Saturday, March 30, 2019

MTD Updates


Two updates on the MTD, one from their recent board meeting and a bidding error in the paper. First from the board meeting: 

The MTD board approved hiring a consultant for their part of "The Yards" project:
MTD board OKs hiring consultant to review plans for downtown development
The Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District is set to hire a consultant for $72,000 to review contracts and agreements related to an expansion of the Illinois Terminal building and other parts of a massive redevelopment project planned for downtown Champaign...

Chicago-based Cotter Consulting Inc. will be hired by the MTD to help make sure transit district and taxpayer interests are protected in a $200 million-plus project called The Yards, in which the city and private developers are also involved...

The MTD hopes to eventually secure grant funding to foot part of the cost of the terminal expansion.

The MTD would be financially involved in only parts of The Yards project — those including an expanded bus platform, renovation and expansion of the existing Illinois Terminal building, a parking structure and a mixed-use retail and office building being developed through a partnership agreement.
The full article is here. The article previewing the meeting explained how this approval fits in upcoming consideration for the MTD's role in the project:
Hiring a consultant is a significant step toward moving this project ahead, he said...

He'll be looking for further commitment from the MTD board at a special district board meeting April 15, he said.

That meeting will be intended to firm up MTD's part of The Yards project and secure the board's commitment to that before sharing it with the Champaign City Council at a later date, Gnadt said.
That full article is available here. This all comes in the aftermath of the MTD losing out on two grant opportunities it was hoping could go towards its portion of the project. The sense has always been that more grant opportunities would present themselves, so the project was still viewed optimistically. More on that at a News-Gazette article from January and a Cheat Sheet post after the last grant fell through here.

Tom's Mailbag had a quick Q and A on that MTD contract bidding error in last week's Tom's Mailbag:
"Last week in The News-Gazette, I read a classified ad placed by the C-U MTD, requesting competing bids for remodeling and replacement of a portion of their repair facilities. The notice was given on a single day only, and the bids were due less than a week later Further, there was a prebid meeting available for bidders, but the meeting date was the day before the notice was given. Is this a normal practice of the C-U MTD, and aren't there laws limiting public entities from operating like this?"

Karl Gnadt, the managing director at the Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District, has your answer: "Before this question arrived, we had already released an amendment to the RFP to extend the due date, as there was an error that occurred with the timing of the notice in the paper.

"It may turn out that we end up scrapping this timeline and start over. We are discussing this with the architect and the proposers who have received the RFP. However, the architect on the job had directly sent the RFP to five proposers well in advance of the publication and has had contact with an additional two since then. At the same time that the RFP was sent to known eligible proposers, the notice was posted on the web."
The full Mailbag article is available here.

Champaign City Roundup


The past week or so has seen a few news items related to Champaign City government. A nullified panhandling ordinance was repealed, a deceased former mayor was again in the news due to a sex abuse scandal, and a hotel has gone from millennial to "urban inspired." Here's a quick roundup: 

WCIA had a short video segment and blurb about Champaign repealing its aggressive panhandling ordinance after a related court ruling. Video segment here. Blurb excepted below:
City leaders voted to repeal an aggressive panhandling ordinance Tuesday night.

The Supreme Court ruled the first amendment protects panhandling as free speech.

Officials say having the rule still on the books can make it confusing for law enforcement and leave them open to lawsuits.

They say people shouldn't notice a major change.

Aggressive panhandling hasn't been an issue for years in the city.
In more unfortunate news, a former Mayor was highlighted among local Catholic Priests involved in sex abuse scandals. From the News-Gazette a couple weeks ago:
At least 16 priests with area ties on Illinois list of alleged sex offendersAt least 16 priests with area connections are among the nearly 400 Catholic clergy members and church staff in Illinois named in a report — released Wednesday by a Minnesota-based law firm — that accuses them of sexual misconduct.

All had been previously mentioned on lists released by the Joliet, Peoria and Springfield dioceses, but Wednesday's report by attorney Jeff Anderson is the largest list of accused clergy in Illinois and includes where each priest served....

The report includes former Champaign Mayor Robert Dodd, who served parishes in Highland and Pana in the 1960s before leaving the priesthood in 1971.

He was mayor from 1983 to '87, and in 1994, Dodd was named in a child sex abuse lawsuit, according to the report. His name was also on the Springfield diocese's list of clergy with substantiated cases of sexual abuse of a minor.

Dodd died in 2013 in Champaign.
The full article has more information on the scandal, including other area priests listed in the report.

A downtown hotel (originally envisioned for millennials and called "Vib") will still be arriving, but with a different name and an "urban-inspired design" instead:
Aloft Hotel, by Marriott, now slated to occupy downtown Champaign lotPlans are still on track to develop an urban-style hotel on a small downtown Champaign lot, but the planned hotel brand has undergone a change.

Developer Doug Altenberger has been working with Marriott International to make the future hotel at 401 N. Neil St. an Aloft Hotel, according to Rob Kowalski, the city's assistant planning and development director...

Last year, the city believed construction would begin at the start of 2019. Now, Altenberger is working with his general contractor to finish construction plans and expects to be ready to start on the foundation work in the next couple of months, Kowalski said...

If construction begins in the next couple of months, Kowalski said, it likely won't be completed until next year.
More details on the ownership details  at the full article here.

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Urbana Gambling


After recently approving a new gambling licence at a local grocery store, the city has put the breaks on new ones. From the News-Gazette yesterday:
Mayor: Liquor code needs 'long-overdue updates'; issuing suspended
In support of a proposal from Liquor Commissioner and Mayor Diane Marlin, Urbana city council members voted in committee Monday to move forward with a plan to suspend the issuing of future video gambling licenses.This comes a week after council members voted 4-2 to approve giving Urbana's Save-A-Lot store a Class A "pour" liquor license, which would have allowed them to apply for a G-1 license in order to have up to five video gambling terminals inside.

In a memo to council members, Marlin said the city's current liquor code and state law "did not foresee or contemplate grocery stores, liquor stores and other venues applying for 'pour' liquor licenses ... as a means for placing gaming terminals on their premises."
...
She went to the council for support, despite the fact she can unilaterally make decisions on the liquor code as liquor commissioner without the it's consent. But it's been a tradition of this mayor to consult the council.

Part of figuring out what those "best policies" will be might require city staff to assess "whether gaming machines that we have permitted to be installed have had any deleterious effect on problem gambling" in the city, council member Eric Jakobsson said.
Full article here. The mayor's memo to the City Council spelled out her concerns concisely:
After much reflection, I believe it is in the best interest of the community to bring an ordinance to Committee of the Whole that directs me, as the Local Liquor Control Commissioner, to suspend acceptance and processing of applications for Class G-1 liquor licenses until we complete the overall review and update of our Liquor Ordinance. The G-1 liquor licenses are for gaming terminals in established businesses.

The City’s current liquor code and state law did not foresee or contemplate grocery stores, liquor stores, and other venues applying for “pour” liquor licenses such as the City’s Class A, B, and BB liquor licenses as a means for placing gaming terminals on their premises. I believe this suspension is required to give the City time to make long-overdue updates to our liquor code and to clarify what is best for the community related to video gaming. We expect the liquor code revisions to take several months.

The suspension would not affect establishments that already possess a G-l license or applications for any other class of liquor license, including G-2.

I would appreciate your support for this ordinance. I believe it is important for the Mayor/City Council to jointly take this action.
Full memo available here on the City's website. The News-Gazette had a brief blurb on the memo here.


[UPDATE 4/5/2019: A couple additional links. The vote described above was at the Committee of the Whole and passed during the Regular City Council meeting this week 6-0. The News-Gazette had coverage of that here and an editorial on the gambling issue here.]

Candidate Information

 

There's a lot of new information, interviews, questionnaires and links for candidates in the April 2nd Consolidated Election (early voting has already begun!). The Champaign County Voter Alliance still has the best organized page for getting to know local candidates on your ballot (from the web, to social media, to email/phone contacts) here: Candidate Guide.

I've updated the Cheat Sheet: C-U Local's election page with candidates in the local government bodies we cover here. Below I have some links to various forums and events I've found on-line with the candidates and will be adding News-Gazette interviews as they're published:


Candidate Information and Links:

Here are links to videos and coverage of recent local candidate forums organized by the News-Gazette, Champaign County NAACP and League of Women Voters:

February 27th Candidate forums: (video from CGTV)
  • Urbana School Board Candidates: Additional News-Gazette coverage here.
  • Champaign School Board Candidates: Coverage here.
  • Parkland Community College Board Candidates: Coverage here.
February 28th Candidate forums: (video from CGTV)
  • Champaign City Council Candidates: Coverage here.
  • Champaign Mayoral Candidates: Coverage here.
  • Urbana Park District Candidates: (video only)
March 6th Candidate forums:
  • Illini Democrats forum for Champaign City Council candidates coverage here
  • Champaign Federation of Teachers forum for Unit 4 candidates here. Facebook event information.

Candidate Meet & Greets:

Candidate Interviews and Questionnaires:

WILL Champaign candidate interviews on the issues.
CCVA Questionnaires here.
Smile Politely Candidate Guide here and Questionnaires section here.
Washington Street Questionnaires here.

News-Gazette Interviews and Questionnaires (N-G election webpage):
Champaign Mayor:
Champaign City Council:
Champaign School Board - Unit 4:
Champaign Park District:


Urbana School Board - District 116:

Urbana Park District:


Results: (update 4/5/2019)

There was a lot of coverage of election results, including the County's unofficial results here. The News-Gazette had their visual results here. WILL had text results here. Incumbents generally held on during some historically low turnout, even for a municipal election. From the News-Gazette Wednesday:
New Champaign County clerk's only problem in first election: Too few voters
Preliminary results indicate turnout was down Tuesday in Champaign County compared with similar local consolidated elections.

Just over 17,000 ballots were cast Tuesday, or 13.27 percent of the 128,000 registered voters in the county.

Four years ago, 21,839 ballots were cast, or about 19 percent, and eight years ago, 20,890 ballots were cast, or about 17 percent.

In 2007, 18,897 people voted, or about 16 percent.
More on election day hiccups and logistical issues dealt with by the County clerk at that full article here. WCIA had some turnout comparisons with area counties here. This election process began within weeks of the massive turnout of the 2018 midterm, with candidates having to file shortly afterward for this election. In political cycles there are often ebbs and flows of enthusiasm. I'll leave it to the reader to stare at midterm versus municipal turnout fluctuations over the years to see if they can unlock the secret. The News-Gazette also had stories on individual races:

The paper also had coverage of election day with the Mayor and the crazy schedule running for a local office can entail here.

Friday, March 22, 2019

Urbana Poverty Information

[UPDATE: The mayor of the City of Urbana responded to the Smile Politely editorial mentioned in this post below. Jump to an excerpt of the mayor's response on this post by clicking here, or go to the full response on the Smile Politely page here.]


Last month, in a followup to previous board questions on the subject, the Cunningham Township supervisor broke down poverty data in the City of Urbana by age groups and compared to other cities. From the News-Gazette:
Cunningham Township supervisor breaks down poverty stats for board
...
At Monday's monthly meeting of the township board, made up of the same people as the city council, Chynoweth returned with more detailed statistics showing that poverty rates for people outside of college age are larger in Urbana than in comparable communities...

Chynoweth's data — organized by township volunteer and University of Illinois doctoral student Allan Axelrod — shows a higher rate of poverty among Urbana residents aged 5 and under, under 18, and over 25 than among their counterparts in Champaign, Normal, Bloomington and "even West Lafayette (Ind.), which has an overall higher poverty rate," according to the memo sent to board members.

The numbers show that the poverty rate for all Urbana residents was 18.9 percentage points higher than the national rate, 8.2 percentage points higher than Champaign and 21.1 percentage points higher than Bloomington. Rates for those under age 18 are similar, and while the rate for residents over 65 is below the national average, it's the highest of the communities included.

At 17.5 percent, poverty among residents 25 and older is also much higher than other comparable communities — 5.7 percentage points higher than the national average, 5.6 percentage points higher than Champaign, 7.2 percentage points higher than Bloomington and 11.1 percentage points higher than Normal.
Full article with additional information available here. Video link here with the poverty data presented at the 5 minute 47 second mark. Some members appeared to be skeptical about how much older students, such as graduate students, may be skewing the data. Chynoweth pointed out that students in poverty may be assumed to have their needs met in spite of their income, but data on hunger suggests that isn't always the case.

Smile Politely's coverage of this issue has charted the data and provided additional information and links to helpful resources here. Excerpt:
Champaign County has a long history of being among the poorest counties in the state: In 2013, Champaign County was the 3rd poorest county in Illinois; in 2015 it was the 10th poorest. Just last year, the poverty rate in Champaign County was estimated to be at 21.4%, with well over 20,000 people living in poverty. (Poverty is often delineated by three categories: extreme poverty, poverty, and low income. For a single person, the federal poverty guideline for 2019 is $12,490 per year. Extreme poverty is about half of that.)

At a special meeting later in the month, the budget was maintained at the same levels for the office that often helps the most vulnerable. The Township Supervisor explained some of the incredible work it does in a recent "So I have to Ask" podcast interview with Elizabeth Hess (available here). A recent example of the eviction-prevention program was in the News-Gazette recently here as well. Here's a short description from the township's description:
The Supervisor's Office is the administrative office of the Township and also has the responsibility of issuing General Assistance welfare benefits to eligible persons living in Cunningham Township (City of Urbana). An additional program established at the Supervisor's Office is the Cunningham Township/City of Urbana Consolidated Social Service Grants Program which distributes grants to local non-profit agencies also serving low-income persons.
Chynoweth pointed out that maintaining current funding levels, while appreciated, leaves a longer term budget crunch coming:
Urbana mayor will urge to preserve financial commitment to social service programs
...
But the city's contribution to the fund, which gives grants to local nonprofit organizations to use for services or operating costs, has been higher in the past, as Township Supervisor Danielle Chynoweth pointed out. She said a long-term goal will be to "gradually rebalance the responsibility between the city of Urbana and Cunningham Township."

Already, the township has been doing "significant deficit spending" since 2014, when the township board voted to decrease the tax levy at the direction of a prior supervisor.

Chynoweth warned the township board, made up of Urbana council members, that if the current level of funding for the township's budget continues, it will burn through its savings in no time.

"I certainly appreciate that the city is committed to keep funding to at least the level of last year," Chynoweth said. "I just want us to look long term and not be surprised in four years when the savings are gone."
Full article here. The full report on the social services funding is available here from the Urbana government website: FY 2018-2019 City of Urbana and Cunningham Township Consolidated Social Service Fund.
UPDATE: The mayor responded to the Smile Politely editorial excerpted above and offered additional information and corrections to misinterpretations of the city code. Smile Politely posted it on their website here. Below is some of the meat and potatoes:
The City of Urbana leverages millions of dollars to promote safe, decent housing for the most vulnerable low-income households, seniors, and persons with disabilities. Here are some of the ways we address this need.
  1. City of Urbana staff are working with Cunningham Township, the City of Champaign, Champaign Township, and social service providers to open a year-round emergency shelter for women and families. We recognize the critical need for this emergency shelter. The City also operates a small-scale transitional housing program for women with children who are pursuing job training or education.
  1. Over the years, we’ve provided funding for construction of the TIMES shelter for homeless men, remodeling of Prairie Center for substance abuse treatment and renovation of Courage Connection properties serving victims of domestic violence.
  1. The City leverages funds for affordable housing construction. We’ve partnered with Habitat for Humanity to build 52 single family homes in Urbana over the past 25 years and another is in the planning stages. These homes stabilize neighborhoods and help low-income families build equity.
  1. The City works with the Housing Authority and private developers to build and renovate affordable housing. Our staff helps developers apply for low- income housing tax credits and the City often donates land for these projects. Recently completed projects include: Hamilton on the Park (36 units), Highland Green (33 units) and Crystal View Town Homes (70 units). The $5.2 million Aspen Court renovation will soon be completed in east Urbana (140 units). Two more Housing Authority projects are in the planning stages. These include the 24-unit Pinewood Place on Colorado Avenue for persons with mental and physical disabilities and a new 75-unit development on Lierman Avenue. The Lierman development will include a community center, a request that topped the list in a neighborhood survey.
  1. The Urbana HOME Consortium has invested over $2.5 million for down payment assistance to first-time homebuyers, Tenant Based Rental Assistance, and support for Habitat houses. The City assists low-income households with emergency home repairs, sewer lateral repairs, and whole house repairs. We sponsor neighborhood cleanups using Community Development Block Grant funds and support a community garden in east Urbana.
The Smile Politely editorial and other media posts misinterpreted sections of the Urbana City Code as targeting strategies low-income residents may use to navigate poverty. Clarifications are below.
  1. The Urbana City Council repealed the panhandling/aggressive solicitation ordinance several months ago in response to concerns expressed by the ACLU over similar ordinances in the state.
  1. Extended stay rooms are legal in the City of Urbana. Over the years, the City has helped people move from regular motel rooms to extended stay rooms. The latter are better equipped for long-term stays.
  1. In the past 20 years, no citations have been issued for “dumpster diving.” References to removing items from collection containers are in the 1999 ordinance establishing our Multifamily Recycling Program.
City Code language can be confusing when fragments are pulled out of context. I urge you to contact me or your Alderperson if you have questions about local ordinances and practices. 
Full article here.


[Updated. Originally posted 3/8/2019 at 6:05am.]

UIUC News Roundup


Campus news this week included updates on changes to hiring background checks, using wearable technology to study local gun violence issues, information on implementing restorative justice programs (which could inform those concerned with the Urbana schools issue), and grant money for a smoke free campus.
UI's expanded background-check program nets fewer job withdrawals...
Results from the third year of the UI's expanded background-checks policy were shared with trustees last week.

The UI has conducted background checks for years for sensitive positions where employees handle money, work at a hospital or deal with young children.

The expanded policy approved by the board in 2015 — after strong opposition from faculty, who feared it would be discriminatory — covered all new employees for the first time.
The background checks are done only after a job offer has been made and accepted, not for every applicant...

One concern in 2015 was that the additional background checks might slow down the hiring process, but Painter said that hasn't happened. The average turnaround time for a check rose slightly in 2018 but was still 2.8 days in Urbana and Chicago and 4.6 days in Springfield. It varies depending on an applicant's history, she said, and the federal government shutdown this winter caused some short delays.

Critics had also worried that the new policy would deter people from applying to the UI. The number of applicants dipped slightly the first year background checks were in use, from 83,426 in 2015 to 81,751 in 2016. But they've rebounded since, to 101,578 in 2018.
More information is available at the full article, including more details about increased cost and numerical breakdowns of applicants screened at the various campuses.

WILL highlighted a recent University collaborative study using wearable technology to measure the effects of exposure to gun violence:
How Wearable Technology Can Help Unveil Links Between Exposure To Gun Violence & HealthResearch has shown that people who are exposed to gun violence are at greater risk of physical and mental health issues. University of Illinois researchers are looking at the role wearable technology can play in better understanding the link.

Sociologist Ruby Mendenhall is an assistant dean for the Carle Illinois College of Medicine and faculty fellow with the National Center for Supercomputing Applications. She’s been working with research programmers there to carry out a mobile health study...

Twelve black women who live in a high-crime neighborhood on Chicago’s south side worked with researchers as “citizen scientists,” Mendenhall said. They wore biosensors, used their cell phones as GPS tracking devices and kept a journal to track their experiences over the course of a month...

Mendenhall said that first "Chicago Stress Study" was preliminary – and the findings were presented at an exhibit last fall, as part of the Pygmalion Festival in Champaign.
Full article here. Another professor talked about restorative justice and issues facing those attempting to implement it here and elsewhere in an interview with WILL:
U Of I Professor: Restorative Justice In Schools Requires Buy-In From CommunitySchools in Illinois and across the country are turning to restorative justice practices as an alternative to traditional discipline models. Mikhail Lyubansky, an associate professor of pyschology at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, studies restorative justice, and he's written about some of the criticisms of the way it's used in schools.

While more schools are implementing restorative justice programs, Lyubansky says the educational community is still in the experimental phase — meaning schools don’t yet have a model to turn to that spells out what restorative justice should look like in an educational context...

So one of the core values is that restorative justice is voluntary. The more voluntary the participation, the more restorative the outcomes. Does everybody have access and do young people want to make use of this system? And then if we can see that there are some subgroups in a school, let's say students of color, who either almost never activate the system or refuse to participate in the system consistently, then it's feedback to us that there's something in the system that isn't working for that group. And we'd want to include them and figure out how to tweak it a way that it will work. 
Excerpts and link to the audio interview available here. Link to some of the recent Urbana High School Violence with a bit more background on local efforts to implement restorative justice programs here.

And today there was a short blurb about a grant to help the UIUC campus go 100% tobacco product free:
Grant’s goal smoke-free UIThe University of Illinois has been granted $20,000 through the CVS Health Foundation to help support plans to make the campus 100 percent free of all smoking and tobacco products later this year.

The money, delivered in partnership with the American Cancer Society and the Truth Initiative, is part of a $1.4 million grant pool going to 82 schools to help accelerate and expand the number of campuses across the U.S. that prohibit smoking, e-cigarettes and all tobacco use.

The UI’s local campus is set to become 100 percent free of all smoking and tobacco use in August with a policy applying to everyone — including students, faculty and visitors — and it will include both an indoor and outdoor ban on all forms of tobacco and vaping devices.

That’s an expansion of the UI’s first smoke-free policy launched in 2014, which bans all smoke-producing tobacco products on campus.
Full blurb available here from the News-Gazette's eEdition for those with a digital subscription.

Trees and Such


Tree issues come up a lot in local government, from aesthetics to the massive citywide efforts each fall to keep roads and water drainage flowing so everybody can safely go about their business. Some folks rarely notice the street sweepers roaming around, even in the fall when they have one or two giant follow trucks hauling the massive amounts of leaves they collect. Flat and swampy can be high maintenance. I had some tree updates a couple weeks ago as well at the bottom of this park updates post here (on MCORE tree replacement and the pesky emerald ash borer problem).

Today's tree post is a two parter: awards and information. First, Urbana received recognition for its arboreal dedication:
Urbana earns designation as 2018 Tree City USA
The Arbor Day Foundation has named Urbana a 2018 Tree City USA for the city's commitment to urban forest management.

The city was also honored with a Tree City USA growth award for demonstrating environmental improvement and an increasingly higher level of tree care, according to city Arborist Mike Brunk.

To be designated a Tree City USA, a community must have a tree board or department, a tree-care ordinance, an annual community forestry budget of at least $2 per capita and an Arbor Day observance and proclamation.

Since the city began the Urbana Cooperative Tree Planting Program four decades ago, that program saw its best year ever in 2018, according to Brunk.

That included more than $10,000 for 85 new trees to line city streets last year through the Urbana Rotary and residents Dr. Holly Rosencranz and Warren Lavey.
Full blurb here. And as far as springtime yard waste pickup, that time is approaching in both Champaign and Urbana:
Just Askin' | Spring yard-waste collection
...
Champaign has shortened its yard-waste pickup from four consecutive weeks to one collection in April and another in May for each of the Orange and Blue zones the city is divided into.

Instead of each zone being divided into subzones for each day of the week, this year, crews will begin picking up yard waste on Monday and continue each day until all materials are collected.

Crews will collect waste from the Orange Zone, which covers everything north of Springfield Avenue and east of Prospect Avenue, the weeks of April 8 and May 13. And the Blue Zone, which covers most of the southwest part of town, will have its yard waste collected the weeks of April 15 and May 20.

Leaves and other yard waste must be in 30-gallon paper bags, and twigs and branches may be bundled with nonmetallic twine.

In Urbana, which only collects leaves, collection will last for one week this spring, from April 22-26.
Full article here. City web links: Champaign collection information here. Urbana collection information here. On a bonus note, Urbana is looking for input for anyone interested in food scrap recycling (compost). More information on that here at WCIA (with a video segment) and a survey link here.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Unit 4 Updates


Groundbreakings, compensated home visits, and more money approved for projects... and updated candidate information here. Also the News-Gazette issued their endorsements (whether one takes that as positive or a negative) here. First on news updates, however, Unit 4 budgeting for projects in addition to or increasing referendum projects got a boost this month. From the News Gazette a couple weeks back:
Unit 4 board unanimously OKs another $10M in upgrades for Edison
...
In a unanimous vote Monday night, Champaign school board members signed off on $10,098,090 more in renovations to 105-year-old Edison Middle School, bringing the total project expense to a little more than $25 million.

The board's action came 28 months after district taxpayers approved a six-school, two-field, $183.4 million referendum that included $15 million for Edison. But the plan put before voters didn't include fixes to some of the building's most glaring shortcomings, Unit 4's project management team pointed out last month, which led the board to take a second look at Edison.

The result: a project that now includes heating and electrical updates, sprinklers for fire protection and plumbing updates in addition to the original list of work (a new cafeteria, expansion of the gym and classroom renovations, among other things)...

The school board also approved two other budget increases for referendum projects:

— $997,041 for South Side Elementary, to cover bid overages, hazardous materials abatement, playground equipment and a change in bus drop-off areas that board members say will make the school more accessible...

— "Not to exceed" $45,187 for Spalding Park, the new home of Champaign Central Maroons baseball, to pay for a "batter's eye" screen — a dark outfield backdrop to help hitters better see the ball.
More details at the full article here and an article the day before previewing the school board meeting here. The News-Gazette editorial board took issue with the additional spending afterward here. Smile politely had the dates and links for the upcoming groundbreaking ceremonies at Central and Centennial schools here.

The News-Gazette also had coverage of the Teachers Union gains in the last contract negotiations on compensated home visits:
Champaign teachers union rolling out plans for newly compensated home visits
...
[Union President Jen White] said the union had at least a "couple different versions" of home-visit ideas before the two sides came to an agreement.

The new contract pays on-schedule staffers who make such visits "the extra-duty rate" for up to 21 hours of work, or adds up to three days of personal leave for every seven hours of visits...

In the works right now are training plans and guideline documents that will help interested staffers know how and why they might want to conduct a home visit, White said. Later this spring, White said some union members will "run the training by some parent groups and community stakeholders to see what they think."

...

It's important to note, White said, that the process won't be teachers just showing up on parents' doorsteps. If anything, it will look similar to home visits already being conducted by another group of educators in the district: those at the Champaign Early Childhood Center.
Full article with additional information on the issues surrounding home visits here.

Transportation Updates


MTD is testing a new tracking system that could replace their 15 year old current system. From the News-Gazette last month:
MTD testing dispatch tech upgrade that may allow real-time info on reroutes
...
The new cellular technology would replace the UHF data-radio system that's been used since the MTD's two-way Computer Aided Dispatching/Automatic Vehicle Location system was installed...

The MTD is planning to try out the new technology on two or three buses in a one-year pilot program set to start before June 30, now that its board approved it Wednesday along with the $66,700 expense involved.

The money is largely for software, and 65 percent of the cost will be reimbursed by a state operating grant, Gnadt said.

If the pilot involving a few buses is considered successful, the rest of the MTD's buses could be added at a minimal expense, according to Gnadt.

The MTD wants to make this change because cellular-data communication is more reliable and has a greater range, he said.
Full article here. A recent mailbag question on why our tax money isn't used more proactively on winter road issues highlighted the limited resources and efforts:
...With the gas taxes both cities have implemented, why haven't they also become proactive with their asset management policies?"

...

To put that nearly $2 million of gas taxes in context we have budgeted nearly that exact amount of gas taxes to resurface Lincoln Avenue from Green Street to University Avenue and Springfield Avenue from Gregory Street to Coler Avenue and bring sidewalks along those streets into compliance with the federally mandated American Disabilities Act. In other words, our annual gas tax revenues are barely enough to fund a single major project per year."

And this from Kris Koester, spokesman for Champaign's Public Works Department: "The city of Champaign adheres to a hybrid model of what has been described by IDOT and Urbana. Examples where we are trying to extend the life of pavements include the sealing of oil and chip streets on a three-year cycle; concrete patching of joints on concrete streets like Mattis (between Kirby and Windsor); and in-house asphalt patching of localized failures and joints on asphalt streets such as Mattis (between John and Kirby) or Neil Street between Maple and Main. We also do asset maintenance through the city's emergency infrastructure repair program which replaces localized areas of failed pavement where most of the street is in decent condition."
More at the full question and answer in the March 15th Mailbag here. The president of the Township Highway Commissioners of Illinois recently wrote a letter to the editor asking for more support for township road budgets and cited some fiscal realities to bolster his case:
We are hearing that the state might pass a transportation capital program this year. I am fielding many questions and comments about what has been happening with the existing money.

Short answer for Illinois township roads? A lot less than we were able to do 19 years ago. Why? Township roads comprise 49.5 percent of our Illinois public road system. They receive a percentage share of only MFT (Motor Fuel Tax) paid at the pump by motorists and collected by the state.

The current percentage has been in place since Jan. 1, 2000, however, MFT itself has remained at 19 cents per gallon, with an additional 2.5 cents per gallon on diesel, since Jan. 1, 1990, or for 29 years.

As a result, MFT to township roads has actually fallen from $98.6 million in 2000 to $92.6 million in 2018, while traffic has increased substantially in volume, size and weight.

Costs to provide basic maintenance on township roads increased 139 percent from 2000 to 2014. MFT decreased 1.3 percent over that same period, meaning only 4.1 miles of township roads could be maintained in 2014 for every 10 miles maintained in 2000.
Full letter here. And there was also a very short blurb about an opportunity for public input on the Bloomington road project is coming up April 1st, from another blurb in today's paper:
Cross Construction will hold a public meeting regarding its upcoming project on Bloomington Road between Prospect and Mattis avenues.

Officials will provide information about the

project at the meeting, scheduled for 4:30-6:30 p.m. April 1 at Jericho Missionary Baptist Church, 1601 W. Bloomington Road, C.
From the eEdition for digital subscribers here.

Monday, March 18, 2019

Urbana Schools Updates


A few items for District 116 in the past few weeks, from IT issues, the latest update on the search firm to replace the interim superintendent, to a legal update on on the Urbana High School fight.

Additional IT expenses were incurred after it was discovered that some of the data being sent to the State was erroneous. For a more complete report on that issue board videos are temporarily at a new web address while the district new website is being setup. Here's a video link to the January 22nd school board presentation (link jumps to the 9:37 mark where the topic is raised). News-Gazette coverage from the February meeting where it was brought back up again:
Urbana district filling vacancies in tech department after data errors
Proper staffing in Urbana schools' technology department would have saved the district officials up to $7,500 in expenses after it was forced to hire outside help to correct 12 months' worth of data.

School districts provide data — on topics such as enrollment, attendance and test scores — to the Illinois State Board of Education themselves, which it then uses for things like funding and state report cards. The information that Urbana had submitted to the state prior to this academic year was "erroneous and often very misleading," interim Assistant Superintendent Jean Korder said, explaining the need for the expensive fixes...

At one point, Korder said, the data included 4,400 duplicated student records...

To prevent such a situation from ever happening again — which board President John Dimit this week said would have been preventable had the tech department been "properly staffed" — the district has begun to fill vacancies in the department.

"The people at the state board are aware of our difficulties — they're aware of our journey," Korder said. "They are extending some important deadlines for us. They have been very generous in giving us extensions. Their data people are helping us clean up."

The district has started to restructure a tech department in which responsibilities had been too specialized...

Also on the radar for the expanding department: replacing aging infrastructure as well as devices like Chromebooks that are 8 to 9 years old.
More information at the full article here, including more explanations from staff.

This week there was an update at the school board meeting with information on the superintendent search list (link to jump to that presentation here). The News-Gazette also had coverage on that:
Search firm details results of public input on Urbana superintendent
Twenty focus groups, two open forums and one online survey later, Minnesota-based School Exec Connect has generated a long list of ideal qualities for the next superintendent of Urbana schools.

School board members heard a long list of those qualities — and the conditions that inspired community members to request them — Tuesday evening, where a School Exec Connect representative presented its data-gathering methods in detail.

The 20 focus groups that included a "wide variety of stakeholders" got input from a total of 187 people. Two open forums gathered input from another 40, and an online survey of Urbana residents — with French, Spanish and English options — received 540 responses, most in English. School Exec Connect combined all three to create its list, representative Diane Robertson said....

Should all things with the search go to plan, Robertson said board members could be conducting interviews of a slate of five to seven candidates on April 26-27, with a selection ready to announce by early to mid-May.
That full article here.

And finally, another student pleaded guilty in a recent group brawl at Urbana High School. More background on that issue here: Urbana High School Violence. From the News-Gazette blurb on the plea:
Another teenager charged in a fight six weeks ago Urbana High School that forced classes to be dismissed early has admitted to mob action.

The 16-year-old pleaded guilty Thursday before Judge Heidi Ladd, who set sentencing for May 21.

The teen could get probation or one to three years in juvenile prison...

In total, eight students were charged in the Feb. 4 brawl that prosecutors say was between two rival groups.
Full blurb here.

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Garden Hills Fights Neglect


In  City of Champaign news, one neighborhood received some additional attention in the last couple weeks, although residents and their representative on the City Council point out that they're typically ignored in spite of numerous pressing needs. WILL highlighted the frustration this week:
Champaign’s Garden Hills Neighborhood Waits ... For Streetlights, Sidewalks & Flood Control
Residents of Champaign’s Garden Hills neighborhood have to deal with a list of problems, including inordinate levels of poverty, gun violence and vacant houses. The neighborhood on the city’s northwest side has another problem: a lack of infrastructure, like storm sewers and streetlights. The Champaign City Council is taking a first step towards a remedy for Garden Hills. But it could be a long wait to the second step...

[Clarissa Nickerson Fourman] lives in Garden Hills, and represents it on the Champaign City Council. Originally built as a suburban subdivision outside the city limits in the 1950s, Garden Hills is now well inside the city, with a sizable African-American population. It still has only a few streets with sidewalks or streetlights. Storm sewers remain inadequate, and in some places, nonexistent. Fourman says that’s a symptom of the city’s neglect of the neighborhood.

“We all call, at least the people who live here, we call Garden Hills the redheaded stepchild of the city,” said Fourman. “Because we’re the largest neighborhood in the city of Champaign. We have a thousand homes. But for some reason, we just kind of get forgot over here.”

In a photo posted to a neighborhood group Facebook page, a Garden Hills resident measures the depth of floodwater on Paula Drive, following heavy rain on March 9.
United Garden Hills Neighborhood Association

Not entirely forgotten. On March 5, the Champaign City Council voted to spend four million dollars to buy up homes along Hedge Road to build a nearly three-block-long floodwater detention pond --- part of a more than $50 million drainage improvement project that will also include sidewalks and streetlights for Garden Hills. But actual construction on the drainage project won’t begin until 2030. Civil engineer Alex Nagy, who’s overseeing the Garden Hills project for the Champaign Public Works Department, says the city just doesn’t have the money to fix all of its infrastructure problems at once.

Nagy says the city is looking at other funding options that might enable the city to start construction on Garden Hills drainage improvements sooner. He suggests that might be done through a combination of a possible state grant and the issuing of construction bonds. But in the meantime, Nagy says the city has had to decide which projects to pay for first.
Full article here. WCIA had a recent video segment which contrasted the darkness of the neighborhood compared to other local neighborhoods and the need for initiatives like SLEEP (Safety, Lighting, Energy Efficiency Program information here). Here's a couple screenshots (click to enlarge):



The News-Gazette also had coverage of the recent City Council meeting where the issue was discussed:
Champaign council OKs initial phase of Garden Hills drainage improvements
City council members unanimously approved the initial phase of the Garden Hills Drainage Improvement project Tuesday, in which 46 houses along Hedge Road will be demolished to make way for a detention basin.

The goal of the project is to reshape the blighted, majority-black neighborhood — where the average home value is $47,000 — by improving water retention, stormwater management and landscaping, as well as by adding much-needed streetlights and sidewalks.

The beginning phase of the project will focus on acquiring the 46 properties slated for demolition and relocating the inhabitants. After demolition, the space will be left as an open field — ready for development once the council finds funding for the rest of the project.

But the first stage alone could take years, Mayor Deb Feinen said...

Feinen took time to go over the city's historical investments in Garden Hills, such as the SLEEP program and installation of lighting and sidewalks, and pointed out that the council voted to increase the storm-water utility fee so that this project could advance.

"I recognize that it's not going as fast as neighbors would like," Feinen said. "But we still have a council goal to move drainage projects up in priority. I just don't expect it all to happen overnight."
More at the full article including more council members speaking in support of addressing the needs faster here. In an article prior to the meeting the paper detailed the timeline concerns a bit more specifically:
But it's the long schedule for the project that worries council member Clarissa Fourman, who represents Garden Hills.

"My main concern is the general time frame," Fourman said. "I'm glad the acquisitions are happening, but we've heard that it won't be until 2040 that this is completed. We need to look at moving this faster."

As of now, phase one would start in April, with city staff beginning to interview tenants and residents to determine their relocation needs. The rest of the year, they'd work to evaluate alternatives to accelerate the later phases of the drainage improvements.

City staff set a date of December 2022 for final purchases of properties from willing sellers. If some residents aren't willing to sell, that could mean more staff time dedicated to continuing negotiations until they are successful, or possible council intervention in the form of eminent domain.
That's a lot of rain and flooding, darkness and waiting, in the meantime.

City of Champaign Roundup


I have a few news items for the City of Champaign government to catch up on. In this post are tidbits about the small business incentive program, the Bradley bridge update, a response for more public accessibility to the police review board meetings, and nuisance issues. There's also a recent post on Garden Hills planning and coverage of what many residents show to be an overdue need for city prioritization here: Garden Hills Fights Neglect.

First on the small business incentive program (more information on that program here at the city website). From the News-Gazette:
Champaign council OKs more funding for small-business program
...
The program, which started in May 2016, helps small businesses by covering start-up costs and providing counseling and related services. If accepted, business owners can get up to $7,000 to cover legal services related to starting their business, marketing and branding it, or to cover capital equipment costs.

So far, 59 local business have participated in the program, using about $161,000 of the total $230,000 the council allocated two years ago.

On Tuesday, Tina Ansong and Small Business Development Center Director Don Elmore — whose organization provides services necessary for small businesses to qualify for program funding — asked council members to consider allocating $105,000 to get money to 15 more approved applicants.

And though council members agreed to do so, Will Kyles quickly pointed out to his fellow members that the program hasn't reached out to the number of minority-owned businesses that he expected. He reminded council members that it was after feedback from community coalition meetings urging more investment in African-American businesses that the incentive program was born...

Council member Clarissa Fourman was more stern in her remarks, but agreed with Kyles that the program hasn't done enough to reach African-American business owners. She questioned why a program set out to primarily help African-Americans has "morphed into benefitting white women," who made up more than half of the grant recipients.
More at the full article here. On the Bradley bridge update:
Dozens turn out for open house on Bradley Avenue bridge replacement
When the Bradley Avenue bridge crossing Interstate 57 was built in the 1960s, that part of west Champaign was largely a rural area...

On Thursday night, about 60 people who live near the Bradley bridge turned out at Parkland College for an open house regarding the span's upcoming replacement.

Miller said work on the $5 million project will begin Wednesday. That's when the affected portion of Bradley will be closed.

Motorists will need to take a detour — by way of either Staley or Duncan roads — and the MTD's pink route will temporarily be rerouted.

"The bridge probably won't come down until the middle part of April," Miller said.

Motorists who travel down Interstate 57 may also be affected from time to time, as the construction plan calls for occasional lane closures, but only at night.

When the project is completed by this Thanksgiving, a whole new bridge will be open for traffic.
Full article here. And finally from Tom's Mailbag on the Citizen Review Subcommittee, a response to a question about why meetings were canceled and frustration about trying to attend:
Meanwhile, here's a response to this week's question from Emily Rodriguez, who chairs the citizen review committee on police, which will review investigations of citizen complaints:

"Thanks for reaching out. The Citizen Review Subcommittee schedules a monthly meeting to review complaints, and the meetings this reader has referred to have been canceled because there were no complaints to review. The CRS is a mechanism for accountability, and we've invested time and effort into fine-tuning the procedure by which we hear and consider citizen complaints. That is our core task, and I'm confident in our process.

"It seems that the heart of this question, though, is about public outreach. This reader is seeking opportunities to address and observe the CRS subcommittee in public, and that is exciting. Public outreach is key component of the CRS mission. We know our community benefits from seeing CRS efforts among our neighbors and that being in public allows the CRS to do our job better. For these reasons, in an open meeting, the Subcommittee voted on and agreed to draft a community outreach strategy. This outreach strategy would (a) inform our neighbors on the complaint process, (b) create regular opportunities to take public input and questions from our neighbors in public settings, and (c) expand the locations where complaints can be filed.

"We're excited to begin that conversation with Champaign as soon as possible. Thus far, we've researched outreach strategies that have been adopted by citizen review boards of comparable cities. We have a good understanding of the decisions points and which strategies seem to show the most promise — but we also know our CRS structure is unique, as are the needs of our community. We're working closely with the Office of Equity, Community and Human Rights staff to determine how to best use the resources at our disposal. Community Relations Manager Rachel Joy has been a key resource in shaping our plans. In the months to come, we plan on presenting an update on our efforts to the Community Coalition. Here, we will seek a handful of community members to work more closely with the strategy drafting process.

"I very much appreciate this question, and I hope they keep coming."
Full Tom's Mailbag article here. More information on the Citizen Review Subcommittee at the city website here. Oh, and one more thing...

A last minute additional item, speaking of complaints. The nuisance department would like us to be less of a nuisance:
Champaign code-compliance manager: Nuisance complaints clogging priorities
Keep your lawn mowed, your weeds cut and trash picked up.

That is, if you don't want to be the target of nuisance complaints.

It would make Champaign Code Compliance Manager David Oliver's job a little easier, at least.

Dealing with the high volume of nuisance cases is keeping his office from focusing on its priorities, he said at Thursday's Neighborhood Services Advisory Board meeting, where he sought direction from board members.

Right now, Oliver said, the city's property-inspection process is "complaint-driven."

And not only do the vast majority of complaints come in the peak season of May through September, but they're also almost always about nuisances like tall grass, weeds and trash.

Oliver said that while nuisance cases generally can be resolved pretty quickly, last year, such complaints accounted for 84.25 percent of his office's caseload. 
Full article here.

Local Candidate Updates


There's a lot of new information, interviews, questionnaires and links for candidates in the April 2nd Consolidated Election (early voting has already begun!). The Champaign County Voter Alliance still has the best organized page for getting to know local candidates on your ballot (from the web, to social media, to email/phone contacts) here: Candidate Guide.

I've updated the Cheat Sheet: C-U Local's election page with candidates in the local government bodies we cover here. Below I have some links to various forums and events I've found on-line with the candidates and will be adding News-Gazette interviews as they're published. To jump directly to that click here.

First some recent candidate news items:

Champaign Mayoral incumbent Deb Feinen picked up support from local realtors. I don't know if it's related to the City Council looking into changing the rules on rental housing discrimination, but activists will likely assume a linkage.
Champaign Mayor Deb Feinen, who has nominal opposition from Azark Cobbs in her race for re-election this spring, reported two recent campaign contributions: $1,500 from the Realtor Political Action Committee in Springfield and a $1,035 in-kind contribution from the same group for a fundraiser this month.
Update: Tom Kacich had a little more on the mayoral fundraising in today's column:
Champaign Mayor Deb Feinen has collected four individual contributions of $1,000 or more in advance of the April 2 election, while her only opponent, Azark Cobbs, doesn't have an official campaign committee to accept campaign contributions.

Feinen has received a total of $4,535 from three different sources, the Realtor Political Action Committee, Champaign Firefighters Local 1260 and Attorney's Title Guaranty Fund Inc. It's likely she's also received smaller contributions, but those don't have to reported until mid-April, weeks after the mayoral election.

AFL-CIO endorsements, from last week's News-Gazette:
Matt Gladney was among six candidates on April's ballot to pick up endorsements Thursday from the AFL-CIO of Champaign County. Also getting the union workers' support:

— Deb Feinen for Champaign mayor

— Andrew Christensen and Jon Paul Youakim for Champaign City Council

— Karie Brown-Tess and Paul Poulosky for Urbana school board


Candidate Information and Links:

Here are links to videos and coverage of recent local candidate forums organized by the News-Gazette, Champaign County NAACP and League of Women Voters:

February 27th Candidate forums: (video from CGTV)
  • Urbana School Board Candidates: Additional News-Gazette coverage here.
  • Champaign School Board Candidates: Coverage here.
  • Parkland Community College Board Candidates: Coverage here.
February 28th Candidate forums: (video from CGTV)
  • Champaign City Council Candidates: Coverage here.
  • Champaign Mayoral Candidates: Coverage here.
  • Urbana Park District Candidates: (video only)
March 6th Candidate forums: 
  • Illini Democrats forum for Champaign City Council candidates coverage here
  • Champaign Federation of Teachers forum for Unit 4 candidates here. Facebook event information.
 
Candidate Meet & Greets:

News-Gazette Candidate Interviews and Questionnaires: N-G election webpage (See also CCVA Questionnaires here and Smile Politely Questionnaires here, and Washington Street Questionnaires here):
Champaign Mayor:
Champaign City Council:
Champaign School Board - Unit 4:
Champaign Park District:


Urbana School Board - District 116:

Urbana Park District: