Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Talk to you Monday… You know I hate to say, but, I told you so
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WIRED…
* VPM Mentor…
* IPM News…
* SJ-R | Illinois House Speaker’s staff continues attempt to unionize: The Illinois Legislative Staff Association filed a response on July 31 to the speaker’s motion to dismiss their case, alleging Welch has failed to engage in collective bargaining. The association formed in 2022 after voters approved the Workers’ Rights Amendment that November — codifying a worker’s ability to organize and collectively bargain in the state constitution. * WSPY | Oswego State Rep. Kifowit expresses interest in new quantum computing program, highlights benefits to Illinois: Kifowit said the field of quantum computing is an idea that shows Illinois is thinking about the future and developing a sound strategy to show other sectors that Illinois is the place to be. […] Kifowit said she appreciates the effort made by her colleagues in the General Assembly and Governor Pritzker for moving this project along, and she hopes the campus will be the beginning of more quantum computing sites and other developments across the state. * Tribune | Chicago’s Shamier Little and the US mixed relay team sets a world record at the Olympics: The U.S. team – consisting of Vernon Norwood, Little, Bryce Deadmon and Kaylyn Brown – crossed the finish line in 3:07.41, beating the previous record by more than a second. The French team, second in the preliminary round, finished more than three seconds behind. “I always knew we were going to run fast,” Little said. “We talked about, you know, it’s going to take a record to win a medal, but it took a record to win our prelim.” * WCIA | Deanna Price to compete in third Olympic Games: Illinois Assistant Coach Deanna Price has had quite the journey to qualify for the Olympics, in a sport many may be unfamiliar with. “It’s an 8.8-pound ball so, if you ever go in your kitchen, pick up like a cast iron skillet,” Price said. “I can generate up to 70 miles per hour and I could throw it almost the length of a football field and you have to throw it between two cage doors, and do it within a seven-foot diameter ring.” * Tribune | How a father-daughter bike ride turned Lake Villa’s Felicia Stancil into a 2-time Olympian: After a young Felicia Stancil’s mother died in a car accident, her father began looking for things they could do together. Activities that would help them both heal, he thought. Activities that would bring them both joy. When she was only 4, he took her on a short bike ride through their Lake County neighborhood, watching carefully as she pedaled her way around with the help of training wheels. As soon as they arrived home, however, Felicia had a demand. “I wasn’t going in the house until he took off my training wheels,” she recalled to the Tribune. “I just stood there and wouldn’t let him go inside. So he went into the garage and took them off.” * WGN | Feds say they’ve foiled plot to kill witnesses in Chicago homicide trial: Federal prosecutors say they have foiled a plot to kill two witnesses in an upcoming homicide trial. Christopher Yates is accused of providing a gun and a $250 down payment to another man last month in an effort to silence witnesses set to testify against the alleged shooter in a September 2020 attack that killed a woman and injured a man. * Block Club | Do You Know The Woman Posing With Obama In This Photo? Chicagoans Are Trying To Find Her: Earlier this week, Reddit user 99ell posted online about wanting to find a woman whose photo they’d snapped with Obama — then a senator, but soon to be president — in 2006. The poster was unable to get the photo to the woman at the time and wants to find her so they can share the photo with her now, they wrote. “I also have a similar pic of myself with Barack that I’ve cherished, so I feel bad that I never got this pic I took of this woman,” 99ell wrote. The poster could not immediately be reached for comment. * Block Club | Chappell Roan Recruited Some Of The Strongest People In Chicago To Lift Weights During Her Lolla Set: Lawrence Scott received a call from a producer with Lollapalooza looking for something “unique” three weeks ago. The producer said there was an artist at Lolla who wanted to recruit people from Scott’s gym, Rockwell Barbell at 2861 N. Clybourn Ave. Scott was shocked. “The only thing that I remember him saying was that the artist is essentially looking for people like [us] that are weightlifters …, that are unique looking, that are … jacked,” Scott said.
* Sun-Times | Bathtub is at the center of this suburban Chicago corruption investigation: In Westchester, Scott Russell, the west suburb’s former public works director, has been charged with using village resources to buy and install a bathtub in a supervisor’s house. Records show investigators are now looking at others in connection with “the bidding and awarding of contracts” for a now-dropped Village Hall complex. * Daily Herald | After years of planning, removal work to begin on Carpentersville Dam on Fox River: After nearly a decade of planning, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources has approved a contract to remove Carpentersville Dam in the Fox River Shores Forest Preserve. Officials announced in a news release that work to remove the dam could begin by the end of the month. […] The dam’s removal will begin healing the Fox River and restoring the natural riverine resource, [Forest Preserve Executive Director Benjamin Haberthur] said in the release. * Daily Southtown | A star at Homewood-Flossmoor, Jacob Schroeder goes to NIU. ‘I was comfortable.’ Then, at 23, he plays for Illinois.: “But it was worth it. To end up at Illinois where my family could come to every home game and to play for a program that competes for championships, it worked out so well for me.” Schroeder, who has graduated from Illinois, still has one season of eligibility remaining and plans to use it while starting grad school next year. The decision to stick around for another season in Champaign was certainly aided by his breakthrough performance this spring, which also increased his hopes for a future in the pros. * WCIA | Champaign County Fair to become more inclusive : The Champaign County Fairgrounds board will be holding a meeting next month to hear about the needs of people with disabilities. County fair organizers said it could include a sensory-friendly area or a place of respite from the sights and sounds of the fair, but they’re still working out details with the community. * WSIL | 170-Year-Old Historic Covered Bridge in Southern Illinois to be Repaired After Storm Damage in 2023: Mary’s River Covered Bridge will see construction starting in late fall to help restore the famous bridge, according to Dawn Johnson with the Illinois Department of Transportation. A local contractor was recently awarded $311,702 by IDOT to help repair it, Johnson said. * WCIA | Springfield firefighters celebrate ribbon cutting of new station: Springfield firefighters celebrated a historic moment Thursday for the ribbon cutting of Station 13. The new station — located on Spaulding Orchard Rd. — will be open for business starting Monday. * NY Mag | Everybody Is Mad at Bloomberg News for Its Embargo-Breaking Gershkovich-Is-Free Scoop: According to multiple sources at the Journal and other major outlets, the Bloomberg scoop left journalists and government officials fuming. With a prisoner swap, you don’t know if it’s going to happen until it happens. (As one Journal reporter put it: “We literally had Yaroslav Trofimov on the ground with binoculars waiting to see Evan come off the plane, and we pubbed as soon as that happened.”) Which means that Bloomberg’s story proclaiming Gershkovich was free was inaccurate, given that the Russian plane was still in the air at the time of publication. That plane could have just turned around and gone back to Moscow, which is why the Journal and other publications had agreed to hold off. * Bloomberg | Nasdaq 100 is in correction territory with AI darlings sinking: The index was down 2.2 per cent in midday trading on Friday, taking its loss since hitting a record on July 10 past 10 per cent. If that holds through end of the session, it will meet the definition of correction. The index remains up nearly 10 per cent for the year. Several megacaps have seen concentrated selling, with both Nvidia Corp. and Tesla Inc. down more than 20 per cent from recent highs, putting them in bear-market territory. Meanwhile Microsoft Corp. and Amazon.com Inc. have each lost more than 10 per cent. However, with the exception of Tesla, all remain higher for the year. * NYT | Harris Has Votes Needed to Be Nominee, D.N.C. Says: The party chair said she had won enough delegates to secure the nomination, setting up Kamala Harris to become the first Black woman and person of South Asian heritage to earn the top spot on a major political ticket for president. * WaPo | Dry lightning, heat and wind could escalate fire activity in the West: California and the other western states face a combination of thunderstorms, heat and wind that threatens to further escalate an already high level of wildfire activity. Beginning Friday and into early next week, conditions could spark new blazes or intensify existing fires. And there isn’t much relief on the horizon, with widespread high fire risk forecast for much of the West this month and September. * Texas Monthly | How a Mariachi Ballad Became a Soothing Touchstone for Texans Grieving After Gun Violence: Violins led the way, though their warm tones were quickly echoed by the brassy hum from a set of trumpets, the steady plunk of guitarróns, and crisp guitar strums. It was June 2022, and an audience of mourners had gathered in Uvalde’s town square. Medrano, a longtime violinist, had traveled there from San Antonio with nearly fifty fellow mariachis who had answered the call to console the shattered community with music after the shooting at Robb Elementary that ended the lives of nineteen students and two teachers. “Amor Eterno,” a heartbreaking ballad and perhaps the most famous song by Mexican icon Juan Gabriel, would undoubtedly be on their short set list. The song was becoming a common tribute alongside memorials of white crosses and masses of flowers that appear when this kind of tragedy visits predominantly Latino communities.
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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois!
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In less than one year, a new law will create credit card chaos for millions of Illinois consumers, small business owners and workers who rely on tips. The law changes how your credit card is processed and has never been done anywhere in the world. The end result is windfall for corporate mega-stores paid for through costly operational hurdles for small businesses and a loss of convenience and privacy for consumers who could have to pay tax and gratuity with cash. There’s still time to protect Illinois small business owners, consumers and workers by repealing the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act now! For more information, visit guardyourcard.com/Illinois.
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Scammy campaign texts on the rise (Updated)
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
Knock wood, I haven’t received any scam campaign texts, but I do get a lot of candidate fundraising texts. You? …Adding… Yikes…
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Question of the day
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times…
* The Question: Should Illinois ban these types of contributions or just leave it the way it is? Explain.
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Uber Partners With Cities To Expand Urban Transportation
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Uber is leading the charge to close critical transportation gaps, ensuring reliable access to its services in places that need it most, such as underserved areas like Englewood. This is a part of Uber’s broader commitment to augment and expand the reach of Chicago’s transportation ecosystem, focusing on overcoming the first-mile/ last-mile hurdles that have long plagued residents in farther afield neighborhoods. Uber aims to extend the public transit network’s reach, making urban transportation more accessible and efficient for everyone. Discover the full story on how Uber is transforming city transportation for the better.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Olympic athletes with Illinois ties
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* WAND…
* Patch…
Juda, who also finished strong on the pommel horse Monday, will now compete in the individual competition, starting Wednesday. * Tribune…
* WCIA…
* This play was just incredible…
* Yeboah is the first Ghanaian woman high jumper to compete at the Olympics…
* More… * River Bender | Watch Party Planned to Support Local Olympian Jayden Ulrich: At 11 a.m. on Friday, Aug. 2, 2024, community members are invited to The Pump House to watch Ulrich’s Olympic event. Ulrich, a 2021 East Alton-Wood River High School graduate, will throw discus for Team U.S.A. in the Paris Olympics on Friday. * KKTV | Greco-Roman Wrestler Kamal Bey is ready for his first Olympic Appearance: Kamal Bey grew up in Illinois, and by the age of three, he was introduced to the sport that would eventually, take him all the way. ”I learned how to throw before i learned how to shoot,” said Bey. As just a toddler, Greco-Roman was the first style of wrestling he ever learned. * NBC | Drawn to wrestling as a child, Kennedy Blades has been dreaming of Olympic gold since she was 8 years old: The night before the trials, Blades said she wrote in a notebook given to her by a trainer, “I’m an Olympic champion,” over and over. “I couldn’t stop. I closed my book, and the next day I did it again and again and again,” Blades said. “I think I’ve kind of manipulated my head into thinking, ‘You’re the champion. Let’s get what’s yours.’” * WBEZ | Athletes with Chicago-area ties competing at Paris Summer Olympic Games: Born in Evanston and a basketball star at Downers Grove South, [Tori Franklin] is making her second trip to the Olympics as a triple jumper. Originally from Spring Grove, [Ali Frantti] is an outside hitter who will be an alternate for the women’s team. A former Penn State star. * NBC Chicago | Olympian Evita Griskenas asked to do gymnastics at age 4- just not the kind her mother signed her up for: When she was 4 years old, Evita Griskenas saw rhythmic gymnastics on TV for the first time. After persistently asking to try it herself, her mother finally agreed and took her to a gymnastics gym - there was just one problem. It wasn’t a rhythmic gymnastics gym. Griskenas immediately knew it was the wrong type of gymnastics and refused to do anything- leaving her mother with no choice but to put her in a different class. * Sun-Times | From Wheaton to Loyola to the Paris Olympics, volleyball stars Thomas Jaeschke and Jeff Jendryk keep rising: Once upon a time, Thomas Jaeschke and Jeff Jendryk were needles in the same haystack. Both grew up in Wheaton, Jaeschke two years older. Both discovered volleyball in high school — Jaeschke at Wheaton Warrenville South and Jendryk at St. Francis — took to the sport exceptionally well and joined the same, Aurora-based club, called Sports Performance. And as it turned out, both went on to star in college at Loyola, where Jaeschke, now 30, and Jendryk, 28, got to know each other and, if you can believe it, actually won a Division I national championship together. * KWQC | Raising an Olympian: Former Rock Island track star Courtney Lindsey’s mom shares his journey: Former Rock Island track star Courtney Lindsey will be competing at the Olympics in Paris and his mom has been right by his side. Lindsey’s mom, Larondia Vesey says his love for running didn’t come at a young age, but once he discovered it, the rest was history. Lindsey actually grew up boxing because his step-father owns a boxing gym in Rock Island. * Tribune | ‘It still doesn’t feel real.’ Chicago wrestler Joe Rau’s improbable journey leads him to the Olympics — at age 33: It was a rash decision, spurred by controversial refereeing and a heartbreaking defeat that kept Rau off the U.S. Olympic team once again. At that moment — and for many months after — the idea of wrestling again sickened the Elmhurst College graduate. “I get a pit in my stomach like I’m going to throw up if I just think about wrestling,” the Union Ridge native told the Tribune a few weeks after the loss. “It’s devastating because wrestling has been the thing I’ve loved most since I was a kid. It’s what I do. It’s what I know.” Have you been watching?
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Veepstakes! (Updated)
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Politico…
* NBC Chicago…
* Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
Thoughts? …Adding… NBC Senior National Politics reporter Natasha Korecki…
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Open thread
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Sangamon Co. Sheriff speaks to WCIA on former deputy who killed Sonya Massey, resignation calls…
- Despite receiving a strong recommendation from his fiancé’s father, retired Sangamon County Sheriff’s Deputy Scott Butterfield, Campbell also said nepotism did not play a role in Grayson’s hiring. -Campbell is vowing to change his hiring practices to prevent future tragedies. He refused to give specifics, but he did say his department may start requesting documents through FOIA for their officer records. * Related stories… ∙ WCIA: Deputy who killed Massey didn’t have hiring ‘edge’ after recommendation from fiancé’s father: Sheriff Campbell ∙ Illinois Times: Sheriff defends hiring process * July University of Illinois System Flash Index fell slightly for the third month in a row : The unemployment rates for Illinois and the nation crept upward by one-tenth of a percentage point, five percent for Illinois and 4.1 percent nationally. Illinois’ rate is now seven-tenths of a percentage point over the rate a year ago. Continuing last month’s trend, individual income tax receipts were up in inflation-adjusted terms compared to the same month a year ago. At the same time, sales and corporate tax revenues were down from July last year. * Block Club | Maternity Care Deserts On South And West Sides See Higher Infant, Maternal Death Rates: The study found the range of full maternal care is distributed unequally across the city, with the South and West sides containing the most low-access ZIP codes. Downtown and the North Side had the most full-access ZIP codes. Three conveniently located clinics on the South and West sides have closed in the past six years, and the dearth of specialists in certain ZIP codes requires expectant parents to seek care outside of their communities. * Capitol News Illinois | Preparations for November election underway, with security a top priority: A new state law is changing the kind of identification badge that election judges and poll workers wear in Illinois in an effort to protect their safety. Starting this year, the badges will no longer display the person’s name, ward, precinct, or township. Instead, they will wear badges with a unique identification number that say they’re authorized by their local court. That was one of several changes made in an omnibus elections bill, House Bill 4488, Pritzker signed into law last month. * Tribune | Illinois’ federal rental assistance dollars have run out. As the state prepares its new program, tenants and landlords are left with less support.: But the program, which doled out nearly $82 million in federal funds between its inception and July 21, stopped accepting new applications on May 31. A new state program is in the works, with $75 million in state funding having been allocated to the effort for fiscal year 2025, which began on July 1. But state housing authority representatives say they won’t be able to get the new program off the ground until after Labor Day, leaving more tenants at risk of becoming homeless and more landlords at risk of not getting paid this summer. * Crain’s | DraftKings to implement a customer surcharge in high-tax states like Illinois: DraftKings Inc., a leader in the online sports-betting business, reported second-quarter profit that missed Wall Street estimates and said it plans to implement surcharges for customers in high-tax states. Revenue rose to $1.1 billion, the company said Thursday, in line with analysts’ estimates. The company reported adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization of $128 million, compared with estimates of $133.2 million. * River Cities Reader | Illinois AFL-CIO Wraps Up 46th Constitutional with an Eye on November Election: The Illinois AFL-CIO wrapped up its 46th Constitutional Convention at the Crowne Plaza Chicago O’Hare in Rosemont. Four-hundred delegates asserted their trust in the leadership of IL AFL-CIO President Tim Drea and Secretary-Treasurer Pat Devaney by voting to re-elect President Drea, Secretary-Treasurer Devaney, and the Executive Board to a four-year term. * Sun-Times | Racing the clock, Johnson speeds up spending of federal pandemic funds: Mayor Brandon Johnson has been racing to beat a Dec. 31 deadline to allocate $1.88 billion in pandemic relief funds — and spend it all by 2026 — to avoid losing the federal money. The race is paying off — but in a way that two influential City Council members fear could create a culture of dependency that beleaguered Chicago taxpayers can’t afford to sustain. * Tribune | Plans for outside police officers to assist Chicago cops at DNC still fluid as convention month arrives: CPD, in response to a Freedom of Information Act request from the Tribune, said this week that the final roster of “mutual aid officers” has not yet been set. In an emailed statement, CPD director of news affairs Don Terry said the majority of additional officers will be from Illinois. * WBEZ | Will this year’s Democratic National Convention in Chicago be a repeat of 1968?: Now, as Chicago gets ready to host another Democratic National Convention, many people are wondering whether the chaos of 1968 will repeat in 2024. We spoke with historians, protesters who were there during ’68 and other experts to analyze similarities and differences between this year’s DNC in Chicago and that of 1968. * Sun-Times | Botched Little Village smokestack implosion wasn’t my fault, Chicago city official says of dust storm fiasco: Finally meeting with community residents more than four years later, Buildings Commissioner Marlene Hopkins faulted a contractor and city health officials for not planning for and containing the dust after developer Hilco demolished the old Crawford coal-burning power plant. * Block Club | Will CHA Finally Build Long-Promised Housing? Agency Moves To End Landmark Housing Lawsuit: The Chicago Housing Authority and public housing residents and advocates amended a 2019 agreement in a federal lawsuit this week, citing progress the housing agency has made in building housing and strengthening its voucher program while targeting work that still needs to be done. Advocates at Impact for Equity and lawyers for the Housing Authority submitted an amended agreement to their 2019 settlement of the federal civil rights suit, Gautreaux v. Chicago Housing Authority, earlier this week. It is slated to go into effect Thursday. * Sun-Times | Chappell Roan is our favorite artist’s favorite artist — and Chicago’s: Lollapalooza review: Thursday afternoon, fans could be seen stretching from the fencing on the east side all the way west to Columbus Drive and as far north as the IHG Hotels & Resorts Stage where eager Kesha fans comingled, happily singing along to Roan’s hits. People were trying to climb trees, kids were crying at not getting a view, the ADA platform had to figure out a way for overfill, and at least five people passed out near me as the incredible medics were as choreographed as the performers on stage. * Sun-Times | Black women struggle to find Black sperm donors: Though Black men make up 13% of the U.S. male population, they account for under 3% of sperm-bank donors, according to a study this year in the journal Fertility and Sterility, published by the American Society of Reproductive Health. White men, who make up 55% of the male population, account for 61% of sperm donors — a disparity that affects not only Black women like Brady but also same-sex couples and heterosexual couples with fertility issues. * Naperville Sun | City of Naperville files motion to dismiss civil suit requesting $20 million in compensatory damages after 2019 AirPods incident: In May, Amara Harris filed a civil suit against the city and Naperville police officers Juan Leon and Jonathan Pope asserting that their pursuit of the theft charge caused her emotional and financial injury. The dismissal motion was the city’s response to the case, filed Wednesday by its attorneys Michael Berasani and G. David Mathues of the Itasca-based Hervas, Condon & Bersani law firm. * Patch | Late Larry Walsh Sr. Will Have Joliet Building Dedicated In His Honor: On Saturday, Will County area politicians and representatives from Pace will meet in downtown Joliet to host a dedication to honor the late Larry Walsh Sr. […] The former Illinois State Senator and Will County Executive was an advocate for Pace and was integral in securing authorization for buses to utilize the shoulder of Interstate 55. * Daily Herald | District 25 ready to welcome first full-day kindergarten students this month: The school additions for full-day kindergarten cost the district $44.6 million, while the first three years of districtwide capital projects cost $25.6 million. Another $8.2 million of capital projects are planned in the summers of 2025 and 2026, according to Stacey Mallek, the district’s assistant superintendent for business. In total, the $78 million building project is being funded by $75 million in bond proceeds authorized by voters, about $3 million in interest earned on the bonds, a $100,000 Illinois Department of Commerce & Economic Opportunity grant, and a $50,000 school maintenance grant. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council approves $4.1 million contract as part of RiverEdge Park renovation: The $4.1 million contract with R.C. Wegman of Aurora is the first of several for an estimated $16 million project that will include a new backstage, a new entry on the southern edge of the park, a new beverage pavilion, a new VIP section and new restrooms. Eventually, the renovations are expected to increase the capacity of the park by about 2,500 people. Current capacity is about 7,300 for events and 6,500 for concerts. * Evanston | Mayor Biss stays grounded by climbing: Biss thought when he first started climbing that the space might be “bro-y,” as many gyms can be. “That’s not me,” he said. “But it isn’t that kind of macho culture.” He describes the acceptance he sees of different racial and gender identities, sexual orientations and especially recently, body types, at the First Ascent network of gyms. * Daily Herald | Suburban teams prepping for first season of IHSA flag football: Girls flag football got started in Illinois thanks in large part to the Chicago Bears, who provided gear for the 22 teams who played in the inaugural 2021 season. This season, teams will play between 22 and 25 games. Two games will be played on Saturday and each team will play one game during the week. * WCIA | Corn production could be causing cancer in Illinois, new study says: Living in an agricultural area like Central Illinois could be making people sick. An associate professor, along with others, conducted a study where he found being exposed to corn production chemicals can cause cancer. Illinois is the highest among the 50 states for these cancer-causing chemicals. Through the study, they’ve looked at more than 50 pesticides. * PJ Star | Major Peoria road scheduled for $9.6 million overhaul with more lanes, sidewalks, lighting: The project, which has received $500,000 from the federal government via congressman Darin LaHood, is entering the engineering and design phase, which will determine the final changes. At a minimum, Radnor Road will likely move from a rural cross section road to an urban cross section road, outfitted with three lanes, sidewalks, curbs, gutters, and street lighting, according to Peoria County Administrator Scott Sorrel. * AP | Sha’Carri breezes through opening round at first-ever Olympics race, wins 100 heat in 10.94 seconds: Sha’Carri Richardson blazed through a no-fuss opening round in the 100 meters Friday, winning her first-ever race at the Olympics in 10.94 seconds to easily qualify for the semifinals. Wearing neon green shoes, which contrasted well against the bright purple track, the American captured the first of eight first-round races on the opening day of track action at a jam-packed Stade de France.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller * You can click here or here to follow breaking news. It’s the best we can do unless or until Twitter gets its act together.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Aug 2, 2024 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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