Author: Jim Murphy

  • Economy Hits Blago

    Judge James B Zagel denied the request by the Blagojevich defense team to pick jurors the old fashioned way by allowing both the defense and prosecution to question potential jurors one at a time.

    The ruling comes after Zagel excused nearly 3-hundred jurors, many for hardship reasons, most of them economic. In fact, when explaining his ruling, Zagel said the number of those excused is larger than usual. Many, according to Zagel, cited unemployment and their inability to look for a job if they are in court every day for possibly as long as four months.

    Defense attorney for former governor Rod Blagojevich, Sheldon Sorosky asked that the defense be allowed to question potential jurors one at a time, “the old fashioned way”. Judge Zagel answered, “what would be achieved by dragging a 28 year old with 3 kids who can’t afford day care down here”.

    The defense will be allowed to review the list of nearly 300 potential jurors who have been excused on Friday.

    Jury selection is scheduled to begin next Thursday.

  • Iowa Economy Exam

    When President Obama returns to Iowa Tuesday he will face a community where more than one person in ten is out of work. It seems like a tough first stop on his White House to Main Street tour that will take him through Iowa, Illinois and Missouri.
    The trip is billed as a series of ‘economic listening events’ and the President could very well get an earful.
    In Fort Madison, Iowa, which will be the president’s first stop, Mr. Obama could hear frustration over the slow pace of economic recovery. Lee County bank president is not alone in his criticism of the president for not making the economy a top priority, saying, “if he worked on that nationally, I think our recovery would have been stronger, quicker.”
    That’s not to say there hasn’t been any recovery. In fact you will find the anxiety of the economy is subsiding in southeast Iowa a bit. Small business owners like Martha Wolf who owns the Ivy Bake Shoppe and Cafe says she sees more traffic in her downtown restaurant. After a dreary winter where her staff of twenty all agreed to cut their hours to keep everybody employed, Martha says things seem to be improving. The one word you’ll hear often when people here explain the turnaround…Siemens.
    The German manufacturer opened it’s windmill blade plant in Fort Madison back in 2007 with 200 jobs. That number has almost doubled as the plant has expanded to fill the demands of a green technology that has windmills dotting landscapes all around the country.
    Siemens will be the stage for President Obama when he visits Fort Madison. He is certain to celebrate the green technology plant and it’s growing roll of employees.
    But the lesson may go beyond the potential benefit of green technology jobs. Call it midwestern sensibility or fiscal conservatism but one thing you’ll learn in Iowa is to live within your means. Martha Wolf says a big reason people aren’t hurting as much is because they spend wisely. “I’m ok. You know. I haven’t been extravagant and I don’t think you’ll find a lot of midwestern, at least in Fort Madison, that are extravagant people.”

  • Sick Of The Water?

    Residents of the village of Crestwood, Illinois, just south of Chicago are frightened and angry as they demand answers as to why they were drinking toxic water from a well the town’s leaders said was not being used.

     

    In 1985 the Illinois EPA began a statewide well testing program. One of the wells on the list to test was Crestwood’s. The state found traces of the chemical perchloroethylene, which is commonly used in dry cleaning. Within a year the state of Illinois and Crestwood officials agreed the well would no longer be used and the village would purchase Lake Michigan water for it’s supply.  After the agreement, testing of the well ceased and that seemed to be the end of the issue.

     

    But instances of various forms of cancer and other illnesses began plaguing the town of roughly 12,000. In 1999, Crestwood resident Patricia Krause began trying to find answers as to why her three children were suffering almost constantly from a variety of illnesses ranging from whooping cough to leukemia. She eventually found herself in Springfield, Illinois pouring over documents at the state’s EPA office. She discovered the well water which residents and the state were told was no longer in use was in fact being mixed with Lake Michigan water, sometimes by as much as twenty percent.

     

    The state administered new tests in 2006 and discovered the dry cleaning solvent had broken down from perchloroethylene into vinyl chloride, a chemical so harmful there is no tolerable amount for human consumption. The well was permanently sealed in 2007 but the question remained in Crestwood…what damage had been done to residents who drank the contaminated water for more than twenty years?

     

    The Illinois Department of Public Health joined the investigation along with a division of the CDC to find out if there is a link between vinyl choride in the water and instances of cancer in Crestwood. Through records kept by Illinois’ cancer registy, a spike in a variety of cancers was found, including lung and liver cancer. In several cases the numbers were double what was the normal rate for the rest of Cook County. Lawsuits began popping up against Crestwood, the villages former mayor Chester Stranczek who was in office from 1969 til 2007 as well as his son and current mayor Robert. And there is also concern at the Federal level. Both the U.S. Attorney’s office and the federal EPA are also looking into the matter.

    Saturday March 13th, representatives of the Illinois Department of Public Health, the state’s EPA held a forum in Crestwood to explain if they’d found the smoking gun linking the elevated rates of cancer to the town’s well water. Residents were given a disappointing, “we don’t see a connection” as an answer. The lack of a strong enough link is due to a variety of factors. Exposure to Vinyl Chloride is usually associated with industrial sites and comes at a much higher level. And testing is sparse on the well and just how much of the contaminated water was mixed with the Lake Michigan water. In the end due to a margin of error which has to be taken into account with so much that isn’t know both about the effects of Vinyl Chloride and the exact situation Crestwood is in, the state’s doctors had to say, there is direct link between the increase in cancer in Crestwood and the well water.

     

    That doesn’t necessarily mean Crestwood’s leaders are completely off the hook. The strongest case against the village may be from the Illinois State’s Attorney General who is suing Crestwood for lying to it’s residents and the state when it said well water wasn’t being used when it was. But even if found guilty of all counts in the nine count indictment, Crestwood would only have to pay as much as $540,000. Village leaders wouldn’t talk to Fox News about the story due to pending litigation. But in a written statement Crestwood officials maintain they were never told specifically not to use the water by the state EPA. The state EPA maintains it did tell Crestwood to stop using the well.

     

    Meanwhile the scrutiny of cancer cases in Crestwood will continue to be monitored…probably forever…leaving residents just as frightened and angry as when they first learned they had been drinking contaminated water.