, meaning a family with four lines pays an additional $20 each month.

More here.

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As the Chicago Bears get ready for Monday Night Football, fans have heard talk about Arlington Heights since 2021. Here are the three biggest questions surrounding the move.

By Dylan Sharkey | Illinois Policy Institute

As the Chicago Bears gear up for Monday Night Football Sept. 8, fans wonder: when will the team leave Soldier Field and move to Arlington Heights?

Here are three big questions at play.

Are they moving to Arlington Heights?

Bears President and CEO Kevin Warren said Arlington Heights is the team’s sole focus. He told reporters Arlington Heights is “the only location in Cook County” able to support a fixed-roof stadium. But the team will only move forward if state lawmakers allow the team and surrounding businesses to freeze their property taxes.

Warren has said if the state passes a “mega project bill,” the new stadium would create 56,000 construction jobs and 9,100 permanent jobs. Gov. J.B. Pritzker has ruled out the state cutting a check to help pay for the new stadium, but he’s considering the property tax freeze.

When would they move?

If the Illinois General Assembly passes a bill, construction could start this year but likely wouldn’t end until 2028 at the earliest. Warren previously worked for the Minnesota Vikings when their stadium construction took 30 months.

State lawmakers return to Springfield in October, but only for six total days of legislative session. That leaves little time for the Bears to get enough consensus from lawmakers to pass their bill. It might also be tough to get state lawmakers representing Chicago on board with a bill, assuming they want the team to stay in the city.

More here.

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Dana Summers – Tribune

Mike Lester – AMS

Scott Stantis

Courtesy The Daily Cartoonist.

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By Sarah Roderick-Fitch | The Center Square

By Glenn Minnis | The Center Square contributor

The city of Chicago ranks near the bottom in the new Best & Worst-run cities in America survey of 148 different locations.

With researchers comparing the operating efficiency of each city, Chicago lands at No. 136 in the WalletHub survey after finishing 102nd in quality of city services and 140th in total budget per capita.

State Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, isn’t shy about voicing his displeasure with Chicago’s dismal showing.

“Chicago has been known as The Second City, but we have dropped quite precipitously down to 136, and that is based on one thing and one thing alone, and that is progressive policies from people who are producing painful results for the residents and for those like my community who are living adjacent to the city,” McLaughlin told The Center Square. “It is no longer the place it was 30 years ago. It is no longer the financial capital of commodities in the world and no longer a place that you will go to and feel safe.”

Researchers weighed “quality of services” metrics that included health, safety and economy rank, measuring each category against the city’s per-capita budget.

As bad as things have gotten, McLaughlin still sees a way out for the city.

“I think Chicago has an opportunity, particularly with those who have recognized that the governor and the mayor have put illegal migrants ahead of citizens and the neighborhoods who have been underserved now recognize that they have been overlooked,” he said. “They just have to change who they’re voting for and they have a chance to do that every two years.”

Read more here.

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Illinois ranked No. 1 for spending per student on higher education in 2024, paying more than double the national average. Declining enrollment, poorly structured finances, growing pension payments and bloated administration have driven up costs.

By Patrick Andriesen | Illinois Policy Institute

Illinois spends double the U.S. average per full-time higher education student, yet 106,375 fewer students want to attend its public community colleges and state universities than 15 years ago.

Pensions, administrative bloat and a poor funding formula are mainly to blame.

Illinois ranked No. 1 in the U.S. for higher education spending per full-time student in fiscal year 2024, spending $25,529 per student. That was double the national average and over $4,400 more per student than the No. 2 state: Wyoming, which had only about 8% of the students Illinois supports.

(Click on image to enlarge)

That translates to Illinois spending the most in the nation per full-time student at public two-year institutions and the second most in the U.S. per full-time student at public four-year institutions.

But all that government money has failed to make Illinois higher education more attractive to students. Enrollment at two- and four-year institutions has dropped from 368,019 in 2009 to 261,644 in 2024, according to the State Higher Education Finance report.

(Click on image to enlarge)

As spending by the state on higher education has climbed, so has the cost of tuition. Illinois’ in-state tuition for a public university now ranks No. 6 in the nation. It is the highest in the Midwest, rewarding Illinois students with more affordable options when they cross state lines.

Research in 2021 showed nearly 48% of Illinois’ four-year, college-bound students chose schools elsewhere, with the top picks being public universities in neighboring states where tuition was cheaper. They took their knowledge, income and tax dollars with them – often for good.

So why are Illinois taxpayers being forced to spend more on higher education when their schools are serving fewer students? And why does all that government spending fail to keep Illinois tuition from being among the highest in the nation?

State pensions, administrative glut and a poor funding model are mainly to blame at the state’s 12 public universities and 48 community colleges.

Read more here.

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By John Kass | John Kass News

I grew up in Chicago–which for 13 straight years now has been the murder capital of America–believing that the Democrats were just too crafty to ever fall stupidly into some Republican trap.

But I was dead wrong.

When I was a boy there was legendary Chicago mayor named Richard J. Daley—who loved the city—and was tough enough and ruthless enough to run it and protect it.

Now Chicago is run by a racist pinhead subject to increasing anxiety and panic attacks. The city’s commercial real estate market is cratering as businesses flee, corporate offices close, and Democrat leaders refuse President Donald Trump’s help to send in the National Guard to help with the murder epidemic

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, soft of mind and body, ridiculed the president’s offer of assistance, saying crime really isn’t an emergency, though more than 50 people were shot and at least 7 were murdered over the weekend.

The truth is that Mayor Pin Head and Gov. Fat Boy don’t really care about black and brown people who are the true victims of violent crimes. They care about the Chicago Teachers Union. They care about shielding Democrat boss Toni Preckwinkle, the Cook County Board President and Cook County Democrat chairman.

Boss Toni is a hard leftist protected by the corrupt corporate legacy media. She is without a doubt the architect of Chicago’s anarchy of crime.

The Democrats are now the pro-criminal party. They are eager to defund police and clear out the county jail that Boss Toni considers too black, too brown. Although the victims of violent crime in Chicago are black and brown. The city’s public schoolchildren can’t read or do math at grade level. All they’re prepared to do is make a life of violent crime and prison.

Chicago circles the drain.

Read more here.

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