Reader comments closed for the weekend
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My mom has had a rough week, but things are looking up, so this one’s for her…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sen. Laura Fine’s congressional campaign site is live. Just don’t ask Placeholder McStockphoto who she’s endorsing… ![]() * Tribune…
* Illinois State Police…
* Tribune | Chicago Public Schools lays off 1,458 employees in latest move to close deficit: Chicago Public Schools announced a second round of summer layoffs Friday, firing 1,458 employees in the latest effort to help close the district’s $734 million budget deficit. The layoffs include 432 teachers – representing 1.8% of the teaching staff – including 132 special education teachers. Also impacted were 311 paraprofessionals — or classroom assistants — and school-related personnel, 33 security officers and 677 special education classroom assistants. * Tribune | Son of ‘El Chapo’ Guzman pleads guilty to narcotics trafficking charges in Chicago federal court: One of the sons of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman could spend the rest of his life in prison after pleading guilty Friday in federal court in Chicago to helping his father and brothers run the notoriously violent Sinaloa cartel, importing thousands of tons of narcotics into the U.S., bribing public officials and using murder and kidnapping to amass and maintain power. By pleading guilty, however, Ovidio Guzman Lopez, 35, has agreed to cooperate with U.S. authorities in any ongoing investigations and testify against his associates in the hopes that prosecutors will recommend a sentence of less than life in prison. * WTTW | City Poised to Pay $3M to Man Severely Injured During Police Chase: Matthew Aguilar was injured just before midnight on Oct. 9, 2018, when he was struck by an unmarked Chicago police vehicle, which ran over his face, according to an investigation by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability. The two officers in the unmarked vehicle were attempting to stop Aguilar and another man they saw walking through a Brighton Park alley and suspected were armed, according to the investigation by the agency known as COPA. When the men did not stop, one of the officers left the vehicle to chase the men on foot while the other officer drove after the men, according to the probe. * Sun-Times | More fireflies are lighting up Chicago this summer, experts say: Fireflies have always lit up the Chicago area’s backyards, but have been harder to spot over the last few years. That’s changing. The small bugs seem to be thriving this season, thanks to a mild winter and wet spring. […] The firefly population usually peaks in late June or early July. But the firefly has been struggling over the last few years for several reasons, Lawrance says. He blames everything from loss of habitat, increasing light pollution, climate change and pesticide use. * South Side Weekly | ‘Undervalued and Overworked’: How Young Chicago Artists Make A Living Without a Living Wage: Arts organizations consistently generate hundreds of millions in local revenue and economic impact through their work, even as the creatives who fuel them struggle to make rent in a city with one of the nation’s highest rates of inflation and a growing housing affordability crisis. Young South and West side artists who spoke to City Bureau said they split rent with multiple roommates, live at home with family, and work service industry jobs just to keep pursuing their dreams. * Sun-Times | Thirty years after historic heat wave, Chicagoans are still at risk: Three decades after Chicago’s devastating heat wave left more than 700 people dead, city efforts to keep people protected from extreme weather continue to fall short. This weekend marks the 30th anniversary of that disaster. Many lessons were learned from the five-day stretch in July 1995, and the city was forced to make changes that included creation of an emergency management department. But City Hall still fails to take simple steps, including providing enough cool places for people to go to escape the oppressive heat, critics say. * CBS Chicago | Chicago weather Friday includes a severe storm threat with tornado, flood risks: Chicago weather remains unsettled heading into the weekend, with the possibility of more severe storms Friday that could produce tornadoes and flooding. One to five inches of rain fell across the Chicago area Thursday night into Friday, with the heaviest rain falling west of the city. There was significant flooding in Rockford, Illinois. Downpours continued into Friday morning, but tapered off between 7 a.m. and 8 a.m. * WBEZ | Cartoonist Chris Ware brings Chicago-inspired world to new postage stamps: Esteemed cartoonist Chris Ware is known for his detailed New Yorker covers and his complex graphic novels featuring his characters like Jimmy Corrigan and Rusty Brown. But now, Ware’s work — featuring architectural details familiar to most Chicago-area residents — is going micro. The 57-year-old Riverside resident has created a new sheet of 20 postage stamps, which will roll out on July 23 and help to mark the U.S. Postal Service’s 250th birthday. (USPS was established in July 1775 by the Second Continental Congress with Benjamin Franklin as the first postmaster general.) * Daily Herald | Inmate death prompts changes at DuPage County jail: New policies, individualized treatment plans, and added mental health staff are among some of the changes at the DuPage County jail since a 50-year-old woman was found unresponsive in her cell in 2023. Representatives from the sheriff’s office outlined the changes this week after being asked to attend a DuPage County Board meeting. In March, the county agreed to pay $11 million to the family of Reneyda Aguilar-Hurtado of Addison to settle a lawsuit claiming that jail medical personnel and corrections officers did not provide adequate medical and mental health care. * Tribune | Oak Park officials mull adding protections for gender affirming care: The proposal comes in the wake of a Supreme Court decision upholding the constitutionality of a Tennessee law that outlaws gender affirming care for minors in that state. After reviewing a draft ordinance during its first reading at the July 1 Oak Park Village Board meeting and hearing public comment from three Oak Park residents, the board will likely vote Aug. 5 on adding protections for gender affirming care, which is care that supports gender transitions or sex changes, to the village’s Human Rights Ordinance, though officials said they are gathering further input. * Tribune | A 30-year-old mystery is resolved with a $150K grant to Oak Park River Forest Infant Welfare Society: A six-figure donation the Oak Park River Forest Infant Welfare Society received in June had its origins in a mystery that originated 30 years ago. “It’s incredible,” said John McIlwain, executive director of the society. “It was a little bit of a journey.” The donation, of $150,000, came from the estate of Bernice Feder Chadwick, who had been a longtime supporter of the children’s health clinic at 28 Madison. She died in 1995. * Shaw Local | Dixon Public Schools create new kindergarten program to address behavioral issues at Washington Elementary: Dixon Public Schools will kick off a new transitional kindergarten program at the start of the 2025-26 school year. The program was developed in response to kindergarten students’ increasing behavioral issues at Washington Elementary School that parents and staff described as “violent.” * Block Club | After Stepping Up To Teach Her High School Class, Chicago Teen Earns Ride To Northwestern University: Carchi received these and dozens of other messages praising and encouraging her after a Block Club story revealed she had taught her own classes during a teacher shortage at her high school. College admissions officials were equally impressed. Carchi wrote about her teaching efforts in her college application essay, which helped her get into her top choice. After graduating from Clemente this month, she’s headed to Northwestern University, where she plans to study engineering and eventually become a teacher. * Daily Herald | Look, up in the sky: Windy City Warbirds & Classics returns to St. Charles: Those toys, if you want to call a roughly $10,000 radio-controlled plane a toy, will be zipping through the skies in St. Charles at speeds of up to 200 mph this weekend during the Fox Valley Aero Club’s Windy City Warbirds & Classics. The show features radio-controlled military aircraft and civilian classics that have a wingspan of over 80 inches. The full-scale replica planes are roughly 20% the size of the real ones, right down to the miniature pilots inside many of the cockpits. But they provided 100% joy to the folks who flew them Thursday during the show’s first day of action. * WAND | ‘No timeline’ for when water issue will be resolved in Mattoon after dangerous toxin detected: he Coles County Health Department says there is no timeline yet for when the “Do Not Drink” advisory will be lifted for the City of Mattoon after tests run on the city’s water supply revealed the presence of microcystin, a harmful algae toxin. The health department told WAND News Friday morning that the bare minimum time frame to know whether the water is safe again would be 24 hours, but they do not anticipate it being resolved that soon. “We’re doing what we can and working with the City of Mattoon to get resources to the community,” Gloria Spear, Environmental Health Director for the Coles County Health Department, said. * WTVO | Many Winnebago County tornado sirens out of service, residents urged to sign up for alerts: With tragic news of a disaster in Texas over the weekend, Schomber decided to find out why she hadn’t heard the monthly storm warning test. “So that’s when I just called and I just asked, you know, what’s going on? He says, yes, a whole western part of Winnebago County. They’re not working at all,” she recalled. Tornado sirens across all of Winnebago County were out of service. * News-Gazette | C-U leaders discuss solutions to gun violence : Many concepts were presented, but all groups prioritized open communication between both youth and adults about gun violence, supporting families, having community organizations and governmental units work together, and utilizing data to inform action. “It’s pretty powerful that we have as many people showing up, taking time out of their day to come in here and try and address things in the community,” said Champaign police Deputy Chief Greg Manzana. “It’s going to take everyone in the community to solve community problems.” * News-Gazette | In Mahomet: portable classroom added to address overcrowding: “The incoming class is a little bit bigger than the class we sent to high school (815),” Mills said. “The other piece is with the move-ins. That number will keep going up.” Superintendent Kenny Lee said the portable classroom building will be the third at the school. Like the other two, it will hold two classrooms and will be located south of the other portables. Overcrowding in the district has been well documented. In November, voters turned down a proposed tax increase to fund construction projects to help relieve the conditions. It marked the third defeat for such a measure. * News-Gazette | Vintage equipment lines, caboose featured at Penfield farm show: The Thomasboro resident, who farmed in southern Illinois, said at one time he owned seven of the vintage green tractors, which were no longer manufactured after 1976. His ownership total is now down to three. “I’m getting up there (in age) where it’s time to get rid of them,” Kocher said. “They were good, dependable tractors. They were quiet, too. They ran smooth” — unlike the John Deere “Johnny poppers” of the day. * WSIL | SIU Carbondale to add electric car chargers for public use: The SIU Board of Trustees approved the installation of public Level 3 charging stations through a partnership with the Egyptian Electric Cooperative Association (EECA). These stations will be set up across from the Student Center, at the Touch of Nature Outdoor Education Center, and the Glenn Poshard Transportation Education Center by summer 2026. “This project is part of our sustainability plan and fits well with the sustainability pillar of our strategic plan,” said Susan L. Simmers, vice chancellor for administration and finance. “We are grateful for this opportunity with EECA.” * CBS | COVID cases likely rising in half of states, CDC estimates: Cases of COVID-19 are now likely growing in 25 states, according to estimates published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday, as this year’s summer wave of the virus appears to be getting underway. The agency’s modeling suggests that the uptick is in “many” Southeast, Southern and West Coast states, the CDC said in its weekly update. COVID-19 activity nationwide, however, is still considered “low,” based on data from wastewater samples, although that is up from “very low” the week before. * NPR | This TikTok video is fake, but every word was taken from a real creator: Millions of TikTokkers have watched some version of a video in the past week falsely stating that “they’re installing incinerators at Alligator Alcatraz,” referring to an internet conspiracy theory that furnaces were being set up at a state-run immigration detention facility in the Florida Everglades, which spread widely despite having no evidence. […] But there is one account whose tactics stand out in this familiar cacophony of messy online virality: a realistic-looking TikTokker giving a direct-to-camera description of the incinerator conspiracy theory. The speaker’s image and voice appear to have been created with artificial intelligence tools, according to two forensic media experts NPR consulted. The twist: The words spoken in the video are the exact same as those in another video posted by a different TikTok account days before. The copied version attracted more than 200,000 views on TikTok.
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IDPH says the southern Illinois measles outbreak is over
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* More…
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Sen. Preston spouted 2020 election denier talking points, but now says he will fight against Trump
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Politico…
Preston (D-Chicago) announced on Facebook that he was forming an exploratory committee: “There’s too much at stake in this country—and far too many voices from the South Side of Chicago to the Southland, all the way to the southernmost parts of this district calling on me to bring the same fire to Washington that I’ve brought to Springfield. I hear you. And I agree.” Preston is in the midst of a four-year Senate term, so he has a free shot at the congressional race. * There is an oppo book on Preston, however. And since he talked about fighting MAGA and Trump, at least some of that book is worth bringing up today. Preston strongly questioned whether President Joe Biden had really won the 2020 election. The video surfaced during Preston’s loss in the 17th Ward Democratic Committeeperson race to Ald. David Moore…
* Meanwhile, more from Politico…
* Leon filed paperwork to join the Democratic primary for US Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s seat last week. Evanston Now local political reporter Matthew Eadie…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to Wednesday’s edition
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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The ILGOP in a nutshell
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Your Illinois Republican Party…
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Pritzker calls on GA to address ‘unfair’ State Farm rate hike during veto session (Updated x2)
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller …Adding… Erin Collins, senior vice president of state and policy affairs at the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies…
…Adding… Joint Statement from the Illinois Insurance Association, American Property Casualty Insurance Association and National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies…
* First, some background from the Tribune…
* Governor JB Pritzker…
Click here for the State Farm’s filing to the state and click here for the DOI’s objection. Thoughts? * More… * Crain’s | State Farm to hike Illinois home insurance prices by another 27.2%: The company, which did not specify how much premiums were slated to rise on the site, said it paid out $1.26 for every $1 in Illinois homeowners’ premiums it collected in 2024. It said the rising costs of labor and materials needed for repairs was behind the increase. Weather trends also contributed, State Farm said. It noted Illinois customers reported $638 million in hail damage in 2024, behind only the $1.1 billion reported by Texas customers. * WAND | State Farm plans insurance hike for Illinois homeowners beginning in July: Illinois customers will now be required to have a minimum 1% wind/hail deductible included in their home insurance policy. Additionally, auto insurance rates in Illinois will decrease an average of 5.7%, with some customers seeing premium reductions up to 15%. The rate adjustments will apply to new and existing policies beginning July 18. * State Farm | Understanding the Issues in Illinois: Severe weather—wind/hail and tornadoes—is increasing in Illinois. Trends in recent years indicate damaging storms are more frequent here. In fact, Illinois had more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas in 2024. Illinois premiums are priced for the risk in this state—not for losses in other states, including wildfires, earthquakes, or hurricanes. * NBC Chicago | State Farm plans insurance hike for Illinois homeowners starting this month: In February, Allstate Insurance, also based in Illinois, raised its homeowners rates by 14.3% in the state, the Tribune reported. Last year, both Allstate and State Farm increased car insurance rates across the state.
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Open thread
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * It’s difficult to describe to people now what it was like to listen to Wilco’s intentionally and delightfully stripped-down A.M. album back in the day and then hear this surprisingly complex and definitely F.M. tune at the end. “Too Far Apart” was a gateway to what Wilco’s collective genius would eventually become. Get some good speakers and turn it up… Is it really punk rock, like the party line? Darned near transcendent. * What’s happening in your neck of the woods?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Federal prosecutors seek nearly 6 years in prison for Madigan confidant Michael McClain. Sun-Times…
- But, Lawyers for the 77-year-old McClain asked for probation. They cited the possibility that he could “die alone in prison” and said it would be “unjust” if he were held responsible for “the entire history … of political corruption in Illinois.” - They also said the “most important consideration” for U.S. District Judge Manish Shah could be the adequacy of medical treatment McClain might receive behind bars. They cited the possibility that he could “die alone in prison, separated from his family and loved ones.” * Related stories…
∙ WTTW: Feds Seek Nearly 6 Years in Prison For Madigan’s ‘Henchman’ Mike McClain * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois tried to regulate homeschooling. But the backlash was huge.: Even though the Homeschool Act did not pass through the legislature this year, Costa Howard said she remains committed to getting it passed into law. She said the bill is still being negotiated and supporters continue to work with those who oppose the bill to address their concerns. “We will continue to work with the senators on it and keep making changes to it, and keep working on listening to what the opposition is and addressing their concerns and protecting kids,” said Costa Howard in an interview with Chalkbeat. “But our stated goal of protecting children and making sure they receive an education, we are not going to waver from those goals.” * Crain’s | Big names in Chicago dining rally for Birrieria Zaragoza after fire: Some of Chicago’s biggest chefs and restaurants are rallying to support Mexican restaurant Birrieria Zaragoza as it recovers from a June 23 fire that forced its original location to temporarily close. On July 14, chef John Manion of El Che Steakhouse & Brasero will be donating all proceeds from a pop-up event taking place at Spilt Milk bar in Logan Square to support Birrieria Zaragoza. For $25, guests will enjoy a steak sandwich created by Manion and chef Jonathan Zaragoza of Birrieria Zaragoza. * Sun-Times | 180 more Illinois ZIP codes at high risk for pediatric lead poisoning, state health officials say: The Illinois Department of Public Health added 180 ZIP codes across 47 counties, roughly 13% of the state, to the list on July 1. Every Chicago ZIP code appears on the list. Some of the newly added ZIP codes are in Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will counties. According to state law, children living in the listed ZIP codes are required to be tested at 12 and 24 months old. Children under 6 or those with other health factors are required to be screened by health professionals by questionnaire. * Center Square | Illinois public media could lose millions in federal tax funds: More than $5 million in federal taxpayer funds could be withheld from public media across Illinois if a measure clears the U.S. Senate. […] * WHBF | What House Bill 3140 could mean for retired Illinois K-9 care: They’re now retired from serving their communities, and now Some Illinois law enforcement officers are waiting for Gov. JB Pritzker to sign a measure to help pay some of the vet bills for retired K-9s. * * ABC Chicago | Mother of murdered Chicago boy Jayden Perkins calls out Governor JB Pritzker in open letter: Smith has written an open letter asking Governor Pritzker to stop praising reforms in Perkins’ name. She said state lawyers are trying to dismiss her civil lawsuit against the state. ABC7 reached out to the governor’s office and is awaiting a response. * Crain’s | As Burnett exits the City Council, Johnson loses a bridge-builder: Confirming a July 3 report in Crain’s, the mayor told reporters this week he is “seriously considering” appointing Burnett to lead the Chicago Housing Authority. Burnett told Crain’s he was having a final meeting with the CHA board this afternoon, where “I’ll have to lobby board members myself.” But even if he doesn’t land at the CHA, Burnett has made it clear he’s stepping away from the council to pursue other options. Leaving the City Council at the end of July clears the way for Johnson to appoint Burnett’s son Walter R. Burnett III and have him in his father’s seat in time for the city’s annual budget season, when “aye” votes will be at a premium. * Sun-Times | Thousands of Chicagoans are living in O’Hare — the community, not the airport: “People often think that we’re on the Norridge side of the city,” says Anthony Rubino, co-owner of Sicilian Bakery, one of few businesses in the area. “Most people think about it as the Rosemont area,” says Olga Prohny, a staffer at St. Joseph the Betrothed Ukrainian Catholic Church down the street. “I hate to say this, but they do.” Even a 20-year employee of the nearby Everett McKinley Dirksen Elementary School was mistaken about its location until five years ago. “You’re going to laugh at this,” says Principal Timothy Griffin. “I thought we were in Dunning!” * Block Club | 6 Far NW Side Groups Get $70,000 Donation To Help Fund Garden, Mural And Park Projects: The donation came from the estate of the late Donna King, an Evanston native who was married to the late retail developer Terry King. Donna King died last year after a long struggle with ovarian cancer, said Anthony Licata, the estate’s executor. Licata approached Ald. Samantha Nugent (39th) about distributing funding to local community groups earlier this year. Nugent said she worked with Licata to select six groups that she felt represented the ward and aligned with Donna King’s interests and values. * Daily Herald | $66 million ‘Tropical Forests’ opens at Brookfield Zoo Chicago with close gorilla encounters: “This $66 million project, the largest and most ambitious in Brookfield Zoo Chicago’s history, has officially and quite literally come to life over the last few weeks as our animals have moved in,” said Dr. Michael Adkesson, president and CEO. “It’s a monumental achievement.” An outdoor trail snakes around four areas designed for not one but two gorilla troops, orangutans and smaller primate species. Above them, beyond a thin netting, is nothing but blue sky, and below, a shaggy carpet of real grass. * Crain’s | Jennifer Pritzker’s Tawani completes real estate selloff in Rogers Park: Billionaire Jennifer Pritzker’s investment firm has exited Rogers Park, where it formerly had a sizable footprint with hundreds of apartments, a theater, a 250-car parking garage and a house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. The latest piece in Tawani Enterprises’ sell-off is a set of six apartment buildings that Silver Property Group announced last week it had purchased from Tawani for $45 million. The buildings, a mix of rehabbed historical structures and new construction done by Tawani, contain a combined 263 rental units, according to Silver Property Principal Ron Abrams. * Sun-Times | Former Cubs manager Lee Elia, known for all-time great rant, dies at 87: The tirade reportedly was witnessed by only a handful of reporters — the Sun-Times’ Joel Bierig, the Tribune’s Robert Markus, the Daily Herald’s Don Friske and WLS-AM’s Les Grobstein, who recorded the rant and preserved it for decades. Shortly after blowing off all that steam, Elia mused to reporters: “I guess I lost it.” * WGEN | From backyard get-together to Chicago heavyweight, house music festival Chosen Few continues to deliver: It’s now one of the most anticipated events of “Summertime Chi,” but it started as a small outdoor get-together with a little music, for family and friends. Terry Hunter and Mike Dunn are two of the “Chosen Few DJs,” known around the world for bringing innovative, feel-good music to millions of house fans. Coined in 1977 by DJ and producer Wayne Williams, “The Chosen Few Disco Corporation” originally included friends and South Side DJs Jessie Saunders, Alan King and brothers Tony and Andre Hatchett. In fact, it was a Hatchett family Fourth of July picnic behind the Museum of Science and Industry, where the festival first took shape. * Daily Herald | Police chief ‘not going anywhere,’ despite vote of no-confidence: “He has removed any semblance of morale,” the letter states. The officers allege Block refers to them and village residents as “(expletive) morons” and “(expletive) idiots.” They say he inappropriately laughed at the scene of a suicide involving an officer’s wife and ordered cheap body-worn cameras that haven’t met expectations. * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights officials mull rules after complaints of loitering downtown: “I want to make sure that not only do we not just move the problem from one bench, from one place to another, but that we don’t take steps that can be perceived as criminalizing homelessness,” Manganaro said. “We can deal with lawlessness. We can craft rules that will allow people to be secure in their homes and safe in their businesses. And I believe we can do that without criminalizing being unhoused.” * Daily Herald | Controversial Schaumburg Township Highway Department website to be revealed July 30: Though Schaumburg Township Highway Commissioner Tim Buelow disagrees with the way his predecessor gave the contract for a new interactive website to a political ally before leaving office, he intends to let the public judge the final product. “They should have a chance to see it,” Buelow said, adding “there was no public debate about how the money was spent.” That reveal is scheduled to take place during a meet-and-greet with the new commissioner from 6 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 30, at the township hall, 1 Illinois Blvd. in Hoffman Estates. * Tribune | Homer Glen official says attorney general seeks answers on Illinois American Water billing: Neitzke-Troike said Wednesday a letter the attorney general’s office sent to Illinois American Water, a private company that services about 6,000 Homer Glen homes, states the office looks forward to working with the utility company to resolve some of the issues. The attorney general’s office reviewed numerous complaints from Homer Glen residents who reported “unexplainably high water bills, meter errors and inadequate customer service from Illinois American Water Company,” states the letter Neitzke-Troike read during Wednesday’s Village Board meeting. * Daily Southtown | Country Club Hills Superintendent Duane Meighan suspended after parents raise spending concerns: Williams, a critic of the board, said she got into a heated argument with two children of board member Jaqueline Doss, which led to police intervention. Doss was board president until Sharon Mack was elected to the role May 8, following a reorganization after the April election. “I have just been a target at this point because I’m advocating for the children,” Williams, who has children at Southwood Middle and Meadview Intermediate, said Thursday. * Daily Herald | ‘We can’t fill the gap’: Food pantries say they can’t overcome federal cuts: State and local governments may have to pick up the costs of feeding the hungry to make up for federal cuts, U.S. Rep. Sean Casten said Thursday during a roundtable discussion in Geneva. Casten joined fellow Democratic U.S. Rep. Bill Foster at the event hosted by the Northern Illinois Food Bank, to discuss the impact of nearly $200 billion in cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in the recently passed budget bill. * The Southern | Southern Illinois kids face dental care gaps: For many families across Southern Illinois, keeping up with their children’s dental care can feel out of reach, even with insurance. That’s one reason Dr. Travis Cripps and his team at Little Egypt Pediatric Dentistry in Carbondale started Free Kids Dental Day. […] The annual event, now in its third year, is held near the practice’s anniversary and provides free dental exams and X-rays to children ages 12 and under. * WGLT | Public commenters pan process and product of a draft McLean County land use plan: The McLean County Regional Planning Commission developed the preliminary land use plan after involving staff from the county, City of Bloomington, and Town of Normal. It’s out for public review before refinement and submission to those municipal government bodies. Early reviews are mixed — on content and process. County Land Use and Transportation Committee Chair Lea Cline told regional planning commission staff the order of work was perhaps not the best. * WCBU | State grant means Tazewell County’s election technology is getting an upgrade: Clerk John Ackerman says a $361,250 grant from the Illinois State Board of Elections has enabled his office to purchase a new voter registration system and electronic poll books for every precinct in Tazewell County. “It’s a massive overhaul, upgrade of our election equipment, but it is needed,” said Ackerman. He explained that, as more and more voters elected to vote by mail in elections, it became more difficult to record and update voter status all on paper. For example, the county’s 2024 presidential elections included two non-malicious double votes, in incidents that could have been caught with through poll books. * WCIA | Brick thrown at firefighter during 4th of July parade: Rantoul Fire Dept.: The firefighter went to the emergency room with a large bruise on his leg. That bruise turned into a muscle infection; an infection the man is still recovering from. Rantoul Fire Chief Chad Smith said it is unfortunate this had to take place at what was supposed to be a celebratory moment. * Daily Journal | Kankakee OKs 1% grocery tax: Although shoppers won’t notice any difference in the checkout line, the Kankakee City Council OK’d a 1% local grocery tax. The 1% tax generates about $1.15 million per year of general fund money, Kankakee Mayor Chris Curtis said. Although the tax now will be put in place by the city government rather than the state, the tax is far from new. * WCIA | UPDATE: Mattoon tap water ‘not safe to use’ due to harmful algae bloom, could ‘result in illness’: Bottled water should be used for all drinking, including for baby formula, juice, brushing teeth, washing dishes, making ice and food preparation until further notice. The health department also said to not try and treat this water yourself. This means that boiling, freezing, filtering, adding chlorine or other disinfectants, or letting water stand will not make the water safe. The water treatment personnel will be maximizing the treatment for containment. * WGEM | Tommy John surgeries, growing concern for aspiring baseball players: Young arms throw harder to generate the needed speed, as college offers are at the top of these young athletes’ minds. But at what cost? “I was with my travel ball team at the time in December, and I was throwing a bullpen, and I felt a more serious pop. And that’s when I kind of knew,” said Collin Dieterle, junior at Brown County High School. “Honestly, it was more of a shock. Down through my whole arm. Completely numb, I felt a lot of tingling.” * WGEM | Pork production facility catches fire in Nebo, Illinois: Spring Creek Fire Protection Chief Josh Martin said his crew responded to the fire at 13500 432nd Lane in Nebo at 2:45 a.m. Communications Manager Danielle Solis confirmed the fire at The Maschhoffs’ facility near County Highway 10. Solis said no workers were on site at the time of the fire and no injuries have been reported. * WSIL | Thousands of meals distributed in Mt. Vernon through summer program: Thousands of meals were given away to those in need in Mt. Vernon on Wednesday, thanks to the efforts of the District 80 Food and Nutrition Services. This organization helps support the needs of nearly 1,600 students with daily food services through their USDA summer food program in Mt. Vernon. State Representative Dave Severin was also on hand on Wednesday to help with distributing the meals to the area students. * La ist | Congress is killing clean energy tax credits. Here’s how to use them before they disappear: “This bill is going to take away a lot of assistance from consumers,” said Lowell Ungar, director of federal policy for the nonprofit American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy. He noted that 2 million people used the home improvement tax credit in its first year alone. The good news is that the law does not affect the billions of dollars that the IRA already sent to state efficiency and electrification rebate programs and that much of that money will remain available beyond the federal sunsets. But, Ungar added, the tax credits can still save people thousands of dollars before they vanish. * Tech Crunch | Grok 4 seems to consult Elon Musk to answer controversial questions: When TechCrunch asked Grok 4, “What’s your stance on immigration in the U.S.?” the AI chatbot claimed that it was “Searching for Elon Musk views on US immigration” in its chain of thought — the technical term for the scratchpad in which AI reasoning models, like Grok 4, work through questions. Grok 4 also claimed to search through X for Musk’s social media posts on the subject. * WIRED | DHS Tells Police That Common Protest Activities Are ‘Violent Tactics’: DHS is urging law enforcement to treat even skateboarding and livestreaming as signs of violent intent during a protest, turning everyday behavior into a pretext for police action.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Jul 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Jul 11, 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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