DISQUS

CapitolFax.com: Morning shorts

  • Ravenswood Right Winger · 1 year ago
    Good riddance to Gorman!
  • Crimefighter · 1 year ago
    >Man alleges politics is key to landing state job
    >“I don’t know who’s making the call,” he said. “I don’t know, but I know as a veteran who’s qualified I cannot even get an interview and that is a sad day for the state of Illinois.”


    Well, someone's gonna get in BIG trouble and be shelling out a large chunk of change for openly violating veterans preference.
  • Niles Township · 1 year ago
    Condolences to Pat on the loss of his father.
  • Stateville Speaks · 1 year ago
    1. Condolences to Mr. Quinn.
    2. Milorad has been destroying DOC since '03. It was his intention all along. Do not get me started on DNR.
    3. I think Tony Peracia should go for Cook County GOP chairman, but I realize why he won't.
  • Sock Puppet Express · 1 year ago
    FROM GORMAN'S Farewell Address:
    "However, I believe strongly that our Party organization must function smoothly, promoting a unanimity of purpose and singularity of voice. From the court house to the White House, we must not be distracted from electing Republicans at every level. It is critically important at this time that the attention of the voters be focused on the candidates and the issues, not internal Party matters."

    Clearly Howdy Dowdy Gorman is fleeing the county due to delusional attacks and prospect there will be even fewer elected GOPs after November. Maybe Skip can step. Or where is Jumpin' Jimmy Dvorak when we need him.
  • VanillaMan · 1 year ago
    New museums, new convention centers, new hotel complexes, new downtown business developments...why do we still believe in the 'if you build it with tax dollars, prosperity will return" mentality?

    Localitites that still believe that governments will pay for their dream cities are not recognizing the new reality. When we had billions to spend on renovated downtowns, mass transit systems, and expressways, we could take hits when we built white elephants. Not anymore.

    After decades of white elephants, unattended infrastructure, potholes and rusty mass transit can attest, voters are unwilling to simply shovel money to developers with big dreams. This doesn't mean that there is no money for new developments, it means that developers need to be more focused and do a better selling job.

    It takes heavy political hitters to get a new Sox park or a McCormick Place expansion. These are single focus projects that can be sold to voters and evolutionary ones that replace or expand successful business generating organizations. Even Mayor Daley has discovered that "pie in the sky" rebuilds without focus cannot find funding because they haven't been sold to voters, or demanded by them. Politicians don't want to be caught in bed with bad real estate paid with tax dollars.

    So, in the case of East Peoria, Kankakee, University Park, and many Chicago neighborhoods, these community leaders hoping for governments to back their dreams need to wake up. There is no extra cash to give to sincere types who wish to pour acres of concrete in order to make something happen to their struggling communities.

    Instead of planning multi-million dollar white elephants, private businesses are snatching up opportunities to grow businesses where there is growth. This leaves behind neglected areas that are abandoned not simply because the building assets got old. When you take a cold eye approach to dying towns, you see that bulldozing and spending millions of tax dollars won't revive a community.

    We don't have the cash to waste and folks will not sink money into areas just because the concrete is fresh.

    That is why there hasn't been any development for East Peoria or Decatur or Rockford.
  • Are you the creator of Hi and · 1 year ago
    Sock Puppet Express cites a quote dripping with hilarity. The "court house." When has Liz Gorman ever cared about GOP judicial candidates in Cook County, (besides herself) or GOP candidates in general?
  • observer · 1 year ago
    People are playing politics with state jobs? Oh my. What's next?
  • Leave a light on George · 1 year ago
    What happened to the the new apply on line with CMS for any open state job? You were to be nothing but an annon. number until the interview. Remeber it was going to take all political favoritism out of the state job process. Didn't apply I guess in the case of this good paying union job.
  • IDTYT · 1 year ago
    Blaggodiot has fooled the National Governor's Assoc. They think he is against predators. They forget he gave Ameriquest $25 million and suspended IL credit counseling laws....
    ...."Illinois Governor Rod R. Blagojevich said: “The crisis in the sub-prime mortgage market has had a devastating impact on homeowners and entire communities across our country. In Illinois alone, it is possible that up to 70,000 homeowners will face foreclosure this year. A real solution will require lenders, consumers, advocates and public policy makers to all work together. Last week in Illinois, we announced a package that will do just that. I am confident that by making good loans and sound advice available to families in Illinois and throughout the country, we can turn the mortgage crisis around and save homeowners from foreclosure.”
  • Flounder · 1 year ago
    The Rules certainly didn’t apply to the Illinois
    Tollway. Patrick Fitzgerald and the media should
    definitely investigate this state agency. It’s
    absolutely staggering how many plum positions have
    been created. Tollway mouthpeices said they reduced staff back
    in 2003 and 2004 by 50 as a media smoke screen and
    later added 150 and that’s not including all the
    high-priced consultants walking around.
    All you have to do is investigate and the MATH!

    Commited, Good, Decent, Hardworking State of Illinois
    employees lost their respective jobs because of Rod
    Blagojevich and his administration's corrupt policies.
  • steve schnorf · 1 year ago
    Unless there have been changes, DoC is authorized to do most of its own hiring. I am taken aback that a disgruntled jobseeker claims politics in hiring. I've heard that for more than 30 years. Sometimes it's true, often it's not.
  • jerry 101 · 1 year ago
    wait...a cook county republican convention? Where did they have that? The corner booth at a Denny's?

    Anyway, development/redevelopment always follows public spending on infrastructure. Not that all infrstructure spending plans bear fruit, quite a few don't.

    But, rebuilding streets and transit networks, putting in water mains, etc are what lead to new development.

    And if you don't think that public investment in mass transit works to spur development, just go take a look at Downtown Arlington Heights or Palatine, or any other suburb that has worked with the ideas of New Urbanism to build living, walkable downtown areas centered on their Metra stations.
    Or follow any CTA line. Neighborhood redevelopment follows CTA tracks. Areas far from an el stop tend to be pretty slummy. But areas close to el stops have redeveloped nicely over the years. Look at places like north/damen/milwaukee that were well known dumps 20 years ago. They are top notch yuppy resorts now. Jump up a stop on the blue line (western) and you'll find "west bucktown" (aka Humboldt Park) which is rapidly gentrifying around the station. Move along to California and Logan Square, same story. Easy access to downtown leads to gentrification and redevelopment.

    A project like Sox park wouldn't lead to redevelopment of the surrounding neighborhood. The surrounding neighborhood is the Dan Ryan and a bunch of parking lots. If they tore up the parking lots and put in place the infrastructure necessary to build a new neighborhood, there is a good chance that life would arrive there. First, a few bars and restaurants, which would lead to people hanging out pre and postgame. Then, people would start moving in. It has the other requirements. IIT to the east, which gives a population of potential early residents (students), close to both a highway and a mass transit station. Well developed middle class neighborhood just to the west (Bridgeport).

    OTOH, McCormick Place is a monolithic structure that isn't conducive to generating a new neighborhood. Too many old abandoned factories nearby, no day in-day out activity. Sox Park would have 81 days a year with life going on around the park, and the neighborhood as a result. But with miles of concrete parking lot surrounding sox park, life isn't going to spring up nearby. Although bridgeport itself is gentrifying.

    Now, to see how infrastructure improvements led to redevelopment of a community, look at the south loop. Building new roads and putting the transit improvements in place that were needed, plus a huge influx of students in the form of the mega dorm led to that area springing up practically overnight. New condos shooting up, restaurants and bars moving in, new shopping centers.

    It works, but it has to be planned. Business isn't going to appear in the middle of nowhere.

    Someone planned it, and some community financially backed it.
  • anonno · 1 year ago
    I'm taken aback. Schnorf should work at the Vatican. A vet expert in the job duties doesn't even get interviewed and now he's a disgruntled jobseeker. So, for the opening gambit, the guy's credibility has just been questioned. Next, they're going to interview to his neighbors and creditors.

    Shame on the perpetrators and double Shame Shame on the cameralists and apologists.
  • Wacker Drive · 1 year ago
    Big Tony Rezko has already started to blame others for his misfortunes and his trial hasn't even started yet.
    The show begins on March 3rd!
  • Ghost · 1 year ago
    The fascinating part about the political hiring stuff is, if its true, it looks awfully transparent. Your would think that coming on the heals of a pay to play indicted governor you would avoid such conduct, or at least do a better job of hidining it. Where Ryan was crafty and old school patronage, Blago is looking like just plain dumb corruption. He may get hit a lot harder then Ryan.
  • Clean as a Whistle...? · 1 year ago
    Leave a Light On George (and all other posters):

    This is the point about the online job postings I made last week.

    Mr. Schnorf: It's true a lot. Maybe Corrections does most of its own hiring; but wardens and executive staff come straight out of the Governor's office--their hiring decisions are naturally influenced by this.

    And so do such wonderful decisions like eliminating the rank of Captain.

    Which DOC continues to pay for.

    Thank God for the staff (and all citizens as well) there hasn't been a major riot in the last five years.
  • steve schnorf · 1 year ago
    Personal patronage wasn't affected by Rutan.
  • anonno · 1 year ago
    Hey--they said they were instituting the online-jobs site to make the process "transparent". Obviously that module is working...it is transparently diverting...just like the masters on LaSalle street.

    Now, I don't remember much from the announcement on making it "fair"...that is another module that would require a waiver for a sole source contract to add that function in through an undetermined R&D cost plus fixed-fee amendment to the IT contract.

    Now I'm not saying that the whole thing is just smoke and mirrors... but (lets see if I can get the tone right) "sometimes its true and often its not".
  • Ghost · 1 year ago
    Steve DOC is NOT authorized to do its own hiring per se. The Governor put in a job freeze, ALL hiring must now go through his office and be approved by the Gov. So technically today you cant hire anyone without the approval of the Gov. The the Gov has a patronage chief who vest names to DOC for hiring. The idea that the current gov, who controls all hiring in the executive branch, may be playing patronage has a lot of leggs.
  • kimsch · 1 year ago
    My condolences to the Quinn family.
  • steve schnorf · 1 year ago
    Ghost, that's a big change, then. When I was with the state most DoC hiring didn't go thru CMS.
  • Clean as a Whistle...? · 1 year ago
    Ghost: Thanks for the update--that's wahat i thought.

    Let's segueway: In state government, is there ever, ever really a job freeze?" Come on.

    The "job freeze" only applies to the people they wish to "freeze" out of jobs. Not to the sons and daughters of campaign contributors, lobbyists and other insiders.
  • Ghost · 1 year ago
    Steve most DoC hiring does not go through CMS, but it all goes through the Gov. They have to have a from signed by the gov authorizing the hiring/filing of the spot.
  • Northside Bunker · 1 year ago
    To bad no one has the onions to get a list of all the State of Illinois jobs and salaries Blagojevich and his cronies have created since 2002.
    Bet that list is a mile long.
  • i d · 1 year ago
    Mr. Schnorf, sorry that your memory and/or ethics are waning. I think that what you really meant to say was that politics in hiring mostly is true, rarely it's not.
  • steve schnorf · 1 year ago
    id,

    I'll simply say I did it, year in and year out, for many years, and I know what I saw. For example, my last 4 years in state government, nobody even suggested to me anyone to hire, much less ordered me, and I had almost all Rutan exempt jobs. Nobody even suggested to me who to give a contract to.

    In my more than 25 years in state government, I could probably count on my fingers the number of times someone tried to order me to hire someone, Rutan exempt or not. I don't recall ever having a problem getting a qualified individual hired.

    What is your experience basis for your insightful comments?
  • id · 1 year ago
    More than a quarter of a century in state government personnel office in lower level position.
  • steve schnorf · 1 year ago
    Well, most of the concerns I heard expressed on Rutan covered patronage involved either DoT or DoC, and those were certainly jobs important to county chairman.
  • Snidely Whiplash · 1 year ago
    Well, now that the appellate court has affirmed the $4,000,000 judgment against her company and called the Gormans some not-too-flattering names, she has other problems to worry about. She has more baggage than Samsonite, and no chance at all of being reelected chairman ... and she knows it.

    Buh-bye, Chairman Combine