Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Subscribers got a look at the 12th HD race this morning. Politico…
* More from Politico…
* KSDK reports the Proud Boy billboard in Breese has been taken down…
* WSIL | Illinois launches ‘One Click’ admissions for public colleges: Illinois has launched One Click College Admit, a new program offering automatic college admissions for any public Illinois university to high school seniors and community college transfer students based solely on their GPA. This initiative, introduced by Gov. JB Pritzker, the Illinois Board of Higher Education, Illinois Community College Board and Illinois Student Assistance Commission, aims to simplify the admissions process by eliminating applications, fees, essays, and recommendation letters. * Medill Illinois News Bureau | Illinois beekeepers battle losses, costs to keep hives buzzing: It’s an idyllic scene, one that can make it easy to overlook how challenging beekeeping can be for Harvey and the more than 5,400 other registered beekeepers across Illinois. Nearly 89% of them are hobbyists managing 10 colonies or fewer, according to the fiscal year 2025 Apiary Inspection Annual Report from the Illinois Department of Agriculture released in July. Bee loss is a persistent issue throughout the state. It’s not uncommon for beekeepers to lose over half of their colonies each year — primarily during winter — due to disease, competition, poor nutrition or limited resources. That’s a trend mirrored across much of the Midwest and the country. * Tribune | Top candidates for the US House in Illinois’ 2nd, 7th, 8th and 9th districts for the 2026 election: The fourth House seat officially opened up when 83-year-old U.S. Rep. Danny Davis announced in late July that he would not seek a 16th term representing a district that stretches from downtown Chicago through the West Side and into the near-west suburbs. Davis’ long-anticipated decision came after 81-year-old U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s May announcement that she wouldn’t run for another term in the seat she’s held since 1999, representing much of the north and northwest suburbs. The wave of retirements began in late April, with 80-year-old U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s announcement that he wasn’t seeking a sixth term. That created a domino effect for the congressional delegation when two incumbents — U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly of Matteson and U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg — declared their interest in Durbin’s seat. * ICT | Oji-Cree and Lakota man announces run for Illinois Congress seat: When Anthony Tamez first ran for office and won in 2023, he made history as the second Native person to hold an elected office in Illinois, and one of the youngest Native people to hold a position in the U.S. Tamez is making waves again by announcing his run for the Illinois Fifth Congressional District. If elected, Tamez, who is running as a Democrat, would be the first Gen Z Afro-Indigenous member of Congress to serve in the United States. * 25NewsNow | Republican challenger starts out swinging in bid to oust ‘radical’ Sorensen from Congress: Julie Bickelhaupt from rural Mount Carroll is now one of two candidates seeking the Republican nomination for Illinois’ 17th Congressional District seat, representing parts of Peoria, Tazewell, McLean, and Fulton counties. In a release, Bickelhaupt called Sorensen a “radical” politician chasing extreme agendas rather than helping working families being “crushed” by rising costs and unsafe streets. “He’s embraced extreme policies and pandering political theater, while families here are just trying to pay the bills,” said Bickelhaupt. * Block Club | Meet The 7 Candidates Vying To Replace Ald. Walter Burnett In The 27th Ward: Grunst-Bednarz ran for 27th Ward alderperson in 2019. She lost to Burnett, who garnered 69.8 percent of the vote to her 30.1 percent, according to the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners. […] Walter Redmond Burnett, son of former Ald. Walter Burnett, is also vying for the position. Burnett is the principal of Hannibal Valley Company, a Chicago-based real estate and hospitality consulting firm focused on community-rooted development, cultural programs and strategic growth. It was created in 2023. * Paul Wargaski | My son still doesn’t have a way to get to school in Chicago: That’s why legislation such as HB 989 matters. In short, the proposal increases the pool of safe, qualified drivers and routes. It also gives parents and caregivers the options to track rides in real time. The bill would allow participating school districts to contract with vetted, third-party transportation providers — giving them flexibility to serve high-need students who too often fall through the cracks. The program would focus specifically on students experiencing homelessness, students with disabilities, foster youths who face frequent placement changes and students who live outside traditional bus routes. In other words, it’s a smart, measured step that gives school leaders one more tool to meet the urgent needs of their most vulnerable students. * Block Club | Target Fires Hundreds From Little Village Warehouse Over Medical Benefits Scheme, Employees Say: Workers at Target’s distribution center at 3501 S. Pulaski Road took advantage of the company’s medical loan program, through which employees could receive loans exceeding $3,000 to cover medical expenses. Workers found a glitch in the program, allowing them to pay back $50 of the loan and have the remaining balance erased from company records, multiple employees told Block Club. One employee was considered the ringleader of the operation and would charge $200-$300 to facilitate taking out and erasing the medical loans, employees said. * Crain’s | Abbott gets 2nd formula lawsuit dismissed, spelling trouble for 700 cases: With a second bellwether case against Abbott Labs thrown out, and statements from a U.S. District Court judge casting doubts on both plaintiff’s evidence and arguments, hundreds of baby formula lawsuits against the North Chicago company are now on shaky legal ground. Last week, Judge Rebecca R. Pallmeyer granted Abbott’s request for a summary judgement dismissing a lawsuit brought by Maryland mother Keosha Diggs that claimed using Abbott’s cow’s milk-based formula led to her baby developing necrotizing enterocolitis, or NEC, a serious and sometimes deadly gastrointestinal disease that primarily afflicts premature infants. * Sun-Times | Chicago cop who killed partner says he’s the victim in Wicker Park bar fight: When Baker’s friends came back inside and told him the woman was a police officer, he said he went outside to get her name and badge number and was “suddenly approached” by another woman, his girlfriend’s mother, who punched him in the left eye as his girlfriend stood nearby, according to the police report. […] The off-duty police officer who had recorded Baker filed her own police report, saying Baker and a woman had punched her repeatedly while in the bar’s vestibule after he pressured her to delete the videos. She was taken to Rush University Medical Center and got two stitches to repair a split lip, according to police sources. […] Meanwhile, the police department’s internal affairs bureau is investigating an accusation that Baker tried to get video of the altercation from a nearby business and that he said he was investigating the matter despite being on a leave of absence since the shooting. * WBEZ | The Uptown Theatre turns 100 with a new book and serious questions about its future: His new book, “The Uptown: Chicago’s Endangered Movie Palace” (CityFiles Press), is the closest available thing to a time machine. Available Aug. 18, the day the Uptown opened its doors to the public in 1925, the book features photographs — both archival, dating back to its earlier days, and those shot over recent years — that reveal the building’s grandeur. The images also tell the improbability of the theater’s survival. Designed as a temple to silent films, the 46,000-square-foot palace was built for maximum audiences. Next to a wide orchestra pit, the theater featured seating for more than 4,000 people who could exit onto Lawrence Avenue or Magnolia Street, while another 4,000 people could stream in after holding in the splendorous lobby. * Daily Southtown | Former Robbins police Chief Carl Scott pleads guilty to battery: Former Robbins acting police Chief Carl Scott pleaded guilty to battery charges Monday, reduced from aggravated battery, for allegedly attacking a man in July 2024. Cook County Judge Diana Kenworthy sentenced Scott to two years of probation and revoked his law enforcement certificate, prohibiting from working as a police officer, according to court records. Kenworthy dismissed all other charges against Scott, including official misconduct and theft. Kenworthy also ordered him to complete an anger management program and to avoid contact with the victim. * : In his resignation letter sent Thursday, Nohelty blamed certain board members for making his job difficult and targeting him with “harassment and bullying.” “The board president and certain board members have undertaken a smear campaign against me, riddled with baseless allegations, innuendo, and repeated threats of investigation and discharge,” the letter said. Nohelty said at one point, a board member pointed out his being a white man in a majority Black district as a reason he had to leave. * Daily Herald | ‘Let’s get this done’: Challenge issued to close funding gap for Antioch Veterans Memorial: Supporters of a long-sought veterans memorial in Antioch hope a push to bridge the final funding gap will allow for a fall groundbreaking. Mayor Scott Gartner is challenging residents and others to contribute $100,000 to complete fundraising for what he described as a lasting tribute to local veterans. “We’re almost there and with one final push, we can begin construction on a memorial that will stand for generations,” Gartner said in a message to the community. * WTTW | Argonne National Laboratory’s Advanced Photon Source Gets $815M Upgrade: Elmie Peoples-Evans is the project manager responsible for choreographing the complex logistical, engineering and technical dance required to complete the project. “We started planning for this over 10 years ago,” said Peoples-Evans. “The upgrade came about as a way to take the existing APS facility to the next level. We wanted a brighter machine. They wanted to do different techniques and enhance the capabilities that we had. … We want to keep the APS as a world-leading machine.” * Tribune | Naperville’s Bob Odenkirk talks about being an everyman action hero — and a possible Disco Demolition movie: In town recently to promote his new movie “Nobody 2,” Odenkirk, who produced and stars in the film, talked about his dramatic turn to grittier roles, first in FX’s “Fargo” series and then as the scheming Saul Goodman in “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul.” Being able to find the funny in those characters helped him find the balance between dark humor and extreme violence in the original “Nobody” (2021). “I’m not a handsome guy, or a young guy,” Odenkirk, 62, said recently in a conference room overlooking North Michigan Avenue. “I think I work well on the screen as a regular guy who has a certain amount of pressure he’s under.” * WCIA | EIU announces end of TV station’s affiliation with PBS: Eastern Illinois University has announced that it is ending its affiliation with PBS this fall amidst funding cuts to the broadcaster’s chief funder. Josh Reinhart, EIU’s Public Information Coordinator, said in a news release Tuesday afternoon that the decision was made after federal funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting was discontinued following the passage of the federal Rescissions Act of 2025. Funding for the CPB will officially conclude on Sept. 30, the same day the university-run station WEIU-TV will end its affiliation. * WGLT | Town of Normal expands enterprise zone to encourage more business development: “We don’t have to look too far in our history where we had a local project unfortunately not check with us and was not included in the enterprise zone,” said council member Kevin McCarthy. “It cost them a pretty penny in sales tax and other potential incentives that we lost because they didn’t realize that their property was not in an enterprise zone.” The town removed nearly 100 acres of property deemed no longer likely to be developed in the zone and added 342.28 acres deemed likely to be. These added areas are generally in north and west Normal, as well as in Uptown. * WSIL | Ribbon cutting scheduled for Deaconess Illinois Clinic for Family Medicine at JALC: A ribbon cutting event is scheduled for August 20, at 11:30 a.m. for Deaconess Illinois Clinic for Family Medicine. The event will take place at Logan Fitness on the JALC campus. An open house will take place at 11:30 a.m. with remarks by speakers at noon. Light refreshments will also be served. * Bloomberg | Trump Widens Metal Tariffs to Target Baby Gear and Motorcycles: The new list includes auto parts, chemicals, plastics and furniture components — demonstrating the reach of Trump’s authority to use sectoral tariffs. That is separate from the executive power he invoked for his so-called reciprocal tariffs. “Basically, if it’s shiny, metallic, or remotely related to steel or aluminum, it’s probably on the list,” Brian Baldwin, a vice president of customs in the US at logistics giant Kuehne + Nagel International AG, wrote in a post on LinkedIn. “This isn’t just another tariff — it’s a strategic shift in how steel and aluminum derivatives are regulated.” * AP | NASA’s Webb telescope finds a new tiny moon around Uranus: Scientists think it hid for so long — even eluding the Voyager 2 spacecraft during its flyby about 40 years ago — because of its faintness and small size. Uranus has 28 known moons that are named after characters from Shakespeare and Alexander Pope. About half are smaller and orbit the planet at closer range. The new moon, still nameless, ups the planet’s total count to 29.
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What Illinois can learn from Texas (Updated)
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WMBD…
* Illinois isn’t alone here. Electricity costs are spiking nationwide. NPR…
[Note from Rich: That story belies the currently widespread claim that natural gas will solve the affordability problem.] * So, what lessons can Illinois take from Texas? Invest in battery storage. Bloomberg earlier this year…
* Inside Climate News last month…
* Rhythm Energy Blog…
This isn’t to say Texas is immune to rising energy costs altogether. Trump Administration cuts to federal tax credits for solar and wind may hinder renewable energy growth. But the state is showing that storage can help tame both prices and reliability risks. * Back to Illinois. Canary Media in June…
…Adding… Illinois Industrial Energy Consumers…
* More…
* Texas Tribune | Hundreds of old EV batteries have new jobs in Texas: Stabilizing the power grid: East of San Antonio in Bexar County, 500 electric vehicle batteries at the end of their automotive lives will soon be repurposed to provide energy storage for Texas’ electric grid, a California company, B2U Storage Solutions, announced last week. The batteries, housed in 21 cabinets the size of shipping containers, create a second life for the technology made from critical minerals, including lithium, nickel and cobalt, for another eight years, said Freeman Hall, co-founder and CEO. * Chron | Energy company unveils 100MW South Texas battery storage facility: Yet another battery storage facility is operational and adding energy capacity in Texas. Apex Clean Energy, a Virginia company that has already planted seeds in the Lone Star State, announced this week that its 100-megawatt (MW) battery energy storage system (BESS) in Hidalgo County is up and running. […] Texas is ranked second in the nation behind California in battery storage; as of September, the state had about 4,832 MW of energy inside batteries. * Bloomberg | How Big Batteries Could Prevent Summer Power Blackouts: When power demand peaked around 4:30 in the afternoon, almost half of the electricity on the grid was coming from renewables, according to the energy analytics platform GridStatus.IO. As the sun set, battery banks that had been soaking up electrons in the heat of the day stepped up to cover 8% of demand, keeping power flowing.“Batteries are very good at handling these types of events,” said Andrew Gilligan, director of commercial strategy at Fluence Energy Inc., a battery developer with three storage sites in Texas. “Things have gotten a lot better than a couple years ago.”
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Democratic press release…
The bill was signed into law last week. * Republican press release…
* The Question: On a scale of 1 to 4, with 4 being the most likely and 1 being the least likely, how would you rate the chances of this legislation being a success in eliminating a substantial number of school mandates? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Meanwhile… in Opposite Land
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Starting off with Oklahoma. AP…
More from USA Today…
Last month, two state board members said they saw explicit images of women displayed in Superintendent Walters’ office during a closed-door meeting. Fox 23…
* Nevada…
* The Texas Tribune…
* Bloomberg…
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It’s now a law
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Frank Main and Tom Schuba at the Sun-Times…
* More from the governor’s press release…
* Fox News…
* Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…
* WAND…
* Sen. Karina Villa…
* WGLT…
* WAND…
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IPA: SB40 With Energy Storage Will Slash Sky-High Electric Bills
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Consumers across Illinois are seeing massive increases in their bills because of inadequate energy supplies and rising demand. And yet a tool that numerous studies have shown could have averted some of these increases now and in the future, battery energy storage, waits for legislative action. Last session, without evidence, opponents claimed adding energy storage in Illinois would spike ratepayer bills. But no fewer than a half dozen studies in Illinois and across the country from groups like the Illinois Power Agency, Clean Grid Alliance and NRDC have shown that storage saves billions for ratepayers. The Facts:
- ComEd customers would save “from $1.52/month to $2.32/month by 2030 and $7.89/month to $8.52/month by 2035.” The facts don’t lie – consumers are seeing the cost of doing nothing in their spiking electric bills NOW. Adding energy storage to Illinois’s electric grid will save consumers billions. That’s why CUB is asking lawmakers to pass SB40 as the best way “to contain costs for electric customers while managing unprecedented energy demand.” Illinois must follow the facts and enact SB40 this fall to deploy 6 gigawatts of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.
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Today’s number: 370
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Daily Herald…
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The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association: Protecting Working People & Fighting Trump’s Predatory MAGA Agenda
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Don’t be fooled by the same front groups, associations and companies that are backing Trump’s predatory MAGA agenda of raising prices, slashing Medicaid, and gutting the Environmental Protection Agency, Food & Drug Administration, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration. They want Illinois to turn its back on people who have been harmed by the negligence and malfeasance of big corporations, and wrongly believe our state can’t be pro-worker and pro-business. The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association is proud to stand with state elected officials who are aggressively fighting Trumpian policies and those who support them. While the federal government and other states abandon their responsibilities to protect Americans from preventable harms, Illinois is a beacon in the nation’s dark night, showing what responsible government looks like. Our state balances the needs of business with workers’ rights and consumer protections to create opportunities for everyone to thrive, not just the wealthy and well-connected. Trial lawyers will always fight for working people and the most vulnerable, helping them to receive justice and holding corporate wrongdoers accountable. For more information about the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, click here.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Energy prices become huge issue to tackle for Illinois lawmakers next session. WMBD…
- The biggest issue identified was data centers. These large buildings power AI technology, requiring an immense amount of power. A spokesperson for ComEd said he’s had requests from data centers that could take gigawatts worth of energy off the grid. - Ideas discussed during the committee include battery storage, additional nuclear power plants and legislation that would require data centers to build their own power plants. * Related stories… * Former gubinatorial candidate Darren Bailey teases another run against Gov. Pritzker…
* WBEZ | Illinois joins federal lawsuit against Trump plan to withhold crime victim funding: The lawsuit filed in Rhode Island is the latest in a series of clashes between Illinois, which has positioned itself as a “sanctuary” state for those without legal status, and the federal government. Under Illinois’ TRUST Act, police are greatly limited in how they cooperate with federal authorities for the purpose of immigration enforcement, and Trump’s move puts more than $50 million at risk for the state. * Ira Weiss | A personal plea for JB Pritzker to forgo a third term: The governor has announced he’ll seek a third term. Yet many of us in the business community sense his heart isn’t fully in it. We know he’s considering a run for president, and we understand why: He’s talented, ambitious and has a national vision. If he runs for president, I will likely vote for him just as I voted for him multiple times as governor. But running a state like Illinois — a state that, for all its assets, faces serious structural challenges — requires undivided attention. And right now, we are not convinced that a third term is about Illinois. * Fox News | ‘Slap in the face’: Major blue state governor signs bill opening financial aid to illegals: Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, a major Democratic leader and rumored presidential candidate, signed a bill into law opening student financial aid to all residents, regardless of immigration status, opening a pathway for illegal immigrants residing in the state to receive educational financial benefits. The move was slammed by conservative Rep. Mary Miller, R-Ill., as rewarding illegal immigrants and a “slap in the face” to Illinois families and students. The bill purports to establish “equitable eligibility for financial aid and benefits” for all students in the state. * Crain’s | CPS seeks $1 billion of short-term debt as cash gone: A delay in local property-tax bills is exacerbating Chicago Public Schools’ cash crunch, leading the junk-rated district to rely more on short-term borrowing. The school system plans to seek authorization to issue $1.25 billion in tax-anticipation notes. For the first time in three years, the district closed the fiscal year ending on June 30 with a negative net cash position, according to budget documents. Making matters worse, it’s unclear when property-tax collections, originally due on Aug. 1, will arrive. * Sun-Times | UChicago gets federal grant to expand U.S. semiconductor, chip production: The announcement comes just weeks after President Donald Trump said he would impose a 100% tariff on computer chips, raising the specter of higher prices for electronics, autos, household appliances while trying to spur more domestic production. * Sun-Times | Thunderbirds ‘clearly’ caused sonic booms at Chicago Air and Water Show practice, expert says: Ald. Bennett Lawson (44th) said residents have told him the boom was louder than any they had ever heard at an air show. He said the window damage was primarily confined to the first floors of four residential high-rises along the lakefront: 3180, 3600 and 3950 North Lake Shore Drive and 4200 N. Marine Drive. Lawson said he has advised residents and managers of those buildings to file a claim with the city because the Air and Water Show was a “city-sponsored” event. * Crain’s | Sterling Bay puts its only finished Lincoln Yards building up for sale: It’s unclear what prompted the duo to hire brokers to sell the property, and spokesmen for Sterling Bay and J.P. Morgan declined to comment. A Harrison Street spokesman did not respond to a request for comment. But the listing comes as the developers face an imminent deadline to pay off a $125 million construction loan — also from Bank OZK — they used to build the structure. That mortgage is due to mature next month, though the sale offering has not come at the direction of the lender, according to sources familiar with the property. * Sun-Times | Eileen O’Neill Burke’s top aide out at state’s attorney’s office after just 8 months: O’Neill Burke credited the resigning First Assistant State’s Attorney Anna Demacopoulos’ “tireless efforts on behalf of the people of Cook County” in an email to her staff. “Anna Demacopoulos stepped away from a thriving private practice in order to utilize her legal expertise to help stabilize the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office and implement innovative and needed restructuring,” O’Neill Burke wrote of the former judge and prosecutor. “Now that those restructures are complete, Anna is resigning her position as First Assistant and returning to her private practice.” * Daily Southtown | Court orders former Orland Park Mayor Keith Pekau to stop posting, remove information from blog: Cook County Judge Kate Moreland granted a temporary restraining order Aug. 7 barring Pekau from publishing “future statements disclosing the village’s attorney-client privileged communications and confidential non-public information contained in village personnel files,” and ordered he remove any publications of such information. Moreland denied the village’s request that Pekau return village records containing confidential information and destroy copies of the records. She also denied their request for Pekau to “itemize the ways in which he has published or distributed” confidential information and identify people to whom he gave the information. * NBC Chicago’s | The half-million-dollar superintendent: Up to today, Nohelty has been in charge of Dolton School District 148, which oversees 10 grade schools. He’s been there since 2016. In that time, his salary has nearly doubled. But during that same period, the district’s financial profile has fallen from the Illinois State Board of Education’s top rank to its lowest rank, and Dolton 148 is now the only public school district in Cook County on the Illinois State Board of Education’s “Watch List.” That spurred NBC 5 Investigates to start asking questions about a possible disconnect between Nohelty’s income, the district’s low financial status with the state, and the tax burden of the residents who pay his salary. No one, however, would talk to us, until Thursday afternoon. That’s when Nohelty’s attorney contacted NBC 5 to say that Nohelty retired from his job, effective immediately, citing “a smear campaign…. riddled with baseless allegations, innuendo and repeated threats of investigations and discharge” which he alleges is being orchestrated by the board’s new president. His attorney says Nohelty’s retirement has nothing to do with NBC 5’s inquiries. * ABC Chicago | Arlington Heights Village Board approves streaming subscription tax: The Village Board approved Monday night a new five percent tax on streaming entertainment subscriptions. The new tax will help pay for six new paramedics who will staff a fifth fire department ambulance. In addition, a one percent local grocery tax, which was set to expire at the end of the year, was extended by the board. * Tribune | Evanston commission corrects error after preventing citizens from speaking on controversial project: Commission officials acknowledged their error at the meeting, saying they had misinterpreted two conflicting government codes. They rescheduled the hearing for Aug. 27. The building has been controversial because in addition to its proposed 31 stories and 331 feet in height, some have spoken about density, parking and potential wind issues at its proposed site in downtown Evanston at 605 Davis St. The proposal calls for 430 apartment units and 80 on-site parking spaces, with an agreement proposed for 120 more at a city-owned garage. * Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan casino opens poker room ahead of schedule; ‘We decided not to wait’: American Place and Waukegan officials cut a ribbon to officially open the casino’s six-table Harbor Poker Room Saturday in Waukegan adding another activity as its profitability continues to grow. Before the poker room opened this month, American Place owner Full House Resorts released its second-quarter earnings report with record net revenue and operating profit for American Place. Babinski also met with city officials several times to discuss plans for the permanent facility. * Daily Herald | Naperville teachers rally again as strike threat looms: NEUA President Ross Berkley, however, said going on strike is not a foregone conclusion. The last time the union took similar action, in 2021, a strike was averted when both sides reached an agreement, Berkley said. “The gaslighting of the teachers and the community needs to stop,” Berkley said before Monday’s school board meeting. “This is always and always will be about our students, and the district is being disingenuous about its information.” * ABC Chicago | Federal mediator to assist negotiations between Naperville School District 203, teachers: “We have the number one academically performing district as far as student performance goes as unit districts in the state of Illinois. Our compensation does not reflect that,” Naperville Unit Education Association President Ross Berkley said. “The union’s current proposal is simply not sustainable. If we were to accept their proposal, our board would have to make tough choices that would directly impact you and your families,” said Naperville 203 Board President Charles Cush. * NBC Chicago | Relentless rain leads to major flooding, street closures in Chicago suburbs: Flood warnings were issued for portions of DeKalb, Kane, Kendall and LaSalle counties, with the National Weather Service saying flooding may occur in poor drainage and urban areas. […] A flood watch was issued for nearly the entire Chicago area until 4 a.m. The NWS reported numerous streets were closed or covered with significant standing water. * Capitol News Illinois | Billboard promoting far-right group Proud Boys springs up in southern Illinois: A billboard rising from a Clinton County cornfield near Breese that appears to be a recruiting tool for the Proud Boys — a far-right extremist group tied to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — has touched off outrage in the small southern Illinois community. The sign is located at Old U.S. Route 50 and St. Rose Road, about 1,000 feet from the entrance to Central Community High School. It lists a local phone number for people to call. Repeated calls to a phone number on the recruiting billboard went to a voicemail that is full. * WGLT | Origin unknown for ‘March on Bloomington’ flyers with swastika imagery: The flyers’ message reads, “We have the White House, Congress, the courts, and the Bloomington Mayor,” and refers to taking back the state while calling for a march in Bloomington-Normal on Aug. 30, from Miller Park to the downtown farmers market. It urges participants to proudly wear military or patriotic organization colors. The flyers claim “the time of ‘not in our town’ is over” and they are claiming Illinois for “REAL CITIZENS.” […] The City of Bloomington said it’s aware of the “inflammatory flyers” and is “looking into the matter.” * WCIA | ADA shortcomings in Mattoon leads city to step up: A paralyzed man in Mattoon says he’s tired of accessibility problems at the train station. Recently, Amtrak told him the elevator wasn’t working when he needed to get to an appointment… But a good Samaritan made sure he could make it. Mattoon’s City Manager Kyle Gill saved the day and made sure everything was working properly to help 48-year-old Christopher Cunningham travel safely to Chicago. But the advocacy doesn’t stop here for Gill and Cunningham. They said the situation has brought up another conversation for the city to have with others. * WGLT | Town of Normal will expand electric vehicle infrastructure with help from Ameren Illinois: The funding allocated to Normal will allow it to potentially install EV charging stations at priority locations and participating businesses and organizations, as well as develop a plan to expand the amount of EVs in Normal’s own fleet vehicles. The partnership also wants to educate the public and businesses about EVs. Eric Sackett, senior manager of beneficial electrification and business development of Ameren Illinois, said they hope more people will learn EVs could be accessible to them, with the planned launch of an EV outreach and education program from Normal. * WGLT | Bloomington seeks solutions to ‘missing middle’ housing gaps: Bloomington city leaders continue to explore potential methods for addressing the “missing middle” portion of the city’s housing shortage, as the administration seeks guidance on possible zoning and subdivision code changes. “We see this as a potential piece in the housing puzzle. This is not going to solve all of our housing problems,” City Manager Jeff Jurgens said at the outset of a 50-minute discussion during Monday’s Committee of the Whole meeting with city council members. * Semafor | Red-state Republicans’ next promise: No property taxes: Yet Republicans who want to end property taxes have a big problem on their hands — namely, a lack of alternative funding that could replace lost revenue for popular public services that the taxes pay for. Efforts to end property levies with ballot measures have floundered for the same reason, and some politicians who pitch abolition face related accusations that eliminating property taxes will inevitably lead to higher sales taxes. But those risks haven’t stopped an anti-tax campaign that sees property taxes as inherently unfair from gaining momentum in a party that likes the idea of slashing voters’ more visible tax bills. Republicans like DeSantis have warned of homes lost to unelected assessors. Grassroots groups have found new recruits for once-obscure ax-the-tax efforts. * WaPo | Defying RFK Jr., pediatric group urges covid shots for young kids: The American Academy of Pediatrics on Tuesday urged parents to get their youngest children vaccinated for covid, part of a broader effort by medical organizations to bypass Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his criticism of broadly administering coronavirus vaccines.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Aug 19, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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