BRIEFLY
Edited by Rodd Whelpley

BRICKS & MORTAR
Blueprint for rebuilding Illinois
Illinois will embark on the largest bonding program in state history, an effort to repair its aging infrastructure. Transportation will be the top priority in Gov. George Ryan's five-year, $12 billion plan, including roads, bridges and mass transit. But schools, parks and hundreds of other local projects also will be in line for construction dollars. The work will be funded primarily through a combination of state tax and fee hikes.

Under the program, dubbed Illinois First, the state will issue $4.8 billion in new bonds, meaning Illinoisans will need to come up with an extra $621 million a year to pay off the debt. Most of those dollars, $572 million, will be generated by increases in vehicle registration fees and liquor taxes.

The plan calls for boosting the annual license plate registration fee by $30, from $48 to $78, which should raise $249 million every year. Truck registration fees will go up an average of 25 percent, garnering $78 million annually. The vehicle transfer fee will jump by 400 percent, from $13 to $65, generating a projected $166 million.

Meanwhile, liquor taxes will rise by $80 million annually. The tax on a six pack of beer will go up a penny a can. And taxes on wine and hard liquor, which have remained the same for decades, will go up. The tax on low- alcohol wine will increase by 3 cents a bottle. The tax on high-alcohol wine will triple from 5 cents to 15 cents a bottle. The tax on a bottle of distilled spirits will go up 50 cents.

But the governor and lawmakers also are counting on the surging economy to make up the $49 million difference each year, at least in the near term. Indeed, the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission, the legislature's budget research arm, reported the state would gain $47 million more in the current budget year than earlier projected. So the governor's budget aides estimate the state will have about $250 million more to play with over the next five years.

Under the plan, $4.1 billion will be spent on roads, including $3.7 billion for highways. Among the projects funded: The Alton Bypass in southern Illinois and the Dan Ryan and Stevenson expressways in Chicago. Another $160 million will be spent for aviation projects, including $75 million to acquire land for a new airport in Peotone south of Chicago.

The plan calls $100 million for railroads, including high speed rail. And officials plan to issue $800 million in state bonds for mass transportation. The Regional Transportation Authority will issue $1.6 billion in bonds. And some $700 million will be used to rebuild two aging elevated train lines in Chicago.

Ryan's plan also calls for an additional $2 billion in bonds for school construction. Those projects will be funded equally through state and local bonds. Another $1.6 billion will be set aside to develop abandoned industrial sites, bike trails, parks, local jails and juvenile centers.

But many of the local spending plans, left to the discretion of lawmakers, had yet to be announced.
Burnry Sampson

The administration's first budget
Gov. George Ryan and lawmakers forged a $42.8 billion state spending plan, meeting his pledge to spend 51 percent of all new general revenue dollars on education and earmarking money for health care workers and tourism projects. In fact, the budget for fiscal year 2000, which begins July 1, rang in at $2.2 billion more than the governor requested.

Primary and secondary education, the largest share of program spending, was increased by 8.5 percent. Special education and early childhood programs were boosted. And $5 million was set aside to hire new teachers. Higher education spending was increased by 5.7 percent, though that is down from the governor's initial request. About $161 million will go to building repairs and construction.

Home care workers for the aged and disabled got a 1. 6 percent wage hike, while smaller nursing home operators got increases in state support for their services.

In response to the release of 12 prisoners from Death Row, the state will launch a four-year pilot program to help pay for public defenders, investigators and expert witnesses for those accused of capital crimes in Cook County. Downstate prosecutors could tap into the fund. The program will cost $20 million annually.

The proposed Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library in Springfield got $40 million for planning, in addition to the $10 million allocated last year. The project cost estimate now ranges between $60 million to $148 million.

And the state set aside $500,000 to fight the Asian long-horned beetle.
Burney Simpson

8 / June 1999 Illinois Issues


Legislative checklist
Gov. George Ryan got what he wanted from lawmakers this spring as they wrapped up the first legislative session of his administration. Most everyone else got something, too.

TUITION TAX CREDITS
Illinoisans will get a break on their state income taxes to recover some costs of sending children to elementary and secondary school. The credit will start at $250 per year and go to a maximum of $500, which could be claimed for expenses up to $2,250. The estimated cost to the state is $60 million to $150 million a year.

Opponents argue taxpayers who send children to public schools, where the tuition is free, probably won't benefit. Meanwhile, the Illinois Education Association and the American Civil Liberties Union vow to sue on grounds the credit violates the principle of separation of church and state. But Elmhurst Republican Sen. Dan Cronin says,"We routinely give out billions in tax credits to farmers and manufacturers and to others."

Arizona, Minnesota and Iowa have tax credits designed to offset the costs of private and public schools.

GUN CONTROL
The governor's 15-20-life sentencing scheme was approved. It could add 15 years for anyone convicted of using a firearm to commit a felony. A sentence could be boosted 20 years if a weapon is fired during a crime. And if someone is shot or killed, the criminal could get an extra 25 years or life.

Lawmakers also would require adults to lock up guns if a child under 14 could otherwise gain access.

And Illinois Attorney General Jim Ryan succeeded in getting five measures through the legislature restricting weapons near schools. Part of his Safe to Learn agenda, the measures would impose tougher penalties for those committing firearm violations within 1,000 feet of a school or a school bus; establish three-year pilot programs to study school violence in a rural community, a midsize city and Chicago; and appropriate $14 million for each of three years for school metal detectors and security officers.

HOG FARMS
Large-scale livestock farms face stiffer standards. Under provisions agreed to by lawmakers and the governor , owners of mega-hog farms must pass muster with the state Department of Agriculture and make a case at local hearings before they can build new facilities. The new regulations apply to large operations with, for example, a minimum of 2,500 sows. Local activists argue corporate livestock farms threaten the environment and the quality of life in rural areas.

The department's eight new criteria for approving new operations will include requirements that they be compatible with the surrounding area and that they won't obstruct traffic or threaten future development. County boards will be authorized to make recommendations about siting.

New operations also will be required to provide odor control plans. Under a separate measure, farmers could be reimbursed for a portion of the expenses for that control.

TEACHER CREDENTIALS
A framework for improving teaching standards was hammered out by lawmakers, the State Board of Education, teachers' unions and advocates for business and public policy groups.

The measure would revise a 1997 law that requires public elementary and secondary school teachers to continue training to qualify for recertification by the state.

Under these revisions, teachers would be required to write a five-year development plan. Under the plan, they would opt to complete eight semester hours of education-related programs, conduct a research and development project or meet national teaching standards. Teachers could also combine portions of each of the training options. The plan would be reviewed by a local panel of teachers, a district superintendent and a parent or a representative of business.

Currently, teachers can be recertified every one to three years by mailing in a $4 check. The new cost will be $5 per year for a total of $25.

The proposed recertification plan is similar to one used in Ohio.

CHICAGO SCHOOLS
An independent arbitrator would resolve disputes over the firing of Chicago school principals under an agreement reached by lawmakers. Currently, such decisions are made by the local school councils that were established under 1988 Chicago school reforms. Paul Vallas, the chief of the Chicago school system, had asked for authority to make the final call, which critics saw as a power grab.

OPEN LANDS
The governor will get the $40 million he requested to establish an open land trust. The money will be used to set aside undeveloped parcels for conservation and recreation.

EMISSIONS CHECKS
A proposal requiring annual emissions inspections of diesel trucks was approved after proponents dropped a provision allowing for random roadside tests. Under the plan, trucks registered in the Metro- East and Chicago metropolitan areas would be tested. A 1992 bill set standards, but not testing requirements, for diesel-powered vehicles. Trucking groups argue new, less polluting engines are replacing older engines.

California and New Jersey already conduct such tests.

ENDANGERED SPECIES
Lawmakers voted to allow construction on habitats of endangered species. But the Department of Natural Resources must be convinced the projects will not increase the chances the species will become extinct. The measure came in response to an effort by Charles Bidwill III to build a lodge at Carlyle Lake, an area inhabited by the endangered Eastern massasauga rattlesnake.
Burney Simpson

Illinois Issues June 1999 / 9


BRIEFLY

Gambling
"You pays your money and you takes your chances," say the card sharks in Las Vegas. And this spring, Illinois' gambling lobbyists drew a royal flush. Lawmakers went for broke and agreed to allow a riverboat into Cook County, help the horse racing industry through riverboat profits and permit dockside gaming, all for the first time.

Allowing the casinos to stay moored while the dice are rolling will match the competition offered by boats in Iowa, say supporters.

Under the agreement, the shuttered boat in Jo Daviess County would be allowed to move. Most predict it will go to the tax-rich Cook County community of Rosemont near O'Hare International Airport, where it can tap the wallets of out-of-state travelers. That move would alter the original intent of the riverboat law to provide help for economically depressed river towns. Other sites are free to bid for the boat, but Rosemont strengthened its hand when officials forged a deal with other suburban cities to share the revenue and promised at least 25 percent of the businesses serving the casino will be minority-owned.

Supporters softened opposition by designating $30 million for projects in economically deprived areas, tapping some of the proceeds from a relocated boat for Cook County's criminal justice system and university construction and promising that minorities and women will get a share in the relocated boat. Proponents added a resolution to study minority ownership in the gaming industry.

But the big winners were current owners of boats and tracks, many of whom have been important campaign contributors (see page 12). Arlington International Racecourse, owned by politically connected Richard Duchossois, and the state's other tracks will split 15 percent of the tax revenue from the relocated boat. Each must then share half of their proceeds with the horsemen.
Burney Simpson

Liquor & soft drinks
Legislation that was seen last fall as protectionism for one or two rich businessmen became this spring's effort to save blue-collar jobs.

After devising the new strategy, Chicago Blackhawks owner and major liquor distributor William Wirtz got what he wanted from the legislature: approval of a measure making it more difficult for liquor suppliers to sever ties with distribu- tors. Liquor distillers will now have to give distributors three months' notice before they end a business relationship — and show just cause for doing so. In theory, that time-out clause gives distributors a shot at fixing problems in the business relationship. An army of high-powered lobbyists helped sell the idea to lawmakers. They argued foreign-owned operations are dominating the liquor business. According to one consultant, the state's 30 liquor distributors comprise a $1.2 billion industry that pays $112 million in taxes and accounts for 10,600 jobs. Liquor industry workers showed up at the Statehouse to underline the point. As a sweetener, legislative sponsors approved similar protections for the soft drink industry, a move that benefits Harry Crisp, an influential downstate Pepsi-Cola manufacturer and bottler and GOP contributor.

The restrictions are opposed by beverage industry trade groups and the Federal Trade Commission, which calls them anticompetitive. Gov. Ryan signed both measures upon passage. They took effect immediately.
Burney Simpson

Managed care
After years of debate, lawmakers agreed to overhaul regulations governing Health Maintenance Organizations. Among the provisions: • HMOs cannot prohibit health care providers from telling patients about all treatment options, not merely those covered by their plans. • Under certain conditions, patients may visit specialists who are not part of a plan. • Patients may appeal a treatment decision or file a grievance with an independent review board. • Patients may seek emergency care without prior approval from HMOs. • Patients will be able to research information about an HMO through a new central clearinghouse.

The reforms were approved after Democrats dropped a controversial provision allowing patients to sue their HMOs.
Burney Simpson

Electric utilities
Larger utilities could keep a greater share of profits under legislative revisions in the state's deregulation law. Chicago-based Commonwealth Edison wants to keep profits from an announced $4.8 billion sale of six coal-powered plants. In return, ComEd agrees to create a $250 million fund for environmental projects. Of that, $50 million would go to help the state's coal industry. Another $7 million would go to the watchdog Citizens Utility Board. And consumers would see $75 million in savings through earlier-than-expected rate reductions.
Burney Simpson

Tax increment finance districts
Lawmakers approved reforms intended to end abuses and unintended uses of the state's tax increment financing law.

The law was designed to help blighted areas, but it has been used for other forms of development. So lawmakers tightened the definition of "blight" and added eligibility standards for fixing environmentally damaged areas. For example, the measure would prohibit the use of tax increment financing for constructing a golf course, limit its use for municipal buildings and require reimbursement to school districts for costs related to increasing enrollments resulting from residential TIFs.

Teachers' unions, the Taxpayers' Federation of Illinois and the Township Officials of Illinois are among those endorsing the changes.
Ed Wojcicki

10 / June 1999 Illinois Issues


Mormons vow to rebuild temple on the bluffs
The Mormon Temple at Nauvoo will once again serve the faithful. Gordon Hinckley, the leader of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, says the temple will be rebuilt "as a memorial to those who built the first such structure there on the banks of the Mississippi." A church member and his family, so far unnamed, made a "very substantial contribution" for the reconstruction.

Mormon Temple

"It will be a while before it happens, but the architects have begun their work," Hinckley says. "This temple will not be busy much of the time; it will be somewhat isolated." But it could be very busy in the summer months when thousands of church members visit Nauvoo.

The original temple sat on the bluff overlooking the river. Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormon Church, laid the cornerstone in 1841, two years after he and his followers came to Illinois and three years before he was assassinated by a mob in Carthage. But craftsmen had barely finished the temple when most of the Mormons fled Illinois in 1846 for lands in the West. Fire gutted the temple in 1848 and a tornado later knocked down some of the walls. People moving into the area used the limestone blocks to construct other buildings in the city.

Today, many buildings in Nauvoo have been restored by church members. The Nauvoo Temple, like all Mormon temples, will be used for marriages and other functions considered sacred. Mormons go to chapels — not temples — for weekly worship.

The church has 56 operating temples and 56 in various stages of planning and construction. The first temple was built in Kirtland, Ohio, in 1836. Nauvoo Temple was the second.
Beverley Scobell

Illinois Issues June 1999 / 11


BRIEFLY
LONG SHOT PAYS OFF
Gambling interests finish in the money
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In recent years, racing interests that contributed to state lawmakers weren't able to beat the political odds. But this spring, they hit the daily double in the General Assembly by winning a combination of tax breaks and revenue sharing with a boat that has been proposed for the Cook County community of Rosemont.

With revenues dropping, horse racing concerns donated $1,97 3,398 to officeholders, candidates and their political parties between 1993 and 1998. But during that time, no major piece of legislation favorable to the industry finished in the money. The industry has long felt threatened by the rise of other forms of legalized gambling, especially riverboat casinos (see Illinois Issues, April 1995, page 22). A recent report by University of Illinois at Springfield political scientist Kent Redfield shows that the total handle for the Illinois horse racing industry fell from more than $1.28 billion in 1993 to $1.18 billion in 1997. During that same period, the gross receipts from the state's riverboat casinos rose from about $606 million to more than $1.05 billion.

Despite the horse racing industry's support for state lawmakers, from 1993 to 1998, the legislature failed to allow casino-style gambling at horse racing venues. And, though Arlington International Racecourse owner Richard Duchossois fancied his own casino license, he couldn't get one. During the 1997-98 election cycle, political contributions from the Duchossois family and businesses totaled $632,818. The track suspended racing for the 1999 season.

A last-minute agreement in the legislature amounts to a $69 million political purse for Illinois' tracks. Arlington, the state's premier track, could reopen as early as next year.
Rodd Whelpley

WEB SITE OF THE MOUTH
Day-tripper. Sunday driver
The weather's warm, and the kids are out of school. It's time to head out on the highway.

The state's tourism department has great day or weekend trips already mapped out, so before putting the key in the ignition, make your first visit to the Enjoy Illinois site at www.enjoyillinois.com.

Click on the icon to get to the home page, then click the highlighted Enjoy Illinois, then Weekend Getaways at the bottom of the next screen. That will take you to a description of 18 trips, from Tour 1 (Route 66 and the Blue Highways) to Tour 18 (Chicago, America's Heart, Soul, Rhythm & Blues). In between are things to see and do within a short distance of where you live.

In southern Illinois you can taste home cooking and local wines along the Shawnee Hills Wine Trail, or follow trails through the Shawnee Forest for a closer look at the natural beauty that defines the state's southernmost counties. Central Illinois tours offer lots of Lincoln and western Illinois has a Rolling River getaway that takes you on a historic transportation tour in anything with wheels through Peoria, Galesburg and Rock Island. The Blackhawk Chocolate Trail lets you indulge in chocolate in all its forms — candy, ice cream, waffles, pie and cake — through main street restaurants, country inns and Victorian bed and breakfasts, all the while taking in the scenery of northern Illinois. Work off all those calories by Making Tracks Along the Fox River Valley, Tour 15, which offers nature walks, hiking and biking trails and boating.

When you've chosen the places where you want to spend a day or two, go to the Trip Planner and choose your destination by geographic area or interest or directly through the search option. Each attraction has a description, a map, directions, accommodations and details of things to do.

There are only 12 weeks of summer. Enjoy Illinois!
Beverley Scobell

12 / June 1999 Illinois Issues


Supreme Court upholds legitimacy of guilty but mentally ill verdict

James Lantz stabbed his wife 68 times in her neck, her chest, her arms and her hands. He then poured a circle of gasoline around the corpse and doused the living room. When the police arrived at his Libertyville home, Lantz put out his hands, which had been burned by repeated attempts to re-enter the house, and told them to cuff him. "I killed her," he said.

During his trial, a psychiatrist and a psychologist testified that Lantz, who has bipolar disorder, experienced a psychotic episode at the time of the 1995 murder. But the psychiatrist serving as an expert witness argued Lantz was not insane. Lantz was found guilty but mentally ill, and was sentenced to 38 years in prison for first degree murder. His attorneys appealed, contending the sentence was excessive. In the Lantz case, an appeals court affirmed the verdict.

Defense attorneys in another murder case were also appealing a guilty but mentally ill verdict. Eric Robles, a Bartlett teen, was sentenced to life in the 1993 murder of his parents. But in the Robles case, an appellate court deemed the guilty but mentally ill verdict unconstitutional. That court ruled the statute encourages juries to reach compromise verdicts and forces the defense to prove inconsistent propositions at the same time (insanity and mental illness). Both situations interfere with due process, it ruled.

The state Supreme Court, choosing to deal with both cases at once, upheld the guilty but mentally ill sentencing option.

Justice James Heiple, however, dissented, writing that guilty but mentally ill "is a meaningless verdict which dupes the jury into believing that there is a middle ground between guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. In reality, the ... verdict is no different from a guilty verdict."

Heiple noted that a guilty but mentally ill verdict makes the defendant eligible for the same punishment he or she would face if found guilty — including the death penalty — and that it does not guarantee a defendant will be treated for mental illness while in prison.

Randy Wells, state executive director of the Alliance for the Mentally 111, says the court's decision is symptomatic of the larger problem of unfair treatment of people who are mentally ill, including those who are imprisoned but not receiving treatment.
Maureen Foertsch McKinney

Good country Hiving by the book
The folks over at the Illinois Farm Bureau were getting complaints. This sort of thing: My new neighbor was mad about the tractor running at 6 a.m. when he wanted to sleep. Or the people at the next farm over don't like dust blowing around when they want to barbecue.

So the bureau decided to publish a booklet that spells out just what country living entails. Now don't get the idea they don't welcome city folk; they just want them to be forewarned, says the farm bureau's Kevin Rund.

So the 23-page The Code of Country Living was born. It's available now.

"It wasn't intended necessarily to discourage folks from coming to the country, but we hope it gets into the hands of people who are thinking about moving so they can think about the realities and make an informed decision," Rund says.

Some of the warnings: Roads are often poorly maintained and traversed by slow-moving tractors; even volunteer firelighters don't cover some areas; and it may get smelly, so "keep in mind prevailing winds."
Maureen Foertsch McKinney

Illinois Issues June 1999 / 13


BRIEFLY
Our Lady of the Angels
Declining enrollment accomplishes what a tragic fire couldn't

The fire that started at the foot of the basement stairs raged through Our Lady of the Angels School just before the day was to end, leaving 92 children and three nuns dead. In the wake of the devastating 1958 fire, school-specific building codes were created for the first time in Illinois, and fire codes were changed across the nation.

Despite the tragedy, the parish rebuilt the school and reopened its doors to students in the fall of 1960. But this month, the elementary school will graduate its final class of eighth-graders.

Located on Chicago's near Northwest Side, Our Lady of the Angels until now survived not only the fire, but the subsequent enrollment and financial challenges that have closed many other Catholic schools.

"When the neighborhood really started changing in the early 1970s, that's when enrollment started to drop precipitously, and it just slowly deteriorated after that," says Jim Dwyer, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Chicago, who adds that in recent years the school has been attended mainly by non-Catholics.

The neighborhood has slowly changed from a largely Polish and Italian area to one dominated by the Mexican, Puerto Rican and African- American communities. Those changes led to the declining enrollment. The Archdiocese spokesman says the school had only 126 students this past year, down from 1,583 in the 1968-69 school year.

The school has historic significance because of that fire, which started in a trash drum at the foot of the stairs and burned undetected for at least 20 minutes. The fire swept through the stairwells and up into the second story hall; it bypassed the first floor halls because heavy wooden doors were kept shut. The hot gases

1958 Our Lady of the Angels of fire in Chicago
rose to a loft above the second story ceiling. Superheated air ignited into flames, which eventually lapped down into the corridor from ventilator grills. The halls were quickly impassable. "There was no sprinkler system, no effective way to remove the students," Dwyer says.

After the fire, the city changed its fire code to mandate automatic sprinkler systems for school buildings and enclosed stairwells with fireproof construction. The code also requires fire doors leading to stairways, fire doors in all corridors and internal fire alarm systems linked directly to the department.

At the state level, the fire instigated the development of a building code specific to schools. The state superintendent called together a committee to put the codes together in 1958. In 1965, the new codes were completed and adopted, separately addressing health

Priest administrating last rites

and safety regulations in new schools and those built before 1965. In particular, the health and life safety code banned the use of combustible materials for interior finishes, as was the case with Our Lady of the Angels, where walls were made of varnished wood. Under the new regulations, bonds can be issued to pay for certain improvements without voter approval.

Ironically, the code is enforceable only in public schools.
Margaret Schroeder

14 / June 1999 Illinois Issues


Green flag drops on Illinois raceway construction

Motor racing is the best-attended spectator sport in the United States. And in Illinois the race is on to see who can build the best facility to draw thousands of fans.

Big money and big names in racing are coming to the Chicago and Metro East areas. Unlike Iowa, where the legislature considered giving several million to a developer for a track in Davenport, Illinois taxpayers won't be on the hook to subsidize construction of the facilities. They will, however, foot the bill for some infrastructure improvements. But enthusiasts argue they can expect a payback.

The number of visitors can be impressive. In Indianapolis, more than 300,000 people bought tickets for the Memorial Day Indianapolis 500, a race featuring Indy Racing League open-wheel cars. In August, that same number of fans will again fill the speedway for the the Brick-yard 400, a NASCAR Winston Cup stock car race. Recent studies show a 125,000-seat track brings about $60 million per weekend into an area's economy.

Through their respective companies, two of the biggest names in the business have invested $100 million in the Route 66 Raceway in Joliet. Tony George, president and founder of the Indy Racing League, and Bill France Jr., who heads up NASCAR, plan to build a 1.5-mile oval that will accommodate both Indy and stock cars. There will be seating for 75,000 fans for the 2001 season, the target date for opening the new track, but there is room to expand to more than 100,000 seats. The raceway also will house a drag strip and a one-half-mile clay oval for midget cars, sprint cars and motorcycles. And there is a two-mile road course.

For more information
The official site of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing is www.nascar.com. It has all the information on schedules, tracks, drivers and teams for the Winston Cup, Busch Grand National, Craftsman Truck and three other NASCAR series. The open-wheel, or Indy-type cars, have two sites. The Championship Auto Racing Teams Inc. is at www.cart.com and the Pep Boys Indy Racing League, the IRL, is at www.indyracingleague.com.

Each of Illinois' tracks also have Web sites. Gateway is at www. gatewayraceway.com; Joliet's track is at www.route66raceway.com; and Cicero's is www.chicagomotorspeedway.com. Chip Ganassi Racing, CART champion for the last three years, is at www.targetracing.com. NASCAR fans can go to www.l800bepetty.com for a real ride. Richard Petty, the driver who has won the most stock car races, offers the chance to drive a race car.

"It will be the only facility in the world that has all the choices in one place," says Fred Nation, vice president of Indianapolis Motor Speedway, George's company "And the Chicago area is an untapped market for stock cars and Indy-style racing."

Indeed, the closest premier race track offering both Indy cars and Winston Cup racing is Indianapolis.

But that could soon change. Gateway International Raceway in St. Clair County has taken on new partners and is planning to expand to 120,000 seats, which may make it an attractive venue for the Winston Cup. Gateway already has a drag strip that draws nearly 100,000 people for a four-day event, and it runs Indy cars through the CART sanctioning body. It also has NASCAR truck races and the popular Busch stock car series. (The Busch series can be thought of as NASCAR's "triple-A level," with the Winston Cup series being the big show.)

A third track, scheduled to be road- ready for a CART Indy-style race in August, represents a unique mix of racing. With the help of Chip Ganassi, owner of Target/Chip Ganassi Racing, Charles Bidwill, owner of Sportsman's Park in Cicero, is building an auto track around the existing horse track. The new Chicago Motor Speedway will host the Target Grand Prix on its one-mile track.

None of the tracks has NASCAR's promise for a Winston Cup race date, but people in racing are saying it's only a matter of time before the Winston Cup crowds — and their money — come to Illinois.
Beverley Scobell

Illinois Issues June 1999 / 15


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