DeWitt Reports

From State Senator Don DeWitte:

Legislative News from Springfield

Omnibus energy bill stalls again

When Senate President Don Harmon called Senators back to the Capitol for a one-day session on June 15, Senate Republicans were told to expect a vote on an omnibus energy bill that would eliminate coal-powered energy by 2035 and natural gas by 2045.

Coal-fired electric generating plant in Springfield.

In addition to closing the Prairie State Energy Campus and Springfield’s City Water, Light and Power facility before the ends of their useful lives, the legislation included another massive bailout for scandal-ridden Excelon/ComEd, which has repeatedly threatened to close nuclear energy plants if the State did not provide significant financial support.

To learn what the opposition has to say about the 2017 ComEd rate hike plan, go to http://www.noexelonbailout.com/.

After waiting all day for a negotiated bill to be filed and heard, the Senate abruptly adjourned shortly before 6:00 p.m. after learning that no deal had been reached.

I favor a cleaner energy future for Illinois, but believe environmental benchmarks must be balanced with what is best for ratepayers and the labor force.

Over the weekend leading up to the anticipated energy vote, a bipartisan group of 18 Senators and 34 members of the House sent a letter to Gov. Pritzker, urging him not to close the Prairie State Energy Campus and Springfield’s City Water Light and Power facility. A similar letter signed by multiple labor groups was also sent to the Governor, and on June 14 the Illinois Manufacturing Association and the Illinois Retail Merchants Association chimed in with their opposition.

Negotiations are ongoing, and legislators expect to return to Springfield for at least one more day later this summer.

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Don DeWitte listening to speech.

As approved and sent to the Governor, the Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 budget had several drafting errors including the absence of many key effective dates.

Without the effective dates, 85 percent of General Funds money could not be spent by State agencies until June of 2022, 11 months into the fiscal year.

It was a sloppy mistake, and one that could have been avoided if there was transparency within the budget process and if ample time had been provided for a thorough review of the lengthy document.

The budget fix required an amendatory veto by the Governor.

While fixing the multiple drafting errors, the Governor could have used his veto pen to strike out the line item for legislative pay raises.

Senate Republicans urged the Governor to do the right thing and remove legislative pay raises, but their request was ignored and the Governor kept the raises in the budget.

Gov. Pritzker had an opportunity to right a wrong, but instead chose to go along with giving senators and state representatives an undeserved raise for FY 22.

Following adjournment on June 14, I issued an official statement on the lack of an energy bill vote and the need to clean up the Democrats’ sloppy budget. Click here to read it.

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‘Fix’ the FOID legislation clears General Assembly, includes optional fingerprinting

The House of Representatives took up a measure this week that had already passed the Senate on May 31, which would allow for individuals to voluntarily offer their fingerprints in exchange for a more automatic renewal of their FOID cards and CCL licenses.

Approved by the House on June 15, the bill now heads to the Governor.

House Bill 562, as passed by both chambers, does the following:

  • Encourages but does not require fingerprinting. Those who agree to fingerprinting are granted a streamlined process for renewal of FOID cards and CCL licenses.
  • Requires person to person firearms transfers to be subject to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) at a federal licensed firearms dealer or through online validation by Illinois State Police using NICS.
  • Requires seller to provide a record of a private transfer of a firearm to an FFL within 10 days of sale. Caps the fee that the FFL may charge at no more than $25. Requires FFLs to keep the record of transfer for 20 years. On the demand of a peace officer, transferees have to identify the FFL dealer maintaining the transfer record (penalty is a Class A misdemeanor).
  • Requires Illinois State Police to establish a public database of all firearms that have been reported stolen to be checked prior to the transfer of any firearm to prevent the inadvertent transfer of stolen firearms.
  • Tasks the Violent Crime Intelligence Task Force to conduct enforcement operations against those with revoked FOID Cards.
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Rockton Chemical Fire

A massive explosion at a grease manufacturing plant in Rockton (near Rockford) created giant plumes of smoke and led to the evacuation of about 1,000 residents within a two-mile radius of the plant.

Remarkably, more than 50 employees inside the Chemtool plant at the time of the explosion got out safely.

Fire officials were limited in their ability to use water to extinguish the fire due to environmental concerns over potential chemical runoff into the nearby Rock River.

Instead, firefighters remained on alert as fluids that caught fire burn out on their own.

An estimated 1,000 residents near the plant were evacuated. A disaster proclamation, which will allow for additional state help and potentially federal assistance, is in effect at least until June 21 across Winnebago County.

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Capitol Complex to reopen to visitors

Looking up at the Capitol dome.

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, the Springfield Capitol has been closed to visitors.

Even when senators returned to conduct business beginning in January of this year, residents were kept out of the building to help prevent the spread of the virus.

As rules relaxed and the State of Illinois finally reached Phase 5 (full reopening) of Gov. Pritzker’s Restore Illinois Plan, visitors were still banned from entering the Capitol and the Stratton Building.

On June 15, Senate Republicans learned the Capitol and its accessory buildings will finally reopen to visitors on June 21.


Comments

DeWitt Reports — 3 Comments

  1. Maybe we should ask the Russians to nuke Springfield when the legislature is in session.

    An act of liberation. For Illinois.

  2. I like Springfield.

    If you sorted out gerrymandering, possibly even split the state up, I don’t think it would be “Springfield” that would be the problem.

    Most the people there are more based than the dorks around here.

    McHenry County is full of dumb gay retards.

    I think Springfield is more down to earth and cool than most of the garbage around here.

    If you wanted to liberate Illinois you should get rid of the Chicago metro area like anything within 50 miles of Chicago.

    Most of central Illinois, including Sangamon County, is way more based than the globohomo metro collar counties including McHenry County.

  3. DeWitte doesn’t give a damn about the Constitution. Another betrayal. Fat assed poser.

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