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Rookie Lawmaker Making Mental Health Priority

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State Rep. Karina Villa is a 40-year-old Democrat representing West Chicago. She’s one of dozens of fresh faces at the Illinois State Capitol this year and also one of seven lawmakers in the House of Representatives whose election flipped a red seat blue — from Republican to Democrat.

 

Villa was a school social worker for 15 years — and said that’s actually what prompted her to make a run for the state legislature. Instead of just complaining, she wanted to be a part of “the solution.”

 

“I saw, under the last administration, how mental health services in general were dwindling,” she said. “It was a lot harder to access services for my students. Families that I worked with were in a middle class family in DuPage County were struggling with just meeting basic needs.”

 

Social service agencies –- including mental health services — are still licking their wounds after they were decimated by a nearly 3-years-long budget stalemate between former Republican Governor Bruce Rauner and Democratic lawmakers.

 

But, Villa believes this is a unique time for mental health in the state, and across the country, that could inspire some real change.

 

“When I started my career so many years ago, I remember it was just so hard to bring light to mental health,” said Villa. “People wanted to sweep the problem under the rug. Now, the brilliant thing about being here in Springfield at this time is that people want to talk about it. It’s a bipartisan issue on both sides of the aisle. People are now willing to look for solutions and put resources behind this problem.”

 

That momentum is something Villa intends to use. Her first piece of legislation, introduced early last month, would require schools to specifically discuss mental health within the health curriculum for all students. The idea is to help children and teens recognize the signs of conditions like depression or anxiety.

 

When presenting the proposal to lawmakers, Villa shared a story about a fifth grade student who she had concerns about for years. It wasn’t until an in-class assignment where students read a TIME magazine article about mental health that the student made an important discovery.

 

“That student had to be excused from the class and came to see me and he was in tears,” she told lawmakers. “He looked at me and he said ‘Miss Villa, I finally know what’s wrong with me. I have depression. I need you to call my parents and I need you to tell them that that’s what I have’.”

 

Villa said that’s what she wants to see happen more often. One in five children have or will have a serious mental illness, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. Villa believes students should be more aware of the signs and symptoms not only for their own benefit, but to also to help remove the negative stigma associated with mental illinesses.

 

Those who are opposed to the legislation don’t have a problem with the idea of it, but want to be sure this will not be another unfunded mandate for public schools.

 

“The way that her bill is written, it’s more goals for what mental health curriculum is doing and we think that will be better placed in the Illinois learning standards,” said Zach Messersmith with the Illinois Statewide School Management Alliance. He said if this particular goal is placed within the health curriculum, he’s concerned schools may be forced to purchase new textbooks or other tools.

 

Villa, who has spent years working in schools, said she appreciated the concern but she did not want this to become a burden on schools and did not have any specific curriculum in mind. The example given with the TIME magazine article would be a sufficient tool for educators.

 

The measure has failed to generate any Republican co-sponsors. It did pass out of the mental health committee unanimously where lawmakers on both sides of the aisle applauded the freshman lawmaker.

 

“Rather than hazing you, I’m going to praise you,” said state Rep. Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago). “I think this is a great bill.”

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March 19, 2019 at 01:34PM

Illinois Lawmakers Look to Increase Living Organ Donors Via Legal Protections

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Illinois Lawmakers Look to Increase Living Organ Donors Via Legal Protections

State Capitol – Rep Deb Conroy (D) is backing two bills, along with Sen Julie Morrison (D) that would provide protections for living organ donors. Rep Conroy has a keen insight into the need for such donations. She recently donated one of her kidneys to her ex-husband.

One bill, HB-2487, would keep insurance companies from charging higher insurance rates to those who donate an organ, and would require businesses to pay employees who donate an organ for up to 60 days, while they’re away from work recovering from their donation surgery. SB-67 would give businesses a tax credit of up to 25% of a donors wages or salary, if the business gives at least 30 days of PAID leave when the employee is off following an organ donation.

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March 19, 2019 at 06:17PM

Lawmaker Wants to Avoid Overregulation of Marijuana | Alton Daily News

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More ideas about how to regulate recreational marijuana could surface this week, but one lawmaker wants to make sure the legislature doesn’t over-regulate the industry or consumers. 

Regulation ideas for Illinois have included allowing local control over cannabis sales, allowing adults to grow five plants at home, and even limiting how much one consumer can possess to one ounce.

Chris Stone with medical cannabis dispensary HCI Alternatives in Springfield and Collinsville said if such limits are implemented there are already systems in place to help with compliance.

Click here for summary

“We’re going to have a tracking system that’s going to make sure that whatever the limit is that you can’t go to 18 dispensaries and get the same amount of product, unlike most of the other states that are out there,” Stone said. “So, they’ve created a backend software and computer system that is going to be able to allow for that.”

Stone said couldn’t address the privacy concerns of possibly tracking consumer’s recreational habits, but said right now HIPPA laws protect medical patients’ information.

State Rep. Carol Ammons, D-Urbana, said whatever ultimately passes should be similar to how tobacco and alcohol are treated.

“And we align those provisions to those current industries that were prohibited at one point but are now legal,” Ammons said. “So I think we are going to do ourselves a disservice by trying to police the cannabis bill in a way that will still create unintended consequences.”

Ammons put forward House Bill 902, which has less stringent government regulation compared with other suggestions that have been floated. Her bill would allow adults to grow up to 24 cannabis plants and to possess up to 224 grams, or nearly 8 ounces, outside of the home.

Ammons said her bill would apply a 10 percent tax on sales and require that at least 51 percent of the licenses for retail stores to be in “communities disproportionately harmed by the war on drugs.” That bill could be heard in committee Tuesday. A Senate bill about cannabis, but without any provisions filed, is slated for a Senate hearing Wednesday.

(Copyright WBGZ Radio / www.AltonDailyNews.com)

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via Alton Daily News

March 19, 2019 at 07:01AM

State Rep. Yednock Introduces Measure Dealing With Opioid Deaths

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76th District State Rep. Lance Yednock introduced legislation dealing with the reporting of opioid-related deaths.

The Ottawa Democrat’s measure, HB 3459, would require coroners in the state to report any death where an opioid is a contributing factor to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Data collected would include demographics of the person, such as age, gender and race, and county of residence, Yednock said.

A report of the information would be generated and distributed to the Illinois General Assembly and various leaders in the community.

In a statement, Yednock said the legislature continues to look at common sense ways to help stop the opioid crisis, and to do that lawmakers need to have the most up-to-date information.

The legislation was assigned to the Human Services Committee earlier this month.

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News,Region: South Suburbs,Region: Joliet

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March 18, 2019 at 03:27PM

Illinois Department of Corrections Breaks Ground on $150 Million Mental Health Treatment Center

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JOLIET – The Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) is constructing a 200-bed mental health and general medicine treatment center in Joliet. This facility will provide the most intensive level of care for incarcerated men and women with mental illness or who require long-term skilled nursing care.

IDOC was joined by Illinois Senator Pat McGuire, Representative Lawrence Walsh, Joliet Mayor Bob O’Dekirk, and AFSCME Council 31 representatives for an official groundbreaking ceremony Monday morning.

“We are changing the way we do corrections in Illinois,” said IDOC Director John Baldwin. “When an individual is sentenced to our care and treatment, our goal is to send them home healthier and more well-adjusted. This new, state-of the-art facility will help accomplish that.”

The 180,000-square foot Inpatient Treatment Center will be located in Joliet, Illinois on the same grounds as the existing Joliet Treatment Center. The $150 million facility will provide services to both male and female patients. More than 400 people will work at the facility including physicians, nurse practitioners, licensed psychologists, and correctional treatment officers.

IDOC partnered with the state’s Capital Development Board (CDB) for this major construction project. CDB secured a Design-Build team comprised of River City Construction and architectural and engineering firms, HOK and HDR. The project will produce nearly 200 construction jobs in the Joliet area.

This new Inpatient Treatment Center will ensure IDOC meets its obligation to provide inpatient beds and programming space for seriously mentally ill offenders, as outlined in the Rasho v Baldwin settlement agreement.

Construction of the Joliet Inpatient Treatment Center is expected to be completed in 2021.

Video of the groundbreaking ceremony can be found here.

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March 18, 2019 at 03:46PM

Illinois Department of Corrections Breaks Ground on $150 Million Mental Health Treatment Center

https://ift.tt/2HLcwki

JOLIET – The Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) is constructing a 200-bed mental health and general medicine treatment center in Joliet. This facility will provide the most intensive level of care for incarcerated men and women with mental illness or who require long-term skilled nursing care.

IDOC was joined by Illinois Senator Pat McGuire, Representative Lawrence Walsh, Joliet Mayor Bob O’Dekirk, and AFSCME Council 31 representatives for an official groundbreaking ceremony Monday morning.

“We are changing the way we do corrections in Illinois,” said IDOC Director John Baldwin. “When an individual is sentenced to our care and treatment, our goal is to send them home healthier and more well-adjusted. This new, state-of the-art facility will help accomplish that.”

The 180,000-square foot Inpatient Treatment Center will be located in Joliet, Illinois on the same grounds as the existing Joliet Treatment Center. The $150 million facility will provide services to both male and female patients. More than 400 people will work at the facility including physicians, nurse practitioners, licensed psychologists, and correctional treatment officers.

IDOC partnered with the state’s Capital Development Board (CDB) for this major construction project. CDB secured a Design-Build team comprised of River City Construction and architectural and engineering firms, HOK and HDR. The project will produce nearly 200 construction jobs in the Joliet area.

This new Inpatient Treatment Center will ensure IDOC meets its obligation to provide inpatient beds and programming space for seriously mentally ill offenders, as outlined in the Rasho v Baldwin settlement agreement.

Construction of the Joliet Inpatient Treatment Center is expected to be completed in 2021.

Video of the groundbreaking ceremony can be found here.

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March 18, 2019 at 03:46PM

Rep. Connor, Citizens Utility Board Urge Support Of Bill To Require Referendum Before Il Cities Privatize Water Systems

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CHICAGO, March 18, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — To protect consumers from the growing problem of privatization and high water bills, a new proposal in Springfield would require cities across Illinois to hold referendums before a private utility could buy their water/sewer system.

The Citizens Utility Board (CUB) urged Illinoisans concerned about high water bills to visit CUBActionCenter.com to send a message to the General Assembly in support of House Bill 2392, ahead of a Subject Matter hearing held by the House Public Utilities Committee 3 p.m. Tuesday, March 19. The measure is sponsored by state Rep. John Connor of Crest Hill.

"Five years ago, private water companies pushed a bill that let them increase rates on their own customers to buy more public water systems," Rep. Connor said. "Last year, they extended that bill another 10 years.  And who’s paying for them to buy these public water systems?  You are, if you are on a private water system. I just think that in a democracy they should get permission from most of the people affected first."

HB 2392, which has bipartisan support, would require a referendum of local voters prior to a municipality being allowed to sell its water/sewer system to Illinois American Water or Aqua Illinois, the state’s two largest private water companies. Although about 80 percent of water systems in Illinois are public, Illinois American and Aqua in recent years have been buying more community systems, thanks in part to friendly state legislation.

Last fall, the General Assembly passed the Water Privatization Act, an update to an earlier law. The act, one of the most aggressive privatization laws in the country, allows Illinois American and Aqua to buy any public system in the state, and recover 100 percent of the cost, plus profits, by automatically raising the rates of existing customers. And it eliminates restrictions on the size of the system those companies can target. 

Privatization often leads to higher water bills. A Chicago Tribune investigation in 2017 found that Aqua and Illinois American charge 20 percent to 70 percent more than public systems in the Chicago region. The companies raked in total combined profits of more than $750 million in 2018, and their stock prices have been trading near all-time highs.

"Shareholders in corporations are given the opportunity to vote prior to the sale of that corporation," said Bryan McDaniel, CUB’s director of governmental affairs. "The residents of the municipality are the shareholders in their water system and deserve a vote on the future of an asset critical to their lives."

CUB is celebrating its 35th anniversary as Illinois’ leading nonprofit utility watchdog. Created by the Illinois Legislature, CUB opened its doors in 1984 to represent the interests of residential and small-business utility customers. Since then, it has saved consumers more than $20 billion by helping to block rate hikes and secure refunds. For more information, call CUB’s Consumer Hotline, 1-800-669-5556, or visit CitizensUtilityBoard.org

SOURCE Citizens Utility Board

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March 18, 2019 at 10:43AM

Rep. Connor, Citizens Utility Board Urge Support Of Bill To Require Referendum Before Il Cities Privatize Water Systems

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CHICAGO, March 18, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — To protect consumers from the growing problem of privatization and high water bills, a new proposal in Springfield would require cities across Illinois to hold referendums before a private utility could buy their water/sewer system.

The Citizens Utility Board (CUB) urged Illinoisans concerned about high water bills to visit CUBActionCenter.com to send a message to the General Assembly in support of House Bill 2392, ahead of a Subject Matter hearing held by the House Public Utilities Committee 3 p.m. Tuesday, March 19. The measure is sponsored by state Rep. John Connor of Crest Hill.

"Five years ago, private water companies pushed a bill that let them increase rates on their own customers to buy more public water systems," Rep. Connor said. "Last year, they extended that bill another 10 years.  And who’s paying for them to buy these public water systems?  You are, if you are on a private water system. I just think that in a democracy they should get permission from most of the people affected first."

HB 2392, which has bipartisan support, would require a referendum of local voters prior to a municipality being allowed to sell its water/sewer system to Illinois American Water or Aqua Illinois, the state’s two largest private water companies. Although about 80 percent of water systems in Illinois are public, Illinois American and Aqua in recent years have been buying more community systems, thanks in part to friendly state legislation.

Last fall, the General Assembly passed the Water Privatization Act, an update to an earlier law. The act, one of the most aggressive privatization laws in the country, allows Illinois American and Aqua to buy any public system in the state, and recover 100 percent of the cost, plus profits, by automatically raising the rates of existing customers. And it eliminates restrictions on the size of the system those companies can target. 

Privatization often leads to higher water bills. A Chicago Tribune investigation in 2017 found that Aqua and Illinois American charge 20 percent to 70 percent more than public systems in the Chicago region. The companies raked in total combined profits of more than $750 million in 2018, and their stock prices have been trading near all-time highs.

"Shareholders in corporations are given the opportunity to vote prior to the sale of that corporation," said Bryan McDaniel, CUB’s director of governmental affairs. "The residents of the municipality are the shareholders in their water system and deserve a vote on the future of an asset critical to their lives."

CUB is celebrating its 35th anniversary as Illinois’ leading nonprofit utility watchdog. Created by the Illinois Legislature, CUB opened its doors in 1984 to represent the interests of residential and small-business utility customers. Since then, it has saved consumers more than $20 billion by helping to block rate hikes and secure refunds. For more information, call CUB’s Consumer Hotline, 1-800-669-5556, or visit CitizensUtilityBoard.org

SOURCE Citizens Utility Board

Related Links

http://www.citizensutilityboard.org

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March 18, 2019 at 10:43AM

Rep. Connor, Citizens Utility Board Urge Support Of Bill To Require Referendum Before Il Cities Privatize Water Systems

https://ift.tt/2W8T05c

CHICAGO, March 18, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — To protect consumers from the growing problem of privatization and high water bills, a new proposal in Springfield would require cities across Illinois to hold referendums before a private utility could buy their water/sewer system.

The Citizens Utility Board (CUB) urged Illinoisans concerned about high water bills to visit CUBActionCenter.com to send a message to the General Assembly in support of House Bill 2392, ahead of a Subject Matter hearing held by the House Public Utilities Committee 3 p.m. Tuesday, March 19. The measure is sponsored by state Rep. John Connor of Crest Hill.

"Five years ago, private water companies pushed a bill that let them increase rates on their own customers to buy more public water systems," Rep. Connor said. "Last year, they extended that bill another 10 years.  And who’s paying for them to buy these public water systems?  You are, if you are on a private water system. I just think that in a democracy they should get permission from most of the people affected first."

HB 2392, which has bipartisan support, would require a referendum of local voters prior to a municipality being allowed to sell its water/sewer system to Illinois American Water or Aqua Illinois, the state’s two largest private water companies. Although about 80 percent of water systems in Illinois are public, Illinois American and Aqua in recent years have been buying more community systems, thanks in part to friendly state legislation.

Last fall, the General Assembly passed the Water Privatization Act, an update to an earlier law. The act, one of the most aggressive privatization laws in the country, allows Illinois American and Aqua to buy any public system in the state, and recover 100 percent of the cost, plus profits, by automatically raising the rates of existing customers. And it eliminates restrictions on the size of the system those companies can target. 

Privatization often leads to higher water bills. A Chicago Tribune investigation in 2017 found that Aqua and Illinois American charge 20 percent to 70 percent more than public systems in the Chicago region. The companies raked in total combined profits of more than $750 million in 2018, and their stock prices have been trading near all-time highs.

"Shareholders in corporations are given the opportunity to vote prior to the sale of that corporation," said Bryan McDaniel, CUB’s director of governmental affairs. "The residents of the municipality are the shareholders in their water system and deserve a vote on the future of an asset critical to their lives."

CUB is celebrating its 35th anniversary as Illinois’ leading nonprofit utility watchdog. Created by the Illinois Legislature, CUB opened its doors in 1984 to represent the interests of residential and small-business utility customers. Since then, it has saved consumers more than $20 billion by helping to block rate hikes and secure refunds. For more information, call CUB’s Consumer Hotline, 1-800-669-5556, or visit CitizensUtilityBoard.org

SOURCE Citizens Utility Board

Related Links

http://www.citizensutilityboard.org

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March 18, 2019 at 10:43AM

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