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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Fox News…
Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…
* Comptroller Susana Mendoza | Put Illinois students above politics, and opt in to the federal scholarship program : Some Democrats may hesitate because this policy emerged from a Republican-controlled Congress and was signed by President Donald Trump. That fear is understandable and justified. Many Illinoisans have been strong critics of the Trump administration, me included. But especially Illinoisans who strongly oppose the Trump administration must recognize that Illinois benefits from recapturing federal tax incentives. Opting out means our Illinois children lose. Rather than funding Trump’s agenda in D.C. or sending more of our dollars to Republican-controlled states already taking advantage of Illinois taxpayers, I would much prefer that an Illinoisan be able to redirect $1,700 to support their own school community. * Chicago Mag | How Are a Village, Town, and City Different?: In Illinois, the distinction has little to do with size and everything to do with when and how the governments were set up. Consider Schaumburg, which was incorporated as a village in 1956, when its population was 130. It is now the largest village in Illinois, with nearly 80,000 people. Villages elect six at-large trustees (four if their population is less than 5,000) and a president, who both presides over and sits on the board. Towns operate similarly but with four trustees. There are technically only 16 towns in Illinois. That’s because the establishment of new ones was eliminated by a state law passed in 1872 in favor of a more standardized system of cities and villages. Existing towns were allowed to keep the designation. Cicero, at 85,000 people, is the largest of these. * Crain’s | Johnson wins veto fight over intoxicating hemp ban: There were only 26 votes to override the veto, well short of the two-thirds majority, or 34 votes, required. Johnson vetoed the ordinance on Feb. 13, saying he wanted to protect small businesses that have profited from the hemp industry, which remains under threat of a federal ban. He waited nearly a month to issue his veto, counting votes to ensure the veto would hold. * Block Club | Fight Over Bike Lanes In Brighton Park Propels Claudia Zuno To Run For 12th Ward Alderperson: Claudia Zuno is running against incumbent Ald. Julia Ramirez (12th), saying during Monday’s announcement that she’ll represent neighbors who “are not being seen or heard.” Zuno said she’ll bring safe streets, great schools and a thriving business community to the ward, which includes most of McKinley Park and Brighton Park. “Julia Ramirez has become a guaranteed vote for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s agenda. That is not what the 12th Ward needs,” she said Monday at her campaign launch party at Tio Luis Tacos & Cafe, 3856 S. Archer Ave. * WTTW | Cost to Defend, Resolve Lawsuits Tied to Disgraced Ex-CPD Detective Tops $159M: The Chicago City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to pay $29.2 million to four men man who spent a combined 71 years in prison after they were convicted of separate murders between 1991 and 1997, bringing the total cost of defending and settling 13 lawsuits naming disgraced former Chicago police Detective Reynaldo Guevara to $159 million, records show. The largest settlement would pay $16.6 million to Demetrius Johnson, who was 15 years old when he was convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison in connection with a 1991 murder. Johnson was released from prison in 2004 and awarded a certificate of innocence in 2020. * Sun-Times | At City Council, Mayor Johnson pays tribute to Jesse Jackson, urges Chicago to honor him ‘with action’: Mayor Brandon Johnson said Wednesday the “power exists in all of us” to honor Rev. Jesse Jackson “with action,” and urged the City Council and all Chicagoans to do just that to honor “one of the most consequential civil rights leaders of our time.” “We can best honor Reverend Jackson by `keeping hope alive,’“ the mayor said before leading the Council in a moment of silence for Jackson and his grieving family. “We do that by organizing with our neighbors, advocating on their behalf and investing in the people of Chicago. In the loving memory of Reverend Jackson, let us go forth in building a just, equitable and thriving city and nation.” * Daily Herald | Barrington plan commission rejects condominium proposal citing density concerns: After overwhelmingly negative public comment, the Barrington Plan Commission rejected it with a 4-1 vote Tuesday. Commissioners praised the building at 20930 N. 20th St., at Taylor and 20th streets, but said it didn’t fit the neighborhood, while neighbors said the project was too dense and out of character, while raising concerns about traffic. Since the commission’s decision is advisory, the plan still has a chance with the village board. The board recently went against the commission’s wishes by approving the Claremont, a gated community with 88 custom homes. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora launches program offering expanded financial assistance to homebuyers: Specifically, a household would need to make no more than 120% of the area’s median income, which city officials previously said was about $144,000 per year for a family of four, to qualify for the program. But, the program will set aside some of its allocated funds specifically for those making at most 80% of the area’s median income, or roughly $96,000 per year for a family of four, to make sure money is always available for likely first-time homebuyers, officials have said. * Aurora Beacon-News | League of Women Voters of Central Kane County urges early mail-in voting amid USPS changes: With the March 17 primary election a month away, leaders from the League of Women Voters of Kane County on Tuesday cautioned voters planning to use mail-in ballots to send in their ballots by March 10 — or drop them off in person at official ballot drop-off sites in the week before the election — to ensure their vote is counted. Standing outside the Batavia Post Office at 500 N. Randall Road on Tuesday, Patti Lackman, the League of Women Voters of Central Kane County co-president, described how changes within the United States Postal Service have led the group to issue updated guidance on voting by mail. * Crain’s | Northwestern Medicine finishes $389M Lake Forest expansion, nearly doubling capacity: The nearly $389 million project was finished ahead of its anticipated April 2026 completion date. It adds 119,000 square feet of clinical space and 171,400 square feet of non-clinical space, including two new patient pavilions with 96 medical-surgical beds, 18 observation beds and all private rooms. Also included in the expansion is an updated emergency department that will increase patient volume and enhance the delivery of acute care, the health system said in a press release. * WGLT | Builders put up some houses last year in Normal. There’s a longer list of empty lots: Single-family housing starts grew in Normal last year by nearly 49% — though the total number only reached 55. Construction of duplexes, or single-family attached housing, rose more — by 63%. The total number of duplexes was lower than for single-family houses, however, at 31, according to town records. The numbers compare favorably to single-family construction in Bloomington last year, but are similarly tepid in absolute terms. The slow pace of new construction also showed up in home sales. Multifamily building permits declined in Normal last year. * WSIL | Shawnee Mass Transit District Awarded $100,000 Grant to Expand Rural Transportation Access in Southern Illinois: The grant will support the launch of Shawnee Express, a significant service expansion designed to reduce transportation barriers throughout the region. The new initiative introduces an on-demand ride option, allowing residents to request same-day transportation. In addition, service hours in Anna and Metropolis will be extended to operate until 6 p.m. on weekdays and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturdays. * Tech Crunch | Microsoft says Office bug exposed customers’ confidential emails to Copilot AI: The bug, first reported by Bleeping Computer, allowed Copilot Chat to read and outline the contents of emails since January, even if customers had data loss prevention policies to prevent ingesting their sensitive information into Microsoft’s large language model. […] Microsoft said the bug, trackable by admins as CW1226324, means that draft and sent email messages “with a confidential label applied are being incorrectly processed by Microsoft 365 Copilot chat.”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Your own reaction to the governor’s State of the State/Budget address?
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State of the State/Budget address open thread, live coverage, react, etc.
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * We’ll use this automatic app thingy today…
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Rate Stratton’s new TV ad
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Juliana Stratton highlights her ties to Gov. Pritkzer in her new TV ad. Press release…
The spot…
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HB 3799 Raises Premiums And Destabilizes A Stable Insurance Market
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois’ competitive system protects consumers and keeps carriers investing here—let’s not break what works. Independent research shows slow, uncertain rate reviews push insurers out and costs up. HB 3799 was already defeated in Veto Session—keep it that way. Vote NO. Protect affordability. Vote NO on HB 3799.
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Caption contest!
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * “This has to be the most Stratton caf thing ever,” texted the person who shared this photo with me…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More budget preview stuff
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Keep Insurance Affordable
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Illinois General Assembly is considering legislation (HB 3799, SA 2 &3) that could make homeowners insurance unaffordable for many Illinoisans. The proposal would destabilize a healthy, competitive market, creating a regulatory framework that is more extreme than what exists in any other state. This will increase premiums and reduce competition. Our robust insurance market has kept homeowners’ rates middle-of-the-pack nationally, even though Illinois has more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas. To protect affordability and consumer choice, lawmakers should VOTE NO. For more information, visit www.KeepInsuranceAffordable.org
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Totally uncoordinated, I’m sure
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Usually, the rule of thumb is that when a candidate goes up on TV, they don’t go dark unless they run out of money. The Evanston RoundTable published this report on Sen. Laura Fine’s very curious TV ad flight in CD9…
Campaigns regularly track spending by other entities, but this looks kinda fishy to me. * Bob Skolnik reported some explosive allegations from congressional candidate and state Rep. La Shawn Ford…
Meanwhile, Jason Friedman, who led Chicago’s Jewish United Fund, was singled out by WBEZ for raising “nearly three times more than his closest rival among 13 Democratic candidates in the March 17 primary.” But AIPAC is going with Conyears-Ervin over the longtime Jewish advocate. * More… * Politico | Crypto super PAC wades into Illinois House primaries: A crypto-funded super PAC is poised to shake up two Illinois Democratic House primaries with seven-figure ad buys targeting state lawmakers running for Congress who backed legislation that the industry opposes. The super PAC, Fairshake, will spend at least $1 million each against Illinois state Rep. La Shawn Ford, who is running to replace retiring Democratic Rep. Danny Davis, and state Sen. Robert Peters, who is vying to succeed Democratic Rep. Robin Kelly as she runs for U.S. Senate. … Both Ford and Peters voted for state-level crypto legislation imposing new rules on digital asset firms that became law last August. Peters — who is backed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a leading crypto critic — was a co-sponsor of the measure, which forces crypto companies to comply with a range of new consumer protection standards. … The crypto super PAC group, which operates independently from any campaign, is funded primarily by three firms: the crypto companies Coinbase and Ripple, along with the venture capital group Andreessen Horowitz. * Jewish Insider | Longtime Chicago Jewish federation leader Jason Friedman makes a bid for open House seat: In a statement seemingly responding to the UDP ads, Friedman said that he “joined this race to fight and deliver results for everyone. The people of the 7th District deserve a representative with integrity, not career politicians with ethical baggage who sell out their constituents to the highest bidder.” Conyears-Ervin has faced several scandals in recent years, and paid tens of thousands of dollars in fines for ethics violations including misuse of city resources. Friedman added that he “won’t be bullied and I won’t back down from doing what’s right — not now, not ever.” * Fox News | AI power players pour cash into competitive primaries as 2026 midterms heat up: The group [Leading the Future] plans to spend seven figures in the open-seat Democratic primary in Illinois’ 2nd Congressional District, in support of former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. and in the state’s 8th Congressional District, where they’re backing former Rep. Melissa Bean.
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Big Tax-Exempt Hospitals Are Turning Patient Discounts Into Corporate Profits
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Across Illinois, large hospital systems and corporate PBMs are profiting from a program meant to help patients. The 340B program allows hospitals to buy medications at steep discounts, but those savings aren’t passed on to patients in need. Instead, large hospitals charge patients full price for 340B-discounted drugs, keep the difference, and share the cash with for-profit chain pharmacies and PBMs.
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Roundup: Pritzker to pitch ‘maintenance’ budget, statewide zoning law, social media fee, two-year data center tax incentive suspension
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Politico…
* Bloomberg…
* NBC…
* Meanwhile, Crain’s…
* Last year, Gov. Pritzker called for classroom cellphone restrictions in his State of the State address, but the proposal stalled. ABC Chicago reports he’s giving the cellphone ban another shot…
* More…
* ABC Chicago | Gov. JB Pritzker to deliver budget address in Springfield: Rep. Kam Buckner, a top House Democrat budget negotiator from Chicago, said one of the goals of this year’s budget will be to play “defense.”"It’s hard when the biggest variable in the budget is not something that you can control,” he said, referring to federal funding. “And with this president, the volatility isn’t a possibility; it’s a given.”
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U.S. Court Rules Against Pharma Efforts To Restrict 340B Discounts – Support HB 2371 To Protect 340B in Illinois
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] States across the country have passed legislation pushing back against Big Pharma’s 340B restrictions that harm patients and providers. Drugmakers, in turn, have turned to the federal court system in another attempt to preserve their profits. On Feb. 9, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld a lower court decision that sustained Louisiana’s 340B contract pharmacy law, one of the first of several state laws protecting the federal 340B program. Louisiana’s Act 358 says drugmakers cannot withhold 340B pricing for drugs dispensed through community pharmacies when those same discounts would apply if the drugs were provided through a hospital’s in-house pharmacy. The appeals court panel unanimously rejected Pharma’s claims that Act 358 violates the U.S. Constitution. It noted that regulating pharmacies and drug distribution has long been a state responsibility, and Act 358 is well within that established authority. Last fall, the Fifth Circuit also upheld a lower court ruling that refused a drugmaker request to halt enforcement of Mississippi’s law safeguarding 340B pricing in pharmacy contracts. The Eighth Circuit in 2024 upheld the constitutionality of Arkansas’ 340B law. Recent high court rulings add to the growing momentum around restoring 340B. Earlier this month, nearly 1,000 people gathered to celebrate 340B for giving low-income and uninsured individuals to access affordable prescription drugs and healthcare services such as chronic disease management, behavioral health, and mammograms. Stand with hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers: Pass House Bill 2371 SA 2 to protect 340B in Illinois—at NO cost to taxpayers and with NO budget appropriation needed. Learn more.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker expected to propose ‘maintenance’ Illinois budget, legislative leader says. Tribune…
- “I’m expecting another responsible, balanced budget proposal from the governor. It’s, as I understand it, likely to be very much a maintenance budget. We’re living in uncertain times, and we don’t know tomorrow morning what tweet’s going to blow another hole in our budget,” Democratic Senate President Don Harmon of Oak Park said. - Separately from the leaders’ meeting, sources said some $200 million in the proposal is expected to come from a tax or fee related to social media companies. I’ll have more on the Governor’s budget proposal shortly. Sponsored by PhRMA: 340B hospitals charge big medicine markups. Illinois pays the price. 340B medicine markups are big business for hospitals. Under the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Big hospital systems pocket the program profits – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The program’s lack of oversight has led to 340B becoming a profit engine for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies. It’s time for Congress to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more. * At noon, Gov. JB Pritzker will give his 2026 State of the State and FY27 budget address. Then at 3:40 pm, he’ll host a roundtable on his housing affordability agenda. Click here to watch. * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * Tribune | Trump administration’s latest funding threat: $128 million withheld in highway dollars: The U.S. Department of Transportation said Tuesday that it was threatening to withhold $128 million in highway funds because a federal audit had revealed illegally issued commercial drivers licenses in Illinois. The Illinois Secretary of State’s office, however, said in a statement it “believes its CDL issuance policies and practices are substantially compliant” with federal requirements “and will not justify cutting federal highway funding.” * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Republican senator pushes to outlaw abortion, loses leadership spots: Senate Republican Leader John Curran said the bill is a “no” for the Republican caucus. “I don’t support his proposal, no other Republican legislator supports his proposal, House or Senate,” he said. “It’s an extreme proposal. I do not view it as a pro-life proposal, I view it as an anti-woman proposal about punishment.” * Press release…
* Capitol News Illinois | DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick focuses on public safety in GOP governor’s race: Mendrick also said he favors “school choice” policies, which generally allow private schools to receive public funding and parents are given more choices in deciding where to send their children. “That’s what makes college so competitive, is that if you’re not a good college, people aren’t going to come,” he said. “And if people want to pay more and travel a little bit further to another school, I think that’s the way to do it.” * Daily Herald | ‘It creates confusion’: Dabrowski takes aim at ‘Tad’ of a mistake on ballot: So far, Ammons is not reprinting ballots, Dabrowski said. The lawsuit asks a judge to order new ballots and require early voters be handed a notice explaining the mistake. Ammon’s office did not respond to a request for comment. However, court documents show that Champaign County State’s Attorney Julia Rietz had reached out to Dabrowski noting the clerk created a specimen ballot with the correct spelling that will be posted at early voting sites and other locations as they open. * Tribune | More than $1.1 billion in medical debt erased in Illinois, with the help of a state program: More than 500,000 Illinois residents have so far benefited from the program, with average debt relief of about $1,200 per person, according to the governor’s office. In some cases, the program terminated tens of thousands of dollars worth of medical debt for individuals, and, for one person, more than $300,000 worth of medical debt. So far, Illinois has spent about $10 million on the program, with $5 million in state funds left for this fiscal year. For each dollar Illinois spends on the program, more than $100 of medical debt is terminated, according to the governor’s office. * Andy Shaw | Covering Jesse Jackson — aka ‘The Rev’ — was never dull: Jackson was also one of my favorite newsmakers, both on the campaign trail, where I watched him mesmerize voters and exceed expectations in two exciting but ultimately unsuccessful Presidential runs in the 1980’s, and on the civil rights front in Chicago, where he was always charismatic and often — truth be told — annoyingly self-important, as he preached from pulpits, led protest marches, gobbled up TV soundbite opportunities, and engaged in repartee in our many informal sideline conversations. * Daily Herald | ‘He was a giant’: Suburban leaders mourn passing of civil rights leader Jesse Jackson: “I owe all of my activist work, all of my political insightfulness and my community outreach work to Rev. Jesse Jackson because growing up in Chicago you had a voice due to a man who you heard loud and clear,” said Brent, president and founder of Unity Partnership and co-chair of the MLK Unity Project in DuPage County. “You couldn’t rest in his presence without standing up for what was right. And even though you had little means to do it, he made you feel really powerful regardless of the outcome. He was a giant.” * NBC Chicago | How Rev. Jesse Jackson is being remembered at a Chicago school he once visited: James said they have “conversations all the time about the life and the legacy of Rev. Jackson and how he shows up in society” at St. Sabina Academy. Students told NBC Chicago the discussions have had an impact on their motivation to work hard in school. “Rev. Jackson said we all are somebody and we all matter,” said Tayor Robinson, a seventh grader at the school. “I think about that and always try to do my best.” * Sun-Times | Civil Rights leader also became a pop culture presence: He could be inspirational, as he was on “Sesame Street” and during a 1989 appearance on the sitcom “A Different World,” talking about the role of young people in elections. But Jackson could also be quite funny, as evidenced by the straight-faced delivery of Dr. Suess’ “Green Eggs and Ham” on Saturday Night Live in 1991. * Tribune | Initiative to boost affordable homeownership on South and West sides wins Chicago Prize: Community organizations and developers from South and West sides formed Reclaiming Chicago, a coalition that plans to leverage the prize money, draw in more investment, and eventually create about 2,000 new for-sale homes throughout the Chicago Lawn, Roseland, Back of the Yards and North Lawndale neighborhoods. The coalition is convened through United Power for Action and Justice, a Chicago-based community organization. Instead of building individual homes on scattered sites, Reclaiming Chicago aims to transform whole neighborhoods at once, sometimes taking over large vacant lots and planting groups of more than 100 affordable homes. * Block Club | How A College Student Is Shaping The Future Of His Neighborhood With Garfield Ridge 2050 Plan: Split into four aldermanic wards — including the 13th, 14th, 22nd and 23rd — Garfield Ridge is caught between conflicting political priorities, causing individual areas to “grow in very different directions,” Villalobos said. This separation has blocked policymakers from enacting a cohesive plan to transform Garfield Ridge into “the true active neighborhood that we want to see,” he said. Villalobos, 24, created Garfield Ridge 2050 on his own time and dime as a blueprint to guide the community’s growth and development over the next 25 years. The plan outlines four major goals: improving transit and walkability, reforming housing, increasing economic vitality and prioritizing parks and open spaces. * Crain’s | If there’s a better two-mile dining stretch in Chicago, we still don’t know where it is: In 2019, we made the argument that Chicago Avenue — between Noble Street and California Avenue — is probably the best two-mile dining stretch in the city. You had mainstays like Cafe Central on the east end and Shokolad just west of Western Avenue, mingling alongside hot new restaurants like Bar Biscay and Funkenhausen. The street had a palpable energy that seemed like it would continue rising. Then the COVID-19 pandemic shut everything down and many of those restaurants closed for good. Today, that vibrancy is back as more places including Brasero, Omakase Shoji and Michelin-starred Feld have opened, drawing even more diners to this West Town stretch. * Sun-Times | Bears will raise season ticket prices 13.5%: A jump in price was expected this year. The Bears, after all, raised ticket prices 10% last year despite coming off a 5-12 record and the first-ever in-season firing of their head coach. In 2024, Warren announced an 8% average increase in season ticket prices in the wake of a 7-10 season. * Tribune | Cook County leaders say spring property tax bills, revenues will go out on time: Second installment bills were months late last year. On top if it, the revenues collected from those bills took extra weeks to hit the bank accounts of the county’s thousands of taxing bodies. That cash crunch cost schools millions in lost investments and borrowing costs, officials estimated, and damaged local leaders’ trust in Pappas and Preckwinkle. Their joint news release said “first installment” bills will be mailed out this year on March 2 and will be due April 1. Property owners will be able to start paying their bills as soon as Feb. 20 on the treasurer’s website, according to the release. * Crain’s | Why are Cook County property taxes a mess? Assessor candidates weigh in.: In a forum hosted by the Civic Federation at the Chicago Board of Trade Building and moderated by Civic Federation CEO Joe Ferguson, the two candidates repeated many of the same arguments they’ve made publicly as both homeowners and commercial landlords gripe about the way their bills are determined and recent fallout from Chicago’s largest residential property tax bill hike in at least 30 years. * Tribune | Contractor admits to bribing McCook mayor, acting as bag man for other extortion payments: A suburban contractor swept up in the corruption investigation of then-McCook Mayor Jeff Tobolski admitted in federal court Tuesday he paid bribes in exchange for contracts with the village and also acted as the mayor’s bag man for other illicit payments. Simo “Sam” Krneta, 68, a former La Grange Park contractor who now lives in Albany, New York, pleaded guilty to a single count of filing a false tax return in 2017. Federal guidelines call for 10 to 16 months in prison, though he’s also eligible for probation. * Pioneer Press | Skokie launches program, rules for Airbnb-type short-term rentals: The board voted Feb. 2 to launch the pilot program, which is scheduled to begin May 1. Village officials said the program will be reviewed at six- and 12-month intervals to evaluate its effectiveness and determine whether adjustments are needed. “I believe our obligation is to get something on the books so we can start the process of registration to provide protection to the residents who are proximate to investor-owned units where there have been problems,” Mayor Ann Tennes said. “The sooner we get an ordinance on the books, the sooner staff can start working toward that May 1 registration.” * Daily Southtown | Dolton presents plans to pay $33.5 million judgment from fatal 2016 police chase: An Illinois Appellate Court in June 2024 affirmed the verdict on behalf of John Kyles, who died following a 2016 police chase in Dolton and Duane Dunlap, who was left severely injured. The Illinois Supreme Court denied Dolton’s appeal of the appellate court decision in March 2025. The village has yet to make payments on the $33.5 million, which has accrued 6% per year through interest, or $2.1 million per year per the a lawsuit petition. As of Feb. 20, the total amount owed is $40.6 million. * Daily Herald | Elk Grove gateway project gets $700,000 more in public funds: The money comes from a village-controlled TIF fund set up in 2022 — where property taxes above a certain level were directed away from schools and other local governments — to fuel redevelopment of the former Elk Grove Woods Plaza on the southeast corner of Arlington Heights and Higgins roads. * Evanston Now | HCDC approves strategic housing plan: Ald. Juan Geracaris (9th) said while he wanted a way to prevent retaliatory non-renewals, he also said there needed to be ways for landlords to be able to not renew bad tenants. “No one wants housing providers to renew the lease for a bad tenant that’s violating their lease,” he said. “But I think what’s happening is a lot of you all who are coming here to talk about ‘just cause’ and how terrible it is, you guys are helping out the bad actors.” * ABC Chicago | Chicago-area interstates ranked worst bottlenecks in the country: The interchange where I-290 crosses and merges with I-294 and I-88 has the worst congestion of any interchange in the U.S., according to the American Transportation Research Institute. The average speed was 39.5 miles per hour. Its the first time that particular interchange, located in Hillside, has topped the list. I-80 at I-94 ranked 24 for the worst bottleneck in the country. * WCIA | Praise, pushback follows new Champaign Co. executive order on immigration: “This is something that’s historical. It predates Obama. It goes back to the Bush Administration,” Maria Jimenez, the executive director of Immigration Services of Champaign-Urbana, said. “So, families have been living in fear of deportation for a really long time. The difference is that now we’re seeing it on national television.” Jimenez said ICE enforcement has taken place in Champaign County, just not at the level seen in cities like Chicago or Minneapolis. And, it’s been going on longer than some might think. * WGLT | Bloomington leaders updated on strategic plan for regional economy, Bridge shelter village: Burgess said nearly a month after opening, The Bridge was at 84% occupancy as of Tuesday. “Every single person that we have moved into The Bridge is somebody who had previously been staying outside, either at the encampment in the gravel pits, the encampment off of Adelaide [Street], or elsewhere in town,” said Burgess. * WSIL | State leaders to host town hall in Carbondale on homelessness strategies: The Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) and the Office to Prevent and End Homelessness (OPEH) are partnering with the City of Carbondale to host a Town Hall and Listening Session on Wednesday, Feb. 25. The event is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church. “This Town Hall allows us to strengthen the work being done in partnership with the Carbondale community,” said IDHS Secretary Dulce M. Quintero. “I am eager to hear from the people of Southern Illinois on how we can continue the work of preventing and ending homelessness. Safe housing is a human right”. * The Hill | Battle over AI regulation hits the airwaves ahead of midterms: A super PAC backed by several major AI players, which boasts a multimillion-dollar war chest, is flexing its muscles with new ad buys in several congressional races. Meanwhile, several groups backing AI safeguards have launched ad campaigns calling for regulation or boosting candidates that support checks on the technology. “The stakes are very high right now for the AI sector when it comes to public policy,” said Andrew Lokay, a senior research analyst at Beacon Policy Advisors. * NYT | Goldman Sachs to Drop D.E.I. Criteria for Board Members: Goldman will no longer explicitly consider race, gender and sexual orientation when evaluating a potential board member at the firm, according to two people with knowledge of the bank’s decision who were unable to discuss it publicly because of the confidential nature of the move. The decision is a result of a deal that Goldman struck with the National Legal and Policy Center, a conservative nonprofit group that has been pressuring numerous companies to drop diversity, equity and inclusion mandates, the people said. The group recently announced similar deals with American Express and the equipment manufacturer Deere & Company.
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Good morning!
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * From 1988…
“They catch the early bus” is a lesson that has always stuck with me. All respect. * A lighter side…
He directly hit on the very essence of that piece. * This is an official open thread. Have at it.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and more campaign stuff
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - 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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