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It’s almost a law

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

The Illinois House unanimously passed a bill Wednesday to ban insurance companies from automatically coding a health service lower than what is actually provided to patients.

This plan states all downcoding determinations must be made or reviewed by a real person, and insurance companies would be required to notify doctors if a service is downcoded.

The bill also bans insurers from downcoding in a discriminatory manner against doctors who routinely treat patients with complex health conditions. […]

Senate Bill 3114 previously gained unanimous support in the Senate. The measure now heads to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk.

Illinois State Medical Society…

“This bill is another example of how Illinois leads the way in passing laws that improve access to medical care, making the state a more attractive place to practice medicine. Once signed into law, the Transparency in Downcoding Act will bring greater clarity to the claims process, establish a clear and accessible pathway for disputing downcoded claims and ensure that a live person — not an automated system — is reviewing medical claims and their accompanying clinical documentation.

The Illinois State Medical Society wants to thank all lawmakers who stood with physicians and patients to support this bill as it passed the Senate unanimously. We especially thank sponsors Sen. Dave Koehler and Rep. Sharon Chung for their leadership, and we are hopeful that Gov. J.B. Pritzker will sign this bill into law as Illinois continues advancing policies that support patients and healthcare providers.”

Key Provisions of the Transparency in Downcoding Act (SB 3114/HB 4735):

    • Prohibits a health insurance issuer from using an automated process, system, or tool to downcode a claim
    • Ensures that a live person — not an automated system — has done a complete and thorough review of claims and accompanying clinical documentation before a downcoding decision is made
    • Ensures that a physician will be clearly notified when a claim has been downcoded and reimbursed at a lower level, including the clinical reason for downcoding
    • Requires health insurers to establish a clear and accessible process for disputing downcoded claims. That means appeals must be reviewed by an individual with experience with the medical condition being managed and the services being downcoded using the most up to date AMA CPT® Coding Guideline, and
    • Prevents health insurers from using downcoding to discriminate against physicians who commonly treat patients with complex or chronic conditions.

* Daily Herald

House Bill 4948 would create the Intelligent Speed Assistance Program, allowing a driver convicted of speeding 26 mph or more above the limit twice in 12 months to keep driving, but with a high-tech speed control device installed in their vehicle.

The measure, which passed both chambers of the General Assembly this spring, was introduced by state Rep. Martha Deuter of Elmhurst. She told us Thursday that the traditional means of dealing with super speeders — suspending or revoking their licenses — doesn’t often keep them off the roads. […]

Among the bill’s supporters are Families for Safe Streets, whose draft proposal served as the basis for Deuter’s legislation, and AAA.

Under the law, a driver whose license is suspended for two 26+ mph speeding violations could apply to the secretary of state’s office for permission to join the program.

If approved, the driver would have to pay for professional installation of an approved speed control device, plus a $30 monthly fee. A driver with a first suspension would have to leave the device in for a year. A second suspension would mean a 24-month installation, and a third would mean three years of driving with the device.

* The Alliance for the Great Lakes…

The Illinois Senate on Thursday passed HB4418, which takes a first step in addressing pollution from the plastic pellets used to produce most plastic products. Having passed both chambers, the bill now heads to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk for signature.

With the governor’s signature, Illinois state law will officially designate plastic pellets as a pollutant for the first time. Illinois will become the first of the Great Lakes states to hold producers of industrial plastic pellets accountable for spills of these toxic pellets into our waterways.

Plastic pollution adversely affects clean water, wildlife and public health. An estimated 22 million pounds of plastic waste ends up in the Great Lakes each year, and 86% of litter collected on Great Lakes beaches is plastic. A recent report found microplastics in 100% of tested waterways across Illinois.

Plastic pellets, sometimes referred to as “nurdles,” are the building blocks of plastics manufacturing. They are a recurring source of plastic pollution in the environment because they get dumped or spilled from stormwater runoff from plastic factories and during transportation between facilities.

The bill passed on Thursday by the Illinois General Assembly, sponsored by state Rep. Joyce Mason and state Sen. Julie Morrison, defines pre-production plastic pellets as a pollutant and directs the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) to develop and implement stormwater pollution controls that specifically target plastic pellets. That means polluters would be required to have a plan to keep plastic pellets out of our waters, protecting wildlife and our drinking water sources from these toxic microplastics.

* Capitol City Now

State Sen. Chris Balkema (R-Channahon) may not be welcomed home once the legislative session is over. He will have to face his only constituent who opposes – “very loudly,” no less – his bill to remove the mute swan from the endangered species list and put it into the crosshairs of Illinois hunters.

That constituent? Mrs. Balkema.

The senator said she is the answer to State Sen. Laura Ellman‘s (D-Naperville) question, “This is a mute swan? Who speaks for this swan?” The senator’s wife would also deliver a loud No to State Sen. Rachel Ventura‘s (D-Joliet) question of whether the mute swan is an “ugly duckling.”

The bill, which has passed unanimously in both chambers, speaks to the swan’s status as an invasive species which, said State Sen. Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro), “does a lot of harm throughout the state. This is a swan that we don’t like, much like snow geese, and should be hunted. It gets rid of an invasive species.”

* More…

    * Capitol News Illinois | Insurance regulation bills clear General Assembly: Gov. JB Pritzker says he looks forward to signing a pair of bills that cleared the Illinois House on Wednesday giving the state Insurance Department authority to regulate premiums charged for automobile and homeowners insurance. “Too many families have dealt with unexplained, unfair insurance price hikes on their homes and cars, so this legislation helps protect consumers while maintaining the core principles the Illinois business community is built on,” Pritzker said in a statement Wednesday night. Pritzker first called for regulating homeowners insurance rates last summer after Bloomington-based State Farm Insurance, one of the largest homeowners carriers in the nation, announced a 27.2% average rate increase across the state. He suggested at the time that State Farm and other companies were trying to shift disaster-related losses from other states onto the backs of Illinois consumers.

    * WAND | Digital driver’s license cleanup bill heading to Pritzker’s desk: The plan could align technology and requirements related to mobile IDs and ensure consistency as the digital driver’s licenses are more widely used. This proposal also bans law enforcement from physically taking someone’s phone to verify their mobile ID. “Most of this language is based on an agreement between the Secretary of State and Joint Committee on Administrative Rules related to the rule making they adopted to implement the original law,” said Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago). “I’m aware of no opposition.”

    * Bloomberg | Illinois Bill Banning Menopause Bias at Work Goes to Governor: The legislation (HB 5284) will make Illinois one of the first states to add menopause explicitly to its employment discrimination statutes, after Rhode Island passed a menopause accommodations law in 2025. Several states from New York to California have considered similar measures this year, as menopause-friendly proposals spread in the US and abroad. Actress Halle Berry gave the movement a publicity boost in 2024, when she spoke of her personal experience and endorsed a bill in Congress. Mostly Democratic-majority states are leading the charge while federal proposals lie dormant.

    * WAND | IL House unanimously passes plan calling for school panic alert systems to improve emergency response: Sponsors say the Illinois State Police will work with the State Board of Education and the Illinois Emergency Management Agency to develop rules for the panic alert system. “Time equals life,” said Rep. Nabeela Syed (D-Palatine). “This bill is one step, one effort, just one small commitment to ensuring that we do everything in our power to protect others and learn from tragedy.” House Bill 5107 received unanimous support in the Senate last week. The measure now heads to the governor’s desk for final approval.

  Comment      


Yeah, no

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald

It could ultimately prove fitting that Collin Corbett chose to announce the launch of his bid for governor outside the former Arlington Park, the site of many an improbable finish.

The longtime Republican Party political operative filed as an independent candidate Wednesday, saying he has the best chance to beat incumbent Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker. […]

Corbett said he may be running against a billionaire and a millionaire, but he is neither. Corbett is the founder of the political consulting firm Cor Strategies.

“I’m an everyday person, like the Illinoisans that deserve representation,” he said. “We’re still in our starter home. We’re facing the same struggles that everyday Illinoisans are facing.”

* From Corbett’s last podcast

I’ve spent 20 years and well over a million dollars of my own money trying to fix [the Republican Party] from within, and I have failed, so now I’m going to fix it from outside

I’m not sure I know too many average Joe’s who’ve spent well over a million dollars of their own money trying to fix a political party.

Just sayin…

  17 Comments      


MLB open thread

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* And then we won again…


  13 Comments      


Illinois Swipe-Fee Proposal Misses The Mark

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Illinois Interchange Fee Prohibition Act promises savings for consumers, but the economics tell a different story. By restricting interchange fees, the policy shifts billions of dollars away from the payment system services consumers rely on - and into the hands of large retailers.

Interchange revenue supports fraud prevention, rewards programs, and broad access to affordable banking services. Cutting it doesn’t eliminate costs; it redistributes them. Consumers will likely face fewer benefits, reduced protections, and new or higher fees elsewhere.

Experience from similar policies shows retailers rarely pass savings on to shoppers. Instead, major national chains capture the gains, while working families see little to no price relief.

The proposal also risks creating a fragmented payment landscape, adding complexity at checkout, and weakening security standards. Those burdens ultimately fall on consumers.

This isn’t a consumer cost-cutting measure - it’s a value transfer. And under this plan, consumers lose while large retailers win.

For more information, visit https://www.icul.com/advocacy/ifpa/.

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Bears stadium bill, Illinois budget in the balance as Springfield session winds down. Sun-Times

    - Illinois lawmakers were running the hurry-up offense Thursday as the clock winds down on their effort to advance property tax-incentive legislation intended to help the Chicago Bears build a new stadium in Arlington Heights and prevent them from moving to Indiana.
    - “We don’t know how many megaprojects there are going to be, and we don’t know how much the recipient in the megaproject is going to pay, so because of that, we have no idea of what the amount of money available for property tax relief is,” Sen. Bill Cunningham said. “There’s three and a half days left, and I’m hopeful we’ll get to something.”
    - Gov. JB Pritzker already has gotten a pair of key legislative wins through the uprights with regulations on auto and home insurance companies as well as the burgeoning artificial intelligence industry.

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by American Innovators Network


*************************************************

* Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Great waste in the Great Lakes: How plastic pollution is clogging our waters: The Chicago Tribune is exploring the plastics dilemma with a focus on the Great Lakes, the world’s largest source of fresh surface water. When confronted about their pollution, industry executives often have blamed consumers, using tactics borrowed from and shared with Big Tobacco, according to a Tribune review of thousands of government, scientific and internal industry documents. This coverage, supported by the Pulitzer Center’s StoryReach U.S. initiative, will delve into the spread of plastic waste in the Great Lakes, research into health hazards and possible solutions.

* STLPR | The story behind the proposed Gateway Arch National Park expansion into Illinois: But while many St. Louisans focused on the Arch itself, Martin became passionate about another piece of Saarinen’s proposal: the east bank. “He realized that the Arch was only part of Saarinen’s dream,” Hier said. Saarinen envisioned a park on the east side where people could get a good view of the Arch. When the Arch was completed in 1965, the vision for Illinois remained unfunded and unfinished.

* Press release | Crisis support program faces complete loss of funding: Turning Point Behavioral Health, a longstanding leader in community mental health services located in Skokie, Illinois, learned last week that the State of Illinois has denied its funding application for the organization’s acclaimed Living Room Program in Skokie. This decision means that the Living Room program located at 8324 Skokie Boulevard will close on June 30, 2026. The Living Room Program offers a safe, welcoming alternative to hospital emergency departments. Because it is grant-funded, adults in distress can access care at no cost, connecting with trained peers who have lived experience. In this setting, guests can openly share fears and challenges while working collaboratively toward problem-solving and recovery. […] Over the years, the program has demonstrated remarkable outcomes, achieving a 98% success rate in helping individuals stabilize without requiring emergency room intervention - reducing both personal trauma and healthcare costs while helping residents in their communities return to their families, jobs, and civic life as soon as possible.

*** Statehouse News ***

* STLPR | Illinois Lt. Gov. candidate Mitchell says he’s ready to step in if Pritzker leaves office: “If anything happens, yes, I’ll be ready,” Mitchell said on the latest episode of the “Politically Speaking” podcast. “But for the most part, what I’m really focused on is how I can be the best lieutenant governor I can be — help move the state forward, help our farmers, help our small businesses.” Mitchell said many of the same goals that first prompted him to run for the Illinois House of Representatives motivate him to run for lieutenant governor: lowering the cost of health care and raising wages.

* WGLT | Illinois lawmakers pass auto and home insurance regulations, but industry says move could backfire: Democratic state Rep. Sharon Chung, who represents Bloomington-Normal where State Farm and Country Financial are headquartered, voted against both bills. She said amendments to the bills did clarify the language about what is excessive and what information companies needed to submit to the Illinois Department of Insurance, which was one reason insurance companies opposed the bill. Chung said she is still concerned about retroactive refunds for excessive rates.

* Center Square | Republicans claim fake transparency in early budget, demand better: The four state Senate Republican budgeters, including Sen. Donald DeWitte, R-West Dundee, warned that a 3,178 page version of the budget previously introduced isn’t close to resembling what is likely to be the final product. “I would have to describe this year’s conversations as amicable and courteous,” DeWitte said “While this session has been interesting and different in many ways, I would say the budget process is rolling out similarly to previous years.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Adam Toledo’s family files new lawsuit against Chicago police officer who fatally shot the teenager: The case was filed a month after the family abruptly dropped another lawsuit filed in Cook County court, just days before opening arguments were set to begin. Now, the legal process will begin again in federal court, over five years after Toledo was killed. “Ultimately we’re seeking transparency, accountability and protection of all of the plaintiff’s constitutional rights,” the family’s lawyer, Adeena Weiss Ortiz, told the Sun-Times. At the previously scheduled trial, a Cook County judge granted the city’s request to split up the initial lawsuit, requiring the family’s attorney to first prove allegations around the shooting before shifting to its claims that the city was negligent in hiring Eric Stillman, the officer who shot Toledo.

* Sun-Times | Juliana Stratton joins calls for Chicago’s top federal prosecutor to step down amid ‘Broadview Six’ fallout: Stratton joins Democratic congressional candidate Daniel Biss in calling for Boutros’ resignation — a week after Boutros announced the dismissal of charges against the remaining members of the “Broadview Six” amid claims of prosecutorial misconduct before a grand jury. The legal damage already has spread to other cases in Chicago and beyond.

* Tribune | Chicago school board delays charter renewals after heated debate: In a contentious, late-night debate Thursday, 11 board members — all of whom are mayoral-appointed or aligned with the Chicago Teachers Union, a staunch charter critic — said they needed additional time and information from the district before voting. The intensified scrutiny comes after a string of charter operators have struggled financially over the past two years. “An accurate sense of finances has been eluding us, resulting in harm to students and cost to the district,” said appointed board member Karen Zaccor, District 4A on the North Side. “We are not here to be a rubber stamp.”

* Crain’s | Mag Mile office tower extends run of downtown distress: Golub and BlueFive are poised to join a long list of downtown office landlords losing their properties as weak post-pandemic demand, elevated interest rates and investors avoiding Chicago decimate their values. The deep pool of distress — largely driven by bad office loans — is not only hampering the city’s post-COVID recovery, but also causing broader headaches: As of April, the balance of delinquent commercial property loans held by commercial mortgage-backed securities investors nationwide totaled $30.9 billion, surpassing the pandemic peak of $30.5 billion set in July 2020, according to a report from ratings agency Moody’s.

* Crain’s | Trump Tower lands first retail tenant more than 17 years after opening: Mediterranean-inspired cafe Prasino will open a 2,800-square-foot location in a terrace-level space at 401 N. Wabash Ave. next summer. The 92-story condo and hotel building overlooking the Chicago River has 70,000 square feet of retail space that’s mostly sat empty since it was completed in 2009.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Elgin Courier News | Elgin council credit card spending to be reviewed after questions arise: All city-issued credit card expenditures made by Elgin City Council members over the last year will be examined after Councilman Anthony Ortiz raised questions about items he saw included in the city bills paid Wednesday night. While the expenses identified did not violate city rules, they may indicate a need for tighter guidelines, he said. Among them was $232 in Uber ridesharing costs and $100 for overweight luggage fees, both stemming from a conference trip.

* Sun-Times | Thousands have been jailed in Cook County for not paying child, spousal support: “Most of these people are incarcerated based on civil contempt, so they did not have access to a public defender,” Katz said. “That’s a problem in jurisdictions where courts have limited time and resources to dig in on whether the failure to pay is willful.” “There’s a real risk,” she said, “that people are being incarcerated for reasons beyond their control and in a manner that is counterproductive.”

* Crain’s | Highland Park rebuffs single-family home proposal for Fort Sheridan condo site: The development team, represented by Scott Borstein, a zoning attorney from the firm Neal & Leroy, and Jacob Dodds of Dirk Denison Architects were requesting Highland Park give zoning relief to permit less space between the planned houses and existing neighbors than the 1998 condo plan allowed. Commissioners noted at the meeting that if a nine-story condo tower were proposed today, it could be built by right, without zoning relief, if it met the original building envelope limits. The plan commission declined to grant the requests, and scheduled the development team to appear again at its June 16 meeting, presumably with changes to the proposal that reflects the board’s comments.

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen fourth grader celebrates playground her fundraising helped create: To help accomplish this, Amelia and her family held Amelia’s Act of Kindness Yard Sale last May at Heritage Park. They also reached out to Homer Glen’s Ability Awareness Committee, which advocates for differently abled individuals, and worked their dunk tank and beer tent during last year’s HomerFest. A relative in Arizona promoted the fundraiser on his radio show, and donations poured in from California, Nevada and Arizona. All together, Amelia and her family contributed more than $11,000 toward playground equipment, which was celebrated Thursday at the school’s fourth grade farewell party.

* Daily Herald | Illinois grant helps preserve Elgin’s ‘Butter Capital’ legacy through digital archives: The transition from century-old paper to high-definition digital pages was made possible by a $1,823 grant awarded last year by the Illinois State Historical Records Advisory Board, overseen by Illinois Secretary of State and State Archivist Alexi Giannoulias. The project was part of a competitive statewide initiative to safeguard Illinois’ cultural heritage. “These original volumes are incredibly fragile, making them difficult to handle without risking damage,” said Angel Flores, director of information and digital services at Gail Borden Public Library. “Thanks to the support from this grant, we have successfully preserved this irreplaceable history. Now, anyone across the globe can explore these remarkable stories and data that shaped Elgin’s identity.”

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Decatur Public Schools seeks new after-school vendor after budget cuts: Superintendent Rochelle Clark told the board that Champions is likely the best option for the district. The company would operate a state-subsidized program in schools at little cost to families, available to low-income families to cover the cost of childcare. “I do not want us to make a decision based on feelings. I want to give options. To me, Champions was the best option outside of what Decatur already has that families have an opportunity to choose from,” Clark said.

* Oak Park Journal | D97 board member Perez resigns after year in office: Perez’s resignation from the D97 school board was announced at the May 26 school board meeting but was effective May 18. Perez has not immediately responded to phone, text and email messages from Wednesday Journal asking why she resigned from the school board. Perez was quoted in a statement posted on the D97 website as saying that she was proud of her role in hiring incoming superintendent Terri Bresnahan.

* WGLT | How Bloomington might build a long straw to a river to get more water: One of the options under study by Bloomington would be for the city to build a pipeline to the Illinois River to supplement what it already pumps from its primary water sources, lakes Bloomington and Evergreen. Joliet and five other communities are currently building a 60-mile pipeline to the city of Chicago to buy city water taken from Lake Michigan for their towns. It’s a $1.5 billion project they hope will be finished by 2030.

* WGLT | State Police troopers receive Medal of Honor after gun battle with armed suspect in Lexington: “We are grateful for the decisive actions of these officers. They are commended for their bravery and heroism in arresting these two dangerous criminals,” Hartman said during the ceremony. ISP said the officers provided medical care, and the suspect survived his injuries. The other suspect, who had gone inside the gas station, was arrested without incident. State police later released body camera footage of the incident.

*** National ***

* AP | Top federal prosecutor in Chicago denies investigation into E. Jean Carroll, disputing media reports: The top federal prosecutor in Chicago denied Thursday evening that his office had opened an investigation into E. Jean Carroll, the longtime advice columnist who has said Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in a New York department store 30 years ago, hours after multiple news organizations reported that the Justice Department was investigating whether she had lied during the course of civil litigation against Trump. The Associated Press and other news organizations, citing anonymous sources, reported that the federal prosecutors’ office in Chicago had opened an investigation into Carroll examining possible perjury allegations.

* Crain’s | When it comes to mergers, make no little plans, United CEO says: After being spurned by American Airlines, Scott Kirby says he’s not interested in lesser deals, such as a play for JetBlue. “I thought for many years that only the kind of big transaction that we tried was the only one that made economic sense,” the United Airlines CEO told analysts yesterday at the Bernstein Annual Strategic Decisions conference. “And none of the other deals made sense. And I also knew, though, that the big transaction required a willing partner, which we clearly don’t have.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, May 29, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* It’s almost a law
* Yeah, no
* MLB open thread
* Illinois Swipe-Fee Proposal Misses The Mark
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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