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Judge taps special prosecutor to investigate Rep. Ammons for alleged retail theft

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URBANA, Ill. (NEXSTAR) — A court-appointed special prosecutor is investigating whether or not there is probable cause to charge state Representative Carol Ammons, a Democrat from Urbana, for allegedly stealing a purse from the Carle Auxiliary Resale Boutique on Friday, January 10th.

The item, said to be a Coach purse, was worth an estimated $80, according to sources who were present. Those sources also say that wads of paper used to fill purses for display purposes were laying on a floor in a dressing room; the tag from the purse was also found on the floor.

Ammons’ legislative aide, Jenna Sickenius, emailed a statement on behalf of Ammons, calling the incident “a non-story about a simple misunderstanding.”

A secretary at Ammons’ government office in Champaign said Ammons declined to answer questions in an interview Friday.

According to court records obtained by WCIA, Urbana police referred the investigation to the Illinois State Police. Champaign County State’s Attorney Julia Rietz asked a judge to appoint a special prosecutor, citing a conflict of interest or the appearance of impropriety if her office were to prosecute the suspect.

The office of the Illinois State’s Attorneys Appellate Prosecutors was assigned to investigate the case.

When reached by phone, Director Pat Delfino said it would be “inappropriate to comment on a pending case investigation.”

“We’re dealing with a situation here where everybody involved is presumed innocent until proven guilty,” Delfino said.

The resale boutique shop accepts donations and operates as a charity to raise money for Carle nursing scholarships and to support the guest house.

Sources familiar with the incident say investigators are reviewing surveillance footage from inside the store. “Security investigated a report of retail theft from the Carle Auxiliary Retail Boutique captured on video and following protocol, notified Urbana Police,” a spokesperson for Carle Foundation Hospital said in an email. “We will continue to cooperate with law enforcement on its investigation.”

The Urbana Police Department declined multiple requests to disclose a police report to the media.

WCIA has filed requests under the Freedom of Information Act to obtain more details about the incident.

Editor’s Note: This story has been updated to include a response from Carle Foundation Hospital.

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via WCIA.com https://www.wcia.com

January 24, 2020 at 07:46PM

State Rep. Didech offers resolution in Springfield that honors Stevenson High School for fifth Blue Ribbon award

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State Rep. Daniel Didech, D-Buffalo Grove, center, presented the Stevenson High School Board of Education with a resolution at the Jan. 14, 2020 board meeting that he filed in Springfield which recognizes Stevenson’s status as a National Blue Ribbon school for the fifth time. (Stevenson High School)

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January 23, 2020 at 07:23AM

Oswego Rep. Files Legislation That Would Mandate House Observance of Memorial Day; Bill Also Calls for House Remembrance Ceremony

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A state representative from Oswego has filed legislation that would mandate Memorial Day be recognized by the Illinois House and would mandate that session could not convene after 4:00 p.m. on the day before the holiday or before 4:00 p.m. on the holiday itself.

Democratic Rep. Stephanie Kifowit, who is the only US Marine Corps female Veteran in the House, announced the filing in a statement on Thursday.

Rep. Kifowit says she filed the legislation saying that for many years, she has been forced to be absent from the House floor, due to attending cemetery visits on the morning of Memorial Day.

For example, House committees met on Memorial Day in the morning in 2019 as the spring session was shortened to the end of May from the original deadline for the end of June.

Kifowit said in a statement, “it is time for all members of the Illinois House of Representatives to be able to be in their hometowns and to honor those who gave so much.”

The measure has secured backing from the Department of Illinois Veterans of Foreign Wars. Illinois VFW Legislative Director Jay Hoffman says in a statement that the legislation would allow Illinois lawmakers time to convene with the Veterans in their home districts, and to,”pay tribute and high honor to the Veterans whose lives were lost in combat operations on behalf of a grateful nation.”

A statement also indicated support from the Department of Illinois American Gold Star Mothers, Inc.

Rep. Kifowit’s bill additionally calls for a remembrance ceremony for Memorial Day to be held in the daily business, during a regular session day, sometime close to the holiday.

There is no record of a remembrance ceremony for fallen service members in the Illinois House.

Rep. Kifowit said that she feels that the House should recognize that nothing is more important than honoring those that have lost their lives in defense of our freedom and liberties.

House Bill 4214 and companion House Resolution 671 were filed on Wednesday.

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January 23, 2020 at 03:34PM

Bill lets library districts tax local cannabis sales

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SPRINGFIELD — A bill filed in Springfield could allow local libraries to get a cut of the taxes on recreational cannabis sales, but it would come at the potential expense of county-level taxes.

House Bill 4135 would allow the state’s more than 600 libraries to impose a 1 percent tax on recreational cannabis sales in their jurisdictions.

State Rep. Dan Didech, D-Buffalo Grove, said the idea for his legislation came from a conversation with a local library official.

“With the new cannabis law going into effect and a significant amount of tax revenue being generated by legal adult-use cannabis, they were interested in getting a piece of that pie,” he said.

Illinois’ combined tax rate for recreational cannabis is one of the highest in the nation, climbing as steep as 41 percent in some areas, depending on the potency of the product and local taxes.

In exchange for the 1 percent tax, the county that the library is in would be limited to taxing cannabis sales in the library district at up to 2 percent. Under existing law, counties can tax local recreational cannabis sales up to 3 percent. Didech’s bill would essentially redirect 1 percent of that to libraries.

County officials have raised concerns about the bill.

“What’s disappointing is that [the law] only happened in August and here we are in January and there’s already a pending bill that’s going to take away that three percent that the legislature recently afforded and divert it to another taxing jurisdiction without a direct correlation to the burden and impact of cannabis,” said Scott Hartman, president of the Illinois Association of County Administrators. Hartman is the deputy county administrator in McHenry County.

Didech said his bill could potentially help reduce property taxes because it…

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January 23, 2020 at 10:50AM

St. Rep. Yednock to labor summit audience: unions are still relevant

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St. Rep. Lance Yednock says raising minimum wage to $15 per hour will affect 1.4 million workers and help 200,000 of them rise from poverty. He told the audience at the labor summit in Ottawa over the weekend, it takes two full time minimum wage jobs to tread water in Illinois.

Yednock expects a $15 minimum wage to generate $19 billion per year in new economic activity in the state. The Ottawa Democrat says minimum wage jobs aren’t just for teenagers starting out in the workforce anymore. He says if you go to the businesses that employ minimum wage people, you see a lot of moms and dads.

Yednock says labor unions are still relevant and their future leaders need to get ready. He told the labor summit audience he has no doubt that unions boost the standard of living.

Yednock says he spent time away from his family and friends, and he put his career on hold to run for office. But he says he ran because of the challenges labor unions are facing.

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January 20, 2020 at 02:03PM

Representative Carol Ammons (103rd): Significant income disparities have to be addressed as a failure of government

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Representative Carol Ammons (103rd-Champaign) joins John Williams to explain why the city will be reinstating the suspended drivers licenses of 55,000 people who have not been able to pay their parking tickets. And she tells John what happens to the dues owed by those people.

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via WGN Radio – 720 AM https://wgnradio.com

January 20, 2020 at 12:37PM

Local state lawmakers tout successful legislative session in 2019, set goals for 2020

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GENEVA – Area state lawmakers took a victory lap for last year’s legislative achievements in Springfield, but said they recognize there is plenty more work to get done in the spring session of the General Assembly, during a forum before local municipal officials.

Property tax relief and solving the state’s ongoing pension crisis will be at the top of the list, state senators and representatives told a gathering of the Metro West Council of Government, a lobbying group representing cities and villages in Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties.

At the breakfast session Friday morning at Geneva’s Eaglebrook Country Club, the lawmakers found Metro West acknowledging last year’s successful effort to approve the first transportation infrastructure funding bill in 10 years.

“The last thing we need is another 10 years between capital bills,” said Sen. Linda Holmes, D-Aurora.

“I know that in the interim local government has been picking up the slack,” said Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin. “That capital bill was landmark legislation,” Moeller said

But what the local officials wanted to know was how the state is going to deal with the staffing shortage at the Illinois Department of Transportation that has led to a bottleneck for approval of shovel-ready projects.

While applauding efforts to outsource some of IDOT’s administrative work, representatives from Metro West called on the lawmakers to allow local permitting for the projects in order to get them moving.

Moeller said she supports “more direct permitting” to clear the backlog.

Sen. Don DeWitte, R-St. Charles, said he has talked with Gov. J.B. Pritzker about the problem and that the governor said an ombudsman will be designated to expedite the IDOT approval process.

DeWitte indicated support for the use of outside engineering firms to help IDOT get existing applications approved and construction underway.

“If they don’t get caught up they’ll be overwhelmed with new projects,” DeWitte said.

Approval of last year’s capital bill was dependent on a doubling the state’s gasoline tax to 38 cents per gallon and earmarking the money for transportation projects.

“The indexing of Motor Fuel Tax funds was the key to that bill,” DeWitte said. “We all had to take some tough votes to get it done.”

Last year also saw lawmakers legalize recreational marijuana.

With legal sales underway since the start of the year, the local officials wanted to know what lawmakers will be doing to correct any unintended consequences.

The legislators essentially said they will be counting on local government officials to help guide them and bring problems to their attention.

“Cannabis was a very big piece of policy,” said Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, noting that the legislature has already approved one clean-up bill and expects that another with eventually follow.

“We are all very intently watching if there are any issues we need to address,” said Sen. Cristina Castro, D-Elgin.

Another notable accomplishment last year was consolidating 650 downstate police and fire pension funds into just two funds, said Castro, chief sponsor of the legislation, creating better investment power and efficiencies.

Metro West is calling on the legislature to control the cost of local municipal public safety pensions.

A major concern to Metro West and local officials is the status of the Local Government Distributive Fund (LGDF), which is the municipal share of state income tax revenues, divvyed up to cities and villages on a per capital basis.

The state cut the local share by 10% several years ago but then restored 5%. The municipalities want the other 5% back.

“That reduction in the LGDF is what gets passed on to property owners in higher taxes,” said DeWitte, who served as mayor of St. Charles from 2005 to 2013.

“The distributive fund has been eroded,” St. Charles Mayor Ray Rogina said, adding that unfunded state mandates compound the problem.

“He dealt with that as mayor,” Rogina said, pointing to DeWitte. “He understands.”

Metro West Executive Director Lesli Melendy said full restoration of the local share of the LGDF is a major goal of the lobbying group.

Melendy also said that the state needs to fully fund public schools.

DeWitte put it more bluntly when he charged that the state government is not meeting is constitutional requirement to provide education funding.

Democrats contend that part of the solution is the proposed Fair Tax Amendment to the Illinois Constitution which is on the November ballot. The initiative would increase taxes on incomes of more than $250,000.

“We rely too heavily on the property tax to fund schools,” said Moeller, urging passage of the fair tax and arguing that 95% of income taxpayers would see no change.

“I was hoping we weren’t going to get into that,” said DeWitte, the next to speak.

While commending Castro for her pension reform efforts, DeWitte said much more needs to be done.

“Until we address the number one burden on taxpayers, we are all just wasting time,” DeWitte said.

After the forum, DeWitte explained his opposition to the Fair Tax Amendment.

“I am adamantly opposed to any scheme that gives a blank check to a simple majority of the legislature to change income brackets and rates,” DeWitte said.

The governor and Democratic leaders have refused to make any assurances that the brackets and rates will remain frozen, said DeWitte, who contends that if approved, tax increases could easily be extended to the middle class.

Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, also opposes the plan, arguing that the increase on the higher earners will simply accelerate the exodus of businesses and residents from Illinois.

“There are other ways to grow revenues,” Ugaste said.

Prior to the forum, DeWitte predicted that property tax reform will need to be tied to a larger grand bargain involving taxes and revenues for both the state and local units of government.

Such a deal promises to be an all-or-nothing proposition, DeWitte said, because there will be so many interdependent components.

Geneva Mayor Kevin Burns welcomed the crowd, which included elected officials and top staffers from the three counties represented by Metro West.

For example, the Batavia contingent included Mayor Jeff Schielke, City Administrator Laura Newman, Assistant Administrator Anthony Isom and four aldermen.

“We are a team that is focused on results,” Burns told the lawmakers.

DeWitte is sponsoring legislation that he said would solve a technical problem for local government bodies, which often do not receive the exact property tax extension that they have levied, because of assessment fluctuations, tax appeal decisions or other factors.

When there is an over extension, local governments often are forced to go through a procedure to abate taxes. When there is an under extension, taxing bodies find themselves short of expected revenues.

DeWitte’s legislation would automatically adjust the extensions to guarantee that local governments receive the tax revenues they levied, and move the adjustments to the assessments for the following year.

The legislation, Senate Bill 1043, was approved in the Senate last year. Ugaste is sponsoring the bill in the House, but the legislation has been languishing in the Rules Committee.

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January 20, 2020 at 05:44AM

Bristow bill would close legislative pay loophole

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Bristow bill would close legislative pay loophole

SPRINGFIELD — In response to recent, high-profile reports of politicians timing their resignations in order to squeeze a full paycheck out of taxpayers, state Rep. Monica Bristow, D-Alton, has introduced legislation to prohibit legislators from receiving a full month of pay if they do not serve the entire month.

“In any other job or career, no one would expect to be paid a full month’s salary for completing just one day of work. This practice is totally unacceptable, and it must stop,” said Bristow. “This is a loophole that we have seen exploited that not only weakens the public’s trust in their elected officials but disrespects the taxpayers of Illinois, and it’s time to close it.”

Bristow has introduced House Bill 4131 which will change the rate of pay for members of the Illinois General Assembly, ending the current law that would allow legislators to be paid for an entire month of work, even if they only serve one day of that month.

Bristow’s legislation closes that loophole, requiring legislators to follow the same pay structure as most other state employees and establishes prorated pay for those who do not complete their term. Similar legislation has been introduced in the Illinois Senate and represents a collaboration with the Illinois Comptroller’s office.

“As I go door-to-door in communities across the Riverbend region, I hear from people that they want a more efficient, transparent and ethical government,” said Bristow. “We need to end special perks for politicians, and while I’ll continue my work to improve our government and save our state money, this is one the most glaring issues that we must fix.”

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via Alton Telegraph

January 17, 2020 at 09:19PM

Pritzker, lawmakers look to end cash bail, mandatory minimums and expand deferred prosecution

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Gov. J.B. Pritzker plans to make criminal justice reform a major focus in the years ahead.

The governor recently took part in a fireside chat about his administration’s Justice, Equity and Opportunity Initiative. Afterward, he laid out some of the things he wants to tackle over the next three years.

“One of those things is working on ending cash bail,” Pritzker said. “Also working on reducing or eliminating mandatory minimum sentences, giving judges more discretion to take into account circumstances in each case.”

There would be taxpayer savings from ending low-level cash bail, the governor said.

“The cost of putting people in jail and having them sit there because they don’t have the $200 or the $500 for cash bail,” Pritzker said. “That’s a cost to taxpayers that we ought to eliminate.”

Pritzker said such moves will help reduce the state’s prison and jail population, but he said they’ll take the time to maintain public safety and to get all stakeholders on the same page.

Members of the state legislature are evaluating expanding deferred prosecution programs in the state.

A committee of legislators earlier this week discussed such programs. State Rep. Maurice West, D-Rockford, said the goal is to provide alternatives to addressing wrongdoing other than criminal proceedings.

“A deferred prosecution program is an alternative justice program designed for first-time non-violent offenders,” West said. “It is an opportunity to keeping a conviction from being permanently entered onto their record.”

West said there are several counties in Illinois with such programs already.

Kane County State’s Attorney Joe McMahon said the Kane County program provides an opportunity for offenders to avoid prosecution while holding them fully accountable to the community.

“All programs provide access to mental health services, substance abuse evaluation and treatment and medical treatment when necessary,” McMahon said.

Lawmakers could take up various reforms when they return for spring session later this month.

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January 16, 2020 at 11:56AM

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