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Capitol Fax com - Your Illinois News Radar » Mayor overplays her hand yet again

=== I was told that he hasn’t reviewed it yet. === I bet Dave Dring laughed at that one. When you put yourself out there as a Progressive, but the only allies you can consistently bank on are the Tribune editorial board, you are eventually going to get jammed up like this in Springfield. You gotta wonder how Durkin feels about Lightfoot’s threat to soak his taxpayers with Chicago’s pension problems too. - James the Intolerant - Friday, Apr 30, 21 @ 10:53 am: “Grossly underfunded”. Daley was 5 for 22, hitting .227. Sen. Martwick’s bill could pass now. Mayor Lightfoot’s Would not. By requiring Martwick to negotiate with the Mayor’s people, Pres. Harmon is demonstrating deference and respect to the new (ish) mayor.

Dempster Dunkin Donuts To Be Demolished For New Dunkin Donuts

Reply The Dunkin Donuts location at 3900 Dempster St. is due to be demolished and replaced with a new location of the same franchise. (Google Maps) SKOKIE, IL The Skokie Village Board this month unanimously approved a plan to demolish an existing drive-thru Dunkin Donuts on Dempster Street and replace it with a new drive-thru Dunkin Donuts in the same location. Local franchisee Reena Panjwani Khowaja and architect Steve Kolber of Evanston-based Kolbrook Design told the plan commission last month that the new facility would meet updated corporate standards and include a slightly larger footprint. The existing building described in village materials as 60 to 70 years old and listed as 53 years old by the Cook County Assessor s Office has served its useful life, they said, and the new one will include a better parking layout and a more efficient drive-thru flow. There will also be a patio for open-air dining.

Cook County Clerk Loses Bid to Be Freed From Oversight

Downtown Chicago. (Photo via Jürgen Polle/Pixabay) CHICAGO (CN) A set of decades-old consent decrees aimed at ending patronage in Illinois government will stay in place for now, a federal appeals panel ruled Friday. The so-called Shakman decrees from 1972 and 1991 are still needed to oversee hiring practices, at least when it comes to the Cook County Clerk’s Office, according to the Seventh Circuit. However, the panel warned that the decrees had been in place for far too long. “Permitting a consent decree over an arm of state or local government (here, the Cook County Clerk) to anchor itself on a federal docket for decades is inconsistent with our federal structure,” U.S. Circuit Judge Michael Y. Scudder, a Donald Trump appointee, wrote in the panel’s opinion.

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