This weather would be great if I was a black mage in Final Fantasy XI.
This weather would be great if I was a black mage in Final Fantasy XI.
We may have had double-digit tornados across northern Illinois tonight. All of Cook County was under a warning, with two spotted around Chicago's airports simultaneously and circulation over the Loop. The National Weather Service had to take shelter in Romeoville and a section of Interstate 55 in Kankakee County has been shut down due to debris.
College of DuPage provided WGN TV with this loop of the storms from the GOES-East satellite.
A year ago, the National Weather Service was surveying the damage from 13 tornados in northern Illinois, the strongest being 3 EF-1 tornados.
I don't recommend living in a country where COVID-19 data isn't widely accessible, and you can go to a hospital and be the only person on the floor wearing a respirator with headbands who keeps it on, and be thankful when you leave it because your electricity finally came back on 10 minutes after you needed it for a mobility device.
The July 15th storm was categorized as a derecho. 19 tornados.
"As of the evening of July 18th, a total of 22 tornadoes have been confirmed in the NWS Chicago forecast area from this event. This ties the daily record for tornadoes in our forecast area (June 30th, 2014 "Double Derecho" and March 31, 2023 Outbreak)."
The July 15th tornado count has reached 27 (breaking the record by 5) and an EF-0 was really close to me. I saw a bit of the damage last week, but didn't think it looked like a tornado.
"Additional tornadoes may be confirmed over the coming month, as we continue to analyze high resolution and satellite and radar data."
National Weather Service updated the derecho page.
"With 32 tornadoes, the July 15, 2024 derecho was the most prolific tornado event to impact the NWS Chicago forecast area in history.
...
During the evening of July 15, there were multiple periods of time during which there were more than 1 [simultaneous] tornado within the... forecast area. The period between 8:25 and 10:30 PM was particularly prolific, with at least 2 tornadoes 70% of the time and at least 4 tornadoes nearly 25% of the time."
Chicago's #COVID19 Wastewater Monitoring Dashboard wasn't updated from the August 22nd or 24th data every time I checked during September. It has been now. Still no full dates on the points on the graph, just month and year, which were displayed at end of last year and early this year.
https://www.chicago.gov/city/en/sites/covid-19/home/covid-19-wastewater-surveillance.html
The Illinois State Board of Elections has a banner with a link to the state's coronavirus response site. Internet Archive's Wayback Machine has captures of the site which seem to show it stopped working after January with a different error graphic.
Another brush fire at that forest preserve. Not as many displaced birds have moved in this direction, yet.
In Cook County in Illinois we have a pretty good resource, Injustice Watch, for helping decide on judicial retention. One of the methods they try to use to help voters make informed decisions is a survey sent to the candidates, but many of the judges refuse to answer it. One candidate this year sent in a response downplaying it and I feel the need to point out that the statement, "Each of the judges running for retention was elected by the voters..." isn't fully true.
https://interactives.injusticewatch.org/judicial-election-guide/2024-general/en/
While it is true every judge on the ballot was elected (later), by my count Injustice Watch reports 27 of the 77 judges up for retention first became judges when they were appointed by the Illinois Supreme Court power to fill vacancies, not by elections. 12 of those in 2017, 1 in 2018. 1 is up for retention on the appellate court. A judge mentioned in this Chicago Tribune article on the questionable application of that power (Marsalek) is up for retention this year.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2012/12/23/defeated-judges-find-way-back-to-bench-2/
For 3 hours yesterday a sensor in Gary, Indiana reported air quality index readings for particulate matter in the hazardous range (above 300 micrograms per square meter). The peak was 772 and readings only returned to the moderate range at 5:00 PM CDT.
Another election with none of the judges up for retention failing to receive enough votes, despite 4 of them having been referred to the Judicial Inquiry Board. 2 of those only happened the day after the election.
Oh and an Illinois state's attorney was elected who believed Black children were superpredators, and that was the best choice on the ballot.
McGlynn was nominated by Trump and confirmed by the Senate in 2020. This country still hadn't recovered from the damage to the federal judicial branch (or even made sufficient attempts to). So, McGlynn got to rule against a law we passed to try to protect ourselves from assault rifles after the shooting involving one during a 4th of July parade in one of the most affluent areas of Illinois.
U.S. District Judge Stephen P. McGlynn put his ruling on hold for 30 days, likely in anticipation of the appeal. The litigation over Illinois’ assault weapons ban is viewed as likely to reach as high as the U.S. Supreme Court.
It has been 1 year since I began wearing an N95 respirator all the time even at home, because absolutely everyone is terrible at risk assessment.
The CDC has taken Trump's approach to hurricanes by drawing the problem away on their graphs, and he's not even in office, yet.
Chicago's Department of Public Health has chosen the worst time to take down the COVID-19 wastewater monitoring dashboard, because not updating it during and after the Democrat super spreader event wasn't bad enough.
Last week I got a letter from my insurance company through which I got a PPO under the Affordable Care Act. They were notifying me that next year I should not be able to afford care if I were to be injured or ill out-of-state (except in counties which border the state).
Still trying to pin this down, but it sounds like another fire at that preserve, even though there had just been one in October. Not only can we smell it, but it has been so windy today that there's ash in the air, visible in street lights tonight, like snow.
There was just an #AMBERAlert in #Chicago, and the first website that I found with anything about it is for the Dutch BNO News. I don't know how accurate they are and details are changing at this point (100 block of S. Central Park Ave. initially vs. 7100 block of S. Eberhart Ave., adding "dark grey" to the possible vehicle colors when the alert had beige...). Their story says the child was last seen at 7:40 pm, which would have been over 6 hours before the alert was sent out.
https://bnonews.com/index.php/2025/02/illinois-amber-alert-tristen-gaters-abducted-in-chicago/
The website for the non-profit National Center for Missing and Exploited Children does not yet have this alert listed.
https://www.missingkids.org/gethelpnow/amber
Their website is also where the Department of Justice directs people to check. amberalert.ojp.gov is yet another federal website with the notice about the freeze and review.
On top of that, the website for the Illinois AMBER Alert Task Force looks like it was another victim of Bruce Rauner's no budget years.
The Republican party is a death cult.
An Illinois Amber Alert has been issued for 8-year-old Tristen Gaters after he was allegedly abducted in Chicago, local officials say. Anyone with information is urged to call 911 immediately. Tristen was last seen at 7:40 p.m. on Thursday when he was taken from the 7100 block of South Eberhart Avenue in Chicago, according to […]
Four helicopters just flew over the southern suburbs of #Chicago and all I can think of is, "Who will it be today?" There's the chance it's just the Illinois National Guard out on monthly exercises, but the chance that it isn't is much greater than zero, now.
There have been 2 EF-1 tornadoes confirmed so far which occurred on the 19th. The tornado warnings that day were issued not out of the Romeoville, IL office but Norman, OK. With the federal government currently destroying any agency which acknowledges climate change, I expect we'll find that it takes longer to confirm these tornadoes and some damage may go un-inspected.
Any meteorologist who adopts "Gulf of America" is not going to help you survive the sociopaths.
"Prevost – who was also the Augustinians’ worldwide leader for 12 years beginning in 2001 – left the principal, an Augustinian priest named Richard McGrath, in his post, a decision he has not explained, as the Chicago Sun-Times has previously reported."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/may/09/clergy-molestation-survivors-pope-leo-xiv
"In 2017, as word spread of the claims against him, McGrath abruptly retired in December of that year, then reportedly moving to a friary in Hyde Park. Months later, he was AWOL from that facility—"unlawfully absent" from the Augustinian Order. A source in 2018 told Patch that McGrath had left the order after conflict surrounding the scandal, because he had felt bullied and unsupported by the order.
At the time of reporting on the settlement in 2023, the Order was said to have been nearing expulsion of McGrath.
The statement issued by Rev. Pizzo and provided to Patch on May 6 clarifies that McGrath had still been a part of the order until late last year."
https://patch.com/illinois/newlenox/providence-ex-president-dismissed-order-whereabouts-unknown
The upside to being in the 6th year of a global airborne pandemic is that I'm nearly always dressed right for when The Dust Bowl tries to make a comeback.
The National Weather Service published a report on the severe dust storm.
"According to the American Meteorological Society’s Glossary of Meteorology, blowing dust/dirt
events with minimum visibilities of 0.63 miles or less are indicated as a 'dust storm,' with minimum visibilities below 0.31 miles indicated as 'severe dust storm.' Severe dust storms associated with a wall of dust and a rapid onset of reduced visibilities and gusty winds are
sometimes caused by thunderstorm outflows or frontal passages, such as what was observed on 16 May (Figure 1). In these situations, the dust storm is often referred to as a 'haboob,' based upon the Arabic word for 'to blow.' Severe dust storms or haboobs are uncommon in the Midwest, and much more frequently observed in the Desert Southwest and Great Plains of the United States or in arid regions of the Middle East, Sahara Desert, or Central Australia
(American Meteorological Society, 2025)."
PDF is here.
https://www.weather.gov/media/lot/events/2025/05_16/2025_05_16_Dust_Storm.pdf