Tuesday, October 27, 2015

How Scott Walker and the Kochs Are Making Wisconsin Corruption-Friendly

 

Now that Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker has abandoned his presidential bid, he and a network of powerful conservative allies with close ties to the Koch Brothers are exacting what critics say is blatant political vengeance on his in-state critics, by targeting the laws that have effectively deterred or punished political corruption.

Last week, Wisconsin’s Republican-controlled Assembly passed three bills that together would completely gut existing campaign-finance laws, blunt prosecutors’ ability to investigate political corruption, and turn the state’s elections and ethics board into a partisan-controlled paper tiger. Two of the bills are now before the Republican-controlled Senate, while the third has already been signed by Walker.

Good-government advocates can’t seem to overstate the impact these bills could have on a state that’s long been a beacon of government transparency and strong campaign-finance laws. “I think the implications, long-term, could be even more horrendous than [Act 10—the bill that gutted state workers’ collective bargaining rights],” says Peter Barca, a long-time Wisconsin politician and current Democratic state assembly member, calling the past week the worst he’s experienced in any legislative body.

Advocates for open government fear the changes may be too “inside baseball” to rouse public anger—at least until scandals beset state government. “It’s a recipe for political corruption. Even worse, the public won’t know about it,” says Brendan Fischer, general counsel at the Center for Media and Democracy. “There’s unlimited opportunities for corruption as a result for these bills and limited opportunities for the public to keep tabs.”

“It’s very strategic and very shrewd,” says Jay Heck, executive director of Common Cause Wisconsin. “Ever since Act 10, there’s been this synergy between the Koch Brothers and Americans for Prosperity with the legislative Republicans and Scott Walker. It’s part of the broader agenda—one they know is an agenda that doesn’t resonate with any people’s lives. They want to get away with it quickly.”

The legislative push is an attempt by Republicans to codify a controversial Wisconsin State Supreme Court decision, which involved an investigation into Scott Walker’s 2012 campaign to oppose an effort to recall him.

The legislative push is an attempt by Republicans to codify a controversial Wisconsin State Supreme Court decision, which involved an investigation into Scott Walker’s 2012 campaign to oppose an effort to recall him. The ongoing investigation into allegations of illegal coordination between Walker’s 2012 campaign and outside conservative advocacy groups was abruptly halted this July—at the apogee of Walker’s presidential campaign—by the court. The justices ruled not only that the instances of coordination were legal, but also that all evidence in the case was to be destroyed. It’s worth noting that justices who signed on to the decision were elected with millions in spending from the same outside groups that were at the heart of the case. Court critics had demanded that at least two conservative justices who had received campaign support from groups like the Wisconsin Club for Growth (suspected of illegal coordination with Walker) recuse themselves. They didn’t—and voted to stop the investigation.

So what exactly is in these pieces of legislation? While they are three separate laws, together they could create a less accountable, less transparent, and more corruptible state government.

Breaking Up a “Gold Standard”

Unlike the Federal Elections Commission and many state agencies, Wisconsin’s Government Accountability Board (GAB) is a nonpartisan body made up of six appointed retired judges charged with enforcing the state’s ethics, lobbying, campaign-finance, and election law.

The board was formed in 2007 with bipartisan support after nine Wisconsin legislators and staffers—Democrat and Republican alike—were found guilty of using taxpayer funds for political campaigns. The state assembly speaker was sentenced to 15 months in prison.

In election law circles, the system is held up as a gold standard for ensuring integrity in the political process—especially because of the independent funding mechanism for corruption investigations, which works as a firewall from political agendas.

Critics think Republicans are targeting the GAB partly because it authorized the probing form of investigation known as “John Doe” into Walker and his staffers. Republicans—echoed by a succession of conservative editorials from The Wall Street Journal—have sought to cast the board as a partner to the prosecutors who went on a “political witch hunt” of Republicans. They contended that the investigation was based on a false interpretation of campaign coordination law.

The bill to repeal the GAB would replace the retired judges with partisan appointees, create separate entities for ethics and elections, and give the legislature the authority to cut off investigative funding if it sees fit.

Republican Assembly Member Joe Sanfelippo penned an op-ed last month saying that the GAB should operate more like the FEC. “If it works for the Federal Election Commission, there’s no reason it won’t for Wisconsin as well,” he wrote. The problem is that it doesn’t work for the FEC. The commission’s chairperson has said that due to crippling partisan gridlock (by law, it has three Democratic and three Republican commissioners), the FEC can’t enforce federal campaign-finance laws. As the Campaign Legal Center’s Larry Noble told the Wisconsin State Journal, "It's like setting up a disaster-relief agency and saying you're going to use the FEMA handling of Hurricane Katrina as your model."

According to Common Cause’s Heck, some Republican state senators who helped implement the GAB back in 2007 and who are still in office are reportedly pushing to allow retired judges to stay on the board. Their numbers are small, however, and it remains to be seen if they will be enough to force an amendment.

Welcoming Unlimited Dark Money

In one of the most expansive deregulations of existing campaign-finance law, the state assembly also passed a bill Wednesday that guts existing regulations, ushers in an even larger windfall of dark money than Citizens United, and removes certain campaign coordination rules that previously served as a firewall between candidate and super-PAC campaigns.

The bill would create a loophole for political groups to skirt traditional disclosure regulations of “express advocacy,” so long as more than 50 percent of total spending doesn’t go to such activity. Experts say that the loophole, which would be one of the most lax in the country, would allow groups to flood the airwaves with un-attributable attack ads. And with this bill, campaigns and “issue advocacy” groups are free to work together.

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As Fischer explains, under the bill the Assembly passed, a campaign could set up a shadow campaign committee that could take donations from corporations, foreigners, and those trying to avoid public scrutiny without having to disclose who is contributing. All the while, the official campaign and shadow group could legally coordinate on campaign strategy.

Additionally, the bill removes the requirement that direct contributors to candidates specify their employer, which helps illuminate which industries are supporting which politicians. Unlimited contributions to political parties and legislative leaders would be allowed, as well.

John Doe No More

Rather than using a grand jury system, since statehood, Wisconsin has used a “John Doe” investigation process, which allows prosecutors to covertly investigate wrongdoing by questioning unnamed suspects before a judge.  The process was used to bring down politicians for corruption back in 2006, as well as for the campaign coordination investigation into Scott Walker. “John Doe” has been in Republicans’ political crosshairs since the Walker investigation and they have long been working to portray it as purely a means for partisan attacks—despite the fact that Republican prosecutors were leading the investigation into Walker’s campaign. 

This bill has passed both the assembly and senate and was signed into law by Walker on Friday, effectively ending “John Doe” political corruption investigations in the state.

Taken together, these three bills mark a wholesale dismantling of good-government policies, likely turning Wisconsin into a political Wild West. If all are enacted, outside groups would be able to dump untraceable money into elections. The campaign-finance laws that remain on the books would be lightly enforced, if at all, as the new agencies become mired in FEC-style partisan gridlock. The ability to effectively investigate instances of corruption would be curtailed—with the legislature vested with the power to cut off the funding for such investigations.

The Koch Connection

The spate of anti-reform legislation comes at a moment of electoral peril for the state’s Republican Party. “Walker has never been weaker and the fractures between the two (Republican-controlled) houses are more pronounced than ever,” says Common Cause’s Jay Heck. “This is sort of a last attempt to tie all the factions together.”

Walker’s lackluster candidacy for president appears to have hurt his support back home. A recent survey puts his disapproval rating at 60 percent, 10 percentage points higher than when he pushed through Act 10 in 2011. But, as last week’s legislative victories showed, he can still rely on the Republican legislature and his loyal band of conservative groups to offer up support—particularly when that support gives the GOP’s big-money backers more sway in state elections.

Indeed, those big-money backers are the prime movers of these measures. As the Center for Media and Democracy’s Fischer has thoroughly documented, these government “deforms” are central to the agenda of the Koch Brothers and their deeply entrenched Wisconsin political infrastructure. The only group that was lobbying in support of the disintegration of the state’s Government Accountability Board was the brothers’ Americans for Prosperity (AFP), which also spent $10 million in support of Scott Walker during his recall election.

Similarly, the sole lobbying proponent of the push for new campaign-finance deregulation is Wisconsin Right to Life, which is run by a former AFP state operative. In a statement to the Prospect, the group said “We are glad the Wisconsin State Legislature is addressing the fact that Chp. 11, our state's current campaign finance law, is unconstitutional as it stands."

Along with AFP, Wisconsin Family Action, a group that seeks to advance “Judeo-Christian values in Wisconsin by strengthening, preserving and promoting marriage, family, life and liberty,” and was implicated in the recent John Doe investigation, lobbied to do away with that very prosecution tool. Intertwined with these organizations is the Wisconsin Alliance for Reform, a recently formed group that has been running radio spots backing the legislation, and has clear ties to AFP, ALEC, and prominent conservative state politicians.

Political Blowback?

Will this brazen agenda of political “deform” lead to the kind of public pushback that arose in opposition to Act 10?  Deregulating campaign finance and breaking up the GAB are hardly policy priorities for the average Wisconsin voter. In fact, there’s plenty of evidence to show that Wisconsinites—and Americans more broadly—want to get money out of politics. In Wisconsin, 61 cities and counties, representing 42 percent of state residents, have passed resolutions in support of overturning Citizens United. Across the country, 84 percent of Americans think money has too much influence in politics and 75 percent believe there needs to be fundamental changes to the campaign-finance system.

Good-government advocates were heartened a few weeks ago, when there was substantial public rancor after Scott Walker and State Assembly Speaker Robin Vos attempted to include a last-minute provision in the budget bill that would have gutted the state’s open records law.

“A lot of work needs to be done to educate voters about what [this new legislation] actually does,” says Fischer. “There’s a lot of misinformation coming from supporters. But as the public grows more aware about what this bill actually does in promoting secrecy, they will grow outraged.”

However, there’s little opportunity to challenge these laws. Experts don’t see much room to stage a legal challenge in the courts and a ballot measure to repeal the laws would first have to be approved by the legislature. Both the state’s 2010 redistricting and the impending flow of more secret money make a Democratic takeover of either chamber in 2016 highly unlikely.

Strategically, this legislation works to help entrench Republican power in a competitive state, and will likely leave state Democrats looking beyond the next redistricting, rather than to 2016, for a new political opening.

How Scott Walker and the Kochs Are Making Wisconsin Corruption-Friendly

My View: Illinois OK when right tax info is compared - Opinion - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

 

By Elizabeth Austin

Posted Oct. 26, 2015 at 5:11 PM

Which state has the highest taxes in the Midwest? Not Illinois, that’s for sure.
The Illinois Policy Institute is claiming otherwise, citing “recent research.” But that research was actually based on tax collections from fiscal 2013, when the state's income tax rate was 5 percent. Today — in fiscal 2016, more than two years later — the state income tax rate has dropped to 3.75 percent. So if you look at tax collections in the first six months of this year, under the new rate, Illinois’ state taxes collections come out to $1,597 a person — more than $60 lower than Wisconsin’s $1,661. That’s just a fact.
But beyond that basic inaccuracy, that letter simply ignored some fundamental facts about state taxes, the first being that comparing state tax burdens is like trying to compare apples and mashed potatoes.
Take Indiana. Their income tax rate is a flat 3.3 percent, which looks pretty good next to Illinois, right? But in Indiana, almost every county imposes its own income tax, which can range up to almost 3 percent, for a total income tax rate of 6.3 percent. That’s a whopping 68 percent higher than Illinois!
And while it’s true that people in Illinois pay more in income taxes per person than people in Missouri, there’s a very good reason for that: We make more money. The average per-capita income in Illinois is $29,666 — above the national average and substantially higher than the Missouri per-capita income of $25,649. So if you want to move to Missouri and pay less, remember that’s because you’re likely to make less.
Then there’s the huge issue of comparing Illinois’ regressive flat income tax rate with our neighboring states’ progressive rates. In Wisconsin, people in the highest income bracket pay a top rate of 7.65 percent. Iowans pay almost 9 percent on taxable income over $68,000. And people in Minnesota pay a hefty 9.85 percent on taxable income of $154,951 and above.
Here’s the real point: When you start cherry-picking statistics on state tax rates, you can prove just about anything you want. The real task is figuring out the best, fairest way for a state government to raise the revenue necessary to pay for the services that its people demand. And you can’t develop smart, effective tax policy based on a misleading, simplistic and out-of-date chart.

But if you could, I’d choose one from the Tax Foundation (that same place that Illinois Policy Institute cited) that ranked the combined state and local tax burden in every state. Illinois comes in at No. 13 — compared with Wisconsin, which had the fifth-highest tax burden in the nation.

 

Elizabeth Austin is vice president for policy and communications for Innovation Illinois, a nonpartisan left-leaning organization dedicated to advancing well-researched, progressive policies in Illinois.

 

My View: Illinois OK when right tax info is compared - Opinion - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

Rauner says union-opposed reforms 'critical' to budget deal - Wandtv.com, NewsCenter17, StormCenter17, Central Illinois News-

 

ROCK ISLAND, Ill. (AP) - Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner says he doesn't expect a budget agreement to come out of a planned meeting next month with legislative leaders.

The Rock Island Argus reports (http://bit.ly/1XuKxVs) that during a visit Monday to Rock Island, the Republican is insisting he won't agree to a budget deal unless it includes reforms from his "turnaround agenda."

Rauner and the Democrats have been at odds over a budget which should have taken effect July 1. The first-year governor wants changes to the business and political climates, such as tighter workers' compensation rules and term limits for officeholders. Democratic leaders have said they want a balanced approach that includes cutbacks in spending.

The governor has said he would circulate an agenda for a Nov. 18 meeting.

Both Republican leaders said they'll be there. Spokesmen said Speaker Michael Madigan and Senate President John Cullerton were willing to attend.

Information from: The Rock Island Argus, http://www.qconline.com/index.shtml

Rauner says union-opposed reforms 'critical' to budget deal - Wandtv.com, NewsCenter17, StormCenter17, Central Illinois News-

Monday, October 26, 2015

Lawmakers strike major budget deal - CNNPolitics.com

 

CNN)Bipartisan congressional leaders and the White House struck a major fiscal deal in principle Monday that would raise the debt ceiling and lift budget caps on both defense and domestic programs, according to congressional sources familiar with the deal.

The agreement could be voted on as early as Wednesday, the same day House Republicans are expected to nominate Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, to replace retiring Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, as House speaker.

The final details are being ironed out and a bill could be introduced later Monday as negotiators draft the language to prepare for it for vote.

    This deal would avoid a potential debt default on November 3, and it would reduce the chances of a government shutdown on December 11.

    The agreement includes top line numbers for defense and domestic spending levels for the next two years, but Congress will still need to pass some type of omnibus spending bill that includes specific levels for various federal agencies to avoid a shutdown in December.

    Read More

    The deal includes $80 billion in increased defense and domestic spending over two years‎, a senior House source told CNN.

    It also includes more money for the Pentagon's overseas contingency account.

    That new spending would be offset by sales from the strategic petroleum oil reserve, use of public airwaves for telecommunications companies and changes to the crop insurance program — among other measures. Moreover, the deal would spread out increases in Medicare premiums over time so beneficiaries don't feel them acutely. It would also aim to preserve the Social Security disability trust fund, sources said.

    Conservatives sharply panned the deal.

    "It's emblematic of five years of failed leadership," said Rep. Justin Amash, R-Michigan.

    But Sen. John McCain says he will support the deal, even though it is $5 billion short on defense funding in 2016 and more than that in 2017.

    "I think it is saleable," he told reporters after leaving a Senate GOP Conference meeting.

    Boehner's office negotiated many of the details directly with the White House, but House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid were also part of the discussions as the framework was developed, according to a source familiar with the talks.

    As he walked off the floor and back to his office, McConnell signaled leaders were on the cusp of a deal to raise the debt ceiling and budget caps.

    "Yeah, we're still talking," he said.

    He was then asked if he feels good about where they are he repeated, "We're still talking."

    On the floor, Reid signaled talks were moving forward as well.

    "There is no reason to have one -- that is a crisis," he said.

    House and Senate GOP leaders scheduled a closed door meeting for rank-and-file members for Monday evening to discuss the emerging deal.

    The legislation could be filed as early as Monday night with a House vote likely Wednesday -- the same day as House Republicans vote to elect a new speaker.

    The deal is not yet final, and could ultimately change. But the discussions are moving quickly since Boehner wants to wrap up the divisive fiscal issues before he hands the gavel on Thursday to Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, who is expected to win House leadership elections.

    It's still uncertain whether the two sides -- particularly in the House -- could win over the rank-and-file and push the matter to final passage. But if Pelosi agrees to back the package, and Boehner can deliver a large segment of his conference, it could be enough to overcome opposition from conservative factions. Two sources said Monday that Boehner and Pelosi were having "productive" discussions.

    The possible deal could give both sides cover. The White House has said that the debt limit should not have any corresponding budget cuts and should pass without restrictions in order to meet the November 3 deadline to avoid a possible default.

    But if a budget deal moved at the same time, Republicans could point to the cuts Democrats agreed to in order to argue they were winning concessions from the White House. One source familiar with the discussions said that the two sides were looking at the possibility of a two-year budget deal, effectively decreasing the chances of a shutdown December 11.

    Boehner was expected to discuss the matter with his leadership team later Monday afternoon

    Lawmakers strike major budget deal - CNNPolitics.com

    Dry fall yields productive harvest season in Boone, Winnebago counties - News - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

     

    By Adam Poulisse
    Staff writer

    Posted Oct. 25, 2015 at 1:00 PM
    Updated Oct 25, 2015 at 7:05 PM

    BELVIDERE — For Marshall Newhouse, a dry fall is good news for him and his 1,400-acre farm in Capron.
    "As far as the weather is going, you cannot ask for a more agreeable harvest," the former Boone County Board member said. "The ground is firm because it's dry. Without the mud, you're not battling with machinery. It aids in the process when everything is nice and dry. Everything works better with harvesting equipment."
    A wet August and dry fall resulted in a productive harvest, allowing farmers in Winnebago and Boone counties more time in the fields, even if crop prices aren't as high as they were two years ago. The price for a bushel of corn is about $3.50, half of what it was two years ago, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Soybean prices are about $8.60, compared with about $10 last year.
    "If you take good production and depressed prices, you're hoping it will average out to an average year," Newhouse said.
    Seventy-two percent of corn and 89 percent of soybeans have been harvested in northeast Illinois, according to the USDA's crop report for the week ending Oct. 18. Statewide, 85 percent of corn and soybeans and 76 percent or sorghum have been harvested, each significantly higher than the same time last year.
    Newhouse was worried that a monthlong midsummer dry spell would hurt the crops, but then came "a sweet spot": a rainy late August that gave way to a dry fall.
    "We were anticipating there would be a yield drag from that stretch," Newhouse said. "When we got to the August rain, it fooled me."
    Richard Beuth started his combine at 7:30 a.m. Friday, hoping to get a head start harvesting corn on his 1,300-acre Seward farm before the rain.
    "It's been, for the most part, a pretty good harvest," he said. "No rain for a month makes it nice for harvesting," and the yield has been "pretty good."
    "With this weather, the corn's been drying in the field. (Farmers) don't have to dry it, which saves lots of money."
    While yields are up, farmers are battling lower crop prices that cut into profit margins.
    "With the good yields, even with the good prices, (farmers) may be able to break even," Beuth said.
    With his beans harvested, Newhouse is taking care of the corn.
    "I'm about 99 percent positive (Boone County farmers) will meet or exceed county averages," he said.

    Dry fall yields productive harvest season in Boone, Winnebago counties - News - Rockford Register Star - Rockford, IL

    Illinois Department of Public Health to contact Boone County Health Department

     

    By Lisa Rodgers
    Reporter
    BOONE COUNTY-The Belvidere Daily Republican (BDR) has sought clarification of public statements by the Boone County Health Department (BCHD) on rhubarb. The BDR has reached out to State Representative Joe Sosnowski for assistance in contacting the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) for answers.
    The BDR was informed that IDPH would contact the Boone County Health Department to explain that rhubarb is a non-potentially hazardous food item under home kitchen operations.
    On Oct. 7, the following statement was issued from IDPH: “Rhubarb was not originally included in the listing of non-potentially hazardous items. Only high-acid fruit pies were included (rhubarb is technically a vegetable).
    *Please note the following answers will only be applicable to the (410 ILCS 625/) Food Handling Regulation Enforcement Act from the present time until Dec. 31 as an amendment will become effective Jan. 1, 2016 significantly changing the law (http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/ilcs/ilcs3.asp?ActID=1578&ChapterID=35) .
    With the assistance of Representative Joe Sosnowski’s office, the following questions were submitted by the BDR to IDPH. The italic portion is the response from IDPH.
    For clarification purposes “non-potentially hazardous” baked goods are defined instatute such as, but not limited to, breads, cookies, cakes, pies, and pastries (410 ILCS625/4(b)(1)(C).
    The types of fruit pies that are permissible and not permissible by home kitchen and cottage food operations is defined under 410 ILCS 625/4(b)(1)(C).
    1. Has Illinois ever prohibited the sale or consumption of rhubarb in any form?
    *Yes; however, there exist exemptions for baked goods within home kitchen operations.
    2. Under the current law, is rhubarb (as a baked good) considered “non-potentially hazardous” under Home Kitchen Operation (410 ILCS 625/3.6)?
    * IDPH considers rhubarb baked goods to fall within the parameters of a “non-potentially hazardous” baked good item under home kitchen operation.
    *Rhubarb pie is not specifically stated as allowable in statute; however, IDPH considers rhubarb pie as a “non-potentially hazardous” baked good item under home kitchen due to the pH level of 3.1-3.4.
    3. Under current law, are non-for profits considered home kitchen or cottage food operation?
    * To determine if a non-for profit falls under the guidelines of home kitchen or cottage food operation depends on the type of event.
    *Example a church potluck is considered a private event, as defined by Section 3.1 of the Food Handling Regulation Enforcement Act. If the event meets the definition of potluck as defined, then no law prohibits the types of products to be served. If the church event exceeds the definition of potluck than the local health department enforcement falls within the oversight of IL Food Service Sanitation Code Part 750.
    4.Under current law can rhubarb pies, jams, jellies, butters or preserves be sold at Farmer’s Markets?
    *No. Rhubarb may not be sold in any form at Farmer’s Markets. Farmer’s Markets are defined as cottage food operations. Cottage Food Operations are prohibited from selling products containing rhubarb.
    5. Under current law, can rhubarb pies, jams/jellies, butters and preserves be sold at bake sales?
    * Rhubarb types of jams/jellies, butters and preserves are not considered permissible to be sold at bake sales.
    * Even though Rhubarb pies are not explicitly referenced rhubarb pies maybe sold at baked sales, because the pH level is considered “non-potentially hazardous.” at 3.1-3.4
    *If the local government has not passed an ordinance to allow “non-potentially hazardous” baked goods to be sold from home kitchen operations than “non-potentially hazardous” baked goods must be made in commercial kitchens. (PA 98-0643) adopted 6/10/14 – Statute Citation: 410 ILCS 625/3.6(c).
    (c) This Section applies only to a home kitchen operation located in a municipality, township, or county where the local governing body has adopted an ordinance authorizing the direct sale of baked goods as described in Section 4 of this Act.
    (Source: P.A. 98-643, eff. 6-10-14; 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
    On Sept. 22, the BDR submitted a FOIA request to the BCHD via their email with the main questions being one. Does Boone County have a local ordinance regulating the operations of home kitchens? 2. Does Boone County have a local ordinance regulating the sale or consumption of non-potentially hazardous foods? As of the online publication of article, the BDR has not received a response.
    The Belvidere Daily Republican would like to thank Rep. Sosnowski’s office and IDPH for their assistance in obtaining information for this article.
    The next Boone County Board of Health meeting will be Monday, Nov. 2 at noon at 1204 Logan Ave. in Belvidere in the BCHD conference room.

    Illinois Department of Public Health to contact Boone County Health Department

    U of I Boone County Extension Office hosts coyote presentation

     

    Posted by RVPEditor / In Belvidere Daily Republican, Events

    BELVIDERE – Coyotes stir many emotions in the human population including fear, anger, and for many they represent the wild beauty of animal songs and prairies. Canis latrans is the scientific name for the coyote and it simply means ‘barking dog’ which is perfect considering the serenade they deliver on any given evening.

    The chatter of the coyote family can bring an awareness of the wild around us even in a subdivision. It startles many people who assume streets with curbs and sidewalks mean a complete lack of wildness.

    On the contrary, coyotes live amongst us all the time but are so wary and able to stay inconspicuous we rarely see them. More often the coyotes are but a melancholy song in the night. The majority of those who witness the elusive coyote are hunters and farmers who catch sight of them most often due to their time connected to the land. Others who see coyotes may not realize they were simply allowed to notice them.

    “Coyotes are our best defense against the multiple rodent species that occur in high numbers. They are intensely focused on their family and really want nothing to do with us,” Peggy Doty, University of Illinois Extension Educator, said.

    “Coyotes are considered a fur bearer and can be harvested as such, however if your coyotes are not doing anything disruptive on your property it would be wise to let them be so you don’t eliminate one who is copasetic with humans only to have the gap filled by a coyote who has learned a behavior that would conflict with your human wildlife values,” Doty continued.

    Coyotes have lived around us for a very long time. Join Peggy Doty for her program, The Life of the Coyote, Wednesday, November 4th from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. at the Boone County Extension Meeting Room located at 205 Cadillac Ct. Suite 5 in Belvidere.

    Peggy will share her interest as well as information from the longest on going coyote research project. Love them or hate them this is sure to be informative and interesting to all those who think they know coyotes.

    The fee for this program is $5 per person. Registration can be done by calling the Boone County Extension office at (815) 544-3710, or online at web.extension.illinois.edu/bdo. If you need a reasonable accommodation to participate in this program, please contact the Extension office.

    U of I Boone County Extension Office hosts coyote presentation