January 12, 2011 · 4:50 pm
- State Journal-Register—Senate approves end to death penalty; bill headed to Quinn, “Ten years after Gov. George Ryan imposed a moratorium on the death penalty in Illinois and nearly eight years after then-state Sen. Barack Obama sponsored reforms to the system, a bill abolishing capital punishment is headed to Gov. Pat Quinn’s desk.”
- Southtown Star—Senate President: More work ahead, “Senate President John Cullerton says fixing the state’s finances will require hard work even after lawmakers passed a massive tax increase.”
- Rockford Register Star—Rockford School District presents $51 million cuts plan to public, “The committee came up with proposals to cut $51 million — or 12.6 percent — from the district’s $404 million budget to use for fiscal 2012, which begins July 1. The committee presented its recommendations Tuesday at the School Board meeting.”
- Bloomington Pantagraph—Normal mayor suggests form-based code optional, “Mayor Chris Koos is suggesting making the controversial form-based code an option — not a requirement — for developers of properties along the Main Street Corridor in Normal.”
Filed under Statewide Update
Tagged as bloomington pantagraph, clean coal plans, daily herald, death penalty vote, debt crisis, gov. george ryan, gov. pat quinn, illinois, illinois end death penalty, illinois government, illinois senate, illinois senate president john cullerton, lombard, mundelien, mundelien merge engineering and public works, normal, normal main street corridor, normal mayor chris koos, rockford register star, rockford school district, southtown star, state journal register, taylorville, taylorville clean-coal technology plant, tenaska vote
January 7, 2011 · 3:41 pm
- (AP) State Journal-Register—Public using stronger open government laws, “Attorney General Lisa Madigan said Thursday that the state’s 2009 overhaul of its Freedom of Information and Open Meetings laws brought long-overdue transparency to Illinois government.”
- Bloomington Pantagraph—On 2nd try, state House votes to abolish death penalty, “Illinois has not enforced the death penalty since then-Gov. George Ryan imposed a moratorium in 2000 after more than a dozen men on death row were exonerated. Just before leaving office in 2003, Ryan commuted the death sentences of 167 inmates to life in prison and pardoned four others.”
- State Journal-Register—Dems push income, cig tax increases, property tax break, “The plan calls for borrowing $8.75 billion to pay off old bills. And to prevent the state from sinking into a financial abyss again, lawmakers will be asked to approve bills limiting spending increases and imposing a prohibition on new programs for the next three years.”
- Southtown Star—Daley rips admission fee for Taste of Chicago, “During that the Taste of Chicago will ‘always be free,’ Mayor Richard Daley said Thursday he would oppose a lone bidder’s proposal to charge a $20 admission fee to the lakefront festival.”
- State Journal-Register, Editorial—Clout carries the day vs. Tenaska, “As things stand now, it appears that the Tenaska clean coal power plant proposed for Taylorville is dead.”
Filed under Statewide Update
Tagged as attorney general lisa madigan, bloomington pantagraph, chicago, cigarette tax, daily herald, death penalty abolished, dupage, freedom of information act, government news, governor george ryan, illinois, illinois deficit spending, illinois democrats, income tax increase, kane county, kane county board, kane finance committee, open government laws, open meetings act, policy news, privatization of festivals, property tax break, richard daley, seniors property taxes, southtown, southtown star, state journal register, taste of chicago, taylorville, tenaska clean coal plant, transparency
January 6, 2011 · 4:45 pm
- Chicago Sun-Times—Better Government Association sues Chicago Police Department, “The BGA, a not-for-profit corporation, claims the Chicago police refuses to release documents about the protection and transportation of Burke (14th) as requested in an Aug. 24, 2010, Freedom of Information Act request, according to the complaint filed in Cook County Circuit Court.”
- State Journal-Register—2 percentage point income tax hike on table for state leaders, “Legislative leaders and Gov. Pat Quinn will meet today to discuss boosting Illinois’ income tax rate from the current 3 percent to 5 percent as part of a package that also could include pension borrowing, a moratorium on new state programs, no new spending and property tax relief.”
- Bloomington Pantagraph—Illinois Senate approves Medicaid reform, “With the clock ticking on the lame-duck legislative session, the Illinois Senate unanimously approved a plan Wednesday to overhaul the state’s Medicaid program.”
- State Journal-Register—Tenaska bill falls short in Senate, “A bill authorizing construction of a $3.5 billion clean coal technology plant in Taylorville failed in a vote in the Illinois Senate Wednesday.”
- Belleville News Democrat—Insurance fraud investigators begin probe into workers’ comp claims at Menard, “State insurance fraud investigators have opened an official probe of the Menard Correctional Center, where hundreds of guards and others have filed for or received taxpayer-funded settlements for “repetitive trauma” they say was mainly caused by operating heavy cell locking mechanisms.”
- Southtown Star—U.S. House welcomes five from Illinois, “The Illinois congressional delegation has the biggest freshman class in more than a decade — five new House members and U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk were sworn in to full terms on Wednesday, all Republicans.”
- Southtown Star, Editorial—Unfair election process taints suburban hearings, “Whenever suburban elections approach, dozens of poor slobs find themselves caught up in a process designed to stop outsiders from threatening the people in power.”
- Chicago Tribune, Editorial: Reform—or eyewash? “Springfield is buzzing with reform talk in the final frantic days of this brief, few-days conclusion to a 2010 legislative session.”
Filed under Statewide Update
Tagged as 14th ward, belleville news democrat, better government association, BGA, bloomington pantagraph, burke, chicago, chicago police department, chicago sun-times, chicago tribune, clean coal technology plant, cook county circuit court, cpd, daily herald, deanna demuzio, FOIA, freedom of information act, gov. pat quinn, il, illinois assembly, illinois politics, illinois senate, kane countys, medicaid reform, menard correctional center, phil kadner, southtown star, springfield, state journal register, stop coalition, tate's attorney john barsanti, tax hike illinois, taylorville, tenaska, u.s. house of representatives