Chicago’s NATO costs still being tabulated

June 26, 2012

By Jayette Bolinski

CHICAGO — It’s been more than a month since Chicago hosted the international NATO Summit and its accompanying protesters, but details continue to trickle out about the cost of hosting the two-day event.

Meanwhile, businesses downtown and near McCormick Place — the site of the event — have mixed feelings about how the city handled it.

The 2012 North Atlantic Treaty Organization summit in Chicago, which brought together high-level heads of state to discuss government alliances, technically occurred May 20-21. But some costs, such as security, were incurred in the days leading up to the event. Washington, D.C., is the only other American city to host the summit.

The Ohio House Motel on North La Salle Street, just north of where much of the NATO activity happened, saw a drop in its leisure market — Friday and Saturday guests — that weekend, according to general manager Larry James.

“Usually on the weekends we sell out. All 50 of my rooms would have been sold on a normal weekend,” he said, noting that he lost probably $500 to $1,000 a night during the weekend of the summit.

Business is back to normal, though, James said, adding that he would support Chicago hosting the summit again.

“After seeing how (the World Trade Organization meeting) was handled in Seattle and the ’68 Democratic Convention (in Chicago), I thought it was handled wonderfully,” he said. “A lot of people who came to Chicago that weekend didn’t have the chance to see the whole city. I think some will try to come back again.”

Chicago officials estimate the cost of hosting the event at $55 million, although they say that will be covered by a combination of federal money and private donations. A nonprofit “host committee” — the Chicago NATO Host Committee — was established to handle much of the planning and organization.

The host committee reportedly is compiling the costs, though it’s unclear when the committee’s analysis may be released.

Some of those costs that have been reported:

  • About 3,100 city of Chicago police officers were assigned to NATO duty and incurred overtime. The dollar amount due to the officers has not been disclosed, and the Fraternal Order of Police, the union that represents the officers, has been negotiating with city officials. The city has said it expects a federal grant will cover security costs associated with the summit.
  • The Illinois Emergency Management Agency sent some representatives to Chicago to be available for an emergency. The workers staged at the College of Du Page in Glen Ellyn for four days, and the cost was minimal — about $13,600 — according to agency spokeswoman Patti Thompson. ”This is pretty much within our natural role — preparing for potential emergencies,” Thompson said. “This was a good thing because nothing happened. But if it had, we would have had personnel that would not have been far away that would have been our quick responders.”
  • The host committee paid $5.8 million for insurance coverage for 46 days leading up to, and after, the summit. According to a report in the Chicago Tribune, the insurance through Lloyd’s of London included a $1.3 million premium for up to $100 million in terrorism coverage, as well as coverage for more minor occurrences, such as automobile damage, medical coverage and more.
  • Metra, the city’s commuter rail system, reported a cost of about $800,000, which included added security expenses, such as bomb-sniffing dogs, as well as the cost of lost revenue from commuters who found others means of transportation during the summit.
  • The Evanston Police Department had about $117,000 in overtime and other expenses, for which officials there reportedly will seek reimbursement. It is unclear how many other suburban police departments had expenses associated with the summit.
  • Chicago Parking Meters LLC, which maintains parking meters in the city, reported $65,000 in lost revenue because of street closures and parking restrictions.
  • It is unclear if Chicago’s hotel occupancy was affected during the summit. State-compiled figures on sales taxes and hotel taxes won’t be available until later this summer.

Matt Scannell, who works at Wing Stop on Harrison Street, said business at the restaurant didn’t change much during the NATO summit, noting that the hot weather also could have been a factor in any loss of customers. The staff was prepared for a potential influx of business.

“Sunday was the day (the protesters) did the marching, and they marched right by our store. I was told we had a lot of people buying bottles of water and drinks,” Scannell said. “It didn’t really hurt or help the business out. Sunday was a little slower since they had streets blocked off right in front of our store.”

Scannell said he thought the city adequately was prepared for the NATO protesters and said he would support hosting another summit. He said he was glad it was on a weekend.

“Everything was kept to a minimum. We didn’t have any problems, and we were all worried about the marching, with everyone dispersing and going off in groups in different directions,” he said. “We pretty much spent the day watching people come in and out.”

Eric Swanson, owner of Swanson Bows — a shop that specializes in repairing bows for musical instruments in the Fine Arts Building on Michigan Avenue — said his business was closed for four days because the whole building was closed – closed and boarded-up, actually – for NATO. He said his wife, who is involved with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, also was affected because the group could not play in Symphony Hall. Youth symphonies who meet in the building on weekends also were affected.

“If you think about it, the whole cultural, artistic side of the city was shut down,” Swanson said. “You would think that is something that NATO members and others participating (in the summit) might have wanted to see.”

Swanson said he found it odd that officials decided to shut down parts of the city for the summit, noting that thousands of people flooded downtown Chicago and Grant Park when Barack Obama was elected president and nothing was closed down then.

“Chicago is totally capable of handling a summit like this. It is interesting that it came to Chicago, but there is no need to shut everything down like that. It is almost un-American. It doesn’t make sense to me,” he said.

“(Chicago Mayor) Rahm Emanuel played it up as a big gain for Chicago businesses, like hotels and restaurants, but this city is really made up of small businessmen, and it really wasn’t a good idea for people like me.”

(Reporter Stephanie Fryer contributed to this report.)

House expulsion in 1905 laid groundwork for 2012 Smith case

June 19, 2012

By Jayette Bolinski

SPRINGFIELD — History probably would have overlooked Illinois Rep. Frank Comerford’s speech to law students in Chicago, except for one thing — he named names.

“To say that the Illinois Legislature is a great public auction, where special privileges are sold to the highest corporation bidders, is to put the statement mildly,” Comerford, a Cook County Democrat, told a gathering of Illinois College of Law students and faculty on Jan. 27, 1905.

A 30-year-old lawyer and just months into his first term as a legislator, Comerford then detailed the names of lawmakers rumored to be on the take, how much cash changed hands and where the conversations took place.

Days later, facing fellow lawmakers poised to kick him out of the House, Comerford said he believed the students had a right to know how laws were made here, and that bribery was rampant.

“I was lecturing to the student body of a college — not making charges upon the floor of this House or in the newspapers. I reserve the right to my opinion; I believe now, as I did then, that the stories told me are true,” he said.

Word of Comerford’s speech hit newspapers Jan. 31, and that is how the representative from the 2nd District came to be the first and only lawmaker expelled from the state’s House for “besmirching its good name and reputation” — and it took only nine days for them to do so. Notably, nothing happened to the legislators who allegedly accepted the bribes. Lawmakers said Comerford failed to back up his claims.

For all the corruption that has been exposed in the Illinois Capitol since the state was established in 1818 — six governors indicted or sent to prison, the Cement Bribery Trial of the early 1970s, the famous Paul Powell shoe boxes full of cash and the state auditor who embezzled millions — there is little precedent for how the House should investigate allegations against one of its own.

One hundred and seven years after the Comerford case, state lawmakers grappling with what to do about indicted Democratic state Rep. Derrick Smith have found themselves using the framework of Comerford’s 1905 disciplinary proceedings as a guide for investigating Smith in 2012.

But the framework could use some work, experts say.

State Rep. Elaine Nekritz, who sat on the House Special Investigating Committee to look into the allegations against Smith this spring, said lawmakers relied on rules and guidelines that were “a little convoluted, at best,” she said.

“I think we could have had for this Special Investigating Committee some clearer guidelines on how the process should unfold,” she said. “The framework could use some work. The rules in some ways were contradictory. There just needs to be clearer direction on time frames and notices — those very simple kinds of things.”

Nekritz, a Democrat from Northbrook, said the committee felt it was important to work within the established framework once it began the Smith investigation, even if some of it was murky.

“It would have felt awkward to me to change the rules in the middle of this process. That would have not felt fair to Rep. Smith to me,” she said. “The rules were the rules under which the process was started.”

Smith, of Chicago, is accused of accepting a $7,000 bribe in exchange for trying to steer a $50,000 state contract to a fictitious daycare. Federal investigators caught the transaction on tape.

The House rules call for a particular procedure leading up to any discipline of a lawmaker, whether it’s expulsion, censure, a reprimand or nothing at all. It starts with at least three lawmakers filing a petition requesting an investigation. A Special Investigative Committee is convened to look into the allegations, and then the probe moves into the hands of a bipartisan Select Committee on Discipline, which determines if the lawmaker should be disciplined. If the committee recommends discipline, two-thirds of the full House must agree.

State Rep. Dennis Reboletti, R-Elmhurst, also sat on the committee to investigate Smith. He said the group looked to various sources for guidance on how to proceed, including the Comerford case and the conviction and impeachment hearings of Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

“We looked at as much precedent as possible and, fortunately, this doesn’t happen very often,” said Reboletti, a former prosecutor. “I don’t think it was as simple as looking at one thing in particular, but also trying to modernize things as thought was appropriate for the Smith situation.”

Reboletti said he anticipates the House rules will be changed in the future to identify the level of misconduct that can trigger an investigation. Theoretically, the way the rules are written, a speeding ticket, a cross word or political ax-grinding could trigger an investigation if at least three representatives request an investigation.

“Just because a representative says something on the House floor or in his or her district, like Comerford did, you don’t want to just base an investigation off of that,” he said. “There has to be a more substantive reason for bringing that course of action.”

Kent Redfield, a political science professor at University of Illinois Springfield and an expert on Illinois government, said the General Assembly historically has dealt with situations like Smith’s on case-by-case basis, which is reflective of the political culture in Illinois.

“We generally tend to treat things as kind of ad hoc — deal with this particular situation, make it go away, as opposed to saying are there systemic issues here that we ought to deal with,” he said.

“My guess is that we are going to deal with this particular situation — that at some point Rep. Smith will be expelled before the end of his term — and then we’ll wait for the next incident to occur and then deal with that.”

Other states and the federal government, though, have set up standing ethics committees for their chambers, written codes of conduct for lawmakers, and established a way for the public to file ethics complaints and see those complaints dealt with publicly.

“The political institutions are in trouble at a time when we’re asking the general public to accept some pretty tough decisions. And all of this would work better, I think, if people had more confidence in government,” Redfield said. “I think that there are things the legislature could do to demonstrate that and try to build that confidence.”

Nekritz declined to comment on whether Illinois should have lawmaker codes of conduct and ethics committees for each chamber, but did say she would like to see the House revisit its rules for discipline eventually.

“I think that we will be looking at this portion of the rules as the new General Assembly is seated next January and try to clean this up,” she said.

Reboletti said things always are subject to review, but noted that, “like anything else, you can legislate and write codes all you want, but there are people who will choose not to follow them. I don’t want to say there already are enough (corruption-fighting tools) on the books, but there is a process to review the procedures and see if something new can be done to try to quell that.”

People always can contact state and federal prosecutors about public corruption, but legislative committees can be hamstrung when it comes to getting information from prosecutors, limiting their effectiveness, said Mike Lawrence, a former statehouse reporter, longtime political observer and a former staff member under Republican Gov. Jim Edgar.

“I don’t know of any meaningful substitute for prosecution of wrongdoing. We have laws against doing what Rep. Smith is accused of doing. We have laws prohibiting the kind of action that Gov. (Rod) Blagojevich was sent to prison for,” Lawrence said.

“Frankly, it’s not an easy answer, but the fact of the matter is the culture of corruption in Illinois will change when citizens get as outraged about dishonesty by public officials as they are about not getting their garbage picked up on time or getting the snow shoveled from their streets in a timely fashion.”

Smith’s case continues to make its way through the federal court system. It is unclear if the House will decide to discipline him prior to the November election. His name remains on the November ballot for his district.

In Comerford’s case, he had the last laugh. Even though he was kicked out of the Illinois House in February 1905, he ran as an independent in a special election to fill his seat, and he won re-election on April 4.

He later went on to become a judge in the Superior Court of Cook County and died in 1929. An Associated Press article about his death referred to him as “the boy orator of the Legislature” for his 1905 allegations.

Priorities for Illinois’ women voters: Jobs and economy, not abortion

In Illinois, women voters say the real “war on women” is about jobs, the economy and opportunity.

May 11, 2012

By Jayette Bolinski

SPRINGFIELD — As the country’s two main political parties continue to duke it out in the so-called “war on women,” women voters in Illinois say they believe the hubbub is merely a tool to distract from the bread-and-butter issues they care about.

Jobs. The economy. College affordability. Education cuts. Those are the women’s issues of 2012, women on both sides of the political aisle say. They describe recent proposals to regulate abortion rights and birth control as insulting, divisive, regressive and over the top.

“I really think, especially in Illinois, people have taken that and run with it as a diversion,” said Laurel Bault, a 54-year-old suburban Chicago married mother of two grown children. “So while we’re standing on the corner with signs saying, ‘I’m not livestock,’ they’re selling our state out. It’s kind of a divide-and-conquer tactic to distract from things that are really going on.”

Jan Dorner, president of the nonpartisan Illinois League of Women Voters, which represents about 3,000 women and men voters in the state by hosting political debates and other educational opportunities, said members are sensitive to the “war on women,” mainly because many of them battled issues of birth control and abortion rights decades ago.

“It’s not our priority,” Dorner, 60, said about reproductive-rights issues. “I have a 31-year-old daughter. I’m sure it’s not on her radar. Our members are older, and they fought this fight, what, 30, 40 years ago. When they see this stuff come up again, it makes them nuts.”

Carrie Stark, 33, of rural Smithton, comes from a long line of small business owners in the Metro East region of Illinois. The issues important to her family when she was growing up — job creation and economic growth, particularly — remain key political issues for her today.

She said she sees candidates pandering to women’s votes or to men’s votes and drawing political lines — women believe in this, while men believe in that.

“I see it as, ‘Hey, I’m a woman and my big issue is small business, the economy, jobs.’ And I would say those are probably the issues for the majority of voters right now,” she said.

Indeed. Women are worried about finding a job, putting food on the table, paying for their children’s college tuition and trying to secure their family’s financial future. The “bedroom issues” of gay marriage, birth control and abortion are on women’s radar but aren’t priorities.

A survey in early April by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, a nonpartisan research organization, indicated the top issues for voters — women and men — are the economy, jobs, the budget deficit, health care and education. Issues identified as least important are gay marriage, birth control and abortion.

“I firmly believe that with the state our country is in that the social issues are not the issues people should be making their decisions on,” said Ginny Kronsted, 50, and a small-business owner in the Chicago suburb Aurora.

Kronsted has watched as her four children, ranging in age from 27 to 16, struggle with the job market. Her oldest graduated from college a few years ago with a radio broadcast degree and hasn’t found a job in the industry. Her younger children vie for summer jobs with adults who are searching for work.

“I found it rather insulting that some believe reproductive rights and social issues are all that women care about. For me, it’s secondary, and for any women I know it’s secondary. We want our children better off than we are,” she said.

So is there a war on women?

“I think it’s a war for women. I think people want women’s votes, and everybody is pointing fingers at each other, saying, ‘You’re not for women.’ ‘No, you’re not for women,’” Kronsted said. “You know what? Women vote on issues just like men vote on issues. If someone said, ‘I want the men’s vote,’ people would look at them like, ‘What?’”

Mikal Sutherlin, 37 and born and raised in Chicago, is married, stays home with her three young daughters and is working on an advanced college degree. She said she thinks there is a war on minorities in general — whether they are women, black, gay, unemployed or something else.

“I feel like we’re all stumbling and trying to fight our way through this recession, and I think it’s easier to blame people who aren’t really in the workforce. It’s convenient to look at us and say, ‘You don’t deserve to have your employer pay for birth control,’” Sutherlin said. “It also felt like forced morality on people who can think for themselves.

“I was just really incensed about most of it. I hope most people in general have common sense and realize this is so mean-spirited. It’s a huge distraction from what people need. It felt like a huge step backward into the 1940s or something.”

Sutherlin, who worked in journalism and public relations before deciding to stay home with her children while they are young, said she voted for President Barack Obama in 2008, and she intends to vote for him again. She said her priorities as a voter — the economy, job creation and healthcare — have stayed the same since the last presidential election.

“The last time I voted I was pregnant and I was worried about my job. I was worried about being laid off. Houses all around us were being shuttered and foreclosed upon. That was just the beginning,” she said.

“I guess I’m a post-1970 baby, and I vote. And I’m sorry if it’s going to make some people mad. I’m going to raise my daughters here to be the same way — if you don’t like something, be vocal about it.”

Hannah Neukomm, of Cissna Park, a rural community of just more than 800 in east-central Illinois, is considered a “millenial voter” — between the ages 18 and 29. She is 21, has a son and is in a relationship with her child’s father. She is taking courses for an associate’s degree and works in a quilt shop in her hometown.

She votes Republican and intends to support former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney if he wins the GOP nomination in November. She said she feels the Republican Party’s views are most closely aligned with her own views. Social issues are important to her.

“I think the biggest is abortion. I do not believe in it, and I honestly don’t think we should be able to do it,” she said. “Another thing I take notice of is education. Who will make it easier to access higher education and what not.”

She said she has felt frustration as a voter.

“I honestly don’t think some of the issues people campaigned on last year, such as jobs and the economy, were ever addressed. They try to mix it up and talk about something new, and they’ll make a big deal about that, and you forget whether or not the last subject was fixed,” Neukomm said, adding that she thinks women voters’ priorities are taken seriously, but only to an extent.

“That can be seen in all aspects of life. Look at wage differences. A woman still makes less than a man,” she said. “They think we do not pay attention to what is going on, but, realistically, we probably do more than (men) do, we listen to the news and we have a sense of what is going on.”

Frustration among young voters like Neukomm is a concern for people like Bault, who is active in the Tri-County Civic Leadership Project in the collar counties of Chicago. The organization tries to rally voters to become engaged and maybe run for office some day.

“I am so hopeful when I talk to young voters because I think they have such a firm grasp on a much fairer and better world,” Bault said.

“One of the saddest things to me is when the powers-that-be are successful at getting people to throw up their hands and say, ‘I’m done with the whole process.’ I know women are smarter than that. Instead of turning away and throwing our hands up, we need to go organize and turn out at the polls.”

Dashboard cookies: a new take on the old heat-wave story

dashboardcookies

So we could debate for days about what constitutes “news” and “journalism.” But sometimes the thing that everyone is talking about — the “news” in a community — has been written about until reporters’ eyes are ready to bleed.

Take a heat wave, for instance. Go to the cooling center. Check. Call the hospitals and the coroner. Check. Catch up with athletes at practices. Check. Find some people with hot jobs. Check. Who’s at the pool? Check.

You get the picture.

Such was the case this past August, when oppressive heat and humidity settled on Springfield like a wet, wooly blanket. We’d been wanting to do some kind of video project about the heat, but didn’t want to do the old fry-an-egg-on-the-sidewalk number. I’d noticed that some colleagues at the Post-Dispatch in St. Louis had tried to bake dashboard cookies in the heat a day or two earlier, and I figured why not give it a whirl here. So I picked up some cookie dough at the store and grabbed my cookie sheets. SJ-R photographer Justin Fowler rigged up a camera inside a car to take photos of the cookies every few seconds for a time-lapse video. I posted occasional updates about the status of the cookies and the temperature inside the car, which essentially became an oven, reaching about 175 degrees inside.

The result was a fun, memorable project that generated buzz and page views for SJ-R.com and got people talking about the heat in a different way (Romenesko even picked it up). The project also served as a means for reminding readers about not leaving pets or loved ones in the car unattended in the heat. Was it journalism? I think so.

Click here to check out the blog entry I wrote about the project, and be sure to click on the time-lapse video.

Police excavate lot after report of foul odor

cistern

I spent more than six hours at this scene, watching as Springfield police, beginning with shovels and then moving to heavy equipment, dug up an entire lot on Wirt Avenue, after a public works crew reported smelling a foul odor upon demolishing a structure. A local woman who went missing in April 2008 last was seen near this neighborhood, and a man who had lived in the house previously had an extensive criminal record. Police wanted to exhaust all avenues to ensure there were no human remains on the property. None were found. It was a fascinating exercise to watch.

Police find nothing in excavated cistern

Nov. 10, 2010

Springfield police detectives and a city public works crew on Wednesday found nothing after excavating an old cistern at 1846 S. Wirt Ave. to try to pinpoint the source of a foul odor.

Police and work crews reached the bottom of the cistern shortly before 10 p.m. Officials said the hole would be filled Friday.

Springfield Deputy Police Chief Cliff Buscher said a squad car would be assigned outside the home to guard the large hole today.

“We’ll have a city crew come by and fill it on Friday,” he said.

Buscher previously had stopped short of calling the probe a death investigation, although detectives and crime scene technicians participated in the excavation.

Public works employees originally went to the property Monday to tear down the red single-story house, which neighbors said had been mostly vacant since a tornado damaged it a few years ago. The crew dislodged the cap on a basement cistern, and workers reported a foul stench coming from inside. Crews notified police and backfilled the basement hole.

Detectives interviewed workers and neighbors afterwards and on Tuesday. They returned to the site Wednesday with a public works backhoe, two dump trucks and about a dozen detectives and crime scene technicians.

Dump trucks hauled away load after load of dirt as crews dug a hole almost as wide as the lot to make it easier for police to get to the cistern.

Detectives entered the hole a little after 5 p.m. Wednesday and started hand digging. They called off the search about five hours later, including a period when they had to take a break to allow water to be pumped out of the hole.

Buscher said he felt police had to check out the odor.

“I’d rather spend the time and the effort checking it out instead of second-guessing it and later find out there was something down there that we didn’t look for,” he said.

The house was one of 41 boarded-up properties the city purchased in August. Most had been cited for weed, grass and solid waste violations over the years.

A man who lived in the house previously has an extensive criminal record, including arrests for domestic battery and unlawful restraint in 2001, battery, driving under the influence, marijuana possession, unlawful use of a weapon, violating orders of protection and animal cruelty. Police did not say he was a suspect in anything associated with the stench at the house.

Stabbing melee leaves city man dead

mele

One of the most memorable interviews I’ve ever done with a witness. Mr. Collier’s eyes were swollen shut from the beating he took in the fight. He was missing teeth and spitting blood, and he talked to me inside his all-but-empty trailer, which had no running water or heat. He became upset and started crying, and I recall him saying to me, “I used to be a good-looking dude,” as he talked about the melee and pulled out a family photo album to show me. Meanwhile, random people were milling around outside the trailer and up and down the street. I actually texted another reporter to drive by and check on me.

Stabbing melee leaves city man dead

Oct. 5, 2010

A melee involving a knife, a tire iron and a meat hook that resulted in the stabbing death of a Springfield man Monday night may have stemmed from an earlier fight at a mobile home down the block, according to a man who lives there.

Neighbors and the Sangamon County coroner identified the victim as Jacob Folder, 25. He was pronounced dead at 12:07 a.m. Tuesday while in surgery at St. John’s Hospital. An autopsy indicated the cause of death was a stab wound to the upper body.

In all, there were five victims, according to Sangamon County sheriff’s investigators.

The fight, which happened at a house in the 100 block of South Livingston Street, came to the attention of police about 10:30 p.m., when a Springfield police officer tried to pull over a speeding car. The driver at first would not stop. When he did, he told the officer he was on his way to the hospital with Folder, who’d been stabbed and needed medical attention.

The other victims, who are in their late 30s and early 40s, went to hospitals by ambulance and in private vehicles. Their conditions were not available Tuesday evening, although authorities said one had been treated and released. Not all of them were stabbed.

No details were available about what prompted the melee, how many attackers were involved or the nature of all the victims’ injuries.

Gary Collier, 39, who said he moved into a trailer on Livingston after being released from prison in August, told The State Journal-Register the attack probably stemmed from an earlier dispute at his home in which he, too, was attacked. Collier suffered a broken bone around his eye, broken ribs and cuts on his face.

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Black Friday shopping fun

blackfriday

As I’ve said before, covering Black Friday shopping madness in Springfield is one of my favorite assignments. Yes, it’s cold. Yes, it’s the middle of the night. But there is such a feeling of excitement and fun in the air that I can’t help but enjoy being out and about with some of central Illinois’ most hard-core bargain hunters. I absolutely love it.

The last several years I’ve blogged Black Friday throughout the night, updating readers on the length of lines, posting photos and talking to shoppers about what they’re after and how they’re holding up in the cold. Two years ago I used a laptop. Last year I was able to blog solely using my smart phone. This year I’ll be using an iPad and Cover It Live, which I’m really looking forward to because it will enable me to post real-time updates and also chat with readers throughout the night. Check in at SJ-R.com closer to Black Friday for more details.

This is the newspaper story that resulted from last year’s Black Friday live-blogging.

Black Friday trumps Thanksgiving for some shoppers

Nov. 26, 2010

If you want to talk about folks who take their Black Friday shopping serious, meet the four women who were at the front of the Springfield Toys R Us line Thursday night – Desiree Embree, Darcy Miller, Jessica Hamblin and Teage Marcum.

Embree, of Riverton, and Miller, of Petersburg, are sisters. Hamblin, of Oakford, and Marcum, of San Jose, are sisters, too. Neither pair knew the other pair until they got acquainted standing in line overnight, but they got along so well you would have thought they’d known each other a lifetime. They all got to the store about 5 p.m. Thursday to wait for its 10 p.m. opening and special sales.

Embree technically was the first in line.

Asked what she was hoping to buy, she replied: “Zhu Zhu Pets. … Give me a second – I’ll get my list here. Zhu Zhu Pets, the Crayola stuff, Bugsby stuff, Aquasand …

“That’s what I’m getting here. I’ve got a list for all my other stores, too,” she said.

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Blagojevich trial starts this week

Blagojevich Indictment

Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich goes on trial this week on federal corruption charges. I will be dusting off a news quiz from late in 2009 that we will run at SJ-R.com occasionally during the trial. When it ran the first time, we didn’t have the interactive quiz feature on the site that we have now, so it was quite “print-tastic.” I’ll update some of the questions, but for now, here’s a taste of what you’ll find at the online quiz later this week. (I’ll post a link once it’s up and running.)

Which is not a quote from the Second City show, “Rod Blagojevich, Superstar!”

A. “Who cares if I was taped?”

B. “Blagojevich, Superstar! Are you as nuts as we think you are?”

C. “I was the greatest Serbian politician the world has ever seen — outside Serbia.”

D. “Have you seen Springfield? It’s a (filthy hole).”

(Answer: A)

What code name did state troopers guarding the Blagojevich family give Rod’s hairbrush?

A. “The cattle prod”

B. “The iron maiden”

C. “The football”

D. “Old sparky”

(Answer: C)

If you enjoy news quizzes and would like to read some more of my quiz-writing work, click here. I’ve written all but two (May 15-21 and Black History Month).

Amber Jack’s incident sparks outrage on Facebook

This story about an altercation at Amber Jack Ale House in Springfield came to my attention while working on Police Beat in May.

After the story was published on SJ-R.com and then the newspaper the following day, readers began calling and emailing the newspaper wanting to talk about experiences they had at the restaurant. A short time later, two sites sprang up on Facebook — one calling for a boycott of Amber Jack’s and the other asking people to share their stories about being banned by the Amber Jack’s owner who was the subject of my story. Within about 24 hours or so one of the Facebook sites had more than 1,000 “fans” and the other had more than 500. It’s a fascinating example of the power of social networking. By the way, the ‘boycott’ site later was pulled by Facebook for violating its rules about personal attacks.

Amber Jack owner, customer cited after altercation Saturday

May 10, 2010

The owner of Amber Jack Ale House and a customer face battery charges after a weekend confrontation at the Springfield restaurant that allegedly involved shoving and slapping.

Police issued notices to appear in court to Amber Jack owner Catherine D. McHenry, 53, of the 2000 block of South Willemore Avenue and customer Charles T. Silvey, 47, of Athens.

The incident happened about 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the business, 3150 Chatham Road. Police said they arrived to find the restaurant’s co-owner, who is McHenry’s husband, holding Silvey down on the floor. Numerous customers were inside, including prom parties and others.

Police provided this account of the confrontation:

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Bar wars

sammy

This story was the talker in Springfield in mid-February. I pieced it together mostly using public documents, including police reports and court filings.

Bar wars? Police investigate incidents at two downtown taverns

Feb. 17, 2010

The owner of a closed downtown sports bar was questioned over the weekend about the destruction of 10 windows at a tavern across the street that is owned by his landlord, with whom he has been at odds, according to police reports.

Tom Kelty, 39, who owns Sammy’s Sports Bar at 217 S. Fifth St., denied any role in the vandalism, which caused $6,000 damage to the front windows at Floyd’s Thirst Parlor across the street at 210 S. Fifth St. Floyd’s is owned by Dennis Polk, who also owns the building that housed Sammy’s Sports Bar.

Court records show that Kelty and Polk have been embroiled in a lease dispute over the Sammy’s building since December 2004. A judge overseeing the case last week ordered Kelty to vacate the building by noon this Friday.

About noon Tuesday, police were sent to 217 S. Fifth St. after Kelty climbed a ladder and took a knife to the property’s blue awning and cut out all of the Sammy’s Sports Bar logos.

“I did climb up out front and I cut our logo and our name off the canopy out front,” Kelty said. “Our name is registered with the state. It’s trademarked. We own it; we bought it; we paid for it.”

Sangamon County sheriff’s deputies are stationed outside the former Sammy’s building this morning to head off any problems or answer any questions that might crop up, according to chief deputy Jack Campbell.

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Food pantries always need help, not just at the holidays

foodpantry

Last fall I started hearing rumblings about food pantries in Springfield running low on food long before Thanksgiving hit. In October I began chatting with some of the local pantries, and sure enough, supplies were running low, even as the need was going up as people struggled with the realities of a recession. The result was this story and a lesson learned — food pantries can use our help all year long, not just during the Thanksgiving and Christmas seasons. In addition to the story, I compiled a list of all the food pantries in Springfield and the surrounding counties so readers could at a glance find a pantry to help. I also included tips for organizing a food drive.

Supplies tight at local food pantries

Oct. 26, 2009

On Friday, some shelves at Kumler Outreach Ministries’ food pantry on Springfield’s north end were empty.

There was no canned fruit, spaghetti noodles, chili, or pork and beans. There were four jars of peanut butter, some jelly, several bags of corn flakes and Ramen noodles, loaves of bread and a few heads of cabbage, as well as some other supplies. The freezer was stocked with bags of frozen corn, individually wrapped tilapia filets and other foods.

Tight food supplies have become the rule, not the exception, all around central Illinois. Food-pantry coordinators say they are seeing more new faces in a tough economy and are concerned about their ability to help.

Some report donations are down, while others say contributions are steady. But they all say the number of people needing food is on the rise, and that means pantries must stretch limited resources.

Pantry staffs say they are working hard to find the best bargains on food, seeking out more donations from individuals and companies, and sometimes not filling a needy family’s grocery bag quite as full, just to make sure there is enough to go around.

“There is no doubt in my mind that until they get jobs in this area, it’s going to continue,” said Rebecca Eaton, administrator of the Jacksonville Area Community Food Center, which operates a food pantry from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Between Oct. 1, 2008 and Sept. 30, 2009, the Jacksonville pantry served about 7,700 people compared to 6,600 and 5,600 the previous two years. On Friday, the pantry provided food for 15 families, of which five were new clients.

“It does that almost every day. It’s just getting crazier and crazier,” Eaton said. “We try to help the poor, the working poor and everybody in between, above or below. We just don’t want to see people go hungry.”

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Careful with that turkey fryer

Springfield firefighters in November demonstrated what can happen when Thanksgiving chefs aren’t careful with their turkey fryers. Having written about numerous turkey fryer fires over the years, I was curious and shot a short video of the demonstration, which involved a lot of flames and a blackened turkey. And I don’t mean Cajun.

Grieving mother: Son deserved a better life

In August I sat through a tearful interview with Dawn Whalen, whose son, Tony Mabie, was struck by three alleged drunk drivers on Toronto Road. He died from his injuries. The criminal cases against the drivers, one of whom was a firefighter, are pending. This story was the result of the interview with Whalen.

Mom: Hit-and-run victim deserved a better life

Aug. 29, 2009

Tony Mabie coped with a learning disability as a youngster, a debilitating injury as an adult and lifelong feelings that he did not measure up.

His biggest enemy was himself, but he had dreams for the future, said his mother, Dawn Whalen of Buffalo. Now, she is hurt and angered by her son’s death at the hands of multiple hit-and-run drivers.

Mabie, 26, was walking along Toronto Road about 2 a.m. Tuesday, when he was struck by as many as three vehicles, two of which fled the scene.

The driver of one of the vehicles, a Springfield firefighter, allegedly was intoxicated, based on court filings, but had the presence of mind to stop and call 911. He was arrested for driving under the influence, but has not been charged with any other crimes.

It is unclear what happened from there. Springfield police said earlier this week they’ve recovered all three vehicles involved in the crime. Investigators would not comment otherwise on Friday.

“It hurts me to think my son felt so discounted all his life, and that’s the way he left this life,” Whalen said Friday. “Tony was not a fighter, he was not aggressive. He’s never hurt a soul. He fought to try to be a better person. He deserved a chance to have a better life.”

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That’s no ordinary limousine

While covering the Illinois State Fair this year, I was offered a chance to ride in the starting gate car prior to one of the races.

The car — a mobile start gate — basically is a modified white limousine with two front ends that has an automated starting gate on it. The men inside the car activate the gates at the appropriate time, and they swing out on either side of the car. The racers then line up in their designated spots behind the gate, and the limo takes off with the horses following. The limo speeds up and gets out of the way of the horses just as they cross the start line.

But that’s not the end of it. The car continues on around the track along with the harness racers. Inside the car are two patrol judges who monitor the racing to make sure no infractions take place. A driver at the other end of the car drives it around the track.

I used the Flip video cam to film the one-mile race from inside the car.