In Chambers
The judge will see you now. Step into Springfield Bureau Chief Aaron Chambers’ chambers for an insider’s view on Illinois politics and government. No, Chambers isn’t a real judge. At least not in the sense of wearing a robe, wielding a gavel and issuing orders. But like a good judge, Chambers tells it like it is.

Archive for March 25th, 2008

$100,000 for Va. Tech Shooting Victims?

1 comment March 25th, 2008

Virginia has offered to give $100,000 to each of the families of the 32 people killed during the April 16 Virginia Tech shooting spree last year and similar compensation to those who were injured.

However, that proposal, which includes a confidentiality clause, is not sitting well with everyone.

The money would come from taxpayers’ wallets, according to the Washington Post.

Under the proposed offer, the state would not admit liability but would justify the payments as a way to avoid a series of lawsuits. The offer came after several weeks of closed-door talks between attorneys for the state and attorneys for families of the victims. […]

As part of the deal, the state would create a fund to help pay for the medical expenses of some of the more than two dozen students and faculty members injured in the shooting, state officials familiar with the offer said. The families of the 32 victims killed by the shooter would get about $100,000 each. The money would come from taxpayers.

Money is only one facet of the settlement, which the Virginian-Pilot detailed here.

Those who survived the shootings say $100,000, which is the maximum the state can pay in damages, would not begin to cover their long-term health costs.

Roger O’Dell of Roanoke, whose son, Derek, was wounded, said families were asked not to discuss the settlement negotiations. He added that his son has made no decision - he doesn’t want to become adversarial toward the school that he loves, but he has been told his lifetime counseling costs could range from $125,000 to $500,000, plus higher health-insurance costs because of his pre-existing conditions.

Post-traumatic stress disorder “could flare up at any time and could be disabling without regular treatment,” Roger O’Dell said. “He’ll have constant reminders because he’ll have the bullet holes.”

In the fall, the victims received money from the Hokie Memorial Fund, in which people donated close to $8.5 million to go toward the families, the injured and the school.

In the wake of the Feb. 14 shootings at NIU and other campus shootings recent years, it is likely that we will see more of these sort of lawsuits surface.

Is $100,000 enough for a life cut short or a life to be forever hampered with long-term health issues? Should there be, or can there be, a uniform policy for this sort of thing, as one commenter asked on a New York Times’ blog?

Wait’s Staff Graduate to Typing

Add comment March 25th, 2008

A recent fax alerting the media to one of Rep. Ron Wait’s publicity events looked as if somebody had scribbled it on a random sheet of scratch paper.

Actually, it looked as if the writer opted to write it with writing instrument clenched firmly in fist. The penmanship was a little rough, you might say.

In substance, the advisory contained the necessary points: It announced a Ron Wait press conference at 1 p.m. on March 10 at Dial Machine in Rockford concerning the “capital budget & economic development.” Yet in style, the advisory, pictured here, was most peculiar.

Wait, R-Belvidere, is a veteran lawmaker. Moreover, this is an election year and Wait is facing a stiff challenge from Rockford lawyer Greg Tuite, the immediate past chairman of the Winnebago County Democratic Party. One might think Wait would be on his toes.

“Geez, I’ve never seen anything like this,” Wait told our Statehouse intern, Andrea Zimmermann, by phone on Friday. “It’s sure not my writing. I have never seen this before. I sure wouldn’t have sent this out. It’s new to me. … I don’t know who would have sent this out. … Believe me, I’ll start asking questions though.”

Tuite saw the media release as well, and said it struck him as odd.

“We all have our ways of communicating, but you would think that a state representative would try to put out something a little more professional when he’s communicating either with the media or with businesses,” Tuite told Zimmermann.

On Monday, a spokesman for House GOP Leader Tom Cross called and said that Wait’s staff had, in fact, distributed the scribbled advisory to media. The spokesman, David Dring, said the staffers were determined to notify the media of Wait’s appearance as quickly as possible.

Just for the record, House GOP staff subsequently distributed a formal media advisory for the Dial Machine event. This time, they typed it.


Search

Latest Posts

Calendar

March 2008
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  

Posts by Month


Most Recent Posts

Posts by Category

Syndication