Honoring Illinois Fallen: Trooper Ryan Albin

The Department of Central Management Services has received notice from
Governor Bruce Rauner that all persons or entities covered by the Illinois Flag Display Act are to fly the flags at half-staff in honor of:  Illinois State Police Trooper Ryan Albin.

Please lower the United States flags and the State flags at all buildings occupied by your agency’s personnel from:

Sunrise: Tuesday, July 4, 2017 until Sunset: Thursday, July 6, 2017

Emergency Management Officials Urge Caution

Parents Reminded to “Look Before You Lock” to Prevent Child Deaths

Press Release from the Illinois Emergency Management Agency

SPRINGFIELD – Each year, an average of 37 children die from heatstroke after being left in locked cars. So far in 2017, 14 child fatalities have occurred. With the hottest days of summer just around the corner, the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) and county and municipal emergency management agencies are urging parents to take steps to ensure their children aren’t locked in a hot car.

Emergency management officials will be offering heat safety tips throughout July as part of Heat Safety Awareness Month in Illinois.

“No one should ever be left in a parked car, even for a short time,” said IEMA Director James Joseph. “Temperatures inside a parked vehicle can rapidly rise to dangerous levels even if the windows are open slightly, and can lead to brain damage or death.”

Joseph said heat effects can be more severe on children because their bodies warm at a faster rate than adults. He encourages parents to develop habits that will ensure the backseat is always checked before the car is locked, such as putting a purse, cell phone or other needed item in the back seat or making it a routine to open the car’s back door every time the car is parked.

“We experience hot and humid conditions several times during the summer in Illinois. The combination of this heat and humidity can reach dangerous levels, particularly for those spending time outdoors in direct sunlight and in buildings without air conditioning,” said Chris Miller, warning coordination meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Lincoln. “Illnesses and fatalities due to heat are preventable. Never leave children or pets unattended in a vehicle; look before you lock your automobile.” Other hot weather tips include the following:

  • Always lock car doors and trunks, even at home, and keep keys out of children’s reach.
  • Stay hydrated by drinking at least 1½ to 2 quarts of fluids daily, even if you don’t feel thirsty.
  • Avoid alcoholic beverages and drinks containing caffeine.
  • Avoid overexertion and strenuous outdoor activities if possible.
  • Take advantage of cooling centers, public pools and air-conditioned stores and malls during periods of extreme heat. Even a few hours a day in air conditioning can help prevent heat-related illnesses.
  • Check on family, friends and neighbors who do not have air conditioning and who spend much of their time alone.
  • Don’t forget your pets. Offer pets extra water and place the water bowl in a shaded area if outdoors. Make sure pets have a shady refuge where they can escape direct sun exposure.
  • If you or someone around you begins experiencing dizziness, nausea, headache, confusion and a rapid pulse, seek medical attention immediate, as these could be the symptoms of heatstroke.

Additional tips on how to protect yourself and others from heat-related illnesses are available on the state’s Ready Illinois website (www.Ready.Illinois.gov).

 

Governor Issues Amendatory Veto to Keep 9-1-1 Service Active

Rauner opposes tying emergency services to tax hike

Press release from the office of Governor Bruce Rauner

SPRINGFIELD – Governor Bruce Rauner today issued an amendatory veto of SB 1839 to ensure that critical 9-1-1 services continue without a massive tax hike on Illinois families and businesses.

“The majority in the General Assembly waited until the last moment to send this 9-1-1 service reauthorization bill to my desk. Unfortunately, those lawmakers also inserted a major tax hike into this bill, a tax that’s both excessive and unwarranted, and that I strongly oppose,” Governor Rauner said. “This extreme increase is unfair and indefensible. But the majority in the General Assembly is using the threat of cancellation of 9-1-1 services on Saturday as leverage to force this tax hike through over my opposition.”

In the amendatory veto, the Governor removed all the surcharge increases and special interest giveaways. He also revoked the sunsets on the Emergency Telephone System Act and the sections regarding telecommunications and cable and video in the Public Utilities Act. These changes mean 9-1-1 would continue in Illinois without the General Assembly having to pass legislation to renew the service.

“This mean-spirited strategy has been employed by the majority repeatedly over the years, most prominently in the current budget impasse: holding innocent people, our most vulnerable residents and essential services hostage as leverage to force excessive, unwarranted tax hikes onto the people of Illinois,” Governor Rauner said. “This practice must stop.”

The full veto message to the General Assembly is below:

To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois Senate,
100th General Assembly:
Today I return Senate Bill 1839, an amendment to Department of State Police Law of the Civil Administrative Code, Emergency Telephone System Act and the Public Utilities Act, with specific recommendations to ensure that critical 9-1-1 services continue without a massive tax hike on Illinois families and businesses.

9-1-1 dispatch centers are the backbone of our public safety system. Our dispatchers are dedicated public servants who are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to help our citizens in times of crisis. Essential 9-1-1 services are set to expire on July 1, 2017 under the current provisions of the Emergency Telephone System Act and Article XIII (Telecommunications) and Article XXI (Cable and Video) of the Public Utilities Act. This sunset process on important services has been used extensively by politicians in Illinois as a way to exert periodic pressure to extract benefits for political insiders. The majority in the General Assembly waited until the last moment to send this 9-1-1 service reauthorization bill to my desk. Unfortunately, those lawmakers also inserted a major tax hike into this bill, a tax that’s both excessive and unwarranted, and that I strongly oppose. The tax hike is large for the people of Illinois, but it’s particularly massive for the people of Chicago. Chicago 9-1-1 fees are already the highest in America. This extreme increase is unfair and indefensible. But the majority in the General Assembly is using the threat of cancellation of 9-1-1 services on Saturday as leverage to force this tax hike through over my opposition.

This mean-spirited strategy has been employed by the majority repeatedly over the years, most prominently in the current budget impasse: holding innocent people, our most vulnerable residents and essential services hostage as leverage to force excessive, unwarranted tax hikes onto the people of Illinois. This practice must stop.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 1839, entitled “AN ACT concerning regulation”, with the following specific recommendations for change:

On Page 1, by deleting lines 4 through 23; and
By deleting pages 2 through 8; and
On page 9, by deleting lines 1 through 5; and
On page 9, by replacing lines 6 through 9 with the following: “(50 ILCS 750/99 rep.)
Section 5. The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended by repealing Section 99.”; and

On page 9, by deleting lines 10 through 24; and
By deleting pages 10 through 79; and
On page 80, by deleting lines 1 through 21; and
On page 80, by replacing lines 22 through 25 with the following:
“(220 ILCS 5/13-1200 rep.)
(220 ILCS 5/21-1601 rep.)
Section 10. The Public Utilities Act is amended by repealing Sections 13-1200 and 21-1601.”; and

By deleting pages 81 through 119; and
On page 120, by deleting lines 1 through 22.

With these changes, Senate Bill 1839 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR

Midnight budget deadline to be missed; Madigan asking ratings agencies to defer judgment

https://www.ilnews.org/news/state_politics/midnight-budget-deadline-to-be-missed-madigan-asking-ratings-agencies/article_0a414528-5dba-11e7-9430-bb35b13410c7.html

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

Lawmakers will be in session Saturday to take up the final pieces of what could be a $5 billion tax increase to pay for a $36.5 billion spending bill, and Republicans are lining up votes.

Following a bipartisan vote in the House to amend the Democrat’s $36.5 billion spending plan, Speaker Michael Madigan said lawmakers should expect to be in tomorrow.

“I think it’s a good step forward, a step that we can work upon. There’s much work yet to be done,” Madigan said. “Momentarily, I will send a message to the bond rating agencies asking them to defer any further opinions relative to the credit rating of the state of Illinois until we’ve had sufficient time to finalize our budget making.”

NOTE:  What passed the Illinois House around 12:30 p.m. was Amendment 2 to Senate Bill 6.  There will be an income tax increase to 4.95%, but the proposed state sales tax on services was dropped.

All Southern Illinois Legislators, Brandon Phelps (D – Norris City) and Republicans Terri Bryant of Murphysboro, and Dave Severin of Benton voted for the measure.

The House is supposed to be in session tomorrow for the final touches on the bill. -sd

Democrat leaders disagree over whether Friday is ‘artificial’ deadline for budget deal

https://www.ilnews.org/news/state_politics/democrat-leaders-disagree-over-whether-friday-is-artificial-deadline-for/article_7046f92c-5d1e-11e7-82d1-b798ba727b9b.html#utm_

State Comptroller Susan Mendoza (D) discusses the budget crisis with Democratic Lawmakers

SPRINGFIELD, IL – (Greg Bishop – Illinois News Network.  Please click on the link above for this and other breaking stories involving the budget crisis in Springfield.  We will keep you updated throughout the day -sd)

Illinois is careening toward fiscal insolvency without a budget, and the state’s comptroller says taxpayers better prepare for maximum impact. Those who don’t think there will be real consequences if the state enters a third year without an approved budget are out of their minds, she said.

“If we don’t have a budget deal in place by midnight on June 30th, it is almost a guaranteed certainty, because the credit rating agencies have already said as much, they will downgrade us to junk bond territory,” Comptroller Susana Mendoza, a Democrat, said, adding that this is no false alarm.

House Deputy Majority Leader Lou Lang, D-Skokie, told Illinois News Network this week that Friday’s midnight deadline is “artificial.”

Mendoza said anyone who thinks that needs to grow up.

Bost Backs Bills to Combat Illegal Immigration

Press Release from George O’ Connor, Press Secretary for Congressman Mike Bost

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Representative Mike Bost (R-Murphysboro)  today voted with bipartisan majorities in the U.S. House of Representatives for two bills that strengthen public safety by combating dangerous sanctuary policies that permit criminals to go free and by enhancing penalties for deported felons who return to the United States.

“Years of lax immigration enforcement and the spread of dangerous sanctuary policies have made America less safe,” said Bost. “We have plenty of work to do in fixing our nation’s broken immigration system, and we owe it to the families of those who lost loved ones to take immediate action to stop such horrible and preventable crimes. We can’t allow states and localities to pick and choose when to follow the law.”

Background:

The No Sanctuary for Criminals Act (H.R. 3003) strengthens federal law to combat dangerous sanctuary policies that shield unlawful and criminal immigrants from federal immigration enforcement. H.R. 3003 clarifies U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainer authority—the tool used by federal immigration enforcement officers to pick up criminal aliens from local jails—by establishing statutory probable cause standards to issue detainers for the first time. It also withholds certain federal grants from jurisdictions that violate federal law by prohibiting their officers from communicating with ICE. The bill protects jurisdictions that comply with detainers from being sued, while allowing victims of crime to sue jurisdictions that refuse to comply and subsequently release criminal aliens onto the streets.

Kate’s Law (H.R. 3004) protects public safety by enhancing penalties for deported felons who return to the United States. The bill is named after Kate Steinle, who was murdered in San Francisco by an unlawful immigrant who had previously been deported five times and was convicted of multiple felonies. In another tragic example, Nicodemo Coria-Gonzales—a criminal immigrant previously deported at least five times—is reportedly responsible for nearly a dozen sexual assaults. He allegedly kidnapped a woman and attempted to light her on fire using gasoline, and kidnapped and raped a 68-year old woman.

 

Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno to resign

http://www.sj-r.com/news/20170629/senate-republican-leader-christine-radogno-to-resign

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

Illinois Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno said Thursday she is resigning from the Senate at the end of business Saturday.

Radogno, who earlier this year tried to negotiate a resolution to the state budget impasse with Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, said she has done all she can to resolve the two-year stalemate.

“I have done everything I can do to resolve the state’s budget crisis,” Radogno said in a statement. “I will continue to do so for the coming days, but if the solution will not come on my watch, I hope and pray that the governor, the other legislative leaders, Democrats and Republicans in the Senate and House, can find a path to solve the state’s problems.”

Don’t Lose Your Independence – Drive Sober

Press Release from the Illinois Department of Transportation

SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Department of Transportation and Illinois State Police urge motorists to make the Independence Day weekend a safe one. If your plans include alcohol, don’t drive.

“To achieve our goal of zero fatalities on Illinois roads, impaired driving must stop,” said Priscilla Tobias, director of IDOT’s Office of Program Development. “Make the right choice and never take the wheel if you’re under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Plan ahead and have a sober ride home lined up before you begin celebrating.”

Summer is a time when more people drive, often leading to more motor vehicle crashes, injuries and fatalities. From 2012 to 2016, between June and August, 1,381 people were killed in motor vehicle crashes in Illinois. Nearly 25 percent of those fatalities involved at least one drunk driver (0.08 BAC or higher). Between midnight and 3 a.m., more than half of the fatalities involved at least one driver who was legally drunk.

Illinois State Police will conduct roadside safety checks, impaired driving patrols and seat-belt enforcement throughout the state to reduce the number of injuries and fatalities during the holiday weekend.

“Throughout the Fourth of July holiday period, motorists will see troopers conducting roadside safety checks and other directed patrols to prevent senseless tragedies from occurring,” said ISP Director Leo P. Schmitz. “DUI prevention requires drivers to take responsibility before getting behind the wheel and passengers in vehicles to hold drivers accountable. Our message remains clear. If you’re going to drink, don’t drive. If you choose to drink and drive, you will be arrested.”

Here are some important safety tips to remember:

  • Make plans in advance to get a sober ride home; never drive while impaired.
  • If you are impaired, call a cab, take mass transit or get a ride with a sober friend.
  • Don’t let others who are with you attempt to drive while impaired.
  • Promptly report impaired drivers to law enforcement by pulling over and dialing 911.
  • Make sure everyone in your vehicle wears a seat belt. It is your best defense in a crash.

Budget package in jeopardy as Democrats roll back Republicans’ economic reforms

https://www.ilnews.org/news/state_politics/budget-package-in-jeopardy-as-democrats-roll-back-republicans-economic/article_d93685ee-5c31-11e7-9994-8f9176f7b0eb.html

SPRINGFIELD, IL –  (Dan McCaleb and Greg Bishop, Illinois News Newtork.  Please click on the link above for the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Chances of a budget deal that would include at least $5 billion in tax increases took a hit Wednesday when House Democrats pushed for votes on reform measures that Republicans say are too watered down to do any good.

In order to sign off on a budget package that includes such a significant tax hike, Gov. Bruce Rauner said he wants a property tax freeze and meaningful reforms to state pensions, workers compensation and other items that would provide some relief to taxpayers and job creators.

With just two days to go until the end of the fiscal year, Republicans criticized Democrats’ tactics, saying that the measures as written don’t provide meaningful benefits and further meetings to work on them are scheduled.

Illinois State Police say trooper involved in I-74 accident has died

http://www.news-gazette.com/news/local/2017-06-29/updated-illinois-state-police-say-trooper-involved-i-74-accident-has-died.html

FARMER CITY, IL –  (Tim Mitchell, Champaign News Gazette.  Please click on the link above to read the full story.  Here is an excerpt below.)

Illinois State Police are mourning the loss of a trooper from Bellflower who died as a result of injuries he sustained in a crash Wednesday afternoon on Interstate 74 in DeWitt County.

ISP Director Leo Schmitz said Trooper Ryan Albin, 37, died about 8:45 p.m. Wednesday at Carle Hospital in Urbana, where he was airlifted to after the wreck. Schmitz said Albin had been with the state police since January 2006, and he and his K-9 partner, Biko, were assigned to District 6, based in Pontiac.

State police said the crash occurred around 3:10 p.m. on westbound I-74 near milepost 155, west of Farmer City. They said Trooper Albin’s squad car and a commercial vehicle were slowing down ahead of traffic approaching a construction zone when the commercial vehicle struck Trooper Albin’s vehicle. Trooper Albin’s K-9 partner was taken to the University of Illinois Veterinary Teaching Hospital and appears to have only minor injuries.

Benton, West Frankfort, Illinois News | Franklin County News