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Homer 33C Goodings Grove Spring Craft and Vendor Fair Doors open at 5 p.m. Thursday, May 4

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News Release
Homer CCSD 33C
Goodings Grove   Luther J. Schilling   William E. Young   William J. Butler
Hadley Middle   Homer Jr. High
 
Contact: Charla Brautigam, Communications/Public Relations Manager
cbrautigam@homerschools.org | 708-226-7628
 
For Immediate Release:
April 20, 2017
 
Pick up a Mother’s Day gift at Goodings Grove Spring Craft and Vendor Fair
Doors open at 5 p.m. Thursday, May 4
 
Among the vendors participating are:
LuLaRoe
Stella & Dot
Young Living Essential Oils
Scentsy
Thirty-One
Pampered Chef
Tastefully Simple
Mary Kay
PartyLite
Usborne Books
Premier Design
All Stars Dips
Tupperware
doTerra
Rodan & Fields
Custom Crafts
Keep Collective
 
Tickets are $2 at the door and include one raffle ticket. Additional raffle tickets are available for $1 each.
 
Proceeds will help pay for a new playground at the school. The event is organized by the Goodings Grove PTO.
 
 
 
 
Like us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/homer33c?fref=ts&ref=br_tf
 

Trump News April 20, 2017

The White House
 

WHITE HOUSE MEMO
President Donald J. Trump is protecting America, its companies, and its workers, from unfair competition. Today, the President is issuing a memo instructing the Commerce Department to swiftly and decisively carry out its ongoing investigation into the dumping of foreign steel into United States markets.
AFTERNOON:

  • 12:00PM: President Trump leads a signing event for the Memorandum entitled Steel Imports and Threats to National Security
  • 2:00PM: President Trump meets with National Security Advisor H. R. McMaster
  • 3:05PM: President Trump meets with Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni of Italy
  • 3:15PM: President Trump leads an expanded bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Gentiloni
  • 3:50PM: President Trump holds a joint press conference with Prime Minister Gentiloni – Watch LIVE
FROM PRESIDENT TRUMP
OVAL OFFICE HIGHLIGHTS
President Trump welcomes the Super Bowl LI Champions, the New England Patriots to the White House.
Read More

President Trump signs S. 544, The Veterans Choice Program Extension and Improvement Act, into law.
Read More
Watch Video
WHITE HOUSE UPDATES
Photo of the Day:

New England Patriots Coach Bill Belichick delivers remarks during the team’s visit to the White House celebrating their Super Bowl LI victory on the South Lawn. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead).
View Photo
Highlights from the 139th White House Easter Egg Roll.
Read More
Get Out and Enjoy National Park Week.
Read More

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NEWS FROM VICE PRESIDENT PENCE’S ASIA-PACIFIC TOUR
Vice President Pence arrives in Japan for more productive conversations with a key ally.
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Vice President Pence makes remarks to the United States-Japanese Business Community.
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Vice President Pence makes remarks aboard the U.S.S. Ronald Reagan.
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WHITE HOUSE HISTORY

Taken in 1917, this is a glimpse of the flower gardens and pool outside the South Portico at the White House. (Library of Congress Online Catalog). View Photo
Learn more about the White House gardens from the White House Historical Association here.
This year’s Spring Garden Tours will take place this weekend, April 22nd and 23rd. Get more information here.
PRESS ROOM
Watch yesterday’s press briefing with Sean Spicer:

Read Transcript
NEWS REPORTS
  • Washington Times: “Trump signs extension of veterans’ choice health care bill”
    Read More
  • Boston Herald: “Donald Trump salutes Patriots in White House ceremony”
    Read More
  • The Hill: “Patriots star Gronk crashes White House press briefing”
    Read More

Climate change and global insecurity

title

Americans endure one myth upon another. These rumors always promote business — somebody’s business – and/or government.
For more than 40 years we have heard at one time or another about the coming “global ice age,” the “ozone scare,” “global warming,” and now “climate change.”
The world thrives on these rumors. People seem to love them. Few inquire as to who might profit from rumors. Of course, we never know the whole truth until later.
What happened to some of the above rumors? Well, the “global ice age” turned into “global warming” which became “climate change” which produced a push for carbon taxes and a required purchase of “carbon credits” to be “sold” by “energy conscious” multinational corporations. Carbon credits are possibly greater fictions than the U.S. dollar.
The ozone scare seemed to have benefited DuPont. DuPont’s Freon patent was up, so the “bad effects” of Freon on the ozone spontaneously appeared. Freon was, of course, replaced with a new product patented by, guess who? DuPont!
But the global warming/climate change scaremongers seem to never quit; no matter how flat their predictions of global calamity fall.
This week we learned from a Council on Foreign Relations-connected think tank called the American Security Project that climate change is not a partisan issue (not sure who thought it was); it’s a national and global security issue.
The gist of ASP’s message — presented in a report from Nevada Public Radio made as ASP members toured two Nevada Air Force bases and spread their propaganda gave a talk  — is that climate change is a threat to national security and global security because it is one of several factors leading to displacement of people. When communities run out of water or can’t grow food or they are flooded out of their homes because of climate change, ASP says, people become displaced refugees. Displaced refugees destabilize the communities they move to, leading to personal insecurity which becomes global insecurity, which leads to required military involvement.
ASP is headed by retired Marine Brigadier General Stephen A. Cheney (CFR member) who, among other jobs, once served as assistant to then Secretaries of Defense (later VP) Dick Cheney (who oversaw the displacement and deaths of millions of Iraqis) and Les Aspin (who oversaw the displacement and deaths of some 2.3 million people in Bosnia-Herzogovenia). The organization is described in media reports as “a group of former military people, current military leaders, government officials and academics who are warning about the intersection of issues such as climate, energy, and space with U.S. national security.” And their view is shared by President Donald Trump’s Secretary of Defense James Mattis.
In an op-ed published at TheHill.com on November 28, 2014, Cheney (the ASP head, not the former SecDef and VP) and one of his lackeys at ASP wrote:

The U.S. Department of Defense reminds us that climate change poses immediate risks to our national security. Our military bases are vulnerable and will require expensive investments to simply stay above water. Our homeland security is directly threatened by extreme weather events. And, climate change will act as a “threat multiplier” that increases the risks of conflict around the world.
While no war is caused by temperature increases alone, the effects of climate change – drought, sea level rise, or extreme weather events – will amplify already existing threats like hunger, poverty, refugee migration, and resource conflicts. The American military will be called to intervene, even as we react to impacts at home, and that means that we must prepare.

Of course, the greatest threat to global instability is the U.S. military — as we’ve seen lately in Iraq, Libya, Syria, Yemen, etc. — with its bases around the globe ready to launch at a moment’s notice a missile strike “for the children” or to instigate regime change or to make way for a new pipeline for a crony corporation or favored oligarch across the territory of some recalcitrant and out-of-U.S. favor dictator. And if they are about to be “under water” because of climate change, perhaps the bases should just be closed down. With more than 600 bases around the globe (that we know about) surely there is one close enough to step in and take on the endangered base’s duties.
But there’s money to made. ASP is partnered with something called the Green Climate Fund (GCF), a work of the U.S. Treasury Department described as “a new multilateral fund… that will reduce climate vulnerabilities and increase the resources that partner countries can devote to deploying cleaner energy technologies. These are smart, cost-effective ways to integrate our foreign policy, energy security, and national security goals.”
The U.S. pledged $3 billion to the GCF, and additional commitments have been obtained from other countries, bringing the total in the fund to $9.3 billion. No doubt there’s a long list of CFR-related multinational corporations and non-governmental agencies that will benefit from the largess while saving the planet.
But not to worry, Cheney assures us the expenditure is worth it. He writes:

America’s $3 billion pledge is cost-effective because it will address the threats presented by climate change before American troops have to be deployed. This investment is a continuation of American leadership: in 2008, the Bush Administration gave $2 billion of a worldwide $8 billion investment in the Climate Investment Fund, a predecessor to this fund.

Well, we certainly wouldn’t want American troops to encounter anything like the British troops did outside Chartres, France in the 14th century… a severe weather event undoubtedly caused by climate change.
And putting a capper on the absurdity from the Nevada visit, Dr. Maureen McCarthy, a senior researcher in physics at University of Nevada, Reno and the Desert Research Institute, says that what we have to worry about going forward is climate extremes.
It won’t just get steadily five or 10 degrees hotter, she says. We might experience a few years of 20 degrees higher, then a few with lots of snow, rain, floods and cooler temperatures.
Or as we less learned people call it, weather.
But Dr. McCarthy assures us it’s not too late to do something about the climate change/national security issue, giving us this bit of wisdom:

“If you look climatologically at Southern Nevada — just from a cold calculus of science — nobody should be living here. Quite clearly, this community clearly has learned how to adapt to an extreme environment,” McCarthy said, “So it’s not bleak. We aren’t starting from scratch. We are starting from a place where particularly Nevadans have learned how to adapt.”

I guess nobody told the Southern Paiute, Western Shoshone and Aha Macav Mohave Indians that “nobody should be living” in Southern Nevada. They lived there for thousands of years until somebody else decided they wanted to live there and they were displaced by gold miners, settlers and the U.S. military. Climate change had nothing to do with it.

Trump News April 19, 2017

The White House
 

WHITE HOUSE MEMO
Today, President Donald J. Trump will sign the Veterans Choice Program Extension and Improvement Act, ensuring our incredible veterans have certainty and continuity of care while the Administration works to deliver the VA reforms that are so desperately needed.
MORNING:

  • 10:30AM: President Trump meets with Secretary of Veterans Affairs David Shulkin
  • 11:30AM: President Trump signs S. 544 the Veterans Choice Program Extension and Improvement Act

AFTERNOON:

  • 2:30PM: President Trump welcomes the Super Bowl Champions: The New England Patriots to the White House – Watch LIVE
  • 3:30PM: President Trump meets with National Security Advisor H. R. McMaster
FROM PRESIDENT TRUMP
OVAL OFFICE HIGHLIGHTS
President Trump signs a Buy American, Hire American Executive Order.
Read Executive Order
Read Remarks
WHITE HOUSE UPDATES
Photo of the Day:

President Donald J. Trump lands in Kenosha, WI on Marine One to deliver remarks at Snap-on Tools and to sign his “Buy American, Hire American” Executive Order. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead).
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President Trump Promotes “Buy American and Hire American”.
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NEWS FROM VICE PRESIDENT PENCE’S ASIA-PACIFIC TOUR
Vice President Pence receives briefing at the DMZ.
Read More
Vice President Pence and Japanese Deputy Prime Minister Aso hold a joint press conference.
Read More
Read Joint Press Release

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PRESS ROOM
Read yesterday’s press gaggle with Principal Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Sanders here.
Today’s press briefing will take place at 12:00PM ET in the White House Briefing Room with Press Secretary Sean Spicer. Watch it LIVE here.
NEWS REPORTS
  • Breitbart: “Donald Trump Celebrates ‘America First’ Executive Order in Wisconsin”
    Read More
  • Washington Times: “Pence tells Japanese that U.S. will confront North Korean nuclear threat”
    Read More

Illinois highest overall state and local tax burden in the nation.

The deadline to file state and federal income taxes is April 18, but for Illinoisans the sting of Tax Day is year-round. Residents in the Land of Lincoln face the highest overall state and local tax burden in the nation.
And in 2017, Illinois state government expects to spend $38.1 billion in 2017 – $5.7 billion more than the revenues it will collect, according to data from the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget.
Where does the money come from?
The bulk of the state’s money comes from income and sales taxes. Combined, these taxes account for over 70 percent, or $23.6 billion of the $32.4 billion state government collects.
Twelve percent of state revenues come from taxes on cigarettes, liquor and insurance sold in Illinois, totaling $3.8 billion in 2017.
Another 3 percent comes from the net proceeds of the state’s lottery as well as taxes on the profits of gaming river boats and casinos in Illinois – about $1 billion this year.
Public utility taxes on electricity, telecommunications and natural gas companies accounts for another 3 percent of state revenue collected.
The last 10 percent is received from the federal government. The state expects $3.2 billion in reimbursements from the federal government in 2017, primarily to help fund Medicaid.
In all, the state will collect more than $32.4 billion in 2017, or about $3.6 billion less than the peak $36 billion when Illinois’ temporary tax hike was in place.
More money than ever
Any way you measure it, Illinois governments already collect more than enough money from taxpayers. Illinoisans pay the highest property taxes in the nation, and when total state and local taxes are tallied up, Illinoisans face the highest overall tax burden in the nation. Illinoisans can’t afford to pay more taxes.
From 2003 to 2016, Illinoisans paid $70 billion more in taxes than the state would have collected had revenues grown at the rate necessary to cover inflation plus population growth.
But politicians didn’t use that excess money to pay down pensions or debt. Instead, they used it to prop up higher spending on government-worker benefits.
Some politicians are calling for another income tax hike. But as the numbers show, Illinoisans are already shelling out a pretty penny – and the General Assembly hasn’t proved itself capable of managing the money.
Craig Lesner
Budget and Tax Research Director

THE MOVE IS ON TO FORCE YOUR FAVORITE GUN SHOP TO CLOSE

Letterhead
URGENT ALERT – YOUR ACTION REQUIRED
THE MOVE IS ON TO FORCE YOUR FAVORITE GUN SHOP TO CLOSE
 April 19, 2017
The Illinois Senate will be holding a floor vote on bill SB1657, sponsored by Senator Don Harmon and supported by Chicago Democrats. This demanding and unnecessary legislation seems intended to regulate gun dealers out of business in Illinois.This bill would affect your ability to sell or refresh your own gun collection, by defining YOU as a gun dealer in Illinois.  Never mind the weight of all the federal regulations that gun dealers and gun owners must deal with, you will have more Illinois regulations and fees now too.
Remember that the anti-gunners have tried repeatedly to force suburban firearms retailers to close by suing them, only to have those suits tossed out.  They have tried to sue the towns that the stores are located in, only to have those suits dismissed as well.  Now they are attempting to change the law of the land, at least in Illinois, and make gun stores do business *their* way, which is no business at all.

WHAT YOU MUST DO TO PRESERVE YOUR GUN RIGHTS
1.  Contact your State Senator and politely tell him/her that you are a law-abiding gun owner and that you expect them to vote against SB1657. To verify who your State Senator is, use the lookup apps available at the Illinois State Board of Elections website. (click here)  Even if you prefer email, also contact them at their Springfield and district offices.  Email can be ignored, phones must be answered.  Remember, the person who answers the phone is usually a state employee reporting to the senator,  and is just doing their job.
2.  Pass this alert on to all your friends and family and have them make calls too.
3.  Post this alert to any and all Internet blogs, bulletin boards, and social media sites to which you belong.
Check out ISRA’s website at www.isra.org! Tell us what you think!
Follow the ISRA on Twitter and Facebook.

Give the gift of an ISRA membership.   Not an ISRA Member?  Join Today!

Illinois State Rifle Association, PO Box 637, Chatsworth, IL 60921

Making sense of the economics of Illinois

From Illinois Policy April 2017

Illinois is a state that could have it all.
The Land of Lincoln has economic potential growing from its farmlands and churning from its factories, in its suburban corporate headquarters and downtown tech start-ups.
But the state’s economic engine is choking on a host of tax and economic policies that squash job opportunities.
Illinois’ potential can be unlocked. The key to unleashing job growth and shared prosperity is for policy makers to apply the economic good judgment that prevails in Illinois households. But instead, governments in Illinois are too much in the business of doing things that don’t make sense – writing more rules, enacting higher taxes, and gumming up the wheels of progress with reams of red tape.
A dose of common sense is needed. Lawmakers should recognize the wounds that Illinois has suffered as largely self-inflicted by the state legislature. The magnitude of these errors must be recognized.
The solution is to enact sound policies that prime the pump for growth. Only then can Illinois’ economy produce the good jobs and rising incomes that result in shared prosperity. Illinois families will be rewarded for their hard work after lawmakers clear the way for economic success.
The purpose of my column and work at the Illinois Policy Institute is to recognize these economic afflictions and to propose solutions.
As Vice President of Policy, I focus on unraveling the economic stagnation that has hurt so many Illinois families, and advancing an understanding of the solutions that will lead to better growth. In the past, I’ve been an educator in South Korea and in South Shore, and a financier in Chicago’s trading markets. My passion is for applying education and economic understanding to transform human potential into flourishing prosperity.
I’ve traveled the world, and am fascinated by economic policy – what works and what hurts a local, regional or national economy.
What I see in Illinois is baffling. All of the necessary elements for success are here.
Illinois should be a target for long-term investments by families looking to lay down roots and businesses seeking to build new facilities. So why isn’t the Land of Lincoln bursting at the seams with growth? Well, it’s certainly not for a lack of natural advantages.
Deep, rich soils make Illinois’ agriculture the envy of the world. And a central location in the United States with access to rivers, lakes, trains and airports make Illinois a natural transportation hub.
The state’s industrial backbone is plugged into the nation’s central transportation network, allowing producers to bring farm goods and manufactured products to international markets.
Chicago’s bustling business core and diversified service sector continue to attract talent and innovation. The great city on Lake Michigan’s shores has built-in advantages as the Midwest’s capital and global hub.
Yet, Illinois doesn’t thrive. Instead, the Land of Lincoln is the sick-man economy of the Midwest. People vote with their feet and leave the state at startling rates. Business leaders compare Illinois to a third-world country.
Illinois is thwarted by human error. The state will succeed if a sound approach is taken to government finances and economic growth. But without a change in course, the state will continue to recede.
Economic opportunity speaks loudly and families and businesses hear its call. That’s the story I intend to tell through this column each Wednesday in the weeks ahead. Illinois didn’t become an economic basket case overnight, and it won’t be fixed in a day either.
Illinois needs light shined on its economic strategies to disinfect it from the mistakes of the past and point the way to a stronger future. The goal of this column is to be one such light.
It’s time for a new chapter in the story of this great state. Illinois’ future should be full of dynamic growth, optimism, and the rewarding sense of a job well done that is the consequence of economic opportunity.

War games

War games

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As last week drew to a close, President Donald Trump ordered a missile strike on the Al Shayrat airbase in Syria. U.S. Navy warships in the Mediterranean Sea rained dozens of Tomahawk cruise missiles down on the target, turning the base into a smoking pile of rubble while crippling nearly 20 percent of Syria’s fixed-wing fleet.  The missiles also delivered a none-too-subtle message to not only WMD-using Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, but any other tinpot dictators who might be considering a run at the title: There’s a new sheriff in town, and homeboy ain’t afraid to flash some steel. And by ordering the launch during a visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping, Trump also flexed enough muscle to convince the Chinese to play ball; as demonstrated by China’s halt of coal to North Korea.
The strike was a geopolitical master stroke by a game theory virtuoso. By showing the Russians minor deference in warning them ahead of time, but still dropping a cinder block on Assad’s toes, Trump deftly tiptoed through a diplomatic minefield and even buried rumors of a secret connection to Russia in the process.
Or…
Trump lobbed millions of dollars of military hardware at Syria to distract people’s attention from an ongoing scandal involving his connection to Russia. Despite all the crowing, the strike was largely ineffective. The whole thing was a “wag-the-dog” ploy; as worthwhile as Bill Clinton’s late-90s launches into the Sudan. In doing so, he further destabilized an already-shaky situation in the Middle East and antagonized the North Koreans, who will probably end up on the business end of a few Tomahawks themselves.
By ordering the strike during Xi’s vacay in Mar-a-Lago, Trump cemented the idea that he’s a loose cannon; prompting Xi to move unilaterally to curtail coal shipments to North Korea in an effort to be the lone adult in the region.
Or…
Trump ordered the strike — less than 12 hours after his former nemesis Hillary Clinton publicly declared her support for just such a move — because he, Hillary, Putin and Xi are all just pawns of the same globalist villains. The strike was nothing more than another chapter in civilization’s acceptance of permanent, eventually total war. Hell, Assad didn’t even launch the Sarin attack in the first place; it was all a false flag operation.
Or…
Trump is a buffoon who likes the idea of blowing stuff up, which makes him a perfect dupe for the chickenhawks and neocons.
Or…
Trump is a genius who just shut the door on eight years of Obama’s mewling appeasement. The USA is back, baby!
None of the above scenarios exist entirely outside the realm of possibility, but they do leave the outside observer wondering who could possibly benefit from such tangled alliances. On a whim, I happened to peek at Raytheon’s stock price. The company that manufactures Tomahawk cruise missiles is trading north of $150/share; not an all-time high, but an exceedingly healthy 20 percent leap over a year ago.  With nearly 300 million shares outstanding, that’s enough money to Tomahawk everyone from Damascus to the DMZ without batting an eye.  In the game of war, there’s your winner.
— Ben Crystal

Will IL House bill help prevent a Flint, MI-like water crisis?

Will IL House bill help prevent a Flint, MI-like water crisis?

 
Are some Illinois communities at risk of a Flint, MI-like water contamination crisis?
That is, in part, the warning issued by a recent Chicago Tribune editorial over concerns stemming from a decision to allow dumping of construction site debris into unlined quarries all across the state.

In the hopes of landing the 2016 Games in Chicago, Illinois passed legislation that allowed this dumping.  The belief was that doing so would help alleviate the cost and expedite the potential construction commitment needed to host an event of such magnitude.
Environmental experts objected to the move, arguing that contaminants would undoubtedly seep into aquifers and poison drinking water. Groundwater monitoring provisions that were promised were never set up, according to the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA).
The Illinois Attorney General’s office also has raised concerns.
Now, some members of the Illinois House are pushing House Bill 3056, which would mandate groundwater monitoring at unlined quarries throughout the state.
All clean construction and demolition debris fill operations at unlined quarries would be affected. Amendments to the current guidance on groundwater monitoring in quarries would be adopted to require and regulate these operations and all uncontaminated soil fill sites as well. Exemptions or certain exclusions would be granted during a period of “dewatering.”
“I am now going to start fighting for real protections for our groundwater in Will County and all the other countries where these quarries are,” said Rep. Margo McDermed (R-Mokena), sponsor of the legislation, which has 28 co-sponsors.
The legislation has drawn support from both sides of the aisle, with Rep. Elgie Sims (D-Chicago), a co-sponsor of the bill, recently telling the Kankakee Times that the legislation is pivotal for his constituents.
“Clean, safe drinking water is essential to our health and quality of life and our drinking water supply must be protected as one of our most vital resources,” he said. “I will continue my efforts to support and sponsor legislative measures to protect our environment and make our communities safer, because future generations are depending on us to make the right decisions today for the world they will live in tomorrow.”
Governor Bruce Rauner supports the bill, as does State Sen. Daniel Biss (D-Skokie), a declared candidate for the 2018 gubernatorial election.
“I do support HB3056 and will vote for it if does come over to the Senate,” Biss told the Illinois Valley Times.
Environmentalist groups also have shown support for HB3056.
The Illinois Environmental Council, one of the only environmental groups to have commented on the issue prior to the introduction of the bill, called the legislation an exceptional approach to the problem.
“Contaminated debris that is sent to quarries in Illinois poses a risk to the groundwater of local people,” Jen Walling, executive director of the Illinois Environmental Council, told the Will County Gazette. “At a minimum, the law should be changed to require groundwater monitoring to protect people near these sites.”
Jack Darin, the director of the Sierra Club’s Illinois chapter, expressed similar thoughts.
“Quarries normally stop mining rock when they hit the water table, so there is great concern for interaction with waste materials and the aquifer,” he said. “Sierra Club has worked for many years to either oppose quarry disposal of demolition debris or other wastes, and also to require better groundwater monitoring, materials testing, and other safeguards in cases where it is, unfortunately, happening.”
Despite this seemingly broad support, will the legislation pass? That’s where politics comes into play.
The bill is opposed by some quarry operators. In 2009, Chicago Tribune columnist John Kass wrote about one of these operators, Michael Vondra, whom Kass calls a “big-time political contributor” who “runs several quarries among his many business ventures.”
Kass’ 2009 column was regarding the Illinois General Assembly’s initial actions — via then-Senate Bill 1607 — to open up the unlined quarries to the dumping of the construction debris.
“Vondra helped found the Land Reclamation and Recycling Association, which is pushing for the bill with the assistance of lobbyist Victor Reyes, the puppeteer of the mayor’s Hispanic Democratic Organization patronage army,” wrote Kass. “Reyes once headed Daley’s Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, as front man for Daley’s political brain Tim Degnan. Reyes’ lobbying partner is Mike Noonan, an ally of House Speaker Mike Madigan and former campaign manager for Mike’s daughter, Illinois Atty. Gen. Lisa Madigan.”
Writing that the effort was “all about money,” Kass further connected the dots between the 2016 Olympics, local political concerns, and the effort to open up the dumping.
“Most of the South Side’s Michael Reese Hospital complex is scheduled for demolition so (then-Mayor) Daley can build his 2016 Olympic Village,” wrote Kass. “Politically connected trucking barons who’ll haul the debris will save time, gas and money by dumping in nearby Cook County quarries rather than dispatching their trucks to some far-flung landfill.”
Eight years later, the 2016 Olympics (held in Rio de Janiero, Brazil) have passed and, despite concerns raised by environmental groups and the Illinois Attorney General’s office, the dumping is still allowed.
Whether or not politics will trump the bipartisan support that House Bill 3056 has attracted remains to be seen.
Based on data from the state Environmental Protection Agency, there are 77 unlined quarries across the state that carry the potential for contamination of groundwater. Forty-four of the quarries are in the Chicago metro area, while the remaining sites are scattered across communities downstate.

Snowflakes and the flag

Snowflakes and the flag

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flag

At the University of California-Davis, display of the American flag at Student Senate meetings is now optional.
Stating “patriotism is different for every individual,” the senate stressed the Stars and Stripes was not being banned. Its action merely eliminated the flag’s mandatory presence.
Also last week, during ceremonies opening the Atlanta Braves’ new home, SunTrust Park, dozens of Sun Trust Bank employees deployed a giant American flag that covered most of the outfield. Flags were also on display on the video message boards.
This prompted NBC News lead baseball writer Craig Calcaterra to tweet out on Easter morning — three days after the flag display — after he was sent a photo of the giant flag after it was unfurled during the ceremonies:

//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
After getting the expected pushback; everything from people wishing he contracted cancer to the standard, “America, love it or leave it,” Calcaterra wrote a column saying he was “sarcastically adopting the voice of one of the many ‘stick to sports’ people we’ve mocked around  here many, many times.”
Most people don’t believe exhibiting the flag is a political act. It should be an apolitical, bipartisan act. But as Calcaterra pointed out in his column:

“…patriotism and flag-waving are a huge part of political strategy and always have been. There are entire ideologies based on it. It is likewise used for other, non-purely-patriotic purposes. Brands routinely wrap themselves in the American flag to sell you stuff. Indeed, there are rankings of which brands best-leverage patriotism for commercial purposes.”

But it’s true; most Americans apparently do like sports to be politics-free. Just remember back to the Colin Kaepernick affair and see how that affected NFL attendance and viewership. And look at ESPN, which continues to see a downward ratings spiral.
Perhaps it’s that Americans want sports to be left-wing politics-free.

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