Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The 21st is Sunday, so let’s do this one a little early… Ba-dee-ya, never was a cloudy day
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * CBS Chicago…
* Tribune…
* Block Club | Federal Agents Tear Gas, Detain Protesters Outside Broadview ICE Facility: The agents assaulted protesters repeatedly starting in the early morning, with the scuffles coming as agents tried to drive vehicles — some apparently containing detained people — in and out of the facility while protesters tried to block the drivers. One altercation came just after 6 a.m. when agents shot several demonstrators with pepper balls and detained others. * MediaIte | Democratic Congressional Candidate Kat Abughazaleh Slammed to the Ground by ICE: Commenting on the shocking encounter on her social media account, Abughazaleh said: “My body hurts and will probably hurt way more tomorrow.” She added: “What ICE just did to me was a violent abuse of power — and yet it’s nothing compared to what they’re doing to immigrant communities.” Abughazaleh later posted the video on her X account, warning, “This is what it looks like when ICE violates our First Amendment rights.” * Tribune | At Broadview ICE facility, federal agents hurl tear gas and pepper spray at protesters blocking vans: Other elected officials, including Lt. Gov. Julianna Stratton and Chicago Aldermen Andre Vazquez and Byron Sigcho-Lopez, also showed up. […] The ACLU of Illinois said in a statement last week that Broadview protesters “have the right to express themselves about government policy.” They said federal officers shouldn’t respond to First Amendment activity with “physical force and the firing of projectiles.” Biss said “it’s obvious these guys are trying to intimidate.” He said the agents, who were armed and masked, rushed out into the crowd. He could be seen at one point on his knees on the street. * The Daily Northwestern | Biss, Abughazaleh, Amiwala confronted by agents at Broadview ICE protest: Around 11:25 a.m., a van arrived, and protesters swarmed as another vehicle left the gate. A tire of the van popped as protestors surrounded it. Protesters chanted “let them go.” At 11:26 a.m., Amiwala released a statement that she was also teargassed at the protest. * Daily Herald | ICE arrests student at Elgin Community College: Federal immigration authorities arrested a student at Elgin Community College Thursday morning, the college announced. The student was arrested in a parking lot on the college’s main campus. ECC officials said the college does not participate in immigration enforcement and does not voluntarily share information about students’ immigration status. * WGN | ICE agents target roofers in Naperville, leaving workers and residents shaken: Witnesses said federal agents appeared to target a suburban roof repair to the distress of workers and many Cress Creek residents. The agents converged on a two-story home early Wednesday afternoon without warning, sending roofers running in all directions. Bobby Fischer said his Naperville home has a giant hole in the roof and no one to fix it after the ICE operation sent roofers running in all directions. “Our neighbors witnessed agents with guns drawn running down a residential street, which seems irresponsible,” Fischer said. * Sun-Times | Illinois professors face threats after landing on Charlie Kirk group watch list: Nearly 50 instructors from public and private colleges across Illinois are named in an online database dubbed “Professor Watchlist” that was created by a group affiliated with slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk to unmask “radical professors,” WBEZ has found. Since landing on the list, some professors have gotten hateful emails, online messages and letters threatening rape or death, and in some instances they have seen that activity intensify since Kirk’s death. WBEZ reached out to all of the roughly four dozen Illinois-based instructors on the nonprofit Turning Point USA list. All those who responded said the allegations lodged against them were distortions of their work. * WTTW | Stewardship Programs Get Boost From Nearly $1M in Illinois DNR Grants: Organizations in Cook, Lake and McHenry counties were among the grant recipients, with funds in many cases earmarked for the least glamorous aspect of conservation work: buying tools. […] Local recipients included Friends of Illinois Nature Preserves and the Nature Conservancy for work in Cook County. The Friends organization received nearly $50,000 to purchase tools and equipment for volunteers, as well as to hire a contractor for invasive species control. The Nature Conservancy will put its nearly $90,000 grant toward equipment for prescribed fire. * Herald-Review | Jim Edgar brought license plate production back to Illinois and to MRI: Former Gov. Jim Edgar, who died Sept. 14, served as Illinois Secretary of State from 1981 to 1991 and was instrumental in bringing license plate production back to Illinois and to MRI. “One of my priorities as Secretary of State has been to bring production of Illinois plates back to Illinois where it belongs,” Edgar said in a news release dated June 8, 1983, announcing the awarding of the contract to MRI, then known as Macon County Rehabilitation Facilities Inc. “But I am doubly happy today because we are saving substantial tax dollars, reversing the trend of sending millions of dollars to other states and we are providing jobs for the disabled.” * WAND | Governor Pritzker announces $16.2M in grants to support Illinois Arts Community: This grant initiative will benefit 1,123 artists, arts organizations, and communities across Illinois, empowering the state’s creative sector and enhancing regional arts initiatives. “The arts enrich our lives, our communities, and our culture,” Governor Pritzker stated during the announcement. “With federal arts funding under threat, I’m proud Illinois remains committed to investing in our talented artists, encouraging young people to follow their passions in the arts, and expanding community access to these vital initiatives.” * WTVO | Illinois GOP pushes for SAFE-T Act revisions amid public safety concerns: House Republicans have introduced several pieces of legislation to reform the SAFE-T Act, aiming to expand judges’ discretion to deny pre-trial release. They believe these reforms are common sense and hope to collaborate with the Democratic supermajority to enact changes. * Block Club | Chicago Starbucks Worker Did Not Write ‘Loser’ On Order Honoring Charlie Kirk, Company Says: Starbucks now says that time-stamped footage from the store at 6332 N. Northwest Highway does not show any of its workers writing that message. Instead, the note appears “to have been added after the beverage was handed off, likely by someone else,” a spokesperson told Block Club. The controversy started with a post Tuesday from Jacqueline Garretson, who, according to her X bio, is the Illinois state director for The Conservative Caucus and previously worked as a staffer for failed Republican attorney general candidate Thomas DeVore. * Bloomberg | Chicago bond penalty widens as Johnson weighs how to close deficit: Spreads on several tax-exempt Chicago bonds that were the most-actively-traded this week have widened recently, according to trading data compiled by Bloomberg. For debt due in 2042, the spread above benchmark muni securities jumped to 1.54 percentage points on Thursday, up from 1.17 percentage points a year ago, the data show. The price of the security — the city’s most frequently traded bond this week — fell to 98.6 cents on the dollar from $1.054 in mid September 2024. The city faces “a serious budget crisis” and tough choices between cuts and ways to raise revenue, a financial task force commissioned by the mayor said in a report issued this week. * Sun-Times | How Oscar D’Angelo, ‘mayor of Little Italy’ and a Daley crony, got entangled in a crooked Bridgeport bank: When regulators closed the century-old bank that had ties to the Daley family and its political organization, they were left with a long list of clout-heavy customers who had been skipping their loan payments for years. D’Angelo, who died in 2016, a year before the bank was closed, was on that list of deadbeats. D’Angelo and Kowalski were mixed up in a deal 25 years ago to sell a Little Italy three-flat to Patrick R. Daley, though his father, Mayor Richard M. Daley, reportedly squelched the sale after D’Angelo arranged for government-owned equipment to rehab the building. Kowalski has told the Sun-Times that Gembara planned to finance the deal for the mayor’s son. * Tribune | EPIC Academy school votes to close as students and staff rally in support: Dwindling enrollment numbers since 2020 have severely impacted the school’s bottom line, which ties its revenue to each student that attends the school, EPIC Academy Executive Director LeeAndra Khan told the Tribune. When Khan started at the high school in 2020, the total enrollment was 566 students. Five years later, enrollment has plunged 55% to 255 students in the current school year. This drop came in tandem with rising operational costs for the school. There are also multiple other high schools that compete with EPIC for students, including two down the street, which makes it difficult to increase enrollment, Khan said. * Aurora Beacon-News | Former police department employee files lawsuit against St. Charles, alleging sexual harassment, sex discrimination: The lawsuit states that Lisa Lullo worked as a police Records Division manager for the city from April 2023 to September 2024, and that she was the only female supervisory staff member at the time. According to the police department’s organizational chart, the police Records Division manager role reports to the deputy chief of administration, who reports to the police chief. The lawsuit alleges that the police chief at the time made “unwelcome sexual statements” to Lullo that “were sufficiently severe and pervasive to alter the conditions of her employment and create a hostile work environment.” * Daily Southtown | Flossmoor man arrested after racist graffiti found at Metra station and park: Flossmoor resident Sean Helton, 32, was charged Tuesday with two counts of criminal damage of government property costing $500 or less, a Class 4 felony, according to Cook County circuit court records. The graffiti found painted on a wall of the Metra Station and on a sculpture installation included in Leavitt Park on Aug. 22 included “racial slurs and racist symbols,” according to Flossmoor police. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Public Library takes part in push to reach Metra commuters: Through the new collaboration, ads are now greeting riders on BNSF Line train cars to highlight ways a library card can help them save money and enjoy their time onboard, according to a news release from the Aurora Public Library District. The ads focus on downloadable books and audiobooks, streaming media platforms and more, district officials said. * News-Gazette | Champaign mayor: Homelessness ‘a countywide issue that needs a countywide solution’: Council member Michael Foellmer voted against the fencing contract and expressed concern about what had been said during public comment. Though he didn’t mention [Former Champaign police Officer Mark Medlyn] by name, it seemed apparent that his use of the word “mutt” was on his mind. “These are people that we’re talking about impacting,” Foellmer said. “They’re not dogs. They are people. People. I am so sick to my stomach about the public comments. Unfortunately, I think I am in the minority. I will not be supporting this. But yeah, I just — these are people that we’re impacting.” * Center Square | Temporary Rockford Courthouse fence sparks debate over security and costs: A temporary fence surrounding the federal courthouse in downtown Rockford, Illinois is drawing sharp criticism and competing explanations from federal and state officials. Illinois U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen, D-Rockford, said in a recent social media video that the Trump administration has not been transparent about why fencing went up around the building. * Crain’s | Western Illinois University’s enrollment remains in free fall: The school reported a fall 2025 enrollment of 5,337 students, down from 6,332 in fall 2024, a drop of almost a thousand students. WIU’s new enrollment figures are a drop of 60% when compared to its peak of 13,602 students in 2006. 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. * WGLT | Town of Normal financial trends look healthy: City Manager Pam Reece said a significant chunk of that is from expansions to the Rivian auto plant, although the housing shortage Rivian growth helped cause also has contributed to a huge run-up in residential assessments. “It’s a good story and a not-so-good story when you look at both sides of the equation. The more we can move some of that burden to commercial-industrial-manufacturing, the better impact it has on residential,” Reece said on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. * WGLT | Moderate drought expected to persist in Central Illinois despite rain threats: The lack of rain has led to moderate drought for nearly all of McLean County. The far southeastern tip of the county is in severe drought, along with Champaign-Urbana and eastern Illinois. Ford says the Mackinaw River is running low enough that it could hurt plant and animal life in and near the water. “Even though it’s only been extremely dry for the last 30 days or so, many of these rivers that are actually pretty sizable … that’s certainly the Mackinaw and Sangamon [rivers], are dropping pretty substantially,” Ford said. * WMBD | Peoria shelter waives fees to find homes for 200+ animals: The fee amnesty will be from Sept. 22 to Sept. 27. The ASPCA’s is happening to get more pets into good homes and soon. PCAPS has a “an urgent and immediate need for adopters,” according to a PCAPS official. The shelter, located in Glen Oak Park, has more than 200 animals in its care now and space is limited. * AP | Federal judge tosses Trump’s $15B defamation lawsuit against The New York Times: U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday ruled that Trump’s lawsuit was overly long and was full of “tedious and burdensome” language that had no bearing on the legal case. “A complaint is not a megaphone for public relations or a podium for a passionate oration at a political rally,” Merryday wrote in a four-page order. “This action will begin, will continue, and will end in accord with the rules of procedure and in a professional and dignified manner.” The judge ruled that Trump has 28 days to file an amended complaint that should not exceed 40 pages in length. * NYT | Vaccine Panel Postpones One Vote and Reverses Another Amid Confusion: On Friday morning, the committee voted not to allow a federal vaccine program to cover the cost of a combination vaccine that protects against measles, mumps, rubella and varicella, or chickenpox. This reversed a vote on Thursday to allow coverage, apparently because some members had misunderstood the way it was worded. And the panelists said they felt unready to decide whether to limit the use of a vaccine for hepatitis B that is typically given to all newborns. Some said they still had questions about the vaccine’s safety, while others seemed relieved that the panel did not make what they saw as a rash decision that might harm children.
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About our recent site issues
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The site has crashed a couple of times this week, including earlier today. We had huge traffic surges, but we’re not yet sure where it’s coming from or why. I’ve had my website hosts beef up our server power numerous times over the years, starting just after Rod Blagojevich was arrested and we (along with at least one Chicago newspaper) were knocked offline. So, we’re doing it again, starting with some server software upgrades. We’re sorry for any inconvenience. It’s truly maddening and unacceptable on our end. * Anyway, here’s Pete Droge… You close your eyes and smile and say, Kid, this is a good one
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Riding a viral wave
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Ismael Cordová-Clough has been posting Facebook videos of suburban ICE activity for the past couple of weeks. Some of his posts have topped 400,000 views. A video of state comptroller candidate Sen. Karina Villa (D-West Chicago) shouting at neighbors to stay inside their homes and then verbally confronting some ICE officers has more than 340,000 views. The Washington Post picked up the video and its Instagram version has more than a million likes. Former Labor Secretary Robert Reich’s YouTube post about Villa has 161,000 views. Telemundo Chicago’s report on Villa has 75K views. NBC5’s report has 37K views and a separate NBC5 interview with Villa garnered another 22K views. A rousing TikTok video of her speaking to a crowd in West Chicago after that confrontation has more than 252,000 views. * It’s not often that a lower-tier statewide candidate goes viral like that - if ever. So, Sen. Villa fundraised off of it. Her text starts off with a short version of the video that I uploaded to YouTube…
* Politico…
I’ve also received a couple of texts about the ad blast, with one calling it “gross.” * I asked Sen. Villa for a statement…
She also sent a statement from José Luis Pepe Gutiérrez, Director of Casa Michoacan DuPage…
More info here. Your thoughts?
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Seems to be a pattern
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Who did it better?…
Deep breaths before commenting, please.
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Judge refuses to dismiss lawsuit filed by Chicago against Glock, others
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the ruling. Click here for more background. Press release…
* Related…
* Bloomberg | Glock Inc. Must Face Chicago Lawsuit Over Pistol ‘Switches’: The suit falls under an exception to the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, Cook County Judge Allen Walker said, rejecting the gunmaker’s assertion that the federal statute shields it from the city’s claims.
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Ignorance of the law is no excuse
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Coming a bit late to this because the draft post somehow got lost in the shuffle. Fox 32…
Man, that’s just shoddy reporting. He wasn’t released “under the state’s sanctuary policies.” He completed his sentence. Also, according to ICE itself, an immigration detainer is a “request from ICE that asks” federal, state and local governments to do things like hold an inmate before release. * Since Fox 32 basically just rewrote the ICE press release and didn’t ask anyone outside of law enforcement for comment, I reached out to the Pritzker administration…
Discuss.
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What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage
Friday, Sep 19, 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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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Sale of Illinois newspaper group puts new state law to the test. Capitol News Illinois…
- Better Newspapers Inc. sold eight Illinois newspapers to Paxton Media Group in Kentucky. Employees and county clerks in several of the areas served by the newspapers say the buyer did not provide the 120 days’ notice required by the new law. - But since the law doesn’t include any enforcement mechanisms or penalties for noncompliance, it’s not immediately clear who, if anyone, can force compliance. * Politico | Harris’ score-settling, elbow-throwing, bridge-burning memoir: Some Democrats, such as Shapiro and then-Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, she writes, were quick to line up behind her as she made calls to amass support for the party’s nomination. “Before you say anything, I’m all in,” Harris recalled Buttigieg saying. But others, such as Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, were more reticent, according to Harris. Whitmer, she wrote, signaled support but said she needed to “let the dust settle” before making a public statement. And Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, noting his state was hosting the party convention that summer, said he could not commit to supporting her. * Center Square | Pritzker touts quantum future, state senator urges caution for taxpayers: The governor spoke Thursday at the Quantum World Congress in Virginia and encouraged attendees to relocate to Chicago and Illinois. “We have Duality, which is the nation’s first quantum startup accelerator,” Pritzker said. “We have the second-highest number of Fortune 500 companies, the customers for quantum, of any region in the nation.” * Legal Newsline | DOJ joins Bost at SCOTUS in fight over IL mail-in vote rules: The arguments will not involve the merits of Bost’s legal claims. Rather, the high court will take on the question of whether federal judges in Chicago wrongly denied Bost the chance to challenge Illinois’ vote-by-mail regime at all. * CBS Chicago | CTA warns service could stop at 9 p.m. daily without more money from Springfield: CTA officials on Thursday warned they might be forced to eliminate 24-hour service next year, with buses and trains possibly running only from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m., if state lawmakers don’t provide hundreds of millions in funding to bail out the Chicago area’s three mass transit agencies. * Capitol City Now | Pritzker to MSNBC: Suspension of Jimmy Kimmel is ‘dangerous’: “Everybody should be saying that ABC should reverse their decision,” said Pritzker. “This is not something they should have been doing. I don’t think that ABC, at least historically, has not been an organization that has exhibited this kind of behavior. But, now we’re seeing the pressure that can be brought by the federal government. You can imagine the pressure that’s on Disney and ABC and on their business, based upon what’s been said so far today.” * WMBD | Hemp regulation getting closer to consensus according to Illinois House Speaker: “As my time as Speaker, it is the single most contentious topic,” he said. “The issue has been so divisive in our caucus three times, but they don’t realize how close they are,” * Herald & Review | Remembering Jim Edgar through the friendship he shared with my father: I share a hometown with Edgar, who died Sunday at age 79. Not only did we both grow up in Charleston, but Edgar and my dad were the same age, grew up on the same block and both graduated from Charleston High School in 1964. My dad, Bill Hall, loved to tell stories of their 1950s childhood shenanigans. A particular favorite was about a fort they once built on the top of a carport, something that seemed incredibly exciting to me as a kid. The details of those stories escape me now, but my dad loved to talk about his childhood friendship with Jim Edgar; it was clearly special to him. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois to issue its own vaccine guidelines: Pritzker also noted Kennedy’s recent firing of top CDC administrators, including the agency’s director Susan Monarez, as well as the abrupt dismissal of the entire board of CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. “This is about making sure no family in Illinois is left wondering if they can protect themselves against preventable serious illness,” Pritzker said in a statement. “When the federal government abandons its responsibility, Illinois will step up. We will follow the science, listen to medical experts, and do everything in our power to enable families to receive the care they need.” * ABC Chicago | Illinois officials reflect on 2 years with no cash bail on anniversary of Pre-Trial Fairness Act: “If you’re a danger to the public, you shouldn’t be able to buy your way out of jail like a Jeffrey Epstein type, while at the same time, if you’re not a danger to the public, you do not need to be incarcerated before you’re found guilty,” Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke said. Removing cash from the decision to detain someone is the foundation of Illinois’ two-year-old Pre-Trial Fairness Act. The law says State’s Attorneys must file a petition to detain someone. A judge makes the determination. Any crime that carries a mandatory prison sentence are all eligible for detention. * AP | As Immigration Arrests Spike in Chicago, Activists Escalate Tactics to Fight Back: When word of increased enforcement in Chicago ramped up, Baltazar Enriquez started buying orange emergency whistles so people could warn others of nearby ICE agents. He said they are reliable even when technology fails. “If they hear that sound, they immediately start closing their doors, locking their gates,” he said of neighbors. “This has worked for us here. People are asking us, ‘Can I get a whistle?’ ” * WTTW | Chicago Spent $119.7M on Police Overtime in 6 Months, 20% More Than Its Annual Overtime Budget: Watchdog: CPD spent an additional $46.4 million on overtime in July and August, which are typically two of the most violent and busy months of the year, according to the inspector general database. In all, the database said, taxpayers spent more than $166 million on CPD overtime in just eight months, ensuring that the city will exceed its annual overtime budget for the seventh straight year. * WTTW | Stalemate Over Serious Chicago Police Discipline Cases to Continue as Illinois Supreme Court Weighs Police Union’s Plea to Intervene: The 2-1 decision by Illinois’ 1st District Appellate Court was reached in error, according to the appeal filed by the police union asking the Supreme Court to take up the issue. The court will consider the request during its November term, said Christopher Bonjean, a spokesperson for the Supreme Court. That will ensure the deadlock will continue for at least several more months, Chicago Police Board President Kyle Cooper said. * Sun-Times | Chicagoans oppose tax hikes proposed by mayoral task force, poll finds: Only 16% of those surveyed support locking in annual property tax increases at the rate of inflation — as suggested this week by Johnson’s Financial Future Task Force and favored by the two most powerful members of the mayor’s City Council leadership team. Raising the $9.50-a-month garbage fee frozen since its 2015 inception, another idea the task force championed, drew 20% support. * Crain’s | Chicago’s safety-net hospitals look for ways to cope with looming federal cuts: First up, for CCH, is a potential $120 million annual cut to its bottom line should federal disproportionate share hospital funding — cash usually doled from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services for uncompensated care — not be renewed, says Dr. Eric Mikatis, president and CEO of the health system. It’s a distinct possibility, given a Republican-controlled Congress that’s keen to cut spending and the current fight over a government shutdown. A vote in the U.S. House today might provide a temporary stay of the DSH cuts through late November, and a longer-term solution has been discussed. “But that $120 million is not something we included in any of our budget planning,” he said. * Crain’s | Chicago Fire, Related Midwest win city panel OK for South Loop soccer stadium: The Chicago Plan Commission today approved rezoning Related’s 62-acre site along the Chicago River south of Roosevelt Road to allow the 22,000-seat stadium that Fire owner Joe Mansueto aims to build for the Major League Soccer franchise. The sign-off moves the proposal forward for consideration by the City Council’s zoning committee and the full City Council, key hurdles the team and developer must clear to meet Mansueto’s goal of completing the privately-financed $750 million stadium in time for the 2028 season. * Nadig Newspapers | Former Patio Theater operator has contract to buy Portage Theater, which has $503,000 in owed taxes: The shuttered Portage Theater, 4050 N. Milwaukee Ave., is under contract to be sold for $25,000 to Chris Bauman, founder of the Zenith Music Group that has operated the Patio Theater and Avondale Music Hall, according to recent court testimony. Any buyer of the theater would presumably also have to pay the county more than $500,000 in back taxes, Curt Bettiker, the count-appointed receiver for the theater, said at a Sept. 11 housing court hearing. * Tribune | Daughter tries to distance herself from backlash against pro-Trump Chicago restaurateur: A day later, Sanchez’s daughter — Samantha Sanchez, a fellow restaurateur who owns La Luna in Pilsen and La Lunita in Logan Square — issued a statement distancing herself and her businesses from her father’s politics. “I want to address the ongoing attacks and false claims that I and my restaurants are ‘pro-Trump,’” her statement read. “Let me be absolutely clear: I have never expressed, posted, shared or endorsed support for Donald Trump in any way.” Noting that she has faced backlash directed at her because of her father’s political beliefs, Samantha Sanchez stated, “His beliefs are his own and do not represent me, my businesses, or my team.” * Tribune | Cook County property tax bill delay continues; board creates fund for governments: Now the county has launched a $300 million loan fund to help cities, towns and other taxing bodies that will struggle to make ends meet without those property tax revenues in hand. The new system was supposed to be ready in April. County leaders committed to officially make the switch off their legacy system — housed on decades-old mainframe computers — to fully adopt Tyler Technology’s system in May in time for the normal bill schedule, with bills due by Aug. 1. * Tribune | From elementary to higher ed, Chicago and suburban schools prepare amid ICE activity in neighborhoods: A suburban Chicago student is in custody after being arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers at Elgin Community College Thursday morning, the college said, two days after a U.S. citizen from the suburb was briefly detained in what the government is calling an immigration enforcement blitz in the Chicago area. The student was taken into custody in the parking lot of Building K, a statement to the school community said. The building houses the college’s Adult Basic Education Center, which offers English as a second language classes, GED preparation, citizenship classes and workforce development resources. * Daily Southtown | Blue Island police help woman after her husband was taken into ICE custody: Officials also said Blue Island police assisted the family of the detained person by ensuring the safety of family members, helping them recover important documents from their vehicle and making sure the vehicle was not towed. “The city of Blue Island remains committed to the safety and well-being of all residents while respecting the jurisdiction of federal authorities,” an official said Thursday. Officials said local law enforcement was not involved in the federal stop. Blue Island police Chief Jason Slattery said he saw five officers dressed in olive drab vests take a man into custody, leaving behind the man’s car in a no-parking, tow away zone when he arrived on the scene at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. * Daily Herald | Des Plaines mayor responds to ICE detentions in city: In his written remarks, Goczkowski reiterated that the city does not work with the U.S. Department of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and encouraged citizens and non-citizens alike to learn their rights. “Our job is to serve Des Plaines residents, not to question where they came from or their status,” he wrote. The message comes after reports that federal agents arrested the men Tuesday morning at a gas station near Ballard and Potter roads, on the city’s east side. One of the men is a U.S. citizen and was later released, according to reports. * Shaw Local | Will County State’s Attorney’s lawsuit seeks to remove Joliet City Council member from office: The lawsuit was filed on Tuesday, and it is known as a “quo warranto” complaint, which is Latin for “by what warrant” and it is used to challenge a person’s right to hold public office, according to the Cornell Law School’s Legal Information Institute. The lawsuit from Glasgow’s office claims Moreno filed a “false statement of candidacy regarding his qualifications” and he was not a resident of Joliet for a year before the April 1, 2025, election, as required under state law. * Daily Southtown | Harvey Park District sued in claim it blocked commissioners from serving: According to the civil complaint by Cotton and Brown-Oneal, the Park District, through its attorneys the Del Galdo Law Group, sent a letter to Cotton on May 8 saying that his being indebted to the Park District led to his seat being vacated. The letter, which was offered as part of the complaint, defended the decision with Illinois statute that deems a person ineligible of serving as park commissioner “if that person is in arrears in the payment of a tax or other indebtedness due to the park district.” The complaint states that the letter “is not based on any truth, and legally without any merit whatsoever.” * Naperville Sun | Jain takes seat on Naperville council amid concerns about selection process transparency: Near the end of the meeting, Councilman Nate Wilson raised general concerns about the city’s appointment process. […] “Under current law, we can fill a vacancy in closed session,” Wilson said. “That’s legally permissible. However, in my opinion, it limits transparency and may undermine the public’s confidence in council’s actions.” More specifically, Wilson said he believed that excluding the public from deliberations opens the council up to the perception that “decisions are being driven through personal relationships” and “political favoritism.” * Daily Southtown | Small libraries in south suburbs feel federal cuts to already limited resources: Furthermore, the “catch-22,” Rodrigues said, is libraries with lower funding also have fewer resources to use on applying for grants. That makes it hard to compete with libraries that can hire a professional grant writer. Rodrigues said she applies for grants on top of her other work throughout the week. “It’s a little sad sometimes when you go to communities that have such better funding and see all these nice things you could get for your community that we won’t have,” Rodrigues said. * Daily Herald | Did ducks at a Buffalo Grove pond die of botulism? Village working with state to find out: IDNR officials told the village it received initial reports of dead waterfowl in mid-August and conducted a site visit confirming 15-20 mallard duck carcasses and several dozen live birds around the pond. Several carcasses were collected and submitted to the National Wildlife Health Center for botulism testing, though tissue quality proved insufficient for testing. Additional reports of dead ducks surfaced early this month. While an IDNR official heard birds showing clinical botulism signs were taken to a rehabilitation facility where infection may have been confirmed, the agency said future testing would require access to dying rather than dead birds. * SJ-R | News station denies suspending former Springfield TV anchor over Charlie Kirk comments: Reached by The State Journal-Register, Heather Nodine, who is news director for the formerly Sinclair-owned station, said the station has not suspended or fired anyone in the past 90 days, though she was unable to comment on Harmony’s situation specifically. […] Harmony was a sales employee whose job was to produce and anchor Marketplace, a sales-based program that features clients who pay to have interviews on the air, Nodine said. Harmony was not employed as a journalist and never worked within the station’s news department, Nodine added. * WAND | Protesters warn that ADM’s proposed CO2 project puts Decatur water at risk: Illinois People’s Action posted to Facebook Sept. 10 that ADM wants to “dump 95 million tons of dangerous CO2 waste” in the Decatur area, including Lake Decatur. The group added in the post that the ADM corporation is “already in violation” of the U.S. Safe Drinking Water Act following a 2022 accident. * WCIA | State reps come together to talk energy rates — and social services cuts: State representatives Carol Ammons and Paul Faraci came together for a joint town hall at the Illinois terminal in Champaign. They brought in experts to talk about cuts to social services and rising energy costs. Ammons says the higher costs surprised even her — causing her to help put this on today. “We said, let’s invite Ameren in here. Let’s talk about what can be done.” said Ammons, “And at the same time, we asked Community Solar and the Solar for All program that is really helping people lower their energy costs at the same time. But a lot of people don’t know about the program. So, we decided to bring both of these things together into one town hall so that people can get some resources and some answers at the same time.” * WAND | Demolition begins at Pillsbury site in Springfield: “My dad worked there, my uncle worked there, I had a cousin who worked there, my brother-in-law worked there, my mother-in-law worked there, so did my father-in-law,” Wilkinson said. “I know it has to come down, but it’s sad to see.” That bittersweet sentiment was shared by many former employees, who got emotional watching the smokestack fall to the ground. It marks the beginning of a large-scale demolition project, set to be completed by summer 2026. * Brennan Center | Limiting the Military’s Role in Law Enforcement: The Posse Comitatus Act rests at the center of a web of laws, regulations, and policies that govern what the U.S. military can and cannot do domestically. It is a crucial safeguard for the preservation of both American democracy and constitutional liberties. At the same time, it is riddled with exceptions, loopholes, and ambiguities that leave it surprisingly weak. The most dangerous exception by far is the Insurrection Act, which gives the president virtually limitless discretion to use the military as a domestic police force. But there are also other ways in which the Posse Comitatus Act fails to provide robust protection against the use of federal troops for law enforcement purposes. * Crain’s | Durbin slams RFK Jr. as ‘danger’ to kids as CDC panel votes against MMR vaccine: “RFK Jr. will be the first Secretary of HHS with a body count,” Durbin said in a speech. “He is a danger to the children of America.” The Illinois Democrat’s speech comes one day after testimony before the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions by Dr. Susan Monarez that Kennedy fired her as director of the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention after she pushed back against his skepticism of vaccines and medical research. * NYT | Kennedy’s Advisory Panel Votes to Limit M.M.R.V. Vaccine for Children Under 4: Many of the panelists also seemed unsure about the purpose of the Vaccines for Children program, which provides free shots to roughly half of all American children. Approving which vaccines the program should cover is a key function of the committee. * Bloomberg | China Seeks Trade Edge, Shunning US Soy in First Since 1990s: For the first time since at least the 1990s, China hasn’t bought any US soybeans at the start of the export season, a sign that Beijing is once again using agriculture as leverage in its trade fight with Washington. As the world’s top soybean buyer, China wields enormous influence over global markets. Now it’s reviving a familiar tactic of holding back on US purchases — deployed during the first trade war under President Donald Trump — as the two countries navigate a fragile truce.
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Good morning!
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * A few years ago, I seriously considered buying an old but gorgeous house that happened to be directly across the street from Jeff Tweedy’s Chicago home. However, when I sat down and thought about it, I realized it would be at the very least 18 months before I could move in and cost me about twice as much as the rough remodeling estimate I had (I’ve watched enough home remodeling TV shows to know that as soon as you knock that first hole in a wall of an old Victorian you’ll see more problems than you’d ever imagined). Plus, as a great friend reminded me, you get to know people on your side of the street a whole lot more than the people on the other side, and I didn’t fancy hanging out on my front porch just to catch a glimpse of him. I passed and never regretted it… ‘Cause rock and roll is dead, but the dead don’t die What’s up?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and some campaign stuff
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Sep 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Sep 19, 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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Poll shows broad Chicago opposition to ICE, National Guard
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
Public Policy Polling conducted the survey. * Let’s focus on the racial/ethnic crosstabs. This is a poll of 582 Chicago voters with a Margin of Error of +/- 4.1 percent. But the MoE for the subsets we’re looking at are much, much higher…
White +/- 6.0 Black +/- 7.5% Other+/- 16.6% * With that in mind, we’ll start with Trump’s Chicago approval… ![]() * Trump sending the National Guard into Chicago… ![]() * President Trump has called Chicago a ‘hellhole and ‘most dangerous city in the world.’ He says deploying the National Guard would ‘clean up’ the city, though the National Guard would not have police powers. Local officials say they welcome federal anti-violence resources and law enforcement cooperation, but declining crime rates show there is no emergency that merits a military response and deployment of the National Guard in Chicago. Having heard some more information, let me ask you again: do you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose, or strongly oppose President Trump’s proposal to send the National Guard into Chicago?… ![]() Notice how support rises among Latinos with the “informed” question, but opposition remains the same. That indicates some persuadability. This poll was taken before everything really ramped up, so we’ll see what happens when reality has kicked in. * Chicago crime… ![]() * Trump increasing federal immigration enforcement in Chicago… ![]() * President Trump has directed Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE to aggressively enforce immigration laws nationwide. These enforcement actions have increased deportations of undocumented residents, but have also resulted in cases of unidentified agents detaining and deporting American citizens and valid visa holders, while separating some families. Supporters say that strict enforcement of immigration laws upholds the rule of law, while critics say that recent enforcement action undermines the rule of law, because it lacks due process and transparency. Having heard some more information, let me ask you again: do you strongly support, somewhat support, somewhat oppose, or strongly oppose the Trump Administration increasing federal immigration enforcement in Chicago through aggressive ICE detainments, expedited deportation removals, and workplace raids?… ![]() No real change in the Latino response with the “informed” question. * How worried are you that deploying the National Guard or aggressive immigration enforcement in Chicago could violate residents’ rights or freedoms: very worried, somewhat worried, not too worried, or not worried at all?… ![]() Again, this was taken before the big ramp-up.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Crain’s…
* Sun-Times courts reporter Jon Seidel… * Edgar Fellows Executive Director Janet Mathis…
…Adding… Press release…
More here. * Press Release | Illinois Unemployment Rate Drops to 4.4%, Payroll Jobs Decrease in August: The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that total nonfarm payrolls decreased over-the-month in August, down -13,300 (-0.2%) to 6,153,700. The July monthly change in payrolls was revised from the preliminary report, from -2,500 to -1,100. The industry sectors with over-the-month jobs increases included: Information (+800), Manufacturing (+400), and Construction (+300). The industry sectors with the largest monthly payroll jobs decreases included: Trade, Transportation and Utilities (-4,500), Private Education and Health Services (-4,000), and Professional and Business Services (-2,600). * Press Release | AG Raoul files lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment Ticketmaster over deceptive business practices: Attorney General Kwame Raoul, in partnership with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and a bipartisan group of state attorneys general, filed a lawsuit today against Live Nation Entertainment Inc. (Live Nation), and its wholly-owned subsidiary, Ticketmaster LLC (Ticketmaster), over the company’s unlawful coordination with ticket brokers that drives up prices for tickets in resale markets. The lawsuit also alleges that Ticketmaster deceptively displays lower ticket prices on its website, only to charge customers substantially more at checkout. * WTTW | Feds Threaten to Withhold CPS Grant Funds Due to Black Student Success Plan, Transgender Student Guidelines: “The Black Students Success Plan, however, is designed for and exclusive to black students and black educators,” Craig Trainor, acting assistant secretary for Civil Rights, wrote in the letter. “It is not, for instance, available to white or Asian American students and educators. This is textbook racial discrimination, and no justification proffered by CPS can overcome the patent illegality of its racially exclusionary plan.” […] A CPS spokesperson said Wednesday the district would not comment on “ongoing investigations.” The district’s Black Student Success Plan aims to bring in more Black teachers, reduce suspensions against Black students, promote teaching on Black culture, increase belonging and close opportunity gaps. It provides a five-year roadmap to improve the outcomes of Black students, who make up a third of the district’s population. * Block Club | Cook County Public Defender Opens Legal Center In Austin: The centers specialize in supporting neighbors navigating criminal court, including offering walk-ins for free legal information. Private pods are available at the office to attend virtual court hearings with staff support, if allowed by the court. The Public Defender’s Office will also use the Austin center to offer legal education for situations such as traffic stops, immigration issues, how to get a gun license and carry a firearm, how to legally possess cannabis and other topics that involve potential encounters with law enforcement. * Block Club | In Little Village, Residents Are Blowing Actual Whistles To Warn Neighbors About ICE: In June, after consulting with Los Angeles residents who have recently experienced immigration raids and a militarized federal law enforcement presence, the Little Village group added a new tool to its efforts: a bright orange whistle. “We had the idea of coming out with a whistle so people could hear that noise, and if they don’t have legal status, go the other way — run as quickly as possible to safety and to make sure they don’t open their doors,” said Baltazar Enriquez, president of the Little Village Community Council. * Block Club | South Loop Fire Stadium Traffic Won’t Snarl Streets — If Fans Bike Or Take Transit, Traffic Study Says: The $650 million stadium project will have limited on-site parking, development representatives said at a recent community meeting. Between on-site parking and the use of nearby lots and garages, there will be roughly 2,800-3,000 parking spaces available on Fire game days. Shuttle services are planned for fans using off-site parking facilities. To accommodate fans, the development team is pitching a plan to use temporary street closures on game days along with temporary parking restrictions and increased public transit service. The stadium would also rely on existing infrastructure, including pedestrian and bike lanes and water taxis. * Chicago Mag | Jeff Tweedy Just Wants to Let His Light Shine: Fresh from a rehearsal with his 20-something musical sons, Spencer and Sammy, and local musician and songwriter Liam Kazar for a show at the Newport Folk Festival, and before that a promotional photo shoot, Tweedy is tired and feeling a bit wonky in the head at the moment. While the migraines he’s long suffered from have abated of late, he’s well attuned to signs that his body needs recharging. For now, though, he’s still game for talking. And so he does, about everything from his long marriage and his latest album to the downside of ego and his determination to fight for democracy. “What I have control over,” he says, “is keeping my mind free.” * WTTW | Minority-Serving Colleges in the Chicago Area Push Back Against Federal Funding Cuts: Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the agency is cutting this funding because MSIs racially discriminate “by restricting eligibility to institutions that meet government-mandated racial quotas.” But Michael Anthony, president of Prairie State College, a community college in Chicago Heights, said he wouldn’t describe how his school handles enrollment that way. “These are our students,” Anthony said. “These are your citizens, your constituents that are in this community that choose to come here. 90% of our students are from the southwest Chicago region. This is not a quota. This is who lives here.” * Daily Herald | Mount Prospect renews contract with controversial license plate camera reader outfit: “We inadvertently clicked on (it) because we didn’t realize (on) the other side, anybody who checked on nationwide lookup had access to everybody else who clicked that same box,” explained Mount Prospect Police Chief Michael Eterno. “That was something we did not know at the time.” Flock Safety implemented several new safeguards in response, including complete removal of agencies that violated Illinois data-sharing agreements and AI-powered audits to flag any search terms that go against Illinois law. * Shaw Local | ‘We have lost our minds’- Debate over Dome of Unity sculpture for downtown Joliet gets heated: The City Council is divided on whether to move ahead with the $197,000 sculpture that proponents say will help bring visitors to downtown Joliet but which one councilwoman derided as resembling an “old wiffel ball.” The City Council is slated to vote Tuesday on whether to add the sculpture to a $9 million city square under construction. The matter was hotly debated at the pre-council meeting Monday night. * Sun-Times | Sen. Tammy Duckworth wants ICE agents out of Hines VA Hospital parking lot: “It is preposterous that VA would believe allowing ICE to operate on the Hines campus will not adversely impact delivery of care for Hines’ patients,” Duckworth wrote. The senator said she is a Hines patient — and has experienced the limitations of the parking lot, which has long lacked the capacity to handle the daily volume of patients, family members and caregivers. * CBS Chicago | Central Street Busker Fest in Evanston, Illinois to celebrate street performance: The businesses on Central Street offer up everything from cuisines of the world, fashionable clothing, books, toys, games, plants, dance classes and hand-ground spices. But a day on Central Street does typically not involve mimes, puppeteers, poets with typewriters strapped to their bodies, or the mayor of Evanston himself juggling fire. * Illinois Times | Grayson’s background ruled irrelevant for trial: Jurors at former Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy Sean Grayson’s murder trial won’t hear potentially disturbing details from Grayson’s military service and previous jobs in law enforcement even though the revelations led to new requirements for background checks of police statewide. Sangamon County Circuit Judge Ryan Cadagin on Sept. 12 agreed with Grayson’s defense lawyers that the information wasn’t relevant and could unfairly sway jurors based on longstanding rules of evidence and case law. Except in certain circumstances, testimony, evidence and legal arguments must focus on what happened immediately before, during and after an alleged crime. Prosecutors argued the details they want the jury to hear are exceptions to those rules. * STLPR | Increased SIUE enrollment and program cuts led to balanced budget, chancellor says: After a $10.3 million deficit last year at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, the SIU Board of Trustees voted on Thursday morning to unanimously approve a balanced budget for the 2026 fiscal year. The now accepted proposal has the university bringing in and spending nearly $341.6 million, according to university documents. Along with the deficit came “really difficult decisions by the university,” said SIUE Chancellor James Minor, who’s led the campus since 2022. * WCIA | Little rain, high variability in farmers’ yields trending in Central IL this harvest season: The Champaign County Farm Bureau said that the name of the game this year is variability Yields aren’t only varying from farmer to farmer, but from field to field, and sometimes, within fields. […] “There’s been a lot of differences in rainfall, even mile to mile this year. And so, that’s making a big difference in our numbers. I think some farmers are getting out there, and they’re finding more crop than they maybe expected. But then, there’s also farmers that are out in the fields, and they don’t have near the crop that they would in a year where they got normal rainfall,” Champaign County Farm Bureau’s Manager, Bailey Conrady, said. * Health Care Dive | House lawmakers scrutinize nonprofit hospitals’ tax-exempt status: Nonprofit hospitals have long been criticized by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle for benefiting from tax breaks and under-delivering on promises to deliver community or charity care to low income patients. Several watchdog reports and investigations from lawmakers have concluded large nonprofits routinely receive more benefits from tax breaks than they provide in community care, and can even “price gouge” low income patients. However, on Tuesday, Republicans at a Ways and Means Oversight subcommittee hearing mostly led the charge for reform, claiming nonprofits don’t pass along financial benefits to patients. * Crux | In Crux interview, Pope stresses welcome of LGBTQ Catholics, won’t change teaching: “What I’m trying to say is what Francis said very clearly when he would say, “todos, todos, todos.” Everyone’s invited in, but I don’t invite a person in because they are or are not of any specific identity. I invite a person in because they are a son or daughter of God,” the pope said. * Change Research | The New American Mythology: Belief in Conspiracy Theories and Their Political Impact: A consistent theme across all three groups is the belief that much is hidden from the public. These sentiments are not confined to the most conspiratorial segments but run broadly through the electorate. In fact, more than four in five voters say many very important things happen in the world without the public ever being informed. Nearly eight in ten agree that politicians usually conceal their true motives, while two-thirds suspect that powerful people work in secret to shape major political and economic events. Even when accounts of an event conflict, large numbers assume deception: over four in ten think such contradictions almost always signal a cover‑up, and nearly as many believe it happens at least some of the time. * Bloomberg reporter… ![]() The story is here.
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A stubborn double-down
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. Streetsblog…
* And then the publication goes on to claim that he voted “No” because of campaign contributions from unions like LiUna (Laborers) and the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150…
Um, Senate President Don Harmon has received millions of dollars from Local 150 and LiUNA and he voted for the bill, which wasn’t mentioned until the site updated the post after a protest from Leader Curran’s spokesperson. * And when it was pointed out to them that Local 150’s lobbyist filed a witness slip in favor of the bill, this was the response…
The union opposed a revenue source involving a toll increase. But it, along with all other unions, supported the final bill, which was in flux all day. That’s the only floor vote which matters. And Local 150 did, indeed, issue support for the bill as passed. Anyone who demands support for legislation as “originally conceived” demonstrates a complete lack of awareness about how the legislative process works. Bills are amended all the time. * But the bottom line here is that no Republicans voted for that bill when it hit the floor. And their “No” votes weren’t because of Local 150 because 150 supported the final version. They mainly opposed it because the bill would raise taxes. That’s the default Republican Party position on pretty much everything. Occam’s Razor, etc. The SGOPs are currently working on an alternate funding proposal that wouldn’t raise taxes, but it uses some one-time revenues for ongoing operations and critics warn that dipping into the Rainy Day Fund would lead to a credit downgrade for the state. Also, that rapidly evolving bill was passed shortly before midnight on the last day of session, so everybody knew it was doomed in the House. The main reason for passing it out of the Senate was so Senate Democrats could go home and say they tried, and to attempt to set the terms of the upcoming summer talks with the House and stakeholders. * Leader Curran demanded a correction/retraction and didn’t get one. Local 150 is now demanding a retraction. Click here to read the letter. Harsh.
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Competition Works: Lower Bills. Reliable Power. Say NO To Right Of First Refusal
Thursday, Sep 18, 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:
Fairport to Denny Transmission Line (MISO – Missouri)
Reid EHV to IN/KY Border Transmission Project (MISO)
• Delivered long-term cost savings
Matheson–Redbud Transmission Line (SPP – Oklahoma)
• 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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Pritzker takes heat over event pic with accused criminal (Updated)
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * August 25…
* September 5 press release…
* CWB…
You simply can’t possibly vet everyone who wants to take a pic with a governor at events, particularly events like this where many of the participants have past criminal records. But, hey, it’s definitely a gotcha moment for Pritzker… ![]() * ILGOP…
* Pritzker administration response…
…Adding… Chicago CRED and Metropolitan Peace Initiatives…
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Mayor still trying to point fingers over bill that passed unanimously
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for some background. WTTW in August…
From Rich: The bill passed both chambers without a single “No” vote. * Also in August, here’s Crain’s…
From Rich: Martwick is one of the mayor’s strongest legislative supporters. * Days later, Gov. Pritzker was asked about the topic at the Illinois State Fair…
From Rich: The mayor never actually said that he called the governor about the bill. * Fox Chicago yesterday…
* From the governor’s office…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Study finds recidivism down among youths in Cook County court program offering links to social services. Tribune…
- The Chapin study examined 144 participants between 2022 and 2023 during a time when the initiative expanded beyond a pilot program. - The study found that 18% of participants picked up a new charge, in contrast to 28% of a comparison group. The review also found high participation among the juveniles referred to the program, with 85% graduating and nearly all successfully hooking up with at least one community-based service. * CBS Chicago | Woman charged in shooting at Illinois state senator’s home; attack not politically motivated, police say: Based on surveillance video footage from several homes and license plate reader technology, detectives were able to identify the vehicle used in the shooting, and Thompson was taken into custody within 30 minutes in south suburban Lansing, near the Indiana state line. During questioning, Thompson confessed to the shootings, and said her intended target was an estranged relative who lives in the area. Police said the shooting was not politically motivated, and Thompson was not at the home she intended to target. * Investigate Midwest | Rural Illinois’ food economy depends on immigrants: In Macon County, anchored by Decatur and the global headquarters of Archer Daniels Midland, nearly 1,000 immigrants have arrived in the last four years – but the county has still lost more than 3,000 residents in that time, showing how immigration can slow but not always reverse population loss. While two-thirds of Illinois’ land is devoted to farmland, the state’s hundreds of food processing plants also drive its nonmetropolitan economies — and they rely heavily on immigrant workers, both legal and unauthorized. Food manufacturing is concentrated in the Chicagoland region, including Kane, DuPage, Lake, and suburban Cook County. Between 2023 and 2024, over 50,000 migrants arrived from the southern border to Chicago. * WAND | Illinois Supreme Court hears arguments over class action lawsuit filed against Walgreens: Calley Fausett used a debit card at a Walgreens in Arizona and realized 10 digits of her card number were included on the receipt. The federal Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act states that receipts cannot show more than five digits of a card. Fausett filed a class action lawsuit in Illinois stating the company broke the law and put customers at risk for identity theft. Walgreens’ attorneys argue this violation was not enough to give Fausett standing to sue, as she did not suffer concrete harm. * NBC Chicago | Video of Illinois senator goes viral as she warns of masked agents on suburban street: Villa said individuals who appeared to be masked ICE agents approached people in the community. “These masked individuals came upon people with the color of my skin and picked them up,” she stated. “One of them was in a van. There was about 13 people, including a minor. One was at a grocery store, an apartment complex, and someone simply walking on the side of the street. This is why we have gathered here today to talk about and show the strength of this community, this immigrant, beautiful community.” * Daily Cardinal | Pritzker talks preserving democracy, encourages peaceful protest at Cap Times Idea Fest: Pritzker said he “hates” the mid-decade redistricting currently going on, adding that President Donald Trump is clearly trying to “manipulate” the system, which directly goes against what the framers intended. […] “If Missouri does it, Maryland is going to need to do it. If Indiana does it, it may be that Illinois has to do it,” Pritzker said. “That may be what happens now that you know they’re going to take advantage of every opportunity they’ve got. I don’t like any of this again. I don’t want to do it… But it can’t just be the good Democrats that are doing independent commissions.” * WGN | Pritzker slams ABC’s indefinite suspension of Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night show: ‘An attack on free speech’: “A free and democratic society cannot silence comedians because the President doesn’t like what they say,” Pritzker said on social media Wednesday evening, as his comment came within minutes of news breaking that ABC would pre-empt “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” indefinitely over the host’s remarks. “This is an attack on free speech and cannot be allowed to stand,” Pritzker added. “All elected officials need to speak up and push back on this undemocratic act.” * Founder of Cor Strategies Collin Corbett… * 25News Now | Republicans and Democrats oppose potential statewide delivery tax in Illinois: “For us, especially in central Illinois, maybe even some of the more rural areas of the state, a lot of people really do rely on deliveries to be able to be connected to the world, so to pay a tax on those deliveries to me, to fund transit up in the Chicagoland area, seems not like a really great idea,” said Democratic State Representative Sharon Chung of Bloomington. * WMBD | Quad Cities area Democrat to challenge for Illinois House seat against Peoria Republican: 25 News reports that Nicole Dopler of Rapids City is running as a Democrat for the 73rd District. The seat is currently held by Republican Ryan Spain of Peoria. The district covers portions of Peoria, Woodford, Marshall, and Stark Counties. Dopler says she is campaigning to protect healthcare and education, as well as getting young people access to affordable housing and higher education. * Crain’s | Union-backed amendment scrambles granny-flats legalization push: At the Sept. 25 meeting, Ald. Marty Quinn, 13th, plans to introduce an amendment that would let aldermen block accessory dwelling units in their wards. Quinn, a longtime opponent of ADUs in single-family neighborhoods, also wants contractors on such projects to use certified apprenticeship programs. * Sun-Times | Snelling pushes to keep police vacancies in budget, seek other cuts to close city deficit: Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling vowed Wednesday to resist any attempt to eliminate altogether 984 police vacancies — even as Mayor Brandon Johnson struggles to erase a $1.15 billion shortfall after two straight years of deficit spending. Johnson has ordered all of his department heads to cut 3% to 5% from their 2025 budgets. Instead of cutting vacancies, Snelling said he plans to meet that $92 million mandate through a hiring slowdown. He plans to hold open those 984 police positions, but budget less money for those vacancies he knows the city won’t be able to fill. * Sun-Times | 30 arrests reported in Trump’s deportation campaign in Chicago — but feds won’t provide full tally: But about half of the names and alleged charges released by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security couldn’t be definitively matched to court records. Officials have also released sparse details about the past arrests, making it difficult to independently verify some of the alleged crimes. * Evanston Now | Metra hoping to avoid service cuts in 2026: The Metra Board of Directors was told on Wednesday that, according to a presentation, the * Sun-Times | Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum condemns fatal ICE shooting in Franklin Park: Sheinbaum joined a growing chorus of calls for a thorough investigation into the death. Villegas González appears to be the first person shot and killed by an on-duty ICE agent since President Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday said his office has asked ICE for “all the information around” the shooting, but admitted, “they have given very little.” * Daily Herald | Mount Prospect proposes regulations for e-bikes, e-scooters, e-motos: “I believe in stronger fines than what’s in place here,” said Trustee Vince Dante. “I don’t think $50 up to $500 is going to be a deterrent for them to not do it again.” Police Chief Michael Eterno pointed out the safety concern by sharing a photo of a young rider performing a wheelie on Northwest Highway. Eterno quoted figures from the Consumer Product Safety Commission showing nearly 361,000 emergency room visits from 2017-2022 for micro-mobility device accidents, with children under 14 representing 36% of injuries. * Evanston Now | Biss vetoes grocery tax: Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss Wednesday vetoed the city’s grocery tax ordinance, passed by the City Council on Monday. The ordinance would implement a local 1% grocery tax, filling the $2.5 million annual revenue gap that city staff estimated Evanston would face with the expiration of state-imposed grocery tax at the start of 2026. * BND | East St. Louis schools address unreliable bus service as frustrations mount: The district contracts with Illinois Central School Bus in Caseyville to transport its students. The drivers are employees of Illinois Central, not the district. A shortage of bus drivers — which drivers say is the result of alleged mistreatment by Illinois Central — has led to delays, overcrowding and, in some cases, buses not arriving at all, community members reported. * Illinois Times | WICS anchor resigns following her unauthorized on-air tribute to Charlie Kirk: WICS news director Heather Voudrie Nodine told Illinois Times no one at the station has been suspended or fired in the last 90 days. … In most of the stories she is described as a “news anchor.” But the WICS news director also said that is inaccurate. Nodine said Harmony has never worked for WICS’ news division. She said Marketplace, the show Harmony hosted, is produced by the station’s advertising department and that she was an advertising employee * WGLT | Concerns over ICE limits attendance at Hispanic heritage celebration at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Bloomington: Organizer Criselda Joaquin said this year’s attendance was down an estimated 2,000 visitors because of fear of ICE raids. “The turnout has been less this year. I did have a couple of community members drop out selling food, and their reason being everything that’s been going on with immigration in Chicago, which has been disheartening but I completely understand,” Joaquin said. * WGLT | Panel: Accessing prenatal care in Central Illinois is not easy for some women: Transportation challenges, difficulty acquiring obstetric care, and the limitations of language barriers are major priorities to be addressed in Central Illinois, according to the panelists. […] Statistically, higher rates of diabetes and hypertension are present in some Black and brown communities, said Rebert. But sometimes those aren’t addressed during pregnancy. “Historically Black women have been mistreated by the medical community, [and that’s resulted in that population having] a fear of the medical community. And there are some biases within providers against those communities, as well,” she said. * WIFR | Pearl Place Apartments in Belvidere wins 2025 Landmarks Illinois preservation award: The 2025 Landmarks Illinois Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Preservation Awards honor Pearl Place Apartments in Belvidere. The restoration of the historic Garfield School made it possible for the building to continue serving seniors and veterans in the area, rather than being converted to market-rate apartments, according to Landmarks Illinois. * NYT | The Hepatitis B Vaccine Is Under Threat. Here’s What to Know.: Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has repeatedly questioned whether babies should continue to receive the vaccine on their first day of life. […] Most pregnant women in the United States are screened for hepatitis B in the first trimester. But screening isn’t perfect, and testing negative in the first trimester “doesn’t mean you cannot contract hepatitis B later on,” said Dr. Amanda Kost, a family medicine doctor at University of Washington Medicine. Some research suggests as many as 14 percent of pregnant women may not get tested, which may be because of inadequate prenatal care or because they refuse the test. There is also a rare risk of false negatives. These screening gaps are one reason doctors recommend a first dose of the vaccine the day a baby is born. * Crain’s | Nonprofits push back as Trump hints at crackdown after Kirk killing: “At a moment that is fragile and fraught, we must rise to the higher standard we all collectively desire. Now is a moment for leadership that drives unity rather than sows further division. Our organizations will continue focusing on helping people across all backgrounds, geographies, ideologies, and belief systems, to heal, thrive, and live peacefully together, protected by the freedoms guaranteed in our Constitution,” the letter concludes. Among the 100 philanthropies to sign the open letter are the MacArthur Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, Woods Fund Chicago, Spencer Foundation, Terra Foundation for American Art, Michael Reese Health Trust and Grand Victoria Foundation. * The Atlantic | Who to Trust If You Can’t Trust the CDC: Today, Monarez testified before a Senate committee that Kennedy fired her after less than a month in her role because she refused to accept his vaccine policy. According to Monarez, Kennedy demanded “blanket approval” of all recommendations made by the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which Kennedy dismantled in June and has since remade in his own anti-vaccine image. Over the next two days, the group is scheduled to discuss vaccines for COVID, hepatitis B, and other diseases. According to a Washington Post report, at the meeting, Trump-administration officials also plan to use a database of unverified vaccine-injury reports to link COVID shots to the deaths of 25 children.
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Open thread
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * How are you?
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Sep 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Sep 18, 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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