* The Senate Progressive Caucus…
Following a subject matter hearing on progressive revenue initiatives in the Senate Revenue Committee Wednesday, members of the Illinois Senate Progressive Caucus called for continued action to modernize Illinois’ tax code.
“While wages remain stagnant and federal funding cuts threaten essential services, we cannot continue to uphold a system where working families carry the weight of generating revenue,” said State Senator Karina Villa (D-West Chicago). “As life gets more expensive for everyday people, corporations and the ultra-wealthy are reaping the benefits of a system that asks too little of them. Working and middle-class Illinoisans are tired of footing the bill. It is time for the rich to pay their fair share.”
During the hearing, caucus members highlighted a series of proposals aimed at creating a more equitable tax structure, including measures to ensure the ultra-wealthy contribute more fairly, close corporate tax loopholes, modernize taxation of digital advertising and strengthen oversight of tax credits and deductions.
The hearing focused on four bills currently before the Senate:
· Senate Bill 3376 would apply Illinois’ personal income tax rate to the appreciation of assets for residents with a net worth of $1 billion or more.
· Senate Bill 3486 would strengthen corporate tax accountability by addressing how large, multinational corporations report income.
· Senate Bill 3353 would apply a 10% tax on a digital advertisers’ annual revenue if the revenue earned exceeds $150 million.
· Senate Bill 3796 would decouple Illinois from federal tax changes, end high-impact business credits and require a cost-benefit analysis of corporate tax incentives.
Caucus members emphasized that Illinois’ long-term economy stability depends on investing in working and middle-class families, maintaining access to essential public services and improving the overall quality of life. They argued that Illinois can no longer rely on tax loopholes and corporate carve-outs that have failed to deliver meaningful, long-term economic benefits for Illinois residents. […]
Members of Illinois Senate Progressive Caucus stressed the urgency of reforming Illinois’ regressive tax system, especially as families navigate a broader national affordability crisis. Through the remainder of the budget process, caucus members will continue advancing equitable revenue solutions aimed at delivering meaningful economic relief for Illinois families.
* WAND…
The Illinois Senate passed a bill Thursday to create new protections for students sexually assaulted by their peers.
The plan would require any student who commits sexual assault or attempted sexual assault at school, a school-sponsored event, or related activities to be expelled for at least one year.
Sen. Steve McClure (R-Springfield) filed the bill last year after a 10-year-old Taylorville Jr. High student was sexually assaulted multiple times by a 14-year-old boy and had to see him return to school after the incident. […]
McClure gained strong bipartisan support for the plan over the past year, but some progressive Democrats opposed the idea. Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) argued current law protects students and provides due process for students accused of assaulting others.
“What we know about people who abuse is that they have been abused,” Villa said. “What happens to that child we’re sending home? We may send them to an alternative placement, but it’s not a requirement.”
* Sen. Rachel Ventura…
A new measure introduced by State Senator Rachel Ventura to establish the Illinois Psilocybin Advisory Board to investigate and advise on best practices for psilocybin treatments to help tackle treatment-resistant conditions such as PTSD passed the Senate Thursday.
“I remain committed to passing the CURE Act in its entirety and providing real change for individuals who have exhausted other treatment methods,” said Ventura (D-Joliet). “This bill is an important first step in that effort and will provide legislators with essential research on the safety and efficacy of psychedelic use in therapeutic treatments.”
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 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. The board would advise on a training program, ethical standards and licensing requirements as it related to psilocybin. 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. Ventura remains committed to passing the CURE Act in its entirety at a later date. […]
Senate Bill 2772 passed the Senate Thursday and now heads to the House for further consideration.
* Rep. La Shawn Ford…
State Rep. La Shawn K. Ford, D-Chicago, is partnering with local public health organizations, elected officials, and researchers from Brown University to highlight new research on the efficacy of overdose prevention sites (centers) in reducing preventable overdose deaths and improving public health outcomes.
“Although some of the most notorious open-air drug markets are on the West Side of Chicago, the problem does not stay local. That’s why a majority of West Side residents support overdose prevention sites, which are grounded in scientific evidence and help reduce harm,” said Ford. “Opioid abuse has devastated families in every region, and it’s up to us to take a smart, public-health-driven, and compassionate approach to tackling this issue.”
Ford, who is sponsoring House Bill 2929—legislation to authorize a state-sanctioned overdose prevention site pilot program in Illinois—is partnering with researchers from Brown University, a public health expert from Rush University, community leaders from the West Side Heroin/Opioid Task Force, and other local elected officials to highlight the need for overdose prevention sites at a press conference on May 11 at Rush University Medical Center.
The pilot program will be kick-started with an $18 million allocation from the Illinois Opioid Remediation Advisory Board, which manages a portion of the state’s opioid settlement funds from litigation against opioid manufacturers, with additional support and oversight provided by relevant state agencies.
“Simply put: these centers save lives—whether it’s through on-site medical staff reversing overdoses before they become fatal or a social worker connecting an individual to a service provider,” said Ford. “While they alone cannot cure someone of addiction, they save lives by meeting people where they are and treating them like patients instead of criminals.”
Rep. Ford’s press conference will be on Monday, from 2-3 pm at the Rush University Medical Center.
* Brownfield Ag…
Several Illinois ag groups are relieved that legislation calling for more than 24 hours notification before applying some agricultural chemicals has stalled in the General Assembly.
Corey Lacey, environmental policy manager with the Illinois Soybean Association, tells Brownfield, “It said that any time a pesticide application happened within 1,500 feet of a school, or park or trail, a notice would basically have to go out.”
Sarah Hastings, Champaign County farmer and board member with the Illinois Corn Growers Association, says applications are extremely weather dependent. […]
“We asked the Illinois Department of Agriculture, how many complaints have we had for somebody spraying? And there have been two inquiries or complaints filed in the last eight years.” She says, “They’re trying to invent a problem that doesn’t exist.”
* Sen. Mattie Hunter…
Disability insurance helps protect people from financial losses if an accident or illness renders them incapable of working and receiving regular income. However, disability insurance plans do not always treat mental health conditions the same as physical health conditions. To help those struggling with mental health conditions, State Senator Mattie Hunter passed a bill in the Senate that would ensure insurance providers properly disclose mental illness limitations for disability insurance purposes.
“Mental illness limitations for disability insurance purposes is discriminatory and unfairly limits the economic protection that disability insurance is intended to promise,” said Hunter (D-Chicago). “Insurance providers need to be upfront with their customers about how their policy treats mental health disorders.”
Hunter’s bill would require private health insurers to disclose to consumers seeking a policy that includes whether the policy limits the duration of coverage for mental health or substance use disorders. The bill would also give consumers the right to request more information about the limitation and other coverage options that include unlimited duration, if available.
The Department of Insurance found that 68% of disability insurance plans offered in Illinois limit mental health and substance use disorder benefits.
Senate Bill 1327 passed the full Senate Thursday.
* More…
* WAND | IL Senate passes proposal banning loud ads on streaming apps: Sen. Doris Turner (D-Springfield) said her plan could ban commercial volumes from being louder than the program you’re watching. This comes as the FCC preempts most state and local regulation of cable or broadcast TV, but streaming apps operate over the internet and fall outside that scope. “The problem is all too familiar and frustrating, especially for parents with young kids who need to nap during the day and individuals with hearing sensitivity,” Turner said.
* WAND | IL House committee passes bill requiring 988 info in public buildings, suicide prevention curriculum in health courses: The Illinois House Mental Health & Addiction Committee unanimously passed a bill Thursday to improve access to suicide prevention services. Sponsors said 988 information should be visible in county shelter care homes, daycares, public libraries, colleges, hospitals, assisted living facilities and nursing homes.
* Journal Courier | Illinois lawmakers debate fixes to rising eviction rates, housing turmoil: By some accounts, more than 50,000 eviction filings are made each year in Illinois. Nearly half result in renters being forced out. Teri Ross, executive director of Illinois Legal Aid Online, said tenants are often unfamiliar with what defenses and resources are available to them and those in rural and suburban areas face unique challenges. […] Gov. JB Pritzker’s proposed Building Up Illinois Developments plan would increase the amount of multiunit housing by easing zoning laws and legalizing “granny flats” to address the crisis.
* WHBF | Illinois jurors could get a pay increase: House Bill 4844 [which is stuck in the House] would require employers to pay workers regular wages while they serve on jury duty. Currently, jurors get $50 dollars a day for federal court, and it varies widely according to the county. Business groups argue this would be unfair to small business and the government should pay for workers’ public service.
- sulla - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:19 am:
Kudos to Senator Ventura. Hope the CURE act can gain additional momentum in the future.
- Steve - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:19 am:
Thu upper 20% of Illinois income taxpayers pay around 67% of the state income tax haul. Imagine thinking that’s not progressive enough.
- Friendly Bob Adams - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:34 am:
They’re starting the Psilocybin Advisory Board about 50 years too late for my participation, but good luck to all concerned….
- Garfield Ridge Guy - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:40 am:
I think the various millionaires’/billionaires’ tax proposals would make great amendments to the Illinois Constitution, together with “retirement income is subject to state taxes” and “pensions are automatically reduced on a pro rata basis and paid directly to the state whenever state expenses exceed state revenue.”
- Steve - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:45 am:
-would make great amendments -
It will have to wait for at least 2 years . That’s what the Democrats wanted. Go figure…
- Demoralized - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:52 am:
==pensions are automatically reduced on a pro rata basis and paid directly to the state whenever state expenses exceed state revenue==
Are you talking about pensions paid to state employees? Because if you are that’s an unbelievable stance to take and it’s just plain wrong.
- Demoralized - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 10:53 am:
==Thu upper 20% of Illinois income taxpayers pay around 67% of the state income tax==
I never understand the point when people make comments like this. That’s really irrelevant. Progressive taxation means that the more you earn the greater the percentage of income tax you should have to pay. It’s fundamentally unfair that someone making $100 million a year pays the same 4.95% state tax as someone making $50,000 a year. You make more you should have to pay a greater percentage. That’s your responsibility in a civilized society.
- JS Mill - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:07 am:
=Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) argued current law protects students and provides due process for students accused of assaulting others.=
Fact
=“pensions are automatically reduced on a pro rata basis and paid directly to the state whenever state expenses exceed state revenue.”=
Even better would be to reduce the social security payments to Illinois recipients to fund pensions./s
- Chicagonk - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:13 am:
@JS Mill - If that were the case, then the student wouldn’t be returning to a school where they were victimized.
- Candy Dogood - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:33 am:
===Thu upper 20% of Illinois income taxpayers pay around 67% of the state income tax haul. Imagine thinking that’s not progressive enough. ===
I think my favorite thing about this argument from fallacy is that assuming that everyone was paying the exact same percentage of their income in taxes all this would mean is that the top 20% of earners in this state earn 67% of the income.
In a conversation about taxes or tax equity the fact is that we are in a situation where our system lacks both vertical equity because of our constitution but also lacks horizontal equity because there are ways for very wealthy people to wind up paying a lower tax burden on their income than folks without as many creative options.
But back to my opening point — the example you’re providing isn’t representative of a progressive tax system. Hopefully you just don’t know what a progressive tax system is and that’s why you shared your observation because if that’s not the case you’re just here sharing something that is intellectually dishonest.
Hope you’re here to learn and not to spread misinformation.
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:35 am:
===Hope you’re here to learn and not to spread misinformation===
That dude is a troll. Always has been, always will be.
- Sue - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:35 am:
In an article published yesterday- the cost to Illinois in lost tax collections for 2023-2025 solely due to Citadel’s move to FL and JB’s failing to resolve Ken Griffin’s concerns on public safety seeing him also moving was a grand total of 843 million the loss continuing every year- that is a lot of lost money to pay for progressive social programs
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:42 am:
===In an article published yesterday===
You got a link to that? I googled Citadel’s move to Florida “$843 million” illinois and came up with nothing.
- very old soil - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 11:46 am:
Sue, in an article published just the other day, Griffin has moved most of his business to NYC because it is a better place to do business than FL
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 12:00 pm:
=== Griffin has moved most of his business to NYC because it is a better place to do business than FL===
Um, he said the opposite https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/06/mamdani-ken-griffin-nyc-miami-tax.html
- JS Mill - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 12:01 pm:
=@JS Mill - If that were the case, then the student wouldn’t be returning to a school where they were victimized.=
Feel free to read the statute for yourself. The proposed bill manadates 1 year. That is the only difference. Current law allows for 2 years. The victim may return regardless and is not subject to removal.
- Sue - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 12:08 pm:
Forgot where I saw it but it was part of coverage of the Milliken Conference interview Sarah Eisen did with Griffin- if you do z Gemini search of Citidel Griffin move to Florida and 2023-2025 illinois tax revenue loss - Gemini has the info in detail confirming the numbers as it include Griffin and the 100’s of his people who moved with him
- H-W - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 12:17 pm:
@ JS Mill
How do schools coordinate accusations of sexual assault with law enforcement? Just curious. I know in higher education, we have an obligation to report to an internal office when we learn of incidents, but as I understand, it is left to the student to decide whether or not to pursue the case. I am pretty sure our college personnel do not coordinate with the local police unless the student request doing so.
Do high school and middle school assault cases get treated the same, or is law enforcement notified in all cases? Just curious.
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 12:20 pm:
===move to Florida and 2023-2025 illinois tax revenue loss===
Illinois net income tax revenue was $29.578 billion in FY23 and $32.903 billion in FY25. https://cgfa.ilga.gov/Upload/0426%20Monthly.pdf
As a percentage of total state receipts, it was 55.7% in FY23 and 60.9% in FY25. ibid
- charles in charge - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 1:15 pm:
=Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) argued current law protects students and provides due process for students accused of assaulting others.=
That isn’t what she said at all.
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 1:24 pm:
===That isn’t what she said at all. ===
She did argue that current law protects students. I watched the debate but can’t recall what she said about due process. I think she addressed it.
- Sue (not the other Sue) - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 1:29 pm:
Imagine thinking that you can stick it to Big Tech with a 10% tax on ads, rather than every small business finding Facebook ads to be the most affordable option getting 10% fewer ads for their budget.
- Demoralized - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 1:52 pm:
==failing to resolve Ken Griffin’s concerns==
So we should all bow down to Ken Griffin’s concerns? I’m not a big fan of catering to people just because they are rich. If Ken Griffin wanted to take his ball and go home then fine. He wanted to get his way and the rich kid was told no. Rich people aren’t used to being told no.
- very old soil - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 1:59 pm:
This is a version of story I read.
https://www.bisnow.com/new-york/news/office/citadel-moving-forward-on-park-avenue-supertall-with-vornado-rudin-123806
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 2:01 pm:
===This is a version of story I read===
Two years ago
- Sue - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 2:45 pm:
Demoralized- Ken Griffin’s concern was public safety- should be everyone’s
- Rich Miller - Friday, May 8, 26 @ 2:51 pm:
===Ken Griffin’s concern was public safety===
Griffin bailed out of the primary race when his preferred candidate tanked. He left in a huff. He said a bunch of stuff.
And crime dropped a lot after he left. His loss.