Search

Working for Illinois Caucus

House Downstate Democrats work for the good people of Illinois

Month

February 2022

Elmhurst Lawmaker Gets Death Threats

https://ift.tt/0VcGeRT

ELMHURST, IL — State Rep. Deb Conroy, a Democrat from Elmhurst, has become the target of death threats in response to her proposed change to a health law.

On Thursday, Springfield-based political blogger Rich Miller documented the threats on his Capitol Fax website.

Conroy’s amendment would give local health departments the right to access data from the state Department of Public Health. The language would be incorporated into an old law that deals with quarantines.

That law has long stated the state department has the power to "isolate or quarantine persons who are unable or unwilling to receive vaccines, medications or other treatments." This, the law says, is to "prevent the spread of a dangerous or infectious disease." Conroy’s bill introduced none of that language.

But the conservative Illinois Review website contended that she brought forward those old provisions in House Bill 4640.

"If HB 4640 were to become law, persons exposed to an infectious disease could be placed under Public Health Department observation, only possible in a contained atmosphere with Department watch guards, some suggest such as a concentration camp," the website said Monday.

In a private Facebook message to Conroy, which Capitol Fax posted, a man wrote, "You come after my family there’s one thing you better bring and that’s a lot of body bags!!!"

Another person emailed Conroy, saying, "You’re the one who belongs in a camp!! For God Hating, America Hating Scum!!! Our medical information is none of your damn business!!!! Take your bill and shove it up your a–!"

In a letter to Fran Eaton, co-founder of the Illinois Review, Conroy said she and her staff have been the subject of dozens of death threats because of the Illinois Review’s "flagrantly false post."

"It would have taken no more than 5 minutes to verify what the bill did and where it was coming from, but instead you chose to publish false information, I assume with the intention of enraging people in the hopes they would further spread your misinformation," Conroy said.

She said the bill allows local health departments to share data.

"It does not give any local body the authority to violate someone’s privacy rights and certainly does not allow for anyone to be detained," Conroy said.

The Illinois Review posted Conroy’s letter and condemned threats to people’s lives. In its new post, the Illinois Review no longer raised the possibility of a concentration camp.

But it did not walk back the previous story.

"What is the point of such a system if NOT to impose health guidance, which could very well include isolation if the empowered county or state agencies deemed it necessary?" Eaton said.

The first story remains on the Illinois Review website.

Patch has left a message for comment with the Illinois Review.

via Elmhurst, IL Patch

February 4, 2022 at 06:44PM

Bill pushes for better school food in Illinois

https://ift.tt/qwy5Deb

Peoria social service worker Anthony Kramer says he lost his job last week after posting pictures of the food at the middle school where he worked.

Why it matters: These complaints are pretty common in Illinois, one of only two states that make school districts give catering contracts to the lowest bidder instead of the company with the best food program.

Get market news worthy of your time with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free.

Driving the news: Last month, Peoria-based state Rep. Jehan Gordon Booth reintroduced House Bill 1782 to free school districts from the "lowest bidder" provision.

What they’re saying: Booth tells Axios she originally launched the bill after being shocked by the food in her own daughter’s school meals, "and then knowing why she came home feeling hungry."

The big picture: "It completely defeats the purpose of feeding kids two meals a day if they don’t eat it and they throw it in the garbage," Booth says. "As taxpayers, are we getting a good return on our dollars?"

What’s next: Booth hopes to have the bill assigned to committees in the next session and on the governor’s desk by April 8.

More from Axios: Sign up to get the latest market trends with Axios Markets. Subscribe for free

via Bing

February 4, 2022 at 08:39AM

State of the State: St. Rep. Lance Yednock wants responsible tax relief

https://ift.tt/XYbQPZs7w

St. Rep. Lance Yednock says the governor’s budget proposal during the State of the State speech is a starting point for the conversation the legislature needs to have. He likes putting extra money into pensions and a rainy day fund. And he wants the state to keep paying down the bill backlog.

Yednock says he wants to make sure violence reduction money actually reduces violence and he wants to support the police. The Ottawa Democrat says supporting schools, maintaining roads and bridges, and supporting health care are the state government’s core functions. He says the state must support those core functions. He hopes the state can afford tax relief like the governor is asking for without sacrificing the core functions.

Region: Northern,Feeds,News,Region: La Salle

via d2674 https://1430wcmy.com

February 2, 2022 at 03:04PM

Illinois students could see Native American studies in class

https://ift.tt/bVzgpoU5O

ROCKFORD, Ill. (WIFR) – Illinois state legislators are taking steps to make sure that indigenous people are the source for the Native American history lessons in school.

State Representative Maurice West (D-Rockford), introduced a bill earlier this month requiring Illinois schools to teach Native American curriculum beginning in the 2023 – 2024 school year. The purpose of the new legislation is to teach Native American curriculum while inspiring students to respect the dignity of all races and peoples.

“This legislation will ensure that our students learn about the Native American experience and contributions to the development of our country,” says West.

The bill maintains steps to guarantee that curriculum developed by the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) will be informed by federally recognized Indigenous tribes and individuals, especially those with ties to Illinois and the Midwest. The curriculum developed by ISBE will be implemented by school districts and will be monitored by the regional superintendent of schools for compliance.

“This legislation is a first step towards ensuring we are teaching our children how to properly respect the heritage and culture of Native Americans,” West adds.

House Bill 4548 was filed on January 13, 2022 and is currently awaiting assignment to a committee.

Copyright 2022 WIFR. All rights reserved.

via https://www.hoiabc.com

February 1, 2022 at 06:52AM

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑