Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
Wednesday, Apr 9, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Illinois Chamber of Commerce…
…Adding… ILGOP…
* Illinois Department of Public Health…
* Illinois Manufacturers’ Association…
* CBS Chicago | Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker seeks to reassure farmers, agriculture workers at Trump tariffs take effect: “Farmers and rural communities often bear the brunt of tariffs and tariff retaliation,” Pritzker said. “We have been working with our counterparts in Mexico as well as our partners in Canada and around the world to keep our ties from this state strong, and to ensure our farmers aren’t once again left as collateral damage in a self-inflicted trade war.” * NBC Chicago | Who could replace Sen. Durbin if he retires? Lauren Underwood leads in new poll: Democrats who might be interested in succeeding Durbin have started organizing, hiring staffers and raising money. Organizing efforts were done almost entirely behind the scenes until Tuesday, when the campaign team for U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood, a Democrat from Naperville, sent out a fundraising email proclaiming she is “gearing up and getting ready here on the campaign side” should Durbin retire. If that happens, Underwood would lead the Senate Democratic primary, according to a new poll commissioned by 314 Action Fund. In March, pollsters surveyed 773 likely 2026 Democratic primary voters in Illinois. They found that Underwood has the highest name recognition of the candidates in the field. * SJ-R | ‘We’re here to see justice’: Sonya Massey’s cousin says family remains ‘united’: Teresa Haley said the change of the location for the former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy charged with first-degree murder of Sonya Massey on July 6 won’t change the outcome. “(Sean Grayson) assassinated her and I think anybody in America will agree that he should be sentenced to life,” said Haley, a Massey family friend representing civil rights attorney Ben Crump. * Rockford Register Star | Where to draw the line on nepotism? Winnebago County looks to loosen hiring restrictions: The new version would remove part of the ordinance that prohibited the county from hiring anyone who was related to or lived with a County Board member, the chairman, employees of human resources or employees of the county board office. […] County Board Member Keith McDonald, R-6, said nepotism restrictions are needed, but that the current version of the ordinance may have gone too far. He said he began to question the current ordinance when his son wanted to test to become a sheriff’s deputy. * PJ Star | City of Peoria reaches settlement in Cleve Heidelberg police shooting case: The City of Peoria has reached a $625,000 settlement with the estate of Cleve Heidelberg, a man who served 47 years in prison in connection with a murder he said he didn’t commit. A settlement in the case, which the city said was being made to avoid further litigation, will see the Heidelberg estate paid $1.2 million, $625,000 of which will come from the City of Peoria. * WGLT | Lead-based paint is a ‘niche’ yet prevalent environmental health concern — including in McLean County: “It’s the most prevalent issue that we see with lead,” said McAfee. “And I think really just the issue is that it’s such a forgotten thing.” Nearly every ZIP code in McLean County is considered high risk for lead exposure, which IDPH has previously said is due to lead paint. Last year, the McLean County Health Department said there were about 30 cases of lead poisoning in youth. * WCIA | Champaign first responders hoping to utilize mental health professionals: In the last five years, Champaign Police have responded to more than 80,000 calls for service that could have benefitted from a mental health professional, the city’s fire chief said. Now, they’re working alongside the fire department pushing for a new way of handling calls that would employ those kinds of experts. They’re asking city council for their approval to move forward with their co-response model. * Tribune | Dexter Reed deal, $32 million for downtown police chase crash set for vote: The lawsuit filed by Bryce and Amy Summary of St. Louis alleges a white Mercedes pulled over by police for a tinted license plate hit them as it fled on a May 2022 evening. The crash left Bryce, in town with his family for a work conference, with two amputated legs and towering medical bills. The couple’s costly injuries were a “direct and proximate result” of the city’s negligence, the lawsuit alleged. The $32 million deal, if advanced by the committee and approved by the council, will represent yet another huge expense for a city outspending the money it budgeted this year for legal settlements. * Sun-Times | Chicago police investigating why cops were told to report ‘migrant arrests’ to the feds: The Chicago Police Department is investigating after officers were directed to alert federal law enforcement officials about “migrant arrests” involving people with tattoos or clothing associated with the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua. The directive was included in a daily briefing in October 2023 at the Near West District, where some new arrivals were living at the time. It highlighted the arrest of a man who had tattoos that “represent the Venezuelan prison gang known as Tren de Aragua,” according to a slide from the briefing. The man was pictured wearing a Chicago Bulls jersey, another purported sign of membership in the gang. * Block Club | As Police Prepare For ‘Teen Takeover’ Downtown, Curfew Debate Resurfaces: The commander told about 30 community members at Tuesday’s meeting that the Police Department is working with Chicago Public Schools to send messages to parents making them aware of the takeovers. Additionally, the department is trying to hold organizers accountable for planning large-scale events without permits, Harris said. It’s not illegal for young people to gather Downtown, but as curfew approaches, the Police Department begins to enforce it more actively. * WTTW | City Council Panel Advances Plan to Block Jan. 6 Rioters from City Jobs After Trump Pardons: With the endorsement of the City Council’s Workforce Development Committee, the measure, authored by Alds. Gilbert Villegas (36th Ward), Matt Martin (47th Ward), Chris Taliaferro (29th Ward) and Bill Conway (34th Ward) now heads to the full City Council for a final vote on April 16. “You should not be allowed to work for the government you tried to overthrow,” said Villegas, a former Marine, who added that he would not allow what happened on Jan. 6 to be “whitewashed.” * WGN | Northwest Side hospital owes construction firms millions of dollars: For months, the bills have gone unpaid. Local construction firms helped build an on-site behavioral treatment center at Community First Medical Center in Chicago’s Belmont-Cragin neighborhood. But they claim they’re still waiting on their money, even though the center has received state funding. The allegations come as small hospitals nationwide struggle to stay afloat, amid the rising cost of care and issues with Medicaid reimbursements. * Sun-Times | CTA to break ground on Red Line extension in early 2026 as prep work begins on Far South Side: CTA officials held the first of three community meetings Tuesday at Woodson Regional Library in Washington Heights to introduce the contractor to residents and give a rundown of the project that will extend the Red Line from the existing terminus at 95th/Dan Ryan to 130th Street. In August 2024, the CTA awarded a $2.9 billion contract to Walsh-VINCI Transit Community Partners to design and build the extension after a two-year bidding process. * WBEZ | Sloppy restaurant reservation etiquette? In Chicago, that means no dinner for you.: The restaurant, which books reservations through Tock, gives customers several chances to cancel within the 48-hour window that gives them the best chance of rebooking those seats. An email reminder goes out two days in advance, then a text reminder 24 hours before, which is when the restaurant sees the most changeover, Irby said. (Opportunists would do well to call or check online for openings starting around that time, she added.) Irby keeps manual track of frequent no-shows and also flags serial cancelers on Tock. * Daily Herald | Tempers flare between board members during St. Charles City Council meeting: A St. Charles City Council member used the closing minutes of a meeting this week to lob accusations against another alderperson and call for his resignation. Alderperson Paul Lencioni strongly criticized fellow council member David Pietryla near the end of the city council meeting on Monday. “I faced an opponent who David Pietryla, for his own personal reasons and for whatever quest of power, has recruited to run against me,” Lencioni said. * Daily Herald | DuPage County has rolled out ‘Text-to-911.’ Here’s how to use the new service: In certain emergencies — a domestic violence or another life-threatening situation — someone might not be able to call 911 safely. In DuPage County, those individuals can now send emergency text messages directly to 911 dispatchers when calling is not possible, County Board Chair Deborah Conroy said. “The text-to-911 service will greatly assist the deaf community, as well as those who may be in domestic violence situations, are hiding, or simply can’t make a 911 telephone call,” she said. * Tribune | Oak Lawn votes to continue 1% grocery tax, tear down village fuel station: Oak Lawn residents will not get a tax break on their grocery bills come year, despite the Illinois General Assembly repealing the state’s 1% tax. The Oak Lawn Village Board voted Tuesday to enact a 1% tax on grocery store purchases and sales to avoid losing $2.2 million annually. “We have a number of grocery stores, so it adds up,” Mayor Terry Vorderer said. * CNBC | Dow surges 2,600 points for biggest rally in 5 years after Trump pauses some tariffs: Live updates: The S&P 500 skyrocketed 8.4%, on pace for its biggest one-day gain in five years. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 2,571 points, or 7%, also its biggest gain since 2020. The Nasdaq Composite jumped 10.8%. “I have authorized a 90 day PAUSE, and a substantially lowered Reciprocal Tariff during this period, of 10%, also effective immediately,” Trump posted on his Truth Social. Trump, in the same post, said he was raising the tariff on China higher again to 125%.
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- Donnie Elgin - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 2:46 pm:
=State Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Rockford, …to determine the impact on energy and water usage and prevent them from putting too much strain on Illinois’ power grid=
If Steve Stadelman is concerned about “too much strain on Illinois’ power,” then he should work to remove/modify the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act, which basically bans expanded large-scale Nuclear and Nat gas plants in Illinois.
- Rich Miller - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 2:49 pm:
===basically bans expanded large-scale Nuclear===
Those have been banned for decades here.
- H-W - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 3:09 pm:
RE: CNBC
=== Dow surges 2,600 points for biggest rally in 5 years after Trump pauses some tariffs ===
Flip, flop. Flip, flop.
Trump is gonna do tariffs until he found out they do not work internally. Then he literally said something like, “other countries are kissing my [butt] to make deals,” and said he is going to pause tariffs for 90-days.
As if blind to the idea of long-term interests, the stock market immediately rebounds (for 90 days or until the next stupid idea comes along).
Those lost profits punished retirees this week and for some time still to come. They will only partially recouped by retirees, and only for a limited (90 -days?) time frame.
I’m waiting for the cheers from Republicans saying Trump won again. /s
- Demoralized - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 3:13 pm:
I have no tolerance for Republicans complaining about “controlling our children” when these are the same people wanting to ban books and tell parents what medical care they can and can’t get for their kids.
- TheInvisibleMan - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 3:32 pm:
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County Board Member Keith McDonald, R-6, said nepotism restrictions are needed, but that the current version of the ordinance may have gone too far. He said he began to question the current ordinance when his son wanted to test to become a sheriff’s deputy.
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So the nepotism ordinance and restrictions are fine, unless it applies to him and his family. Then and only then should it be changed. Funny how it often works out that way.
Is there some reason his son can’t apply to the other 101 sheriffs departments in the state?
Or better yet, does he see his position on the county board as more important to him than the ability of his own son to get hired at the county.
Life is full of choices, Mr. McDonald.
- CA-HOON - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 4:43 pm:
Re: Where to draw the line on nepotism?
Asking to have a law changed for a family member is nepotism in itself, but to change a law *against* nepotism specifically for nepotism’s sake is just cartoonish.
His son can be a sheriff’s deputy in an adjacent county and still live at home, they shouldn’t change the law.
- Steve Polite - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 4:59 pm:
“The man was pictured wearing a Chicago Bulls jersey, another purported sign of membership in the gang.”
There must be a lot of gang members at Chicago Bulls games. ICE should start there. I can imagine on any given day there are many, many gang members going about their business in Chicago wearing those jerseys, especially during basketball season. Arrest them all. /s
- Mister Ed - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 6:20 pm:
Looks like market manipulation. Markets hang on every word from the President.
- TheInvisibleMan - Wednesday, Apr 9, 25 @ 6:49 pm:
Off-topic, but an interesting headline just came across my screen.
“Lake in the Hills to end special taxing areas – but will increase overall tax levy instead”
I imagine the people losing the SSA payment on their property, and instead getting a smaller overall tax charged to them aren’t too upset.
The people outside of those SSAs who will now pay extra taxes for those services but without any of the benefits, are probably less happy with it.
I’ve said for awhile now that the goal of consolidating supposed excessive governments in IL has at its core the intent to spread the expenses of the affluent to everyone else, to lower the direct expense to the affluent.
It’s not just words on a screen anymore. This is an example of it in action.
https://www.shawlocal.com/northwest-herald/2025/04/09/lake-in-the-hills-to-end-special-taxing-areas-but-will-increase-overall-tax-levy-instead