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Pritzker asked about need for new executive order (Updated x2)

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. From the governor’s press conference this afternoon

Q: Your office also released an executive order directing state agencies to identify up to 4% of fiscal year 2026 months to reserve, to put reserves in order to mitigate any adverse action from President Trump’s economic policies. But why wasn’t this action taken through, like a memo, like through an internal government action, as opposed to an executive order, which makes it look political and furthers your public feuding with President Trump?

Pritzker: Executive order is something that we do all the time when we want to make an emphatic effort to accomplish something and make sure that it’s understood throughout the entire executive branch that this is everybody’s responsibility. And so that’s one of the reasons that we put it up in EO form. Very important to us that we deal with what Donald Trump has done to well, almost every state in fact, I believe every state in fact, has had their budgets significantly impacted by the policies of the big, ugly bill, the policies of his administration.

There are hundreds of millions of dollars that are going to have to be made up for as a result of the cuts the federal government is making, including in health care and nutritional assistance, but also across the economy, with the tariffs that are impacting businesses in Illinois. So we think this is prudent.

We also think that we’re going to have to look at every nook and cranny of state government to make sure that we are balancing the budget, as has been promised in the FY 26 budget. And then, of course, going into FY 27 there are going to be severe effects upon the state budget, and that’s going to be yet another conversation in mind. […]

Q: Related to those four percent cuts, can you talk about why that was necessary? Because a lot of people will look at that actually and say, is this an indication that Illinois financial picture is really bleak right now?

Pritzker: No. What it’s an indication of is that the federal government, Donald Trump and the big, ugly bill have been literally weighing on states all across the United States. You talk to every state in the country, and they will tell you that they are having to make cuts to their state budgets to deal with what the federal government has done.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

…Adding… Oops. I missed a question…

Q: How did the state arrive to calling on your state agencies to identify up to 4 percent of FY 26 funds for reserves in this executive order? Why that number?

Pritzker: Because it’s a beginning of dealing with what we think could be a very severe challenge for the state budget in this year. Remember, we can only identify what we know.

Here’s something that I’m very concerned about, which is that the budget is affected vastly by the economic situation of the country. And we’re already seeing that states like Iowa are in recession. We’re doing okay in Illinois right now, but I can’t believe that when we see lots of other states that are severely negatively impacted by the President’s policies and the economies of their states are affected, that they’re not also going to see a deterioration of revenues.

So we don’t know what’s going to happen for Illinois. We certainly have brought a lot of new companies and jobs to the state. But if we get a recession, and I’m hoping we don’t, but if we see one, and it seems like others are experiencing it, then we’re going to have to not only look at the 4% but see what other things we can do to deal with the challenges that are brought upon us by Donald Trump.

…Adding… Darren Bailey…

Darren Bailey today called the anti-Trump rhetoric in Governor Pritzker’s Executive Order compelling state agencies to find at least 4 percent in cost cuts a work of fiction.

Bailey is issuing the following statement:

“Republicans have long called for financial sanity in Illinois,” Bailey said. “The first budget Pritzker signed into law was a $40.6 billion budget. That number has increased by $15 billion in just seven years. To blame President Trump for Illinois’ budget problems is like blaming the White Sox’s losing record on the fans. It is absurd. Real leaders take responsibility for their actions. The budget problems facing our state are a direct result of the Governor setting new spending records every year he has been in office. As Governor, I will bring transparency and accountability to the budgeting process and instead of wasting time applying blame, I will work on the solutions taxpayers in our state deserve. The money being spent at the state level belongs to the people. It is time taxpayers had an advocate for them serving as Governor of the state.”

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Illinois will announce its own vaccination guidelines defying the Trump administration this week, with its immunization advisory group voting yesterday to recommend almost everyone over the age of 6 months get a COVID-19 vaccine this season.

Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Sameer Vohra said yesterday the department would release science-based immunization recommendations for the current respiratory virus season, just as states on the West Coast and in the Northeast have done in recent days.

The separate recommendations are a rejection of the process and conclusions made by federal authorities, including the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions’ Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices. […]

The Illinois advisers voted for a universal adult recommendation that all people 18 years old and up who are not contraindicated for getting vaccines should get a COVID shot this fall, as should children ages six-months to 23-months old, stating that COVID remained a public health problem.

* Fidel Marquez’ sentencing date has been set. Jon Seidel

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Hastings files legislation to combat ‘cost shifting’ practices in insurance rate setting: “Cost shifting is fundamentally unfair,” said Hastings (D-Frankfort). “Illinois families should not be footing the bill for losses in other states. This bill makes sure premiums reflect the real risks here in Illinois, not the costs of events thousands of miles away.” Cost shifting is the practice of passing the costs of out-of-state catastrophes, such as hurricanes, wildfires or floods, onto Illinois policyholders. Hastings’ measure is designed to address this practice by ensuring residents are not forced to subsidize disasters outside the state’s borders. In addition to banning cost shifting, Senate Bill 2692 would set standards to ensure rates are not excessive or unfairly discriminatory. The measure would require that rates reflect actual risk and costs for Illinois consumers. Rates are considered unfairly discriminatory when price differences between policyholders cannot be reasonably explained by differences in risk or expenses.

* Tribune | Protesters gather in Loop Monday to demand Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs divest state investments from Israel bonds: In response, Frerichs, who was first elected in 2014, said in a statement, “As a responsible steward of taxpayer money, it is our job to get the best investment returns for taxpayers. Israel Bonds have been stable investments that have generated among the highest returns in the state portfolio. Israel has never defaulted on Israel Bonds’ payments in more than 70 years. The rates are locked in, so any ratings downgrades do not impact Illinois’ rate of return. It is very important to have strong investments for our state when the Trump administration is disrupting the economy and unlawfully holding back money for Illinois.”

* WCSJ | Governor Pritzker Visits Morris to Talk About New Runway at Airport: Governor J.B. Pritzker, Morris officials and others were at an event this morning commemorating the construction of a new runway at the Morris Airport. […] Morris Mayor Chris Brown said the city received a grant over $10 million for the project a few years ago and bids were approved at a meeting in June.

* PV Magazine | Why are Illinois public schools missing the solar boom?: Just 2% of public schools in Illinois have solar, according to the Illinois Power Agency, which includes Illinois Shines projects that don’t participate in the public schools category but are located on public school-owned land. At the time of publication, Illinois public schools had 14 energized projects and 39 solar projects in the works. Over the program’s lifetime, Illinois Shines’ public school category has supported 91 schools with onsite solar.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Yolanda Talley stepping down after just months as CPD’s second-in-command: Talley took over the job in March after Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling left the post vacant for the first 17 months of his tenure. But this summer, Snelling significantly scaled back Talley’s role and assumed control of the department’s patrol, detective and counterterrorism bureaus. The department never shared why those responsibilities were shifted from Talley to Snelling, though he’s taken a more hands-on approach to the job than many of his predecessors.

* Crain’s | Compromise clears path for citywide ‘granny flats’ expansion: Ald. Bennett Lawson, 44th, and Ald. Marty Quinn, 13th, announced they reached a compromise this morning ending a year-long stalemate that threatened to block any legislation expanding the city’s accessory dwelling unit, or ADU, pilot program to the entire city. Talks were upended this month after Quinn moved to add a union-supported requirement that contractors hire through a certified apprentice program. That provision will remain in the compromise ordinance for new construction.

* WTTW | Repeated Police Misconduct by 272 Officers Has Cost Chicago Taxpayers $295M Since 2019: Analysis: Chicago taxpayers paid $295 million between 2019 and 2024 to resolve lawsuits naming officers whose alleged misconduct led more than once to payouts, according to an analysis of city data by WTTW News. In all, 272 officers were named in at least two lawsuits that were settled by Chicago officials or resulted in a jury verdict paid by taxpayers, according to the analysis.

* Block Club | Advocates Push City Council To Help Chicago’s Struggling Animal Shelter: ‘We Should Do Better’: Chicago Animal Care and Control, or CACC, is the only municipal shelter in the city, which means it takes in any animal that comes through its doors. Without the proper resources, the shelter must sometimes euthanize animals due to overcrowding and lack of resources to adequately care for them. In July, Chicago Animal Care and Control took in 1,842 cats and dogs, or about 59 animals per day, the agency’s public information officer Armando Tejeda told Block Club. That’s a significant increase from 34 per day from 2013-2017, and an increase from 56 per day in May.

* WTTW | Chicagoans’ Right to Compost Could Get a Boost From City Council: In the two years since Chicago launched a composting pilot program, some 7,500 households have signed up to participate. At least twice as many households subscribe to private compost services, and the Chicago City Council could make it easier for people to keep organic waste out of landfill. “Getting into organic collection is where we need to go,” Chris Sauve, deputy commissioner with the Department of Streets and Sanitation, said during Monday’s meeting of City Council’s Committee on Environmental Protection and Energy.

* ABC Chicago | Griffin MSI union members vote to authorize strike: Workers are demanding, what they call, fair wage increases, improvements on vacation and sick time, holiday pay, and paid parental leave. They say more than 90% of workers voted in favor of authorizing a strike if deemed necessary. In response, the museum said in a statement: “We are committed to engaging in dialogue with AFSCME and continue to work toward an agreeable and comprehensive resolution that supports our employees, our visitors and the sustained future of our historic Chicago institution.”

* Sports Illustrated | Jack’s Take: With 6 Games Left, Does Avoiding 100 Losses Really Matter For White Sox?: The White Sox are certainly more aware that they’re on the verge of a third straight 100-loss season, as they take a 58-98 record to New York for three games against the Yankees before wrapping up the season with three road games against the Washington Nationals.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | Wife of ISP trooper Brian Frank, injured in Scott’s Law crash, outraged after same driver arrested for DUI: The wife of state trooper Brian Frank, who was left severely injured in a Scott’s Law-related crash, is outraged after learning the man who caused those injuries with his car is in trouble for his driving yet again. Angel Casillas was booked at the Riverdale Police Department last month for a DUI—the same man who pleaded guilty, apologized, and appeared to show remorse for crashing into ISP Trooper Brian Frank’s squad car in 2021. Along I-57 near exit 127 in Riverdale, Illinois, state police pulled over Casillas in late August.

* Naperville Sun | Police make gun-related arrest No. 16 near Naperville Topgolf: Officers performing a patrol in the Naperville Topgolf parking lot at 3211 Odyssey Court observed cannabis in open view inside an unoccupied vehicle, according to Naperville police Cmdr. Rick Krakow. When Smith and his passengers returned to the vehicle, officers followed him out of the lot and pulled the car over for moving violations, he said.

* Daily Herald | Barrington village board approves Claremont development, overrules plan commission: At Monday’s board meeting, village trustees acknowledged the importance of the commission and reiterated their trust in its decisions. Ultimately, though, they came to the opposite conclusion. “I place great deference (to the commission), but when I feel the decision rendered is not correct, as a member of the village board, we have the final say on either approving or rejecting those recommendations,” village trustee Jason Lohmeyer said.

* Daily Herald | District 204 eyes solar projects, makes progress on referendum work: It’s been nearly a year since voters in Indian Prairie District 204 overwhelmingly approved a $420 million borrowing plan for building improvements, and various schools have seen progress on significant projects. Over the summer, the district made entrances more secure and made other safety enhancements at 11 of its elementary schools. The Aurora-based district replaced flooring in six schools. As part of an energy efficiency program, the district also has started the process of upgrading lighting to LED.

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Marion residents can aid police with new initiative: Residents and business owners can now voluntarily register their surveillance cameras with the department. By registering, participants provide their contact information, enabling police to request video evidence if a crime occurs nearby.

* WICS | Sangamon County sheriff speaks out after drone-assisted arrest: The Sangamon County Sheriff’s Department nabbed the duo using their new drones. The technology isn’t new but it’s new to the sheriff’s office. They started using the three new drones this month. Crouch told me a licensed drone pilot was on duty that night and was able to jump into action. “Knowing the area, knowing there have been past burglaries there, he was able to access that equipment,” Crouch said. “So, although he was not necessarily the first responding unit, he grabbed that equipment and headed that direction.”

* NPR Illinois | UIS ranked as the top public regional university in Illinois: This is the seventh year UIS has gained that designation in the 2026 Best Colleges rankings. UIS also was 10th among public regional universities in the Midwest. “We are honored to once again receive this recognition as the top public regional university in Illinois,” said UIS Chancellor Janet L. Gooch. “UIS is a place where students are empowered to succeed, graduate workforce-ready and turn potential into possibility.”

* WCIA | Monticello bans sale of kratom, Delta THC and other synthetic drugs: “Rather than being reactive, we’d like to be proactive,” said Piatt County Board member Michael Beem. Beem said he worked with Kirkman, the mayor, police department and attorneys to work out. “It’s illegal in Alton and Jerseyville and several other places here in Illinois. And we just sort of looked at what best fit our community,” Beem said.

*** National ***

* AP | Powell signals Federal Reserve to move slowly on interest rate cuts: In remarks in Providence, Rhode Island, Powell noted that there are risks to both of the Fed’s goals of seeking maximum employment and stable prices. But with the unemployment rate rising, he noted, the Fed agreed to cut its key rate last week. Yet he did not signal any further cuts on the horizon. If the Fed were to cut rates “too aggressively,” Powell said, “we could leave the inflation job unfinished and need to reverse course later” and raise rates. But if the Fed keeps its rate too high for too long, “the labor market could soften unnecessarily,” he added.

* AP | Robot umpires approved for the 2026 MLB season as part of challenge system: Major League Baseball’s 11-man competition committee on Tuesday approved use of the Automated Ball/Strike System in the major leagues in 2026. Human plate umpires will still call balls and strikes, but teams can challenge two calls per game and get additional appeals in extra innings. Challenges must be made by a pitcher, catcher or batter — signaled by tapping their helmet or cap — and a team retains its challenge if successful. Reviews will be shown as digital graphics on outfield videoboards.

* CNN | America has a new top-selling beer - Michelob Ultra: The Anheuser-Busch beer has overtaken Bud Light and maintained its lead over rival Modelo Especial in US retail sales by volume for the year-to-date ending on September 14, according to data from Circana seen by CNN. In a press release Monday, Anheuser-Busch attributed the momentum partly to the successful launch of Michelob Ultra Zero, a non-alcoholic version of the beer.

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Audit: IDoC allowing some employees to use leave time for regular shifts, then work shifts at overtime pay rates

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois Auditor General’s report on the Department of Corrections 2022-2024

Department of Corrections (Department) allowed employees to use leave time (i.e., sick, vacation, personal leave, and accumulated holiday time) for their regular shift and then work another shift at an overtime rate on the same day. While there may be instances where this would be a needed solution to a difficult staff coverage scenario, it could be a sign of abuse of overtime and may be against Department policy.

According to the Department, for Fiscal Year 2024 through June 30, 2024, there was a total of 2,958,142 hours of overtime paid at a cost of $151,734,099. Stateville Correctional Center reported 393,832 hours of overtime at a cost of $21,829,406, the highest amount of overtime of any correctional facility. The facility with the next highest amount of overtime was the Dixon Correctional Center with 210,329 hours of overtime at a cost of $10,977,269. We reviewed overtime payments for 20 employees. We selected 10 employees at the Stateville Correctional Center and 10 employees at the Dixon Correctional Center who had the highest amount of overtime paid. As part of our review, we obtained employee annual timesheets and payroll reports. In our review of these 20 employee timesheets, 16 employees (80%) had used a full day of benefit time at least once during the fiscal year on the same day they had worked an overtime shift. For these 16 employees, we identified a total of 150 instances for the two years ended June 30, 2024, in which employees used a full day of leave time (7.5 hours) the same day that they also worked overtime. The instances per employee ranged from 1 to 30 instances during Fiscal Year 2023 and Fiscal Year 2024.

We requested any union agreements that allow overtime pay on the same day that leave time is taken; however, the Department could not provide any union agreements which did so.

The Department’s Overtime Equalization Training Manual requires the Department to not consider employees on benefit time for Master Overtime Equalization if the overtime is occurring during the time of the employee’s absence. This finding was first noted during the Department’s Fiscal Year 2014 State compliance examination, ten years ago. As such, Department management has been unsuccessful in implementing a corrective action plan to remedy this deficiency. The Department’s management team is responsible for implementing timely corrective action on all of the findings identified during a State compliance examination. […]

DEPARTMENT RESPONSE

    o Recommendation implemented.
    o The Department follows the policy listed in the finding by not allowing employees to work overtime on the same shift for which benefit time was used, since the overtime would occur during their absence.
    o The Department plans to revise the Overtime Equalization Manual to explicitly state the circumstances where the policy applies.

Not great management there.

* The Tribune’s Jeremy Gorner asked the governor about the report at an unrelated news conference

Gorner: The Illinois Auditor General released a report today showing that Illinois Department corrections, among other things in the audit, were allowed to work overtime on the same day as they were on paid leave, raising concerns by the auditor general that prison employees were abusing overtime. It’s not the first time the Auditor General has raised overtime related issues with agencies under your leadership, what’s your reaction to this new audit, and what’s your administration doing to remedy the problem?

Pritzker: Well, I haven’t seen this audit, let me say that right up front. But let me also point out that, as you know, these audits are a year or two old when they come out. And you may recall that a couple years ago, every industry was having trouble hiring because there was a labor shortage, including all the departments of the state of Illinois. We’ve rectified that to a greater degree. We’ve hired quite a number of people. I think you’ve seen us announce that. But look, number one is we want our correctional officers to be safe. We want to have enough correctional officers at any given moment that are covering the prisons and all their duties. And so I guess it may be that there was overtime- or that there was some observation by the auditor general that too much money went to the correctional officers. But I have to say they do an amazing job, and we don’t want to cross any of the rules of hiring, but we also want to make sure that we’ve got enough people on the job to do the job when we need them.

Needs a better response.

(Isabel Miller contributed to this post.)

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Broadview mayor pushes back on Homeland Security, Pritzker, Biss

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I walked you through some coverage of the ICE protests in Broadview yesterday. Village of Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson’s response…

Regarding the Department of Homeland Security’s claims that ‘multiple calls for assistance’ were placed to the BPD by the leadership of the ICE facility, that is false. On September 19, regarding Village of Broadview first responder activity, at 11:39 a.m. the Broadview Police Department received a single call from the ICE facility informing us of objects being thrown onto the railroad tracks behind their facility. Per our protocol, BPD contacted Harbor Belt Railroad, which is responsible for track security, to alert their security service and to address ICE’s concerns.

The Pritzker administration’s claim that Broadview has not reached out to the state is false. I reached out for help on September 10 to the governor’s office of government affairs, and later that day I received an email on ‘Know Your Rights Resources.’ Finally, yesterday, September 22, Deputy Governor Bria Scudder scheduled a meeting with me for this Wednesday. Hopefully, this meeting will produce assistance beyond a brochure.

9th CD candidate Kat Abughazaleh thrown by an ICE officer, not a Broadview Police Department officer.

My focus is not on Daniel Biss and his congressional campaign. My focus is on my officers’ safety. On Friday, September 12, the Broadview Police Department issued a request for help with the ICE protests from other police departments via the Northern Illinois Police Alarm System, to which Evanston belongs. Mayor Biss ignored our call for help. Instead of sending officers he arrived with his campaign

* I reached out to the governor’s office for a response.

A spokesperson clarified that a member of the governor’s administration was the one who actually reached to the Broadview mayor last week, not the other way around.

The mayor was asked if she needed anything. “And she said, ‘We’re hanging in there,’” a Pritzker spokesperson said. No request was made for boots on the ground or for the Illinois State Police, I was told.

  16 Comments      


Question of the day

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Sun-Times

A City Council member from Lincoln Park wants to throw a financial bone to Chicago restaurants fighting for survival by allowing them to serve patrons who bring in their dogs — without fear of being fined.

Ald. Timmy Knudsen (43rd) said he drafted the ordinance at the behest of a Clark Street cafe owner whose eat-in French bakery was tied up for hours by “back-to-back” city inspections triggered by a patron complaint about the presence of dogs in the eatery.

Right now, Chicago restaurants are prohibited from serving patrons accompanied by dogs — either indoors or outdoors — unless that customer has a service dog.

Although the ban is widely ignored and sporadically enforced, usually in response to a complaint, restaurant owners allow dogs at their own risk and sometimes face the consequences.

Part of the proposal

Dogs would be limited to one per table. They could only be provided with water — not food or table scraps — either by their owners or by restaurant employees.

Areas where food is prepared would be off limits. Tables, chairs, fixtures and floors would have to be made of hard surfaces that can be washed and sanitized.

If a restaurant employee has contact with a dog or with a surface touched by a dog, the employee “shall immediately wash their hands before continuing any food service work,” the ordinance states.

Any dog not “kept on a leash at all times” or kept “under control by its owner shall be immediately removed.” Restaurant owners could refuse to serve owners who fail to keep their dogs on a leash or “exercise reasonable control” over their pets, or have dogs that behave “in a manner that compromises or threatens to compromise the health, safety or enjoyment” of other customers.

* The Question: Should the state legislature pass a bill to allow dogs in restaurants with limits, or should this decision be left to local ordinances? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please. Thanks…


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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Expected news update

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - ‘Let’s just start a conversation’

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Pritzker EO directs agencies to identify up to 4 percent of appropriations to create a reserve fund ‘to mitigate the impact of Trump’s disastrous economic policies’ (Updated x2)

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Gov. JB Pritzker…

Today, Governor JB Pritzker signed Executive Order 2025-05 directing state agencies to identify up to 4% of Fiscal Year 2026 General Funds appropriations to reserve in order to mitigate the impact of Trump’s disastrous economic policies while working to maintain core services. The action comes as all states, including Illinois, are forced to manage the Trump and Congressional Republicans’ budget bill that threatens state revenue streams and places pressure on Illinois’ fiscal stability.

Trump’s reckless economic policies are wrecking state economies, stifling job growth, and increasing unemployment in key sectors. At the same time, Trump’s tariffs are taxing working families, increasing the costs of everyday goods and disrupting supply chains. This chaos is making it harder for businesses to hire, expand production, or maintain payrolls. In the coming months, Trump’s budget bill will further compound these pressures, creating uncertainty over state revenues as slower economic activity directly affects the amount of revenue collected and ultimately puts funding for core services at risk. To protect the State’s fiscal stability, Governor Pritzker is directing agencies to take proactive steps to brace for these challenges and work to maintain core services.

“Illinois has built a strong economy and proven its fiscal responsibility, but Trump’s disastrous policies threaten to undo that progress,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “Trump and Congressional Republicans sealed one of the largest wealth transfers in American history, stripping health care, food assistance, and other essential supports for working families to fund permanent tax breaks for the wealthy. At the same time, tariffs are hurting our farmers and businesses, slowing job growth, and driving up costs for Illinois families. I’m taking executive action to mitigate the impact of Trump’s economic policies on our state finances, maintain critical services, and preserve our economic stability.”

Under the order, agencies under the Governor will:

    - Conduct immediate budget reviews to identify efficiencies and reductions.

    - Identify up to 4% of General Funds appropriations for FY26 reserves to reinforce state finances.

    - Limit non-essential spending, purchases, and travel.

    - Review all hiring decisions and prioritize only essential roles.

    - Propose programmatic changes or appropriation transfers if FY26 budget shortfalls emerge.

Agencies must submit reports on their progress to the Governor’s Office and the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget (GOMB) within 30 days. Key obligations such as pension payments and K-12 funding, and offices outside the Governor’s authority (i.e. legislative, judicial, and other constitutional offices) will not be impacted. The Executive Order will take effect immediately.

Trump’s Budget and Tariffs Are Undermining Illinois’ Economic Growth

For years, Illinois’ economy has been on the rise. As the nation’s 5th largest economy, the state surpassed $1 trillion in GDP in 2022 and steadily grew revenues. That growth enabled Gov. Pritzker to deliver seven balanced budgets, secure nine credit rating upgrades, and eliminate a massive bill backlog. Now, Trump’s budget bill and tariffs are already undermining growth and threatening the fiscal stability Illinois worked hard to build.

    - Farmers Feeling the Pinch: Illinois’ $13.7 billion agriculture industry is being pummeled by tariff-driven trade disruptions, costing farmers income and jeopardizing jobs across rural communities

    - Gutting of Medicaid and Rising Premium Costs: Cuts to Medicaid and Affordable Care Act (ACA) coverage will remove healthcare access for an estimated 330,000 Illinoisans, raise premiums for those insured, and risk hospital closures in rural areas.

    - State Revenues Under Pressure: Because most state tax codes are tethered to federal law, Trump’s giveaways to the wealthy automatically slash states’ revenues, including in Illinois, potentially reversing years of growth and fiscal stability. These changes
    will affect Illinois as well as other states’ revenue outlooks for the foreseeable future.

    - Cuts to SNAP Threaten Families: Reductions in SNAP and other supports shift costs directly onto states and will leave an estimated 360,000 Illinois families at risk of losing access to these benefits and forced to fend for themselves as costs continue
    to rise.

    - Cooling Labor Market: The August 2025 jobs report confirmed a national slowdown, with only 22,000 jobs created nationwide and unemployment reaching its highest level since 2021. Illinois mirrored that trend, shedding 13,300 payroll jobs in August, the
    state’s largest monthly decline since July 2023 and the fifth overall drop this year with employers squeezed by tariffs and Trump’s anti-immigrant policies restricting access to needed workers, leaving businesses unable to hire, expand, or keep pace with demand.

While no state in the nation — including Illinois — can fully backfill the cuts imposed by the federal government, Gov. Pritzker remains committed to mitigating their impact wherever possible. This action echoes previous budget reserve measures including those implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic, when agencies were asked to conserve resources to maintain fiscal stability amid uncertainty.

Today’s action also builds on Gov. Pritzker’s efforts to address the economic challenges created by Trump’s tariffs on Illinois businesses and workers. Earlier this summer, Gov. Pritzker signed an Executive Order directing agencies to evaluate the scale and impact of Trump’s tariffs in key economic sectors. He has also led trade missions, signed economic cooperation agreements with the United Kingdom and Mexico, and continued engagement with international leaders, including the Canadian Ambassador to the U.S. and the Consul General of Mexico in Chicago.

Click here to read the EO.

…Adding… Crain’s

Pritzker said the Trump administration is hurting economy, which will reduce state revenue, as well as tax changes.

“Tariffs are hurting our farmers and businesses, slowing job growth and driving up costs for Illinois families,” Pritzker, who’s seen as a potential presidential candidate, said in a statement, just a few hours after making similar points in an interview on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “I’m taking executive action to mitigate the impact of Trump’s economic policies on our state finances, maintain critical services and preserve our economic stability.”

One change in federal tax law passed by Congress extended the reduction in the corporate income tax from 35% to 21%, which doesn’t affect states. But it also accelerated deduction of business expenses, such as property and equipment, allowing them to be taken immediately, rather than being spread out over several years.

Warning signs already were flashing for Illinois and other states as they completed their budgets this summer after several years of strong growth in income taxes, as well as planned reductions by Congress in federal funding for food and healthcare.

…Adding… Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

“When President Biden was in the White House, the Governor’s own five-year budget projections showed average annual budget deficits of $4.6 billion over the next five years. Yet, he continued to increase state spending by 40 percent since taking office, despite Illinois’ GDP significantly lagging behind national growth. If he is serious about protecting Illinois’ fiscal solvency, he will start by making the difficult, and sometimes unpopular decisions needed to constrain state spending, reduce taxes, and improve economic opportunity for all Illinoisans, regardless of who is president.”

…Adding… House Republican Leader Tony McCombie…

We warned that this budget was irresponsible and overspent. Stop passing blame, Governor. Illinoisans aren’t buying that recent policy changes in Washington DC are to blame for the decades of Illinois financial mismanagement

  59 Comments      


Illinois Supreme Court rules that Tom DeVore’s law license will be suspended

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune in April

A former Republican nominee for Illinois attorney general, downstate lawyer Thomas DeVore, should have his law license suspended for 60 days for a series of infractions, including having a sexual relationship with a client whom he represented in challenging Gov. JB Pritzker’s COVID-19 restrictions in 2020, a legal disciplinary hearing board has recommended.

DeVore, who became well-known for spearheading legal fights over pandemic mandates before his unsuccessful 2022 run for attorney general, began dating a married Springfield salon owner shortly after sending letters challenging the pandemic mandates to government agencies on her behalf in May 2020, according to an Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission hearing board report issued Monday.

The two began a sexual relationship sometime that June, though the exact date was disputed in testimony before the board at a December 2024 hearing.

DeVore argued the sexual relationship with Riley Craig began after his initial work for Craig ended and before his work representing her in other legal matters began. But the hearing board found evidence showing “an unbroken continuation of his attorney-client relationship,” including DeVore preparing pleadings in Craig’s divorce case filed by a law firm associate.

* ARDC at the time

The Administrator charged Respondent with violating Rules 1.7(a)(2), 1.8(a), 1.8(j), 3.1, 3.4(c), 4.2, 4.4(a), and 8.4(d) by engaging in a conflict of interest and sexual relationship with a current client, entering into a prohibited business transaction with that client, copying the client on an email disparaging her, bringing frivolous chancery and order of protection proceedings against the client with no substantial purpose other than to embarrass, burden, or delay her, knowingly disobeying the automatic stay in the client’s bankruptcy case, emailing the client twice about her bankruptcy despite knowing she was represented by another attorney in that matter, and being sanctioned by the bankruptcy court for his conduct. The Hearing Board found that Respondent engaged in all of the alleged misconduct except the Rule 3.4 charges and some of the Rule 3.1 and Rule 4.4(a) charges. The Hearing Board recommended a 60-day suspension based on the proven Rule violations, substantial mitigating factors, and absence of aggravating factors.

In my own opinion, the ARDC let him off easy, which they do a lot.

* And now comes the Illinois Supreme Court

MISCELLANEOUS RECORD

M.R.032700 - In re: Thomas Guy DeVore. Disciplinary Commission.

Motion by the Administrator of the Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission to approve and confirm the report and recommendation of the Hearing Board. Allowed. Respondent Thomas Guy DeVore is suspended from the practice of law for sixty (60) days.

Suspension effective October 10, 2025.

Respondent Thomas Guy DeVore shall reimburse the Client Protection Program Trust Fund for any Client Protection payments arising from his conduct prior to the termination of the period of suspension.

Order entered by the Court.

More here.

* DeVore said nothing about his suspension on his Facebook page. His followers will remain ignorant.

The failed attorney general candidate and current candidate for Republican state central committeeman did, however, blow his stack at Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski for saying kind words about his recent meeting with DeVore’s arch-enemy Rep. Charlie Meier. Click here to read it. A few not safe for work phrases, but the sweaty cope is utterly hilarious.

…Adding… Must be a quality operation

  25 Comments      


Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois families are sweating through heat and higher electricity bills this summer. Across the Midwest, some relief from energy inflation is in the forecast. Thanks to competitive bidding, dramatically lower costs have resulted compared to no-bid Right of First Refusal (ROFR) proposals.

Here’s the proof:

    $87 Million Saved
    Fairport to Denny Transmission Line (MISO – Missouri)

      • Competitive bidding cut MISO’s initial estimate from $161 million to just $74 million – saving Missouri Customers millions!
    $6 Million Saved
    Reid EHV to IN/KY Border Transmission Project (MISO)

      • Open competition saved customers $6 million upfront
      • Delivered long-term cost savings
    $14 Million Saved
    Matheson–Redbud Transmission Line (SPP – Oklahoma)

      • Competition delivered $14 million in savings
      • Provided a superior engineering solution compared to other proposals

In many cases, incumbent utilities won these bids, proving that when they compete with other qualified builders, consumers win. It saves money and drives better results.

Competition Works.

Legislators should choose competition and protect Illinois families.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ICE officer said his injuries were ‘nothing major’ after deadly shooting near Chicago, video shows. Sun-Times

    - Video obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times shows the blue jeans of the other federal agent were left bloodied and torn, and he told local police that he was “dragged a little bit.”
    - Shortly after the shooting, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security reported the agent “sustained multiple injuries” and was “seriously injured” when he was “dragged a significant distance” by Villegas González’s car as he fled a traffic stop. DHS officials said the agent had opened fire, fearing for his life.
    - The videos raise new questions about the narrative put forth by DHS, which is leading an ongoing deportation campaign in the Chicago area that has stoked fears and sparked protests.

* Related stories…

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* Governor Pritzker will speak at Morris Municipal Airport at 11 am and cut the ribbon on a new health and wellness center at Joliet Junior College at 1 pm. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Illinois committee recommends state part ways with feds on COVID-19 vaccines: The Illinois Department of Public Health Immunization Advisory Committee voted unanimously Monday to recommend updated COVID-19 vaccines for all Illinois residents ages 18 and older. And they voted to recommend the shots for all children ages 6 to 23 months old. The committee also recommended vaccines for children between the ages of 2 and 17 if they are in higher risk groups, or if their parents want them to have the shot. The recommendations aren’t final for Illinois, but the state health department will consider the committee’s votes when releasing its official recommendations for Illinois later this week, said Dr. Sameer Vohra, director of the state health department.

* Sun-Times | Trump’s civil rights boss challenged by appeals court weighing Illinois assault weapons ban: But Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon also found herself being questioned by Judge Frank Easterbrook, who’d joined the 2023 decision that’s helped keep the law in place. On Monday, he asked Dhillon whether a lower court judge’s fact-finding affected her view. When she said it didn’t, Easterbrook retorted, “You don’t think the facts matter.” “Facts, of course, do matter,” she told him.

* NBC Chicago | Durbin’s abortion stance sparks backlash ahead of Archdiocese award: When asked to respond to Paprocki’s comments, Durbin said he does not have much communication with the Springfield bishop. Durbin said he and his family have been actively involved at their Chicago parish for almost 20 years. “My personal feelings on the subject (of abortion) are one thing, and I would discourage any woman in my family from considering that option, but they have to make the ultimate decision. When it comes to public policy, the opportunity for that decision should always be there,” Durbin added.

*** Statewide ***

* WICS | UIUC’s high enrollment of international students bucks national trend: Aisha Price, Recruitment Section Manager at IDOT, said, “Once they receive their Bachelors of Science in Civil Engineering, they can actually work at IDOT full time, as a Civil Engineer Intern.”The program also allows interns to earn service time toward state employee benefits. Officials hope this will encourage more engineers to remain with IDOT after completing their internships. Candidates interested in the program can apply now.

* Tribune | Illinois superintendent salaries often don’t reflect the district’s size, wealth or student performance: A Tribune analysis of 2024 salaries found that at least 18 suburban superintendents in Illinois received higher compensation than Martinez despite overseeing significantly smaller districts. Collectively, these 18 superintendents oversee 117 schools serving 76,000 students — roughly 600 fewer schools and 230,000 fewer students than Martinez.

* ABC Chicago | Illinois could be facing ‘tick invasion,’ experts warn of possible increase in diseases: “We’re sort of on the edge of an invasion,” Northwest Mosquito Abatement District Medical Entomologist Patrick Irwin said. Irwin said of the nearly 250 square miles that he covers, almost half of the ticks they surveillance were positive for Lyme disease. “When we looked at the number of ticks that we got, you know, four years ago, it was very small compared to what we’re seeing now,” Irwin said. A new study out of the University of Illinois shows multiple counties recording three different types of ticks: the lone star tick, the dog tick and the black legged tick.

* WCIA | Dept. of Agriculture looking for help in stopping the spread of an invasive species in Illinois: The spotted lanternfly is native to China — but has been introduced across the United States. Experts say it first popped up in Illinois in 2023 — and still remains. The department said sightings have been on the rise in Cook County — feeding mostly on grapevines.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Stateline | Illinois declined to give sensitive voter data to the DOJ. Some GOP states are doing the same.: It’s a similar response to the one given in deep blue Illinois, where the Illinois State Elections Board, not the secretary of state, oversees elections. “We take Illinoisans’ privacy very seriously; data breaches and hacking are unfortunately common, and the disclosure of sensitive information contrary to state law would expose our residents to undue risk,” ISBE general counsel Marni Malowitz wrote the DOJ on Sept. 2.

* Center Square | Illinois library staff to be trained with overdose antidotes under new law: House Bill 1910 would require all Illinois public libraries to keep a supply of opioid antagonists, such as naloxone, a nasal spray that can reverse an overdose. The law also mandates at least one staff member on duty at all times be trained to administer it. “Jordan Henry, a local high school senior, was inspired by her volunteer work in the Chicago area suburbs, where she sought to change the treatment model for substance use disorder from a ‘punishment’ model to a ‘care’ model,” stated the bill’s sponsor state Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, on social media, noting she worked with Henry to create the law.

* Tribune | First Lady MK Pritzker to discuss architecture, history of Governor’s Mansion in Oak Park: Gert Johnson, co-chair of the association’s development committee, had found a copy of the book at the Oak Park Public Library and was captivated by it. “I was amazed at it. I found it so beautiful,” she recalled. She recommended that they invite Pritzker to talk about the book. Pritzker’s lecture was chosen as a prelude to the 2025-26 Monday Afternoon Education Series, which begins in October.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Millions in loans to replace lead pipes pumping water into Chicago homes remain unspent: Since 2023, the city has drawn $70 million to $90 million of an approximately $325 million federal loan for lead service line replacements that expires next year, White said, adding that the city expects to spend much more quickly in 2026. “We just found out we’ve got hundreds of millions of dollars sitting somewhere with nobody doing anything,” 15th Ward Ald. Raymond Lopez said Monday.

* Tribune | Chicago defends slow pace of notification letters for toxic lead water pipes: The city has mailed out fewer than a tenth of the letters it was required to send by a federal notification deadline in November 2024, acknowledged Patrick Schwer, director of water quality surveillance. But he defended the decision as a practical move to spend more money on fixing pipes. “Spending $10 million just to send a bunch of letters that people throw in their trash seems like a waste of money, especially when that money should be spent on replacing actual lead service lines,” he said.

* Crain’s | How Illinois’ privacy law is costing Chicago billions in data-center deals: Developers and data center operators say that means tackling BIPA, but privacy advocates say the law isn’t the problem. “BIPA has been attacked for all kinds of reasons,” says Ed Yohnka, spokesman for the ACLU of Illinois. “Long-term opponents have found a new coercive argument to weaken BIPA, which is, ‘oh, you’ll lose out on all these data centers.’”

* Tribune | Developer proposes 56-story residential tower for the Magnificent Mile: AMLI still needs to win approvals from city planners, City Council and Streeterville residents before it can break ground. It would be the first new skyscraper built in years on the Magnificent Mile, and could provide a much-needed shot in the arm for the well-known shopping district, which has suffered from a high retail vacancy rate. “A new beautiful building like this will further reinforce the reputation of Chicago’s Magnificent Mile as a tremendous street in the retail world,” said John Vance, a principal of Stone Real Estate.

* Tribune | Rivian off-road course draws thousands of joyriders along Michigan Avenue: “The Electric Joyride allowed us to showcase the capabilities of our all-electric R1S SUV and R1T truck by building an off-road course in the middle of Chicago,” said Rivian spokesperson Kelli Felker. “All EVs are fast on the road, but our vehicles shine both on- and off-road, which sets us apart from the rest.” None of the test drives ventured into the real obstacle course — the actual potholed and traffic-jammed streets of Chicago — but Rivian used the faux Baja terrain to provide an experience of how the quad-motor R1S SUV or R1T truck can do in rugged backcountry.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago house music DJ Ron Carroll dies of heart attack: Ron Carroll was called the “Minister of House Music.”He was also a vocalist and producer. Carroll died of a heart attack on Monday morning. Carroll’s fans say his legacy will live on through the music he created and the community he loved.

* The Athletic | Is this what happiness feels like? Bears and their fans break out of funk: When Ben Johnson was hired, there was a prevailing notion that everything was about to change for the Bears. But, in typical fashion, it all looked so familiar … through two weeks. That’s why Sunday’s 31-14 victory over the Dallas Cowboys at Soldier Field felt so glorious to the fans, players, coaches, front office executives and all of their families. It felt like there were four times as many guests in the bowels of the stadium after the game. A lot of basking in reflected glory was going on, and why not?

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Center Square | White House does not expect arrests of sanctuary mayors and governors: At a press briefing Monday, Leavitt was asked specifically about Evanston Mayor and former state Sen. Daniel Biss, D-Evanston, and other elected officials involved in protests and riots against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. “Unless they commit a crime, I don’t see them being arrested, but if they are violating federal law, if they are violating state law, then, of course, they should be arrested by state and local law enforcement. If they are violating federal law, then they can expect the consequences of that behavior,” Leavitt said.

* Shaw Local | DeKalb County officials largely silent so far on Hanson public records indictment: Current and former DeKalb County officials don’t have much to say yet about the indictment of former DeKalb County Administrator Gary Hanson, accused of illegally destroying public records.

* NBC Chicago | Delayed Cook County property tax bills frustrate residents amid tech issues: The delay stems from a years-long technology upgrade that county officials say is more complex than anticipated, and residents are growing increasingly frustrated. NBC 5 Responds has heard from dozens of taxpayers, including Colette, who wrote: “Why are second installments late every year? It’s a pain in the neck. Playing with my mortgage company, playing with my escrow account, it’s nuts.”

* Shaw Local | Kane County Board member clarifies comments about LGBTQ+ community, shootings: After Young recited the details of recent shootings that apparently involved transgender people, he said: “The Democratic Party embraces this LGBTQ+ group, including a lot of people here on this Kane County Board. They embrace the culture of death. They embrace evil. I want to know when – when – will this group, this evil group, be denounced by any leader of the Democratic Party.”

* Crain’s | Capital One cutting nearly 400 jobs in latest layoffs tied to Discover acquisition: The round of cuts includes 200 employees who work at the former Discover headquarters in Riverwoods, 18 Illinois residents who work remotely, and 165 are non-Illinois residents who report to managers at Riverwoods.

* Daily Herald | Fiery maples and golden ginkgos are some of the fall color showstoppers at Morton Arboretum: “We were seeing some trees that are known to be drought sensitive — Lindens is one that is in a lot of neighborhoods, as well as here at the arboretum, we have a tree called Katsura — and those trees were definitely shedding some leaves early,” Christy Rollinson, the arboretum’s senior scientist in forest ecology, said. Rollinson still expects the peak for colors at the arboretum to be in mid-October, though, when a lot of their maple trees turn. The Illinois Office of Tourism agrees, projecting peak time in Northern Illinois around Oct. 15 on its website.

*** Downstate ***

* Press Release | Ebert Fest: But, as is often said, all good things must come to an end–or, in this case, a new beginning. Thus, we write to share the bittersweet news that 2025 marked the festival’s last year in Champaign-Urbana. We understand that for all of us this marks a big change. Like you, we will miss the excitement of Ebertfest in our community–and Roger’s hometown–and the way it has brought together actors, directors, producers, critics, and the audience in dialogue about film and its importance in our society.

* WCIA | Tilton approves pause on solar projects: During the village board’s meeting on Thursday, Sept. 18, the board narrowly passed an ordinance for a moratorium on commercial solar developments. Three board members voted in favor of the moratorium, while two voted against it. Mayor Bill Wear said the moratorium will give Earthrise Energy the time to apply for a special use permit — while also allowing the village time to figure out the requirements of the permit, like zoning rules and how the project might be decommissioned in the future.

* WCIA | City of Monticello considering ban on THC products: The Monticello City Council is working with the Piatt County Mental Health Center and Piatt County Board to restrict the sale of these items in both the city and the county. The Monticello City Council’s meeting will begin at 7 p.m. at the City of Monticello Livingston Center.

* WMBD | AI metal detector prices unveiled at Peoria Public School Board of Education meeting: The cheapest company, Opengate, costs $173,650, and the schools will then own the metal detectors. In the middle is Evolv, which will cost the board $487,790 for a four-year lease. The third option is Xtract One, which would cost $1,096,000 for a five-year loan.

* WGLT | Bloomington council OKs local grocery tax, increases video gaming licenses: A divided city council voted in favor of the city administration’s recommendation to implement a 1% municipal grocery service tax during Monday’s regular meeting at the McLean County Government Center. “I get nobody likes taxes and any tax, you could argue, is too much,” said City Manager Jeff Jurgens, noting the projected $3 million in revenue from the grocery tax is critical to offsetting the city’s operating deficit originally estimated at around $7.25 million — although revised estimates have lowered that figure to $1.5 million.

* STLPR | ‘Right thing to do’: Steelworkers rally in Granite City for long-term commitments: “We want job security with long-term commitments,” said Jason Chism, a subdistrict director with the United Steelworkers. “The biggest message of all: Let’s get back to making American-made steel here in Granite City, Illinois.” While newly acquired U.S. Steel’s reversal on Friday of its decision to quit processing steel at the mill later this fall served as a short-term win for the steelworkers and the community, the union and its supporters want to build off any momentum they’ve gained and garner the attention of White House.

* Muddy River News | Helsabeck resigns as Quincy Public Library director: Library Board President Jon Hoover would not discuss the decision on the record following the meeting but issued a statement on behalf of the board following the meeting: “In recent months, the Board and Kathleen have engaged in discussions concerning the future direction of the Library. Kathleen’s decision to resign resulted from those discussions as well as her career interests. The Board of Directors’ acceptance of her resignation is not due to any misconduct or performance deficiencies on Kathleen’s part, but rather an acknowledgment that now is an appropriate time to transition.”

* WICS | Drone aids in arrest of burglary suspects at Viper Mine in Williamsville: The drone pilot identified a second suspect, Daniel Gregg Jr., 53, also of Springfield, hiding in a nearby tree line. Deputies, guided by the drone, apprehended Gregg, who had sustained lacerations to his arm. A tourniquet was applied until EMS arrived. Inside the building, deputies found numerous burglary tools and noted extensive damage to the electrical wiring and plumbing system. A Viper Mine employee estimated repair costs at approximately $80,000. Genovese and Gregg were booked on charges of Burglary, Criminal Damage to Property over $10,000, and Possession of Burglary Tools. This incident marks the second successful use of the Sheriff’s Office drone program, following a successful search for a missing person on September 12, 2025.

* NPR Illinois | UIS breaks ground on new Library Commons: The Library Commons is a publicly funded project made possible by a $42.5 million investment from the State of Illinois. The three-story, 52,000-square-foot building will be located between the Student Union and the Health Sciences Building on the UIS quad. The new facility will combine the library, advising and academic support, career development and tech support services into one accessible, student-centered space.

*** National ***

* AP News | Trump makes unfounded claims about Tylenol and repeats discredited link between vaccines and autism: Medical experts said Trump’s remarks were irresponsible. New York University bioethicist Art Caplan said it was “the saddest display of a lack of evidence, rumors, recycling old myths, lousy advice, outright lies, and dangerous advice I have ever witnessed by anyone in authority.”

* NYT | Defense Department Delays Cleanup of ‘Forever Chemicals’ Nationwide: The Pentagon’s new timeline would delay cleanup around military sites by nearly a decade in some cases, according to the latest list, which is dated in March and was posted publicly in recent weeks without an announcement. The delays vary by site. They add up to a significant revision from the Pentagon’s earlier cleanup timetable, which had been released three months earlier, in December 2024, in the final days of the Biden administration.

* AP | Supreme Court will weigh expanding Trump’s power to shape agencies by overturning 90-year-old ruling: The Supreme Court said Monday it will consider expanding President Donald Trump’s power to shape independent agencies by overturning a nearly century-old decision limiting when presidents can fire board members. In a 6-3 decision, the high court also allowed the Republican president to carry out the firing of Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic member of the Federal Trade Commission, while the case plays out.

* CBS | Amazon faces trial this week over whether it duped people into enrolling in Prime membership: When it announced legal action against Amazon two years ago, the FTC said consumers who used Amazon to make purchases were presented with numerous options to subscribe to Prime, but that it was less clear how to buy an item without signing up for a membership. In some cases, the button for Amazon users to complete their purchase did not clearly indicate that they were also agreeing to enroll in Prime, according to regulators.

  10 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Myself and my younger brother Denny Ray were posed on our dad’s Indian motorcycle sometime in the summer of 1965 at our house just outside the Kankakee city limits and very close to my dad’s best friend from First Grade Larry Enz…

Are these the good old days? Make each one of them yours.

* Arlo

And I don’t want to die
I just want to ride on my motorcycle

* What’s going on in your town?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and a campaign update

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* CBS

The Department of Homeland Security has escalated its clash with so-called sanctuary states this week, warning California, New York, and Illinois in letters obtained by CBS News that refusal to honor immigration detainers could trigger federal legal action.

In letters dated Sept. 10, Acting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director Todd Lyons ordered the attorneys general of the three states to declare within two days whether they would comply with “thousands of ICE detainers” lodged against individuals in state custody, according to DHS. Immigration detainers are formal requests by ICE asking local jails and prisons to notify the agency before releasing an individual, and to hold them briefly so federal agents can take undocumented migrants into federal custody.

According to DHS, Illinois and New York formally declined to cooperate. California initially did not respond. On Thursday, Lyons sent follow-up letters obtained by CBS News accusing each state of obstructing immigration enforcement and vowing to enlist the Department of Justice in response. Senior DHS officials tell CBS News the department will tap the DOJ to sue states, blocking future federal funding.

In his follow-up letter to Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, Lyons wrote that the state’s refusal “will result in thousands of criminal aliens being released into Illinois communities,” adding that “ICE will engage with the U.S. Department of Justice and other federal partners to pursue all appropriate measures against you.” […]

The Illinois attorney general’s office referred CBS News to a letter it sent to Lyons on Sept. 12, which also said ICE detainers are “requests” and state and local authorities cannot be forced to comply with them. The office also noted that it doesn’t oversee pre-trial detention in Illinois, so the office “rarely, if ever, receives ICE detainers,” and it can’t “unilaterally override state law” by forcing local police departments to honor ICE’s requests.

“Responding to an ICE detainer based on erroneous information could subject Illinois law enforcement agencies to liability for ICE’s mistakes,” the letter read. “And unfortunately, the number of erroneous detentions by ICE continues to grow at an alarming pace.”

* AP

U.S. Steel reversed course and said Friday that it will continue processing raw steel at its Granite City Works plant in Illinois, nixing a decision that had put the plant on track to stop work in the coming weeks.

U.S. Steel did not explain its reasons for changing course, now barely three months after Nippon Steel sealed a deal with President Donald Trump to buy the iconic American steelmaker by giving the government a say over decisions that affect domestic steel production.

In a brief statement, a U.S. Steel spokesperson said it will continue to supply raw steel slabs to Granite City “indefinitely.”

Initially, it had said ending processing operations at Granite City would allow U.S. Steel to “maintain future flexibility.” On Friday, it said “our goal was to maintain flexibility, and we are pleased to have found a solution to continue slab consumption at Granite City.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Chicago dealmaking ahead of the curve despite slower than expected ramp-up: While mergers and acquisitions activity has remained light this year as potential buyers and sellers wait for borrowing costs to come down and economic conditions to stabilize, Chicago is ahead of the curve. Local dealmakers have been busier than their national counterparts, with data from research firm PitchBook pegging the number of Chicago-area deals announced this year at 318 through August, down just 1.2% from the comparable period of 2024. Nationally, 9,425 deals had been announced through August, a drop of 9.9% from the 10,462 in the first eight months of 2024.

* Crain’s | Compass scoops up 2nd-largest Chicago-area residential brokerage in latest mega-deal: New York-based Compass announced a $1.5 billion acquisition of New Jersey-based Anywhere, a deal that is expected to close in the second half of 2026. Anywhere’s residential real estate brands with offices in the Chicago metro area are Coldwell Banker, Sotheby’s (represented locally by Jameson Sotheby’s International Real Estate), Century 21 and Corcoran. Compass was already the nation’s biggest real estate brokerage by far before announcing this latest deal that will make it a $10 billion firm. It became the leading firm in the Chicago-area market when it acquired @properties Christie’s International Real Estate. The deal, reportedly valued at $444 million, was announced in December and closed in early 2025.

* Tribune | A Tribune photographer describes capturing a compelling image from protests outside Broadview’s ICE facility: On Friday, she was assigned to document a protest outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement holding center in Broadview, where activists have been gathering routinely to show their opposition to the Trump administration’s surge in illegal immigration enforcement actions in the region. During the protest on Sept. 19, federal agents deployed a significant amount of a chemical agent upon protesters who were attempting to obstruct ICE workers and others at the facility. During an ensuing melee after gas was deployed, Wescott made a photograph of former Marine Curtis Evans carrying an American flag amid a cloud of gas in the middle of the confrontation.

* WTTW | Longtime Chicago Publisher, Arts Leader Bruce Sagan Dies at 96: Bruce Sagan, the longtime owner and publisher of the Hyde Park Herald and arts leader who served on the WFMT Radio Committee for more than two decades, has died at the age of 96. The former journalist, who was awarded the National Medal of Arts by President Joe Biden in 2024 for his contributions as an arts leader in Chicago, died at his home Sunday following a brief battle with cancer.

* Block Club | Kennedy Mural Blasted As ‘AI Slop’ By Local Artists, Commuters: The building currently features an organization that commissioned AI-generated art, which was hung about nine weeks ago. Since then, passersby have taken to Instagram and Reddit to slam the use of AI on a mural that would typically be created by local artists. […] The current artwork was intended to highlight Hope Ignites Chicago, a nonprofit whose mission is “to guide and nurture young people in need to become college-educated, career-ready, and community-minded men and women.” The group’s work is important, and it’s unfortunate that the use of AI has distracted from that, artists and commuters told Block Club. Hope Ignites did not respond to critics in an Instagram post about the artwork, and has not returned Block Club’s requests for comment.

* ABC Chicago | Free tours of Obama Presidential Center to start soon in Chicago: The Obama Foundation will start offer free community tours to take a look at the property. People can ask questions, see the renderings, and take a walking tour outside the fence of the construction site. Michael Strautmanis, the chief corporate affairs officer at the Obama Foundation joined ABC7 to talk about the tours.. The next monthly perimeter tour will take place on Tuesday, September 30, at 5:30pm.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Inmates sue McHenry County over jail bus crash in Grayslake: Six inmates who were traveling in a McHenry County Sheriff’s Office bus when it was involved in a crash last year are suing the county, the bus driver and the other driver involved, claiming negligence and carelessness. The crash occurred about 1:30 p.m. Sept. 4, 2024, when 16 inmates were being taken back to the county jail after court hearings at the Lake County courthouse. […] According to the lawsuit, the driver of the sedan “suddenly and without warning made an improper left turn within the intersection and failed to yield the right-of-way and collided with” the bus. The suit claims that the driver of the bus “carelessly and negligently failed to avoid a collision.”

* Aurora Beacon News | Oswego locally extends grocery tax that would have expired at end of year: Trustees as a committee of the whole will meet Oct. 25 to discuss whether the approximately $1 million expected to be generated annually by the grocery tax should remain in the village’s general fund or to transfer some of the revenue to the Water and Sewer Fund to help offset the costs associated with the project to bring Lake Michigan water to Oswego. Oswego’s 2026 proposed budget would have had a $200,000 deficit had the grocery tax not been extended, village officials said

* Aurora Beacon News | Batavia modifying its EV charging station rates: Under the modified ordinance, users of city charging stations will be charged 25 cents per kilowatt-hour for Level 2 charging stations and 50 cents per kilowatt-hour for Level 3 charging stations. Currently, Batavia has just one Level 2 charging station in the west parking lot at City Hall, per the city. But it’s set to get two Level 3 chargers soon: one downtown and another at Batavia High School, a project partially funded by state grant money.

* Daily Southtown | Officials unveil state’s first 24-hour library in Palos Hills: The futuristic-looking library material vending machine sits outside the main entrance of the library, 10331 S. Interlochen Drive in Palos Hills. Teri Wilson, head of Patron Services, said the new feature “gives patrons the opportunity to browse, check out and return materials whether we are open or closed.” “It’s useful to a lot of patrons, especially those who are unable to come in directly during opening hours,” she said. “No need to rush over to retrieve available holds or check out last-minute films for a late-night movie or book read.”

* Daily Herald | With controversial church plan progressing in South Barrington, could lawsuit’s end be near?: “Area N Development and the church welcome the progress recently made with the Village of South Barrington,” the Schaumburg-based organization said in an e-mailed statement. “Both sides have been working to resolve outstanding issues.” South Barrington Trustee Daniel Zierk is hopeful. Village officials can’t be perceived as “dragging our feet” on real estate developments, he said.

* CBS Chicago | Village of Romeoville, Illinois to plant 2,500 new native trees: Many of the trees will be brand-new plantings, but some will be replacements for trees that belong to invasive species — which will be cut down because they are either already dying or are a threat to the environment, the village said. New plantings will fill open spaces where trees have been lost due to storms, or will replace trees that are damaged or dying. They will be planted in residential subdivisions, roadside rights-of-way, and park sites and village owned properties, the Village of Romeoville said.

*** Downstate ***

* WSPY | Former DeKalb County administrator indicted on 15 counts:: A former DeKalb County administrator is being charged with concealing and destroying public records, as well as official misconduct. Court documents accuse 70-year-old Gary Hanson of DeKalb of destroying email records without receiving written permission, as required under state law. Fifteen indictments were filed in DeKalb County Court by a special prosecutor on Friday. Hanson was issued a notice to appear in court on October 14 at 9 a.m.

* Tribune | Setbacks and hope as America’s oldest Black town fights for its survival: The brick building at Madison and South 5th streets is still vacant, still boarded up, still tagged with faded gang graffiti. For the second time in as many years, it’s been slated for a $2.5 million makeover, courtesy of the federal government, that would transform the building — once a grocery store and, later, a skating rink — into a community center for this historic town of 650 people across the Mississippi River from St. Louis. And once again, the project has stalled, its future uncertain, amid partisan spending battles in Washington, D.C., and the looming threat of a government shutdown.

* PJ Star | Who is Cameron Jones? Illinois native chosen for 2025 NASA astronaut candidate class: An astronaut candidate from Illinois was introduced today as one of 10 selected by NASA for potential exploration missions to the moon and Mars. The class will now begin nearly two years of training before being eligible for space missions in 2027. […] Cameron Jones is a 35-year-old native of Savannah, Illinois, according to a press release published by NASA. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in aerospace engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and is a major in the U.S. Air Force.

* Fox2 Now | Former O’Fallon bank executive sentenced in $2M check-kiting scheme: A federal judge has sentenced a former second-in-command Bank of O’Fallon executive to several years behind bars in connection with a $2 million check-kiting fraud scheme. Andrew Blassie, 70, was sentenced to five months and three years in prison on Thursday and also ordered to pay nearly $2.5 million in restitution. He pleaded guilty to charges of bank fraud and interstate transportation of security or funds obtained by fraud in May. Blassie served as the Executive Vice President for the Bank of O’Fallon from September 2023 to September 2024 and stole $1,972,887.67 in a check-kiting scheme while employed, according to his federal indictment.

* Fox 2 Now | Little Mary’s River Bridge in Chester, Ill set to reopen: The restoration project, which cost more than $300,000, included modern safety modifications to the bridge. The bridge was originally closed after a severe windstorm in 2023 that caused damage to its roof, fire suppression system, and video monitoring equipment. The 86-foot-long pedestrian-only bridge, located along Illinois 150 about 4 miles north of Chester, was built in 1854. It is the oldest remaining covered bridge in Illinois and the only one in Southern Illinois.

*** National ***

* LA Times | ICE offers big bucks — but California police officers prove tough to poach: “We’re not trying to pillage a bunch of officers from other agencies,” said Tim Oberle, an ICE spokesman. “If you see opportunities to move up, make more money to take care of your family, of course you’re going to want it.” But despite the generous new compensation packages, experts said ICE is still coming up short in some of the places it needs agents the most. “The pay in California is incredible,” said Jason Litchney of All-Star Talent, a recruiting firm. “Some of these Bay Area agencies are $200,000 a year without overtime.”

* NYT | Kennedy Said to Focus on Unproven Link Between Common Painkiller and Autism: Federal health officials are expected to link rising rates of autism to the use of acetaminophen, the active ingredient in the common painkiller Tylenol, in a report to be released on Monday. Scientists have studied a potential connection for years, but the research so far has yielded inconclusive results. “I think it’s a very big factor,” President Trump told reporters on Sunday, referring to acetaminophen.

* La Times | Predator drones shift from border patrol to protest surveillance: When MQ-9 Predator drones flew over anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles this summer, it was the first time they had been dispatched to monitor demonstrations on U.S. soil since 2020, and their use reflects a change in how the government is choosing to deploy the aircraft once reserved for surveilling the border and war zones. Previous news reports said the drones sent by the Department of Homeland Security conducted surveillance on the weekend of June 7 over thousands of protesters demonstrating against raids conducted by Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The Predators flew over Los Angeles for at least four more days, according to tracking experts who identified the flights through air traffic control tower communications and images of a Predator in flight.

* NBC | Jimmy Kimmel’s show returning on Tuesday, ABC announces: “Last Wednesday, we made the decision to suspend production on the show to avoid further inflaming a tense situation at an emotional moment for our country,” the Walt Disney Company said in a statement Monday. “It is a decision we made because we felt some of the comments were ill-timed and thus insensitive.”"We have spent the last days having thoughtful conversations with Jimmy, and after those conversations, we reached the decision to return the show on Tuesday,” Disney added.

  5 Comments      


How long can this go on?

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As we’ve discussed before, Western Illinois University enrollment has plummeted over the years. The school laid off several employees last year, 57 faculty and 32 staff were let go and the university “opted not to renew contracts for 35 non-tenure-track workers and staff,” according to Crain’s. It’s now working on a reorganization. From Tri States Public Radio last month

TSPR asked [President Kristi Mindrup] if WIU can maintain an enrollment of around 5,000 with a freshman class of that size.

“With new strategies that we’ll have in place, looking at data, working with experts, we are looking at expanding and changing some of our markets and so attracting new students to Western Illinois University is one strategy,” Mindrup said.

She said the administration also has “a number of other strategies” designed to keep students at WIU once they come, and she said they will develop a new strategic plan in the coming year.

Mindrup said WIU can be a great university even with 5,000 students.

“We can leverage the idea of 5,000 students to ensure that students understand that they’re not just a number at Western Illinois University, that they’ll have personalized attention,” Mindrup said.

She said the administration has made adjustments that will allow WIU to be sustainable with a lower enrollment.

But what happens if enrollment falls below 5,000? It’s getting close.

* The spin after the new enrollment numbers were published last week

From 6,332 total enrollment to 5,337 this fall, enrollment numbers from WIU show a decline over the years, though officials noted that enrollment is higher than its forecast weeks earlier of 5,100 students.

“By enrolling more students than our projected number, we can build upon our momentum and allow our student supports to reach further,” according to Vice President for Student Success Justin Schuch. Schuch also said 197 students enrolled at WIU were students who had left the university, but have since returned to finish their degrees.

At that pace, WIU will be below 5,000 next year.

Those 2024 layoffs may have further spooked prospective students and their parents. Freshman enrollment was down 26 percent this year compared to last. And it’s down almost 50 percent since fall of 2021.

Back in 2021, 17.7 percent percent of freshmen who were accepted decided to enroll. This year, that’s down to 8.8 percent.

* Back to Crain’s

The continued drop in students has put strain on the school’s ability to balance its budget. Last year, WIU’s board of trustees approved a round of layoffs as it stared down a $22 million deficit, which it estimated would be reduced to $10 million following the cuts.

I’m a big proponent of the directional schools. Not everyone can move to a far-away university town.

But if WIU winds up with just a few thousand students, then maybe letting area community colleges offer four-year degrees might not be such a bad thing. And I kinda suspect that’s what was at the heart of Gov. Pritzker’s push last spring to allow the colleges to do just that.

  38 Comments      


Broadview protest coverage roundup (Updated)

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Broadview ICE facility is in House Speaker Chris Welch’s district. He had earlier refused comment, but spoke out on Saturday

…Adding… From the Speaker’s spokesperson Jon Maxson…

The Speaker knows this is difficult situation for community leaders who do not want this federal presence, but cannot control the decisions of the Trump Administration. In fact their concern is anything they say will only result in escalation of an already volatile situation. But federal agents tear-gassing people peacefully exercising their constitutional rights is unwarranted escalation. That undemocratic violence needs to be called out for what it is. 

* From the Department of Homeland Security regarding Broadview

Any allegations that ICE Broadview Processing Center is temporarily closing is FALSE. Since Friday, rioters and sanctuary politicians have obstructed and assaulted law enforcement. These rioters have thrown tear gas cans, rocks, bottles, and fireworks at law enforcement, slashed tires of cars, blocked the entrance of the building, and trespassed on private property.

Police under JB Pritzker’s sanctuary jurisdiction refused to answer multiple calls for assistance.

The Prizker administration confirmed that neither Broadview nor Cook County have requested assistance from the Illinois State Police. They also released this statement…

The media needs to use extreme caution before reporting what the Trump Administration is saying given their record of lies, lack of transparency, and failure to coordinate with the state and local law enforcement. It’s completely false to suggest the state or local municipalities have been obstructing federal officials. The state has not received multiple calls for assistance from the federal government and would remind them the importance of coordinating with local law enforcement to protect public safety. Governor Pritzker has been clear that violence is unacceptable and everyone needs to follow the law, which includes federal agents respecting constitutional rights to peaceful protest.

* Back to the DHS statement

So far, federal law enforcement arrested 16 rioters.

Sun-Times

All of the people arrested during Friday’s protest outside the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement processing facility in Broadview have been released.

Brad Thomson, a spokesperson for the National Lawyers Guild, confirmed that 10 protesters were arrested, but he could not say whether any of them had been charged.

Protesters were arrested during Friday’s demonstration after they clashed with federal immigration agents who fired pepper balls and launched tear gas in an attempt to disperse the crowd.

“Our legal observers witnessed federal agents using indiscriminate violence against demonstrators,” Thomson said. “Numerous people suffered physical injuries, including people who required treatment at the hospital.”

* More Sun-Times

Among masked Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and fired-up protesters, Abraham Aguirre stood outside the ICE building in Broadview on Sunday with a red suitcase and dark duffel bag.

He believed his cousin was inside.

Aguirre knocked on the boarded-up windows and handed off the provisions: clothes, personal items, toiletries.

“Not scared, not nervous, but I feel a deep sense of injustice,” Aguirre said in Spanish through a translator.

* Sen. Graciela Guzmán also went to the facility looking for people. Sun-Times

Illinois State Sen. Graciela Guzmán (20th District) used a bullhorn to try to communicate with six federal officers who looked down on the protesters from atop the Broadview facility.

“I am asking for the release of my two constituents, as well as all of the folks that you have detained,” Guzmán said as dozens of protesters gathered behind her. “As a reminder, they are U.S. citizens exerting their freedom of speech as well as the right to protest.”

“Could I just ask for a conversation with someone one-on-one?” she asked. “That’s all I’m asking for, respectfully. Please advise.”

Guzmán repeated the request several times.

The officers, battle-clad and masked, showed no interest. And, over the next half-hour, there was no response from anyone inside the building.

* Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton showed up Friday as well…


* 9th Congressional District candidate Kat Abughazaleh had a much different experience…


* Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, also a CD9 candidate, was gassed…


Block Club Chicago

At least one officer was seen with his gun unholstered and out at his side while he stood near the protesters.

“I’ve seen shocking violence,” said Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, who was out with protesters. “I mean, throwing people to the ground, pepper balls, tear gas. … It seems gratuitous, right? They’re trying to intimidate. They’ve got guys up there on the roof with cameras.

* Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle

The recent incidents at the ICE facility in Broadview are deeply troubling. We have seen reports of people exercising their First Amendment rights being tear gassed, pushed, threatened and pepper sprayed by masked federal agents. Members of the press were also targeted with tear gas.

We have passed a resolution calling out ICE’s callous tactics: stopping people in unmarked cars, refusing to identify themselves, hiding their faces with masks and terrorizing our communities. These tactics are unlawful, they are dangerous and have already cost the life of Silverio Villegas Gonzáles.

Let me be clear: I stand firmly with the residents of Cook County who have organized to support, inform and speak out against these tactics and strongly condemn these violent actions on our residents.

* But not everyone is supporting the protests. Village of Broadview Mayor Katrina Thompson focused her ire on Mayor Biss…

Evanston Mayor and congressional candidate Daniel Biss’ repeated appearances and provocations at the ICE facility in the Village of Broadview, with his videographer and photographer in tow, are helping to fuel the agitation of an already tense situation, which could endanger our police officers, fire fighters, demonstrators themselves, and the surrounding Proviso Township communities. He has lacked the decency and respect to call me or to notify my office when he comes to my community to engage in provocative campaign activities at the ICE facility. He should know better. He’s a mayor. Broadview would be better served by the presence of Evanston police officers helping to bolster our small force to protect demonstrators rather than a candidate creating Instagram videos and giving media interviews boosting his campaign. This is not the leadership that we need in Congress.

No mention of anyone else who was there.

Biss’ response…

The only people endangered right now are our neighbors being abducted off the street and the peaceful protestors being tear gassed by masked federal agents. I encourage the mayor of Broadview to join the many protestors, advocates, and elected leaders in standing up to ICE – instead of facilitating their illegal, immoral, and dangerous tactics.

* Another person who believes the protesters are doing more harm than good, via ABC 7

Ana Nikolic, with the International Chaplain Alliance, believes that some protesters are making it more difficult for families to get information from the Broadview Processing Center.

She said she’s been there every day since Wednesday, trying to get an update on the status of someone who was detained for a family she’s helping.

She was outside the facility on Friday when protesters blocked the entrance of the driveway and white smoke and pepper bullets were deployed to disperse the crowd.

“The big challenge with protesters attacking ICE is that they have closed the doors for lawyers, closed the doors for families, closed the doors for ministers, for chaplains like me,” Nikolic said. “Because if you’re behind me, they are not going open the door….so when they see you’re not with them, of course they will open the door and help you as much as they can.”

* Meanwhile, in Naperville

Neighbors told [homeowner Bobby Fischer] masked agents, who they believe to be ICE, arrived at his Naperville home around noon and targeted the crew working on his roof.

“They had to jump off the roof, because to trap them, the agents knocked down the ladders so they could not leave the roof and basically they said either jump or stay up there,” Fischer said.

Fischer said five of the six crew members jumped down and ran. He said one of his neighbors told him one of the crew members injured his leg before he was detained.

What shocked Fischer the most was how agents allegedly detained another crew member who ran out of fear.

“My neighbors witnessed two agents chasing one guy down the street in a residential area, guns drawn,” Fischer said. “A roofer running for his life.”

Also

Fischer later learned from the owner of the company that all five of the detained workers were documented.

“This is just people trying to make a living and you’re harming us, the homeowners,” Fischer said. “This isn’t a business, this isn’t you raided a factory. This is a home that you surrounded with guns. I have children I don’t want that here. There was no reason for it to be here.”

Discuss.

  44 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for some background. Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton’s Senate campaign…

Today, U.S. Senate Candidate Juliana Stratton released a new video, calling on her opponents, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi and Congresswoman Robin Kelly to join her in refusing corporate PAC money in the Senate race.

During their time in office, Congressman Krishnamoorthi and Congresswoman Kelly have accepted a combined sum of more than $7 million dollars from corporate special interests. So far, Juliana is the only viable candidate in the race to reject corporate PAC money, a clear differentiator between her and the rest of the field.

The video


Transcript…

Corporate greed is squeezing Illinois families at every turn, from our health care system to our housing market to the halls of Congress.

Corporations don’t care about the middle class. They don’t care if your family can afford a home, put food on the table, or afford your medication. They only care about their bottom line.

And for too long, DC politicians have let these corporate overlords go unchecked – looking the other way while pocketing money from these same special interests.

Let’s call that system what it is: broken.

My opponents have taken millions of dollars each from corporate PACs. How are Illinoisans supposed to believe that politicians have their best interest at heart when they’re benefiting from this broken system?

It’s time for that to change. I’m not taking a cent of corporate PAC money in this race because I answer to Illinoisans, not special interests.

Congressman Krishnamoorthi and Congresswoman Kelly, I’m challenging you to join me in rejecting corporate PAC money in this Senate race.

Let’s put Illinoisans above corporate interest.

* SEIU is backing Anthony Driver Jr., the SEIU Illinois State Council director, in his campaign for the 7th Congressional District. Sun-Times

Anthony Driver Jr., a community organizer and head of the Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability, has garnered the support of a powerful union in the 7th Congressional District race, his campaign announced Saturday.

The Illinois branch of the Service Employees International Union endorsed Driver in his run for the 7th Congressional District seat. The district encompasses Chicago’s West Side, and stretches from west suburban Hillside into the Loop and down to the South Side. SEIU Illinois represents more than 150,000 janitors, healthcare, childcare and other public employees.

Driver is currently the executive director of the SEIU Illinois State Council.

* Austin Weekly News

An Oak Park resident who owns his own law firm, Richard Boykin announced his candidacy [for the seventh Congressional District seat] on Sept. 6, hoping to take over the position of the man whose congressional career he helped launch. 

Boykin was Davis’ chief of staff from 1997 to 2006, starting when Davis was first elected to the position. Boykin was responsible for 22 staff in Chicago and Washington D.C. and served as Davis’ liaison to federal and local officials. 

“All of his legislative activities and successes for the first 10 years, I helped lay a foundation for his 30-year career in Congress,” Boykin said. […]

He also worked for Carol Moseley Braun — the first African-American woman elected to the U.S. Senate and the first female U.S. senator from Illinois — and Bobby Rush, a congressman from 1993 to 2023 who co-founded the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party. Boykin has worked with members and staff of the Congressional Black Caucus on multiple issues.

* Evanston Now

Chicago community organizer Miracle Jenkins, one of nearly 20 candidates vying to replace Rep. Jan Schakowsky in Congress next year, suspended his campaign Sunday evening, announcing he’s endorsing Bushra Amiwala of Skokie in the 9th Congressional District Democratic primary.

Jenkins, who helped lead Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign in Illinois, is the first candidate to back out of the crowded primary, netting Amiwala a key endorsement ahead of November’s deadline to gain ballot access. He launched his campaign in mid June, when just a handful of candidates had joined the race. He previously served as a community organizer for Schakowsky after graduating from Evanston Township High School.

Amiwala, a member of the Skokie School District 73.5 Board of Education, announced the endorsement Sunday evening, just days after she joined two other high-profile candidates, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss and content creator Kat Abughazaleh, in Broadview for a protest against the federal immigration processing facility Friday, which led to agents tear gassing the candidates along with dozens of other demonstrators.

“Jenkins ran a laudable campaign that challenged the status quo of gross economic inequality in our district,” Amiwala said in a news release Sunday night, writing she was “honored to accept his endorsement.”

* More…

    * WJHL | Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly Endorses Neil Khot for U.S. Congress at Campaign Office Grand Opening: At the grand opening of Neil Khot’s new campaign office in Schaumburg on September 14, Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly announced his endorsement of Neil Khot, Democratic candidate for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District. […] Neil Khot expressed gratitude for the Mayor’s support: “I’m honored to have Mayor Dailly’s trust and endorsement. Schaumburg is a cornerstone of this district, and I’m committed to fighting for working families, protecting Medicare and Social Security, and ensuring government works for the people — not just the political elite.”

    * WGLT | U.S. Army veteran wants to continue oath of service in 16th Congressional District: Despite the 16th Congressional District having no Democratic candidates in the 2024 general election, there is no shortage of candidates clamoring for the nomination in the 2026 midterms. Brendyn Morgan of Chicago is a U.S. Army veteran and one of three Democratic candidates running in the district. […] “I took an oath to this country … I’m still young, like I said I just turned 30, and in my eyes that oath, I’m not finished serving it,” he said. “Right now, I see people living in poverty, I see people living in distress and I see, quite frankly, a lot of inaction from Congress, specifically in Illinois’ 16th district with our current representative Darin LaHood.”

    * Journal Courier | Bowlby announces run for Mary Miller’s congressional seat: Judy Bowlby of Riverton held a news conference Thursday to announce her intent to seek the Republican nomination for Illinois’ 15th Congressional District. She made the announcement in the House of Representatives chamber at Springfield’s Old State Capitol State Historical Site. Bowlby is the fifth person to declare a run for Miller’s seat and the first person to challenge her as a Republican. Bowlby invoked Abraham Lincoln’s “A House Divided” speech, which he delivered in the Old State Capitol, to explain why she is running for office. She described the state of the nation as divided against itself, decrying the “absence of cooperation” between government officials and saying most people are “stuck in the middle” between far-right and far-left stances, not identifying with either the Democratic or Republican parties.

    * Patch | ‘These Workers Do Their Jobs, But Dist. 130, You Need To Clean Up Your Act Today.”: State Sen. Willie Preston (18th District), who is running for an open seat in the Illinois 2nd Congressional District, said he started his career as a union janitor. “So I know what it feels like to go to work, work hard and have no respect at the end of the day,” Preston said. “Let me be clear to Dist.130. These workers do their jobs, but you need to clean up your act today.”

  21 Comments      


News coverage roundup: Former Gov. Jim Edgar remembered for integrity and bipartisanship

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* CBS Chicago

Calling his impact on the state of Illinois “incalculable,” hundreds came to Springfield in Saturday to say their final farewells to former Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar.

The funeral service was held at Central Baptist Church in Springfield.

In a world of deep partisanship, Edgar was lauded by his fellow Republicans and also by Democrats as a leader with great integrity.

“I’ve been around politics for 35 years,” former U.S. Rep. Ray LaHood said at the funeral. “Jim Edgar is the gold standard for public service, for honesty, and for integrity.”

Click here to watch the full memorial service.

* The Tribune

Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, who consulted Edgar for advice, said the former governor’s “values and judgment and service have been a model to follow” and called the former governor “an icon of Illinois.”

“Jim Edgar believed deeply in our individual and our collective responsibility to one another — that regardless of where we live, what we look like or who we voted for, our foremost obligation is to serve one another. That is how he governed,” Pritzker said.

“As governor, Jim was a steady hand and a comforting, calming presence for our state. Through times of crisis, he could walk into a room of people he disagreed with, hold on to his strong views and still listen and learn with a full heart. All of these characteristics, so inherently Illinois, made Jim a force for unity, with a unique ability to bring people together despite their differences. These are lessons that I think all of us could use right now,” he said.

Pritzker added that “earnestness, honesty, unwavering loyalty to the people he served have made Jim Edgar an icon of the great state of Illinois, no matter what party we belong to. His impact is incalculable, and it changed our state for the better.”

Rev. Dr. Kent Lolling of Laurel United Methodist Church, who officiated the memorial ceremony, said Edgar had specifically requested Pritzker offer remarks at his funeral because “he believed it was important to show that bipartisanship still matters, that it still lives in Illinois and in America.”

* WBEZ

Edgar was known for his willingness to work across the aisle. Edgar, a moderate Republican, supported abortion access while also being a fiscal conservative. Last year, he endorsed Democrat Kamala Harris in her bid for president over Donald Trump.

Felicia Norwood said Edgar never asked her what political party she belonged to. She was brought on as his senior policy adviser at the start of his first gubernatorial term in 1991. Norwood called him “demanding, but very fair.”

“He asked me whether I had a passion for service,” Norwood said. “We worked together for long hours, tackling some of the state’s biggest challenges as a team. We challenged each other.” […]

Several political luminaries attended the Saturday service, including former Gov. Pat Quinn, and Jayne Thompson, the widow of former Gov. Jim Thompson. Also attending were Rep. Nikki Budzinski, a Springfield Democrat, as well as Democratic and Republican leaders from the state Legislature.

* WQAD

As Illinois mourns the passing of former Gov. Jim Edgar, the program he founded more than a decade ago continues to carry his vision of leadership.

Edgar launched the Edgar Fellows Program in 2012 at the University of Illinois, aiming to strengthen public service through ethics, civility and bipartisan cooperation. Executive Director Janet Mathis said the program was born after Edgar was asked to create a course on government ethics. Instead, he pushed for something broader: a focus on leadership. […]

To date, more than 500 Illinois leaders have completed the program. Alumni include U.S. Reps. Darin LaHood and Nikki Budzinski, along with State Sen. Mike Halpin and Illinois House Minority Leader Tony McCombie. […]

Mathis said Edgar remained closely involved in the program until his final months, often spending the first day of the leadership institute sharing his lessons on compromise and honesty in government. She said the program will continue as a living tribute to his leadership style.

…Adding… Gov. Edgar’s hearse was outfitted with 1996 governor’s plates…

* More…

    * Capitol City Now | A bipartisan showing at Former Gov. Jim Edgar’s funeral, just the way he would have wanted: The service brought together the congregations of the Central Baptist and Laurel United Methodist Churches and choirs. Stang called Edgar “a truly remarkable individual” — sentiments echoed by the political leaders and family members who spoke, like Governor JB Pritzker.

    * NYT | Jim Edgar, 79, Popular Moderate Republican Governor of Illinois, Dies: Perhaps Mr. Edgar’s greatest accomplishment was grappling with a budget deficit of almost $1 billion, the largest in the state’s history, which he inherited on assuming office in 1991. Saying the state’s finances couldn’t tolerate a repeal of a temporary income tax increase, he instead made it permanent. Angering Democrats, he called for cuts in social spending and in the state work force, among other budget-trimming moves, in an effort to preserve funding for education. The speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, Mike Madigan, a Democrat, wasn’t having it. Mr. Edgar eventually won over Mr. Madigan. “By the end of the session, when we were in overtime, about every day he’d be down in my office, and we’d have lunch together,” Mr. Edgar recalled to Illinois Public Media in 2015. “We knew we were going to have to compromise.”

    * ABC Chicago | Former Illinois Governor Jim Edgar laid to rest following funeral services: His son and daughter spoke at the service, quoting the movie “It’s A Wonderful Life.” Edgar’s son said that “in true Jim Edgar style” they were giving him the last word, and a video played in which the former governor reflected on his life, saying he had “a good run.”

    * NBC Chicago | Former Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar laid to rest Saturday: “It is with heavy hearts we share the news that our beloved husband, father and grandfather Jim Edgar passed away this morning in Springfield from complications related to treatment for pancreatic cancer,” a family statement read Sunday. “We are deeply grateful for the love, support and kindness so many have shown to Jim and our family over these last several months.”

    * Alton Telegraph | Remembering Jim Edgar’s Alton bookstore visits after his death at 79: “On Dec. 23,” the letter began, “my book shop, The Second Reading, hosted a most distinguished patron, Gov. Jim Edgar. A private helicopter landed the governor in Riverfront Park, where a waiting car brought him to my place. As though a visit from our state’s chief executive wasn’t extraordinary enough, Edgar even purchased some books, including a collector’s quality first edition about the 1916 Irish Easter Sunday Uprising.” After so many years, I don’t recall if “Easter Sunday” is my fault or that of the editor. The 1916 Irish uprising occurred on Easter Monday — the day following Easter. This event heralded the beginning of Ireland’s struggle for independence from Great Britain. “I might add,” my letter continued, “that, a bit later, he also visited Books and Co., where, I have been informed, he purchased yet more books.”

    * SJ-R | With a clear-eyed approach, Edgar had a governance style ‘you just don’t see anymore’: Longtime State Journal-Register political writer and columnist Bernard Schoenburg recalled spending a day with Gov. Jim Edgar during his 1994 campaign. As they were flying from Chicago to southern Illinois, Schoenburg recalled that Edgar was pointing to different counties, breaking down the percentages of Democrats and Republicans in each and ticking off who the county chairpersons were.

    * Tribune | Photos: Former Gov. Jim Edgar funeral service held after lying in state

  2 Comments      


What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois confronts skyrocketing electric bills, legislators are on the hunt for solutions that provide relief as quickly as possible. Battery energy storage is our best and most cost-effective solution.

But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions.

Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 million in 2024.

Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year.

Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass the Clean and Reliable Grid Act this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

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Edgar knew how to win races in Illinois and worked hard to keep his legacy of ‘civility, compromise and compassion’ alive

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Jim Edgar ran a brilliant campaign for governor in 1990. He set the template for every winning statewide race since then by focusing on the importance of independent suburban women.

The Republican Edgar defeated a Catholic Democrat — Neil Hartigan — in that race, with a boost from the National Abortion Rights Action League’s endorsement. That endorsement most definitely helped him with suburban women, who were just starting to lean Democratic.

Every successful high-profile statewide candidate since then has focused on winning the votes of suburban women. No major statewide candidate has won without them. Edgar broke the code. And 35 years later, his approach still works.

Edgar also realized property taxes were a much more important issue than the income tax in the suburbs and everywhere else. Hartigan campaigned on a pledge to repeal a temporary state income tax surcharge for education and local government. Edgar said he’d keep the surcharge in place and tackle property tax increases instead, understanding those property taxes were more important to voters than a half point on the income tax.

The Illinois Education Association, which represented (and still does) lots of suburban and Downstate teachers, endorsed him over the Democrat Hartigan. After he was elected, Edgar forced an overtime session that eventually produced a cap on suburban property tax increases.

Statehouse denizens often referred to Edgar as “Governor No” back in the day.

Edgar had succeeded Gov. Jim Thompson, who tried for 14 years to be everything to everyone. Edgar inherited a ballooning budget deficit and after he was elected insisted the state had to live within its means.

That insistence meant repeated clashes with lefty activists, many of whom loudly pounded on the Illinois House doors in protest during an Edgar budget address announcing his proposed Medicaid cuts. At the time, Medicaid costs were rising far faster than state revenues, and Edgar insisted something had to be done.

“Governor No” was often better at blocking things than passing things, as evidenced by his eventual abandonment of an election-year push in 1994 for an assault weapons ban.

But he remained popular among the electorate, and he hammered his ’94 Democratic opponent Dawn Clark Netsch’s campaign pledge to increase income taxes to reduce property taxes, cruising to a 30-point victory.

Edgar had actually favored a tax swap plan since the 1970s, and he introduced his own variation on the Netsch plan after he was reelected.

But because of the 1994 national Republican landslide and a Republican-drawn legislative map, the Republicans held the majority in both legislative chambers, and his proposal went down in flames. (He said at the time he had polling that showed his plan was popular, but when I pressed him for his numbers, he said I made more money than he did so I should do my own poll.)

He put the state on a path to pay down its pension debt, agreeing to a plan that didn’t kick in with higher payments until long after he would be gone from office.

But Edgar realized that something was better than nothing, and even though the plan was flawed and the state is still struggling all these years later to pay down its pension debt, Illinois has mostly remained on track.

Edgar increased K-12 education and higher education funding; implemented an “instant” background check on gun buyers; and left the state with a $1.2 billion budget surplus (almost $3 billion in today’s dollars). That surplus was almost immediately spent when his successor George Ryan took office and was eventually restored under the current governor.

Since leaving office, Edgar has focused on promoting bipartisanship and leadership building with his tremendously successful Edgar Fellows program, which trains new politicians (mainly legislators) to govern and work with others.

Edgar spoke out frequently against the rightward drift of his beloved Republican Party, eventually parting ways with the GOP because of Donald Trump. In a speech last May, he also stressed what he called “the three C’s.”

“Civility, compromise and perhaps most important, particularly today, is compassion.”

By then, Edgar had acknowledged he’d been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. “I look forward to seeing you next year,” he told his audience in May, “And I look forward to being seen next year.”

Jim Edgar passed away this month. I think Darren Bailey (yes, Darren Bailey) probably said it best after Edgar’s death was announced: “He was a man of integrity and strong moral character who dedicated his career to public service. His contributions to Illinois will not be forgotten.”

I couldn’t agree more.

  22 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Retailers like Shayne in Joliet enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Nuclear power, battery storage funding at center of energy policy debate. Capitol News Illinois

    - After twice failing to pass an energy reform package this year, lawmakers and renewable energy advocates are aiming to reach a deal in time for a brief legislative session in October.
    - “This is still a work in progress,” Sen. Steve Stadelman, D-Caledonia, said at a Thursday subject matter hearing on the bill. “Should the bills come back before the Senate, we will have another subject matter on the legislation or we could craft a different proposal in another bill.”
    - Stadelman, who chairs the Senate Energy and Public Utilities, noted at the end of that hearing a final package could come “this fall or next spring.” He also said the committee will hold another hearing in early October.

* Related stories…

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*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Protesters clash with agents at Broadview ICE facility as official denies its closure: In a statement to the Sun-Times on Sunday afternoon, Assistant DHS Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the Broadview facility wouldn’t be closing, but she didn’t immediately respond to questions about whether operations there would be changing in response to the protests. McLaughlin also confirmed 16 protesters in total had been arrested at the Broadview facility this month. A state official told the Sun-Times that Broadview police and Cook County sheriff’s haven’t asked the Illinois State Police for help despite DHS claims to the contrary. Matt Hill, a spokesperson for Gov. JB Pritzker denied the state has received multiple calls for assistance and said the Trump administration shouldn’t be trusted “given their record of lies, lack of transparency, and failure to coordinate with the state and local law enforcement.”

* Tribune | Brace for impact: Tax hikes loom for South, West side homeowners: Thomas saw a nearly 60% increase in his assessment, but it could have been a lot worse, given what’s happening to many of his neighbors. More than 37,000 residential properties on the South and West sides saw their tax assessments more than double between 2023 and 2024. In parts of Englewood, Roseland and just east of Thomas in North Lawndale, the median homeowner saw their valuation increase between 119% and 160% — far more sharply than anywhere else in the city, according to the Illinois Answers and Tribune analysis.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WJBD | State Representative Blaine Wilhour running for another term: 110th District State Representative Blaine Wilhour will be running for re-election next year. Wilhour made the announcement while participating in the Marion County Republican Party’s petition signing event in Salem Wednesday afternoon.

* Press release | AG Raoul wins court order protecting SNAP recipients’ sensitive information: In a lawsuit brought by Raoul and a coalition of 20 other attorneys general and the state of Kentucky, the District Court for the Northern District of California ordered a temporary restraining order preventing the Trump administration from enforcing its demands that states turn over the personal information of all SNAP applicants and recipients. “I join others in our coalition in applauding the court in this decision, which ensures SNAP recipients can receive the benefits they rely on without the concern of their private personal information being involuntarily shared outside the program,” Raoul said. “SNAP provides access to food for millions of Illinois families while also supporting thousands of local grocers, farmers’ markets, and other merchants who are critical to states’ economies, and I will continue to protect their privacy.”

* Democrat Nick Uniejewski is running against Sen. Sara Feigenholtz in the 6th District. Press release…

Carbondale City Councilmember Clare Killman announced her endorsement of Nick Uniejewski for State Senate in Illinois’ 6th District, citing his record of coalition building, leadership, and bold policy ideas as what Illinois needs right now—especially on housing.

“Nick Uniejewski is already doing the work of a state leader,” said Killman. “He doesn’t just talk policy; he brings people together to make it happen. On housing especially, Nick understands the only way to win real change is through collaboration, and that’s exactly the kind of coalition builder we need in Springfield.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | A culture at risk: Chicago’s street vendors quietly disappear from familiar corners during ICE surge: On Sept. 7, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents detained a flower peddler with no known criminal record. Concerned bystanders recorded his arrest and the video went viral. He was deported a few days later. Five days later, images of federal immigration agents arresting two palateros selling popsicles in Mount Prospect circulated on Facebook, garnering hundreds of comments. Many of them said they had bought a popsicle from the vendors a day ago, or that buying from those paleteros had been a long-standing tradition for families in that neighborhood.

* An update on Paul Vallas’s lawsuit alleging a consultant defrauded his failed mayoral bid in Chicago. People’s Fabric

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools rebuffs Trump administration’s threat to cut magnet school funding over diversity efforts: A letter sent by CPS’ Acting General Counsel Elizabeth K. Barton called the department’s demands outlined in a letter the Trump administration sent Tuesday as “unreasonable and untenable” and requested 30 days to respond. Craig Trainor, the acting assistant secretary of civil rights in the U.S. Department of Education, said his office found CPS violated anti-discrimination laws and would lose grant dollars through the Magnet School Assistance Program. But Barton wrote back that the district’s “policies and practices are prescribed by state and local law, and CPS remains in compliance with those laws.”

* Crain’s | Inside the UIC medical simulation preparing students for health care realities: Actors behind two-way mirrors voice the patient’s symptoms, complaints and reactions, as students take turns with exams and consulting with colleagues, or with actors playing doctors or nurses in on the consultations. The institute has five bays with mannequins, as well as more available in simulated operating rooms.

* Tribune | ‘This guy was scary’: Ex-Chicago cop, Outfit hitman Steve Mandell dies in prison: While never one of Chicago’s more high-profile mob figures, Mandell, who once went by the name Steven Manning, has a story that’s unique even in the city’s heavily chronicled underworld. Not only was he the first former law enforcement officer to ever be sentenced to Illinois’ Death Row, he later became a celebrated exoneree and won a landmark $6.5 million judgment against the FBI for framing him — only to have the judge reverse the jury’s award.

* Tribune | Fifty years ago, Richard J. Daley sought an early remap of congressional districts – and lost: In 1975, the next scheduled reassessment of Illinois’ congressional districts was still five years away. But Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley didn’t want to wait. The way the mayor saw it, the existing map was harming his beloved Chicago and keeping his political organization from expanding its influence into the suburbs. So he had a friendly state legislator propose a new map, years before the next federal census would normally trigger the process.

* Block Club | Swimmers Return To Chicago River For 1st Time In A Century, Marking Waterway’s Dramatic Transformation: But today, the Chicago River is cleaner than it was decades ago, and Sunday marked the first time an open-water swim has been held in the river since 1926. Organized by nonprofit A Long Swim, the event celebrated the city’s progress toward cleaning the river while raising money for ALS research and youth swim education programs. For Olivia Smoliga, a two-time Olympian from suburban Glenview, the opportunity was too historic to pass up. After finishing her one-mile race in first place, she felt ecstatic to be part of history.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Oath Keepers’ founder convicted as part of Jan. 6 riot to speak to GOP-tied group, creating conflict in Geneva: Rhodes’ event is part of a series of talks, titled “Pints & Politics,” sponsored by the Geneva-based Three Headed Eagle Alliance, a group headed by a member of the Illinois GOP State Central Committee. […] While Rhodes indeed did not enter the U.S. Capitol with the mob of Trump supporters who sought to disrupt the certification of Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory, a federal jury convicted the Army veteran and Yale Law School graduate of seditious conspiracy and other crimes for his role in fomenting and preparing for the violence in Washington.

* Daily Herald | Schools, advocates work to reassure parents, students amid growing fears over ICE raids: At West Chicago Elementary District 33, school principals reported buses were running half full on Tuesday, Superintendent Kristina Davis said. “And we had between 15% to 25% absenteeism, which is very much out of the normal for us,” Davis said. “My understanding from the principals was that the primary reason for many was fear of leaving their homes.”

* Daily Southtown | Will County OKs addiction recovery center at horse farm in Crete Township: The program will serve up to 14 men. The foundation intends to keep one single bedroom unoccupied to offer a short-term refuge for anyone who may come to them in crisis, documents indicated. There is no set departure date unlike most recovery programs, but many men are anticipated to stay at the facility and work the farm for anywhere from six to 18 months, attorney Nathaniel Washburn said. The longest a person stayed at a similar recovery facility was 20 months, he said. “Everybody’s recovery journey is different,” he said.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Bloomington and Normal claim McLean County has defaulted on shared sales tax agreement: Now, according to documents WGLT obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, the town and city have formally accused the county of defaulting on the decade-old intergovernmental agreement on use of the shared revenue. “Given the historical lack of transparency and critical concerns, which are only exacerbated by recent reports and information now coming to light, the City and Town have exhausted efforts to address these concerns. The Town and City have a strong interest in ensuring the Pledged Revenue is used effectively and appropriately as intended by the IGA and therefore must insist the County cure these defaults without further delay,” wrote Bloomington City Managers Jeff Jurgens and Normal City Manager Pam Reece on Sept. 11 in the notice of default.

* WGLT | Bloomington to consider adding local grocery tax and more gambling licenses: However, Bloomington also has been laboring under a structural deficit, and the city now says such a tax would prevent the loss of $1.5 million in revenue it gets from the state version of the tax. “We know no one likes taxes, and we do not make this recommendation lightly. But maintaining this modest 1% tax allows us to protect services and move forward with investments that strengthen our entire community,” City Manager Jeff Jurgens said in a statement. “Without this revenue, we would be looking at deeper cuts to services and no ability to address major projects.”

* WCIA | Urbana’s Sola Gratia planting roots, growing for the future: More than 80 volunteers planted over 400 fruit and nut trees in Urbana over the weekend. The project took place at Sola Gratia farm on Saturday. Organizers said it was for their edible windbreak project — which they hope will serve multiple different purposes. Sola Gratia plans for the trees to protect crops from the wind, produce food for multiple generations, serve as a wildlife habitat, aid with soil and water conservation, and help to absorb carbon.

* IPM Newsroom | ‘Quite remarkable’: The Farm Aid benefit concert, which started in Champaign, celebrates 40 years: The first show included performances from Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, Loretta Lyn and many more. Jennifer Fahy, the current Farm Aid co-executive director, said the three had no idea they were founding a legacy. “Willie was very aware of [the farm crisis] from his background, growing up in agricultural areas of Texas, and also from traveling the country, as he does to this day, even at the age of 92,” Fahy said.

* BND | Southern IL road closes to allow 20-plus snake species to cross: The snakes spend the winter in limestone cliffs that overlook the road, and many of them summer in LaRue Swamp across the road. Some likely go farther, possibly down to a nearby river, Vukovich said, but more research is needed to know exactly how far and where the snakes are traveling.

*** National ***

* NBC | Pentagon places further restrictions on journalists’ access: Journalists who cover the Defense Department at the Pentagon can no longer gather or report information, even if it is unclassified, unless it’s been authorized for release by the government, defense officials announced Friday. Reporters who don’t sign a statement agreeing to the new rules will have their press credentials revoked, officials said.

* AP | Kennedy’s vaccine advisers change COVID shot guidance, calling them an individual choice: In a series of votes Friday, advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention took the unprecedented step of not recommending them even for high-risk populations like seniors. Instead they decided people could make individual decisions after talking with a doctor, nurse or pharmacist. The panel also urged the CDC to adopt stronger language around claims of vaccine risks, despite pushback from outside medical groups who said the shots had a proven safety record from the billions of doses administered worldwide.

  8 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…

  3 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Monday, Sep 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Mayor: 'ICE is seeking to intimidate the Village of Broadview... We will not be intimidated'
* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Charges withdrawn, but Chicago FOP President Cantanzara agrees to voluntary leave of absence as First VP of Illinois State Lodge during probe
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Wirepoints' deficit spending continued as assets were further depleted ahead of staff exodus
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Softball
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* Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal
* Isabel’s morning briefing (Updated)
* Open thread
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
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