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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTVO

When the clock strikes midnight on January 1, 2026, Illinois will usher in a slate of new laws, signed by Gov. JB Pritzker, that promise to reshape workplaces, redefine employee rights, and even redraw the boundaries of corporate power.

Illinois becomes one of the few states to specifically regulate employer use of AI. House Bill 3773 amends the Illinois Human Rights Act to make it a civil rights violation for employers to use AI tools that result in discrimination based on protected characteristics (such as race, gender, age, or disability) in hiring, promotion, discipline, termination, or other employment terms.

Companies are also required to notify workers when AI technology is deployed and explain what it evaluates. The law also prohibits the use of zip codes as a proxy for protected characteristics, such as race or ethnicity.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | Something amid the junk caught their eye, and a bidding war was on : Bigmike11 peered into the plastic tub filled with a tangle of sparkly bangles, bracelets, even someone’s military dog tags, and decided there was something in there that he must have. Ditto for Repostl1975 and 41junk72. How else to explain why these three were in a bidding war — up to $4,050 as of mid-November — for what to most people would appear to be a heap of junk? But here’s the thing: None of the bidders (Bigmike11, Repostl1975 and 41junk72 are their online names) had actually examined the thing (or things) they wanted. They’re online bidders in the State of Illinois’ Online Auction, which runs year-round. Each auction typically lasts a week, offering items as tiny as a set of earbuds or as big as a dump truck. All of it is housed in a one-story, 40,000-square-foot warehouse in Springfield, which isn’t open to the public.

* Press Release | Chicago Abortion Fund Launches Statewide Visibility Campaign to Expand Awareness of Abortion Access Across Illinois: The campaign will run from mid-October through December 21, 2025, with placements across Chicago, Chicagoland, Champaign/Urbana, Bloomington, Decatur, Springfield, Ottawa, and targeted border-state digital extensions. It directs people to CAF’s secure landing page and helpline, offering immediate access to funding, logistical coordination, and confidential guidance. Total estimated impressions across Out-of-Home (OOH), digital, and audio exceed 26.6 million statewide.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol City Now | Former Ameren owner settles with Illinois Attorney General on 10-year-old price-fixing allegations: According to a news release, the Illinois Attorney General’s office says Texas-based Dynegy has agreed to pay $38 million to settle allegations it manipulated the energy market back in 2015, a few years after Dynegy purchased the utility. They essentially, the AG says, manipulated the market “to overcharge electric customers by taking advantage of rules that already been deemed unjust and unreasonable.”

* Illinois Times | Turner and Coffey find agreement on veto session bills: Turner, a Democrat, and Coffey, a Republican, both voted against the transit bill, explaining that the reform package to fill a funding gap for the Regional Transportation Authority in the Chicago area did little for central Illinois, though a move to fill the funding gap for the RTA felt inevitable. “The reason why I voted no is because I really felt like it was more of a bailout for Chicagoland and wasn’t going to benefit downstate,” Turner said. “There was going to be some type of legislation that was going to be passed, because just looking at what was happening in Chicago with transportation, you knew something was going to happen,” she said.

* WAND | Pritzker signs bill increasing weight limit for electric, hydrogen trucks: Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law Friday to create a weight limit exemption for clean energy trucks. The change could help businesses using hydrogen and electric vehicles, but downstate lawmakers are concerned about potential road damage. The legislation calls for a 2,000-pound allowance for vehicles operated by engines fueled wholly or partially by natural gas, electric batteries, or hydrogen fuel cells. Sponsors filed the plan to help a southwest suburban company working with DHL to add hydrogen-powered trucks to their U.S. fleet.

* WCSJ | Assisted Suicide Bill Passed “Out of the Blue”: 38th District State Senator Sue Rezin was in our studios recently providing the latest details about a controversial bill that passed during the fall veto session. “Two-thirty in the morning, they called the assisted suicide bill out of the blue. This bill has been assisted suicide has been talked about and come before committees for the last two years, but really hadn’t gained momentum. Well, they called the bill at two thirty in the morning. There’s a tremendous amount of pushback rightfully so from the faith based community. we didn’t support the bill. We haven’t supported the bill because we have heard from not only our constituents, but, you know, I, again, coming from the faith based community, believe that it is not the appropriate approach. The fact the bill was called at two thirty in the morning so people who oppose it could not contact us and really come out and advocate against the bill is exactly why the bill was called and passed at two thirty in the morning.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Who’s to blame for this year’s property tax bills? Finger-pointing and opportunism abound: This year’s bills showed Chicago homeowners’ median property tax bills jumped 16.7% over last year, according to the Cook County treasurer, while the collective bills for commercial real estate in the Loop dropped by $129 million. […] Fueling much of it is a crisis of timing: a monthslong technology snafu involving Tyler Technologies, the Texas-based vendor whose software underpins the county’s tax system. The glitch delayed the release of bills by months, landing them not in the usual quiet of midsummer but at the peak of budget negotiations and election-season maneuvering. […] The collective levies of governments inside the city of Chicago grew $528.6 million in 2024, reaching $8.87 billion, according to the treasurer’s analysis. Chicago Public Schools make up the largest part of Chicagoans’ bills. CPS increased its levy by 4.5% to nearly $4 billion earlier this year, a hike unanimously approved by the Chicago Board of Education this summer, including members aligned with the teachers union.

* Sun-Times | Alternative to Mayor Johnson’s budget could entail higher trash collection fee, new package delivery fee: The plan they hope to unveil later this week would likely hold the line on property taxes, but increase the $9.50 a month garbage collection fee that has been frozen since its 2015 inception. Sources said the proposal could more than double the garbage collection fee — to roughly $20 a month — while exempting senior citizens

* Block Club Chicago | Construction To Begin Soon On South Loop Data Center: Urbanize Chicago reported that a foundation permit has been issued to HydraVault to renovate a two-story building at 2538 S. Wabash Ave., where the 76,000-square-foot data center will be housed. Construction is set to begin before year’s end, according to the real estate blog. Building owner Scott Greenberg shared details of the plan at a town hall this year, telling neighbors the data center would be available to a wide range of clients, including researchers and government agencies. The facility will have a power supply of 20 megawatts and deliver up to 200 kilowatts per rack, using a hybrid liquid-and-air cooling system that operates on a closed loop, promising “scaleable usage,” per HydraVault’s website.

* WTTW | Lawsuit Filed by Man Police Shot in CTA Red Line Station Set for Trial: Roman’s shooting was captured on cellphone video and was one of several instances of police violence that drew widespread attention during 2020, fueling calls for criminal justice reform that grew after a Minneapolis police officer murdered George Floyd in May 2020. The trial, set to start Dec. 8 and last 10 days, represents a high-stakes gamble for the city, whose lawyers typically recommend settling civil cases involving actions by the police that led to criminal charges and are ruled to have violated department policy. […] Chicago taxpayers paid $1.15 million through Aug. 28 to defend the lawsuit filed by Roman, according to documents obtained by Roman’s lawyers through a Freedom of Information Act request and provided to WTTW News.

* Tribune | Union Pacific says rail merger could unclog Chicago. Critics worry about costs and traffic tie-ups: Union Pacific says the $85 billion merger would serve the public interest and win federal approval by unclogging Chicago, the cradle of American railroading and still its biggest and most notorious bottleneck. But the “increased monopolistic power” of the combined railroad will drive up shipping costs and could kneecap America’s global competitiveness, according to nine Republican attorneys general in a letter last month. Shipping costs are already a pocketbook issue for everyday Chicagoans. Americans received 66 packages on average in 2024, a 78% increase over seven years, according to Capital One retail data. During this time, the average price per package dropped by just 4%.

* Tribune | Judge’s unusual criticism in dropped immigration case is latest strange twist for US attorney’s office: In granting the prosecution’s motion to dismiss assault charges against Dana Briggs, U.S. Magistrate Judge Gabriel Fuentes took the opportunity to opine more generally on the U.S. attorney’s office’s role in prosecuting a number of other immigration-related cases that have since fallen apart. In his nine-page opinion, Fuentes wrote he could not “help but note just how unusual and possibly unprecedented it is” for Chicago’s venerable U.S. attorney’s office to bring charges “so hastily” that, once more facts came out, they were unable to obtain an indictment in the grand jury or were forced to dismiss the case as not provable.

* Press Release | Chicago Board of Elections Welcomes New Commissioner Laura Kotelman: The Chicago Board of Elections welcomed its new Commissioner Laura Kotelman, who was sworn in by the Office of the Chief Judge of the Circuit Court of Cook County on November 26, 2025. A long-time public servant and lawyer, Commissioner Kotelman is the first Republican woman to be appointed, and for the first time in its 130-year history, the Board will be comprised of all women.

* Sun-Times | 227 vehicles towed on first night of winter parking ban, frustrating unaware drivers: ‘It sucked’: The 227 tows on the first night of the ban were the lowest in four years and the second-lowest this decade. Last year, 244 cars were towed, while 263 cars were hauled away in 2023, according to the department. Those who violate the parking ban will be towed and face a minimum $150 towing fee, a $60 ticket, and a storage fee of $25 per day. Vehicles are towed to auto pounds at 10301 S. Doty Ave. or 701 N. Sacramento Ave.

* Block Club | Chicago Could See 4 Inches Of Snow Monday And ‘Bitter’ Cold Through The Week: After seeing its snowiest November day ever Saturday, Chicago is expected to get 2-4 more inches of accumulation Monday, the National Weather Service’s forecast states. The agency issued a winter weather advisory from 2 p.m. through midnight. Chicagoans can expect slippery road conditions and “hazardous conditions” including reduced visibility, with high temperatures only hitting 25-30 degrees and low temperatures falling to 11-21 degrees.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | New Cook County Circuit Court chief judge sworn in for first time in over 20 years: The new chief judge of the Cook County Circuit Court was installed Monday morning. The Honorable Charles S. Beach II took the oath during a ceremony inside the Chicago-Kent College of Law. He was elected in September. […] Chief Judge Beach is an eight-year veteran of the bench. He took over for former Chief Judge Tim Evans, who served eight terms since 2001.

* Chicago Reader | Cook County law enforcement agencies get more money in 2026: The 2026 budget includes massive investments in digital surveillance, including millions of dollars in servers and hardware, as well as dozens of positions in digital forensics and predictive analytics. In all, more than 56 percent of the county’s general fund is earmarked for the public safety system—which encompasses the Cook County Department of Corrections, the Cook County Sheriff’s Office, and the various facets of the county court system. The $1.5 billion allocated for law enforcement in 2026 represents an increase of more than $300 million, or about 30 percent, from the previous year, driven mostly by personnel costs.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County Board shoots down chair’s pick for District 2 seat, as some members criticize selection process: Then, on Nov. 17, the full board met, and Pierog recommended Berman’s widow, Mary Berman, for the seat. At that meeting, Pierog said that other candidates under consideration were interested in running for the seat when it is up for election in 2026. She expressed concern that, with early voting beginning in just a few months for the primary election, selecting one of those candidates to fill the seat now would allow them to claim to be the incumbent.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Fox Valley Park District gets $330K grant to help fund after-school program in West Aurora District 129: The Fox Valley Park District was receiving the federal funds on a three-year grant cycle, which expired in June. But uncertainty surrounding federal funding availability prompted the park district to look for other funding sources to continue on with an after-school program at West Aurora, explained Fox Valley Park District Recreation Superintendent Becky Harling. “The grant world … can be kind of fluid at times,” Harling said. “You’ll have funding one year and not the next, and trying to make sure that there’s stability within your program when you’re looking at grant funding can be a little tricky.”

*** Downstate ***

* Muddy River News | Pike Co. budget shows $880,328 shortfall, county chair gets no confidence vote: Tensions linger from last week’s Pike County Board meeting, which then carried over to a special meeting on Tuesday. Discrepancies emerged after a budget was passed, delaying its filing until late Thursday, with the new budget year beginning today, Dec. 1. Pike County’s projected revenue is $5,876,900. The projected expenses are $6,767,228. That’s a $880,328 shortfall. “$500,000 is debt service that we had to borrow this year to cover payroll and other operational costs,” Board Chair Reta Hoskin told Muddy River News over the weekend. “That leaves $380,328 in 2026 estimated expenses that are not covered by regular revenue sources.

* Capitol News Illinois | Budzinski intervenes in local housing dispute on behalf of low-income residents: Yet, past reporting has documented HUD’s inspection process as failing to flag dangerous living conditions in federally subsidized housing. HUD has since shifted to a new set of standards for inspecting publicly subsidized housing, but full implementation of requirements to meet those standards has faced delays. Although Sangamon Towers received a satisfactory score on the inspection, HUD’s September letter to Budzinski notes deficiencies “for cockroach presence in two units and a mold-like substance in a bathroom of another unit.” Neither issue was associated with the original complaint submitted to HUD.

* Illinois Times | HSHS to pay cyber attack settlement : The nonprofit health system, based in rural Sangamon County near Riverton, discovered the suspicious cyber activity “by an unauthorized third-party threat actor” on its computer network in mid- to late August 2023, according to Sangamon County Circuit Court documents. The breach caused the personal information of almost 869,000 former and current patients to be disclosed and resulted in several lawsuits to be filed against HSHS, which posts about $2.8 billion in annual revenues and operates HSHS St. John’s Hospital in Springfield as its flagship.

*** National ***

* AP | Federal review finds 44% of US trucking schools don’t comply with government rules: The Transportation Department said Monday that it plans to revoke the accreditation of nearly 3,000 schools unless they can comply with training requirements in the next 30 days. Another 4,000 schools are being warned they may face similar action. […] The list of schools being targeted wasn’t immediately released.

* The Hill | Flying without REAL ID may cost you $45 under new TSA program: On Monday, the TSA announced it “will refer all passengers who do not present an acceptable form of ID and still want to fly an option to pay a $45 fee to use a modernized alternative identity verification system, TSA Confirm.ID.” The $45 fee would allow the traveler to use TSA Confirm.ID for 10 days. “This fee ensures the cost to cover verification of an insufficient ID will come from the traveler, not the taxpayer,” Senior Official Performing the Duties of Deputy Administrator for TSA Adam Stahl said in Monday’s press release.

* NYT | The ‘Race Against Time’ to Save Music Legends’ Decaying Tapes: A huge portion of the world’s recorded musical heritage is stored on magnetic tape, used regularly from the 1940s into the digital age to capture musicians’ sounds in the studio. But as analog tape ages, it grows more fragile and vulnerable, posing a challenge for engineers like Pribble, 60, an audio preservation expert with the giant storage company Iron Mountain. For 15 years, he has been at the forefront of an obscure but vital industrywide effort to save old tapes — for which he employs an assortment of handmade tools and Rube Goldberg-worthy machines in a cramped workshop.

  Comment      


Question of the day: 2025 Golden Horseshoe Awards

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s time once again for our annual Golden Horseshoe Awards. Our first two categories…

    * Best Place to Gather for Dinner During Session Weeks

    * Best Place to Gather for Drinks, Etc. During Session Weeks

As always, do your very best to nominate in both categories. And make sure to explain your nominations or they won’t count. This isn’t a poll. Let us know why you think your nominees are deserving of this award.

This year, we have one new rule to try and mix things up: No repeats from last year. Last year’s winners were Saputo’s and JP Kelly’s.

Have fun!

  5 Comments      


Here we go!!! Our annual LSSI Christmas gift fundraiser (Updated x2)

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* It’s time to kick off our annual fundraising drive to buy Christmas presents for foster kids! Lutheran Social Services of Illinois cares for more than 2,500 foster children and you’ve helped spread a whole lot of joy in the years we’ve been raising money. I believe it’s one of the most important things this website does.

The average cost of each gift is about $25, although that can vary depending on need. Your donations are used exclusively for gifts. LSSI does not take a cut for overhead. Last year, we raised $45,442. Y’all are amazing.

As usual, I’ll match the first $2,000 in donations. So, click here and let’s get going!

Thanks!

*** UPDATE 1 *** Well, that was fast. We’s already reached $2,000 and then some. With my matching $2,000 donation, we’re now at $5,375! Thanks! Please, click here to keep the momentum going!

*** UPDATE 2 *** We just hit the $10K mark. We have a long way to go, but thanks! Please, click here.

  2 Comments      


Rising electricity costs starting to dominate campaigns

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* New York Times

Across the country, Democrats have seized on rising anxiety over electricity costs and data centers in what could be a template for the 2026 midterm elections.

In Virginia, Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger pledged during her campaign to lower energy bills and make data centers pay more. In the House of Delegates, one Democratic challenger unseated a Republican incumbent by focusing on curbing the proliferation of data centers in Loudoun County and the exurbs of the nation’s capital.

In New Jersey, Governor-elect Mikie Sherrill promised to declare a state of emergency on utility costs and freeze rates. And in Memphis, State Representative Justin J. Pearson, who is challenging Representative Steve Cohen in a high-profile Democratic primary next year, has vowed to fight a supercomputer by Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, that would be located in a predominantly Black neighborhood.

Strong opposition by citizens forced the Tucson City Council in August to pull the plug on an Amazon data center slated for that Arizona city, and then in September forced Google to call off one in Indianapolis.

“Electricity is the new price of eggs,” said Charles Hua, executive director of Powerlines, a nonpartisan organization which aims to modernize utility regulations and reduce power bills. “This is a defining moment for politicians of all stripes — what’s your answer to lowering utility bills? Because I think consumers and voters are looking for leadership on this.”

* AP

Past due balances to utility companies jumped 9.7% annually to $789 between the April-June periods of 2024 and 2025, said The Century Foundation, a liberal think tank, and the advocacy group Protect Borrowers. The increase has overlapped with a 12% jump in monthly energy bills during the same period.

* Illinois’ electricity costs have also been rising fast, and were a major component of the recent energy omnibus bill

A new report compiled by the U.S. Congress Joint Economic Committee Minority projected that Illinoisans could pay up to $200 more for electricity this year compared to last, an increase of more than 15%. […]

The bill that cleared the General Assembly [last month] funds energy storage systems through a new charge to Illinois electric customers that will take effect in 2030. The bill also lifts a longtime ban on new nuclear power developments and gives new authority to state utility regulators.

The bill incentivizes new storage projects, which state officials at the Illinois Power Agency found will suppress electricity prices in an analysis they provided to lawmakers. It also mandates new programs to decrease strain on the grid, like energy efficiency programs.

* Illinois has a strong subsidy program for data centers, which is backed by powerful construction unions. Worker demand is pushing wages up, but a massive labor shortage is growing. Wall St. Journal

Data centers don’t employ many workers once they are actually built. During construction, though, they are a hive of workers pouring concrete walls and foundations, wiring electric panels and installing equipment such as power generators and chillers to ensure servers are cooled to a precise temperature at all times. […]

Given such complexity and high demand, workers who move into the data-center industry—in roles ranging from electricians to project managers—often earn 25% to 30% more than they did before, said Jake Rasweiler, senior vice president of data centers at Kelly Services, a staffing and recruitment firm. […]

The effects are starting to pile up. A survey by the Uptime Institute of data-center equipment manufacturers, engineers and construction companies found that 52% said staffing shortages on sites had caused business disruptions, up from 43% last year. Contractors working on data centers have an average backlog of 10.9 months of work, compared with eight months for their peers, according to data from ABC.

* Gov. Pritzker has long been a strong supporter of the subsidy program. From last year

A Texas-based company broke ground on a new data center in Aurora on Wednesday, the latest in a boom of data storage facility developments in northern Illinois.

Gov. JB Pritzker at the groundbreaking hailed the project as another victory for his administration’s economic development strategy and noted the project will bring with it hundreds of union construction jobs.

* But the future looks dicey. The Economist

On November 20th American statisticians released the results of a survey. Buried in the data is a trend with implications for trillions of dollars of spending. Researchers at the Census Bureau ask firms if they have used artificial intelligence “in producing goods and services” in the past two weeks. Recently, we estimate, the employment-weighted share of Americans using AI at work has fallen by a percentage point, and now sits at 11% (see chart 1). Adoption has fallen sharply at the largest businesses, those employing over 250 people. Three years into the generative-AI wave, demand for the technology looks surprisingly flimsy.

Whether AI adoption is fast or slow has profound consequences. For the world to reap productivity gains from AI, normal businesses must incorporate the tech into their day-to-day operations. It is also the most important question in determining whether or not the world is in an AI bubble. From today until 2030 big tech firms will spend $5trn on infrastructure to supply AI services. To make those investments worthwhile, they will need on the order of $650bn a year in AI revenues, according to JPMorgan Chase, a bank, up from about $50bn a year today. People paying for AI in their personal lives will probably buy only a fraction of what is ultimately required. Businesses must do the rest.

* The country got a taste of how reliant business has become on centralized data centers when a key Aurora center went down. Crain’s

The Aurora data center that supports the CME installed backup cooling capacity after a catastrophic outage that roiled world markets on Friday. […]

The cooling system failed at the data-center complex late Thursday and temperatures soared to over 100F (38C). While CME’s disaster recovery plan calls for a move to a data center in the New York area, the exchange opted against switching to a backup facility because the information it had pointed to a brief outage.

* Related…

* Endeavour Energy, behind proposed 560-acre DeKalb data center, won’t use water to cool servers, plans show: According to the city, Edged has proposed a data center build that uses air instead of water to cool its servers. Natural gas instead of diesel would fuel the generators that spin and create electrical energy to run the operation, according to the project proposal.

* Potential data center in Illinois village raises local concerns: At the meeting, residents fear their local infrastructure cannot support a large industrial facility. “We are in a very dry area in terms of the groundwater,” Raney said. She noted that when a fire broke out at the High Point Golf Course, land later acquired by Constellation, crews had to haul water from multiple towns. “They actually had to drive to get water from like 10 other municipalities near us because we do not have the fire hydrant system,” she said.

* Opinion: Illinois consumers can’t foot the bill for runaway data-center demand: While there’s a lot we can do here in Illinois to protect consumers from data center costs, we can’t do it alone. PJM — a little-known organization that has a tremendous impact on how affordable and clean electricity is for 67 million customers across 13 states — has been struggling to manage runaway data center energy demand. Current PJM policy socializes the costs of those centers across all customers, which means everyday consumers — you and me — are paying big electric bills to cover the wealthiest companies in the world. At a recent media briefing hosted by the Citizens Utility Board, representatives from the Natural Resources Defense Council warned that if nothing is done to manage the estimated 30 gigawatts of data centers seeking to connect to the grid, the PJM region could face rolling blackouts and bill spikes averaging $70 a month. … Although no plan gained decisive support, an advisory vote from members produced striking results: The comprehensive proposal that won the most votes called for the toughest standards. That plan — from the Independent Market Monitor — took a wise “Bring Your Own Generation” approach that would prohibit data centers from connecting to the grid until they brought their own new electricity resources to power their facilities.

* AI data centers’ massive demand for aluminum is crushing the US aluminum industry: But data centers guzzle enormous amounts of power, and electricity prices are skyrocketing. In the US alone, electricity demand is expected to grow five to 10 times faster over the next 10 years than it did in the previous decade, per Bank of America. For aluminum smelters, this is a problem. Producing aluminum is incredibly energy-intensive, and without cheap power, those smelters can’t operate.

* Flood of AI Bonds Adds to Pressure on Markets: Companies were able to complete their sales. But some had to pay unexpectedly high interest rates. Prices of bonds from the companies have also been sliding—a sign that investors were caught off guard by the sheer quantity of bonds entering the market and of growing concern about the worsening credit metrics of the businesses. Stock investors, already nervous about the sky-high valuations of AI businesses, have taken note of the weakness in the bond market. Meanwhile, the cost of insuring those bonds using credit-default swaps also has climbed, with negative sentiments from different groups of investors feeding into each other.

* Trump’s push for more AI data centers faces backlash from his own voters: Political leaders across the U.S. are urging a rapid expansion of data-center capacity and new power production to keep the country competitive in AI. Trump, a Republican, is promoting the build-out as an economic and national security priority and has directed his administration to bypass environmental rules and permitting that give local communities a voice. In Pennsylvania, Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro and Republican Senator Dave McCormick are courting developers with incentives and infrastructure upgrades to attract investment in the fast-growing industry.

* Critics scoff after Microsoft warns AI feature can infect machines and pilfer data: Microsoft’s warning on Tuesday that an experimental AI agent integrated into Windows can infect devices and pilfer sensitive user data has set off a familiar response from security-minded critics: Why is Big Tech so intent on pushing new features before their dangerous behaviors can be fully understood and contained? … Both flaws can be exploited in attacks that exfiltrate sensitive data, run malicious code, and steal cryptocurrency. So far, these vulnerabilities have proved impossible for developers to prevent and, in many cases, can only be fixed using bug-specific workarounds developed once a vulnerability has been discovered.

* Health care AI will generate real value in 2026: West Monroe: A multisite survey of physicians revealed lower rates of self-reported clinician burnout and less after-hour documentation. A second study of a UChicago Medicine pilot compared ambient AI scribe users to a “look-alike” group of non-users. That study found clinicians using the ambient clinical documentation tool spent 8.5% less total time in the electronic health records, with more than 15% less time spent composing notes.

  10 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* US Senate candidate Raja Krishnamoorthi

Former Lieutenant Governor of Illinois Sheila Simon announced her endorsement of Raja Krishnamoorthi for U.S. Senate in a video released today, becoming the latest downstate leader to join the rapidly expanding coalition uniting behind his campaign.

“Raja is the kind of leader who listens to and fights for every Illinois community, not just the ones closest to Chicago,” said Former Lt. Governor Simon. “Raja is ready to not just represent the state of Illinois, but to be the kind of national leader we need right now. He is primed to step into the traditions of some amazing U.S. Senators — Dick Durbin, Barack Obama, and my favorite, my dad.”

* The Edwardsville Intelligencer: “Seven questions with Senate candidate Juliana Stratton”

Q: Turning to the campaign, there are a couple of big names seeking the Democratic nomination and a lot of lesser-known candidates — some of whom have brought up how unpopular the Democratic party currently is. What are you doing in this campaign to stand out, not just among the big names but among this pretty enormous field of candidates?

“First of all, let me just acknowledge the big night that Democrats just had here in America, all across the country. People made it very clear that when you talk about the issues that matter to people, when you talk about affordability, when you listen to the people, and when they see what’s happening in Washington right now — people came out in droves and Democrats were wildly successful in lots of different ways. And so I just want to point that out, that people are feeling what’s happening in Washington is not taking our country in the right direction.

“But having said that, in terms of what I talk about — first of all, I’m the only candidate that has represented all of Illinois for the last seven years. And that’s important because I’ve been in these communities. I’m not showing up for the first time. I’m going back multiple times to communities. And even on this campaign trail, there’s been seven years. I’ve told you I’ve led the Governor’s Rural Affairs Council. That’s something new that’s distinct.

“But I think the other thing that’s important to point out, in addition to saying that I’m the only one that’s a leading candidate, is that I’m not accepting corporate PAC money. The other thing is that I have not just been about… I’ve not just been out there for the last eight, ten years raising money — I have been focused on getting things done as a true partner in governance to our government.

“So what have we done for the people of Illinois? Not just talk — we’ve delivered. We’ve raised the minimum wage, so we’re raising wages. We’ve passed paid leave for all workers. We’ve protected workers’ rights and the right to collectively bargain. We’ve protected women’s rights. We’ve made sure that we’ve created thousands of good-paying jobs all across our state. We’ve made child care more affordable. We’ve lowered the cost of prescription drugs. To me, Illinois is the blueprint. What Governor Pritzker and I have done here in Illinois is the blueprint that I want to take to Washington, D.C., and I want to fight for Illinoisans just like I’ve done for seven years.”

* Evanston Now

The Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC announced Tuesday its support of Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss in his bid for Congress in the 9th Congressional District.

Biss is the seventh congressional candidate the PAC has announced support for this cycle, including State Sen. Robert Peters, who’s running for Congress in the 2nd District, and Rep. Adelita Grijalva, the newest member of Congress from Arizona, who was sworn into Congress earlier this month.

“In his decades of service to Illinois as an educator, activist, legislator and as a mayor, Daniel Biss has been a bold progressive change agent and a critical ally for working families,” caucus co-chairs Rep. Pramila Jayapal of California and Rep. Maxwell Frost of Florida said in a statement. […]

Incumbent Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Evanston, who’s yet to endorse any candidate in the crowded Democratic congressional primary to replace her, is a member of the Progressive Caucus but not a member of the PAC’s board, which is made up of seven House Democrats, including two Illinois representatives — Rep. Delia Ramirez (3rd) and Rep. Chuy García (4th).

* Evanston Now

Sunrise Movement, one of the nation’s largest climate activist groups, has endorsed Kat Abughazaleh in the Illinois 9th District U.S. House Democratic primary.

Abughazaleh in a statement Monday morning said she was “incredibly honored” for the group’s support.

Sunrise Movement Chicago volunteers reportedly plan to phonebank, canvas and organize on college campuses to back Abughazaleh and State Sen. Robert Peters, who’s running for Congress in the 2nd District. […]

Avi Horwitz of Sunrise Movement Chicago called Abughazaleh the “kind of courageous leader the Democratic Party continues to have far too few of.”

* Politico

In IL-07: State Rep. La Shawn Ford has been endorsed by the Cook County Teachers Unions and Ald. Derrick Curtis, who’s also a Democratic committeeperson.

* Evanston Now political reporter Matthew Eadie


According to the State Board of Elections, Sigcho-Lopez would need 10,816 valid signatures to run as an Independent. He could collect up to 17,304 signatures.

* More…

    * Journal & Topics | State Board To Rule On Congressional Candidate Objections Next Month: Voters most likely won’t know how many candidates running for 3rd, 8th and 9th congressional districts will end up on the upcoming primary election ballot until early December. […] According to the copies of the objection filings provided by ISBE, most objections follow a standard format and arguments, alleging that the candidates don’t have enough valid signatures on their nominating petitions to meet the legal minimum, which varies depending on the district and which party primary the candidate is running in. The objections specifically list which signatures they believe are invalid and any potential reason why.

    * Sun-Times | Dolton mom turned away from hospital during labor calls for changes to maternal health: “After being kicked out of the hospital and begging to stay but still being pushed away was hurtful, disgraceful,” Mercedes Wells told reporters Tuesday. “I felt unheard. I felt ignored. I felt treated less than human.” She was joined by U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly, who said she plans to file a bill to make sure what happened to Wells does not happen again to anyone else. “It’s clear that Mercedes’ story isn’t an isolated incident,” Kelly said. “This is not a Franciscan Health problem but rather a systemic issue.”

    * Advocate | Illinois Democratic candidate glitter bombs anti-LGBTQ+ Christian group: In his campaign for the state’s 7th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, Reed Showalter, 32, recently received a survey from Christian nonprofit the Illinois Family Institute. The form asked for his stance on various issues, including LGBTQ+ and abortion rights — with an obsessive focus on trans participation in sports. […] “If it weren’t already clear, this organization is gleefully transphobic and homophobic, so I think it’s only fair that they get a little sparkle in their life,” Showalter concluded in the video.

  8 Comments      


More SNAP peril

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Congress’ “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” which passed last summer, could prove to be far more damaging to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in Illinois than most people know. A SNAP “death penalty” is built into the budget reconciliation law.

Before we go further, there’s a caveat: The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service has not yet released definitive guidance for how the federal government intends to enforce the law.

As I’ve told you before, Illinois’ SNAP “error rate” (providing too many benefits or not enough) was 11.6% last year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The new law requires states with error rates above 10% to pay 15% of the SNAP benefit costs.

That would translate to a $705 million price tag for Illinois — which is obviously money the state cannot afford.

Analyses from several experts claim if Illinois does not lower its error rate and cannot pay the full federal penalty of potentially hundreds of millions of dollars, then the SNAP program may disappear here.

The widely held assumption was if the state couldn’t pay the error rate penalty, then SNAP spending would be lowered by the same amount. And that could still happen if the coming federal guidance allows the state to reduce eligibility.

But benefits would have to be cut by up to 17% if none of the $705 million penalty can be paid. Not good in an era of rising grocery prices.

However, according to those experts, if the state can’t pay the penalty in the 2027 federal fiscal year, which begins next October, the entire SNAP program could quite possibly be shut down in Illinois.

An analysis by David Super, the Carmack Waterhouse professor of law and economics at Georgetown University, concluded “(I)f a state does not pay its state share, USDA could find the state in violation of the Act and terminate the state’s participation on that basis.”

The only option, according to Super, would be if the state cut SNAP eligibility, which would lower the cost of the program, and therefore, the state’s cost share.

This topic came up in testimony to an Illinois House appropriations committee last month by Illinois Department of Human Services Secretary Dulce Quintero. “The state match requirements are all or nothing,” Quintero told the committee. “If we’re unable to pay all of the state share, we will receive no federal funding, putting the entire SNAP program for Illinois at risk.”

Chloe Green with the American Public Human Services Association told the U.S. House Committee on Agriculture in September: “Absent any change to the current legislation, our understanding is that if states cannot pay the funding that has been shifted to them, they will not be able to operate a SNAP program.”

Again, this could change when the Food and Nutrition Service releases guidance.

The governor’s office is confident the state can lower the state’s error rate (and therefore the penalty) in the coming months.

It’s hiring 250 people to tackle the problem. It’s also retraining workers, rolling out some new tech to alert caseworkers to potential errors and to evaluate data collected from recipients, as well as “identify and resolve Integrated Eligibility System defects.” It’s requiring more info about shelter and medical costs (big reasons for the error rates). And it’s reinstating six-month eligibility periods instead of annual reviews and doing in-person interviews. It’s also conducting a public awareness campaign.

According to the Illinois Department of Human Services, “inadvertent” recipient errors make up two-thirds of the error rates. An example: “A customer applied for SNAP and reported $570 in monthly rent paid to the landlord. During Quality Control Review, Department of Human Services discovers their rent is $500, with $70 paid to the landlord for utilities and internet.”

Another third is blamed on agency errors: “A caseworker verifies the customer’s income as $525 but accidentally enters $255 in the eligibility system.”

Despite all the hype about fraud, Department of Human Services insists it’s “less than 0.10% of errors.”

Illinois’ error rate has historically been lower than 10.6%. The state claims a big reason for the increase is “technical errors.” Quintero told the House appropriations committee last month the feds “moved the goalposts” in 2022 by including technical mistakes in the error rates. New Jersey, Quintero pointed out, saw its error rate skyrocket from “below 4% to 35%” after that federal change.

Whatever the case, a whole lot is riding on the state’s effort to lower its error rates, including possibly the very existence of SNAP here.

Discuss.

  17 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Indiana lawmakers in state House to convene session with redistricting top of mind. AP

    - Indiana House members are expected to push forward Monday with redrawing the state’s congressional districts in Republicans’ favor, increasing pressure on their defiant counterparts in the GOP-led Senate to meet President Donald Trump’s demands.
    - Republicans who control the House chamber have said there’s no doubt that redistricting will pass that chamber. But the fate of any proposal to emerge remains uncertain in the Senate.
    - Senate leadership recently backed off from previous intent not to meet at all, agreeing to convene next Monday. But it’s still unclear if enough senators will back a new map.

As you’ll recall, Gov. JB Pritzker said he would push for a congressional remap here if Indiana redrew its congressional boundaries.

* Related stories…

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*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois sues USDA to block changes to SNAP eligibility of immigrants: Illinois is among a group of Democratic states suing the Trump administration, seeking to block a change to the federal food stamps program that the states say unlawfully prevented some legal immigrants from accessing the aid. Kwame Raoul, Illinois’ top lawyer, and attorneys general from 20 other states and Washington, D.C., filed the lawsuit Wednesday in an Oregon federal court against the U.S. Department of Agriculture and its secretary, Brooke Rollins, asking the court to block the change’s implementation.

* NYT | Times Analysis Finds Errors in Trump’s Supreme Court Filing That Calls for National Guard in Chicago: The Trump administration made erroneous claims to the Supreme Court, mischaracterizing the responsiveness of local police and the actions of protesters in a filing asking the justices to sign off on the deployment of hundreds of National Guard troops to Chicago, a New York Times investigation found. The emergency request, filed by the solicitor general, D. John Sauer, which draws heavily from court declarations made by two Homeland Security officials, misstates what happened in the aftermath of a car crash and shooting on Oct. 4 in Chicago that involved Border Patrol agents.

* NPR | Northwestern settles with Trump administration in $75M deal to regain federal funding: Earlier this month, Cornell reached a deal requiring the university to pay $60 million to unfreeze $250 million withheld by the Trump administration over alleged civil rights violations. The private Ivy League university said the settlement did not come “at the cost of compromising our values or independence.” Per the agreement, Northwestern will pay out the $75 million over time through 2028 and “shall maintain clear policies and procedures relating to demonstrations, protests, displays, and other expressive activities, as well as implement mandatory antisemitism training for all students, faculty, and staff,” according to the DOJ.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Chicago city employee charged with threatening Illinois state senator from Freeport in emails: Joseph Haggerty, 59, of Chicago, was charged with two felony counts of threatening a public official after authorities said he sent the emails in September to state Sen. Andrew Chesney, a conservative Republican from Freeport. The Illinois State Police, which conducted the investigation, announced the charges Tuesday. Haggerty remained in the custody of Stephenson County authorities, police said. […] The first email from Haggerty stated he would “love to meet” the senator “on the street anywhere” and explained how he “would cave your f−−−−−− teeth in and make you sip your food through a straw for the rest of you dumb −−−hole coward life.” The second email called Chesney “spineless” and contained another threat and insults.

* The Nation | Illinois Has Put an End to the Injustice of Cash Bail: Now that the law is in place, “it’s going dramatically better than any of us had expected it would be,” McLoughlin said. In Cook County, most people who are arrested are going free before trial. Because of the law’s provision for low-level offenses, many aren’t even required to go to court; 44 percent of people who were charged by police were given a citation and sent home. Across all arrests that resulted in court appearances, the prosecutor declined to ask for jail time in 82 percent of cases. Nearly all those charged with misdemeanors have been allowed to go home to await trial. All of this has translated to a 14 percent decline in the jail population in Cook County.

* Capitol News Illinois | Trump cuts could shrink Illinois economy by $10B: report: Recent cuts by President Donald Trump’s administration could reduce the size of Illinois’ economy by nearly $10 billion each year, according to a new report released Monday by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute. […] “The depth of economic reductions and jobs losses caused by federal actions cannot be mitigated by expenditure reductions at the state and local levels,” researchers Frank Manzo and Robert Bruno wrote in the report. “Policymakers will need to examine new revenue sources to counter the damage done to public schools, Illinois families, and the state’s robust economy.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Bodycam video shows feds’ aggressive tactics in vivid detail: ‘Deploy f—ing gas’: A federal judge has released footage from nearly four dozen body cameras showing immigration agents’ ‘unprecedented’ use of force during their months-long deportation blitz in the Chicago area. Earlier this month, U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis, handed down a historic order restricting agents use of force in “Operation Midway Blitz,” claiming the tactics she’d seen so far “shocks the conscience.”

* WaPo | With ICE in the area, FEMA workers were pulled from storm damage work: The decision to halt the disaster assessment teams’ work on Nov. 6 came amid an ongoing immigration crackdown in the city, leaving the coordinating state and agency officials worried that FEMA’s efforts could put residents as well as the groups of surveyors at risk. The shift meant about 10 groups of federal, state, county and local workers had to stop work surveying hundreds of homes that sustained heavy water damage in parts of the city hit hard by recent storms — assessments that help the federal agency document disaster impacts, and can help make a case for why an area may need help paying for recovery.

* WTTW | Former Inspector General Joe Ferguson Fined $5K for Revealing Botched Little Village Smokestack Implosion Could Have Been Prevented: The Chicago Board of Ethics voted 4-1 to fine former Inspector General Joe Ferguson $5,000 for violating the city’s ethics ordinance by divulging a confidential report that found city officials could have prevented a plume of dust from enveloping Little Village in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic when crews demolished the former Crawford Power Plant. Ferguson is now the head of the Civic Federation, a nonpartisan fiscal watchdog group, and has been fiercely critical of Johnson’s financial stewardship of the city. Ferguson paid the fine, which was levied on Nov. 10, according to records published Friday morning by the board.

* Block Club | Christkindlmarket’s New Capacity Limit Poses ‘Existential Threat’ To Popular Holiday Market: Organizers: The city recently implemented a capacity of 1,553 visitors at a time at Christkindlmarket, the German-themed Christmas market that has been a beloved Downtown holiday tradition for nearly 30 years, market organizers announced Friday. The capacity restriction, which was implemented after the festival opened Nov. 20, is less than half of the limit during the pandemic, when visitors were capped at 3,494 at a time in 2021.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago begins towing cars with winter overnight parking ban in effect: The ban is enforced on 107 miles of main streets in the city, from 3 to 7 a.m. It applies even when there’s no snow on the ground. Violators will be towed and ticketed, with a $150 towing fee, a $60 ticket and a storage fee of $25 a day.

* Tribune | Saturday snow breaks record in Chicago, National Weather Service says: The last time O’Hare saw so much snow on a single day in November was 74 years ago, Nov. 6, 1951, when 8 inches fell, according to the weather service. Snowfall reached 8.7 inches at O’Hare by noon Sunday. Amid the record-breaking snowfall, O’Hare saw at least 1,322 flight cancellations and Midway Airport had 250 cancellations, according to FlightAware.

* CBS | “How did you get this through security?” Pope Leo asks CBS News’ Chris Livesay of White Sox baseball bat gift: Many on board continued the long-standing tradition of presenting gifts to the pontiff as a courtesy, but Livesay had a particularly personal gift for the Chicago native: a Louisville Slugger baseball bat that once belonged to Hall of Fame second baseman Nellie Fox — a Chicago White Sox legend whose career coincided with Leo’s childhood.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | ‘His word means nothing’: Dismissed case reveals dishonesty of Border Patrol commander, protester says: In a criminal complaint, Bovino accused Sheridan of pushing him. An agent under Bovino’s command accused Sheridan of taking a swing at Bovino. The federal charges accused Sheridan of “forcibly assaulting, resisting, opposing, impeding and interfering with a federal officer.” Most of those charges held up until, four weeks later, a friend happened to spot Sheridan getting pushed down in footage from an Oct. 31 news report. “The video demonstrates that, not only did I have no kind of altercation with Bovino, I wasn’t even in front of him,” Sheridan said.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville Planning and Zoning Commission votes in favor of proposed data center: The Naperville Planning and Zoning Commission voted 8-1 in favor of a controversial data center proposal Wednesday evening, marking the fourth and final commission meeting on the topic. “This has been long, it’s been unlike any case we’ve ever worked through,” Commissioner Whitney Robbins said. Developer Karis Critical is proposing one 211,000 square-foot, 36-megawatt data center to be built on the 40 acres of land at the former Alcatel-Lucent site at 1960 Lucent Lane, located off the Interstate 88 (I-88) corridor. The request is scaled back from the initial proposal, which called for two data center buildings that would total 72 megawatts.

* Daily Southtown | Will County holds the line on taxes, but now faces budget shortfall: The board voted 12-10 to approve no increase in the levy, but will capture any new construction, which expands the total tax base and adds to the overall assessed value of property. The levy to hold the line on taxes passed with 11 Republicans and Democrat Destinee Ortiz, of Romeoville, supporting it. The budget that was approved was based on a 1.75% levy increase. “As of right now we have an unbalanced budget,” Speaker Joe VanDuyne said. “It’s illegal.”

* Tribune | McHenry County takes on an old client in court: ICE: McHenry County has filed suit against ICE, trying to get the federal government to pay for potential liability for allegedly making immigrant detainees do forced labor. The court battle pits conservative McHenry County, which once fought in court for the ability to hold accused immigrants in the U.S. without legal permission in its jail, against the agency that once paid it millions of dollars every year to do so. Both county and federal officials have denied liability.

* Forest Park Review | House Speaker Welch joins town hall on D209’s Sports Complex at Proviso West: “Yes, $40 million is in this state budget for Proviso West High School to build a sports complex and I make no apologies about it,” said Chris Welch, speaker of the Illinois House. Welch is widely credited, and sometimes criticized, for getting the Proviso funding into a tight state budget. Welch was back in the cafeteria of his alma mater on Thursday, Nov 20. to speak with D209 administrators, community members and stakeholders about the $40 million grant designated for the construction of a new sports complex at the high school.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora expands number of gambling machines allowed in local businesses: City code previously allowed licensed establishments to have up to five “video gaming” terminals, but now that number has been increased to six. The change, approved by the Aurora City Council on Tuesday, also raised the total number of allowed terminals within city limits by 40 for a total of 240. The increased cap on video gambling terminals is expected to bring in new revenue both for the local businesses they are installed in and for the city through taxes and licensing fees.

* Daily Herald | Geneva council considering referendums for new police station, home rule: If approved, the referendum for a new police station would be on the March 17, 2026, primary ballot. The home rule question would appear on the April 6, 2027, ballot. Home rule status is automatic when a municipality’s population exceeds 25,000. Geneva’s population is 21,393, according to the 2020 census, requiring voter approval for home rule status.

* Naperville Sun | YMCA urges Naperville Park District to halt referendum plans: The YMCA of Metropolitan Chicago and Naperville’s Fry Family YMCA are urging the Naperville Park District to not pursue a referendum for the March 2026 ballot, citing possible duplication of services and affordability concerns for residents. As part of its efforts, the YMCA sent a letter asking the park district to pause its referendum plans. The YMCA has also created a website to help communicate its stance with others, which includes a section where residents can send a letter opposing the referendum.

* Injustice Watch | Timothy Evans Expects to Endure: In September, his tenure came to a surprising conclusion when he lost his eighth reelection bid to Circuit Judge Charles Beach — a relative newcomer to the bench with no background in politics. As the county’s vast and complex court bureaucracy prepares for its first change in leadership in decades, questions about Beach and his plans abound. His election would have many believe the courts no longer need a career politician at their helm. But Evans’ story suggests otherwise. Evans’ political acumen allowed him to endure as chief judge for 24 years and to enact significant progressive change in the inherently conservative courts, often for the benefit of the most vulnerable people to come through the system. His actions often seemed to come under duress, and his inaction was often criticized. But he achieved longevity in this role by keeping enough judges happy, absorbing public pressure, and weathering scandals unperturbed. His deliberative and self-assured leadership style was also well suited to the peculiar nature of the circuit court, an institution whose opaqueness is baked into law, whose principal actors are themselves elected officials, and whose bureaucracy is an entrenched extension of Chicago’s old political machine.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Ameren Illinois gas customers to see average $3.65 increase on bills in January: Ameren Illinois residential customers will see an average $3.65 increase on their natural gas bills in January after the Illinois Commerce Commission last week slashed proposed rate hikes for two of the state’s largest utilities. Ameren, which serves approximately 816,000 customers in central and southern Illinois, initially held off on estimating the impact to customers until it could conduct an in-depth review of the ICC’s order, Brad Kloeppel, Ameren senior director of gas operations and technical services, said after the ruling.

* WGLT | Bloomington City Council OKs anticipated $3M increase in property tax levy: The Bloomington City Council on Monday voted 7-2 in favor of the staff’s recommended tax levy estimate that is based on McLean County’s projected equalized assessed value of $2.7 billion. The pending tax levy reflects a rate of 0.98%. “We realize that property taxes are certainly a burden. We do not want to put all of the stress on the taxpayers,” City Manager Jeff Jurgens said near the end of his lengthy presentation during the 70-minute regular council meeting. “We work really hard to be inventive and to try and be more lean and as efficient as a government as we can be.”

* WJBD | Marion County Board Approves Budget with 2.9-Percent Levy Increase: The Marion County Board has voted to approve a $13,452,049 budget with a 2.9-percent property tax levy increase and a new 1-percent state mandate levy to fund a county veterans commission. The decision came at a special meeting on Friday to get the budget passed before the county’s new fiscal year begins on Monday, December 1st. The initial vote did not pass by the required two-thirds majority, but Brock Waggoner changed his initial no vote to yes to allow for passage by a nine-to-three margin.

*** National ***

* NYT | ‘The New Price of Eggs.’ The Political Shocks of Data Centers and Electric Bills: As loyal Republicans, Reece Payton said that he and his family of cattle ranchers in Hogansville, Ga., had one thing on their minds when they cast their ballots in November for the state’s utility board — “to make a statement.” They were already irked by their escalating electric bills, not to mention an extra $50 a month levied by their local utility to cover a new nuclear power plant more than 200 miles away. But after they heard a data center might be built next to their Logos Ranch, about 60 miles southwest of Atlanta, they had enough of Republicans who seemed far too receptive to the interests of the booming artificial intelligence industry. “That’s the first time I ever voted Democrat,” Mr. Payton, 58, said.

* AP | What a federal ban on THC-infused drinks and snacks could mean for the hemp industry: But the ban doesn’t take effect for a year. That has given the industry hope that there is still time to pass regulations that will improve the hemp THC industry — such as by banning synthetically derived THC, requiring age restrictions on sales, and prohibiting marketing to children — rather than eradicate it. “We are very hopeful that cooler heads will prevail,” said Jonathan Miller, general counsel of the industry group U.S. Hemp Roundtable. “If they really thought there was a health emergency, there would be no year-long period.” The federal ban would jeopardize more than 300,000 jobs while costing states $1.5 billion in lost tax money, the group says.

  18 Comments      


Good morning!

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Soul legend Donny Hathaway


* Enjoying the weather?

  2 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Monday, Dec 1, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Question of the day: 2025 Golden Horseshoe Awards
* Here we go!!! Our annual LSSI Christmas gift fundraiser (Updated x2)
* Rising electricity costs starting to dominate campaigns
* Catching up with the federal candidates
* More SNAP peril
* Isabel’s morning briefing
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