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Afternoon roundup

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* Gov. Pritzker was asked today about a bill passed by the Senate to rescind the state’s longtime moratorium on constructing new nuclear plants. The object is to spur development of small nuke plants

Over the years, I think the environmental movement has looked at nuclear differently, especially over the last 15 years, than it did prior. Because you talk about nuclear today, you’re not talking about building another Byron plant or Zion as it used to be. Instead, you’re talking about small modular reactors. And that’s something that’s new. They’re small, they are considered much, much safer. There’s something you can really, if you had a million square foot plant for example, you could have your own small modular reactor that’s next to that plant that’s providing all the energy just for that plant.

So you know, banning nuclear entirely in a world where it’s become much safer and these are smaller, less prone to an accident, more likely for us to be able to maintain them for a long period of time. That’s something that’s worthy of consideration.

Now the devil’s in the details and we want to make sure that we’re not just opening this up to nuclear everywhere or any type of nuclear. So, I’ve talked to Sen. Rezin a bit about this and to some of the people who are contemplating sponsoring it in the House, and we will continue that dialogue. I don’t know where that bill will go this session, but I’m not opposed to it as if I’m just dead set against any nuclear. I just want, if we’re going to consider it, it’s got to be safe.

Please pardon all transcription errors.

* The governor was also asked about Misty Buscher’s Springfield mayoral win

Well, I congratulate her on her victory. I’ve worked with Mayor Langfelder now for the last four years, and we’ve gotten an awful lot done for Springfield together and I know that I’ll work with the new mayor on whatever is best for the city of Springfield. We all spend an awful lot of time here, even if we’re not here full time. And we know that this is a special city. It’s our capital city, it ought to shine for the world. We want to bring tourists and bring the rest of the world to Springfield. And so I’m going to work closely, as I will with the mayors all across the state of Illinois.

* He was also asked about why he thought the move to ban books was gaining steam and where it was coming from

Well, the extremists are coming after your literature. They’re coming after your libraries, they’re coming after your books under the guise of ‘we’re protecting somebody.’ That’s always the guise under which people end up banning or burning books.

The reality is more information is better. Obviously we all believe in age-appropriate materials. But the reality is our libraries have been able to manage this for years and years and years. And all of a sudden there’s this mythical thing that’s popped up with the far right, that, you know these books are being pushed on people somehow. That’s not what’s happening hasn’t been happening. Just like there’s no CRT in schools. They’ve made that up. K through 12 education has no CRT. In higher ed, there are graduate programs where people are teaching, learning, choosing. These are adults choosing to take courses like that or teach them. But K 12 education, there’s no CRT, just like there is no need for us to take books off the shelves in our libraries. They have been age appropriate for many years, librarians are highly capable of managing that.

* On that topic, he was asked which book had the most impact on him growing up

You’re gonna look for me to pick Moby Dick or some other major classic. But I’m going to tell you the book that had the most impact on me. My great-grandfather immigrated to this country from Ukraine in 1881. And he was nine years old when he arrived. He had nothing. He sold Chicago Tribunes on a street corner to survive. There was a social service agency that gave him a place to live, a public school that gave him a place to go to school and learn English. And he became a successful lawyer during his lifetime.

He wrote a book near the end of his life, it’s called Three Score after Ten. It’s not on the bookshelves anywhere because it was just written privately by him for our family. And it’s a quite a long tome, but it’s about the history of my family, where we came from, the challenges that our family went through, the the fact that our lives, our family’s lives were threatened, had to escape and become refugees out of Ukraine, and made it to the United States. And it’s one of the reasons I believe in standing up for refugees and helping them resettle when they come to the United States when they’re escaping violence. So that book had an enormous impact on me. I read it when I was 13 years old first, and I’ve probably read it at least five or seven times since. .

* AG Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul, as part of a coalition of 22 states, urged the Biden administration to scrap dangerous federal rules that allow employers to interfere in the reproductive health decisions of their employees.

The rules, put in place under the prior administration, took away contraceptive coverage from women who should have been entitled to complete coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). They added broad, unreasonable exemptions that allowed nearly all types of employers to deny birth control coverage to their employees based on religious or moral objections.

In a comment letter addressed to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Acting U.S. Labor Secretary Julie Su, Raoul and the coalition applaud the Biden administration’s proposal to restore access to cost-free contraceptive coverage by rescinding the moral exemption and creating alternate means to cover contraceptive services for individuals whose plan sponsors claim the religious exemption. However, the letter also expresses opposition to the administration’s decision to retain the overly broad religious exemption promulgated in 2018, which is deemed far beyond what is necessary to protect those with religious objections.

“More than 60 million women rely on coverage for preventative services, including contraception, as a fundamental part of their health care plan,” Raoul said. “Access to contraceptive care supports people’s ability to control their reproductive health and promotes access to education, jobs and financial empowerment. Employers do not have the right to stand between their employees and the reproductive health care they need.”

* A bit of housekeeping news…


If you're wondering why my website posts aren't automatically appearing on Twitter, this is from https://t.co/9lmYfIT7WE pic.twitter.com/310SBYUrtZ

— Capitol Fax (@capitolfax) April 5, 2023

* Heh…


By the way, I checked back in my records and on @capitolfax for May 14, 2019 - the day the simultaneous FBI raids occurred - to see what was going on in Springfield that day. Was the day of the (mostly) annual House vs. Senate softball game. For the record, the House won 15 to 5. https://t.co/wHgJkjYyyT

— Hannah Meisel (@hannahmeisel) April 5, 2023

…Adding… Crain’s

Gov. J.B. Pritzker appointed five new members to the board of trustees of Northeastern Illinois University, pending confirmation by the Illinois Senate.

The announcement comes after trustees moved to oust president Gloria Gibson amid concerns over the school’s flagging enrollment and abysmal graduation rates. Four of the previous trustees’ terms have expired and another quit in frustration. The board is made up of nine members. […]

As Crain’s previously reported, the faculty last fall issued a vote of no confidence in president Gibson and followed that with another no-confidence vote for the board. By then, the board had acted, deciding not to renew Gibson’s contract that expires June 30. In February, the vice president for enrollment management resigned.


…Adding…
US Attorney’s Office

A federal judge in Chicago held the City of Chicago liable for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act by failing to provide accessible pedestrian signals at signalized intersections throughout the city to those who are blind or have low vision.

In April of 2021, the Justice Department moved to intervene in a disability discrimination lawsuit that people with visual disabilities brought against the City under the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act. The United States’ complaint in intervention alleged that the city fails to provide people who are blind, have low vision or are deaf-blind with equal access to pedestrian signal information at intersections. Pedestrian signal information, such as a flashing “Walk/Don’t Walk” signal, indicates when it is safe to cross the street for sighted pedestrians.

Accessible pedestrian signals (APSs) are devices that provide pedestrians with safe-crossing information in a non-visual format, such as through audible tones, speech messages and vibrotactile surfaces. Since at least 2006, Chicago has recognized the need to install APSs for pedestrians with visual disabilities, specifically identifying the need for such installation in multiple city documents. Yet, while Chicago currently provides sighted pedestrians visual crossing signals at nearly 2,800 intersections, the United States’ suit alleged that — at the time it intervened — fewer than one percent of those were equipped with APSs for people who are blind or have low vision.

On March 31, U.S. District Judge Elaine E. Bucklo sided with the United States and the private plaintiffs in a decision on both sides’ motions for summary judgment, holding the city in violation of the ADA and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. The court found that the city had provided APS at only a “miniscule portion of the whole,” and thus had failed “to provide ‘meaningful access’ to its network of existing facilities and to ensure that newly constructed signals are designed and constructed in such a manner as to be ‘readily accessible’ by blind individuals.”

* Isabel’s roundup…

posted by Rich Miller
Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 2:32 pm

Comments

  1. I don’t understand what Chatham residents hope to accomplish by not allowing cannabis businesses… their moral high ground does nothing to prevent the consumption within Chatham, and they lose all that tax money.

    As someone who lives in Springfield right next to Unincorporated Sangamon County/Jerome, I really wish that we wouldn’t have all the weird pockets of non-city space. It makes dealing with slumlords and problem properties that much more of a challenge.

    Happy to say I voted for Misty. Jim is a very, very nice guy, but doesn’t have the authoritative personality and abilities necessary to be the Mayor. COVID did a great job of pointing out all of his existing flaws. Looking forward to better communication and a city hall with more than a skeleton crew.

    Also very happy that the racist didn’t win the Alderwoman race in my ward! Sad that my preferred treasurer candidate didn’t win, but she did a great job. I look forward to what she does in the future.

    Comment by Squirrel Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 2:54 pm

  2. == Twitter labels NPR’s account as ’state-affiliated media ==

    In response, NPR labels Elon Musk an idiot.

    Comment by H-W Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 2:55 pm

  3. Lightfoot advises Johnson to be humble? Not something she has experience with, but OK….

    Comment by Friendly Bob Adams Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 2:57 pm

  4. Squirrel: ==a city hall with more than a skeleton crew.==

    With the debt she owes to so many unions you can rest assured head count and IMRF pension payments will skyrocket.

    Comment by don the legend Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 3:51 pm

  5. ===With the debt she owes to so many unions you can rest assured head count and IMRF pension payments will skyrocket.===

    As others have previously noted, the crowd behind Misty gives me pause. They haven’t been this excited since Karen Hasara was Mayor. And we remember how those 8 years went.

    Comment by Anyone Remember Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 4:21 pm

  6. Book with most impact - My grandfather wrote a memoir for the family that included growing up in Austin and later serving in WWII. My husband’s great-great(?) grandfather wrote a book about his time in the Civil War. Books like that are amazing.

    Comment by Just Lurking Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 5:06 pm

  7. To Don and Anyone Remember - there have been many roles left unfilled and the city has suffered for it. I don’t remember how those 8 years went under Hasara - I didn’t live here - but I vividly remember the last 8, and a change will do some good.

    Comment by Squirrel Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 5:29 pm

  8. Maybe they could allow new nuclear plants outside of city limits…at least until a few have been installed and operating long enough to get a track record of safety.

    Comment by Jibba Wednesday, Apr 5, 23 @ 8:17 pm

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