GOP lawmakers: CPS receives preferential treatment in school funding bill

https://www.ilnews.org/news/state_politics/gop-lawmakers-cps-receives-preferential-treatment-in-school-funding-bill/article_53db8c70-77d2-11e7-b23d-db26e0814a13.html

SPRINGFIELD, IL –  (Cole Latterbach, Illinois News Network.  Please click on the link for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

At the center of the school funding argument is the preferential treatment that Gov. Bruce Rauner and Republican lawmakers say Chicago Public Schools would receive under the Democrats’ plan.

When Rauner filed his amendatory veto of the school funding formula, he said it removed much of that preferential treatment CPS would have otherwise received. He objected to suburban and downstate taxpayers bailing out Chicago’s underfunded teachers’ pension.

When asked Tuesday, House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie, D-Chicago, said Chicago has long been shortchanged by the state because the city is double-billed for pensions.

“Chicago taxpayers pay for our teacher pensions but we also get to pay for the downstate teachers,” Currie said. “The downstate school districts don’t pay for their teachers.”

But suburban state Rep. Steven Reick, R-Woodstock, said the original language in Senate Bill 1 not only made the state’s annual payment to Chicago Public Schools’ pensions part of normal funding, it also allowed only Chicago to add its legacy pension debt in the formula for determining a district’s ability to fund its own schools. This made the district appear much worse off than it otherwise would, qualifying it for more state aid.

Harrisburg, IL inmate sentenced to 8 years for attack on guard

 

http://www.kfvs12.com/story/36057415/harrisburg-il-inmate-sentenced-to-8-years-for-attack-on-guard

HARRISBURG, IL –  (Kaylie Ross, KFVS-TV.  Please click on the link for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

On Thursday, August 3, Illinois Youth Center – Harrisburg inmate Jaylan Banks entered a guilty plea in Saline County to a Class 2 felony of Aggravated Battery.

According to the release, Banks on April 21, 2017 struck guard Jacob Miller in the face.

At least 2 injured in crash involving bus

 

http://www.wsiltv.com/story/36058573/at-least-2-injured-in-crash-involving-bus

WSIL TV photo

WOODLAWN, IL – (Brian Wilson, WSIL -TV.  Please click on the link for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

ORIGINAL STORY
Crews are on scene of a crash involving a car and a bus on I-64.
It happened Thursday at around 4:15 p.m. on I-64 eastbound at mile marker 67.

UPDATED: THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 2017, 5:35 p.m.
Illinois State Police say one lane of I-64 east is back open to traffic.
Traffic will be congested in this area for several hours until cleanup is complete.

Eclipse Preparation Underway at IDOT

Agency working with law enforcement, public asked to plan ahead

IDOT estimating 200,000 to visit Southern Illinois

Press Release from the Illinois Department of Transportation

SPRINGFIELD – Although the sun might go missing for a little while, the Illinois Department of Transportation promises to stay active leading up to the solar eclipse to make sure traffic keeps moving and the traveling public remains safe. Carbondale is in the path of the total eclipse, making it one of the prime viewing areas in the country for the Aug. 21 event. The rest of the state will experience a partial eclipse of approximately 90 percent.

“The Illinois Department of Transportation is proud to be one of several state agencies teaming up to make sure that Illinois is prepared to host this historic occasion,” Illinois Transportation Secretary Randy Blankenhorn said. “We also need the public to do its part. By following a few basic guidelines, the eclipse can be safe and exciting for everyone.”  

Up to 200,000 people are expected to visit southern Illinois to view the eclipse and take part in local festivities in the days leading up to it.

Unlike some states, Illinois is placing no special restrictions on truck activities due to the eclipse.  To help with traffic flow, lane closures on major IDOT projects in the southern part of the state will be temporarily lifted during the weekend before the eclipse and the following day. Throughout the state, digital message boards will be used to communicate traffic and safety messages.

The department also is coordinating with Illinois State Police and local law enforcement to ensure that traffic control points are appropriately staffed. 

If you are traveling during the eclipse, here are some common sense tips:

  • Plan ahead: Do not expect to park and view the eclipse from the side of the road.
  • Anticipate increased pedestrian and bike traffic near popular viewing areas.

  • Do not wear special viewing glasses or take photos of the eclipse while driving.

  • On the day of the eclipse, drive with your headlights on.

  • Use the Getting Around Illinois website to get the latest on traffic conditions.

To help answer questions about the eclipse, IDOT has created a special page on its website.

Here is a link to a story from KFVS -TV interviewing IDOT District 9 director Keith Miley about the eclipse

http://www.kfvs12.com/story/36043991/idot-urges-traffic-safety-during-total-solar-eclipse

Bost Works Behind the Counter at Cahokia MotoMart

by George O’ Connor, Communications Director of Congressman Mike Bost

Congressman Bost at Motomart in Cahokia (Photo provided by Congressman Bost’s office)

CAHOKIA, IL – Representative Mike Bost (IL-12) worked behind the counter at the MotoMart in Cahokia, interacting with employees, serving customers, and conversing with constituents about issues important to them. Bost partnered for the special event with the National Association of Convenience Stores (NACS)’s In Store program.

“Convenience stores are vital small businesses that provide essential services to time-starved consumers with one-stop shopping, grab-and-go food service, a variety of merchandise and fast transactions,” said Representative Mike Bost. “I was excited to have had the opportunity to participate in the NACS In Store program and witness firsthand the many benefits convenience stores offer to the residents of Cahokia.”

 

“Convenience stores are the anchor of communities across the country, and they are also where community conversations take place,” said Henry Armour, NACS President and CEO.  “More than half of the country visits a convenience store on a daily basis, whether to buy fuel, use the ATM, wash their cars or quickly buy snacks, drinks or meals. The NACS In Store program gives elected officials a perfect opportunity to experience how these stores serve the public in their home districts.”

Bost Bill to Overhaul VA Appeals Process Passes Senate

By George O’ Connor, Communications director for Congressman Mike Bost

Washington, D.C. Today, Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs Chairman Mike Bost (R-IL) applauded the unanimous Senate passage of legislation he authored to modernize the appeals process at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Bost introduced the Veterans Appeals Improvement and Modernization Act of 2017 (H.R. 2288) in May and helped guide it to quick passage in the House later that month. After minor technical changes were made in the Senate, the legislation is expected to head back to the House for a vote on final passage in September.

“I applaud Republicans and Democrats in the Senate for passing this critical legislation,” said Bost. “For too long our veterans and their families have faced unacceptable delays during the VA’s benefits claims appeal process. There are currently hundreds of thousands of veterans still waiting on a decision from VA. This simply is unacceptable. We need to get this legislation to the President’s desk for signature as quickly as possible.”

Background:
The Veterans Appeals Improvement and Modernization Act of 2017 would create three “lanes” for veterans’ appeals, including the “Local Higher Level Review Lane” in which an adjudicator reviews the same evidence considered by the original claims processor; the “New Evidence Lane,” in which the veteran could submit new evidence for review and have a hearing; and the “Board Lane,” in which jurisdiction for the appeal would transfer immediately to the Board of Veterans’ Appeals.

COMPTROLLER MENDOZA URGES LAWMAKERS TO ACT QUICKLY TO END RAUNER’S SCHOOL FUNDING CRISIS

Press Release from Comptroller Susan Mendoza

CHICAGO, IL – Here are the facts: SB1, the school funding bill negotiated with input from school superintendents and legislators from every corner of the state, treats all districts fairly and leaves no district with less funding than it has now.

The Better Government Association’s PolitiFact Illinois calls “FALSE” Governor Rauner’s mislabeling of the bill as a “Chicago bailout.” The fact-checkers found: “The bill’s Chicago pension component can’t be called a ‘bailout’ or even a perk because it only gives CPS what every other school district already has.”

We urge legislators of both parties to override this wrong-headed veto as they did with the budget. If they do not, the fact is our office will not have the legal authority to make the next scheduled General State Aid payment to schools on Aug. 10. Governor Rauner will, in fact, be the first governor in our state’s history to force Illinois schools to go without General State Aid payments – another trophy for his Hall of Shame.

Govenor Bruce Rauner’s statement on the amendetory veto

From the office of Governor Bruce Rauner

SPRINGFIELD (August 1, 2017) – Today, Gov. Bruce Rauner issued an amendatory veto to Senate Bill 1, the school funding bill. The matter now heads to the Illinois General Assembly, where the governor has respectfully requested that lawmakers uphold his changes. If these changes are upheld, Illinois will achieve historic education funding reform.

“It doesn’t matter where you come from or who your family is. With a great education, you can go anywhere in life and be whomever you want to be. You can grow up, get a good job and provide for your family. That’s why the changes I have made to the education funding bill are so important,” Gov. Rauner said. “With my changes, our state ensures that enough resources flow to children in the poorest and most disadvantaged school districts across the entire state. And my changes ensure that the education funding system in our state is fair and equitable to all students in Illinois.”

More than a year ago, Gov. Rauner established the Illinois School Funding Reform Commission. This group came together on a bipartisan basis to study the way Illinois funds its public schools, and to chart a path to a fairer and more equitable system.

“These changes included in my amendatory veto reflect years of hard work by our education reform commission and our ability to overcome our political differences for the good of our young people’s futures,” Gov. Rauner said. “I urge the General Assembly to act quickly to accept these changes and let our students start school on time.”

The governor’s amendatory veto makes the following changes to ensure an adequate and equitable school funding formula:

• Maintains a per-district hold harmless until the 2020-2021 school year, and then moves to a per-pupil hold harmless based on a three-year rolling average of enrollment.

• Removes the minimum funding requirement. While the governor is committed to ensuring that the legislature satisfies its duty to fund schools, the proposed trigger of one percent of the overall adequacy target plus $93 million artificially inflates the minimum funding number and jeopardizes Tier II funding.

• Removes the Chicago block grant from the funding formula.

• Removes both Chicago Public Schools pension considerations from the formula: the normal cost pick-up and the unfunded liability deduction.
• Reintegrates the normal cost pick-up for Chicago Public Schools into the Pension Code where it belongs, and finally begins to treat Chicago like all other districts with regards to the State’s relationship with its teachers’ pensions.

• Eliminates the PTELL and TIF equalized assessed value subsidies that allow districts to continue under-reporting property wealth.

 

• Removes the escalators throughout the bill that automatically increase costs.
• Retains the floor for the regionalization factor, for the purposes of equity, and adds a cap, for the purposes of adequacy.

The amendatory veto also removes the accounting for future pension cost shifts to districts in the Adequacy Target. This prevents districts from ever fully taking responsibility for the normal costs of their teachers’ pensions.

A copy of Gov. Rauner’s amendatory veto letter is attached.

Video of the event will be posted here.

 

Gov. Rauner cuts Chicago money from school funding bill

http://www.sj-r.com/news/20170801/gov-rauner-cuts-chicago-money-from-school-funding-bill

SPRINGFIELD, IL – (Doug Finke, Springfield Journal-Register.  Please click on the link for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Gov. Bruce Rauner used his amendatory veto power to rewrite a school funding reform bill Tuesday, something Democratic lawmakers said will set back school funding reform by decades.

Rauner made multiple changes to Senate Bill 1, including how the bill deals with Chicago teacher pensions and changing a hold harmless provision so that it will eventually be based on school enrollment.
“Senate Bill 1, as it is written, does not achieve both fairness and equity for all Illinois students and it did not meet the expectations of the School funding Reform Commission,” Rauner said during a Statehouse news conference.

Rauner said he is “beyond disappointed” that the funding reform bill wasn’t sent to him until Monday and said “some people in this building chose to politicize the issue and play partisan football with our kids’ future.

Illinois could become the latest state to legalize switchblade knives

https://www.ilnews.org/news/statewide/illinois-could-become-the-latest-state-to-legalize-switchblade-knives/article_27cc57e4-7634-11e7-8160-ef6b64126d7f.html

SPRINGFIELD, IL –  (Scott Bertman, Illinois News Network.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Illinois could become the latest state to legalize switchblade knives.

A bill now on Gov. Bruce Rauner’s desk would eliminate a decades-old ban that state Sen. Tim Bivins, R-Dixon, says never made much sense to begin with.

“It was an archaic law that was passed 40 or 50 years ago,” Bivins said, “more than likely in response to musicals like ‘West Side Story’ or the movies with switchblades, which created a little panic and you got an overreaction.”

The measure would eliminate language on the books that anyone who sells or possesses a switchblade could be charged with unlawful use of a weapon.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News