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Proviso Probe

Saturday, November 26, 2005

M06, four questions for Rep. Karen Yarbrough [7th Rep]

I asked Rep. Karen Yarbrough four questions I felt were relevant to her campaign.

1. On the smoking legislation you pushed, you've said it's about local control. If you favor local control, why not just let the owners of the establishments decide whether to be smoking or non-smoking?
HB 672-Clean Air Act
The allowing for all communities to have "local control" in deciding public smoking policy just only seems fair. The 1989 legislation pre-emption (written by tobacco companies) only allowed 21 communities in the state of Illinois the option to decide. Why not all Illinois communities? Why should the state be deciding public policy for local communities and not the reverse? I just feel the locals know better their respective communities better than the state and will do what's in their best interest.

The other issue has to do with second-hand smoke ingestion by innocent employees. Is it reasonable to expect to be able to work in safe, decent, work environment? We know that workers exposed to secondhand smoke are 20-30% more likely to develop cancer. The science is irrefutable.

2. Since District 209 spends 73% more per student than Riverside-Brookfield HS, and R-B has much higher percentages of students passing the PSAE, doesn't this
discredit the hypothesis that schools like ProvisoTownship High Schools need more money?

District 209
Your point is well taken concerning the per pupil spending comparison with Brookfield and Dist. 209. The ultimate proof is in the pudding. When you look at the test scores that are some of the worst in the state; it would suggest there are misplaced priorities. The money needs to be better spent in the areas of instruction and resources for all of the children in district 209 especially those who are struggling. Every child should be given every opportunity to succeed.

BTW, I was factually incorrect in the premise of the question. District 209 reported spending $14,093 at a board meeting and the Riverside/Brookfield Landmark said R-B spent $8,000+ on education. The R-B figure did not include the spending on non-education stuff, like maintaining the physical building. See this post.

3. Have you sponsored any legislation initiated by a constituent and not an interest group?
Citizen Sponsored Legislation
The most recent legislation I sponsored is HB 1428 which is now a public act. Citizen's who have mortgages (most do) usually have both their insurance and real estate taxes escrow ed and the mortgage company pays the payment when due. If they, 1) do not pay 2) pay the wrong parcel 3) over pay it sets into motion a whole series of problems for consumers. This actually happened to me several years ago and I then heard from a woman who lives nearby about her misadventure. It was suggested that if the mortgage company would 1) let a consumer know when they pay 2) the actual parcel # they pay it would be helpful to clear up the problem prior to an increased payment, etc.

4. What does it mean to you to be a Democrat?
On being a Democrat
I believe in the basic democratic philosophy of fairness to all people, rights to privacy, property, freedom of speech and government should work for the common good of all people.

I asked the challenger, Emanuel Christopher Welch, four questions, but he refused to answer.

4 Comments:

  • Karen is Toast! Moore and Welch with Lightford and Ireland are going to kick her around like a rag doll!

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 7:40 PM, November 27, 2005  

  • Welch does not have any ideas nor does he care! His message is about power and greed and is about himself! All of Welch's ideas at 209 were implemented or were being done by Manzo! Welch can't answer any questions in depth, because he is to shallow and he is not a bright man! Welch is the poster child of Affirmitive action gone wrong!

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 9:42 AM, November 28, 2005  

  • Chris Winch says..Please read this

    Russ Stewart
    Attorney at Law & Political Analyst




    "PLANTATION POLITICS" RISES
    ANEW IN PROVISO TOWNSHIP


    ANALYSIS & OPINION BY RUSS STEWART


    Several generations ago on the West Side, so-called "plantation politics" was a fact of life. As southern blacks migrated northward to urban areas during the Depression and World War II, the predominantly Jewish and Italian West Side evolved into a majority-black area.

    But that didn't bother the area's white ward bosses. Jake Arvey, Artie Elrod, Eddie Quigley and Al Horan continued to rule their West Side domains. During the 1940s and 1950s they put a few black faces into a few offices, but they maintained dominion. The civil rights movement of the 1960s hastened their political demise, and black bosses emerged to control the predominantly black wards.

    An updated version of "plantation politics" has arisen in west suburban Proviso Township, which has a large and growing black population, especially in Maywood, Bellwood and Broadview. The township's black Democratic committeeman, Gene Moore, who is the Cook County recorder of deeds, is being kept in power by white votes generated by the white mayors of the white-majority cities in the township.

    In next year's March 21 primary, it will be "Plantation versus Anti-Plantation." Moore, of Maywood, faces tough opposition from state Representative Karen Yarbrough (D-7), who also is black and from Maywood and whose husband, Henderson Yarbrough, was elected Maywood's mayor in 2005. Moore beat her for committeeman in 2002 by 9,073-7,911, getting 53.4 percent of the vote. Yarbrough won the township's black areas by sizable majorities, but Moore prevailed in the white areas by even bigger majorities. But now, as was evident by Henderson Yarbrough's triumph in 2005 over Moore-backed incumbent Ralph Conner, Moore's base in Maywood has collapsed, and his Maywood vote will shrink even more.

    Moore could lose to Yarbrough, and if he does, his hold on the recorder's job will be jeopardized. His term runs through 2008, but if he's not committeeman, party leaders will feel no compunction about dumping him and slating some more clout-worthy suburban black committeeman for the job.

    Proviso Township is an electoral behemoth - it's the second largest suburban township in Cook County, containing more than 83,000 registered voters. It runs from Harlem west to DuPage County, just west of Interstate 290, between North Avenue and Ogden. It includes Maywood, Bellwood, Forest Park, Berkeley, Hillside, Melrose Park, Broadview, Brookfield, Westchester, LaGrange Park and part of Stone Park.

    In the 2000 census, Maywood was 82.6 percent black, Broadview 73.1 percent and Bellwood 73.4 percent - major increases over 1990. The black population was up to 31.1 percent in Forest Park, 36.8 percent in Hillside and 27.7 percent in Berkeley, and it is higher today. However, Brookfield was 93.5 percent white, LaGrange Park 93.2 percent, Westchester 86.1 percent, Melrose Park 71.5 percent, Berkeley 59.3 percent and Forest Park 56.1 percent.

    Those percentages have declined, as the out-migration of blacks from the West Side to the west suburbs continues. Overall, Proviso Township is about 45 percent black, 40 percent white and 15 percent Hispanic, but white voters are still the majority.

    The key white Democratic political players in the township are the "Mighty Mayors" - Melrose Park's Ron Serpico, Brookfield's Mike Garvey, Berkeley's Mike Esposito, Bellwood's Frank Pasquale, Broadview's Henry Vicenik and LaGrange Park's Jim Discipio. Broadview and Bellwood, despite a black majority, have white mayors. The mayors are not political allies of Moore, but they definitely prefer that he remain as the Democratic committeeman.

    As mayors, they control their municipal budget and hundreds of jobs. Each has a mini-machine, and each has the ability to deliver thousands of votes to Moore. Their fear is that Yarbrough, if committeeman, would use the job to build a black political machine in Maywood, Bellwood and Broadview and would, by the end of the decade, have enough power to take over township government, controlling some funding for local projects and then fielding mayoral candidates in their cities as the black population increases.

    The mayor of Westchester, Republican Paul Gattuso, won't be a player in next year's contest.

    But Proviso's "Mighty Mayoral Machine" is not invincible. The township supervisor is Kathy Ryan, a white independent who is backed by the local Republican organizations. In 2001 Ryan beat Wanda Sharp, Moore's black protege, by 9,538-8,633; she succeeded August Taddeo, who also was Melrose Park's mayor until he was convicted of taking kickbacks. That election marked the end of the township government's dominance by Italian-American politicians.

    In 2005 the township's white mayors fielded their own slate for eight township offices, including Mari Herrell for supervisor. Moore supported their slate. Ryan won again, beating Herrell 8,666-8,513, but the slate's candidates won the other seven offices, including four trustees, clerk, assessor and collector.

    One would think that Moore, age 63, would be a veritable titan in his bailiwick. But in the pantheon of county office holders, Moore is the runt of the litter. His office employs 275 people and has a budget of $13 million. That's definitely not the "Right Stuff" needed to build a personal political machine.

    Moore was the Maywood-area state representative from 1993 to 1999. When Jesse White was elected secretary of state in 1998 and resigned his post as recorder, Moore quickly lined up support among black committeemen in general, and suburban committeemen in particular, and when the Cook County Board met to choose White's successor, Moore had the backing of board President John Stroger and was picked.

    From there, at least in Proviso Township, it's been mostly downhill for Moore. In 1998 he challenged Committeeman Gary Marinaro, who is white, in the primary and beat him 6,883-3,935, getting a huge vote in Maywood and the black precincts. He then arranged to have his aide, Wanda Sharp, appointed to his House seat in 1999.

    In 2000, however, Sharp was opposed in the Democratic primary by Yarbrough, the president of the Maywood Chamber of Commerce. Just after her appointment, Sharp was indicted on six counts of perjury and six counts of mutilation of election materials stemming from a prior election. She lost to Yarbrough 5,733-5,545. The charges were dismissed after the election, and Sharp maintains that Yarbrough was behind the allegations.

    Moore faced Yarbrough for committeeman in 2002, beating her by just 1,162 votes. In 2005 Yarbrough's husband got 1,314 votes (31 percent of the total) in the election for Maywood mayor in a five-candidate contest; Moore's candidate, the incumbent mayor, finished fourth, with 692 votes (16 percent).

    For 2006 the "Maywood Maze" is typically puzzling and convoluted. State Senator Kimberly Lightford (D-4) of Maywood is a close ally of Moore. Her Senate district includes Yarbrough's suburban House district and the Chicago-based House district occupied by Calvin Giles (D-8), which takes in the 37th Ward and small parts of Oak Park, Berwyn and North Riverside. Lightford's district is 64 percent black.

    Giles, an erstwhile ally of Moore and Lightford, is backing James Smith in the 2006 Democratic primary against Lightford. Interestingly, Smith ran against Giles for state representative in the 2004 primary, losing 11,334-4,021 and getting 26.2 percent of the vote. In 2005 Giles was ousted as chairman of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus by state Senator James Meeks, who was supported by Lightford. Giles was mightily incensed, and now it's payback time. Expect Yarbrough's organization to weigh in behind Smith.

    Moore is supporting Chris Welch, president of Proviso Township High School District 209 Board of Education, in the 2006 primary against Yarbrough. Lightford has not taken a stance.

    The early outlook:

    Lightford, a senator since 1998, has huge problems. She won her primary in 2002 with 62.3 percent of the vote, beating two opponents. In 2006 she'll likely have both Giles' and Yarbrough's organizations working against her, simply because she is allied with Moore.

    As for Moore, he has no political organization. Maywood is dominated by the Yarbroughs' political machine. In the 2002 committeeman's race, township turnout was 16,984; that's 50 percent more than the turnout of 10,768 in 1998. Turnout in the 2005 municipal elections was about 4,300 in Maywood, 4,000 in Bellwood and 1,300 in Broadview, or about 9,600 in the black-majority towns. It was 4,800 in Brookfield, 4,600 in Westchester, 3,100 in Melrose Park, 1,300 in Berkeley, 1,800 in Hillside and 3,000 in LaGrange Park, or about 18,600 in the white-majority towns. Turnout will be much lower in a Democratic primary.

    My prediction: Moore will lose to Yarbrough by almost 3-1 in Maywood and by at least 3-2 in Bellwood and Broadview - worse than he did in 2002. To win, he needs to win the white areas with more than 60 percent of the vote. The "Mighty Mayoral Machine" did its job in 2002, and the mayors have the motivation to replicate their feat in 2006. They would love to be rid of those pesky Yarbroughs and let Proviso Township return to the quietude of plantation politics. But getting their constituents to support them is a lot easier than persuading them to vote for a black candidate in a Democratic primary.

    Welch will lose to Yarbrough by a sizable margin, but the fate of both Lightford and Moore is in doubt; either could lose.


    E-mail to Russ@russstewart.com or visit his website at http://www.russstewart.com

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 7:39 PM, November 28, 2005  

  • 209 janitors said...

    Karen we really didn't mean that Chrissy made us do it, he actually speaks for us.....

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 6:28 PM, November 29, 2005  

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