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It’s just a bill

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* WQAD

In February, a bill was introduced to the Illinois General Assembly that would allow Illinois breweries to be able to directly ship their products to their customers.

“The idea behind that bill is that maybe we can hit a person in another state or downstate where we don’t currently have distribution,” said Nick Bowes, general manager at Bent River Brewing Company. “It’s just a way that we can add maybe a little bit more to our sales as breweries and get our product to people who otherwise don’t really have an easy way to access it,” […]

“This can help us increase our sales,” Bowes said. “We want to be able to deliver a quality product while keeping our lights on. A move like this would definitely be a step into the right direction.”
The bill currently stands in the Senate with the liquor subcommittee. Illinois Legislation Session ends this week.

* Insurance Business Mag

An Illinois bill that would allow for punitive damages in wrongful death cases has raised concerns among industry groups, including the American Property Casualty Insurance Association (APCIA) and the Illinois Insurance Association (IIA).

A joint statement from the two associations warned of the detrimental impact that the bill could have on the state’s public policy and various stakeholders.

Introduced by Representative La Shawn Ford, House Bill 219 seeks to reverse the current prohibition on insurers paying punitive damages.

This would make Illinois an outlier state in terms of the damages allowed in wrongful death cases, according to the APCIA-IIA statement. While some states that permit punitive damages also place caps or limitations on both punitive and non-economic damages, Illinois does not.

* WAND

Police chiefs at universities across Illinois are asking state lawmakers to pass a plan to help them recruit officers from out of state.

House Republicans filed a bill earlier this spring to allow higher education institutions to hire law enforcement without a residency requirement during the application process. Their proposal could exclude university police applicants from the civil service testing and residency requirements.

“Western Illinois University has applicants from Iowa and possibly Missouri who apply for positions with the campus police and under current statutes they’re not authorized to apply for those jobs as out-of-state residents,” said Rep. Dan Swanson (R-Alpha). “This would give them an opportunity to apply for these positions also.” […]

House Bill 1767 passed unanimously out of the House Higher Education Committee Tuesday morning and now moves to the House floor. The measure gained unanimous support in the Senate last week.

* Cook County Public Defender’s Office…

Today, SB1886: Fair Probation Drug Testing passed the Illinois House! Since there were amendments, the bill now returns to the Senate for concurrence.

Huge thanks to our House sponsor @Lilian4StateRep for her hard work & leadership! #twill pic.twitter.com/OSyl74rFK2

— Cook County Public Defender’s Office (@CookCoDefender) May 16, 2023


* WAND

Illinois could make a popular merit-based grant pilot program permanent to help more students go to state public universities.

The AIM HIGH grant pilot program was launched in 2019 after state leaders saw several years of declining enrollment at Illinois public colleges.

Lawmakers and advocates felt the state’s higher education institutions were out-recruited by colleges in other states offering merit-based scholarships. Families frequently told lawmakers that their students could receive scholarships and grants for $10,00-$20,000 if they had high ACT or SAT scores. […]

House Bill 301 passed unanimously out of the House Higher Education Committee Tuesday morning. The plan now heads to the House floor for further consideration. Sponsors hope the proposal can pass out of both chambers before session is scheduled to end on Friday.

* Scott Holland

On Monday, state Reps. Dagmara Avelar, D-Barrington, and Ryan Spain, R-Peoria, published a guest column titled “State tax credit a bipartisan approach to easing Illinois’ affordable housing deficit.” The lawmakers advocated for passage of the Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit. When I first wrote about that proposal in April 2021, the bipartisan backers were state Reps. Delia Ramirez, D-Chicago, who now sits in Congress, and Tom Demmer, R-Dixon, out of the General Assembly after a failed bid to become treasurer.

No matter the advocates, the hearts seem in the right place. The federal Low-Income Housing Tax credit has indeed been a successful means of encouraging private development of lower-cost housing options and House Bill 2044 would add a state credit, following nearly half of other states trying to solve similar problems.

“The Build Illinois Homes State Tax Credit calls for creating an estimated 3,500 homes or apartments each year, generating nearly $1 billion in economic activity and $300 million in state and local taxes paid over the next decade, and more than 17,000 jobs supported during that time,” Avelar and Spain wrote. “Each annual round of tax credits will cost the state $350 million spread over 10 years, but the economic returns generated from the program will more than offset the cost.” […]

The numbers aren’t spin, but they require context and an understanding the housing shortage demands multiple solutions. Avelar and Spain are pushing one direction, which should help, but much heavy lifting remains.

posted by Isabel Miller
Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 9:29 am

Comments

  1. Context for the closing the death gap legislation the House passed yesterday in punitive damages:

    https://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/news/200/punitive-damages-for-wrongful-death-bill-passes-illinois-house/

    Comment by Dan Johnson Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 9:39 am

  2. I get having residency requirements for public jobs (and especially for police, given what studies have shown about the negative effects of police and communities being disconnected).

    But it is also very very dumb to require the residency requirement up front before someone even applies.

    Comment by Homebody Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 9:51 am

  3. I agree with homebody,recruitment needs to be done on a national basis. All the other states are recruiting nationally and many allow for lateral transfer of pension benefits . Illinois has been so limited in its approach . Just look at the Facebook adds from other states to recruit police officers. We will keep losing officers to other states who have better benefits . Chicago is losing officers at a clip that cannot be easily replaced.

    Comment by Tinman Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 10:22 am

  4. I love me some small local breweries, but I’d like to see some analysis on how direct to consumer shipping would jive with the federal three tier system, especially if they plan to ship across state lines.

    Comment by ChrisB Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 10:25 am

  5. The brewery bull, or the lack thereof, has led to some hilarity on Twitter over a “right-wing” beer company that was (?) planning to ship out of IL.

    Comment by Bothanspied Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 12:33 pm

  6. Bill. I meant, bill not bull

    Comment by Bothanspied Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 12:33 pm

  7. Constant probation drug testing leads to increased probation failure and cycles of incarceration. Testing is needed, but periods of imprisonment won’t solve substance use disorder and I’m glad these legislators understand that and have done something about it.

    Comment by Politix Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 1:30 pm

  8. Teenagers already planning to send beer to themselves and hope it arrives before the parents get home.

    Comment by Big Dipper Wednesday, May 17, 23 @ 2:20 pm

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