* The Sun-Times…
The Bears hailed Indiana politicians taking the first step to create the Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority as a “significant milestone” in the team’s discussions to build a home stadium across state lines rather than the 326 acres the team owns in Arlington Heights.
The Indiana Legislature’s Senate Bill 27, amended Thursday, would authorize the Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority to acquire land, finance improvements and enter into leases with a private business such as the Bears.
“The legislation presented by the State of Indiana is a significant milestone in our discussions around a potential stadium development in Chicagoland’s Northwest Indiana region,” a Bears spokesperson said in a statement. “We appreciate the leadership and responsiveness of Governor [Mike] Braun and Indiana lawmakers in advancing a framework that allows these conversations to move forward productively.”
More from Crain’s…
Language in the proposed legislation would create the stadium authority as a stand-in for the state; the authority would function as the owner of a new stadium.
The authority’s three-member board would be made up of the director of the Indiana Office of Management and Budget, a budget office designee and the director of the Public Finance Authority.
SB 27 doesn’t mention the Bears by name, but it specifically allows the new stadium authority to enter into agreements with an NFL franchise. Under the current language, that NFL team would have to commit to a 35-year lease. […]
The bill stipulates the authority would own the stadium, but the team would pay for repairs and operational costs. During the lease term, the NFL team would have the option to buy the stadium for the cost of the outstanding debt — or for $1 once the project is fully paid off.
* Rep Hoan Huynh filed HB4467 this morning…
Creates the ICE and CBP Tracker Act. Requires the Attorney General to create and maintain a statewide incident reporting system related to unlawful activity in Illinois by personnel employed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and U.S. Border Protection. Makes legislative findings. Authorizes the Attorney General to adopt rules to implement the Act.
* Sen. Rachel Ventura…
State Senator Rachel Ventura introduced a new measure to establish the Illinois Psilocybin Advisory Board to investigate and advise on best practices for psilocybin treatments to help tackle treatment-resistant conditions, like PTSD. […]
For the past several years, Ventura has championed Senate Bill 2184, also known as the CURE Act, which would establish a framework for the legal manufacture, delivery, use, and possession of entheogens, namely psilocybin, and make conforming changes to the State’s criminal laws. The measure would require a referral from a health care professional in order to begin the therapy. Prior to first exposure of psilocybin, an individual would undergo a prep session to gauge their conditions and previous treatments and methods they have tried. Post session integration meeting would ensure the individual has the resources and tools they need to work through the psilocybin experience.
The measure led by Ventura this year – Senate Bill 2772 – would implement a part of the CURE Act, establishing the Illinois Psilocybin Advisory Board under the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, which would create a training program, ethical standards and licensing requirements. During a two-year program development period, the board would issue recommendations for health and safety regulations to agencies tasked with regulating psilocybin production and use under the CURE Act. Ventura remains committed to passing the CURE Act in its entirety at a later date. […]
Senate Bill 2772 currently awaits committee assignment.
* Press release…
Members of the Illinois Senate Republican Caucus joined together to outline a series of legislative proposals aimed at addressing the state’s growing energy affordability crisis and reversing policies that have driven electric bills higher for families and businesses.
Senate Republicans warned that the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act (CRGA) weakens consumer protections, removes long-standing rate caps, shifts billions of dollars in new costs onto ratepayers, and reduces local control. Meanwhile, the bill does nothing to deliver lower prices or improved grid reliability.
“Illinois families are already struggling with record-high electric bills, and CRGA makes the problem worse,” said Terri Bryant (R-Murphysboro), Republican Minority Spokesperson for the Senate Energy and Public Utilities Committee. “It removes rate caps, weakens consumer protections, and shifts massive new costs onto ratepayers without offering real relief.”
In response, Senate Republicans are filing several energy proposals focused on affordability, reliability, and accountability. The measures include restoring consumer rate caps, expanding reliable energy generation, streamlining permitting for new power projects, and repealing policies that reduce supply and drive up costs.
“Nuclear energy provides around-the-clock reliability and price stability,” said Senate Deputy Republican Leader Sue Rezin (R-Morris). “Instead of prioritizing proven solutions, CRGA shifts costly and risky policies onto ratepayers. Senate Republicans are advancing legislation to speed up permitting for new generation, including nuclear, so Illinois can compete and keep costs down.”
Senator Rezin has filed legislation to modernize and streamline the permitting process for new power generation projects by requiring agencies and local governments to act within clear timelines, with permits automatically approved if deadlines are missed.
Senator Jil Tracy (R-Quincy) highlighted Senate Bill 1234 and Senate Bill 1235, two additional measures previously filed aimed at improving and increasing reliability and transparency. […]
Meanwhile, Senate Bill 1235 would repeal the 2030 and 2045 forced shutdown dates for coal and natural gas plants and allow for the construction of new natural gas peaker plants to ensure reliability during extreme weather. […]
“Pritzker’s new law removed the rate caps that protect families from unlimited utility increases,” said Senator Rose (R-Mahomet). “I’m filing legislation to put those rate caps back where they belong, repeal the costly battery storage program, and restore local control so communities have a real voice.”
Senate Republicans said their legislative agenda is designed to lower costs, strengthen grid reliability, and restore accountability in Illinois’ energy policy.
* HB4457 from Rep. Amy Briel…
Creates the Gender Pricing Equity Act. Provides that a person, firm, partnership, company, corporation, or business shall not charge a different price for any goods that are substantially similar if those goods are priced differently based on the gender of the individuals for whom the goods are marketed and intended. Provides that a violation of any of the provisions of the Act is an unlawful practice under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. Amends the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act to make a conforming change.
* Sen. Lakesia Collins introduced SB2832 earlier this week…
From the bill…
Developmental etiquette education under this Section shall be offered in the following grades:
(1) Prekindergarten and kindergarten.
Instruction in these grades shall include sharing basic manners and greeting others.
(2) Grades one through 3.
Instruction in these grades shall include listening, apologizing, taking turns, and cooperation.
(3) Grade 6.
Instruction in this grade shall include 9 peer communication, empathy, and personal responsibility.
(4) Grade 8.
Instruction in this grade shall include cyber etiquette, resolving disputes, and bystander skills.
(5) Grade 9.
Instruction in this grade shall include first impressions, posture, and polite conversation.
(6) Grade 12.
Instruction in this grade shall include interviewing, networking, and workplace etiquette and a capstone project to showcase the etiquette skills acquired.
- Rudy’s teeth - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 10:52 am:
The Bears will never move to Indiana. The iconic song “Bears Down Chicago Bears …You’re the Pride and Joy of Illinois” will never be sung in Indiana.
Gov. Braun should focus on repairing roads, funding public education, and addressing rampant pollution in NWI.
- DS - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 10:56 am:
The Bears just keep finding new ways to ruin the best vibes in decades over this stadium.
- Friendly Bob Adams - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:01 am:
If the Bears lose Sunday they can move anywhere they like.
- Give Us Barabbas - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:02 am:
Man, I just don’t get how the Bears owners are flirting with Indiana and not understanding just how huge a PR hit they would be taking if they relocated to a stadium there. I get it that at least one other NFL team does that. But Chicago fans will riot and it’s gonna be a big financial hit as well, the damage to good will would be immense.
- Flapdoodle - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:06 am:
Re teaching etiquette — Since proper etiquette varies considerably from place to place and culture to culture, I’m kind of wondering whose version(s) will be taught and when. Not against the idea, just a bit skeptical.
- Pundent - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:12 am:
=Gov. Braun should focus on repairing roads, funding public education, and addressing rampant pollution in NWI.=
Or, as we learned last week, introducing himself to a large number of Hoosiers who don’t even know who he is
- Sue - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:18 am:
As much as the Gov touts his pro business chops- economic growth and employment here in Illinois has vastly lagged the growth in the midwest- if he loses the Bears to Indiana- his national profile will be severely damaged
- Candy Dogood - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:23 am:
===The Bears hailed Indiana politicians taking the first step to create the Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority as a “significant milestone” in the team’s discussions to build a home stadium across state lines rather than the 326 acres the team owns in Arlington Heights.===
I’m genuinely impressed at the new ways that the Bears front office has at finding new ways to demonstrate their incompetence.
At a time when I’m supposed to be excited about the Bears, they’re reminding me how much I hate the owners.
Let them move to Indiana. See how their fan base responds to that.
Also — Indiana wants to give away billions of dollars to billionaires who have spent their entire lives avoiding Indiana like the rest if the people that live Chicagoland. Have they asked their voters how they feel about this plan?
- Hoosier Daddy - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:24 am:
Read through the Indiana bill. Struggling to understand some of it (they write them differently there.) Especially this from page 6, line 21:
“(the agreement) may provide that the lease rental payments by the lessee shall be made from: (A) proceeds of local excise taxes; and (B) applicable proceeds of food and beverage tax and innkeepers tax.”
The lessee is presumably the Bears. Which means a bunch of sales taxes are handed over to the Bears and then they use that cash to pay rent?
https://iga.in.gov/pdf-documents/124/2026/senate/bills/SB0027/SB0027.02.COMS.pdf
- Big Tent - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:39 am:
The beginning of the end….
- Roadrager - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 11:48 am:
==The lessee is presumably the Bears. Which means a bunch of sales taxes are handed over to the Bears and then they use that cash to pay rent?==
The Bears’ plan to move to Gary collapsed in 1995 because Lake County refused to approve the tax increase that would fund the deal.
This time, they want to implement the tax statewide.
If the Bears decide to start talking really tough about this charade, I imagine JB can reach down into the couch cushions and blanket the state with ads informing all the Colts fans that their elected representatives want to give a whole bunch of their hard-earned money to the CHICAGO Bears.
Also, clearly no one behind this legislation has considered how quickly the Irsay family will have its hands out if this actually passes.
- Steve Polite - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 12:00 pm:
“Senator Rezin has filed legislation to modernize and streamline the permitting process for new power generation projects by requiring agencies and local governments to act within clear timelines, with permits automatically approved if deadlines are missed.”
Given the Illinois General Assembly controls appropriations to State Agencies, funding for programs are sometimes cut, and staffing shortages occur, having a bill that permits are automatically granted when deadlines are missed, seems to me to be a bad idea.
- Henry Francis - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 12:01 pm:
The goal for the Bears stadium plans is to increase the value of the team when it is sold by Papa Bear’s grandkids in the near future. The team needs to own the stadium to do that. If a new state of the art stadium is included in the sale of the team, it would add roughly $2 billion to the purchase price.
The Indiana legislation has the state authority owning the stadium, not the Bears. So Warren’s leverage play with the Hoosiers is a bust.
- Pundent - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 12:02 pm:
=As much as the Gov touts his pro business chops- economic growth and employment here in Illinois has vastly lagged the growth in the midwest=
It’s a tired trope particularly considering the vast difference in GDP. And I’ll take Illinois wages over right to work havens like Indiana all day long.
As far as the Bears go, the Governor seems quite adept at reading the room. In an economy where affordability is front and center I don’t think saying no to billionaire sports teams is the burn you think it is.
- H-W - Friday, Jan 16, 26 @ 12:12 pm:
Re: Bears
I like the new name = The Northwest Indiana Bears. It helps avoid any confusion around the differences between the Indianapolis Colts and the Northwest Indiana team. Let’s go NW Indi Bears.