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            The report given by the Department of 
            Public Health to the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board, 
            which recommends that LDC be closed, says that "economics play the 
            deciding role in this application. … the lack of funding for this 
            facility in the State budget means that the only way care can be 
            maintained for these patients is to move them to other facilities 
            which have the necessary funding." 
            On Aug. 15, the planning board will 
            decide whether to give the Department of Human Services a permit to 
            close LDC. DHS and Gov. George Ryan, citing continuing allegations 
            of abuse and neglect, have set Sept. 1 of this year as the date to 
            shutter the doors of the 125-year-old facility. 
            "Basing the recommendation for closure 
            on lack of funds is wrong," Bomke said Wednesday. "That’s not an 
            issue. It’s just a question of reallocating funds." 
            Even though current funding for LDC 
            runs only until Sept. 1, Bomke says money could be found to keep the 
            embattled Lincoln facility open. 
            "We know that funding will have to be 
            increased at other institutions to care for LDC residents being 
            transferred there," he said. "DHS is the largest agency in state 
            government, and I guarantee they don’t calculate their budget to the 
            penny," Bomke said DHS has the ability to transfer 3 percent of its 
            budget from one facility to another. 
              
            
             
            Even if DHS was not able to fund LDC 
            for another year, the legislature could always appropriate 
            additional funds, he said. 
            "Last year’s budget was based on an 
            $800 million year-end balance in the general revenue fund. It is not 
            uncommon for the legislature to make supplemental revenue available 
            if an agency runs low on funds. They could do that either in the 
            November veto session or in January," Bomke said.  
            Bomke, who will represent southwestern 
            Logan County and most of Lincoln if he wins in the November 
            election, is a party to the lawsuit that has forced DHS to seek the 
            permit before permanently closing LDC. 
            He said he was disappointed in the 
            DPH’s report. Closing LDC, he said, is not a good thing for Logan 
            County, but it is even worse for the parents and families of LDC 
            residents and for the residents themselves. 
            Spokespersons for the American 
            Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, the union that 
            represents most LDC workers, also disagreed with the DPH report. 
            "What I can’t get over is how the 
            planning board staff seemed to miss the most obvious point," said 
            Anne Irving, spokesperson for AFSCME Council 31. "There are just not 
            enough services in this planning area to serve the residents of LDC."
             
            During hearings in front of a House 
            committee early this year, DHS representatives said there were 168 
            LDC residents who had families ties to central Illinois, but now 
            they are listing only 63 residents in the planning area, she said. 
            These 63 residents could be accommodated at Jacksonville 
            Developmental Center, according to DHS.   
             [to top of second column in this
            article]
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            However, many families live just 
            outside the planning area but are close enough to Lincoln to visit 
            their relatives often. These include families in Peoria, Tazewell 
            and McLean counties. 
            "By excluding LDC residents whose 
            family members are outside the planning area but who are still 
            closer to LDC than to other state-operated facilities, they are 
            distorting the picture," Irving said. 
            For example, she said, an elderly 
            parent, Clara May, recently widowed, has a daughter at LDC. May 
            lives in Peoria and visits her daughter often, bringing her home at 
            least once a month. 
            Irving said May specifically asked that 
            her daughter be transferred to Jacksonville but has been told she 
            will go to Howe Developmental Center in Tinley Park because she will 
            get better care there. 
            "She is asking how her daughter can get 
            better care if she isn’t able to see her mother," Irving said. 
            Irving also questioned the objectivity 
            of the DPH report. 
            "The planning board staff, employed by 
            the governor, analyzes the data provided by the DHS staff, also 
            employed by the governor, which includes a statement by an attorney 
            in the Bureau of the Budget, also employed by the governor. There is 
            no critical analysis," she said. 
            Dan Senters, spokespersons for AFSCME 
            Local 425, said he was also disappointed in the conclusions DPH 
            reached. 
            "It’s more of the same. DHS is trying 
            to make Lincoln look bad when it isn’t." He said several former 
            Lincoln staff members who have transferred to other state-operated 
            facilities are being cited for the good work they are doing. 
            Senters also agreed that DHS 
            understated the number of people who need facilities in the area. 
            "The criteria for closure have not been 
            met. I would hope that the board would be more objective than the 
            staff whose paychecks are signed by Gov. Ryan." 
              
             
            The criteria which the Health 
            Facilities Planning Board will consider include the DPH staff 
            report, a petition signed by approximately 10,000 people opposing 
            the closure of LDC, several letters from parents opposed to the 
            closure, a letter from AFSCME, several letters from provider groups 
            in the area offering placement to LDC residents, letters supporting 
            closure from several groups representing developmentally disabled 
            individuals, and a letter from Melissa Wright, associate director of 
            the Office of Developmental Disabilities. Reginald 
            Marsh, spokesperson for DHS, could not be reached Thursday morning. [Joan
Crabb] | 
        
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            "Every two years, many men and women 
            are elected to county boards and commissions for the first time and 
            immediately face an array of questions and responsibilities," 
            explained Jeri Marxman, U of I Extension public policy education 
            specialist who is heading the project. "We thought that if we 
            provided them the opportunity to learn about the requirements and 
            gain the insights of longtime, retiring board and commission 
            members, they would be able to hit the ground running if they win in 
            November." 
            For many years, Extension has provided 
            post-election training for county board members and commissioners. 
            Marxman said a representative of the 
            Illinois Department of Commerce and Community Affairs will be 
            present at the programs to explain the fiduciary duties of board and 
            commissioner members. Ethics and potential conflicts of interest  will be addressed by a representative of the Illinois attorney 
            general’s office. Extension specialists will provide information on 
            parliamentary procedure and meeting management.   
             [to top of second column in this
            article]
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            "We are particularly excited about a 
            panel of veteran board and commission members who will share their 
            experiences with the candidates," said Marxman. "They’ll discuss the 
            things they wished they had known before they began their service 
            and how board and commission members can most effectively serve the 
            public." 
            Registration for each meeting begins at 
            3:30 p.m., and the training commences at 4 p.m., concluding at 8 
            p.m. The $45 charge per person  includes materials and dinner. People 
            interested in attending one of the sessions should contact their 
            local Extension office for further information. 
            Dates and locations are: 
            •  Sept. 5 — Galesburg, 
            Prairie Inn (formerly Jumer’s) 
            •  Sept. 11 — Springfield, 
            Northfield Conference Center 
            •  Sept. 19 — Morris, 
            Jennifer’s Garden Center •  
            Sept. 26 — Mount Vernon, Holiday Inn [U 
            of I news 
            release] | 
        
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            The collection contains a number of 
            interesting rarities. Several early Illinois law books, such as 
            Sidney Breese’s 1831 "Reports on Cases at the Common Law and In 
            Chancery" and the 1839 edition of "Cases Adjudged in the Supreme 
            Court of the State of Illinois," are found in the collection. Of 
            special significance is Judge David Davis’ copy of the "Laws of the 
            State of Illinois Passed by the Tenth General Assembly." Davis was 
            judge of the 8th Judicial Circuit, where Abraham Lincoln practiced 
            law from 1837 to 1861. Lincoln appointed Davis to the United States 
            Supreme Court in 1862. 
            The collection also reflects the many 
            friendships and themes that characterized the life of Abraham 
            Lincoln Marovitz. In Robert W. Johannsen’s 1973 biography of Stephen 
            A. Douglas, Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley inscribed the following: 
            "I thought you would enjoy the new biography of Stephen A. Douglas, 
            the ‘Little Giant,’ who in my opinion is the outstanding Democratic 
            leader in the history of Illinois." Illinois authors such as Carl 
            Sandburg, Lloyd Lewis, Benjamin Thomas, Paul M. Angle and Harry E. 
            Pratt sent copies of their Lincoln studies to Judge Marovitz with 
            inscriptions of gratitude. 
            Judge Marovitz owned every book written 
            about Lincoln’s legal career, reflecting his keen interest in 
            Abraham Lincoln’s legal practice and thinking. Anyone who visited 
            Judge Marovitz’s chambers saw the vast array of framed prints and 
            photographs of Abraham Lincoln. Bookends reproducing the Daniel 
            Chester French seated Lincoln at the Lincoln Memorial graced the 
            judge’s bookshelves. Assorted busts and bas-reliefs of the 16th 
            president were scattered on shelves and desktops. 
              
            
       
            Every significant scholarly Lincoln 
            biography is contained in the collection, along with the important 
            studies of Lincoln’s Jewish friends and associates by Bertram Korn, 
            Isaac Markens and Emanuel Hertz. 
            The Marovitz materials will become part 
            of the Illinois State Historical Library’s 46,000-item
            
            Henry Horner Lincoln Collection. 
            Marovitz was a trustee of the
            
            Illinois State Historical Library from 1961 to 1969. The 
            State Historical Library and its collections will become part of the 
            Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum now under 
            construction in downtown Springfield. The library portion of the 
            two-building complex will open Nov. 18, and the museum portion is 
            scheduled to open in mid-2004. The section of Marovitz books will be 
            recognized by a special book plate acknowledging this generous gift. 
            Judge Marovitz’s parents, Rachel and 
            Joseph Marovitz, were Lithuanian immigrants who entered the United 
            States through Ellis Island. When Abraham was born, on Aug. 10, 
            1905, the family had relocated to Oshkosh, Wis. Rachel, recalling 
            the impressive character of the 16th president recounted at a New 
            York settlement house lecture, named her son after him. Judge 
            Marovitz often remarked that his mother thought Lincoln was Jewish 
            because John Wilkes Booth shot him in the temple. The family moved 
            to Chicago’s Maxwell Street area when Abe was 5.   [to top of second column in this
            article] | 
      
       
            Marovitz enrolled in
            Chicago-Kent 
            College of Law at age 16, using money loaned to him by 
            Alfred S. Austrian, the attorney for whom he worked at the law firm 
            that is now known as Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw. Since he was only 19 
            years old when he graduated from law school, Marovitz had to wait 
            two years to take the bar exam, because state law prohibited anyone 
            under 21 from becoming a lawyer. 
            At age 22 Marovitz became the youngest 
            person to work as a Cook County assistant state’s attorney. During 
            this time, he met a young Richard J. Daley, a city council clerk, 
            and the two began a lifetime friendship. 
            Marovitz teamed up with his two 
            brothers in private practice. He represented labor leaders and some 
            of the most notorious gangsters of the day. 
            Marovitz was elected to the Illinois 
            Senate in 1938 and was the first Jew to serve in that body. 
            Remembering the prejudice he suffered as a youth, he helped 
            introduce the first Fair Employment Act that barred discrimination 
            based on race, religion or sex. His friendship with fellow state 
            Sen. Daley was strengthened during this time. 
            Marovitz’s Senate service placed him in 
            Springfield during the golden era of research and writing about 
            Abraham Lincoln. Paul M. Angle, then director of the Illinois State 
            Historical Library, stated on several occasions that the library’s 
            best friends were Marovitz and Richard J. Daley. 
            Marovitz left the Senate in 1943 to 
            join the U.S. Marines and saw combat during the invasion of the 
            Philippines. He was wounded but refused the Purple Heart, saying his 
            injuries were far less serious than many soldiers who had lost 
            limbs. 
            Marovitz remained in the state Senate 
            until 1950, when he became a judge in the Cook County Superior 
            Court. He was sworn in by the new county clerk, Richard J. Daley. He 
            served from 1958 to 1959 as chief justice of the Cook County 
            Criminal Court. In 1963 President John F. Kennedy named him a 
            federal judge in the Northern Illinois District, a position he held 
            for several decades. He earned a reputation as a fair and impartial 
            judge. 
            Marovitz had many famous and 
            influential friends besides Mayors Richard J. and Richard M. Daley, 
            including Hubert Humphrey, Jimmy Durante, Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra, 
            Sophie Tucker, legendary fan dancer Sally Rand and comedian Joe E. 
            Lewis. Chicago had an honorary street-naming ceremony in his honor, 
            and a forest in Israel with 200,000 trees bears his name. Judge 
            Abraham Lincoln Marovitz died March 17, 2001. He was 95 years old. [Illinois 
            Government News Networkpress release]
 
      
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