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Illinois expands use of police surveillance drones:  New law allows event surveillance, building inspections, search and rescue 

By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinoisaadams@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – Next time you attend a parade, there might be an eye in the sky.  A new law signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker last […]

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Governor signs Illinois book ban prohibition: First-in-the-nation law ties state funding to open access policies

By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinoisphancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed legislation Monday that seeks to protect public and school libraries from pressure to ban, remove, or restrict access to […]

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State board of education looking for new providers in preschool ‘deserts’: Agency looks to open 5,000 new slots in underserved communities

By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinoisphancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Even though Gov. J.B. Pritzker has yet to sign the budget bill lawmakers just passed, the Illinois State Board of Education is seeking […]

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Governor touts new budget’s higher education spending: MAP grant increase will make community college tuition-free for many

By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinoisphancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Gov. J.B. Pritzker began a tour of the state Wednesday to tout the new state budget that lawmakers passed last week, stopping at […]

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Budget vote brings General Assembly’s 2023 spring session to a close: House gives final OK to $50.6 billion spending plan

By PETER HANCOCK  Capitol News Illinois  phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – The 2023 spring legislative session came to an end in the early hours of Saturday morning after the Illinois House gave […]

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State report: Catholic churches harbored hundreds more abusers than previously disclosed

By HANNAH MEISELCapitol News Illinoishmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Catholic dioceses in Illinois failed to disclose hundreds of abusive clerics before the state opened what would become a years-long investigation into sex abuse within the church, Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Tuesday. Included in a scathing 700-page report published by Raoul’s office, at the end of the four-and-a-half-year investigation, is the most comprehensive list to date of Catholic priests and religious brothers – 451 in Illinois – who abused nearly 2,000 victims since 1950. When former Attorney General Lisa Madigan began the investigation on her way out of office in late 2018, only the Archdiocese of Chicago and the Diocese of Joliet disclosed the names of clergy with substantiated sex abuse allegations against them. Between the two dioceses, they disclosed 103 names. During the course of the investigation, the four other dioceses began listing their own names of known child-sex abusers who ministered within their purviews, eventually upping the number of disclosed clergy with substantiated sex abuse claims against them to 320. The original 103 names disclosed by the Archdiocese of Chicago and Diocese of Joliet had some overlap with lists of names disclosed by the other four dioceses. But Tuesday’s report names 149 more abusive clergy members than the dioceses had ever disclosed. “Decades of Catholic leadership, decisions and policies have allowed known child sex abusers to hide, often in plain sight,” Raoul said at a news conference in Chicago. “And because the statute of limitations has frequently expired, many survivors of child sex abuse at the hands of Catholic clerics will never see justice in a legal sense. But it is my sincere hope that this report will shine a light on those who violated their positions of power and trust to abuse innocent children, and on the men in church leadership who covered up that abuse.” A 2017 law eliminated Illinois’ prior statute of limitations for child sex abuse, under which a 20-year clock began ticking on a victim’s 18th birthday. But that law was only prospective; a 2009 Illinois Supreme Court decision affirmed that attempts to alter the statute of limitations retroactively violated the due process rights of the accused. Asked Tuesday whether he would support an amendment to the state’s constitution to allow older victims to file lawsuits, Raoul declined to give an answer. “I’m not going to speak to that,” he said. Raoul and Assistant Chief Deputy Attorney General Thomas Verticchio on Tuesday said investigators referred certain cases to local law enforcement any time they had reason to believe the statute of limitations window may have still been open. But they couldn’t say how many cases were actionable. However, they did say the most recent abuse detailed during the investigation occurred around 2010. The investigation spans more than seven decades, with some of the oldest priests named in the report having been ordained in the 1910s. Raoul on Tuesday confirmed that the majority of those named in the report – 330 – were already dead. “These perpetrators may never be held accountable in a court of law, but by naming them in this report, the intention is to provide public accountability and a measure of healing to survivors who have long suffered in silence,” Raoul said. The attorney general’s office made “more than 600 confidential contacts” with survivors of child sex abuse by church leaders, including in-person, video and phone interviews, in addition to messages left on the attorney general’s hotline, plus emails and letters. The dioceses cooperated in the investigation, giving staff in the attorney general’s office access to thousands of files and allowing diocese leadership to sit for interviews with investigators. “It’s important to note, when we say substantiated, we were not calling balls and strikes,” Raoul said “The church is, in the end, substantiating.” According to the report, 22 clergy members associated with dioceses in Illinois had preyed on five or more children. Nine of those had at least 10 victims over the course of their careers, and one former priest – Joseph Fitzharris of Chicago – had at least 20 victims dating back to his first assignment in Puerto Rico in the late 1960s. Fitzharris spent 17 years associated with eight churches in the Chicago area before moving on to Missouri, Indiana, California, and Colorado, where he continued abusing children until the mid-1980s, according to the report. He was convicted of sexual abuse of a minor in Illinois in 1987, removed from public ministry in 1991, resigned in 1995, and was finally laicized by Pope Benedict in 2009. Survivors’ accounts The report is full of anecdotes and direct quotes from survivors interviewed by the attorney general’s office. In one heart-wrenching story, a woman referred to by the pseudonym “Shanice” recounted how she was repeatedly raped by the Rev. Robert Boley in the late 1980s when she was a fifth-grader at St. Cyril in Chicago’s Woodlawn neighborhood. Boley’s abuse began with inappropriate touching behind his desk while the rest of the class worked on math problems. But eventually Boley would regularly hold Shanice back from going to recess, raping her in the empty classroom. “He told me I was bad,” Shanice told investigators from the attorney general’s office. “He told me that Jesus made me bad, that he was there to help me.” Shanice said she both trusted Boley and feared him. She also said she knew she wasn’t the only one of her classmates targeted by Boley. “I think that what people don’t understand is when you are a child, you don’t separate a priest from God,” she was quoted as saying in the report. “He was God. To me, he was God’s worker.” According to Shanice, another priest even caught Boley one day, bursting into the empty classroom at recess and witnessing Shanice on his lap. But instead of doing anything about it, Shanice recalled. the other priest asked Boley a question, then locked the door behind him on his way back out. Boley was moved to three other assignments before ending up back in Illinois, where he worked at Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Darien in 2002 when another woman accused him of abusing her when she was a young girl in the 1980s, close to the time of Shanice’s abuse. After decades, Shanice finally told her mother about the abuse in 2019, and eventually agreed to a settlement with the archdiocese of Chicago in 2022. According to the report, Boley was removed from public ministry in 2006 and is “on a safety plan.” Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of print and broadcast outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial Association.

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Native American history, ride-share regulation measures clear General Assembly: Legislature’s spring session to continue longer than scheduled

By NIKA SCHOONOVERCapitol News Illinoisnschoonover@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Even though it became clear this week that the General Assembly’s spring legislative session would go longer than scheduled as lawmakers finalize a […]

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Pending bills would lift state moratorium on new nuclear plants, require retailers to accept cash

By Jerry Nowicki and Nika Schoonover Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Lawmakers went on a two-week spring break last week with more than 700 bills already passed in at least one chamber of the General Assembly. They will return to Springfield on April 18 for a final one-month stretch in which the measures can be amended, defeated, or sent to the governor. Among the bills to successfully move to the other chamber are a measure to lift the state’s 1987 moratorium on nuclear power plant construction, a bill that would create statewide building codes, and another requiring retail establishments to accept cash payments within certain hours. Gov. J.B. Pritzker noted last week that he’s generally supportive of the concept of lifting the nuclear construction ban, although he didn’t commit to signing the proposal contained in Senate Bill 76, which passed on a 39-13 bipartisan roll call. Pritzker said he is supportive of allowing for the construction of small modular nuclear reactors, which are small-scale generators that could be used to power individual factories or for other uses. He said he didn’t think doing so would be contradictory to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act that he signed in 2021. Some environmentalists have opposed lifting the nuclear ban because of the dangers associated with nuclear waste. “These are smaller, less prone to an accident, more likely for us to be able to maintain them for a long period of time; that’s something that’s worthy of consideration,” Pritzker said. “Now the devil’s in the details, and we want to make sure that we’re not just opening this up to nuclear everywhere or any type of nuclear.” SB 76, as written, would allow any type of nuclear construction, including the large-scale projects. “I don’t know where that bill will go this session, but I’m not opposed to it as if I’m, you know, just dead set against any nuclear,” he said. “I just want … if we’re going to consider it, it’s got to be safe.” Cash requirements Lawmakers advanced a bill that would mandate retail establishments to accept cash for purchases under $750. Senate Bill 1979 passed 40-16 in the Senate with mainly Democratic support. Sen. Omar Aquino, D-Chicago, is the bill’s lead sponsor. He said SB 1979 is aimed at protecting “underbanked and unbanked” people who only carry cash. “This bill is making sure that those folks … have an ability to still purchase needed things,” Aquino said. “Getting fuel, getting their medicine at the pharmacy, getting food on the table that they’re able to purchase from groceries and restaurants.” The bill also says retail establishments can’t charge a higher price to customers paying with cash. SB 1979 also exempts restaurants, gas stations, and grocery stores from the requirement between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m. in an effort to protect against robbery. “It goes directly into trying to keep people safe,” Aquino said of the time exemption. “Businesses are accepting cash; we’re just trying to get ahead of the trend that looks like more locations are going for a non-cash payment.” Debate on the measure centered on the question of accessibility versus safety, with Republican opponents arguing that mandating businesses to accept cash was putting them at risk. “What I’m concerned about is the small businessman who operates in an area that he’s worried about theft, or he’s worried about robbery, and he chooses how he runs his business to operate in a certain area,” said Sen. Jil Tracy, R-Quincy. Sen. Steve McClure, R-Springfield, added that not all robberies occur at night. “These businesses, some have been ransacked, and the times in which they were ransacked in the last several years was not between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m.,” McClure said. “They were in broad daylight, and we are seeing that more and more.” The bill also notes that retailers are not required to accept any denomination of currency larger than a $20 bill. A violation could result in a $50 fine for the retail establishment, $100 for a second offense in a 12-month period, or $500 for a third offense during that period. No establishment could be fined more than $5,000 in one year. Statewide building codes Beginning in 2025, Illinois could have statewide building codes for new or substantially renovated commercial and residential construction under a bill that passed the Senate before break. Sponsored by Dave Koehler, D-Peoria, Senate Bill 2368 allows the state’s Capital Development Board to prohibit occupation of such a facility until it is inspected. The building would have to be compliant with several state or federal building codes for electricity, energy efficiency, accessibility, and plumbing, as well as the Fire Investigation Act. “Basically, what this does is establishes a statewide building code as a minimum standard,” Koehler said during floor debate. “Now most communities are going to have well above the minimum standard. But the reason that this is important is because Illinois is one of only six states in the union that does not have a statewide building code.” Koehler said that when Illinois has a natural disaster and applies for funding from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the state has to check a box noting it doesn’t currently have such a code. […]

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ANALYSIS: Report suggests state spending will soon begin outpacing revenues once again 

By JERRY NOWICKICapitol News Illinoisjnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – While Illinois has recently experienced a prolonged stretch of good financial news, a new state fiscal forecast notes that if spending continues to […]

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