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Beacon Blog

BY MIKE CETERA

In 2007, Gov. Rod Blagojevich killed funding -- about $6 million -- for the anti-violence group CeaseFire, which had a fledgling Aurora chapter. An administration official at the time said the state could not afford to spend money on the program.

Nine months later, the governor on Tuesday proposed a $150 million anti-violence plan that encourages funding of "community-based programs (to) keep our children safe."

You see, now the governor wants to find a way to Stop. Killing. People.

If only there were a such a program out there...
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But, wait, it gets better. The governor, in proposing his new Community Investment Works program, which -- as of yet -- has no funding source, appears to have used a rather flattering news story about what CeaseFire has accomplished to advocate his own plan. If CeaseFire is so great, why did he block funding?

BY MIKE CETERA

Parents who preach traditional values should be apoplectic. But there has been virtually no backlash over two local high schools' selections for spring musicals that deal in very adult issues. Have we turned a tolerance corner, or have people just stopped paying attention?

West Aurora High School just wrapped up its performance of "Rent," a rock opera that centers around a cast of gay characters struggling to make a life "under the shadow of AIDS." Related story here.

And Oswego High School is set to perform "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" later this week. "Sweeney Todd," is a musical revenge story about a barber turned serial killer. Related story here.

BY MIKE CETERA

Highlights from the legislative week that was:

* Sorry, we're stuck with the flat tax; lawmakers reject calls to move to a graduated income tax.
* No more gerrymandering? How legislative districts are drawn could be changed.
* FOID cards could be revoked from some parents who can't keep their kids away from guns.
* Gov. Blagojevich will not face a recall.


How did your lawmakers vote on these issues and more? Read all about it after the jump. Find previous votes here.

BY DAVE PARRO

It's interesting that Mayor Tom Weisner's State of the City address this week contained no major announcements. Especially considering that we're heading into election season.

Last year during his address, Weisner announced the winning concept design for his proposed river park and committed $5 million toward its first phase. In his first address to local business leaders after he took office in 2005, he made optimistic promises about what his administration would accomplish.

But his address Wednesday really didn't tell us anything we don't already know. In this case, is no news good news?

BY MIKE CETERA

Here's something nobody is talking about: Shootings are down, way down, in Aurora this year.

Through Wednesday, shootings had dropped by more than 50 percent when compared to the same time period last year, according to Aurora Police Department statistics.

The numbers
25 shootings between Jan. 1 and April 30, 2008
53 shootings between Jan. 1 and April 30, 2007

Those figures put Aurora on pace to record 75 shootings this year. Wow.

BY MIKE CETERA

A week before the Super Bowl, a neighbor told me about an annual betting pool he and his buddies enter. Such pools are not hard to find -- a trip to your local watering hole is about all it takes.

This pool offered up "squares" that corresponded with the score of the game at the end of each quarter. If the score matched your square, you earned a piece of the pool. Simple as that. The Aurora bar where this pool took place sold squares at $1,000 a piece. Shocked at the price, I declined my neighbor's invitation.

I offer up this anecdote as validation of Elburn Mayor Jim Willey's understatement in addressing the bust of a similar gambling operation in his town: "I don't believe this is only happening in Elburn."

Of course it's not. But the question is why do these anti-gambling laws -- which are selectively enforced -- exist?

BY MIKE CETERA

Eyebrows were raised, but the word "tenuous" also was uttered more than once during our afternoon meeting Monday when editors discussed where the mention of Dennis Hastert in the Tony Rezko trial should be played in the paper.

Read the trial accounts here and here.

From the Sun-Times:

Tony Rezko associate Elie Maloof just testified that when he received a grand jury subpoena, Rezko told him not to talk to the feds. Why?

"The federal prosecutor will no longer be the same federal prosecutor," Maloof just testified that Rezko told him. What did Rezko mean prosecutor Chris Niewoehner asked? "That Patrick Fitzgerald would be terminated and Dennis Hastert will name his replacement. The investigation will be over."

All of the accounts I've read dance around the suggestion that Hastert was involved in a plot to sack U.S. District Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald. Hastert denied the suggestion himself on Monday.

Yet this isn't the first time the former speaker's name has been invoked during discussions of Fitzgerald's potential dismissal.

BY MIKE CETERA

The Legislature wasn't in session last week, so no roundup of how your local lawmaker voted. Instead, check out this interesting piece about some politicians looking to appease unions -- again -- at the expense of taxpayers.

Some lawmakers are trying to add tollway workers and others to an alternative pension formula that was supposed to be used only for retired law enforcement officers, writes columnist Kristen McQuery of the SouthtownStar.

The alternative formula is a sweeter, softer, cushier pension offering that takes into consideration the dangerous, stressful occupations of policemen and women. In general, it allows them to retire with 25 years of service at age 50, earning up to 80 percent of their pay - and their pay rises annually to reflect a cost of living adjustment.

Throughout the years, the General Assembly, to please labor unions, has added state pilots, conservation officers, corrections officers, Department of Revenue inspectors, secretary of state investigators and several other clout-heavy professionals to the formula.


BY MIKE CETERA

On its face, charging a kid with a crime that could land him in prison for as long as 30 years for lighting a roll of toilet paper on fire seems a bit like overkill. People convicted of reckless homicide have been given less time.

But when you consider what could have happened after the 17-year-old allegedly started a blaze in a bathroom earlier this week at West Aurora High School, such a penalty seems far less extreme.

BY DAVE PARRO

While the conviction Monday of six Insane Deuces gang members made headlines in Aurora, it got little attention elsewhere. It should have, however, because proving conspiracy might be the most powerful tool police and prosecutors have in bringing down street gangs here.

Federal prosecutors successfully used racketeering laws to prove a conspiracy to commit murder and sell drugs in Aurora over a period of time. Some of the gang members will be facing life sentences under strict federal sentencing guidelines.

It's not the first time the RICO Act, originally used against the Mafia, has been used against street gangs. But it's a new tool in Aurora, and the guilty verdicts this week could be a sign of things to come.

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