Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘The Chicago Way’ Category

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan exits the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in Chicago on Monday, Oct. 21, after opening statements in his federal corruption concluded. | Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams

Capitol News Illinois reporter Hannah Meisel is covering the corruption trial of ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan from the Dirksen Federal Courthouse in Chicago.

The former speaker, who left office under growing pressure related to the FBI investigation surrounding him in early 2021, faces 23 counts of racketeering, bribery, extortion and wire fraud.

For the full background on the trial, the yearslong investigation and Madigans’s fall from power, read Meisel’s preview story here: 4 decades after rising to power and nearly 4 years since his fall, former Speaker Madigan goes to trial

To summarize, prosecutors allege he used his political power and various offices – including as a partner in his law firm – as a “criminal enterprise” to protect and enhance his power while enriching himself and his allies. But his defense attorneys argue the state is trying to criminalize the political process and baseline constituent services.

His co-defendant Mike McClain, a veteran Statehouse lobbyist and longtime Madigan confidant, was already convicted on public corruption charges last year in the separate but related “ComEd Four” trial.  The feds are again trying to show McClain is an “agent” of Madigan, while his defense attorneys say he simply engaged in legal relationship maintenance, a core function of lobbying

Below is a rundown of the coverage from the courtroom – where the trial is scheduled each Monday through Thursday well into December. This page will be updated as the trial progresses.

Monday, Oct. 21

Madigan’s approach to power at center of opening statements in his corruption trial: The jury heard Madigan’s opening statements and got a first look at a key piece of evidence that has for years been teased in legal filings. In that grainy video, Madigan meets with Chicago Ald. Danny Solis to discuss how the speaker’s property tax appeals firm could get business from an apartment development project. But Solis, the chair of Chicago City Council’s powerful zoning board, was secretly wearing a video camera. Read the story here.

Tuesday, Oct. 22

Feds ‘turned over heaven and earth’ in Madigan probe but found no real bribes, co-defendant says: It was McClain’s day for opening statements on Tuesday as he sat at a defense table for the beginning of his second corruption trial in 19 months. His defense attorneys sought to show the government had tunnel vision as a result of its yearslong investigation into Madigan and “wrongly concluded that since Mike Madigan is powerful, therefore he must be corrupt.” The jury also heard from a pair of former lawmakers who had conflicts with Madigan. Read the story here.

Wednesday, Oct. 23

ComEd exec testifies utility prepared for bankruptcy before 2011 law threw it a lifeline: McClain’s role as electric utility Commonwealth Edison’s longtime top contract lobbyist is central to the trial. On Wednesday, a ComEd executive said the company was preparing for bankruptcy in 2007 and continued in “dire” financial straits before it successfully lobbied for a 2011 law that helped make it profitable again. How that measure became law – and whether it happened legally – was the focus of Wednesday’s court proceedings. Read the story here.

Thursday, Oct. 24

‘My client is the speaker’: Jury hears wiretapped calls of Madigan co-defendant, longtime friend: The jury heard witness testimony and nearly three dozen wiretapped phone calls on Thursday. Included were calls the feds hope will bolster their argument that McClain was Madigan’s “agent” – a term McClain himself sometimes used. In another call, McClain told a colleague: “Your client is only Mike Madigan. It’s not the Democratic Party … it’s not anybody that hired you, it’s not your mom and dad. The only person you care about is Mike Madigan.” Read the story here.

Capitol News Illinois

Read Full Post »

“D220 named best unit school district in IL”

Yesterday, District 220 published the following on their Facebook page:

“In his Superintendent’s Report at our Oct. 15 Barrington 220 Board of Education meeting, Dr. Winkelman shared that Barrington 220 has been named the Best Unit (PK-12) School District in Illinois in the 2025 Niche rankings! Click here to check out all of the 2025 Niche rankings.”

That Facebook posting can be found here.

Yet on September 30th, WGN News published, “Report: Top three U.S. school districts are all in the Chicago area,” written by Jeremy Tanner and Ethan Illers. An excerpt from their report reads:

“The greater Chicago area is home to the top three best school districts in America, according to a new report from Niche.

Niche, an education research and rankings platform, weighed data for over 11,000 school districts for its annual selection. The rankings are based on ratings from current students, alumni and parents, along with quantitative data from the U.S. Department of Education.

The study comes at a time when young students across the country are still trying to recover from caused by the pandemic. After a record injection of $190 billion in federal dollars, some students’ test scores have improved but millions are still behind, a June analysis found.

‘Choosing the right school for our children can have a real ripple effect on their lives — from career path and earning potential to how they’ll contribute to society,’ said Luke Skurman, founder and CEO of Niche, in a press release. ‘Our annual K-12 rankings empower families to make informed decisions and help lay a strong foundation for their children’s futures.’

The top district overall remains unchanged for the fourth straight year — Adlai E. Stevenson High School District No. 125 in Lincolnshire, Illinois. The district has nearly 5,000 students and received the highest possible rating for academics, teachers, clubs & activities, college prep and administration.

In fact, the greater Chicago area swept the top three spots with Cook County’s Glenbrook High School District 225 and Evanston Township High School District No. 202 in second and third, respectively.”

The top 50 school districts in Illinois according to Niche and the WGN News report are:

Did District 220 and/or Dr. Winkleman choose to use the term “Unit” to qualify their report to students, teachers, staff, the board and taxpayers (parents or not)?

From a purely technical perspective, perhaps it might be valid. But does this send the right message to voters being asked to decide on a significant financial referendum question November 5th?

You decide.

Read Full Post »

By Jon Seidel | Chicago Sun*Times

Edward M. Burke, the onetime dean of the Chicago City Council and its longest-serving member, has surrendered to a federal prison to begin serving his two-year sentence for racketeering, bribery and attempted extortion, authorities have confirmed.

Burke, the former 14th Ward alderman, is in custody at a low-security facility in Thomson, Illinois, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

It’s a day many Chicagoans thought would never come. Even after his conviction by a jury last December, some predicted the 80-year-old political powerhouse would delay any sentence by tying his case up with appeals. No such appeal ever materialized.

Inmates at the Thomson facility are responsible for making their beds, sweeping and mopping their living-area floors, removing trash and “ensuring it is clean and sanitary,” according to its official handbook. Inmates must wear “institution issued clothing” from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays that includes a white T-shirt, spruce green shirt and slacks.

The handbook also says leisure programs are provided. Burke, who is Roman Catholic, may also be able to take advantage of the facility’s Religious Services Department, which “provides pastoral care and religious accommodation.”

The facility is located about 150 miles west of Chicago, near the Iowa border.

Though U.S. District Chief Judge Virginia Kendall recommended Burke serve his time at a facility in Terre Haute, Indiana, that recommendation was not binding on the Bureau of Prisons.

Read more here.

Read Full Post »

The Village Board of Trustees will be conducting their regular monthly meeting this evening beginning at 6:30 PM. Topics on their agenda include:

A copy of their agenda can be viewed and downloaded here.

Read Full Post »

The Roads & Bridges Committee will meet (publicly) today at 4:00 PM. Topics on their “agenda” include:

  • Snow Plowing Program Bid Results
  • Road Program 2024 Review
  • Road Program 2025 Discussion

A copy of the “agenda” can be viewed here. However, it is sorely lacking information, namely the, “Snow Plowing Program Bid Results,” as there ARE NO RESULTS disclosed.

Many in our community mistrust the Roads & Bridges Committee, and for good reason given their repeated lack of transparency as the case here. It is disheartening to witness how much the Cecola Administration seemingly has adopted, “The Chicago Way,” of doing business in less than four years.

Related:A matter of trust,” “What message is the Cecola administration sending residents?,” “The most viewed stories of 2022

Read Full Post »

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed over 275 bills into law recently. Here is what you need to know about changes to taxes, hotel shampoo, light bulbs and virtual health care.

By Joe Tabor | Illinois Policy Institute

llinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker just signed over 275 bills into law on subjects ranging from occupational licensing to taxes to hotel shampoo bottles.

Here’s what you should know about some of the bills signed into law during August.

Taxes

Pritzker signed a bill that would eliminate the grocery tax, two property tax bills that fail to promise real relief and one bill that expands sales taxes to out-of-state business shipping products to Illinois.

House Bill 3144 ends the statewide 1% grocery tax, joining the 37 states that do not impose a tax on groceries. However, municipalities will be able to impose a local grocery tax by ordinance without first asking voters. Some cities are already doing so.

Senate Bill 2936 would allow municipal governments to reduce property taxes for newly remodeled single-family residences up to the value of the alteration.

Senate Bill 3455 commissions the Illinois Department of Revenue to study the entire property tax system in the state, including a comprehensive review of assessments, collections, exemptions and the tax levies themselves.

Neither SB 2936 nor SB 3455 would actually reduce the overall property tax burden. Neither deals with the No. 1 driver of property taxes: overpromised public pensions.

Senate Bill 3362 expands the reach of local retail taxes by requiring businesses outside of Illinois that ship tangible personal property to customers in Illinois to collect the local sales tax in addition to the state tax.

Employment

Pritzker signed two bills addressing jobs programs in the state.

Senate Bill 2907 requires the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to publish a report on all state and federally funded job training and workforce development programs to “identify successful programs, areas for improvement, and potential areas of duplication or overlap in order to optimize the efficiency and effectiveness of State and federally funded job training and workforce development efforts.”

Senate Bill 3155 gives DCEO discretion not to require businesses that failed to maintain the minimum employment numbers from March 2020 to the beginning of 2024 to repay tax credits. This bill is likely meant to allow some latitude to employers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, but giving the final decision to DCEO means the department will be picking the winners and losers.

Read more here.

Read Full Post »

By Matt Paprocki | Illinois Policy Institute

Does Illinois finally have a path to public pension reform?

Barrington Township recently placed a nonbinding resolution on the Nov. 5 ballot that serves as a meaningful first step.

The referendum reads as follows:

“Do you support constitutional pension reform to protect workers’ existing retirements and generate savings which could provide property tax relief or be reinvested in the community?”

Illinois’ worst-in-the-nation pension crisis shouldn’t come as a surprise. For years economists have been sounding the alarm that Illinois’ pension problem is growing from financially painful to potentially unsolvable. Now, taxpayers are on the hook for $212 billion in unfunded state and local pension liabilities.

Not only is Illinois’ pension debt the largest in the U.S. as a percentage of the state’s gross domestic product, but Illinois’ government pensions also are the second-worst funded in the nation at 49.5%.

Illinois’ pension spending has grown significantly since 2000, outpacing other categories. Since then, pension spending has increased by more than 584%, while total spending grew by 21% and many vital services to the state’s most vulnerable were cut by 20%. Rapidly growing pension spending still can’t keep up with the growing gap in what’s been promised to government retirees.

What does that mean for residents and businesses in Illinois?

While decades of fiscal mismanagement by lawmakers largely is responsible for Illinois’ current pension predicament, residents and businesses have been forced to cover the growing costs. Those costs become higher property taxes: as pensions eat more state spending — currently $1 of every $5 — schools and other local governments boost property taxes to replace dwindling state dollars and cover their own pension costs.

Residential property taxes in Illinois have increased 215% since 1996. Illinois residents now pay the second-highest property taxes in the U.S. Additionally, Chicago has the second-highest commercial property tax in the nation.

High taxes are pushing people out of the city and out of the state. Population levels in Chicago are the lowest they’ve been since 1920 and the state has lost more than 250,000 residents since the pandemic.

Residents also are hurt by the effect of high taxes on businesses, which provide jobs. High taxes are bad for business. The greater Chicago area has lost seven major companies in recent years, which means thousands of Illinois jobs are headed to states with lower taxes.

It’s a vicious cycle. Pension debt eats up finances that would be used for goods and services. To keep up and avoid cutting services, lawmakers raise taxes. Residents and businesses, overburdened with high costs, flee the state and worsen the burden for those who remain.

Experts describe pension funding ratios that fall under 60% as deeply troubled and warn ratios below 40% are likely past the point of no return. Illinois at 49.5% is at great risk of reaching that point of no return. That means pensions are at risk for our public employees, and remaining Illinoisans face the threat of massive new taxes.

Now, more than ever, the state needs meaningful pension reform.

Of the eight states that enshrine public pension benefits in their constitutions, Illinois is the state that has had the most difficulty when it comes to funding its pensions. In 2013, a series of bipartisan reforms that would have addressed many of the problems were passed, but ultimately rejected by the Illinois Supreme Court as unconstitutional.

A pension reform plan originally developed by the Illinois Policy Institute — based loosely on those bipartisan 2013 reforms — would help eliminate state and local unfunded pension liabilities and achieve retirement security for government pensioners without taking away current benefits. But to implement these, or similar, necessary reforms and solve the pension problem, Illinois needs to change its constitution.

Polling shows a majority of Illinoisans support constitutional pension reform. However, legislators across Illinois have refused to give residents the opportunity to vote on the issue. Without legislative action, a constitutional amendment to reform pensions won’t get on the ballot.

Which is why Barrington Township’s referendum, while nonbinding, is so important.

Local townships giving residents the opportunity to declare their concern about the issue tells lawmakers how important it is to take up pension reform at the state level.

More municipalities throughout Illinois should follow Barrington Township’s example.

Enabling voters to voice their opinions on much-needed pension reform is the first step toward solving the pension crisis and ensuring financial security for pensioners, businesses and residents in Illinois.

– Matt Paprocki is the president and CEO of the Illinois Policy Institute.

Read Full Post »

Gov. J.B. Pritzker recently approved two laws intended to spur change in the way property taxes work in Illinois. They are old ideas that will provide more show than relief. | AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

By Joe Tabor | Illinois Policy Institute

Gov. J.B. Pritzker just signed two bills into law that aim to address property taxes in the state, but neither will bring the reform Illinoisans deserve.

Senate Bill 2936 allows home rule municipalities to provide abatements for newly remodeled homes. Senate Bill 3455 commissions a study on the entire property tax system in the state.

SB 2936 would allow municipal governments to abate property taxes for newly remodeled single-family residences up to the value of the alteration. This policy would provide added incentives for homeowners to invest money in their homes and increase the value of their property.

It would not reduce the property taxes governments demand. It simply shifts the burden to those who did not make improvements to their homes. This is not a solution to the problem of high property taxes.

SB 3455 commissions the Illinois Department of Revenue to study the entire property tax system in the state, including a comprehensive review of assessments, collections, exemptions and the tax levies themselves. It is to look at the classification system used by Cook County as compared to the system used by the rest of the state. The law allows the department to make recommendations that will improve the system.

If that sounds familiar, it is because it is roughly the same mandate Pritzker gave to the Property Tax Relief Task Force created by SB 1932 in 2019 just after he took office. The task force put out a draft report in 2021 recommending various changes in policy, including local government consolidation, more state funding for education and expanding the sales tax base.

Few of the task force’s recommendations have been seriously followed up on. The report ignored the No. 1 driver of property taxes in Illinois: overpromised public pensions.

Read more here.

Read Full Post »

The District 220 Board of Education meets this evening at 6:30 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.

Read Full Post »

Loose rules on campaign cash have allowed legislative leaders in Springfield to consolidate their power and protect incumbents by directing the flow of money to preferred candidates. | Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune

By RAY LONG and RICK PEARSON | Chicago Tribune

At the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, the importance of money in national politics was clear, from the appeals made at fancy fundraisers to the unrelenting streams of video ads and text messages.

But in Illinois, big money is inundating politics at a pace that virtually puts government offices in the Land of Lincoln up for sale.

Few states invite politicians to raise and spend so aggressively as Illinois, where large infusions of cash led by billionaire Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker and his billionaire Republican enemies are enabled by loose rules and feeble enforcement standards that tempt politicians to push the limits of campaign finance boundaries.

As part of the ongoing series “Culture of Corruption,” which explores how Illinois’ voracious politics, structural flaws and tepid oversight set the state apart, the lack of meaningful campaign finance reform has repeatedly been identified as a key factor.

In this state:

  • Campaign contribution limits, approved only 15 years ago, are easily circumvented by a common maneuver political insiders call “the money bomb,” meaning the restrictions are essentially ignored.
  • Politicians use their campaign funds to legally launder cash so donors can obscure their identities and get around contribution limits to send more money to their allies.
  • Legislative measures to control campaign spending — often announced with great fanfare — are repeatedly buried or watered down by the very lawmakers who would be bound by them.
  • Election laws banning political action committees from coordinating with the candidates they support fail to define “coordination.”
  • The state agency charged with enforcing election laws has little authority to launch its own investigations or levy tangible penalties that might deter violators.

The flood of money pouring into the state’s pliable political system has created a raucous campaign environment where the last two races for Illinois governor have become the most and third-most expensive governor’s races in the nation, and, in 2022, allowed the incumbent governor to spend as much as he wanted to help pick the Republican rival he correctly thought would be easiest to defeat.

It has permitted legislative leaders in Springfield to consolidate their power and protect incumbents by weaponizing political donation rules meant to ensure fair play and directing the flow of cash to preferred candidates.

It allows indicted politicians, including two of the longest-serving elected officials in state history, to pay for their criminal lawyers with campaign cash and, if they are convicted of public corruption, to use those same funds to pay heavy fines.

Read more here.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »