Editor’s comment: We were told current Illinois Governor Pat Quinn was a reformer. He has started a number of reform initiatives and actually called for a change to the Illinois constitution mandating what people in other parts of the country call “ethics”—most Illinois politicians don’t understand or use that term much.
What happened at the Workers’ Compensation Commission last week was the same sort of secret, clandestine and under-the-cover shenanigans we have grown so used to from past administrations. We knew Paul Rink; he was a former Commissioner who appeared to have been gently nudged out several months ago. We have been awaiting his successor and now he has been appointed. You may all note the vacancy was not filled with a publicized national or even state-wide search for the best possible candidate—we don’t do things that way in this poorly-run state. Everything is closely guarded, like it is a nuclear secret and if the news gets out about what they do filling a state job, the sky might fall.
Last week, Governor Pat Quinn appointed Daniel R. Donohoo as a Commissioner. You may note the Commissioners sit as administrative appeal officers—there are nine of them. While they haven’t completely figured it out just yet, Commissioner Donohoo may fill the “public” member seat on Panel B and be the swing vote between the labor Commissioner, Barbara Sherman and the employer representative, Kevin Lamborn. Please note they may scramble the three panels but they will be certain to insure two members vote for labor and the management member gets to file lots of dissents.
The Commission has advised new Commissioner Donohoo holds a B.S. degree in Business Administration from Southern Illinois University and a J.D. degree from Thomas M. Cooley Law School. He served as the Madison County Recorder of Deeds for 21 years and operated his own accounting firm for 17 years.
We want everyone to note we don’t know and have never met Commissioner Donohoo. He may turn out to be the best administrative appeal officer in Illinois history. To our knowledge, he isn’t going to fill the bill on what some folks feel would represent “diversity.” From our research, we assure our readers he:
- Doesn’t have any formal workers’ comp training
- Doesn’t have a workers’ compensation litigation background
- Isn’t an associate or partner at a workers’ comp petitioner or defense firm
- Has never, ever handled a litigated workers’ compensation claim that we can find on the web or elsewhere.
Our research indicates new Commissioner Donohoo graduated from Thomas M. Cooley Law School in Michigan exactly two years ago today on May 17, 2008. We are fairly confident they don’t have a class or even a seminar on Illinois workers’ compensation law and practice in Lansing, MI. The Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission’s website indicates he was licensed to practice law in Illinois November 6, 2008. That is about eighteen months ago, so while he may be a veteran deed-recorder and accountant, he is a complete newbie as a work comp lawyer.
We ask all of our readers, why would they hire someone with absolutely no WC experience to a top-level state job? Whose brother’s-cousin’s-uncle do you have to know to get the nod on that sort of work?
Well from the outside, looking in, we assume Mr. Donohoo is part of the Madison County Insiders—he was the Madison County Recorder of Deeds for more than two decades. He is probably already eligible for a state/county pension when he reaches the right age. If you aren’t aware of it, Madison County is a small, mostly rural county in southern Illinois across the Mighty Mississippi River from St. Louis. Madison County has been repeatedly designated as a “judicial hellhole” for their approach to litigation that comes to this tiny county from all over the United States. Every month for years on end, little Madison County, IL with a population of about 140,000 has a monthly asbestos trial call of about 400 pages—if all those claims were to be tried in a given year, most adults in that county would be on indefinite jury duty. If you ever get to visit the county seat of Edwardsville, you may see what has to be the biggest rural county courthouse in the history of our planet—the place was fully funded with about $90 millions dollars derived from the interest on an appellate bond in the amount of about $600 million dollars on a tobacco verdict later tossed out by the Illinois Supreme Court.
How did Madison County get so prominent in Illinois WC circles? Well, if you go back down memory lane about nine years to 2001-2, our current former-Governor-about-to-be-tried-on-June-3 was locked in a very close three-way primary election battle with Paul Vallas and our current junior U.S. Senator Roland Burris. Rumors are the former Governor made a deal with the Madison County Plaintiffs’ bar that gave him the political edge to win the primary and then the general election. As part of that bargain, we understand the former Governor turned over substantial control of the then-named Illinois Industrial Commission to the Madison County Insiders who quietly changed the name, funding and make-up of the place into a shiny new not-very-diverse Plaintiff-Petitioner-dominated place that has been anathema to Illinois business ever since.
We want to make it clear, the folks brought to the Commission by this group are both honest and outwardly professional and many of them were and are very knowledgeable and ostensibly qualified. We are amazed to see someone move into a second-tier job that completely lacks any true WC background and wonder why he wasn’t started out as staff attorney for a Commissioner to then become an arbitrator and continue to move up. With that in mind, we caution we have no idea, absolutely none, how new Commissioner Donohoo will rule when cases are brought before him. We assume he will learn very rapidly on the job. When he needs help, he can ask the covert, hidden, undisclosed players-not-to-be-named-ever who got him the job. And the observers from Illinois business will continue to sigh and wait for the fall election to see how things go.
And please, everyone remember, the State of Illinois under Pat Quinn still ain’t ready for reform. A vote for Bill Brady will be a vote for jobs to grow and stay in this state.
Post Provided by Gene Keefe of Keefe, Campbell & Associates, LLC. The firm was started by
Eugene F. Keefe, Michael J. Danielewicz, John P.
Campbell, Joseph R. Needham and Shawn R. Biery with
the goal of providing high-quality and cost-effective
civil litigation services for the defense of
self-insured employers and insurance carriers.
