Posts tagged: Chicago

Nation’s Mayors Support Gay Marriage But Complain About Unemployment

Tom Ramstack – AHN News Legal Correspondent

DC, Washington, United States (AHN) – The U.S. Conference of Mayors wrapped up its winter meeting Friday in Washington, D.C., with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel stepping into controversies on same sex marriage and education.

Emanuel joined about 80 other mayors from across the nation in endorsing laws to give legal recognition to same sex marriage, along with the tax breaks and other benefits spouses can share.

The mayors signed on to a statement that said, “Our cities derive great strength from their diversity and gay and lesbian families are a crucial part. Studies have shown what we know through our hands-on experience that cities that celebrate and cultivate diversity are the places where creativity and ideas thrive.”

Emanuel supported the Illinois Legislature’s effort last year to legalize civil unions for same-sex couples.

He said New York did “a good thing” last June when state lawmakers legalized gay marriage.

In separate comments Friday, Emanuel discussed his plan to turn Chicago’s community colleges into training institutions for the city’s employers.

Currently, Chicago’s City Colleges have a graduation rate of about 7 percent and job prospects for graduates that are “not as high,” Emanuel said.

His plan calls for each of the city’s seven community colleges to operate with specialties, such as health care, transportation, hospitality and manufacturing.

In addition, employers would be brought in to develop curricula that would train the students to become their employees.

“I want it to have economic value” to attend college, Emanuel said at the downtown Washington hotel where about 250 mayors were meeting.

Turning colleges into job training institutions is controversial among some academics, who say a well-rounded education requires liberal arts courses that include literature, history and the arts.

Nevertheless, job creation and recovery from the economic disaster of the Great Recession were dominant themes throughout the meeting this week.

The U.S. Conference of Mayors released a report that said the nation’s metropolitan areas will struggle for five more years to regain jobs lost during the recession that started in September 2008.

“The recovery is very uneven across U.S. regions, with the southeastern and southwestern metro [areas that] were the most affected by the housing bubble looking ahead to years of recovery,” the report says.

U.S. nonfarm payrolls will grow about 1.3 percent this year, which is unlikely to reduce the unemployment rate below 8 percent, according to a report by IHS Global Insight.

The report predicts the nation will regain nearly half the jobs lost during the Great Recession by the end of 2012.

The mayors used the economic report to try to prod Congress to approve legislation that would create more jobs.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, president of the Conference of Mayors, said “Congress has jumped ship” in its obligation to stimulate the economy and employment.

However, Villaraigosa acknowledged cities will have a hard time squeezing money out of Congress at a time the federal government is trying to reduce its deficit by cutting spending.

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Morehouse ‘Oprah scholars’ surprise Winfrey in Chicago

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Congress Warned That Public Transit Cuts Would Hurt U.S. Economy

Tom Ramstack – AHN News Legal Correspondent

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – Public transportation advocates said at a Senate Banking Committee Thursday that if transit agencies lose federal funding, the entire nation would suffer.

Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.) chairman of the Banking Committee, said, “It is sometimes forgotten but reliable and accessible public transit is vital in rural areas like South Dakota, just as it is vital in large urban cities.”

Public transportation funding is among budget items members of Congress are considering reducing as they try to cut the $14 trillion federal deficit.

However, fewer bus, subway and passenger rail trips will mean more roadway congestion, transit advocates say.

“Our public transit systems connect workers with employers, keep cars off congested roads, reduce our dependence on foreign oil and get people where they’re going safely and affordably,” Johnson said.

Republicans, such as Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, say the federal government should subsidize local transit agencies only if they match the funds and agree to keep their systems in a state of good repair.

The Obama administration seeks to increase operating assistance to transit agencies. Operating assistance refers mostly to salaries for workers, but also recurring expenses like electricity.

“There’s no point in using federal dollars to buy brand spanking new buses for transit systems if they can’t afford to pay the drivers to put those buses into service,” Federal Transit Administration chief Peter M. Rogoff told the Banking Committee.

JayEtta Hecker, transportation advocacy director for the Bipartisan Policy Center, said public transportation will get the funding it needs only if Congress can be assured taxpayers are getting a good deal.

“We are not going to get consensus for the kinds of [revenue] increases that are required in transportation until we rebuild the credibility of the program,” she said. “A clearer set of performance objectives, clearer outcomes, clearer recognition that we’re getting value for our money.”

The Bipartisan Policy Center is a foundation that promotes policies supported by both Republicans and Democrats.

Other warnings about big cuts in public transportation came from a study released this week by the Urban Land Institute, a public policy group.

It concluded that the United States would fall behind other countries economically if transit spending is drastically reduced.

Outside of the United States, “in most of the developed world and in many emerging markets, countries have committed to fulfilling infrastructure agendas as essential for sustaining or enhancing living standards in an increasingly competitive global marketplace,” says the report.

One example mentioned in the report came from the United Kingdom, which is spending $326 billion over the next five years to stimulate its economy by investing in passenger rail, broadband access and energy production.

China is on schedule to complete 10,000 miles of high-speed rail lines by 2020, the report said.

Meanwhile, major U.S. cities like Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco are reducing transit service, raising fares and delaying new projects as they divert transportation funding to other priorities, the Urban Land Institute reported.

Additional budget cuts are likely for defense spending, federal employees’ pensions, student loan subsidies and farm payments, according to members of the Obama administration.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates this week described how the Pentagon is trying to figure out which weapons systems can be reduced without risking national defense.

President Obama announced a 12-year deficit reduction plan earlier this year that seeks to save $400 billion.

The Pentagon’s review of its own budget includes ways to find management efficiencies that might reduce the size of the armed forces, Gates said.

In addition, the Obama administration is doing a “serious examination” of policies that “drive dramatic” increases in health care, retirement and infrastructure, he said.

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Supporters of Chicago priest protest suspension

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Chicago, IL, United States (AHN) – Members of a Catholic congregation in Chicago’s South Side gathered in protest on Thursday against the suspension of their pastor, whose outspoken comments prompted action from the archdiocese.

Parishioners of St. Sabina gathered outside the residence of Cardinal Francis George to ask the reinstatement of Father Michael Pfleger.

Pfleger was suspended on Wednesday after saying in a radio interview he would likely leave the Catholic Church if he was reassigned.

The pastor, who has led his congregation since 1981, was offered the presidency at Leo Catholic High School, a post the cardinal said would let Pfleger continue his advocacy against gun violence in the black community.

George informed Pfleger of the suspension in a letter released by the archdiocese. He chastised the pastor for comments that “short-circuited” the process to determine whether to proceed with the transfer.

The cardinal said their private conversation about the reassignment was also “misrepresented publicly as an attempt to ‘remove’ him,” a move only done in cases of sexual or financial offenses.

But leaders of St. Sabina said the cardinal had failed to show respect for Pfleger by announcing the suspension in a letter that reporters allegedly received before being sent to the pastor.

They had been urging their congregation to write to the cardinal to let Pfleger stay as pastor.

“Considering the current state of the economy, we believe that removing him at this time would be devastating to both our parish and the Auburn Gresham community,” they said in a statement last month.

Pfleger, who was inducted into the International Civil Rights Walk of Fame in 2009, remains officially the pastor at St. Sabina but he has no priestly functions.

His associate pastor, Father Thulani Magwaza, will temporarily serve as church administrator. A priest at St. Ailbe Parish, Father Andrew Smiths, has been assigned as assistant.

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Obama focus stays on raising debt ceiling, cutting deficit

Tejinder Singh – AHN News Correspondent

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – President Barack Obama is scheduled to undertake domestic travel in the coming week according to a White House communique.

Obama is planning to hold town hall meetings in “Northern Virginia, Palo Alto, California and Reno, Nevada to speak directly to the American people about his vision for reducing our debt and bringing down our deficit, based on the values of shared responsibility and shared prosperity,” the White House said.

On the return flight from Chicago on Friday, Jay Carney, presidential spokesman called Obama’s two urgent tasks as one to pursue Congress to immediately raise the ceiling on U.S. debt and the other to move with urgency towards deficit reduction.

On the first task, Carney said, “That shouldn’t be linked or held hostage to any other action because the consequences of not raising the debt ceiling — those consequences would be catastrophic to the American economy, to the global economy and to America’s creditworthiness internationally.”

About efforts towards deficit reduction, Carney said the president, “asked the Vice President to oversee and leaders of Congress to appoint members to participate in where they can come together and begin to negotiate areas where we can agree to bring about further deficit reduction in a balanced way that can achieve the kind of results that we think are what America needs economically and for our future.”

Citing both as “urgent … but … not linked,” Carney reiterated, “With regards to the debt ceiling, it cannot be linked or held hostage to something that wouldn’t pass — couldn’t reach consensus. It has to be done. All the leaders of Congress of both parties have said that, and we obviously share that sentiment.”

Carney hinted that the president was ready for compromise on his targets while negotiating with Republicans, saying, “He recognizes he’s not going to get 100 percent of what he wants or that it’s not going to be his way only, and Republicans need to recognize that, which is how we ended up with an agreement last week on the funding for the 2011 budget.”

Carney noted that the president Obama believed Congressman Paul Ryan of the budget committee “is absolutely sincere and that he believes that this is the right — that that’s the right path, the one he put forward is the right path for America.”

On the disagreement part, Carney said, “He (Obama) doesn’t think that it’s (Ryan’s budget proposal) balanced.”

Explaining the disparities, Carney said, “He doesn’t think that we need to — that the price of deficit reduction needs to be ending the guarantee, the health benefits that Medicare has provided our seniors, cutting energy — clean energy investment by 70 percent, cutting education by 25 percent, cutting infrastructure by 30 percent — and all so that we can not just reduce the deficit but so that we can extend tax cuts for the wealthiest of Americans and give new tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.”

With the count-down to 2012 presidential election ticking and Obama already an official candidate, the incumbent needs to sell his policies to voters who are not diehard rock star Obama fans.

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Chicago Housing issues resident relocation report

Eleven years after the Chicago Housing Authority undertook a massive overhaul aimed at removing thousands of residents from…

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Flint Housing Bust Hurts County Health Efforts

Flint, MI, United States (KaiserHealth) – Inside the Genesee County Health Department, Mark Valacak gestures to a darkened office that until a few months ago housed a clinic providing free baby formula and diapers to poor mothers. “You used to always hear the crying babies,” before the clinic was closed and services moved to a suburban clinic, says Valacak, the county health officer.

Diane L. Towers, MSN, RN, APRN-BC a nurse practitioner at the UHWC works with patient Billy Fleming on his current health concerns. (Gary Malerba/AP Photos)

Around a corner is another empty waiting area. It’s Tuesday, one of the two days of the week the STD clinic is closed because of budget cuts, and Valacak frets that the service cutback could lead to an increase in syphilis and other sexually transmitted diseases.

In cities and counties across the nation, the housing bust has hit health care. In Genesee County, where housing prices have plunged and foreclosures have been widespread, property tax revenues have declined by 15 percent over the last two years.

The decrease is hampering efforts by the county, which is 75 miles northwest of Detroit and the birthplace of General Motors Corp., to provide health care to the poor as well as public health services.

Late last year, the county laid off 30 people in the health department and cut its paramedics workforce by 15 percent. Meanwhile, the Genesee Health Plan, a county-backed plan for low-income residents, which is partly funded by property taxes, has stopped covering MRIs and may soon have to start turning away new applicants.

The health cuts underscore the woes of municipalities across the country, which are struggling amid glimmers of an economic recovery. Nationally, property tax revenues, which are the biggest source of revenue for many cities and counties, last year fell an inflation-adjusted 1.8 percent, the first decline in at least two decades, according to the National League of Cities. These revenues tend to lag changes in sales and income taxes partly because assessments usually take place only every few years.

Things are likely to get worse for local governments. Property-tax revenues are expected to decline again this year, the league says. In addition, federal stimulus money ends this summer and states are cutting funds to cities and counties – even as demand for services such as health care continues to increase.

“Local governments are at the bottom of the hill and bad news rolls downhill,” said Robert Ward, deputy director of the Rockefeller Institute of Government in Albany, N.Y. “There is nowhere else for local governments to go, other than to reduce their workforce and raise local taxes.”

In the District, where property tax revenues declined last year, 125 jobs in the health department jobs were eliminated. Spokeswoman Dena Iverson said the city did not cut any services because it transferred responsibilities to other employees.

In late 2009, the Prince George’s County Health Department cut the jobs of six staffers and eliminated its adult health education and nursing home licensing program. The cuts were the result of falling property and income tax revenue.

Partly because of a slowdown in property-tax growth, the Montgomery County Health Department last year eliminated 11 jobs, including those of five public health nurses. Services to prevent childhood obesity and reduce substance abuse were among those cut, said county spokeswoman Mary Anderson, who added that property tax revenues are expected to decline this year.

Around the country, health cuts are occurring because of a variety of financial pressures:

In Florida, one of the epicenters of the housing crisis, county property tax revenues fell 6 percent in 2010, the third consecutive annual decline after nearly two decades of growth, according to the Florida Association of Counties. One result: the Health Care District of Palm Beach County reduced hours for nurses working in public schools, lowered funding to hospitals and cut back on grants to free health clinics.

El Paso County, Colo., which includes Colorado Springs and relies on property taxes for 20 percent of its budget, has stopped monitoring air and water quality and testing mosquitoes for diseases such as West Nile virus.

In Oklahoma, the Muskogee County Health Department last year cut 11 positions, or 20 percent of its staff, and eliminated audiology and speech pathology services and testing for diabetes and high blood pressure. This year the county 50 miles southeast of Tulsa began charging $25 for flu shots instead of offering them for free.

In Seattle-King County, the health department in February laid off 37 staff workers who helped women with high-risk pregnancies. It has already eliminated immunization clinics, child-care nurse visits outside Seattle and outreach to homeless pregnant women with alcohol or drug problems.

In Vermilion County, Ill., located along the eastern border of Illinois about 95 miles south of Chicago, the health department has cut 35 public health nurses, reducing the availability of immunizations and STD testing.

The Genesee Health Plan, which has a $25 million budget, was started in 2001 to help people who made too much to qualify for Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor, but not enough to buy private insurance. Five years later, county voters approved higher property taxes – about $50 a year for the average homeowner – in order to expand the plan. Since that vote, enrollment has tripled, and now numbers 28,000 people.

The program covers doctor visits, generic drugs and mental health services, but not hospital care. Local hospitals get lump-sum payments from the plan to partly cover their costs of treating enrollees.

Jennifer Stephenson, who has had two recent heart attacks, says, “I’d be dead” without the plan, which pays for her medications and visits to the doctor. Rod Adcox, a 40-year-old mechanic who works at a scrap yard and has just been diagnosed with a hernia, says he’s happy he got into the Genesee plan. “I know I needed insurance but I can’t afford $600 a month,” he says.

But because of the drop in property tax revenues, the health plan is now being squeezed. New applicants have to wait for two months before they are allowed to enroll, and Linda Hamacher, the health plan’s CEO, worries that she might have to close enrollment entirely – something that she says “would be disastrous” in a county with a double-digit unemployment rate. If people are turned away, Hamacher says, they’ll end up putting off seeking care or wind up in expensive hospital emergency rooms for primary care.

On a frigid day last month, more than 30 people showed up at the plan’s office to enroll or get help finding health care. One woman with multiple sclerosis needed a checkup, while a woman with a thyroid problem needed prescription drugs. A man needed a mental health evaluation.

In 2014, under the new federal health law, many of the health plan’s members will qualify for Medicaid, easing pressure on the plan. But Hamacher says she’s worried about the near term: keeping her plan open to new members now and getting county voters to renew the plan’s property tax financing next year. Neither is a sure bet.

pgalewitz@kff.org

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Cubs part ways with right-hander Silva

Jojo Doria – AHN Sports Contributor

Mesa, AZ, United States (AHN Sports) – Carlos Silva, who verbally attacked pitching coach Mark Riggins and the Chicago Cubs organization after being informed Saturday that he will not make the team’s roster, was officially released by the Cubs Sunday.

Cubs general manager Jim Hendry and manager Mike Quade sprang to the defense of Riggins, who according to the disgruntled Silva was not forthcoming about the veteran starter’s potential role on the team.

Silva was acquired in a trade with the Seattle Mariners in December 2009. He had an impressive 9-3 start in the first half of 2010, but struggled afterwards as he dealt with an injury.

In 2010, Silva went 10-6 with a 4.22 ERA in 21 starts for the Cubs, who are responsible for the $11.5 million remaining on the former pitcher’s contract.

Quade indicated to the Chicago Tribune that he had a good meeting with the 31-year-old Silva Saturday but was “upset” and “disappointed” Sunday by Silva’s comments to the media.

“Obviously, we’re dealing with a man at this particular point of his career that’s not willing to face the facts that what he’s done the last few years, except for a two-month period (last year), is well below major league standards,” Hendry told the Tribune.

Quade also said that it was his decision to release Silva, who struggled by yielding 29 hits in his first 11 innings of camp.

“First of all, he’s dead (bleeping) wrong, OK, about my pitching coach. And I’ve got no (bleeping) time for that, the Cubs manager told the Tribune.

Quade continued his admonition: “Respect is a two-way street, and “I don’t want to hear anything about respect. If you ain’t giving it, you ain’t getting it.”

Hendry, who apparently was more incensed than Quade, did not mince words in lashing out at Silva,

“Basically, he wasn’t good enough to make the team,” Hendry said. “We try to factor in not only spring training, but the second half of last year. You’re looking at a guy who had a 14-something ERA from July 11 on, and came to camp with the notion that he already had a spot in the rotation.

“Obviously, the first three or four outings (were) quite poor, and basically you try to give him every opportunity, which we did.”

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The Watchdogs: Judge sued twice over land deals

Chicago’s Beverly Bank & Trust lost nearly $1 million last year on a construction loan to Cook County Judge James J. Ryan and his business partners, according to one of Ryan’s partners. The bank filed a foreclosure suit in Cook County Court last June charging that Ryan, his brother and …

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Candidate Patricia Watkins Talks Schools, Housing, And ‘Consensus’

Unless your name is Rahm Emanuel, you may have had some trouble attracting media attention to your run for Chicago mayor. First there was the…

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Obama picks Bill Daley for White House chief of staff

Matthew Borghese – AHN News Contributor

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – President Barack Obama has selected Bill Daley to serve as his White House chief of staff, filling the shoes of Rahm Emanuel who left the Oval Office to run for mayor of Chicago.

Daley has a background in law, commerce, and politics. In 1993, Daley was a special counsel to President Bill Clinton, working with the commander in chief to persuade lawmakers into passing the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

Later, Daley would serve as Secretary of Commerce in the second Clinton administration before becoming a chairman on Vice President Al Gore’s presidential campaign.

Recently, Daley has been serving on the executive committee of J.P. Morgan Chase.

“Few Americans can boast the breadth of experience that Bill brings to this job,” Obama said. “He served as a member of President Clinton’s Cabinet as Commerce Secretary, and took on several other important duties over the years on behalf of our country. He’s led major corporations. He possesses a deep understanding of how to create jobs and how to grow our economy. And, needless to say, Bill also has a profound awareness of how our systems of government and politics work. You might say it’s a genetic trait.”

“But most of all, I know Bill to be someone who cares deeply about this country, believes in its promise, and considers no calling higher and more important than serving the American people. He will bring his tremendous experience, his strong values and forward-looking vision to this White House. I’m convinced that he’ll help us in our mission of growing our economy and moving America forward. And I very much look forward to working with Bill in the years to come,” Obama added.

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Sidelined quarterbacks: Vikes’ Brett Favre, Packers’ Aaron Rodgers out Sunday

Jim Keller – AHN Sports Reporter

Green Bay, WI, United States (AHN Sports) – Brett Favre’s career streak is now two.

Favre, the Minnesota Vikings quarterback who is undergoing one of the most trying seasons of his 20-year career, has been ruled out of Sunday’s game with the Chicago Bears. It is the second straight week Favre will sit after playing in a NFL-record 297 consecutive games.

He’ll be joined on the sidelines by the player who replaced him in Green Bay, Aaron Rodgers, who suffered a concussion in last week’s 7-3 loss to Detroit and will sit against the New England Patriots.

Favre injured his throwing shoulder in the first possession of the game with Buffalo two weeks ago and has not played since. He has also suffered broken bones in his ankle and shoulder tendonitis and is undergoing an NFL investigation into his texting habits with a former Jets employee.

Favre was also embroiled in a public feud with head coach Brad Childress, the latter dismissed due to the Vikings’ poor start.

Third-string rookie Joe Webb will make the start after backup Tarvaris Jackson injured his toe in last week’s 21-3 loss to the New York Giants.

Matt Flynn will make his first NFL start for Green Bay (8-5), which is in a battle for the playoffs.

The Packers are a game behind Chicago (9-4) in the NFC North Division and a game back of Philadelphia (9-4) and New York (9-4) for the second wild-card berth. New Orleans (10-3) has the first Wild-Card berth.

Rodgers had started every game since taking over from Favre as the Packers’ starter at the beginning of the 2008 season.

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NXT Capital Adds Healthcare Team

CHICAGO–(BUSINESS WIRE)–NXT Capital (“NXT”) announced today the hiring of Dave Allen as a Managing Director in its Corporate Finance unit with responsibility for NXT’s cash flow lending activities in the healthcare sector. Dave has spent over 18 years in middle-market commercial finance with City National, Heller Financial, GE Capital and Freeport Financial. Most recently he was a co-founder of, and built the healthcare practice for, Freeport Financial. Prior to entering banking, Dave spent ti

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$10,000 reward: Killer of cop, ex-officer

Police are offering a $10,000 reward as they investigate the deaths of a Chicago police officer and a former Chicago Housing Authority officer who were gunned down Friday afternoon while the police officer was investigating a burglary. It was the fifth time in six months that a Chicago police officer was shot and killed.

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Interim head of new Chicago department appointed

The executive director of an affordable housing lender has been chosen to lead Chicago’s newly formed Department of Housing and Economic Development.

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