LIKELY BOUND FOR PRISON!
ILLINOIS EX-GOV. GEORGE RYAN
Welcome to CHBlog.ozarkattitude.com News and commentary by Carol Henrichs, retired journalist and Peotone Airport historian
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Friday, June 29, 2007
Rep. Jackson needs a geography lesson
Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. |
Does Congressman Jackson even know where Peotone is located?
Ford Heights
is now a neighbor of Peotone.
At least that
is what U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr., (D-Il) said on the floor of the U.S. House
of Representatives Thursday when he attempted to defend a Republican attack
against funding for the Abraham Lincoln National Airport Commission (ALNAC).
House
Republicans were unsuccessful in their effort to try to limit pork barrel
spending they blame on Democrats.
The national
debate targeting ‘earmarks’, which is loosely defined as a request for a
specific amount of money to a particular organization or project in a
congressman’s home state or district, got personal and close to home Thursday
when it was learned that Jackson was asking for $231,000 for ALNAC, as an
earmark added to the Financial Services Appropriation Bill.
By a wide
margin, the House approved the bill with the earmarks intact.
Jackson will
get the funding.
But it was
during his defense of the spending request that Jackson said, “Ford Heights,
one of the poorest suburbs in the country abuts the airport.”
Perhaps the
federal tax dollars ALNAC will receive can provide a little geography lesson
for Jackson.
This marks the
second instance where the public has been mislead about the airport’s location,
which does not lie within his congressional district.
A few years ago, on his website, Peotone was listed under the heading “My Home District.” All of the communities in Jackson’s district were listed there, including Peotone, which was between Park Forest and Phoenix. Peotone remains in the list, but a new header has been added that reads, “Municipalities on the South Side and South Suburbs including the future Home of Chicago's Third Airport in Will County Illinois Peotone.”
Jackson’s spending proposal was criticized Thursday, by U.S. Rep. John Campbell, (R-Ca), who offered an amendment to the legislation to ban earmarks. The confrontation was shown live on C-Span.
Jackson’s spending proposal was criticized Thursday, by U.S. Rep. John Campbell, (R-Ca), who offered an amendment to the legislation to ban earmarks. The confrontation was shown live on C-Span.
Jackson asked
for the funds for what the Republicans are calling “the invisible airport.”
“This earmark
would direct $231,000 – taken from taxpayers’ pockets across America – for
“Minority and Small Business Development and Procurement Opportunities,”
according to the Republican Study Committee.
Not only does
the Republican organization recognize that an airport does not exist, but they
protest that Rick Bryant is the Executive Director of ALNAC, which was
spearheaded by Jackson. Bryant is also Jackson’s paid staff member. Bryant is
Jackson’s Deputy District Administrator, who earned $23,999.99 in 2006,
according to Jackson’s website.
Republicans
charge that Jackson said he wouldn’t pursue federal funds for the airport. They
claim that Gov. Rod Blagojevich has been enthusiastic about the new airport
only because it would not use public funds.
During
Thursday’s confrontation, Jackson played a clip of the governor’s 2005 State of
the State address offering support for Peotone. Jackson claims the only thing
standing in the way of the airport is Blagojevich’s agreement to lease
state-owned land to ALNAC.
Yet, he failed
to mention that only a percentage of the land is owned by the state and the
remainder is in the hands of unwilling sellers.
Campbell
questioned the use of small business and procurement opportunities for an
airport that doesn’t exist.
“How can that
be?” he asked, since even if it were approved today, it wouldn’t exist for many
years.
Jackson argued
that he is not seeking federal funds for the airport, but rather for small
business opportunities to maximize the benefits of women and minorities to work
in all aspects of job training.
When Campbell
tried to enlist Jackson in a debate on the House floor, Jackson refused to
speak, saying he would allow Campbell to continue, but that he would give
closing remarks.
He took the
balance of his time to turn the debate into a pro-airport commercial, complete
with an easel and posters showing the airport layout plan.
Jackson said
IDOT is now in the process of submitting ALNAC’s plan to the FAA for approval.
And, he added that a Record of Decision could come in six months.
He denounced
Campbell’s two terms in congress by criticizing Campbell for jumped into a
three-decade old discussion first advanced by (former Gov.) Jim Edgar.
Jackson
pointed out facts as he sees them, such as Midway’s runways are too short,
O’Hare reached capacity two years ago, and ALNAC is a legitimate airport authority
who plans to build Chicago’s third airport with public-private funds.
“I have been
almost solely responsible for leading the effort,” he said, “for the last 12
years to attempt to solve the airport capacity crisis.
“Now is the time for planning,” Jackson said,
without the usual preface, that this airport is purported to be the most
studied airport in history.
Monday, May 1, 2006
History shows Ryan hurt eastern Will County
Ex-Illinois Gov. George Ryan |
Let us not forget that it was Ryan who started landbanking for the Peotone Airport.
Who would have predicted that Ryan would be indicted, let alone convicted, of multiple felonies, including racketeering conspiracy, mail fraud, making false statements, extortion, money laundering, structuring money, tax fraud and filing false tax returns?
The fall of George Ryan began with the tragic death of six innocent children belonging to the Rev. Scott and Janet Willis. The events began a probe into Ryan’s conduct in public office.
Though Ryan did not directly cause the accident, it was later learned that the driver of the truck that caused the accident illegally obtained a drivers license when Ryan was Secretary of State. And Ryan pals who now sit in jail, tried to cover up the investigation of the accident.
George Ryan’s downfall was his arrogance, rooted in the belief that he was above the law.
Many say that Ryan was a nice guy, a kindly grandfather. Well, that may be the case, but the test of a person’s character cannot be accurately measured by how he plays with his grandchildren.
A true test of character is evident by how a man behaves under adversity and how he reacts to problems.
Ryan handled problems like a bully on the playground, scornfully dismissing anyone who disagreed with him.
Had it not been for a hardnosed prosecutor with a keen sense of right and wrong, Ryan would be just another ex-governor who hurt people without a sense of remorse.
Ryan never flinched when he hurt people with his decisions.
In eastern Will County, Ryan certainly hurt people. Had it not been for his actions as Governor, the Peotone airport project would have died in 1992. At that time, Ryan did the right thing -- voting appropriately -- against locating an airport near Peotone. As a member of the Bi-State Policy Committee that was charged with selecting the right site for a new airport, Ryan cast the deciding “no” vote for the Peotone site.
Once in the top political spot in Illinois however, Ryan followed in the footsteps of his predecessor Jim Edgar, who threw the first Illinois tax dollars at the proposal to build an airport at Peotone.
Not to be outdone, Ryan took it a few steps further. While Edgar threw money into additional studies, Ryan, for the first time, put money into the state’s budget for land acquisition.
Ten years after Ryan did the right thing by voting against Peotone, he did the wrong thing by boldly deciding to buy the first piece of property.
Apparently it didn’t matter that the first piece – a vacant parcel in Heatherbrook Estates in Monee Township -- was outside the state’s downsized airport plan.
Nor did it matter that officially, there was no project, since the Federal Aviation Administration had not identified a site for a new airport. The Phase I Environmental Impact Statement was not even completed at the time.
When the Tier I EIS was finally completed, it was after the fact. While the agency’s determination that buying land for an airport would not endanger the environment, in a letter to Ryan pal Kirk Brown, who headed the Department of Transportation, the agency wrote that Illinois was buying land at its own risk.
That action caused many to wonder about the political motivations behind the deal.
Land acquisition fell under the influence of the Airport Project Office in Matteson, run by former Monee Township Supervisor Christine Cochrane, who was named by Edgar.
Later, Cochrane became an assistant to Ryan political pal Brad Roseberry who then headed the project office.
Roseberry quit the post when he testified in court against Ryan. He admitted that he campaigned for Ryan on state time and shredded documents during Ryan’s tenure as Secretary of State. Roseberry escaped indictment, however, when he agreed to testify against Ryan and Ryan pal Scott Fawell.
Ryan’s first land deal netted one vacant lot in Heatherbrook Estates, but the token piece was all it took to inspire near panic sales by other landowners, already worn down by years of uncertainty.
The $47,000 price tag was a cheap price to pay to get the real estate door opened for the Peotone project. Never mind that it wasn’t even a part of the state’s 4,000 acres needed for its “starter” airport.
Another 27 parcels in Heatherbrook Estates were purchased by the state, totally relieving owner/developer Bob Bonnema from having to sell lots in his upscale subdivision. Another 65 acres has been purchased by the state to date.
Ironically, under the Blagojevich administration, Ryan’s actions were undone. It was decided to sell the Heatherbrook properties, since they weren’t needed. Residents there cried hardship, earning little sympathy from other eastern Will County landowners that have suffered since long before Heatherbrook was built.
An entire region has faced a hellish existence because George Ryan made a deal.
Despite the fact that Ryan was not directly responsible for the death of the Willis kids, he is responsible for destruction of peace and pleasure in eastern Will County.
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