Senator Fowler comments on Gov. Rauner’s budget address

Sen. Fowler Week-in-Review: February 12-16, 2018

The second major milestone in Illinois state government for the year was hit this week, with lawmakers coming together from both the Senate and the House of Representatives to listen to the annual Budget Address on Feb. 14.

After attending the speech, State Sen. Dale Fowler (R-Harrisburg) was cautiously optimistic about the spending plan presented to the General Assembly.

“One of the fundamentally basic, but still critical, aspects of the Governor’s spending plan is that it is balanced, adhering to our Constitutional requirement and calling for the state to spend within its means,” said Sen. Fowler. “Stability won’t be sustained on a foundation of reckless spending or a crushing tax burden. We have to be realistic and responsible, working toward a brighter future for our state by putting an end to the cycle of overspending and overtaxing.”

Other key points from the speech critical for downstate Illinois include $100 million for higher education improvements, $100 million for statewide emergency repairs and calls for 100 new Illinois State Police Cadets, urging a tougher approach toward crime.

“Another exciting component to the proposed budget is the direct investment in the future of Southern Illinois, allocating $1 million toward the Cairo river port project,” said Sen. Fowler. “Our region has so much to offer this state in terms of opportunities, future development and potential. I’m extremely encouraged that this budget recognizes the need to invest in Southern Illinois and takes steps toward revitalizing and reviving Cairo and our surrounding communities.”

With a balanced budget on the table, Sen. Fowler stresses the importance for lawmakers to work together moving forward.

“This budget isn’t perfect and just like any other budget proposal, we have work ahead of us and tough decisions to make. However, we have a good starting foundation: a balanced budget that outlines some of the critical areas for Illinois to address. Lawmakers now have a responsibility to come together, pass the reforms our state so desperately needs, and pass a budget that works for our state and the people we represent,” concluded Sen. Fowler.

In other news this week, Illinois lost a true hero when Chicago Police Commander Paul Bauer was shot and killed on Feb. 13. In honor of his memory, all entities governed by the Illinois Flag Display Act were instructed to fly both the United States and Illinois state flags at half-staff. Commander Bauer lost his life while confronting an armed suspect outside the James R. Thompson Center, a state government office building in downtown Chicago. Bauer was a 31-year veteran of the Chicago Police Department.

Finally, Sen. Fowler is reminding people about the upcoming voter registration deadline. Illinois residents looking to vote in the March 20 primary election need to be registered by Feb. 20, which is the end of the regular registration period. This deadline also applies to those people who need to change their names or addresses. More information on registration and how to vote can be found on Sen. Fowler’s website, senatorfowler.com.

No, there haven’t been 18 school shootings in 2018. That number is flat wrong.

The stunning number swept across the Internet within minutes of the news Wednesday that, yet again, another young man with another semiautomatic rifle had rampaged through a school, this time at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in South Florida.

The figure originated with Everytown for Gun Safety, a nonprofit group, co-founded by Michael Bloomberg, that works to prevent gun violence and is most famous for its running tally of school shootings.

“This,” the organization tweeted at 4:22 p.m. Wednesday, “is the 18th school shooting in the U.S. in 2018.”

Please click on the link below John Woodrow Cox and Steven Rich of the Washington Post.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/no-there-havent-been-18-school-shooting-in-2018-that-number-is-flat-wrong/2018/02/15/65b6cf72-1264-11e8-8ea1-c1d91fcec3fe_story.html?utm_term=.30549cf04912

 

State Senator Dale Fowler: Week in review

HARRISBURG – Illinois lawmakers spent the week leading up to the highly-anticipated Budget Address working in committees, beginning the process of moving legislation and gearing up for floor action, according to State Sen. Dale Fowler (R-Harrisburg).

During committees, Sen. Fowler advanced legislation that would create a tax increment financing (TIF) extension for the City of Marion. Senate Bill 2303 would extend the life of the existing TIF for Williamson County for an additional 12 years, pushing for continued improvement and economic development in the area.

“We should be doing all we can to spur economic development in Southern Illinois. This legislation is simply extending a path forward for Williamson County to bring in investment, implement improvements and encourage economic growth in the region,” said Sen. Fowler.

The TIF extension unanimously passed out of the Senate Revenue Committee on Feb. 7 and will now advance to the Senate for floor action.

In other news from the Capitol, a joint hearing of the Senate Appropriations I and II Committees received an update from the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget on the state’s finances. Next week, lawmakers will return to the Capitol for a joint session of the General Assembly to hear the Governor deliver his annual Budget Address on his framework for Fiscal Year 2019 on Feb. 14.

Also heard in committee this week was legislation that would raise the legal smoking age to 21, a measure to expand the number of people eligible to use medical marijuana, and a joint Senate and House hearing on the state’s response to the Legionella outbreak at the Quincy Veterans’ Home.

News in the District

Before heading to Springfield for the week, Sen. Fowler made some stops around the District, beginning with a tour of the Laidlaw Building in Metropolis. Sen. Fowler visited the old factory facility, learning about the current steps being taken to demolish the abandoned property, sell the materials for scrap and use those funds for the expansion of Fort Massac State Park.

Sen. Fowler also stopped at the Shawnee National Forest to visit the new Outpost on Karbers Ridge Road by Garden of the Gods. Sen. Fowler is excited for the business development and is optimistic that the business is meeting a need within the area.

Finally, Sen. Fowler is sharing news from the Illinois Department of Transportation about an upcoming road closure in the area. Beginning Feb. 20, IL 34, approximately 1.75 miles east of Thompsonville, will be closed. Repairs are being made on a drainage structure and will require the road to be closed through March 2.

What do you grab when your house is on Fire?

By Kendee Pemberton 

Four and a half weeks ago the fan on our wood furnace caught fire. It was during the day and most of us were home. Jake was sick and asleep in his bed, Mark had just finished his last midnight shift for the month and was upstairs asleep, Caleb was out of school early, and I was working in my office. I noticed that it smelled a little too hot (which isn’t all that uncommon when it’s 13 degrees and you heat with wood), so I went out to check on it, choked it down a bit more, came back in, grabbed a cup of coffee went back to my office.

When I got back to my desk smoke was coming up from behind my computer – I thought – but by the time I got up and moved the tower the smoke was rolling out from the duct under the desk….and through the rest of the house. I ran to find the source and discovered the North side of the house ablaze. Smoke and flame were blowing into the ductwork of the house.

The rest of the day is a blur of craziness…..we fought the fire with buckets until the fire department arrived (when you are in panic mode you forget the garden hose stored in the basement). Because of the overexertion and smoke (and firefighting barefoot in his underwear), Mark had to be taken by ambulance to the hospital – and Katie (who recently passed the EMT exam) rode with him, Jake and the dog sat in my car until Grandma came and got him. Caleb and I ran through the house gathering what was most precious until we were assured that the fire was no longer burning inside the wall.

Things have been crazy – we lived in a hotel for almost three weeks and worked every evening to try to get the house back in order (at least a more normal chaotic state), but our insurance company has been amazing – they have really taken care of us.

During this entire process all I can think of is how very blessed we are. It could have been so much worse. Jake was asleep 4 feet from the fire – but the fire happened during the day and we got out. The Fire department was here in 6 minutes. Mark is ok. We lost very little (with the exception of the Judy Neal couch…..Mike Heathcoat is pretty upset about that…..). The damage was mostly outside – with just some smoke and mess inside. It has been an inconvenience – but I say again, we are so blessed….and it could have been so much worse.

As I was starting to put things back in place I became very aware of what things are important to me. The pile of some of the items included family photos, the drawing Marlene Webb did of Tyler, our bibles, Caleb’s player of the week football, Eli’s Mr. Bear, and the much loved china doll that my grandparents brought me from Mexico (her name is Senorita…..because what else would you name her?). Some of the other items are the (probably now not politically correct) tea set that Grandma Bain and I used to have tea parties with, belt buckles that Mark’s grandpa earned in the mines, pot holders perfectly crocheted (and I mean perfectly!!) by my Grandma Great (Odom), a Bakelite watch box that was Grandma Dungy’s, and a crocheted bonnet that Grandma Adaleen wore as a baby.

There was also a little coin purse that has sales tickets inside that are made out to Billy Dungy – and marked “paid in full” – because that’s how he did business, and the thing that probably spoke to me the most: a bible presented to Mr and Mrs Kenneth Odom Dec 25, 1945 from Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Odom. There are newspaper clippings and other small momentous tucked in the pages – including the rose she carried when she married my grandpa….it had been a gift from her brother Thurmond. The newest inscription said “presented to my oldest granddaughter Kendee for her 23rd birthday. May it bring you much knowledge in Christ’s Love as it has served me 45 years. Your Loving Grandma – Adaleen “Nanna”.

As we work on the repairs to the house, I’m also reminded of the hardest working man I ever knew, who tore down a school house and rebuilt it into this place 80 years ago. It amazes me to see his work inside the walls (now open and available for view) – the sills carved of black oak – as strong now as it was then because of the care he put into it. This house, built by a man with a third grade education – not because he wasn’t a good student – but because he CHOSE to send his brothers in the available shoes instead of go himself, has been a place of refuge for brothers, their wives, and their children, sons, and grandkids. I’m so grateful that it still stands – prepared to continue in service to our family as the heritage continues.

For me, when my house was on fire, the things that were important were the people I love – the heritage that was given to me – or the heritage that is being built on the foundation of the ones who came before. As we began to put the pieces back together, I have been touched by so many memories – all good – of family who built a foundation on the love of Christ, hard work, and undying love for their kin. I am so blessed.

NOTE:  Mark and Kendee Pemberton have been friends of mine most of my adult life.  They are the type of friends that we do not cross paths much, but when we do we talk awhile.

They live in the northeastern part of the county.  This was originally a blog post, and gracefully she gave me the permission to use it. -Steve

Steve’s Ramblings: A League That has Left Me Behind

By Steve Dunford

In this past, this used to be one of my favorite days of the year.  This year, I am not watching one down of the Super Bowl.

I watched the fourth quarter of the AFC championship game.  I felt like I was doing something dirty, like I was sneaking to do something like I shouldn’t do as a kid.  I was a good boy overall, but I was all boy at times.

I am not a fly by night NFL fan.  This will be the first one in four decades I am going to miss.  The players kneeling for the National Anthem, turned my stomach.

Miami Times image

I was going to watch the Super Bowl, but when the league refused to show an add for AMVETS, is when I made up my mind to not watch “the big game.”

The first Super Bowl I can remember was in 1977.  It was the Denver Broncos vs. the Dallas Cowboys.  I remember the Orange Crush shirts.

The next season, I fell in love with the Pittsburgh Steelers.  I had a Bradshaw Jersey that I wanted to wear to school as soon as my mother washed it.  I wanted to wear it to church.  Mom limited me to wearing it one day a week.  She was afraid the women of Thompsonville would talk that I had few clothes.

Those Cowboys became public enemy number one.  I still don’t like them.  They have climbed up or below what ever you want to interpret as my third least favorite team from the Patriots and the Rams.

The Steelers were my AFC team, but my NFC team was the St. Louis Cardinals.  If St. Louis would have built  Bill Bidwell a stadium, they would have never left in my opinion.

After the reality of the Big Red leaving the city of St. Louis decided to build a stadium, in a “Field of Dreams” moment, if they build it they will come.

The Rams came to St. Louis in 1995.  There was some bad football in the early days.  I decided that I was going to like this team win or lose.  It was like drinking castor oil in the early days.

I remember the late Jack Buck who called Super Bowl I for CBS, three years before I was born.  He went on a rant during a rain delay of a Cardinal game.  It was during a time baseball was hurting.

He said “I give the Rams 15 years before they move back to LA.”  His prophecy was right on the money, only five years short.

The “Greatest Show on Turf”  gave me some wonderful memories with winning a Super Bowl in 1999, led by QB Kurt Warner, RB Marshall Faulk and WR Torry Holt.

I endured some bad football, when majority owner Georgia Frontiere’s estate sold to a majority group led by Walmart tycoon Stan Kronke, I thought was a good move.

The league refusing ownership of the to minority owner Rush Limbaugh raised my eyebrows of the political correctness of the NFL.  With Cape Giraudeau being his hometown, the NFL feared he would want to keep the Rams in St. Louis.

Being sore about the Rams moving has not healed with me.  I adopted the Packers.

It was week two of this season, I had an afternoon planned of “remote control aerobics” flipping between football games and the NASCAR race.

The Steelers were going to be shown on CBS.  It was kneeling or locking arms.  I applaud West Point graduate and former Army Ranger Alejandro Villanueva for standing in the tunnel for saluting the flag.

I cancelled my subscription to Red Zone.  I was going to get the sports package out of my house.  It is worth the five bucks to me watch college basketball, the NFL Network is part of it.

One thing that understand is there have been people angry with me for my stance.  It might be one, but I do not want my cable box monitoring I am watching NBC.  I also refuse to watch any commercial online.

There was a Super Bowl party planned at my apartment.  The only thing I did not know about it.  If someone will knock at my door with chicken wings, I am saying I will eat your wings, but we are not watching the game.

There is another sport that I will give up if they strike.  The current collective bargaining agreement in Major League Baseball expires in 2022.

Agents are calling for players to boycott spring training.  Any player that refuses to play, there is someone in AAA that would love to have your spot on the roster.

Yu Darvish, Lance Lynn, and Jake Arrieta is still on the market.  Honestly, in this trio, are these guys worth $20 million to pitch every five days?

There are guys that are making eight figures to play a game.  With the NFL, it disgusts me when players disrespect the flag and the league refuses to sell a 30 second spot to an organization made up of men and women who fought to give them the right to play football.

I thought what is going on in MLB goes hand in hand.  Cardinal pitcher Adam Wainwright made a statement.  “The first million dollars means you will live more than comfortable the rest of your life.  The rest you can help people in a world that needs it the most.”

This is my view, and I will stick to my guns.   I hope it is not taken as being a crepe hanger.

Every event like the Super Bowl there will be posts on social media, how much football players are paid and how less career people are paid like nurses, policeman, and teachers.

I am not knocking the three professions at all.  They do a lot of work for low pay.

The only ones that will not be richer than Justin Timberlake on the field today will be the owners.  It seems like the same crowd that gripes about sports figures does not care that rock starts, actors and Oprah makes.

I tried to keep this under 300 words.  I apologize for going over the four figure mark.  I just had a lot to say.

The NFL has left me behind.  This old geezer does not understand the lack of patriotism.  If Major League Baseball “wildcats”, using an old coal mine term, I will be done as well.

 

 

 

 

Is a fair immigration compromise possible out of failed Schumer shutdown?

Illinois Senator Dick Durbin with New Yourk Senator Chuck Schumer (Politico image)

Is there a fair, reasonable way to deal with immigration without shutting down the government as the Democrats did just recently?

Yes.

A way to save the “Dreamers” and build President Donald Trump’s wall to protect the borders, and lower the anxiety of millions of Dreamer parents, those immigrants who crossed over illegally for a better life in America.

A way for Americans to accept immigration policy as fair, not just something jammed down their throats by politicians.

Please click to read the rest of the editorial from John Kass of the Chicago Tribune.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/kass/ct-met-shutdown-immigration-kass-0124-story.html

 

Become an official — stay connected to high school sports

By Bob Gardner, Executive Director of the National Federation of State High School Associations and Craig Anderson, Executive Director of the Illinois High School Association.

These individuals are so important that, in fact, there would be no organized competitive sports at the high school level without the men and women who officiate these contests every day across the country. Subtract the dedicated men and women who officiate high school sports and competitive sports would no longer be organized; they would be chaotic.

In some areas, high school officials are retiring faster than new licenses are being issued. And junior varsity, freshmen and middle school games are being postponed – or even cancelled – because there are not enough men and women to officiate them.

Anyone looking for a unique way to contribute to the local community should consider becoming a licensed high school official. For individuals who played sports in high school, officiating is a great way to stay close to the sport after their playing days have ended. Officiating helps people stay in shape, expands their social and professional network and offers part-time work that is flexible, yet pays. In fact, officiating is a form of community service, but with compensation.

Another benefit of officiating is that individuals become role models so that teenagers in the community can learn the life lessons that high school sports teach. Students learn to respect their opponents and the rules of the game and the importance of practicing good sportsmanship thanks, in part, to those men and women who officiate. And the objectivity and integrity that high school officials display is an example that every young person needs to observe firsthand. In short, communities around the country will be stronger because of the life lessons that high school officials help teach the next generation.

Officiating is a great way to stay connected to sports and to give back to the local high school and community. We need dedicated men and women to become involved so that high school sports can continue to prosper for years to come.

Individuals interested in learning more about becoming a high school official, and even begin the application process, can do so at www.HighSchoolOfficials.com.

The pundits swoon over Oprah for 2020 – but running for president is brutal

Oprah Winfrey suddenly has the best of all worlds—a flood of gushing praise about the possibility of running for president without actually having to do it.

Business Insider photo.

And if she does do it, well, she’ll quickly learn that being an entertainment icon is far easier than taking positions on tough issues and dealing with a tsunami of political attacks.

What, for instance, is Oprah’s position on trade with China? Chain migration? Arming Syrian rebels? Financing infrastructure projects? It’s one thing to be a hugely successful talk show host and a pal of Barack Obama, and another to take on the world’s problems in a hyper-polarized atmosphere.

Please click on the link for the full story and video from Howard Kurtz of Fox News.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/01/09/pundits-swoon-over-oprah-for-2020-but-running-for-president-is-brutal.html

 

 

 

 

Steve’s Ramblings: Sears Holding company did not “Roll with the Changes”

By Steve Dunford 

By April, you will have to go to Paducah, Fairview Heights. Evansville, or Cape Girardeau to buy Kenmore Appliances or Craftsman tools.

As I am writing this I am thinking about the REO Speedwagon song “Roll with the Changes.”

Before my time, you could buy anything at Sears and Roebuck.  Before the days of indoor plumbing, the catalog was used as toilet paper.

Sears like Kenmore appliances, had things manufactured under their name. Here is a page from the 1979 wish book, with their version of clone Mattell hand held games. (8bit.com)

I did not grow up as a Toys-R-Us kid, but I remember the days the Sears catalog at the Wish Book dreaming what I wanted Christmas.   I was a Toys-R-Us parent, buying things for my son at Christmas and birthdays though.

Most of us little boys grew up in Toughskin Jeans.  I think they were made out of some type of denim-canvas.  My mom would dress me in green or brown ones to cut down on the grass stains.

My go-kart as a kid came from Sears out of the catalog.  It came in a crate about the size of the leg lamp one.

For you young whippersnappers, there were Sears catalog stores in most small towns across America.  These were franchise businesses owned by independent operators.  The Sears store in Franklin County was in the building that houses First Financial Bank in West Frankfort now.

There was one in DuQuoin until the last few years.  I do not know if they replaced the one in Mt. Vernon, that opened after the retail store closed several years ago.  There was a catalog store still in Harrisburg, and I am unsure if it is still in operation.  Most of the recent ones specialized in lawn equipment and appliances.

Benton had the competitor catalog store, Montgomery Ward, a company that is now a distant memory.   The store was on East Main, around where Jack Russell Fish Company is now.

An add for a Sears and Roebuck house in the 1920’s (searsarchives.com)

There was a time that you could order complete houses from Sears.  In fact some of these still dot the countryside. They would be shipped to the nearest train depot.

Some houses that I can give you an example of is the Ernie Duckworth place on Route 34 between Thompsonville and Benton.  Another is the Organ Farms Pumpkin Patch on Route 14 between McLeansboro and Carmi.

Sears began to lose their hold on the market when Sam Walton had a new way of doing business.  He started in Arkansas right after Ben Franklin pulled his franchise.  The liquidation stock he rented a building and put Wal Mart on the front of it.  As Paul Harvey said, now you know the rest of the story.

The chain began to grow regionally.  Each store has a number.  It grew to Southern Illinois after buying out a local discount chain, Mohr Value.   Slowly every county seat had a Wal-Mart.  The store number in Benton-West City is 262, the sequence the store was built.  Now they are in five digits worldwide.

I was sitting in Econ 101 at Rend Lake College as a Freshman.  The instructor brought the latest copy of Forbes and a cut out article from the Wall Street Journal.  It said that Wal-Mart was going to roll out a business model called the Hypermart.  The major change was the stores would sell groceries and gasoline.   He said it was going to be the death of the growing retailer.

I don’t think I need to explain the Hypermart model to you.  It is basically every Walmart now.

In 1997 Walmart passed Sears as the world’s largest retailer.  I thought they replaced Sears as a blue chip stock, but Walmart replaced Woolworth, which is in existence as Foot Locker today.

Some accounts when Sears lost blue chip status, they were replaced by Microsoft, which tech companies were mainly traded on NASDAQ.  Some accounts said Home Depot.

On a record setting day the stock market hit a record high of over 25,000, Sears Holding’s was trading over three dollars a share.

There was a time that K-mart was the discount king in the 1970’s.  The stores had full service restaurants, and the “Blue Light Specials.”  Reflecting on things, a K-mart store has changed little in my lifetime.

At one time a mall was the hip place to go.   It was the hangout for the “preppy” teenagers.  (Preppy might be a word from the past.)  They are now a dying breed.

Malls are now dying.  The last time I was at St. Louis Mills was three years ago.  I loved the place.  Cabella’s helped me wanting to be there.  Bass Pro Shop down the next exit “enhanced” my shopping experience.  The Nike store was one of my favorites.

I remember as a college student walking in Illinois Center Mall.  I was thinking this place is is Marion.  It was at one time the showcase of Southern Illinois.

I have not been in it in a couple years, but it looks like skid row.  The trees in the middle were overgrown.  There was more vacant storefronts than open one.  I know it is worse now.  A place that was once bustling, is dying.  Sears closing might be the last nail in the coffin.

In my head when the Post Dispatch ran a story how empty the place was, I was saying to myself wow.

Walmart “rolled with the changes” with walmart.com.  I can sit at home, still be in my jammies, and by anything with a click of a mouse and debit card in hand.

Sears and Roebuck as well as K-Mart did not “roll with the changes.  With the force of the two companies behind them, they could have competed with Amazon and Wal-Mart.

Instead K-Mart was stuck in the 1970’s, Sears was in the 1980’s.  Soon, they will be part of history.

The majority of you know, that I have not driven in over three years because I suffer from non epileptic seizures from residuals of a stroke.  On days that I feel good, I will make the mile and a half stroll across the interstate.  It is good for me physically and mentally.

The last few times going to K-Mart here in West Frankfort, I could see the writing on the wall.  The stock was low.  If I had wheels, barring if there was not a wreck, I could hop on 57 and be at Walmart in five minutes.

Yes I will miss it.  However, I will not be deprived of anything with the closure of the store.  My heart breaks for the employees losing their jobs.

Dollar Tree, Dollar General and Kroger gets the most of my money.  There is always a trip into McDonalds to get some tea, and a hamburger on my day “adventures.”  I was going into K-Mart less and less.  They were out pricing themselves, and always out of stock on sale items.

I have never owned a retail business, but you have to find your niche.  One retailer that has is Dollar General, with small towns and neighborhood stores.  Benton has two, and soon there will be a second in West Frankfort, that will personally be handy for me.

Growing up in Thompsonville, I would never have dreamed a major retail chain would locate there.

Approaching fifty, this world leaves me more behind everyday.  The changes that are taking place makes my head spin.  I have learned to keep up the best you can and “roll with them.”

Sears and K-Mart will be leaving Southern Illinois in April.  They reason why, they did not “Roll with the Changes.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oregon’s Freak-Out Over Pumping Your Own Gas Shows Why Many Dumb Regulations Still Exist

Oregon and New Jersey are the only two states that ban self-service gas stations. But thanks to a new law that went into effect on January 1, customers can now pump their own gas in Oregon, though only at stand-alone gas stations in counties with fewer than 40,000 residents. Elsewhere, the ban still holds.

But even this tiny increase in freedom was apparently too much for some Oregonians. In a Facebook post that’s now gone viral, local news station KTVL polled their fans for their thoughts about the new law. Some did not take the news well.

Please click on the link below to read the full story from Nick Sibilla of Forbes Magazine.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/instituteforjustice/2018/01/03/oregons-freak-out-over-pumping-your-own-gas-shows-why-many-dumb-regulations-still-exist/#68a508ac600e

 

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