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Miller Signs on to WOTUS Legislation

15th District Congresswoman Mary Miller has introduced companion legislation in the House to help farmers and the federal government define the terms of the Waters of the United States.

Waters of the United States or WOTUS are the rivers, streams, and lakes that fall under federal jurisdiction and forms the foundation of the Clean Waters Act enforced by the Environmental Protection Agency.

In 2015, former President Barack Obama published a rule meant to clarify which streams and wetlands fall under federal protection, something that has caused frustration and litigation for the country’s farmers since 1972.

In 2019 by executive order, former President Donald Trump rolled back the Obama era regulations on the rule, calling it both a power and land grab by the former administration. The move was largely praised by farmers and industry groups. In July 2019, Indiana Republican Senator Mike Braun sought to codify the Trump order into law. Braun recently reintroduced the Trump rollback in the U.S. Senate. Miller has sponsored the companion legislation in the House.

The Biden Administration has said that it would re-implement a version of the Obama era rule after the EPA announced it would be initiating a new rule-making process that would restore protections prior to the Obama-era rule and seek to find a better WOTUS definition.

Braun and Miller’s measures currently sit in committee awaiting votes.

JPD Investigating Shots Fired Incident

Jacksonville Police are investigating two locations that were hit with gunfire overnight.

According to a press release, at approximately 11:18PM Friday police dispatch received a report of gunshots in the 600 block of Jordan Street and in the 300 block of North Prairie Street.

Upon arrival, officers determined that a residence had been struck by gunfire in the 300 block of North Prairie and that a vehicle had been struck by gunfire in the 600 block of Jordan Street. No injuries were reported at either location.

No arrests have been made in connection with the incident.

Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Jacksonville Police Department at 217-479-4630 or the Morgan, Scott, Cass Crimestoppers unit at 217-243-7300 to leave an anonymous tip.

Pike County Sheriff’s Office, ISP Looking For Endangered Elderly Man

The Pike County Sheriff’s Office and Illinois State Police District 20 Troopers are looking for an endangered elderly man at this hour.

The Pike County Sheriff is requesting your assistance in locating Ronald Abney, who is an 82 year old white male, who is 6 foot and weighs 240 pounds. Abney has white hair and is wearing a green plaid shirt and khaki pants. He was last seen leaving Hardin, Illinois and possibly traveling to Moberly, Missouri at 3:00p.m. on Friday, July 23rd. Abney was driving a red 2004 Honda Accord with Illinois license plate AHI85. 

Mr. Abney has a condition that places himself in danger. Any person with information regarding the whereabouts of Ronald Abney should contact the Pike County Sheriff’s Office at: 217-285-5011 or contact 9-1-1.

Coroner Releases Identity of Deceased In Old State Road Crash

Morgan County Coroner Marcy Patterson has released the identity of a young woman killed in a single-vehicle roll over crash on Old State Road Friday night.

The passenger that was pronounced deceased at an area hospital at 7:46PM Friday is 19 year old Daiziana Burton of Jacksonville. Burton and the 17 year old driver of the 2007 Honda Accord were both ejected from the vehicle after the vehicle went off the roadway for an unknown reason, struck a ditch on the south side of the roadway, and then rolled several times before coming to a stop.

The driver was transported to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. Their current status is unknown.

The Illinois State Police Traffic Crash Reconstruction Unit (TCRU) and the Morgan County Coroner’s office are continuing the investigation.

ISP Releases Identities of Those Involved in Fatal IL Rte 4 Crash

Illinois State Police have released the identities of those involved in a fatal crash in southern Sangamon County last night.

Details released in a report say that a silver 2008 Chevy truck driven by a 17 year old male juvenile from Chatham was traveling northbound on Illinois Route 4 near Planter Road south of Auburn when the driver attempted to pass vehicles. As the driver of the truck pulled into the southbound lane, it struck a black 2008 Buick car driven by 57 year old Brian McCoy of Virden head-on in the southbound lane, with both vehicles coming to rest in the roadway.

The passenger in the southbound Buick, 50 year old Michael A. Devries of Virden was pronounced dead at the scene by the Sangamon County Sheriff’s office. McCoy and a 16 year old passenger from Chatham from the Chevy truck were transported from the scene with serious injuries by ambulance. The 17 year old male driver of the truck was airlifted from the scene with serious injuries. The Illinois State Police Traffic Crash Reconstruction Unit is continuing the investigation.

Rural Electric Coops Face Uncertainty With Prairie State Energy Campus Closure on the Table

Illinois lawmakers are still debating a statewide energy proposal that would shutter the state’s coal-fired power plants by 2035. A local utility cooperative is asking its members to lobby lawmakers to keep it open.

Illinois Electric Cooperative has issued letters to their members asking to keep the plants open because they say it will cost utility rate payers more money and provide an unreliable electric grid of power.

IEC’s general manager Randy Long says it will also saddle the state with significant outstanding debt: “We believe it is probably going to reduce grid reliability and it’s going to cause good energy jobs to leave the State of Illinois along with the tax base to neighboring states and it’s going to increase our [utility] rates also. In 2035, the Prairie State plant will still have about $188 million worth of debt, and that is still going to have to be paid off. We’ll no longer be getting energy from that plant either, so we’ll have to replace that energy from another source. We are just very concerned about that – the increased costs to our members and also the reliability on the grid, which is really in the forefront after the blackouts we have just heard about in Texas and California recently.”

Long says that many of the state’s 25 not-for-profit electric cooperatives along with some municipalities owe shares in the Prairie State Energy Campus in Marissa, Illinois and would be stuck with the debt. The plant is currently the state’s largest coal-fired plant, which employs 650 staff and approximately 1,000 union contractors. According to the letter sent out to members, if the clean energy bill were to pass the General Assembly, cooperative members would see their utility bills increase between 20-25%.

State Senator Chris Belt told WCIA back in June that he’s pushing to delay the closure to 2050 to allow cooperatives and municipalities pay off the debt incurred in the facility.

Long says the grid reliability is the other troublesome point for cooperative members due to Nature’s unpredictability: “We support green energy, and we support the transition to green energy. I know here at Illinois Electric, ourselves, we own and operate a wind turbine in Pike County and also own a solar [farm] right here in Scott County that we operate, so we like renewables. Prairie Power also has some renewable assets. Our concern with that is that renewable assets are intermittent by nature. The sun’s not shining; the wind’s not blowing – you’re not getting anything from them. Where a power plant like Prairie State is what we would call dispatchable – it’s available to produce power 24/7. There are those times even when more and more renewables come online and are available, there are times due to their intermittent nature, that they are not available and there has to be these base-load dispatchable [power] plants in place to carry us through those times. Technology has not caught up with that yet. We like to say ‘don’t let the policy get ahead of technology.'”

The Prairie Power complex generated 12.9 million megawatts of power in 2019, which is enough to power 2.5 million homes in the state. Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration shows Prairie State’s plant operates at a higher level of efficiency and creates more power per ton of coal than any other plant in the state.

Meanwhile, Illinois lawmakers continue to talk behind the scenes on the fate of the plant in the Metro East as well as CWLP’s plant in Springfield.

Jacksonville Night At Busch Stadium 2021

Cardinals fans got a treat last night as the Redbirds took the series win in the finale 3-2.

Dylan Carlson and Nolan Arenado homered for the Cardinals.  Cards’ hurler Kwang Hyun Kim gave up just two runs over six innings to pick up the win.  Alex Reyes got the save for St. Louis, which has won five of six. 

Jake Marisnick drove in both runs for the Cubs on a two-out double in the fourth inning.  Cubs’ rookie Adbert Alzolay allowed three runs to take the loss for Chicago.

Jacksonville High School’s choir sung the 7th inning stretch of “God Bless America” and Scotty DeWulf threw out the opening first pitch.

ISP Releases Information on Officer-Involved Crash on IL Route 125 from Wednesday

No one was injured after an Illinois State Police vehicle was struck on Illinois Route 125 Wednesday night.

Illinois State Police responded to a call of a wrong-way driver at 8:40PM Wednesday on Illinois Route 125 at Illinois Route 97 near Pleasant Plains. A District 9 trooper located the vehicle and attempted to stop the vehicle still traveling in the wrong lane. When the vehicle failed to stop, the trooper then attempted to perform a PIT maneuver causing the vehicle to leave the roadway, continued into a ditch, and then re-entered the roadway eastbound in the westbound lane.

The vehicle attempted to pass an ISP squad car and struck another. It then side-swiped a Sangamon County Sheriff’s Deputy vehicle before eventually crashing off the roadway and coming to a stop. Officers then provided medical aid to the unnamed driver and determined they had been suffering a medical episode throughout the whole ordeal. The driver of the vehicle was later transported to an area hospital for medical treatment. None of the police officers involved asked for medical treatment at the scene.

Illinois State Police say no further information about the incident will be released.

1 Dead, 3 Injured in Southern Sangamon Crash

One person is dead and three others are hurt after a 2-vehicle crash in southern Sangamon County last night.

Illinois State Police reported the crash happened at 8:08 last night on Illinois Route 4 just south of the Divernon Road intersection, south of Auburn. Preliminary police reports say that a vehicle was traveling northbound on Illinois Route 4 and another was traveling in the same area heading southbound.

Troopers told WAND-TV that the first vehicle moved into oncoming traffic to pass vehicles in front of it and hit the second vehicle head-on. The driver and passenger of the northbound vehicle were taken to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. The second vehicle’s driver was airlifted with serious injuries, while the passenger of that vehicle was pronounced dead at the scene by the Sangamon County Coroner’s Office.

Both lanes remained closed for almost 5 hours overnight due to investigation and clean up.

The Illinois State Police Traffic Crash Reconstruction Unit is investigating. The investigation is open and ongoing.

LaHood Proposes TANF Reforms to Include Apprenticeships

18th District Congressman Darin LaHood has introduced TANF reform legislation in order to put people back to work.

LaHood introduced 2 bills aiming to strengthen provisions under he Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. The reforms are expected to hold states accountable for their spending and ensure that the federal dollars are going towards the neediest families to provide them with the resources and necessary tools to get back into the workforce.

The two-bill package was introduced as part of the House Ways and Means Republican caucus JOBS for Success Act that also has Senate companion legislation.

LaHood’s bills would require states to spend 25% of their Maintenance-of-Effort funds and 25% of their federal block grant on work or work support activities and prevent states from using TANF to fill state budget deficits. The bills would also add apprenticeships to the list of approved work activities.

LaHood says the reforms provide a hand up for those in poverty so they are able to get back to work and move toward self-sufficiency.