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Your moment of zen

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Oscar’s groomer always sends a photo of Oscar when the work is finished. Today…

One time, the groomer sent me a pic of Oscar with a Cubs bandana. I showed up wearing my White Sox cap. He immediately apologized. Profusely.

  16 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Chicago Tribune

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott don’t have much in common, but one shared policy may soon take effect in Illinois: a crackdown on intoxicating hemp products.

Just as Abbott recently did in his state, Pritzker is threatening to use his executive authority to reign in the unregulated sales of hemp products containing delta-8, -9 and -10 THC, the cannabis component that gets users high. […]

Last week, Pritzker said hemp products were making children sick, adding, “we may need to impose executive authority to try to shut those sales of intoxicating hemp down.”

Tuesday, he tempered his comments, saying, “We should have a regulated environment for hemp, and I am pushing that. If the legislature and if the advocates for the hemp industry are unwilling to do it, then we will take executive action.”

* Capitol News Illinois’ Ben Szalinski

Illinois will release a new round of federal funding to build electric vehicle charging stations after the Trump administration initially sought to withhold it. […]

The 2021 Bipartisan Infrastructure Law signed by former President Joe Biden contained $148 million for Illinois to build more EV charging stations. The state received $25.3 million to build charging stations at 37 locations in 2024 as part of the first round of grant funding.

But the Federal Highway Administration withheld the second round earlier this year after President Donald Trump signed an executive order requiring federal agencies to pause funding for clean energy projects appropriated in the Biden-era law.

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and 16 other attorneys general sued the Trump administration in May seeking the release of the funds. The lawsuit argued it is illegal for the president to withhold funding that has already been approved by Congress. A judge ruled in June that the federal government must release the funds to Illinois and other states that joined the lawsuit. […]

Pritzker’s office announced on Wednesday that Illinois will receive $18.4 million this year as part of the second round of grant funding for EV chargers. The money will fund 167 charging stations at 25 locations. With the release and allocation of the federal funding, Illinois will have received $43.8 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to build 349 charging ports in 62 locations.

* Tribune

After trying repeatedly to find a safe person to tell about her alleged a sexual assault by a correctional officer, a woman who was detained at Logan Correctional Center intercepted a female staff member while she was in the unit. […]

The woman, who is now living in southern Illinois, is among seven current or former inmates who have filed separate lawsuits against correctional officers, prison staff and leadership in federal court in Springfield, alleging a widespread pattern of sexual abuse, followed by retaliation when they rebuffed the guards or tried to report the abuse. […]

All together, the complaints paint a grim portrait of the experience at Logan, which has been dogged by abuse complaints in the past. The women reported that correctional officers raped them and coerced them into sexual acts by threatening punishments or withholding favors.

When the women resisted or reported the abuse, they were often retaliated against, the lawsuits say.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WMBD | Illinois lawmaker suggests estate tax reform for farmers: State Representative Sharon Chung said in a town hall Tuesday she hopes to change the estate tax to help Illinois farmers. “Farmers tend to really take the brunt of the estate tax more than your everyday people,” she said. An estate is taxed a percentage of all the properties, investments and all other belongings when the owner dies.

* Capitol City Now | Sally Turner named Legislator of the Year by organization: Sen. Sally Turner was named the 2025 Legislator of the Year by the Illinois Association of County Veterans Assistance Commissions Monday night. […] IACVAC cited Turner’s legislative work, particularly Senate Bill 39 which made veteran housing more affordable, that improves the lives of veterans statewide, according to the release.

* Lutheran Social Services of Illinois | 2025 “Paul Simon Courage in Public Service” Award Honors Gov. JB Pritzker: Lutheran Social Services of Illinois (LSSI) and Lutherans Unite for Illinois today honored Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker with the Paul Simon Courage in Public Service Award for exemplifying Sen. Simon’s lifelong commitment to developing just, compassionate, and responsible public policy, especially in defense of Medicaid and social services. The award was established in 2004 by several Lutheran organizations to honor the late Sen. Simon’s extraordinary legacy of public service.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Trump, ICE target police in Chicago, other cities for recruitment in NFL ad: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement specifically pitched jobs to the city’s cops when it ran a local advertisement during a Monday night NFL broadcast. “Attention Chicago law enforcement,” the commercial said, the city’s skyline in the background. “You took an oath to protect and serve, to keep your family, your city safe. But in sanctuary cities, you’re ordered to stand down.” “Join ICE, and help us catch the worst of the worst,” it continued before touting a $50,000 sign-on bonus and student loan forgiveness.

* Sun-Times | CPS special ed staff cuts, shuffling leave students lost, behind and unserved: The analysis found that CPS cut about 250 special education teachers and 673 aides last spring. It then added back hundreds of positions, most of them weeks after school started on Aug. 18. With the school year already underway, many principals have no idea how they’ll fill these new openings, and some are still short positions. It can be unsafe for students who need these supports in some situations without the proper number of special education aides, school staff say. And learning for all students can be disrupted when a special education teacher isn’t available to differentiate lessons for students of varying abilities.

* Sun-Times | Pilsen coal plant demolition puts pressure on city not to repeat Little Village fiasco: The owner of the former Fisk coal-fired power plant wants to demolish more than a dozen structures around the facility, a project that will require added city scrutiny because of risks to public health and the environment. […] Midwest Generation, a division of NRG Energy, is seeking city permission to tear down 13 structures, including storage tanks and silos, around the more than century-old building. The demolition will require dust control and other precautions.

* WAND | Mayor Brandon Johnson visits WGN Radio – talks taxes and federal troops: Chicago’s Mayor Brandon Johnson joins Bob Sirott to discuss Chicago’s crime statistics over the years, his suggestion concerning vacancies on Michigan Avenue, and what he thinks about President Trump claiming that he will send federal troops to Chicago. He also talks about the affordability of housing in Chicago compared to other big cities, how property taxes will be handled going forward, and Bob’s advice to Mayor Johnson.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘We are not backing down’: Feds ramp up immigration raids in Chicago area: Some public officials have directly confronted DHS agents. State Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, posted a video Monday showing her approaching masked federal agents in SUVs in a West Chicago neighborhood. Villa, a candidate for comptroller, was seen running down the street telling people to hide in their homes. Crowds have also gathered in protest outside a Broadview detention facility where ICE is holding people in custody. The protests have occasionally devolved into skirmishes with ICE tactical teams as protesters have blocked entries and exits into the facility.

* Tribune | Cook County to consider $22.3 million for men wrongly convicted in fatal fire: At a 2012 hearing, attorneys questioned CPD’s conclusions about the fire, alleging abuse by detectives and failure by the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office to question the narrative. It took another ten years — with delays partly driven by the pandemic — before the three men were exonerated and released, in 2022. The Chicago City Council agreed to pay a collective $48 million settlement to the men back in May. Commissioners on the county board’s Finance Committee are set to consider paying each man $7.45 million.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County residents urged to document ICE actions: Knowing they cannot stop raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Lake County, leaders like state Sen. Adriane Johnson, D-Buffalo Grove, are urging residents to bear witness and make a record of area ICE activities. “When you see ICE, take out your phone and video everything you see,” she said Tuesday. “Get videos and photos from all angles. This is putting ICE on notice that we will not tolerate them terrorizing us and our communities.”

* Daily Herald | Opponents of closing maternity ward at Alexian Brothers in Elk Grove Village take case to state board: Opponents of Ascension’s plan to halt obstetric services at Alexian Brothers Medical Center in Elk Grove Village took their case to the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board, which held a hearing this week in Elk Grove Village. They gave testimony highlighting potential risks to expectant mothers as childbirth services are consolidated under the umbrella of the St. Alexius Women and Children’s Hospital in Hoffman Estates.

* Daily Herald | Firefighters will relocate to Rosemont when Des Plaines firehouse is replaced: The Des Plaines City Council on Monday approved an agreement with Rosemont that will allow the crew members and vehicles normally at Des Plaines Station No. 62 to use Rosemont’s Station No. 2 for at least one year. Rosemont approved the agreement Sept. 8. The agreement ensures uninterrupted fire and emergency medical coverage in southern Des Plaines during the eventual construction of a new Station No 62, Fire Chief Matt Matzl said in a memo.

* Naperville Sun | Identifying someone who’s died not as simple as it sounds in some cases, DuPage coroner says: As the second most-populous county in Illinois, DuPage sees about 10,000 deaths a year, Lukas said. Not all of those deaths get reported to the coroner. If a person dies of a natural death and a physician is available to sign the death certificate, the coroner is not needed. State laws determine which deaths get reported to the coroner. “We are obligated by law to investigate any sudden, unexpected or unexplained deaths,” Lukas said. Of the 10,000 or so deaths a year, about 6,500 will come through the coroner’s office. That number includes not just physical bodies, but also cremation permit requests and deaths reported by hospice organizations.

*** Downstate ***

* Shaw Local | Kankakee City Council rejects plan for Fortitude shelter: A homeless shelter will not be operated in Kankakee by Fortitude Community Outreach – at least for the next 12 months. At Monday’s Kankakee City Council meeting, the conditional use permit request was rejected by a 12-0 vote despite another impassioned plea from supporters of the organization.

* Daily Egyptian | Why is SIU using AI when our syllabi say that students can’t?: SIU System President Dan Mahony said naming ceremonies are “extraordinarily rare” — he’s only ever attended three. But this one was extra special, because the School of Journalism and Advertising became the first school at SIU to be named after a woman. […] “We decided to do something entirely different and have ChatGPT give us a bio on Charlotte,” Mahony said. “And I find that whole concept terrifying, but her bio is really incredibly impressive, and ChatGPT was clearly impressed as well. And I will say they gave me this task because they’ve heard me speak before and decided you better read something.”

* WGLT | Panel centering LGBTQ immigration issues convenes in Bloomington: A lunchtime panel this week aims to illuminate specific challenges and barriers LGBTQ immigrants face. The panel, sponsored by Prairie Pride Coalition, is connected to Welcoming Week, a nationwide initiative advocating for inclusive communities, and features representatives from The Immigration Project, Illinois State University’s Queer Coalition and Rainbow Railroad, a global nonprofit which helps LGBTQ people escape persecution based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

* NPR Illinois | Study: UIS contributes nearly $1 billion to the Illinois economy: The University of Illinois Springfield added $943.2 million to the Illinois economy during fiscal year 2023, according to a new economic impact study conducted by Lightcast, a nationally recognized labor market analytics firm. […] The analysis found that UIS supports 9,093 jobs statewide through operations, student and visitor spending, volunteer contributions and the increased productivity of alumni. The largest single impact comes from UIS graduates, whose higher earnings and contributions to Illinois businesses added $847.9 million to the state’s economy in 2023.

*** National ***

* NPR | RFK Jr. ‘wanted blanket approval’ for changes at CDC, fired director testifies: “He just wanted blanket approval,” Monarez told members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on Wednesday. “Even under pressure, I could not replace evidence with ideology.” Over the three-hour hearing, Monarez repeatedly countered Kennedy’s claims – which he outlined in a Wall Street Journal op-ed and reiterated during a congressional hearing in early September – that she was fired because she was not a “trustworthy person.”

* AP | Federal Reserve cuts key rate for first time this year: The move is the Fed’s first cut since December and lowered its short-term rate to about 4.1%, down from 4.3%. Fed officials, led by Chair Jerome Powell, had kept their rate unchanged this year as they evaluated the impact of tariffs, tighter immigration enforcement, and other Trump administration policies on inflation and the economy. Yet the central bank’s focus has shifted quickly from inflation, which remains modestly above its 2% target, to jobs, as hiring has grounded nearly to a halt in recent months and the unemployment rate has ticked higher. Lower interest rates could reduce borrowing costs for mortgages, car loans, and business loans, and boost growth and hiring.

* Tax Notes | Present at the Creation: A Short History of the SALT Deduction: The United States has never had a federal income tax without a SALT deduction to make it more palatable. Lawmakers have defended the deduction on various grounds, typically advancing claims about fairness and federalism. But Congress has often treated the deduction’s existence as a given — an element of the law so obviously necessary that it requires almost no explanation.

  5 Comments      


What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage

Wednesday, Sep 17, 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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Speaker Welch: ‘We haven’t had any conversations regarding redoing our maps in the middle of a decade’

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* House Speaker Chris Welch was in Bloomington this week

In other issues, Illinois was the center of a map redistricting tussle after Texas Democrats came to the state to block a mid-year redistricting bill. […]

Some Democrats want Illinois to do the same and change their congressional seat districts to potentially bring more Democrats into Congress. […]

Welch said he is happy with the maps. Thanks to the most recent map change, Chung was able to join the House.

“As a result of that map, Sharon Chung was the first Korean American to serve in the House of Representatives,” he said. “We haven’t had any conversations regarding redoing our maps in the middle of a decade.”

Despite all the media hype and the governor’s hinting around, it was just never gonna happen. The Democrats are pretty much maxed out now and diluting districts could put members in jeopardy down the road. Filing season is also well underway.

And what sort of message would it send after hosting those fleeing Democratic Texas legislators if Illinois Dems did to Illinois Republicans what the Texas Republicans did to their Democrats?

  12 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition (Updated)

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Stay careful out there (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* After the assassinations of two Minnesota legislators and then Charlie Kirk, pretty much everyone in this business is on edge

* Shaw Local

Shorewood police responded to three reports of gunfire Tuesday morning, and two residences were damaged.

Officers were called to the area of Ca-Crest Drive and Highland Drive for a report of shots fired at 4:50 a.m. but were initially unable to find anyone in the area or evidence of damage, according to a statement from the Shorewood Police Department. […]

Shorewood police said in their statement that the owners of the two impacted homes do not know each other and have no common known affiliations.

* Shorewood police say they have a suspect in custody

Thanks to the help of many neighbors sharing their videos with us, our officers and detectives were able to identify the vehicle and suspect involved in this mornings shootings. We are happy to report that the suspect has been taken into custody. We will release more information when it is available, but for now residents can be assured that there is no further threat from this person.

* Isabel reached out to the Senator. Here’s her report…

Sen. Meg Loughran Cappel said she has not been notified whether the shooting at her home was politically motivated.

In the moments after the shot was discovered, she said she was shocked. Cappel noted that she generally keeps a low profile, but the incident made her reconsider the risks elected officials face. “It really made me think that sometimes it just doesn’t matter if you’re a Republican or a Democrat,” she said. “Somebody is always just not going to like you because of the party you’re affiliated with.”

She added that she is still processing what happened. “I think [the recent political violence] has legislators and electeds looking over their shoulders a bit more and being a lot more cautious because of the climate of our political world right now,” Cappel said.

Cappel said her adult children were at her home at the time of the shooting.

“Now they have to deal with this, and worry that their mom’s going to be murdered, even though we don’t know the motive of it, but, you know, that’s just on their mind,” Cappel said. “So that’s the hard part, the kids dealing with it.”

Cappel said she has previously taken steps to increase her security, installing cameras and fencing at her home. After Melissa Hortman, the Democratic speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives, was assassinated in June, she also added security at her office. She said she has been in contact with the Illinois State Police to conduct an assessment to see if there are any security gaps.

…Adding… A source told us local authorities have determined the incident at Sen. Cappel’s home was not politically motivated.

* On a related note, these two comments have now been hidden on a WSIU story about the Joe DeBose House campaign, but we have a screenshot

Click here to read more about what appears to be the commenter. (If that link doesn’t work, click here for a pdf.)

…Adding… Joe DeBose…

“I want to make something very clear: I will not be intimidated, and I will not back down. Less than 24 hours after announcing my campaign, I’ve already received threats—even one calling for violence against me. This is not the first time, and it won’t be the last. I’m used to it, and I’m ready for this fight.

But let me be clear: this filth doesn’t shake me, it fuels me.

It reminds me of the evil plaguing Illinois and our nation, and why what I’m doing is so important. It reminds me that God has given me talents and a light that I must shine into the darkness. As John 1:5 says, “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.”

* Related…

    * WGLT | Illinois House speaker says lawmakers are more aware of their surroundings: Speaking with reporters at the Bloomington Public Library ahead of a community town hall with State Rep. Sharon Chung, D-Bloomington, Welch said legislators have become very mindful of their surroundings. “But we also have constituents to serve We’re going to continue to do our jobs, and we’re going to continue to represent the people of Illinois to the best of our ability,” he said. Chung noted she’s had security measures installed at her home and office — something she hadn’t considered before.

    * ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker says threats increased to his office since Charlie Kirk shooting: Governor JB Pritzker said that in the days since Charlie Kirk’s assassination his office has seen an increase in the number of threats. “The number of threats that have come in over the last few days has been an enormous multiple of those that were coming in in the days before,” Pritzker said.

  18 Comments      


Unclear on the concepts

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Notice anything missing from this brainiac’s “analysis”?

What’s missing is Rep. Benton’s 2024 totals. Benton won by 2,335 votes in 2024 - 52.21 percent to 47.79 percent. That’s a higher margin than his 2022 victory of 51.66 percent to 48.34 percent.

Politics ain’t magic, unless you traffic in such a thing and your followers don’t know any better.

* For whatever reason, House and Senate Republicans have an inordinate fear of Tom DeVore, even though he doesn’t seem to understand basic politics. For example, DeVore’s backing a Republican candidate against Rep. Charlie Meier and regularly slams the incumbent for highlighting local businesses, restaurants and festivals

That’s just so unbelievably ignorant. Praising local businesses and organizations is a core function of any good politician. DeVore’s constant attacks just reinforce the notion that Charlie is everywhere in his district and truly respects the hard-working people who provide goods and services to his constituents. People (literally) eat that stuff up.

I really think Republicans should start sending Facebookers DeVore’s way because he’s inadvertently making their case for them.

  27 Comments      


Illinois is an island for adequate MMR vax rates, but trouble could be ahead

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* NBC News

The vast majority of counties across the United States are experiencing declining rates of childhood vaccination and have been for years, according to an NBC News data investigation, the most comprehensive analysis of vaccinations and school exemptions to date. […]

    • Since 2019, 77% of counties and jurisdictions in the U.S. have reported notable declines in childhood vaccination rates. The declines span from less than 1 percentage point to more than 40 percentage points.
    • Vaccine exemptions for school children are rising nationwide: As many as 53% of counties and jurisdictions saw exemption rates more than double from their first year of collecting data to the most recent.
    • Among the states collecting data for the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, 68% of counties and jurisdictions now have immunization rates below 95% — the level of herd immunity doctors say is needed to protect against an outbreak.

* National MMR vax rate map

Yikes.

* Now, zoom in on Illinois

Cook is at 94.9 percent, so it’s moving into a danger zone.

* NBC 5

Among the [Chicago area] districts with the lowest reported [MMR vaccination] rates were Alsip-Hazelgreen-Oak Lawn School District 126 in Cook County, Zion Elementary School District 6 in Lake County and Chicago Public Schools.

District 126 reported 87.51% of students were vaccinated, but the superintendent told NBC Chicago the district did not submit all records in time for state analysis and claimed the actual rate was 97.8%.

Meanwhile, District 6 reported 72.3% of students were vaccinated. The district attributed the decline to “shifting demographics, policy landscapes, access barriers, misinformation, and data/measurement changes,” and emphasized its commitment to a safe learning environment.

Chicago Public Schools reported a 93.05% vaccination rate. As of publication, CPS has not responded to NBC Chicago’s request for comment.

Click here to search for school districts statewide.

* Another real problem is St. Louis

The rate of children starting kindergarten in St. Louis with all the state-required vaccines has plummeted from 91.6% during the 2010-2011 school year to 75.9% in 2024-2025. […]

In 2010, almost 90% of kindergartners attending school within the St. Louis city limits had received their recommended MMR shots, which prevent nearly all cases of measles — the most contagious virus known in the world. In the last school year, MMR coverage rates among kindergartners plummeted to 74%.

Luckily, all the Illinois counties nearest to St. Louis have 97-98+ MMR vax rates.

Believe it or not, Arkansas and Mississippi appear to have very strong vax rates.

  30 Comments      


RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path.

Retailers like Tim Peterson in Evanston 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

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Oversight panel objects to new Illinois prison mail policy. Capitol News Illinois

    - A legislative oversight panel formally objected Tuesday to a new administrative rule that temporarily allows the Illinois Department of Corrections to withhold mail from incarcerated people and instead deliver electronically scanned copies of correspondence they receive from the outside.
    - That objection does not block the rule from remaining in effect through January. But it sent a clear message to the department that it will need to make significant changes — and listen to feedback from incarcerated people’s families, attorneys and other interested stakeholders — if it wants to make the rule permanent.
    -“I think what you’re hearing from this committee on a bicameral and bipartisan basis is that there is a belief you are doing this wrong,” state Sen. Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, chair of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, told IDOC staff during a committee meeting in Chicago.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Subscribers know more. WaPo | Illinois state senator confronts ICE agents: Illinois State Senator Karina Villa (D) walked through a Chicago suburb on Sept. 15, warning neighbors of the presence of what appeared to be ICE agents.

* Tribune | Officials and local leaders encourage people in US without legal permission to stay home amid federal activity: “This is an engineered crisis,” Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton said at a news conference at Daley Plaza Tuesday evening, “a spectacle designed for headlines, not for the safety of our neighborhoods. … (This administration is) targeting hardworking people who have been our neighbors for decades. People who run local businesses, sell flowers at the corner, and have shown up every day to build a better life here.” Early Tuesday — just over a week since the Department of Homeland Security’s “Operation Midway Blitz” began — Gregory Bovino, an official with U.S. Customs and Border Protection who led immigration operations in Los Angeles this summer, posted on social media announcing that his agency had “arrived” in the Chicago area.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WGLT | Illinois House speaker says lawmakers are more aware of their surroundings: While the recent killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has escalated fears of political violence, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch has been on high alert since June 14, when Democratic former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband were killed in their home. Since then, he said his caucus has been briefed regularly by the Illinois State Police and other groups about potential threats. Speaking with reporters at the Bloomington Public Library ahead of a community town hall with State Rep. Sharon Chung, D-Bloomington, Welch said legislators have become very mindful of their surroundings.

* WMBD | Downstate will get ‘something’ from Chicago transit bill according to Illinois House Speaker: The Windy City’s transport system is facing a fiscal cliff. It needs additional funding, or thousands of jobs could be lost, and service lines could be cut. While the Speaker of the House Chris Welch said it will benefit Downstate, he can’t give any details on what changes it will make to statewide transit.

* WMGL | Joe DeBose announces campaign for Illinois House District 118: “I’ve had enough of the budgets in Springfield growing larger and larger while the family budgets in Southern Illinois grow smaller by the day. My commitment is simple: to stand firm, speak the truth, and work hard every day to protect our freedoms, lower taxes, and deliver results for Southern Illinois,” said DeBose. “I’ve helped conservatives win tough fights and pass common-sense policies across the country. I know how to work with others to deliver results, but let me be clear: I will never back down when it comes to fighting for you, the families, taxpayers, jobs, local businesses, and communities of Southern Illinois.”

* Adam Braun is running in the Democratic primary for Rep. Hoan Huynh’s seat as Huynh makes his bid for Congress. Press release…

Today, Illinois Senate President Pro Tempore Bill Cunningham announced his endorsement of Adam Braun’s campaign for the Illinois House of Representatives, 13th District, citing his experience ensuring access to affordable healthcare, standing up to the Trump Administration, helping law enforcement take illegally trafficked firearms off the street, and combating the opioid crisis.

“Adam Braun was a leader as Executive Deputy Attorney General and I know he will continue to be a leader in the Illinois House of Representatives,” said President Pro Tempore Cunningham. “I was proud to work with Adam on legislation that will make our streets safer by holding the firearm industry accountable. I saw firsthand how he worked as Executive Deputy Attorney General to ensure access to affordable healthcare and tackle the opioid epidemic head-on. At a time when Donald Trump is threatening our most basic freedoms, Adam has proven he won’t back down. He’s the leader the 13th District needs in Springfield.”

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul has endorsed Sen. Sara Feigenholtz for reelection…

“Sen. Feigenholtz is a longtime champion for reproductive freedom and public safety in Illinois. She led the fight to protect abortion here at home when Trump threatened to take that right away, and expanded access to reproductive care, regardless of income. She pushed for common sense gun laws and supported law-enforcement to make our neighborhoods safer. I’m proud to stand with her and support her re-election for state senate.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Hyde Park Labs marks another push to make Chicago a tech hub: Hyde Park Labs aims to be a hub for deep tech innovation and quantum computing in Chicago. It will host IBM’s next-generation quantum computer before it eventually moves to the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park. The quantum computing campus will be at the former U.S. Steel South Works site. “Hyde Park Labs and the UChicago Science Incubator are a milestone for innovation on Chicago’s South Side,” said John Flavin, CEO of Portal Innovations. “Portal’s mission has always been to bridge the gap between academia and private industry. The partnership with the University of Chicago will allow us to help grow innovative life sciences, quantum and deep-tech startups locally.”

* Sun-Times | South Side activists, residents call on elected officials to stop development of quantum computing campus: Residents, gathered across from New Sullivan Elementary School, said elected officials haven’t done enough to inform neighbors about the development. They also expressed concerns over a lack of transparency, potential displacement and environmental concerns at the site. Southside Together wants officials to rehabilitate the fallow land and invest in resources the community wants and needs.

* Block Club | Chicago Budget Task Force Recommends Tax Hikes, Higher Fees To Close $1 Billion Gap: Mayor Brandon Johnson should consider raising garbage and rideshare fees, hiking the liquor tax, extending a hiring freeze and tying property tax increases to inflation to help close a more than $1 billion budget gap in 2026, according to a coalition of civic and business leaders. Those ideas are just a few of almost 90 recommendations included in a report issued Tuesday by the Chicago Financial Future Task Force, a group convened by Johnson’s administration to help fix Chicago’s budget woes next year and beyond.

* Crain’s | American squares off in court against city and United over O’Hare gates: American Airlines is asking Cook County Circuit Court Judge Thaddeus Wilson to stop a process that would give United five more gates while taking four from the Fort Worth, Texas-based carrier, beginning Oct. 1. The airport is reallocating gates for the first time based on a use-it-or-lose-it provision in a new lease agreement signed in 2018. The carriers and the airport claim millions of dollars are at stake, in costs associated with moving airlines and passengers to new gates and tickets that already have been sold to customers.

* Tribune | ‘You don’t get a break’: Chicago Public Schools lunchroom workers demand higher wages, fair contract: More than 1,800 lunchroom attendants, cooks and porters staff the district — and about half regularly struggle to cover basic expenses like housing and food, according to their union, UNITE HERE Local 1. “CPS lunchroom workers put their heart and soul into cooking and caring for Chicago’s children,” said Karen Kent, president of UNITE HERE Local 1, which represents hospitality workers across the city. “We know Chicago loves their lunchroom workers, but these workers can’t serve from an empty cup.”

* WBEZ | Chicago anchorman Bill Kurtis on his new book ‘Whirlwind’ and journalism’s crisis moment: As a broadcast journalist, he covered some of the 20th century’s most gruesome murder cases, from Charles Manson to Richard Speck, and broke landmark reporting on the use of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. More recently, he has lent his signature deep voice to both Will Ferrell’s “Anchorman” and NPR’s weekly quiz show “Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me!”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* CBS Chicago | U.S. citizen tased and detained during ICE operation in Des Plaines, Illinois: Family members said that the man was released from the hospital after he said he was tased in the face while being taken into federal custody. The only problem—he was born in Chicago. Although his father is undocumented, they all ended up in ICE custody.

* ABC Chicago | 2 apparent US citizens swept up in Elgin ICE raid documented on Noem’s social media: They arrived like a military operation. Agents could be seen in camouflage uniforms with military helicopters circling above at about 5:30 a.m. They broke the front door down and entered the home. Members of Elgin’s rapid response teams want to keep their identities anonymous.

* Daily Herald | Palatine neighborhood dealing with rat infestation: While several sightings have occurred in residents’ yards, to his knowledge no one has officially reported rats inside their homes, Lamerand said. The cause remains undetermined, though theories include construction work on Route 53 or the demolition of Arlington Park. The village has responded by working with residents to eliminate food and water sources that attract rodents.

* Daily Herald | ‘Catalyst for good’: Presidents Cup, Medinah leaders announce six-figure donation for DuPage’s Crisis Recovery Center: With a year to go before Team USA tees off against a squad of international players, the event, staged by the PGA Tour, is already making a mark. “From the start, we wanted this Presidents Cup to be about more than world-class golf. We wanted it to be a catalyst for good, delivering a positive impact far beyond our gates,” said Mike Scimo, chair of the host committee and former club president.

* Daily Herald | Second measles case confirmed in suburban Cook County: A 4-year-old suburban Cook County child has tested positive for measles, the second confirmed infection in the county this year, health officials said Tuesday. The Cook County Department of Public Health believes the child was infected during international travel. Officials say they’re working to identify and notify people who may have been exposed. One identified point of exposure is O’Hare International Airport’s Terminal 5, between 7:30 and 11 a.m. on Thursday, Sept. 11.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | SPD officers display unity amid recent criticism of department: [Springfield Police Chief Joe Behl] said during the meeting that he has agreed to meet with community activist Tiara Standage after he issued a department-wide boycott of the Faith Coalition for the Common Good due to Standage’s involvement with the group.

* WCIA | NTSB releases final report on 2023 Teutopolis HAZMAT disaster: Finally, the NTSB noted that none of the first responders contacted the shipper of the anhydrous ammonia in Ohio. The shipper’s identity and emergency phone number were listed on papers in the cab of the crashed truck, but they were left there by the driver when he self-extricated and were not retrieved by first responders. Under federal regulations, the shipper was required to provide emergency response and incident mitigation information.

* WAND | District 186 faces ongoing budget issues; further cuts likely on the way: Springfield School District 186 is experiencing some challenges with the budget. On Monday night, board members voted on a budget, but the district is still facing a multi-million-dollar deficit, and district leaders are trying to find solutions for the next school year. “The cuts that we made last spring for this current budget, which was to the tune of about $3 million, were things that we could do without touching the classroom at this point in time,” said Superintendent Jennifer Gill.

* WCIA | 126 employees impacted in layoff as Rantoul distribution center transitions to 3rd party provider : Revelyst Inc., which designs, manufacturers and houses outdoor products, was a part of Vista Outdoors, before the company split into two. On Sept. 3, Revelyst issued a WARN Notice, regarding its decision to conduct a mass layoff at its Rantoul facility. According to data shared with Illinois workNet Centers, the layoff will impact 126 employees and is scheduled to begin Nov. 3, 2025.

* WAND | Decatur City Manager resigns after less than 2 years back in role: Decatur City Manager Tim Gleason is stepping down after less than two years back in the role. “I had planned on being here longer … figured it would at least be two years,” Gleason said. “Sometimes you just need to make a decision, put yourself first. It’s time for me to move on.”

* WCIA | U of I research team investigating wildfire smoke impacts on health: Molitor said his team set out to discover how common wildfire smoke was in different parts of the country — including in Illinois — and what impacts it has on people’s health. After taking data from satellites that measure smoke plumes and matching that to data on health outcomes, they learned that on days the smoke plumes roll in, there’s an uptick in visits to the emergency room and deaths.

* WJBD | Salem City Council approves agreement for four license plate readers for police department: The Salem City Council has approved the lease of four FLOCK license plate readers for the next two years. The move was opposed by Centralia resident Mike Musick, who worked with a company before retirement involved with Missouri Department of Transportation roadside cameras. “It’s too much,” Musick said. “The percentage of crimes solved versus the number of individuals whose mobility is tracked in detail in coming and going—I’m uncomfortable with it.”

*** National ***

* Forbes | Stephen Miller’s Quota Likely Drove Korean Arrests In Immigration Raid: Charles Kuck, an immigration attorney at Kuck Baxter in Atlanta, represents 11 individuals arrested in the raid and pieced together what happened at the facility. ICE did not bring Korean language interpreters—proof Koreans were not the intended target—but managed to determine that the South Koreans at the facility entered on B-1 visas or the Electronic System for Travel Authorization known as ESTA.

* Reuters | Trump files $15 billion defamation case against New York Times, Penguin Random House: The lawsuit filed on Monday in Florida federal court centers on a book about Trump by two New York Times reporters and three “false, malicious, defamatory, and disparaging” articles that he says were aimed at sabotaging his chances in the 2024 presidential election. In a statement on Tuesday, the Times said Trump’s lawsuit has no legitimate legal claims and is an attempt to stifle and discourage independent reporting.

  5 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric…

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

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Sep 17, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Sep 17, 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

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents weren’t wearing body cameras during the deadly shooting of a Mexican immigrant last week in the suburbs because a program requiring them was scrapped by the Trump administration.

In late 2021, ICE launched a $25 million body camera pilot program that was discontinued soon after President Donald Trump took office, Jason Houser, chief of staff for ICE from 2021 to 2023, said in an interview Tuesday.

“It would have put cameras on all 6,200 deportation officers,” Houser said. “So if they would have carried through with the timeline we had in place, they would all be wearing them.”

Two ICE agents weren’t wearing body-worn cameras when one of them fatally shot Silverio Villegas Gonzalez in a traffic stop Friday in Franklin Park, according to a federal official who asked not to be identified.

*** In Memoriam ***

* Jim Nowlan | Jim Edgar was proud to be governor of the state he loved: A teetotaler, Jim pushed successfully as secretary of state for drunken driving alcohol limits. He carried his abstemiousness into the governorship, where not a whiff of alcohol ever wafted through the grand rooms of the Executive Mansion. An invitation to the Governor’s Mansion was, shall we say, not the hottest ticket in town, and over eight years, it probably cost Jim a few social points, important in politics. But that was Jim Edgar. In his run for governor in 1990, Jim supported what was in effect a tax increase. Several years prior, the legislature had passed a temporary income tax increase, which was to expire in 1991. Jim’s opponent loudly called for terminating the tax increase. Not Jim, who knew state government inside out and also knew the revenue would be needed for education, a priority of his, and to balance the budget. That could well have been the end of Jim’s political career, but he won, in a squeaker.

* Tribune | Porter McNeil, Illinois political consultant admired by those in both parties, dies at 65: “Porter’s passing leaves an irreplaceable hole in the community he loved so fiercely,” Gov. JB Pritzker said in a statement. “His infectious enthusiasm and fervent dedication to his family, his friends, and to doing the right thing for the neighbors he represented should serve as a guiding light for all public officials to follow.” McNeil spent time working for the political firm headed by David Axelrod, who went on to become senior adviser to President Barack Obama. Axelrod, now a senior political commentator for CNN, said that McNeil “had a great talent for communications and tremendous passion for politics but always as a vehicle to help improve the lives of his community and hard-working people.”

* Tribune | Aaron Jaffe, former Illinois lawmaker, judge and head of state gaming board, dies at 95: Jaffe’s role overseeing the state’s gambling control board involved overseeing legal riverboat casinos and video gaming terminals. “He was an excellent chairman of a very important board, to make sure that we had honesty and integrity when it comes to gambling in Illinois,” said former Gov. Pat Quinn, who reappointed Jaffe as the board’s chair. “He was an exemplary legislator, judge and regulator and he just did everything with great integrity, and I think everyone in Illinois owes a permanent debt of gratitude to his public service.”

* US Rep. Darin LaHood

* Bob Kustra | Jim Edgar’s tenure as Illinois governor is a reminder of politics’ better days: As his lieutenant governor for eight years, I saw him up close and personal when he reached the pinnacle of his service to the people of Illinois after his election to the state legislature and as secretary of state, when he led a successful fight to crack down on drunken driving. He struck me as a mediator in the office of governor, always willing to listen to both sides of an issue and then make a call based on his own keen judgment of what worked best for the people of Illinois. Jim knew how to balance a budget, a lost art in our nation’s capital where deficits prevail. Upon his election in 1990, he inherited what was then the largest deficit in the state’s history requiring him to make hundreds of millions of dollars in budget cuts. But he never wavered in approving the Illinois Board of Higher Education budget year after year. It would be one of his proudest accomplishments.

* Daily Herald | Jim Edgar, 1946-2025: In these dark political times, we all may miss the former governor’s legacy of decency more than we know: While a close colleague of both, Edgar in actuality was a protégé of long-ago legislative power W. Russell Arrington. When as a young man Edgar interned for the suburban president pro tem of the Illinois Senate, Arrington famously counseled him, “We’re not here just to get reelected. We’re here to solve problems.” With a record of historic legislative achievement, Arrington embodied those words, and they inspired Edgar throughout a half-century career in Illinois politics.

* University of Illinois | Jim Edgar’s contributions to higher education, good government lauded by U of I System leaders: “Gov. Edgar was the ideal of collaborative and civil leadership, both as an elected leader and throughout his life. He led with vision and demonstrated a deep appreciation for higher education and its role in promoting social mobility and maintaining a stable society,” U of I System President Tim Killeen said. “His legacy here at the University of Illinois System lives on through the Edgar Fellows Program, training future generations of political leadership to address our state’s needs.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Villivalam invites residents to a transit town hall: The transit town hall will be held Saturday, Sept. 20 at noon at Harry S. Truman College – McKeon Lobby, located at 1145 W. Wilson Ave., Chicago. Villivalam is hosting the event alongside State Senators Sara Feigenholtz, Graciela Guzmán and Mike Simmons, and Alders Angela Clay, Maria Hadden, Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth, Matt Martin and Andre Vasquez, where they will provide updates about transit, answer residents’ questions and hear about how transit is essential in their communities.

* Oak Park Journal | Illinois’ first lady tells story of remaking governor’s mansion : MK Pritzker, the first lady of Illinois, will tell the backstory of how she worked to update the governor’s mansion in Springfield when she visits the Nineteenth Century Charitable Association on Sept. 29. […] Gertrude Johnson, a club member, was the driving force in inviting Pritzker to speak. Porucznik says that Johnson, “read the book cover-to-cover and was so taken with it, she thought that Mrs. Pritzker would make a great speaker.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s budget group announces familiar ideas to plug budget gap: After months of closed door meetings and zipped lips from its members, a working group appointed by Mayor Brandon Johnson to give him ideas to to plug next year’s $1.15 billion budget gap is rolling out a bunch of largely familiar, in some cases improbable options for Chicago officials to consider. The report is a mix of revenue increases and cuts, but it omits bolder ideas backed by progressive groups like a payroll expense tax on corporations, the mass cancellation and sweeping of special taxing districts, or major cuts to the Chicago Police Department budget.

* Crain’s | Task force floats $2B menu of fixes for Chicago’s budget gap: The report identifies 39 options to fetch between $630 million and $1.65 billion in annual revenue through new or adjusted taxes, fines and fees, pegging some streams, including property taxes, to inflation. The city has not increased the property tax to keep pace with inflation since 2023. The 2026 inflationary increase is estimated to be $56 million, if approved, but Johnson has ruled out including a property tax increase in his proposal after the City Council unanimously rejected a $300 million hike last year.

* Bloomberg | Chicago fronts cash to pension funds amid property tax delay: The city’s decision helps lessen the risk that its four pensions would need to sell assets from their portfolios, which include stocks, bonds, real estate and private equity, to raise cash after a glitch in setting up a new county computer system is delaying hundreds of millions of dollars in property tax earmarked for the funds.

* Crain’s | Measure legalizing video gambling in Chicago advances over Johnson’s objection: Saying the Bally’s temporary casino has failed to bring in the tax revenue promised when it was approved in 2022, Ald. Anthony Beale, 9th, introduced the measure claiming the “sin tax” could bring in $60 million to $100 million in annual revenue. “It’s better . . . than to hit people with property taxes, fines and fees. Speed camera tickets and things like that. This is something that a person has to opt into, they have to want to go” gamble, Beale told Crain’s ahead of the meeting.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson orders police to work with protesters if Trump ‘tramples constitution’: But when reporters pressed him Tuesday about how the order will change the way Chicago police respond to federal agents cracking down on protests against deportations, Johnson offered no specifics. He simply reiterated that protesters in Chicago should be able to express their First Amendment rights, without saying whether police officers would seek to stop federal agents from removing protesters or using “less lethal” anti-crowd weapons like tear gas or rubber bullets against them.

* Daily Herald | Border Patrol agent who led immigration crackdown in Los Angeles arrives in Chicago: “Well, Chicago, we’ve arrived!” Gregory Bovino said in a post on X that included footage of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement vehicles and agents under Chicago street signs and views of downtown. “Operation At Large is here to continue the mission we started in Los Angeles.” President Donald Trump has promised for weeks that Chicago would see a surge in deportations and National Guard troops over the fierce of objections of local leaders and residents.

* Block Club | Pro-Trump Chicago Restaurateur Heads To Washington To Urge President To Slow Deportations: Amid ICE’s local efforts, Sanchez said he continues to carry his passport everywhere in case he is stopped. “I’m not lying to you — I have my passport in my pocket right now,” Sanchez said. “Is that what we have come to?”

* Block Club | ICE Arrested Nearly 400 In Chicago, Nearby States In The Days After Trump’s Inauguration: Records: Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested nearly 400 people in Chicago and neighboring states during the 10 days after Trump’s inauguration, according to records released to Block Club Chicago — after we sued to get them. At least 122 of those 393 arrests occurred in Illinois, including at least 53 in Chicago, the records show.

* Crain’s | Advocate Illinois Masonic unveils $645M tower designed for patient and staff respite: During tours of the $645 million facility expansion, the nurses’ excitement was palpable as they showed off state-of-the-art, private patient care spaces, staff respite rooms with views of Wrigley Field and plans for their virtual backup, remote nurses, to take care of everything from documentation to monitoring patients via in-room cameras.

* Block Club | Bridgeport’s Formerly Polluted Riverfront Park Is Now Thriving And Could Be Expanded: The Park District is close to wrapping a $500,000 makeover of Park No. 571, 2828 S. Eleanor St. along Bubbly Creek, adding two fishing stations and a nature play space this summer. Landscaping is still ongoing to convert turf grass into a sprawling native prairie habitat, spokesperson Michele Lemons said in a statement. Park 571, also known as the Eleanor Street Boathouse, could also expand dramatically thanks to further environmental remediation planned along the Chicago River.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Homeland Security chief at Elgin immigration arrest Tuesday: According to members of a CASA DuPage volunteer People’s Patrol, people started calling them around 5:30 a.m. to report the raid. One of them, who declined to give her name, said agents pointed rifles at them and told them to leave. […] Ismael Cordova-Clough, an Elgin activist, posted on Facebook that agents knocked down the front door and that four people were arrested. He also posted, later in the morning, that federal agents had arrested people at the Kane County Judicial Center in St. Charles. State Rep. Anna Moeller of Elgin wrote, on Facebook, that she had heard of several arrests Tuesday morning in Elgin.

* Shaw Local | Rep. Underwood: 250 people taken into custody in federal immigration crackdown: A federal immigration enforcement operation in Illinois has led to 250 people being taken into custody, according to U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood. Underwood, D-Naperville, was briefed on Wednesday regarding ”Operation Midway Blitz” by the leadership of the U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement.

* Shaw Local | ICE silent on reported Joliet enforcement during Operation Midway Blitz: Federal officials have yet to disclose whether they’ve been involved in reports of immigration enforcement activity in Joliet, including one that was alleged to have occurred at the Will County Courthouse. When The Herald-News contacted U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement about whether they’ve been involved in one these incidents last Thursday in Joliet, a spokeswoman requested more information.

* Tribune | US citizen says he was briefly detained in latest Chicago-area ICE blitz: Joe Botello, 37, recalled being jolted awake before 6 a.m. by his home shaking and the sounds of yelling upstairs on the main floor. He said masked and armed agents were calling out the name of another man in Spanish and had forcibly entered his house in the 900 block of Chippewa Drive, destroying a front door and glass patio door in the process. “I’m just blessed that I’m still alive,” Botello said. “I’ve been hearing it and seeing it through social media. But it never crossed my mind that it was going to happen here at the house… where I live.”

* Tribune | Protesters call for justice in Franklin Park after fatal ICE shooting; border patrol chief announces arrival in Chicago: As questions continue to surface over how U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents came to fatally shoot a man in Franklin Park on Friday, community members called for justice at a rally and march. Silverio Villegas Gonzalez, 38, was shot and killed after he allegedly tried to flee a traffic stop and struck an ICE officer with his vehicle.

* Sun-Times | Elmwood Park fire chief resigns after allegedly punching employee of local bar, locking him in beer cooler: The incident, which happened the same weekend as the suburb’s annual family festival, led to criminal charges against 55-year-old Michael Terzo, who’s due in court this week. Why did he allegedly beat the 24-year-old man? “He disrespected me,” Terzo said, according to police records.

* Tribune | Senate candidates Robin Kelly, Juliana Stratton make their pitches at Oak Park forum: While Kelly stressed her experience in Congress and her role in passing legislation, Stratton said that the current situation demands much more than that. “I don’t see my role as your next United States senator just to pass legislation, although that’s a big part of the role,” Stratton said. “I do not see my role as your next United States senator to just have a bully pulpit and to speak with moral clarity although I believe that that is my role, I also see my role to push our party to be courageous and bold.”

* Tribune | Northbrook passes 1% grocery tax rather than lose $1.8 million in revenue: Northbrook has joined a long line of municipalities enacting their own 1% grocery tax when the state’s 25-year-old tax for the same amount ends Jan. 1. Officials said without creating the village’s own tax, Northbrook would lose up to $1.8 million in revenue annually. “We would need to make up that lost revenue elsewhere, most likely through an increase in property taxes or other new taxes and fees,” Trustee Robert Israel said.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | EIU’s international enrollment down 50% amid federal immigration hurdles: International enrollment at Eastern Illinois University has dropped over 50% from fall 2024. Many students are concerned about the impact this will have on their college experience. “Every day I wake up and I say, ‘God, my funding should not be taken away from me.’ My funding should not be cut because if it happens, it means that I cannot continue to study here in the U.S,” said Eric Senyo, an EIU graduate student.

* WAND | Sangamon County Sheriff signs 10 Shared Principles with NAACP: The 10 Shared Principles were developed by the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police and the Illinois NAACP State Conference, designed to strengthen relationships between law enforcement and communities. Sheriff Crouch said, “Law enforcement works best when it works together with the community. I am proud to sign onto these principles alongside the NAACP as a pledge to work hand-in-hand with our community to continue building confidence in how we serve. This is about listening, treating all people with fairness, and strengthening our relationships.”

* WGLT | Town of Normal shows positive financial trends, passes audit from prior fiscal year: The town saw a $201 million increase in total assessed value from 2015 to 2024. Residential total assessed values alone rose by $102 million. Another $58 million came from industrial and $41 million came from commercial. Huhn said the shift in numbers has shifted the tax base, too. “If you look back at 2015 to about now, about 68% of the tax base [back then] was residential, so as that changes to more industrial and commercial, more of the tax burden is shifted away from those households to those entities,” said Huhn.

* WCIA | Decatur City Manager Gleason stepping down after returning to the role last year: Gleason formally announced his resignation in a letter to the Decatur City Council, effective no later than Oct. 31, 2025. This concludes his recent tenure leading the city since his return to the position in May of 2024. Gleason previously served as the City Manager of Decatur between 2015 and 2018. He then worked at the City of Bloomington as its city manager until his return to Decatur last year. During his tenure, Gleason oversaw city initiatives like improving infrastructure, economic development and efficiency with internal organization, as well as supporting public safety.

* WGLT | Bloomington becomes a ‘lifesaver’ for family that opens grocery in food desert: The Alzebdieh family arrived in Bloomington-Normal, a place they’d never heard of, with $16 left. This was 16 years ago. They’ve never left. They stayed for a while at the Home Sweet Home Ministries shelter, where Matt Burgess — now the CEO — helped them get settled. “Matt truly, truly saved our lives. I don’t know if my kids and everybody else feel like that, but when I came here I was in a lot of trauma after being shot,” she said.

* WTVO | Illinois Gov. Pritzker issues disaster proclamation for storm-hit Boone County: “Through the preliminary damage assessments, we’ve been able to validate the full scope of the August 16-19 storms’ impact,” said IEMA-OHS Acting Director Theodore (Ted) Berger. “The Governor’s proclamation is a critical step to expanding assistance, allowing us to submit this information to FEMA for determination of what federal assistance may be made available to residents and local governments.”

*** National ***

* AP | It’s ‘do or die’ for electric vehicle maker Rivian as it breaks ground on a $5 billion plant: Rivian Chief Policy Officer Alan Hoffman said the company believes it can sell electric vehicles not for environmental or tax incentive reasons, but because they’re superior. “We did not build this company based upon federal tax incentives,” Hoffman said. “And we’re going to prove that we’re going to be successful in the future.”

  22 Comments      


Pritzker on Trump: ‘I think he might be suffering from some dementia’

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Trump this morning


* Governor JB Pritzker was asked about the president’s comments today and yesterday during a press conference this afternoon

Reporter: Let’s start on the big question. The president has again reaffirmed his desire to send National Guard troops to Chicago. Don’t take this the wrong way, but he said ‘Pritzker, he’s nothing,’ so tell me your reaction.

Pritzker: Look, I have said before that you can’t take anything that he says seriously. From one day to the next, he’s attacking verbally, sometimes he attacks [by] sending his agents in. Sometimes he forgets. I think he might be suffering from some dementia. You know, the next day, he’ll wake up on the other side of the bed and stop talking about Chicago. So I’ve never really counted on anything that he said is real. When he said that he wasn’t coming to Chicago, I didn’t trust that. When he says he is coming to Chicago, it’s hard to believe anything he says. […]

Reporter: Can you comment on the president this morning using the words ‘against Pritzker’ to describe going in with the National Guard?

Pritzker: Again, I think he’s losing it.

  56 Comments      


Services announced for Jim Edgar, Porter McNeil

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From Jim Edgar’s official obituary

On Friday, September 19, Governor Edgar will lie in-state in the Rotunda of the Illinois State Capitol Building. Visitors may sign a memorial book and pay last respects between 3:30 PM and 7:00 PM.

Memorial services for Governor Edgar will be held at 11:00 AM on Saturday September 20 at Central Baptist Church in Springfield. Butler Funeral Home in Springfield will be assisting the family.

The Saturday memorial services will be live-streamed. To view the services, viewers can go to www.blueroomstream.com and scroll to upcoming events.

Full obit is here.

* From Porter McNeil’s official obituary

A visitation will be 3:00pm to 7:00pm on Friday, September 19, 2025, at Rafferty Funeral Home, 2111-1st St A, Moline. There will be a private burial on Saturday morning at Riverside Cemetery, Moline.

In lieu of flowers, the family is organizing a scholarship fund for Quad Cities students interested in public service and politics as a tool for positive social change.

Condolences may be left at RaffertyFunerals.com

Link to donate to the Porter McNeil Public Service Scholarship in lieu of flowers: https://everloved.com/life-of/porter-mcneil/donate/

Full obit is here.

I hope to attend Porter’s wake, but if you can’t (and even if you can), I’d respectfully ask that you contribute to the scholarship fund.

Thanks.

  5 Comments      


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

Tuesday, Sep 16, 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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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Wednesday Journal published a story about the numerous endorsements House Speaker Chris Welch has rounded up in his race for Democratic state central committeeman. Senate President Don Harmon, another candidate in that same race, issued this statement in response

In a statement Monday, Harmon said, “A constituent in our community was killed by an ICE agent on Friday under questionable circumstances. There will be plenty of time for politics, and I trust Democrats will give their attention when that time comes. For now, I’m evaluating the race, and paying attention to elected officials who have voiced their preference. I’m focusing on the pressing issues before us, not spending my time asking my friends to choose between the Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate.”

Background on that ICE shooting is here.

Discuss.

  18 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* HuffPost

Former Democratic Rep. Melissa Bean — known as one of Wall Street’s favorite Democrats during her first tenure in Congress — announced last week she’s running for her old seat in suburban Illinois, joining a Democratic primary contest with nine other candidates.

The crowded field in the state’s 8th Congressional District to replace Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is running for Senate, reflects Democratic optimism about retaking control of the House of Representatives and checking President Donald Trump’s power in 2027. The district is safely Democratic. […]

Dan Tully, one of the other Democrats running for the seat, said Bean’s entry “clarifies” the race.

“I was in grade school when she was first elected, and now I am an attorney, veteran and a former civil servant, and I’m running for Congress because we’re all still living with the consequences of the actions and inactions of the politicians of the past – including the politicians of the past who let the perpetrators of the financial crisis off the hook, which led to the conditions for the rise of Donald Trump,” Tully told HuffPost.

* Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison…

Today, Cook County Commissioner and Democratic candidate for Illinois’ 8th Congressional District Kevin Morrison and local leaders released the following statements in response to former Rep. Melissa Bean entering the race:

“The American Dream is slipping through our grasp, and a corrupt Congress has failed the middle class by giving tax breaks to billionaires at the expense of everyone, especially our hard-working families,” said Kevin Morrison. “I’ve been doing the work in our communities to fight for Main Street, not Wall Street. That’s why I’ve been endorsed by more than 150 local and national leaders who know I have what it takes to make the American Dream accessible to all once again.” […]

“We cannot move the Democratic Party or our country forward by looking backward. In Congress, former Rep. Melissa Bean indicated she was opposed to same-sex marriage and simply cannot be trusted to stand up for the LGBTQ+ community,” said State Representative Kelly Cassidy. “At a time when our rights are under attack at levels we haven’t seen in decades, the last thing we need is someone who hesitated to step up for us when we needed her. My support for any candidate is based on what they’ve done to show me they’re ready for the fight ahead. Kevin Morrison is the fighter we need at this urgent moment.”

* Equality PAC endorsed Morrison this morning…

Today, Equality PAC announced the endorsement of Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison, who is running to represent Illinois 8th Congressional District. He is running to succeed Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is retiring to run for Senate.

“Commissioner Kevin Morrison has built a strong record of delivering results for the people of Cook County — from lowering health care costs and expanding access to mental health services, to supporting small businesses and strengthening local economies,” said Equality PAC Co-Chairs Ranking Member Mark Takano (D-CA) and Congressman Ritchie Torres (D-NY). “He has worked to make government more efficient and accountable, while ensuring communities have the resources they need to thrive. As the first openly gay man elected to the Cook County Board, Kevin has already made history, and now he is ready to bring that same trailblazing leadership and dedication to Congress. Kevin understands the everyday challenges families face and will be a tireless advocate for lowering costs, protecting freedoms, investing in infrastructure, and creating more opportunities for working families. Equality PAC is proud to endorse Kevin as a proven leader who has delivered at the local level and will fight every day for his district and for the country.”

* Moving to the 9th Congressional District, where two former aldermen are backing Sen. Laura Fine


More from Evanston Now

After three terms on the council, Wilson lost reelection in a primary in 2021 to Ald. Jonathan Nieuwsma and Diane Goldring, with Nieuwsma winning the municipal election that April.

After serving 11 years in office, Braithwaite resigned from the council in July 2022 and took a job at Northwestern University, leading to Mayor Daniel Biss’ appointment of Ald. Krissie Harris.

Wilson publicly supported Jeff Boarini earlier this year in his run against Biss for mayor. Fine supported Biss in his mayoral reelection. […]

One of her top opponents, Biss, has earned an endorsement from five current City Council members — Alds. Bobby Burns, Juan Geracaris, Krissie Harris, Shawn Iles and Jonathan Nieuwsma — along with former Alds. Eleanor Revelle, Jane Grover and Robin Rue Simmons and former mayors Jay Lytle and Liz Tisdahl.

Braithwaite and Wilson are the first former Evanston legislators to support Fine’s campaign.

* Bushra Amiwala announced Northside Democracy for America has endorsed her for the 9th CD




* More…

    * The American Prospect | A Call-Up From the Anti-Monopoly Bench: Last year, Rep. Maggie Goodlander (D-NH) made the transition from antitrust enforcement to Congress, and now Reed Showalter is attempting the same leap in Illinois. After spending the Biden administration as a legislative liaison in the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, a Federal Trade Commission litigator, and a competition policy adviser at the White House National Economic Council, Showalter is announcing his campaign today for the state’s Seventh Congressional District, an open seat after the retirement of Rep. Danny Davis.

    * Evanston Now | Candidates face ICE agents in Broadview: Two congressional candidates — Kat Abughazaleh and Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss — joined a group of protesters outside a Department of Homeland Security processing facility in Broadview Friday morning as ICE raids ramp up in Illinois. The agents, armed with tear gas canisters and rifles, repeatedly encroached on the protesters throughout the morning to allow vehicles to pass, leading to one agent physically shoving Biss back about three feet and others pulling Abughazaleh from the ground, scraping her knees.

    * WGLT | Young Democrat Montez Soliz to challenge incumbent Eric Sorensen in 17th District primary: He is critical of Sorensen on immigration issues. Soliz said when ICE came to Rockford a couple months ago, he had family and friends who are DACA recipients calling him crying and afraid. “And to have a representative that has been quiet or on the sidelines or addressing the situation too late, that really rubbed me the wrong way. And so, for me I think that was the final nail in the coffin,” said Soliz. “We shouldn’t have to be anointed to lead when we could just be leaders ourselves.”

  17 Comments      


Trump sends National Guard to Memphis, says Chicago is ‘probably next’ — again

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Associated Press

President Donald Trump signed an order Monday sending the National Guard into Memphis to combat crime, offering another major test of the limits of presidential power by using military force in American cities. […]

Speculation had centered on Chicago as Trump’s next city to send in the National Guard and other federal authorities. But the administration has faced fierce resistance from Democratic Illinois J.B. Pritzker and other local authorities.

Trump nonetheless insisted Monday, “We’re going to be doing Chicago probably next” while also suggesting that authorities would wait and not act immediately there. […]

Trump has also previously said he’d be willing to send troop to New Orleans — another Democrat-leaning city in a Republican-run state. He mentioned New Orleans again on Monday, but also singled out Baltimore and even St. Louis as locales that could be in line for troop deployments eventually — though he provided no details.

“We want to save these places,” Trump said.

Trump had previously flagged Chicago as “probably next” back in August, after deploying the National Guard in DC.

* Crain’s

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has been dubious whether the threat of a troop deployment, which he and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson have opposed publicly and frequently, was off the table.

“I’m glad to hear it,” Pritzker said when asked about Trump’s comments last week that he was sending troops to Memphis, not Chicago.

“On the other hand, the president says things one day and then goes back on them the next day, changes his mind from week to week. So we never really know what he intends to do. All I can say is that sending troops into any American city is a terrible idea.”

* During the Monday press conference, President Trump was asked how he would send the National Guard into Chicago without cooperation from Gov. Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson

Trump: Well, if they do cooperate, that’s good. If they don’t, it’s not going to matter to us at all. You know who wants to help us? Police Department — they have no respect for the governor. They have no respect for the mayor. They respect us. And we found that in Washington, you know, we haven’t had total support in Washington from government, as you know, from everybody. I don’t want to say the mayor, because she’s better than most, but we haven’t had great, great, but we have had great support from the Metropolitan Police. They’re like brothers of these people, they’re really like brothers. You see that they work together. And so, if the governor wants to support, as I said to [Tennessee Governor Bill Lee], it’s going to be his proudest moment. What is going to do the governor of Tennessee? What’s going to happen with Memphis? In three, four weeks, we’ll stand together, and we’ll say, “Look at this. The crime is almost disappeared, maybe completely disappeared. In Washington, they don’t even know how to record it, because it’s down so much. You know, they’ve never heard — I heard 87 percent is down. I said, “Really? Who are the 13 percent?” because it’s more than that. It’s actually more, hard to believe, right? You can have the same results in Chicago, and we hope we have the governor’s help, but if we don’t, we’re doing it without him.

* More…

    * NBC Chicago | Amid Memphis deployment, Trump signals desire to send National Guard to Chicago: Unlike in Illinois, where Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson have forcefully denounced the idea of using National Guard members in a law enforcement capacity, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has voiced support for the action, and was in the Oval Office for Monday’s announcement. […] Memphis Mayor Paul Young, a Democrat, was less enthusiastic, questioning whether the move would work. “I did not ask for the National Guard, and I don’t think it’s the way to drive down crime,” he said.

    * Block Club Chicago | Yes, Chicago Crime Really Is Down. Here’s What To Know About How It’s Tracked: Declarations by the president that Chicago is the “murder capital of the world” do not hold up to fact-checks showing dozens of other cities with far higher murder rates or law enforcement data that’s charted an ongoing drop in violent crime in the city. Yet Trump’s repeated insinuations have ignited fresh discord over how often crimes are happening in Chicago and how they are being counted. Mayor Brandon Johnson tried to rebut the president’s claims last month via a fact sheet emphasizing dips this year in homicides and overall violent crime — while also noting that the city’s homicide clearance rate of more than 77 percent is the highest it’s been in more than a decade.

    * Block Club Chicago | Trump Revives Threat Of Sending Troops To Chicago After Memphis: The Monday Oval Office signing ceremony included GOP Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, who supported the measure. Memphis Mayor Paul Young has meanwhile said that he did not ask for the National Guard and did not think it would drive down crime, according to the Associated Press.

    * The Guardian | Trump to send national guard to Memphis and says Chicago is ‘probably next’: Announcing the taskforce in an Oval Office meeting, Trump said the troops would work alongside federal authorities from various agencies, including the FBI; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; the Drug Enforcement Administration; Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice); the US Marshall’s service and the Department of Justice. In his remarks on Monday, the president cited a slew of crime statistics and vowed to end the “savagery” and to “make Memphis safe again”.

    * WISN | Here’s the latest on Washington, D.C.’s crime numbers 30 days after National Guard deployment: A Get the Facts Data Team analysis found that incidents of violent crime have fallen in the 30 days since Trump’s emergency order, but violent crime was already on a two-year decline in the district following a 2023 spike, according to Metropolitan Police Department data. If you compare the 30 days after Aug. 11 to the 30 days before, violent crime has dropped 17% and property crime incidents have dropped 18%, police data shows. However, there are many factors that can affect crime, and trends are difficult to determine with such a small snapshot of time.

  12 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois lays new pathway for internationally trained doctors to earn licenses here. Crain’s

    - Illinois has a new licensing process designed to expand the health care work force by enabling internationally trained physicians to practice in the state.
    - Applications for the limited, two-year license is available to international medical graduates now, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation said in a press release.
    - Over the course of the two-year limited license, IMGs must practice under the supervision of a fully licensed physician at an approved sponsoring institution, the release said.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will attend an 11:00 am luncheon with Lutheran Social Services of Illinois to receive the Paul Simon Courage in Public Service Award. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Federal immigration agents sweep across Chicago area as advocates try to make sense of ‘patchwork’ enforcement: “We don’t know the true scale, but we know activity has increased” in the area over the last couple of weeks, said Brandon Lee, spokesperson for the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. The organization is mostly relying on intake numbers from legal partners, hotline calls and networks of community members to get a sense of what is happening and who has been affected.

* Capitol News Illinois | Amid backlash, Pritzker calls for leaders — especially Trump — to tone down rhetoric: Gov. JB Pritzker said political leaders — starting with President Donald Trump — need to do more to condemn political violence. “He actively fans the flames of division, as he did on Friday, regularly advocates violence for political retribution, and in more than one case, declares we are at war, not with a foreign adversary, but with each other,” Pritzker said. “I don’t believe any of that.” Pritzker’s critique of the president comes after the governor faced backlash last week for immediately tying conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassination to Trump’s rhetoric.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Republican Joseph Johnson has launched a bid against Rep. Marty Moylan in the 55th House District. Press release

Joseph Johnson, small business owner, first-time candidate, and father of four, today announced his campaign for State Representative in the 55th Legislative District. Johnson, a first-time state representative candidate and political outsider, is running to unseat longtime incumbent Marty Moylan, who has served in Springfield for over a decade.

“I have watched too many friends and family leave Illinois because of the failed policies coming out of Springfield,” Johnson said. “High taxes, unsafe streets, and a lack of opportunity are driving working families out of our state. Illinois is my home, and leaving is not an option. I’m running to tackle these issues head-on and fight for the future of our communities.”

The 55th District leans Democratic. Rep. Moylan won reelection by 9 points in 2022, while Gov. JB Pritzker carried it by 17. The last Republican to prevail there was Leslie Munger, who won the 2016 comptroller’s race by 3 points.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | In a spirit of pride, Pilsen turns out for El Grito celebration: The Mexican Cultural Committee of Chicago hosted the annual Mexican Independence eve celebration — El Grito, on Monday evening at St. Paul’s Catholic Church in Pilsen. However, the mood was subdued amid concerns of increased enforcement activity in Chicago by agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Committee president Teresa Fraga says she doesn’t regret hosting the event under the current circumstances.

* WBEZ | South Chicago charter school may abruptly close, stranding 250 students: Epic Charter School in South Chicago with about 250 students informed CPS on Aug. 21 that it was facing “persistent enrollment declines and rising operational costs,” according to the district. The board of the privately managed, publicly funded school is expected to formally vote on the closure at its meeting Wednesday. “While CPS is not making this decision, we are deeply committed to supporting Epic students, families and staff throughout any transition,” district officials said in a statement.

* WTTW | 2 More Developments Designed to Transform Chicago’s Financial District Into a Residential Neighborhood Advance: The Chicago City Council’s Finance Committee endorsed the $241 million plan from Riverside Investment & Development/AmTrust to transform the 1.3 million-square-foot building that used to be home to Bank of America at 135 S. LaSalle St. into an apartment building with 386 units, including 116 units set aside for low- and moderate-income Chicagoans. The project relies on $98 million in city subsidies, and includes “event and cultural spaces as well as a fresh-market grocer,” according to the developer.

* NYT | 20 Years Ago, Alinea Electrified Chicago Dining. Does It Still Matter?: Flames leap. Ice smokes. Servers march and whirl. You’re in for a show, and maybe for the price, you’d better be. This can be fun when it’s not domineering. “Eat immediately,” I was warned in the blandly elegant Salon upstairs. “And keep your mouth shut.” Servers in the more intimate Gallery downstairs were gentler, recasting commands as helpful advice: If you don’t shut your mouth, the contents of the exploding raviolo will likely end up all over the table.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Federal agents make immigration arrests in West Chicago and at West Side courthouse: More than a dozen people were taken into custody by federal immigration agents Monday in raids near a west suburban police station and a Chicago courthouse, according to a state lawmaker and court officials. State Sen. Karina Villa, D-West Chicago, said her office received reports that immigration agents would be out across DuPage County early in the morning, and she spotted about nine agents in the West Chicago Police Department parking lot.

* Evanston Now | Grocery tax passes, Biss promises veto: Once Biss formally vetoes the ordinance, the six members of the City Council in favor of reinstating the tax are expected to add a veto-override vote to the regularly scheduled Sept. 29 City Council meeting. The state set a deadline of the end of September for municipalities to reinstate the tax locally, after abolishing it statewide last year.

* ABC Chicago | Some seek East Aurora school board member’s resignation over alleged racially insensitive comments: On Monday night, District 131 School Board member Mayra Reyes publicly apologized for comments she allegedly made a year ago during an interview for a then-vacant school board position. “I deeply apologize for the hurt and frustration. Clearly, it was never my intention to offend or discriminate in any way, shape, or form against any minority group,” Reyes said.

* Tribune | Black leaders concerned about ‘unwelcome’ climate in East Aurora School District: According to audio obtained by The Beacon-News of last year’s interview for the vacant school board position, Reyes claimed she was “not as in support of (the dual language program) as I once was” because “I struggle with the fact we are now giving the advantage that Spanish speakers may have at one point … over somebody who wasn’t bilingual.” According to the audio recording, she went on to say, “Now we are making all of us kind of all even in that playing field.” And as an example Reyes on the recording described “an African American kid who did not grow up speaking Spanish” now being able to speak Spanish “along with the kid who did grow up speaking Spanish” and might seek a job as a translator. “And now the African American kid can, too,” she said on the audio recording of the interview. “So I feel like that advantage has been taken away.”

* Daily Herald | Pace reveals passenger upgrades at Schaumburg bus hub but specter of fiscal cliff looms: After years of being exposed to the elements, riders at Pace’s Northwest Transportation Center in Schaumburg finally have a place to warm up, cool down and stay dry. Officials marked the opening of a $7.2 million renovation that includes a large indoor waiting room, expanded park-n-ride lot and the region’s first ADA paratransit transfer facility last week.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg, Hoffman Estates to establish emergency connection of water systems: They along with the neighboring suburbs of Elk Grove Village, Hanover Park, Mount Prospect, Rolling Meadows and Streamwood found themselves already prepared to rely on backup sources during the four-day repair of a leak in a Northwest Suburban Municipal Joint Action Water Agency water main in the spring. Hoffman Estates Mayor Bill McLeod said his village had kept its wells in working order for such an eventuality in addition to having already completed an emergency interconnect with unaffected Palatine.

* Tribune | Suburban La Luz Del Mundo church leader ordered held in child sex trafficking case: A federal judge in Chicago on Monday ordered the pastor of a local chapter of the La Luz del Mundo megachurch held in custody to face federal charges alleging he helped cover up a widespread child sex trafficking operation that authorities say victimized young members of the church for decades.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Toxic bacteria shut down this town’s water supply. Fertilizer runoff is fueling the issue: After that crisis, Toledo installed sensors and carbon filtration to ensure its water supply is clean. Similarly, in August, the Mattoon City Council voted to invest in new measures to help protect its water system from algal blooms. The city will spend roughly $300,000 to spray algaecide to control algae blooms in both of its reservoirs and replace a broken water pump. City Manager Kyle Gill said that eventually, they’ll need to dredge both reservoirs to get rid of fertilizer-laden silt.

* BND | What Trump priorities, EPA firings mean for sewage spills in metro-east city: At the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the employee tasked with coordinating the local, state and federal response in Cahokia Heights and tracking the projects and funding was assigned to a different job in January, according to the lawmakers. Other employees at the EPA were fired under former Trump adviser Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. Duckworth said the regional EPA office that oversees Cahokia Heights is now understaffed.

* WGLT | Young Democrat Montez Soliz to challenge incumbent Eric Sorensen in 17th District primary: Montez Soliz is another example of the trend. The Rockford native said he’s running against Democratic U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen in the March primary for the 17th Congressional District in Illinois. “My platform runs on three basic points: economic justice, health care and rights and building strong communities. I believe that we need to be making work pay with better wages and benefits, legislatively, expanding earned tax income credit, child tax credit,” said Soliz.

* Capitol City Now | Massey Commission shares final recommendations for change following Sonya’s death: Johnson says they also recommend a publicly-accessible database for incidents of potential officer misconduct. Another recommendation was that some officer training should be given before they leave the academy, and not, in some cases, after a couple of years of work on the street — especially in the area of de-escalation.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. Circuit Clerk offering Amnesty Week: The Champaign County Circuit Clerk’s office has announced that it’ll host Amnesty Week in October, helping people save money when paying fines. Amnesty Week will run from Oct. 20 to Oct. 31. The Circuit Clerk’s office said during that time, anyone who owes money on any criminal, traffic, DUI, ordinance violation or conservation violation can avoid paying late fees and collection fees.

*** National ***

* NYT | Appeals Court Says Lisa Cook Can Remain on Fed Board: A federal appeals court on Monday denied a last-minute attempt by President Trump to fire Lisa Cook, a Federal Reserve governor, and prevent her from participating in a crucial two-day Fed meeting to set interest rates. As a result, Ms. Cook will be able to cast a vote at the gathering, which begins on Tuesday.

* Art News | Trump Orders National Park to Remove Famed Photograph of Formerly Enslaved Man: Following a threatened crackdown on what he his administration called “corrosive ideology” in American museums, Donald Trump has ordered a national park to remove a famous photograph of a formerly enslaved man baring his scarred back. The Washington Post, which first reported the news on Monday night, did not specify which park would be impacted by the removal of the photograph and cited anonymous sources. But the article said it was one of “multiple” parks impacted by the orders, which target “signs and exhibits related to slavery at multiple national parks,” per the article.

  3 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  11 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Sep 16, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Sep 16, 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      


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