Friday, March 13, 2015

Belvidere police arrest 16-year-old after Starbucks holdup - News - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

 

BELVIDERE — A 16-year-old male is accused of holding up a Belvidere Starbucks on Thursday night.
At 5:30 p.m. Belvidere Police officers and Boone County sheriff's deputies responded to an armed robbery call at the Starbucks in the 1900 block of Gateway Center Drive. According to a statement released by the Belvidere Police Department, the teenage suspect showed Starbucks employees a handgun, took an unspecified amount of cash and ran away.
Police say he was arrested within minutes of the robbery by a Boone County Sheriff's deputy who was already in the area.
A handgun believed to be used in the robbery was recovered at the scene.
No injuries were reported.
Armed robbery is a class x felony, punishable by 6 to 30 years in the Department of Corrections.
The Belvidere Police Department is investigating the incident. The teen is being held at the Winnebago County Juvenile Detention Center.
Anyone with information regarding a crime or drug trafficking is encouraged to call the Belvidere Police Department at 815-544-2135 or Crime Stoppers at 815-547-7867.

Belvidere police arrest 16-year-old after Starbucks holdup - News - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

Pope Francis Gets The Problem With Money In Politics Exactly Right

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Francis succinctly summarized the corrupting influence that money can have in elections during an interview with a group of Argentine teenagers from a Buenos Aires slum, Crux reported.

Speaking about elections in his home country of Argentina, the pope said that candidates can become too beholden to donors who back their campaigns.

"Because many interests come into play in financing of an election campaign and then they ask you to pay back," he said in the interview. "So, the election campaign should be independent from anyone who may finance it."

The pope also said that a public finance system for elections would create more transparency.

"Perhaps public financing would allow for me, the citizen, to know that I'm financing each candidate with a given amount of money," he said.

Although the pope was speaking about Argentina, some quickly seized on his comments to make the case for reforming the influence of money in American politics. In the landmark 2010 case Citizens United v. FEC, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that independent political groups, such as corporations and unions, could spend unlimited sums of money in elections. The ruling has led to a flood of campaign spending from various groups, and President Barack Obama has said that the decision "has caused real harm to our democracy."

Pope Francis Gets The Problem With Money In Politics Exactly Right

King Rauner wants carte blanch trust

 

Gov. Bruce Rauner has met with dozens of state legislators both individually and in small groups since his election. By all accounts, every meeting has been cordial and he has scored lots of points with legislators who aren’t accustomed to this sort of gubernatorial attention.

Until last week, that is, when he had the Senate Black Caucus over to the mansion for breakfast.

Things started out well enough, but turned south in a hurry when Rauner said he couldn’t accept the Senate super-majority party’s stand-alone proposal to patch about $600 million of the current fiscal year’s $1.6 billion budget deficit with transfers from special state funds. He wanted, he said, an “all or nothing” solution.

Rauner repeatedly said he wouldn’t raise taxes to solve this year’s budget problems and therefore absolutely needed to make big cuts. Legislators should “trust me,” Rauner said. “We don’t know you,” was their reply.

And since his proposed budget for next fiscal year, which begins July 1, demands huge cuts to major social programs, why should they trust him to not go after those same cherished programs in this year’s budget if they give him the carte blanche he is demanding to make whatever reductions he desires?
The governor, in turn, warned the legislators that up until now he’s been blaming former Gov. Pat Quinn for this mess, but if they didn’t give him what he wanted he’d start blaming the General Assembly. Threats don’t often work too well with that caucus, to say the least.

You may recall that Gov. Rauner’s public criticism of the Senate Democrats after they moved their budget fix bill out of committee last week was pretty harsh. “After weeks of detailed negotiations, including three hours yesterday morning,” Rauner’s spokesman said via a press release, “it is clear that Senate Democrats are more interested in playing politics than solving this problem.”
But Rauner was told by Caucus members that as far as they knew there had been no “real” negotiations. Instead, Rauner’s staff has been meeting with legislative staff. But that staff has no authority to approve any agreements. The legislative “budgeteers” (appropriations committee chairmen) have so far been eliminated from the process. And they, along with the chamber leaders, are the only ones who can negotiate any deals, particularly in the Senate.

Indeed, a spokesman for House Speaker Michael Madigan said last week that his boss did not view the staff talks as “negotiations.” Instead, he said, staff is listening to the ideas presented by the governor’s budget folks and is offering advice on what is doable and what has to be changed to be legal and what isn’t legal.

And speaking of the House, the governor also accidentally stepped on a land mine during the meeting. Rauner had met with a few members of the House Black Caucus the night before, and he chastised the Senate Democrats for not working with him like the House has been.

As anyone who has ever visited with African-American state Senators undoubtedly knows, there is no more “anti-House” group in their entire chamber than the Senate Black Caucus.
“We’re not the House,” the governor was informed.

Making matters somewhat worse, failed African-American Chicago mayoral candidate Willie Wilson showed up in Springfield the day before and asked Senate President John Cullerton to convene a Senate Black Caucus meeting with him that very day.

Wilson essentially offered himself up as a conduit to the Republican governor, whom he supported last year. One member did give him a list of items on her wish list and he apparently took it to the governor. Rauner told the Caucus that he’d read the list and could support almost everything in it for next fiscal year, but he would need them to back him 100 percent this fiscal year. His offer was firmly declined.

At one point, the governor’s demands grew so loud and insistent that one Black Caucus member noted aloud that Illinois voters “didn’t elect a king” last year.

Senate President Cullerton has so far avoided the fate of his Democratic predecessors, who almost constantly battled internal caucus intrigue and coup attempts. He has done this partly by listening respectfully to all sides and not proceeding without consensus. Unless those wounds are healed quickly and the governor begins to accommodate opposing views, he is going to have a really tough time with his budget fix.

Rich Miller also publishes Capitol Fax, a daily political newsletter, and CapitolFax.com.

King Rauner wants carte blanch trust

Thursday, March 12, 2015

CeaseFire warns loss of state funding could result in more shootings | Chicago

CeaseFire warns loss of state funding could result in more shootings

Posted: 03/10/2015, 05:35pm | Frank Main

Dr. Gary Slutkin (pictured in 2012), the founder of CeaseFire Illinois, warned Gov. Bruce Rauner on Tuesday of the possibility of a flare-up of shootings in Chicago unless state funding for the antiviolence program is restored. | Al Podgorski~Chicago Sun-Times

The founder of CeaseFire Illinois warned Gov. Bruce Rauner on Tuesday of the possibility of a flare-up of shootings in Chicago unless state funding for the antiviolence program is restored.

CeaseFire, whose efforts to prevent retaliatory shootings received international attention in the documentary “The Interrupters,” was notified on March 4 that its state grant was suspended as part of Rauner’s budget cuts.

On Tuesday, CeaseFire founder Dr. Gary Slutkin wrote to Rauner that the $4.5 million grant represents most of the funding for CeaseFire Illinois, which he said serves 18 communities in Chicago and six outside of the city.

“The state of Illinois cannot afford to interrupt the CeaseFire program,” Slutkin said in his letter. “Lives depend on this program.”

Slutkin said the governor should consider CeaseFire an essential state program not subject to budget cuts.

“People’s health and safety should not be relegated to ‘non-essential’ service status and treated like property leases, office space and energy consumption savings measures,” he said.

An interruption in CeaseFire’s funding in 2007 under Gov. Rod Blagojevich had coincided with a steep rise in shootings in Chicago, Slutkin said.

CeaseFire also held a $1 million contract with the city of Chicago to combat gun violence in the Grand Crossing and Ogden police districts between mid-2012 and mid-2013, but the contract was not renewed.

CeaseFire warns loss of state funding could result in more shootings | Chicago

What Rauner’s budget cuts could mean for families who depend on respite care | WGN-TV

 

CHICAGO — One of the social service programs on Gov Rauner’s chopping block is the respite care program.

Families already pushed to the limit could soon have an even tougher time.

Under the governor’s proposed budget, funding for developmental disabilities respite care would be discontinued.

More than 3,000 Illinois families currently depend on the program.

WGN’s Monica Schneider spent time with a a family that depends on the program for help.

What Rauner’s budget cuts could mean for families who depend on respite care | WGN-TV

(1) Mainstream: New setbacks would prohibit wind... - Belvidere Daily Republican

 

March 6 at 5:12pm ·

Mainstream: New setbacks would prohibit wind farms here
By Bob Balgemann
Reporter

BOONE COUNTY - As public hearings continue on new setback requirements for wind turbines, Mainstream Renewable Power is continuing its opposition, saying the proposed rules would keep such projects out of Boone County.

The second hearing will be held March 24, with the possibility of a third in April.

The zoning board of appeals' (ZBA) recommendation will be considered by the planning, zoning and building committee meeting, which is held the first Wednesday of each month. That is a standing committee of the county board consisting of five board members.

Last stop for the proposed text amendment to the Boone County Zoning Ordinance will be the county board, which meets the third Wednesday of each month.

The Chicago law firm of Schain, Banks, Kenny and Schwartz Ltd. has written letters to the ZBA, concerning the text amendment.

Here are some excerpts from the second letter, dated Feb. 20, which addressed the revised application submitted by David Cleverdon of Caledonia and Karen Kenney of Capron.

"The new language in the proposed text amendment does not cure the constitutional invalidity of the prior language, and the new provisions will prohibit development of wind energy projects in Boone County. Accordingly, the objections previously raised in my Jan. 27, 2015, correspondence applies to the new proposal, and Mainstream therefore opposes the new amendment for the same reasons.

"The new text amendment again includes a minimum property line setback of one-half mile, or 2,640 feet. As Mainstream previously demonstrated, this setback precludes development of wind energy projects in Boone County, since the setback from the property line alone requires the host parcel to be more than one mile by one mile in size."

Attorney John R. Griffin, who wrote the letter, included a map showing that if a 2,640-foot setback was applied from every property boundary in the county, no land area would be eligible for a wind turbine.

While the revised text amendment includes a provision allowing a "participating landowner" to partially waive the setback requirement, Griffin wrote that it would not make any difference.

"Land use rights cannot be contingent upon receiving special permission from a neighboring property owner," he stated. "...therefore, the county's ordinances must allow for wind energy projects without making the use contingent upon special permission."

STAFF RECOMMENDATION

The city-county planning staff does not support increasing the existing setback, which is 1,000 feet, or 1.1 times the height of the tower, from the property line.

Planners agreed with Mainstream that a 2,640-foot setback or 5.5 times the height of the tower, whichever is greater, "would not allow towers to be constructed in Boone County."

Further, that would be in contradiction with Section 4.8.1.3 of the county zoning ordinance, whose purpose is "to promote the supply of wind energy in support of Illinois' statutory goal of increasing energy production from renewable energy sources."

"There is no submitted evidence to support the need for the greater setback," planners stated. "If the Illinois Tollway Authority, the Illinois Department of Transportation, local municipalities or other utility providers felt that such a setback was required, it would currently be written in their guidelines."

While the county health department and highway department has no comments on the text amendment, there were mixed responses from North Boone Fire District 4 and from Bonus Township.

The 8,000-acre wind farm being proposed by Mainstream is in Manchester and Leroy townships. Bonus Township voted 4-0 against the text amendment, viewing it as "excessive," with no facts "to substantiate the safety and health concerns specifically referred to in the application."

Planners inform each of the nine townships about cases before the ZBA. Bonus was the only one to respond.

Manchester earlier wanted to establish its own setback requirements, but ultimately was told it could not contradict what was in the county zoning ordinance.

Fire District 4 voted 2-0 with one abstention to recommend accepting the amendment.

"The biggest problem with wind turbine fires is that, because of the turbine height, the fire department can do little but rope off the area and watch the fire burn itself out," wrote the board president, Kerry B. Kenney, in an undated letter.

"While this may be acceptable in reasonably still conditions, in a storm setting it means burning debris being scattered over a wide area, with obvious consequences. From a first responder's viewpoint, with further setbacks from roads, houses and property lines, we feel this gives greater safety to the community we serve."

(1) Mainstream: New setbacks would prohibit wind... - Belvidere Daily Republican

BCJ: The VAC Returns to the County Board

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The story shown below is from the March 13, 2015 Boone County Journal which is available free of cost at many Boone County merchants or on line at:  http://www.boonecountyjournal.com/news/2015/Boone-County-News-03-13-15.pdf#page=1

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