Front Page Irony

The intended Chicago Sun-Times front page before the Rod Blagojevich jury delivered its verdict.

Failed politicians sometimes get rehabilitated.

From the front page coverage intended for former Congressman Dan Rostenkowski by the Chicago Sun-Times, you can see that bringing home bacon to Chicago and making deals with Republicans like Ronald Reagan was more important to its editors than his felony conviction for mail fraud.

Charges including stealing tens of thousands of dollars in unused postage money.

But, there was another front page in the Sun-Times today.

The real front page in the Chicago Sun-Times today.

It featured Rostenkowski Republican successor, Michael Patrick Flanagan, who was beaten by now-convicted felon Rod Blagojevich.

Rostenkowski and Blagojevich.

Bookends of representation.

One rehabilitated.

Will the other one be, too?

Attorney General Rules McHenry County College May Reveal Walt Packard Percformance Evaluation

The stalling tactics of McHenry County College didn’t work.

OK, so it's photo shopped. You get the point, right?

You may remember that I filed a Freedom of Information request for the performance evaluations of ex-President Walt Packard.

You remember him.

The one sent packing Feb. 26, 2009 with no explanation, but with a golden parachute that kept him on the payroll through this summer and he and his sick wife on tax-paid health benefits through August 21, 2012, according to the MCC press release.

That’s three and a half years.

The reason given for hiding this man’s performance evaluations follows:

“because it contains personal information, which if disclosed, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.”

The denial letter then quotes Section 7(1)(c) of the Freedom of Information Act thusly,

an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy means “…the disclosure of information that is highly personal or objectionable to a reasonable person and which the subject’s right to privacy outweighs any legitimate public interest in obtaining the information.”

Now comes Public Access Division Assistant Attorney General Matthew Sebek telling the college that it has not met its burden of proof in its lawyer-prepared denial.

Ex-MCC President Walt Packard

“Evaluations of public employees directly address the manner in which public employees perform their public duties.  Public bodies use these evaluations to determine the public duties of public employees for purposes of Section 7(1)(c) of FOIA.  Accordingly, disclosure of such evaluations would not constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.”

The letter goes on to say,

“We further note that MCC’s citation to Section 24A-7.1 of the Illinois School Code and House Bill 5154, in support of its 7(1)(c) assertion, is unpersuasive.”Section 24A-7.1 of the Illinois School Code, which exempts from disclosure performance evaluations for certain public educators is simply not applicable to MCC, which, as a community college, is governed b y the Public Community College Act [citation given] and not the School Code.”

Is that a smack down of MCC law firm Robbins, Schwartz, Nicholas, Lifton & Taylor or what?

But there’s more.

“With respect to House Bill 5154’s proposed amendment of Section 11 of the Personnel Record Review Act to exempt performance evaluations of public employees, that Bill was amendatorily vetoed by the Governor on July 26, 2010 in a manner that significantly limits the scope of that legislative change to certain law enforcement personnel.

“In accordance with this letter, MCC may release the requested records to the requester.”

The opinion is below. Click to enlarge it.

Huntley School District Goes Back to Days of Hiding Contracts from Public

Many public officials are in denial about how their own actions and non-cooperation add to the public’s mistrust of government and even disgust of government.

Public officials adopt either a public servant’s I’m-here-to-help attitude or a self-serving I-don’t-want-to-bother attitude.

John Burkey

I asked former Huntley 158 School Board member Larry Snow if he had seen a copy of the recently negotiated contract with the support worker’s union (HESPA).

It is before the Huntley Board of Education to be voted on.

Snow looked online in Huntley’s board packet and wasn’t able to find it. He volunteered to ask Supt. John Burkey for a copy of the contract. I said, “Sure.”

Snow negotiated the last contract with HESPA along with Burkey and Shawn Green.

While Snow was on the board there wasn’t another board member who put in more time getting the district financially on track and getting its accounting reported correctly.

In other words, Snow put in thousands of hours helping the district keep the district solvent.

Let’s see how helpful as a public servant Burkey was.

Here is Snow’s email to Supt. Burkey and above, Burkey’s response:

Subject: Re: BOE Agenda 8-19-10
From: Burkey, John
Date: 8-17-10 5:29 pm
To: Larry Snow
Burkey, John wrote:
I cannot email it now as it is not a public document until after the
Board approves it. It will be online after that.

—–Original Message—–
From: Larry Snow [mailto:lsnow@mc.net]
Sent: Monday, August 16, 2010 7:40 PM
To: Burkey, John
Cc: Fettes, Naomi
Subject: Re: BOE Agenda 8-19-10

Can you email me a copy of the HESPA contract that will be voted on at
the board meeting?

That’s pretty close to what I asked for myself and the reply I received from Public Information Offier Lori Woods.

While Burkey writes how he “cannot,” there is no legal prohibition preventing Burkey from providing the information because it is not a public document.

It is a decision on Burkey’s part how he “won’t.”

He can, but simply “won’t.”

While the proposed teachers’ contract was available on the internet on the District 158 web site, the support workers’ contract is not.

It’s a deliberate choice to switch from transparency to secretiveness.

Some superintendents choose to be uncooperative, as Burkey has, while insisting that residents and parents be cooperative.

Such unresponsive and uncooperative government is, frankly, unworthy of local government.

Cooperation on small matters or lack thereof turns people off.

Stakes are much higher in the national arena where the public’s trust is eroding in President Barack Obama. As a candidate he promised his would be the most transparent government.

He would not receive a passing grade on that subject today.

The choice in December is to sweep Illinois Dems out of office, not to save our country, but to definitely help save ourselves from unresponsive people in government positions of authority.

I understand plenty of union members have a copy of the contract, so why won’t the administration share copies with Snow and me?

If the district can post the last teachers’ contract online before it was voted on, as it did, it should matter of factly include the HESPA contract in the online board packet where it could be seen by taxpayers.

Putting that packet online before meetings puts District 158 out in front of most local governments, after all.

But, the District 158 board and superintendent can hardly brag about transparency when they won’t post the contract until it is too late for public input.

And won’t send out copies when requested.

Quinn’s Wiggle Room and Why There Haven’t Been Serious Reforms Since Blago’s Arrest

Pat Quiinn

Governor Quinn is a lawyer, as is Rod Blagojevich.

So when I read in the Chicago Tribune,

“Quinn said, ‘My conscience always guides me to do the right thing.’”

it occurred to me that “guides” gives Quinn plenty of wiggle room. Quinn can always say it was only a guide and he didn’t violate the law.

Dems haven’t passed serious reforms into law to prevent corruption in Illinois.

Can you imagine Chicago Dems ever voting for such nonsense?

For the Dems in Chicago and Dems elsewhere, reality is a game of

”Catch me, if you can.”

Blago is Typical of Illinois Dems – Not Admitting They Did Anything Wrong, Even After a Conviction

Press conference after the trail.

The Blago’s aggressiveness and lack of contriteness typifies the in-your-face unionism that has become the Dems’ core beliefs and behavior.

Rod actually spoke after his conviction of how he was the victim and persecuted by the Feds.

He

“never let anyone down.

Guess what?

Taking Illinois from $5 billion in debt (his number when he took office) and more than doubling that  to ($13 billion, according to successor Pat Quinn) brokesville is letting people down.

Rod had many willing Dem accomplices in the General Assembly.

Blago’s temperament and values have become part of Illinois Dems’ DNA.

Until Dems get widely swept out of office, we will have more Blago in the form of other Dems’ swearing they are innocent and doing everything possible “for the people.”

Attempted Kidnapping South of Hebron

The Sheriff’s Department advises the following:

Sheriff’s Office Investigates Attempted Child Abduction in the Hebron Area

The attempted abduction Tuesday afternoon was near VanderKarr and Kemman Roads

Sheriff Keith Nygren announced today that on August 16, 2010 at approximately 4:25 p.m. members of the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office responded to a report of an attempted child abduction.

Deputies spoke with the juvenile victim on scene who stated that while riding his bicycle near Kenman Rd. and Vanderkarr Rd., Hebron, Illinois he was approached by a man in a red vehicle.

The offender asked the victim for directions and actively tried to get the victim into the car.

Members of the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office Criminal Investigation Division spoke with the victim and determined that the offender was driving a red in color four door vehicle similar to a Chevy Cobalt.

The victim described the vehicle as new and had Illinois license plates. No other indicative features of the vehicle stood out to the victim.

The victim described the offender as a white male in his late 20’s, with blonde or light brown hair, wearing a white tee shirt, and cargo shorts.

Sheriff Keith Nygren encourages anyone with information regarding this investigation to contact either the Crime Stoppers of McHenry County at 1-800-762-STOP(7867), the McHenry County Sheriff’s Office at (815)33-2144, or the tip line email address; TipLine@co.mchenry.il.us. Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward up to $1,000.00 for information leading to the arrest and prosecution of the offenders(s). Crime Stoppers does not use caller ID.

Tryon Pleased at Blago Conviction, Re-Trial

Mike Tryon

State Rep. Mike Tryon has issued the following statement about former Governor Rod Blagojevich’s conviction for lying to the FBI:

Crystal Lake…..Today, former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich was found guilty of making false statements to the FBI, a felony punishable by five years in prison, but the jury could not reach consensus on the 23 other counts against him.

While I am pleased with the jury’s verdict on the false statements count, I am disappointed that they were not able to reach consensus on the other charges against Blagojevich.

The people of Illinois want closure on this issue, and they want a definitive ruling on all 24 counts that were brought against the former governor. To that end, I am pleased to hear that the prosecution intends to retry the former governor on the remaining 23 counts.

Corruption by this Democrat Governor was unlike anything we have ever seen in Illinois.

Not only was he corrupt, but recordings in his own voice paint the picture of a man disdainful of the position he held and of the people he was elected to serve.

And while the jury did not come back with guilty verdicts on all counts, the fact is that Rod Blagojevich has been found guilty of making false statements to the FBI and he will go down in the history books as a convicted felon.

Blagojevich Guilty

This cartoon is the Rod Blagojevich side of JimRod, the Two-Headed Chicken. A new message--"I'm guilty?"-- has been put in the balloon above this hapless creature's head.

Rod Blagojevich doesn’t understand how he could have been found guilty on any count, of course.

Ex-Governor Rod Blagojevich has won the Corruption Championship Blue Ribbon at this summer's Crook County Fair.

He is clueless.

But the governor who increased the state budget by $1 billion a year–with the complete cooperation of Democrats who control the General Assembly–instead of working the state out of the $5 billion deficit he said he found when he took office now faces jail time.

He has helped his county maintain the blue ribbon in corruption.

Of course, Rod will say,

“They found me guilty,”

rather than

“I’m guilty.”

= = = = =
Apologies to Crook County, Wyoming, the location of Devil’s Tower.

When we were getting our 1880’s pictures taken next to the KOA Campgound restaurant that served buffalo-shaped burgers, I saw the blue ribbon shown above. There was a sign in the trailer advising that photos were not allowed.

I asked if I could take a photo of the ribbon and was given permission.

The wife of the team asked,

“Don’t you have a Crook County in Illinois?”

I told her the official name was “Cook County,” but that I referred to it as “Crook County.”

Assistant State’s Attorney Gains State Bar Association Appointment

From a press release from the State’s Attorney’s Office we learn…

DEMETRI TSILIMIGRAS APPOINTED TO SERVE
AS MEMBER OF THE ISBA COUNCIL

Demetrio TsilmigrasLouis A. Bianchi, McHenry County State’s Attorney, is pleased to announce that the President-Elect of the Illinois State Bar Association, Mark D. Hassakis, has appointed Assistant State’s Attorney, Demetri Tsilimigras, to serve as a member of the Criminal Justice Section Council and the Traffic Laws & Courts Section Council. The mission of the ISBA Council is:

  • To work for a system of criminal justice that fairly protects the accused, the accuser,
    and the public in general;
  • To seek or oppose change, as considered appropriate, by legislative activity, recommendations on court rules and recommendations to agencies; and
  • To educate and inform lawyers and the general public through newsletters, seminars
    and other appropriate channels of communication.

Mr. Tsilimigras duties will include: attending regular business meetings; contributing to continuing legal education programming; actively participating in programs and projects, and regularly contributing to each Section Council Newsletter.

Correction Time re This Article about Citizen Oversight

This article is corrected and bumped up for visibility.

Mark Altmayer

I misread the minutes of the Financial Advisory Committee meeting of August 2nd. It was not Huntley School District 158 Chief Financial Officer Mark Altmayer whom the minutes say advocated abolishing the financial Advisory Committee.

My apologies to him for the misidentification.

It was tax hike advocate Michael Andre who is reported to have thought there was no further need for a citizens advisory group on financial affairs.

Here’s what the second draft of minutes from the August 2nd meeting says about the “FAC Role”:

Discussion from both committees took place.

Mr. Quagliano asked for the FAC to provide their role at this time.

Mr. Andre conveyed the District has a CFO (Mr. Altmayer) in place, and that the FAC may not be needed.

Mr. Andre stated the four options remaining for the FAC:

  1. work on various projects
  2. hibernation until needed
  3. dissolve
  4. other

Mr. Quagliano shared the importance that SD 158 residents stay involved, and conveyed the importance of keeping the FAC in tact. He further stated the FAC should work together as a committee to help determine their role, and their direction.

Mr. Troy reiterated with Mr. Quagliano and concurred.

Mr. Gentry entered at 7:15 p.m.

Mrs. Moore exited at 7:40 p.m.

Mr. Skala reiterated and concurred; adding whatever issues the FAC wants to delve into, it is okay for the community to stay involved.

Recommendation: Finance Committee to determine 3-5 items they would like FAC to work on. FZC to decide if they want to remain a sub-committee of the Finance Committee or expand to a broader citizen’s advisory committee, and reporting back in the next month or so to the Finance Committee.

= = = = =
Attending the meeting besides School Board members Tony Quagliano, Kevin Gentry, Mike Skala, Aileen Seedorf and Paul Troy were citizens Joe Lyons, Michael Andre, Ronda Goldman, Michael Laird, Lucinda Nelson, David Roeder, Rich Seiler, Linda Moore and Angela Sorejian.

This citizens advisory committee was the launching pad for both Quagliano and Larry Snow’s school board candidacies.

Fox Lake Man Charged with Ponzi Scheme

The US Attorney’s Office has issued a press release announcing the indictment of Joseph A. Dawson, a Fox Lake resident, for running a Ponzi operation.

FAR NORTH SUBURBAN MAN CHARGED WITH CHEATING
TWO DOZEN INVESTORS OF $3.7 MILLION IN ALLEGED PONZI-SCHEME

CHICAGO – A far north suburban man was charged yesterday with engaging in a ponzi-type fraud scheme, cheating more than two dozen victims of approximately $3.7 million dollars they invested with a trading firm he owned.

The defendant, Joseph A. Dawson, was charged with three counts of wire fraud in a criminal information filed yesterday, announced Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, and Robert D. Grant, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Dawson allegedly misappropriated more than $1 million of investors’ funds for his own benefit and used investors funds to pay promised returns to other investors. He allegedly caused investors to lose a total of approximately $2.8 million.

Dawson, 48, of Fox Lake, will be arraigned at a later date in U.S. District Court. The charges seek forfeiture of $2.8 million, representing the alleged loss to investors.

According to the charges, Dawson was a commodity futures and securities trader who owned an investment fund called the LEAP Fund since about 2001. He also owned Dawson Trading LLC, which operated in Ingleside, Fox Lake and later Lakemoor, and which took over the business and customers of the LEAP Fund in about 2004.

Between 2004 and September 2009, Dawson offered and sold approximately $3.7 million of interest to 26 investors in Dawson Trading’s investments, including former customers of the LEAP Fund.

These investments were primarily in the form of promissory notes, which guaranteed the safety of the invested funds and promised to pay a fixed annual return plus as much as 80 percent of any trading profits. Dawson allegedly misrepresented the profitability, safety and use of the funds raised from investors, as well as the status of the investments.

Instead of investing the funds as promised, Dawson used a significant portion for such personal expenses as his residence, the construction of a swimming pool, landscaping and three automobiles.  To conceal the fraud to investors, Dawson allegedly lied about the status of their accounts, at least in part by creating and distributing fraudulently inflated periodic account statements.

The government is being represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Felicia Manno Alesia.

Wire fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000 and restitution is mandatory. The Court may also impose a fine totaling twice the loss to any victim or twice the gain to the defendant, whichever is greater. If convicted, however, the Court would determine a reasonable sentence to impose under the advisory United States Sentencing Guidelines.

An information contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendant is presumed innocent and is entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Inmate “Revolving Door” Issue Makes Chicago Tribune Editorial Cartoon

As soon as it was revealed that Governor Pat Quinn had let criminals out on the street, I thought of the revolving door television ad that ran when Michael Dukakis ran against the first George Bush.

The issue was sure to pop up again with Quinn’s early release program.

Letter criminals out early is an invitation to continuing stories.

And ads.

We saw a story this week when Republican Bill Brady called for the ousting of the Corrections Department Director who released the inmates.

Now, Chicago Tribune editorial cartoonist has entered the fray.

He shows a ferocious hooded criminal aiming a gun right at the reader.

The bad guy is wearing a “Quinn ’10” button. A tattoo on his bulging shoulder says, “I (heart) 2 MAIM.”

He is saying, “I was released early…and I approve this message!”

The cartoon certainly supports Tribune policy to elect Brady governor.

And it does it well.

Message of the Day – Wipe Out!

My nephew Joey flew to celebrate his 23rd birthday with the family in Wonder Lake on Sunday.

Perfect day.

The ski board was hooked up to the jet ski and off they went.

He started off kneeling on the ski board.

The board really wasn’t meant for a 23-year old.

Last week this 4-year old was watching Tommy Bartlett's show in the Wisconsin Dells. Sunday he was training to be in it.

It was designed to teach a kid how to water ski.

Standing up.

But the 23-year old managed to stand up.

Wonder Lake Wipe Out.

For a while.

My son says his cousin jumped.

Maybe.

Attorney General’s Office “Reaching Out” to Soar to Higher Heights Foundation Officially Formed

The Soar to Higher Heights Foundation is being contacted by the Charitable Trusts Division of the Illinois Attorney General’s Office, according to press officer Robyn Ziegler.

McHenry County Blog checked last week as to whether the foundation had registered with the Secretary of State’s Office and the Attorney General’s Office.

The "Frequently Asked Questions" page on the Illinois Attorney General's Charitable Trusts Division page says, "All charities that solicit in Illinois should be registered with the Office of the Attorney General." The Soar to Higher Heights Foundation has not yet done so.

When I called both offices said it had not, but the Attorney General’s Office told me that its Charitable Trusts Division would check further.

I got my reply yesterday.

“You’re right. The organization doesn’t exist yet, so obviously they are not registered with our office” Zeigler told me.

“The Attorney General’s Office is reaching out to those individuals identified as affiliated with this group.

“Our goal is make sure they understand the Charitable Trust laws of the state, including the requirement to be registered with our office, if they are soliciting for charitable purposes.

“Those efforts help to protect the charitable assets that have been collected for this or any charitable purpose.”

But, when I checked again with the Illinois Secretary of State’s Office I was told,
“It was incorporated 8-13,2010.”

That’s last Friday.

The only name attached to the foundation is its agent, David Joseph Ruelle

“They don’t list officers until their first annual report,”

the Secretary of State’s employee told me.

McHenry County Kirk Supporters Seeking Door-to-Door, Phone Workers Next Saturday

Congressman Mark Kirk waves to Crystal Lake Independence Day Parade watchers.

Next Saturday (Aug. 21) is Mark Kirk Super Saturday across Illinois.

Thousands of volunteers will hit the phones and the streets with Mark Kirk’s campaign message of fiscal responsibility and the importance of retaining and creating jobs in Illinois. We hope to have a large group of volunteers working on Mark Kirk’s behalf in McHenry County on that day.

Please join me at 9:45 am on Saturday, Aug. 21 at the GOP headquarters in Crystal Lake for coffee and donuts (8 Crystal Lake Plaza). At 10:00 am we will participate in a conference phone call with Mark Kirk and a mystery Republican from the national level. After the call, volunteers will spend four hours (or as much time as your schedule allows) making calls, going door to door, delivering yard signs, stuffing literature bags, etc.

We will have Mark Kirk T-Shirts, literature, bumper stickers, yard signs and 4 x 4 signs on Saturday, and our goal is to saturate much of the county on this day.

This Senate seat will go to either Republican Mark Kirk or to Democrat Alexi Giannoulias. Whether you are a conservative Republican, a moderate Republican or fall somewhere in between, Mark Kirk will bring a much-needed Republican voice to Washington and a desperately-needed element of balance to a currently lopsided U.S. Senate. We hope we can count on your support for Mark Kirk Super Saturday.

Please respond to mchenryforkirk@gmail.com and let us know if we can count on your help for Super Saturday!

Best Regards,

Cheryl Meyer
McHenry County Coordinator
Mark Kirk for Senate

Also in the “You Can’t Make This Up” Category

Galena Cellars is right next to the flood gate next to Route 20.

First, it’s a Huntley School Board member saying that Tea Party participants are prone to toss Molotov cocktails at Federal buildings.

I thought only radical left wingers were trying to scare people away from events like the legislative forum being held by the new Huntley Tea Party next Monday night at the Park District’s Cosman Cultural Center.

Now what has appeared is private label Sheriff Keith Nygren wine bottles from Galena Cellars. You can see the entire article on McHenry County Sheriff’s Department Exposed, Zane Seipler’s blog.

White or red.

Grand Reserve White or Country Red.

Take your choice.

And, you will notice that there is a seven-pointed star.

Red or white wine bottled by the Galena Cellars. My wife likes both, but we've never had any private label.

On April 25, 2005, Citizens to Elect Sheriff Nygren bought $992.58 worth.  It for “campaign gifts.”

The seven-pointed star on the label is the same one in the article below. The one linked to above shows on an endorsement letter for Nygren’s choice to eject McHenry County State’s Attorney Lou Bianchi from the office he held.

Here you see the same seven-pointed star on the wall just inside the entrance of the McHenry County Jail.

It’s the same seven-pointed star on the wall of the Sheriff’s Department at the entrance of the McHenry County Jail.

Eagle Ridge Resort & Spa Merlo

One question being raised by Seipler in his request that a special prosecutor be named to investigation whether Nygren is using tax dollars in his campaigns for public office is whether the seven-pointed star is the official star of the McHenry County Sheriff’s Department or his campaign star.

On his chest, Nygren wears a five-pointed star.

Sheriff Nygren is not the only one with a private label wine. We discovered that Eagle Ridge Resort has one, too.

Eagle Ridge Resort & Spa Merlo.

It’s bottled by Rutherford Wine Company in St. Helena, California.

Huntley Board Member Says Tea Party Attracts People who Want to Throw Molotov Cocktails

Kim Skaja, a Huntley District 158 School Board member apparently thinks the Tea Party attracts people who want to throw Molotov cocktails.

You just can’t make this stuff up.

So here’s her post from the Huntley Neighbors’ blog.

She was responding to former board President Shawn Green.

Kim 08-16-2010 06:01 AM

Kim Skaja

Shawn, be fair. He didn’t refuse to speak to you face to face; he is reluctant to attend the meeting with a room filled with angry people. There are a lot of crazy people in the world. A local person told a friend of mine we should all throw molotov cocktails at federal buildings and “take back our government.” Those are not your views and I do not believe your party advocates those views; however it does attract people with those views.

Pam Fender, Huntley village trustee, whose day job as Grafton Township Administrator has been put in jeopardy by the separation of powers court case awaiting decision, added this to the thread:

pam 08-16-2010 06:13 AM

Remember Shawn has a great advantage- he carries a gun.

Fender neglects to mention that Green is able to carry a gun since he is employed by the Schaumburg police.

Both Skaja and Fender are anti-Tea Party, favoring big government and all of the liberal spending that goes with it. They both are certifiable tax increase advocates.

There is desperation in the political air when Skaja and Fender as elected officials in Huntley are writing about throwing “Molotov cocktails” and carrying a gun to scare off people from attending a Huntley Tea Party meeting.

Skaja and Fender fear conservatives organizing politically as the unions in Illinois already are.

What has Skaja’s and Fender’s bloomers in a knot?

It started with this message post:

Huntley Tea Party – Town Hall Meeting

Huntley Town Hall Meeting

Monday August 23, 2010 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM

Cosman Cultural Center, Huntley, Illinois (map) Be part of the next big Tea Party Event. Your opportunity to meet state and local legislators and candidates. Ask questions. Find out their views on important issues. Be a better informed voter. Be part of this important exchange of ideas.

Maybe Skaja can tell us when the last Molotov cocktail was thrown at a political event in Illinois “to meet state and local legislators and candidates.”

I would say there’s about zero chance elected official Skaja filed a report with the F.B.I. or Huntley police about someone trying to incite someone else to throw Molotov cocktails at Federal buildings.  Such a threat would be a serious crime, maybe even a felony.  It might even be a crime not report such a felony.

Of course Skaja, as a school board member, would report a felony if she learned of one, right?

A Million Dollars to Illinois Schools and McHenry County Doesn’t Get a Dime

It’s costly for McHenry County to have liberal Democrats, Melissa Bean in the U.S. House and Jack Franks in Springfield, especially when rules get written that penalize the schools in our districts from receiving grants.

Liberal Dems discriminated against McHenry County and Franks and Bean apparently did not object.

Or, if they did, any such objections had no effect.

There’s an example in a press release with the following headline from the State Board of Education on a federal pass-through grant:

For Immediate Release
June 9, 2010

State Board Awards Nearly $1 Million to Improve School Cafeterias

Of the 57 schools and 43 districts that got the money, not a single one was in McHenry County, as best I could tell. In other words, a million dollars widely distributed and not a dime ended up to McHenry County, one of the state’s largest counties.

Lake County Juvenile Detention Center

The Lake County Juvenile Detention Center got a bit more than $5,000. It qualifies as an academic center because its detainees go to school on site.

“We bought a new milk cooler and an auxiliary refrigerator and we got some new shelving for our walk-in freezer,”

the knowledgeable woman in administration who answered the phone told me.

In how the state board of education does accounting, the $903,000 of grants were described as “nearly $1 million.”

How liberals decided to discriminate against McHenry County was by specifying this requirement:

“Participating sites had to have at least 50 percent of students eligible for free and reduced-priced meals.”

Not 25% or 20% or 30%, but 50%.

I would think some schools in District 300 qualify. Most of those aren’t located in McHenry County, but the district does cover much of Lake in the Hills and Algonquin.  Some of its schools in Carpentersville have high concentrations of poor families.

Not all of the public funds went to public schools.

Beacon Hill Preparatory Academy is a private, not public school, with about 200 students in Harvey. It received $26, 610.

The New Village Leadership Academy is a private school for 60 students in Chicago. It’s not a public school. It received $18,477. How much cafeteria equipment do you need to improve its existing cafeteria to feed 60 students?

Do you think liberal Dems like Bean don’t look at spending to see how much is necessary to meet critical needs?

If someone took the time to investigate what each of these grants was actually going to be used for, it’s likely one would find a lot of spending that went to additional extras and not critical, if-we-don’t-have-the money-we-won’t-have-a-pot-to-cook-the-food-in expenses.

Bean voted to increase wasteful government spending and our national debt to where she can’t explain how we can pay for the interest on the debt in a few years.

Joe Walsh, who is challenging Bean in November, has a different approach. He is committed to common sense spending restraints and moving the country away from a steep cliff of debt and high unemployment.

In our analogy, the police cars are taxpayers.

Whenever I hear President Obama describe his driving the country as if it were a car, it’s obvious he and Bean are driving in Thelma-and-Louise fashion over a huge cliff of debt.

Will the U.S. economy crash as Thelma and Louise's convertible did in the movie?

In the Bean-Obama script, they probably exit the car as millionaires or positioned to make big money before it goes hurtling over the cliff.

Looks as if Libertarians Will Be on Fall Ballot

An email from the Illinois Libertarian Party appears below:

Illinois Libertarian Party Statewide Slate Survives Challenge, Seems to Have 33,545 Valid Signatures

The Libertarian Party statewide slate of candidates in Illinois submitted approximately 45,000 signatures at the end of June, but the petition was challenged.  The “binder check” process is now complete and the party seems to have 33,545 valid signatures, well above the legal requirement of 25,000.

(Libertarian Party was required to get 20,000 more signatures than the Republican and Democrat candidates because of the inequity in ballot access rules that the sitting powers to be created.)

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Republicans will not be happy with that.

In 1998, when Jim Tobin was the Libertarian Party candidate for Governor, the Chicago Tribune ran an article after the fall election documenting that Secretary of State George Ryan’s people were used to challenge signatures while they were on the state payroll. U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald did not see fit to make that one of the allegations in Ryan’s corruption trial.

In 2002, the Libertarian Party petitions containing my name for Governor were challenged as well. After the election, I was told that State Treasurer Judy Baar Topinka’s employees participated in the challenge while on being paid.

This year, Libertarians didn’t find any state employees, but did identify relatives of Republican Party gubernatorial candidate Bill Brady working on the challenge.

Needless to say, Republicans don’t want Libertarians on the ballot anymore than Democrats want Greens.

One other party that would drain votes from Republicans, the Constitution Party, is reported to be closer to the 20,000 required number.