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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for some background. WTTW

The Adams County Sheriff’s Office has transferred at least two men into U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, in apparent violation of the state’s TRUST Act and Way Forward Act, according to a lawyer who helped provide technical support for the legislation. Both men were later deported.

In a statement, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin pointed to both men’s criminal charges — but in one case, the federal government dismissed its criminal complaint; in the other, he was never charged for the alleged crime that landed him in jail.

In addition, the Adams County Jail also has a contract with the U.S. Marshals Service that authorizes ICE to utilize the jail to detain people for $80 a day. Such contracts also appear to run afoul of state law. […]

“No law enforcement agency, law enforcement official, or any unit of State or local government may enter into or renew any contract, intergovernmental service agreement, or any other agreement to house or detain individuals for federal civil immigration violations,” states the Illinois’ Way Forward Act. […]

“A law enforcement agency or law enforcement official shall not detain or continue to detain any individual solely on the basis of any immigration detainer or civil immigration warrant or otherwise comply with an immigration detainer or civil immigration warrant,” the TRUST Act states.

Click here for a TRUST Act explainer.

* Journal & Topics

Longtime Maine Township Democratic committeeman Laura Murphy will not seek reelection for the local party position this coming spring. Instead, she is endorsing Des Plaines Mayor Andrew Goczkowski for the job.

A few weeks ago, Goczkowski announced that he was running for committeeman. A short time later, Murphy said she is running for reelection to the four-year post she has held for the last 23 years.

“It’s time to get new blood in,” said Murphy late last week. “ My leadership responsibilities in the state senate are growing. I don’t have the time.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Nuclear Newswire | Gov. Pritzker looks to possible changes in Illinois nuclear: When Pritzker vetoed S.B. 76, he spoke in support of allowing small modular reactors, explaining that he was specifically against large-scale nuclear. In an official statement, he said that the bill would have opened the door to “the proliferation of large-scale nuclear reactors that are so costly to build that they will cause exorbitant ratepayer-funded bailouts.” At the end of 2023, he signed H.B. 2473, repealing Illinois’s construction moratorium for projects with a rated nameplate capacity of 300 MW or less, beginning January 1, 2026. Now, it seems that Pritzker has changed tack. On August 13, in response to a question on managing energy costs, he said, “We in Illinois can do something very important; we can get rid of the moratorium on nuclear, which has been in place for decades now. We already got rid of it on small modular nuclear. We can do that on large nuclear. It’s going to be an important part of the transition to renewable energy everywhere and to our 2050 goal of clean energy.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Governor gives boon to trial lawyers, vetoes treasurer-backed bill: One of the bills Pritzker signed Friday invited almost immediate pushback from Republicans and business groups. The law, outlined in Senate Bill 328, allows lawsuits to continue against companies that operate in Illinois even if the company and plaintiffs are from other states. The law only applies to cases dealing with “toxic” substances under state law.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools students head back to class amid budget uncertainty: King made brief remarks at Courtenay before introducing Johnson as “the mayor of education who has made so much possible,” and Johnson complimented King on her work as interim CEO before making his own remarks. Neither King nor Johnson took questions from reporters at either stop. The two may also be at odds, however, over how to close the district’s $734 million deficit. Last week, King put forward a budget plan that does not include a reimbursement to the city to pay a portion of a pension payment that partially covers school district employees. The proposal says CPS would only contribute if it finds additional revenue. The 21-member school board is also divided over the proposal, with Johnson’s allies urging King to include the city pension reimbursement. Johnson said last week that he expects CPS to make that payment.

* Fox Chicago | CTA adds bus routes to ‘Frequent Network’ with rides every 10 minutes: The CTA said the expansion of the #53 Pulaski bus route alone will reach 69,000 more residents and link more than 35,000 jobs. The agency also added Sunday service to the #93 California/Dodge route to close a mile-long gap. Four additional routes are expected to be added to the “Frequent Network” in December for a total of 20 routes, the CTA said.

* Sun-Times | Flood sensors aim to get help to Chicago neighborhoods faster: “Ultimately, the goal is to make sure the residents of our city are safer, faster,” said Nina Idemudia, chief executive of Chicago-based Center for Neighborhood Technology. “It can also help determine where money goes and where improvements are made.” The telecommunications giant Verizon and the Michigan-based tech startup Hyfi are providing the technology for free through next year. The city will then have the option to keep the network for $1,495 per sensor, or less than $75,000 per year. Ten of the solar-powered sensors had already been deployed by Monday, but the installation of the other 40 sensors has been held up because permits haven’t been obtained to put them in place. No timeline was given for the installation.

* Daily Herald | ‘We will enhance the O’Hare experience from curb to gate’: Work begins on new concourse: The 19 new gates will accommodate a variety of aircraft from narrow-bodied to international wide-bodied, which will reduce layovers and allow for greater efficiency. “Today we begin building for the future of O’Hare,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said.

* Block Club | Gun Found At Whitney Young High School On First Day Of Classes: Whitney Young Prinicpal Rickey Harris shared the news in an email to parents Monday morning. Harris said the gun was “identified during our standard entry screening,” and it was “secured” and did not get further into the building. “Safety is always my top priority, which is why I am writing to notify you of a situation that occurred earlier today,” Harris said. A person was arrested and charges are pending, a Chicago Police spokesperson said. Police did not release an age of the person arrested.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Lawmakers urge one more look at Wirtz’s impact fees for Ivanhoe Village project: State legislators who represent the Mundelein area are urging the village mayor to re-open discussions on the impact fee agreement the municipality made earlier this year with the Wirtz family’s team developing the vast Ivanhoe Village project. The mayor, who previously issued a statement indicating she’ll keep the village’s existing deal in place, responded with a memo saying that instead she’s working separately with the school districts—which had said their needs were ignored—to set up a path for them to negotiate with developers such as the Wirtzes on their own.

* Evanston Now | District 65 plans student cell phone ban: In a memo for Monday’s school board meeting, several administrators outlined both the reasons behind the ban, and why it will be for the entire instructional day, and not just in class in the elementary/middle school system. The all-day ban is different than what’s already in effect at Evanston Township High School, where cell phones are prohibited in class, but allowed during passing periods and at lunch.

* Daily Southtown | Frankfort to reimagine Commissioners Park with $7.9 million state grant: While the village in May received $1.6 million to link the eastern part of Frankfort and Commissioners Park, 22451 S. 80th Ave, to the broader Frankfort trail system, the most recent grant will largely focus on improving Commissioners Park itself, according to parks Director Gina Hassett. “This amount of money is pretty much unprecedented to get,” Hassett said Monday. “I’ve been with the district for 10 years and our Park District is underfunded compared to other districts in the Southland.”

* UPDATE: The meeting has been canceled. Evanston RoundTable | Council returns Monday for Envision work, over objection from Seventh Ward group: Mayor Daniel Biss confirmed he was calling the meeting last Monday, but on Friday he and the council received a letter signed by more than 100 residents of the Seventh Ward requesting to postpone it. The letter, initially written and distributed by resident Mary Rosinski, cites the fact that Seventh Ward Councilmember Parielle Davis is currently on medical leave through Aug. 25 for “an unavoidable major medical procedure,” which Davis notified residents of in an emailed city newsletter sent on Aug. 5.

*** Downstate ***

* 25News Now | Study underway to examine McLean County’s 2 election authorities: In 2008, the League of Women Voters recommended a consolidation of the two agencies. That did not happen, and a 2018 referendum in Bloomington rejected abolishing the city’s election commission. […] “We are collecting information and talking to stakeholders so that we can decide if we want to take a position,” said Diana Hauman, who’s leading the League’s study and addressed the Bloomington City Council on Monday, Aug. 11.

* QC Times | ‘Voices Without Fear’ festival to be held after Mexican Independence Day Parade canceled: Following the cancellation of the Mexican Independence Day Parade & Fiesta in Moline, Hispanic leaders in the Quad-Cities have rallied to establish a new festival on the same day that honors Mexican and Mexican-American heritage, community organizer Graciela Macias announced in a press release Friday. The new festival is called Voces Sin Miedo – El Griot de Todos, or “Voices Without Fear – The Cry of All,” and will take place 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 14, in downtown East Moline. […] The news comes after Moline-based LULAC Council 5285 announced the cancellation of the Mexican Independence Day Parade & Fiesta, on Wednesday, Aug. 13. According to LULAC, festival organizers encountered multiple unexpected issues while planning the celebration.

* WGLT | New union representing ISU lab school employees hopes to start negotiating first contract this fall: LSEA is the latest in a wave of organizing on ISU’s campus, where over half of all workers are now unionized. Now that it’s certified, LSEA’s next steps are to get all members to fill out some forms, and to elect a bargaining team and building representatives, Flanagan-Rudd said. They hope to begin negotiating their first contract with ISU sometime this fall, although Flanagan-Rudd said they expect those negotiations to take awhile — possibly through the end of the 2025-26 school year.

* WCIA | Urbana Police launches next phase of planned mental health unit: The department launched the live-response model of its Crisis Co-Response Team (CCRT) on Monday. This step builds on a pilot program already in operation, which provided follow-up care and outreach for individuals in mental health crisis. Now, the CCRT will respond in real time during weekday hours, offering support on-scene, stabilization and connection to mental health services.

* Journal Courier | Jacksonville hospital, library partnering to make mental health kits available for families: Each kit includes books about emotions and mental health, worksheets explaining techniques to help with breathing and grounding, coloring pages, and contact information for local support and mental health resources. The kits, designed for those ages 3 and above, can be checked out from the libraries for a two-week period. A library card is not required.

* WGLT | ‘It was never about him’: Bloomington-Normal leader Bill Sulaski passes away: Former ISU president David Strand said he and Sulaski inherited an institution that was isolated from the community, the media, and state government. “There was quite a bit of divisiveness on the campus,” said Strand. “He and I talked about ways that would be helpful in healing wounds that had been created, and building bridges so that we would have better relationships with each of those constituencies.”

*** National ***

* NYT | Newsmax Will Pay $67 Million to Settle Dominion Defamation Lawsuit: The right-wing cable channel Newsmax has agreed to pay $67 million to settle a libel lawsuit that Dominion Voting Systems had brought against the channel for falsely claiming that the voting machine company had rigged votes in the 2020 U.S. presidential election. The settlement, which the companies completed on Aug. 15, was disclosed in an S.E.C. filing by Newsmax. It noted that Newsmax would make the payments in three installments by Jan. 15, 2027.

  3 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

Though Democrats hold supermajorities in both the House and Senate and no legislation for the Bears could advance without them, Republicans in the minority say they haven’t heard anything from the team in about a year in seeking support.

“This has not been top of the list at all,” said state Sen. John Curran of Downers Grove, who leads the GOP minority in the chamber. “We’re engaged with our Democratic colleagues on a lot of issues. This has not been one (of them).”

The lack of effective clock management was one of the downfalls of the Bears’ last coach, Matt Eberflus. But it is an important part of the legislative process — though the Bears have appeared mostly unengaged in Springfield.

“I haven’t talked to a single member about the Bears,” House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch of Hillside said about the stadium issue.

“People are so focused on talking to their neighbors and getting (candidacy) petitions signed, and what they’re hearing at the doors is property taxes, grocery prices, gas prices — they’re talking about things around the kitchen table,” he said. “You know what they’re not talking about? The Chicago Bears.”

  21 Comments      


Tariffs Impact Everyone

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The shelves of Springfield’s Whimsy Tea are filled with hundreds of tea blends from 149 different countries around the globe. For a retail business whose main product is predominantly reliant on international trade, owner and founder Gordon Davis is facing challenges unlike any other for his business: the specter of rising tariffs. The increased costs associated with tariffs impact us all, and Gordon predicts from his retail experience that the trickle-down effects will keep rolling and rolling.

Retailers like Gordon enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.

  Comments Off      


Land doesn’t vote, and these new Illinois maps help illustrate that fact

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’ve all seen this type of goofy ploy

* Some standard retorts…

* At my behest, a friend crafted this one using AI: “Non-Contiguous Cartogram by Population (2020) Areas scaled to share of state population; county shapes preserved; adjacency not preserved”…

Click the pic for a higher resolution version. Same goes for this next one: “Illinois County Dorling Cartogram (Population, 2020 Census)”…

* And the pièce de résistance: “Illinois Counties - Contiguous Population Cartogram (2024 presidential winners)”…

Feel free to use them.

  65 Comments      


It’s now a law

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

People charged with their first weapon-related offense will soon have the ability to apply for a FOID card while they participate in a pretrial detention program.

Current state law allows nonviolent offenders charged with their first offense to participate in divergence programs. Once completed, a state’s attorney can dismiss the charges, but the individual cannot apply for a FOID card until after the charges are dismissed. […]

“[The law] expands access to rehabilitation while upholding gun safety laws, maintains law enforcement oversight, strengthens public safety through legal compliance, and ultimately reduces recidivism and supports successful reintegration,” said Rep. Justin Slaughter (D-Chicago).

All of the current requirements for legal gun ownership in Illinois will remain the same. The Illinois State Police could also deny someone’s application for a FOID card if they are ineligible.

* Sen. Omar Aquino…

Amid alleged due process violations and changing immigration policies, State Senator Omar Aquino championed a new law to secure representation for non-citizen Cook County residents undergoing immigration proceedings. […]

The new law expands the jurisdiction of the Cook County Public Defender to represent non-citizen Cook County residents in immigration cases arising or being heard outside of the county. The law also allows the county board to authorize representation by the public defender beyond those limits.

“Everyone deserves a fair and just legal process, no matter their immigration status. By expanding the jurisdiction of the Cook County Public Defender, we are strengthening the right to due process for all our residents,” said Aquino. “Illinois is a welcoming state, and we will not turn our backs on the people who call it home.”

House Bill 2436 was signed into law Friday and is effective immediately.

* Sen. Robert Peters…

State Senator Robert Peters led a new law creating the Office of the State Public Defender, an independent office under the state’s Judicial Branch – marking one of the most substantial reforms of Illinois’ public defense system since 1949. […]

A state public defender is a government-employed lawyer who provides legal representation to individuals accused or convicted of crimes who cannot afford to hire their own attorney. Public defender offices are one of three methods through which states and localities ensure defendants are granted the 6th and 14th Amendments right to counsel.

Currently, in all Illinois counties except Cook, judges can hire and fire chief public defenders at will. This goes against the national standard set by the American Bar Association, which calls for public defenders to be independent. Only one other state – Mississippi – still does this, highlighting the need for this updated system in Illinois.

Peters’ law creates the State Public Defender Act – establishing the Office of the State Public Defender under the courts, setting the rules for the public defender’s powers, pay and how they are appointed, and forming a commission to oversee the office and identify its operational costs and funding requirements. At the local level, county offices will mirror this structure to strengthen local defense across the state. […]

House Bill 3363 was signed into law Friday. It goes into effect Jan. 1, 2027.

* Sen. Julie Morrison…

A new law championed by State Senator Julie Morrison will eliminate the use of toxic “forever chemicals” in everyday items like cosmetics, dental floss and children’s products, marking a significant step toward keeping harmful substances out of people’s homes and bodies. […]

To reduce Illinoisans’ exposure to these chemicals, Morrison’s new law bans intentionally added PFAS from several categories of products sold and distributed in the state beginning Jan. 1, 2032, including cosmetics, dental floss, children’s items, menstrual products and intimate apparel. The law prioritizes products where PFAS exposure is likely to be frequent or prolonged, especially for vulnerable populations like children, and sets a 2032 implementation date to give manufacturers time to phase out their use.

The law also requires the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to submit a report to the General Assembly by Aug. 1, 2027 on the risks and potential regulation of PFAS in consumer products. […]

House Bill 2516 was signed into law Friday and takes effect immediately.

* WMBD

A new Illinois law will make it easier for parents or guardians to see their kids’ mental health records.

House Bill 2994 gives parents of students receiving special education services access to their child’s mental health records regarding the service the parents consent to on the child’s behalf, Illinois State Senator Dave Koehler (D-Peoria) said. […]

Koehler said the previous law made access to the records unclear or limited as children grew older. He said this new law will help improve understanding between teachers and families.

The law was signed on Friday and will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2026.

* Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…

State Senator Mary Edly-Allen worked with multiple statewide education stakeholders to pass a law that will address unnecessary and burdensome Illinois School Code mandates.

“Public school teachers play a critical role in shaping our young minds and preparing them for the future,” said Edly-Allen (D-Libertyville). “The School Code Mandate Reduction Council will begin evaluating the 699 mandates introduced since 1982 – an essential step toward improving our laws to fit with the evolving education landscape.”

Senate Bill 1740 initiates the reduction of unnecessary school code mandates agreed upon by statewide educational stakeholders. The law creates the School Code Mandate Reduction Council, comprised of eight members of the General Assembly and one member from each of the 12 statewide educational organizations, to identify and recommend the removal of mandates that align with the state’s goal of providing high-quality education tailored to each student.

“As an educator and legislator, I recognize the importance of mandates; however, it is time to remove the outdated and cumbersome requirements that limit educators from preparing our students for the future,” said Edly-Allen.

Senate Bill 1740 was signed into law on Friday and goes into effect immediately.

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law Friday to require the Illinois Department of Corrections report data on hospice care available for prisoners. […]

The Department of Corrections does not have a formal hospice program, as end-of-life care is provided on a prison by prison basis.

Sponsors said this has led to inconsistent care for prisoners diagnosed with terminal illnesses or who are expected to reach the end of their life.[…]

IDOC will have to provide a report with demographic data of prisoners receiving hospice and palliative care by December 1 of each year. This plan passed out of the House and Senate on partisan lines.

* Rep. Patrick Sheehan…

State Representative Patrick Sheehan is proud to announce that House Bill 1842, a measure designed to enhance the fairness, transparency, and effectiveness of municipal code enforcement proceedings, was officially signed into law this past Friday.

“This legislation ensures local governments have the tools they need to uphold local code while also protecting the rights of residents,” said Rep. Sheehan. “By setting consistent rules and requiring formal training for hearing officers, we’re promoting accountability and fairness across the board.”

HB1842 establishes clear standards for administrative hearing officers and reinforces due process for individuals facing municipal code violations. Hearings must be led by attorneys licensed in Illinois for at least three years, who complete formal training in procedural rules and adjudication. Decisions must be based on authenticated evidence, with written findings outlining penalties or required actions. The bill also authorizes local governments to remediate violations when compliance deadlines are missed, ensuring timely enforcement to protect public safety.

* Sen. Laura Ellman…

Middle school students across Illinois will soon have the opportunity to get a head start on their high school education, thanks to legislation led by State Senator Laura Ellman. House Bill 3039, recently signed into law, allows seventh and eighth grade students to earn high school credit for certain high school-level courses. […]

Under the new law, middle school students who are enrolled in high school courses may earn credit if they:

    ● Take the course at the high school without taking high school student’s seats
    ● Take the course at their middle school and pass the same final exam used at the high school, demonstrating proficiency
    ● Take the course from a teacher properly licensed or endorsed to teach that subject at the high school level. […]

House Bill 3039 was signed into law Friday and takes effect Jan. 1, 2026.

* WTVO

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a new law Friday that guarantees undocumented students in Illinois have access to student financial aid.

House Bill 460 makes financial aid accessible to all Illinois residents, regardless of their legal immigration status. […]

According to Villaneuva’s office, the bill standardizes eligibility criteria across programs to eliminate confusing and sometimes conflicting requirements that have excluded undocumented migrants from finanical aid. […]

The law goes into effect on January 1st, 2026.

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a proposal into law Friday to ban companies from manufacturing, selling and distributing firefighter protective gear that contain forever chemicals.

The law requires companies selling protective equipment containing PFAS to provide written notice of why the chemicals are added to the gear by the end of the year. Illinois will ban people from selling any PPE containing forever chemicals to fire departments starting January 1, 2027. […]

“Although the fire service has known that PFAS were contained in our protective gear since at least 2018, nothing was done about it until state laws and litigation started to affect the bottom line of these manufacturers,” said Steve Shetsky from the Associated Firefighters of Illinois.

Manufacturers that sell auxiliary protective gear will be banned from knowingly selling or distributing the gear intentionally containing PFAS starting January 1, 2030.

  5 Comments      


The Republicans’ most notorious ‘Democrat operative’

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

Some Republicans in Illinois have taken to regularly bashing Republican state legislative leaders for seeking support from the Illinois Education Association, a teachers union that has for decades worked to help elect Republicans who are sympathetic to their issues.

With longtime wealthy Republican contributors and fundraisers dying, moving to warmer climes and/or retiring, the IEA and more conservative labor unions can help close the funding and precinct worker gap. But those who do are instantly declared to be persona non grata “Republicans in Name Only” by some folks who want no ties whatsoever with public employee unions.

On the surface, at least, it’s a legitimate policy dispute. Former Gov. Bruce Rauner wiped out years of hard work by the IEA when he insisted that Republican legislators reject the teachers union because he hated public employee unions and believed all Republicans should do the same.

But by relying mainly on money from Rauner and some of his pals, the Republicans lost a more permanent revenue source. Politicians may come and go, but the unions are always there. So when Rauner and his ilk pulled up stakes after suffering humiliating statewide defeats, it was only natural that at least some Republicans would renew their relationships with the IEA and others.

When asked about this schism at the Illinois State Fair’s Republican Day, Senate Republican Leader John Curran pointed out that he lives in a “purple” district and will work with anyone who works with him. Curran said he looks at the members of the IEA who live in his district, not the union itself.

“I think it’s incumbent upon Republicans to represent your districts,” Curran said. “This is a very diverse state. A one-size-fits-all is not the path to ultimate victory and success in this state.

“We have got to reflect the communities we represent, first and foremost. That’s success. It is not a blanket party one way or another.”

House Minority Leader Tony McCombie told my associate Isabel Miller that 46% of the IEA members in her district are Republicans.

“I think you find that in a lot of our rural areas,” she said. “I think, like with every organization, especially as a leader, it’s important that I have a relationship with every organization,” she said, adding that the IEA has “been helpful to the caucus.”

McCombie differentiated the IEA from the National Education Association, however, saying the NEA “has gone too far left for us.”

She said the IEA is different.

Failed 2022 attorney general candidate Tom DeVore has attracted thousands of online followers and regularly attacks both Curran and McCombie for their IEA ties. He’s gone so far as to repeatedly claim that the IEA represents Chicago teachers, even though the Chicago Teachers Union is most definitely not part of the IEA.

DeVore has endorsed a primary opponent against McCombie and against at least one other House GOP member, state Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville.

McCombie and her allies will likely have to spend significant money to defend the leader and Meier — money which could’ve been used to defend against a predicted House Democratic onslaught next fall. That prospect only buttresses McCombie’s claim from earlier this summer that DeVore is a “Democrat operative.”

Whatever he says, the end result is Democrats benefit.

Americans for Prosperity Illinois is expected to go all in for McCombie in the primary. The group will also help her caucus fend off the Democrats next year.

Meanwhile, downstate Republicans often complain that urban Democrats turn up their noses at rural Illinois. During Republican Day, however, Republican DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick made a claim about rural Republicans that could haunt his announced gubernatorial bid.

Like Darren Bailey in the 2022 governor’s race, Mendrick is running for governor on a tough-on-crime agenda. But he said Bailey just didn’t get it.

“He had no ability to really do anything about [crime]. No offense to him, but he’s a farmer,” Mendrick said about Bailey.

That “farmer” crack didn’t sit well with Bailey’s former campaign manager Jose Durbin.

“Taking a swipe at farmers in a state built on agriculture is a strange way to ask for votes — especially in a GOP primary largely made up of rural voters,” Durbin told Isabel. “Perhaps Jim should try other ways to promote his failing campaign. Darren Bailey’s roots in farming mean he knows hard work, responsibility and how to deliver results — exactly what Illinois needs to fight crime and get back on track.”

  20 Comments      


Tariffs Impact Everyone

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The shelves of Springfield’s Whimsy Tea are filled with hundreds of tea blends from 149 different countries around the globe. For a retail business whose main product is predominantly reliant on international trade, owner and founder Gordon Davis is facing challenges unlike any other for his business: the specter of rising tariffs. The increased costs associated with tariffs impact us all, and Gordon predicts from his retail experience that the trickle-down effects will keep rolling and rolling.

Retailers like Gordon enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ‘A terrible position’: Illinois sprints to lower new SNAP costs without booting people who need it. Tribune

    - Officials with the Pritzker administration said they anticipated earlier this year that they would need additional staff even without knowing the specifics of the Republican-led tax bill. Now, the department is looking into the number of additional staff it might need to deal with SNAP changes, according to the governor’s office.
    - Illinois could be on the hook for an additional annual $700 million bill to pay for some of the benefits though that contribution could be eliminated if the state manages to bring down the payment error rate.
    -To bring down the rate, IDHS is using an existing contract with Deloitte to diagnose exactly where those mistakes happen and what changes could be made to the program, according to the governor’s office, which did not provide an estimated timeline on those efforts. IDHS is also reviewing its own policies to see how it could reduce the error rate, according to the state.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | RTA leader backs off contract extension request amid pushback: “Nothing’s been decided,” board chairman Kirk Dillard told Crain’s of Redden’s contract. “It’s off the agenda and there’s nothing to talk about at this time. I didn’t want to have it go forward.” Dillard said he’s “waiting to see what the lay of the land is” before deciding if a new contract is in order. […] ​​“Trying to lock yourself into a three-year contract as workers are potentially getting layoff notices goes beyond being tone-deaf,” said Bob Reiter, president of the Chicago Federation of Labor.

* Bloomberg | Data centers need to bring their own power supply, watchdog says: Data centers looking to connect to the largest US grid must bring their power supply, the system’s independent watchdog said. The warning escalates the watchdog’s position from just a month ago when it said the grid operated by PJM Interconnection LLC, stretching across 13 states from Virginia to Illinois, has no spare supply for new data centers and suggested developers build their own power plants.

* Daily Herald | RTA drills down into costs of fiscal crisis from ‘pizza tax’ to 10% higher fares: The RTA is recommending raising fares systemwide by 10% in both cases, noting there’s been no increase since before the pandemic. That action would raise about $50 million. “Our regional fare structure continues to be affordable after past prices were reduced during the pandemic,” Communications Manager Melissa Meyer said. “But generating another $50 million in system-generated revenues will help lower the funding gap.”

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | Federal cuts to weather staff put Illinois emergency alerts at risk: “The issue is that the NWS people who do communications and put out things like weather warnings are incredibly productive, efficient, and resilient,” Illinois State Climatologist Trent Ford said. “Right now, from my perspective, there hasn’t been too much impact, but only because the workload of those forecasters monitoring the weather has been absorbed by other wonderful people who are still there. That’s not a stable model, though.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Chicago Bears face a long drive to get passage of stadium legislation in the fall: Already, there is $525 million in outstanding public debt from the controversial 2003 Soldier Field renovation, a tab currently covered by city hotel taxes and, when that falls short, by Chicago’s share of state income taxes. The Bears’ lease at Soldier Field expires in 2033, but it can be broken early with a penalty, and the team says it will take three years to build its new stadium. But even if the Bears were forced to pay off the outstanding debt, that alone is unlikely to be enough to satisfy city lawmakers who are key in providing the necessary votes to advance any legislation to help the team.

* Center Square | IL state reps challenge IEMA-OHS responses to local agencies: During a Joint Committee on Administrative Rules hearing on Wednesday, state Rep. Steven Reick, R-Woodstock, noted that there have been delays with the agency’s drafting of revisions and issues with certification and paperwork. Reick said the extensive rule-making expected in the next two months will have a great impact on local emergency management agencies. Louise Conway, deputy general counsel for IEMA-OHS, told Reick her agency is aware that local emergency services disaster agencies have been unhappy with the state’s rule-making process.

* Sun-Times | State Sen. Napoleon Harris to reimburse his campaign fund more than $20k over questionable expenditures: The Flossmoor Democrat, who also serves as the Thornton Township supervisor, had used the Friends of Napoleon Harris campaign fund for clothing purchases from upscale department stores, along with payments to a Mercedes-Benz dealership in Orland Park and a pizza restaurant he ran in south suburban Harvey.

* Evanston RoundTable | Texas Dem leader endorses Hoan Huynh to succeed Schakowsky: Texas state Rep. Gene Wu, chair of the Texas House Democratic Caucus and one of numerous Texas Democrats who were staying in Illinois and elsewhere this month to prevent a mid-decade redrawing of Texas’ congressional districts, endorsed Illinois state Rep. Hoan Huynh (D-13th District) on Sunday in the open race to succeed Jan Schakowsky as Evanston’s representative in Congress.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson’s plan to push out zoning board chair sparks independence concerns: Johnson appointed Shiller, who represented Uptown in the City Council from 1987 to 2011, to the board in 2024 and now wants to place her in the lead seat. The decision has rankled other members of the ZBA, according to sources familiar with the situation, and a former chair told Crain’s the appointment risks the board’s independence. The current chair, Brian Sanchez, a partner at Sanchez Daniels & Hoffman, was expecting to be renominated by Johnson, but is instead being pushed out altogether. He was informed he would not be reappointed by Shiller in a phone call this week, according to the same sources.

* Tribune | Bally’s Chicago completes its $250M IPO, falls short of fundraising target: Bally’s Chicago announced Friday it has completed its $250 million initial public offering, adding 1,800 individual investors to the project, but falling short of its fundraising goals. The company created 10,000 Class A shares valued at $25,000 each, but sold only 2,551 shares to public investors, according to a filing Thursday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. That puts the value of the IPO at $96.7 million, including Class A investments, private placement and Bally’s funding to support the individual investors, according to the company. The gross proceeds to the company from the initial public offering were $5.5 million, according to the filing.

* Crain’s | Five Chicago community centers get $1 million for youth mental health efforts: The community centers, chosen through a competitive application process, will implement programming over the next 12 months. “Partnering with trusted community organizations allows us to meet young people where they are,” said Melvin Rodriguez, co-founder of Mielle Cares and chief operating officer of Mielle Organics, said in the release. “These centers are already doing incredible work. Our role is to amplify their efforts and ensure they have the resources to help youth identify challenges, heal from adversity and rebuild their future.”

* ABC Chicago | Chicago police officers face new lawsuit over stop-and-search in the Gold Coast: “I was just terrified,” said Limorris Bell, the plaintiff and driver behind the latest lawsuit. “Honestly, I didn’t know what was gonna happen next.” Bell said he had no clue why Chicago police were pulling him over on Sept. 1, 2024, while he was driving to pick up his date in the Gold Coast. According to police-worn body camera footage obtained and reviewed by the I-Team, officers said they pulled Bell over for not wearing his seat belt, or using his turn signal, points that Bell denies was the case.

* Crain’s | Work begins on $730 million concourse at O’Hare: Work is underway on a $730 million new concourse adjacent to Terminal 1 at O’Hare International Airport, the first of three major projects remaining that are part of a major upgrade and expansion of the airport’s terminals. The final design features a soaring, arched roof and a curved wall of windows with views of the airfield and downtown skyline. There’s also a two-story main entry area, capped by a skylight dome that floods the space with natural light, and several indoor trees nestled into curved seating areas, a nod to O’Hare’s early days as Orchard Field.

* WBEZ | CPS enrollment, Trump actions and special ed: What to watch this school year: Federal and state funding for [after school] programs is a mess, said Brosnan of the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council. Fewer schools in CPS are getting federal money for after-school programs, due to a technical error that was uncovered two years ago. State lawmakers allocated $50 million last year for after-school programs, but the state board of education never sent that money out, saying they never got direction from lawmakers. Now, that pot is gone. Another pot of state funding for after-school programs did get a $10 million increase this year, but the state has yet to ask schools and programs to apply for that money.

* Sun-Times | Sustainable community schools will kickstart CPS ‘reconstruction’: The concept of sustainable community schools was born from the Latina mothers who went on hunger strike to build Little Village Academy and Black community leaders who starved for 34 days to prevent former Mayor Rahm Emanuel from closing Dyett High School on the South Side. In the face of power that saw our neighborhoods as places to ignore or our schools as facilities to close, Black and Latino Chicagoans created an educational model like Dyett where graduation rates set standards and underdog basketball teams bring home championships.

* CBS Chicago | Angel Reese hosts back-to-school celebration for Chicago Public Schools students: Reese hosted a back-to-school bash at International Sports Chicago this afternoon on the Northwest Side. There was live music, food and of course, basketball. About 2,000 students received new Reebok backpacks filled with school supplies. Reese also sent the students off with some words of encouragement, telling them they can do anything they set their mind to.

* Sun-Times | Savannah Bananas players draw raves from fans for second sold-out Chicago game: “Baseball can be really long, so the fact they’ve got a time limit and they try to do entertaining things every inning is really a draw,” said Emily Pustelnik, 24, of Tinley Park, who bought her $60 tickets through a lottery. “Everyone wants to be here. So the fact that we got tickets was super-exciting.” A family of four from Elmwood Park who couldn’t get tickets in the lottery bought them via resale for a whopping $800.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Gap in law leaves unorthodox school in Oak Park mansion largely unregulated by state: Illinois law allows nonprofit private schools to register voluntarily with the state or seek state recognition, giving the Illinois State Board of Education the power to review some of a school’s practices. But state law bars for-profit operations such as The Language and Music School from doing either. These omissions create such a blind spot for regulators that state officials say they don’t know how many students attend Illinois schools run on a for-profit basis. By contrast, for-profit private universities that largely serve adults are tracked and regulated by the Illinois Board of Higher Education. […] Asked if her bill would also address for-profit schools, [Rep. Terra Costa Howard] said the situation at The Language and Music School is “rare” but she would consider whether it makes sense to include such schools in the bill or craft different legislation.

* Sun-Times | How tattoo removal could give some incarcerated Illinoisans a blank slate: A soft buzzing sound radiates from a small room within the DuPage County Jail in Wheaton. On the door, in hand-painted red and black letters, are the words “Redemption Studio.” Walk in, and you’ll find the only state-licensed tattoo studio located inside a prison or jail in Illinois. The clients are people incarcerated at the jail. But this ink shop is less about what new images are going onto their skin and more about what’s getting covered up.

* Tribune | Oak Park District 97 Superintendent Ushma Shah abrubtly resigns: Oak Park Elementary School District 97 Superintendent Ushma Shah abruptly resigned Friday, effective immediately, on the eve of the start of a new school year. The resignation was announced in what was termed a joint statement issued by the school district late afternoon Friday Aug. 15. “Dr. Shah has served the district with dedication since June 1, 2022, bringing visionary leadership, a deep commitment to student success, and a collaborative spirit that has strengthened our school community,” it read.

* Tribune | After a lawsuit alleging sexual abuse decades ago at Maryville Academy, a Lake Zurich priest is placed on leave for the third time: Now there’s another allegation that in the mid-1990s, during his years on staff at Maryville Academy, Ryan sexually abused a child. The allegation is part of a civil complaint that Chicago lawyer Mike Grieco filed against Maryville last week in Cook County. These days, Grieco, 35, describes a sense of urgency surrounding the matter. He said he has tried to “push the archdiocese” to examine testimony that Ryan recently provided in a deposition concerning the alleged abuse at Maryville. Grieco said he questioned Ryan in June at the office of Ryan’s defense attorney and that Ryan’s answers reflected “the issues on campus” at Maryville during his tenure there.

* Evanston Round Table | Council returns Monday for Envision work, over objection from Seventh Ward group: After four earlier special meetings on June 24, July 21, July 30 and Aug. 4, councilmembers have discussed and voted on most of their proposed amendments to the plan, which the Land Use Commission recommended for adoption on May 21. Like prior agendas, Monday’s meeting has the draft plan included “for discussion,” meaning the council will only be voting on revisions to the plan and will not take a final vote to adopt it as the city’s guiding policy document for the next 20 years.

* Daily Herald | A railway merger trifecta? What supersized UP/Norfolk Southern combo could mean: Here we go again. For the second time in recent years, two railroad titans are contemplating a marriage that could shake the freight landscape nationally and locally. Union Pacific Railroad and Norfolk Southern Railway informed the U.S. Surface Transportation Board in late July they want to merge, pending approval. The two are among the biggest freight carriers in the U.S. — UP owns over 32,000 miles of track in the central and western U.S.; Norfolk Southern stretches from the Midwest to the East Coast on 19,000 miles of track.

* Daily Southtown | Southland road work, bike path projects to receive Cook County grants: Nearly $8.3 million in grants for 32 projects were announced last week by Cook County. The county awarded $300,000 to Calumet City to install stormwater bumpouts on Wentworth Avenue at 156th Street and 156th Place. Calumet Park will get $350,000 for design and construction of alley improvements in the village.

*** Downstate ***

* WGlT | Mayor Brady says Bloomington Police should not take part in immigration-related events: The City of Bloomington pulled out of a planned event regarding immigration issues earlier this month, with Mayor Dan Brady saying he wasn’t aware of the event until someone brought a flyer to his attention. The event went on at Wesley United Methodist Church. “I didn’t believe, and after checking with the police department and our chief and others, that we, the Bloomington Police Department, had any type of specialty that was going to lend to [a] talk about ICE and immigration issues and what to do or not to do when you talk about an ICE raid,” said Brady.

* WQAD | John Deere to lay off nearly 240 workers in Illinois, Iowa: The layoffs affect the following facilities: Harvester Works in East Moline, Illinois — 115 workers, last day Aug. 29. Seeding and Cylinder in Moline, Illinois — 52 workers, last day Sept. 26. Foundry in Waterloo, Iowa — 71 workers, last day Sept. 19.

* National Geographic | This Illinois city should be the first stop on your Route 66 road trip: The state capital may not get a shout out in the iconic highway’s famous song, but with its growing roster of sites and attractions, Springfield has become a mandatory stop——especially as the Main Street of America gears up for its centennial.

* WQAD | Floatzilla draws more than 1,000 paddlers to the Mississippi River: The Mississippi River looked a little different Saturday as a 10-mile section from Rock Island to Hampton was closed to boat traffic and filled instead with more than 1,000 kayaks & paddleboards for the annual Floatzilla event. River Action, which has organized the event since 2010, said about 1,200 paddlers from 20 states participated this year. More than 100 local volunteers helped make the event possible.

*** National ***

* AP | States rethink a long-held practice of setting speed limits based on how fast drivers travel: Under its “20 is Plenty” campaign, the Wisconsin capital of Madison has been changing signs across the city this summer, lowering the speed limit from 25 mph to 20 mph on local residential streets. When Seattle took a similar step in a pilot program seven years ago, not only did it see a noticeable decline in serious injury crashes but also a 7% drop in the 85th percentile speed, according to the Vision Zero Network.

* 404 Media | ICE Adds Random Person to Group Chat, Exposes Details of Manhunt in Real-Time: The texts included an unredacted ICE “Field Operations Worksheet” that includes detailed information about the target they were looking for, and the texts showed ICE pulling data from a DMV and license plate readers (LPRs), according to screenshots of the chat obtained and verified by 404 Media. The person accidentally added to the group chat is not a law enforcement official or associated with the investigation in any way, and said they were added to it weeks ago and initially thought it was a series of spam messages.

* NPR | Why a NASA satellite that scientists and farmers rely on may be destroyed on purpose: The data the two missions collect is widely used, including by scientists, oil and gas companies and farmers who need detailed information about carbon dioxide and crop health. They are the only two federal satellite missions that were designed and built specifically to monitor planet-warming greenhouse gases. It is unclear why the Trump administration seeks to end the missions. The equipment in space is state of the art and is expected to function for many more years, according to scientists who worked on the missions. An official review by NASA in 2023 found that “the data are of exceptionally high quality” and recommended continuing the mission for at least three years.

* WaPo | As Trump takes over D.C.’s police, here’s what law enforcement can and cannot do: The ACLU of D.C. has expressed concerns that federal law enforcement will be able to “act with impunity” while carrying out Trump’s directives in Washington. It cited a comment he made this week — that he would let police “do whatever the hell they want” to curb crime — which it said raises concerns of “civil rights abuses to come.”

* NPR | Electricity prices are climbing more than twice as fast as inflation: Power-hungry data centers have been popping up all over, to serve the boom in artificial intelligence. The Energy Department projects data centers and other commercial customers will use more electricity than households for the first time ever next year. That’s a challenge for policymakers, who have to decide how to accommodate that extra demand and who should foot the bill. “Regulators always play catchup,” says John Quigley, senior fellow at the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy at the University of Pennsylvania. “The growth of data centers is far outpacing the response by grid managers, public utility commissions across the country, and they’re racing to catch up.”

* LA Times | Sierra Club in turmoil after board fires executive director: Jealous’ tenure had been tumultuous. He clashed with staff over sweeping layoffs and faced sharp criticism from ousted high-level employees, volunteers and some notable environmental advocates. They said the Oakland-based organization had stifled differing opinions and had become weakened as the Trump administration rolled back environmental protections.

  11 Comments      


Open thread

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  4 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller


  Comment      


Live coverage

Monday, Aug 18, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Link Wray

And the sun was standin’ still
Everything was dark, but I could see

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Frerichs calls Pritzker veto ‘misguided’ (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker vetoed an initiative by Treasurer Michael Frerichs today, citing the danger of SB246 being used to “benefit fringe and extremist groups”…

Today, I veto Senate Bill 246 of the 104th General Assembly. The bill is designed to allow the State Treasurer to create a non-profit investment pool and an electronic payment processing program to benefit 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(5) organizations. Non-profit organizations would be able to deposit funds with the Treasurer and potentially benefit from the Treasurer’s higher investment returns.

The Treasurer’s work to support Illinoisans by addressing the financial needs of Illinois non­ profits has always been commendable, and my administration highly values the critical work many non-profit organizations are doing throughout the State. This legislation is well intended to support the financial needs of Illinois non-profits, and it led community banks and credit unions to recognize there was a gap in services they have been offering. Because of the hard work of the Treasurer and advocates, these private financial institutions have created financial products to meet those needs. My administration is eager to assist in that effort.

Though SB 246 is well-intended and might benefit non-profits whose missions advance interests the state desires to promote, it would unfortunately also allow Illinois’ financial investments to be used to benefit fringe and extremist groups. I cannot sign a bill that unintentionally allows extremist groups to advance their hateful missions by exploiting state services and resources.

This is not an exercise in hypotheticals - hate groups are growing. Some of their members have been elevated by the Trump White House to positions of power and are no longer on the fringes of American society. They are currently attempting to reshape the legal and ethical boundaries of our country from within the federal government. In Illinois we must remain vigilant. While the federal tax rules were designed to prevent hate groups from qualifying for non-profit status, recent changes in policies, rules, and decision-making at the federal level suggest the trend is to accept extreme views and organizations that promote violence and racial discrimination.

On January 6, 2021, the United States Capitol, the Vice President of the United States, and Members of Congress were attacked by a mob attempting to stop the Congressional certification of the electoral votes of the 2020 presidential election. Among those persons found guilty of criminal acts related to the attack were members of the group known as the Oath Keepers.

On January 20, 2025, several members of the Oath Keepers, who were convicted of offenses related to the January 6, 2021 attack received Presidential pardons of their crimes. Subsequently, I directed our state’s hiring agency to consider any participation in the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol to be “infamous and disgraceful conduct” for purposes of the Personnel Code and to recognize such participation as antithetical to the mission of the State to prevent the hiring of these individuals. It was and remains important to ensure that Illinois government does not allow the hate and danger that entered the Capitol that day to infiltrate our state’s government and the services we provide.

To support its activities, the Oath Keepers formed the Oath Keepers Educational Foundation, a 50l(c)(3) charitable organization. That organization’s tax-exempt status has since been revoked by the Internal Revenue Service. However, an associated group, the Indiana Oath Keepers, is currently registered as a 50l(c)(3) charitable organization and is in good standing with the Internal Revenue Service. If Senate Bill 246 were signed into law, the possibility remains that the Indiana Oath Keepers could pa1ticipate in this state’s non-profit investment pool, as the bill does not require that a participating non-profit be located in Illinois in order to participate in the program. Oath Keepers is just one of a number of extremist organizations that could become investors in the state’s non-profit investment pool, and our state should not represent or promote the interests of these type of hate groups.

Some have suggested this issue can be resolved through rulemaking, but that would necessitate the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) reviewing administratively proposed rules and voting on whether the standards that have been proposed appropriately limit the charitable organizations that may participate in the Treasurer’s investment pool. A government program that includes standards based on an organization’s views, activities, founders, or members to exclude non-profits with extreme positions could give rise to legal challenges.

I recognize that many non-profits with beneficial missions are facing real financial hardships, perhaps now more than ever. As noted above, my administration has encouraged community banks to offer various unique financial resources to non-profits. Community banking solutions can help give non-profits greater flexibility, such as interest-free revolving lines of credit. I look forward to continuing to foster relationships between non-profits and community banks, and my team stands ready to suppo1t non-profits.

Pursuant to Section 9(b) of A1ticle IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 246, entitled “AN ACT concerning State government,” with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Frerichs himself testified in favor of the bill.

* From Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs…

I am disappointed the governor vetoed this bill. Like the governor, I decry the rise of extremist and hate groups and the efforts of the Trump administration to mainstream hate. I strongly disagree with the governor’s misguided belief that hate groups would use a state investment pool. The bill specifically requires that to be eligible, a nonprofit must provide a copy of their audited financial statements. No hate group would ever agree to that. Sunshine remains the best disinfectant for fighting hate.

Trump is decimating funding for nonprofits throughout Illinois. Make no mistake: Local food pantries, youth and community centers, homeless shelters and other non-profit groups will be hurt. The Nonprofit Investment Pool Act would allow the Illinois State Treasurer’s Office to help those groups combine resources and earn greater investment returns to make up some of Trump’s unconscionable cuts. Every dollar we make through smart investing is another dollar non-profit organizations can invest in our local communities at a time when many non-profits and communities are struggling for resources. They also could generate interest income toward major expenses or purchases for their organizations, including repairs and upgrades to facilities, buying new equipment, or hiring workers.

More than 150 nonprofits, including the Jewish United Fund, the Illinois AFL-CIO, the NAACP/Westside Division, the Illinois CPA Society, the Illinois Environmental Council, and the Sierra Club, sent letters in support of this legislation. We will be discussing potential next steps with our legislative sponsors.

Frerichs also included copies of his letter to the governor urging passage, as well as supportive letters from the Illinois AFL-CIO and the Woodstock Institute.

…Adding… Personal PAC…

“Personal PAC supports Governor Pritzker’s veto of SB 246, a bill that could have opened the door for dangerous, anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers to gain new funding streams and manipulate more people. These fake clinics mislead, shame, and delay people from accessing abortion care—putting patients’ health and lives at risk. Illinois cannot and will not give resources or policy advantages to organizations whose mission is to block and mislead Illinoians from accessing health care. While the aim of the bill is admirable, the unintended consequences are dangerous.  We applaud the Governor for always standing with patients and their ability to make informed decisions about their bodies.”

  1 Comment      


Pritzker signs controversial bill giving personal injury lawyers more reach in suits over toxic substances (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Governor signed a plethora of bills this afternoon, including the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association’s Senate bill 328. From the governor’s press release

Bill Number: SB0328
 
Description: Expands jurisdiction for claims alleging injury or illness resulting from exposure to toxic substances. Under this bill, a foreign corporation consents to general jurisdiction in this state in the limited circumstances involving actions (1) alleging injury or illness resulting from exposure to a substance defined as “toxic” under the Uniform Hazardous Substances Act of Illinois (430 ILCS 35), and (2) where jurisdiction is proper under section 2-209(a) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-209(a)) as to one or more named co-defendants. By its express terms, SB 328 does not allow the exercise of general jurisdiction over a foreign corporation in actions that are not covered by the Uniform Hazardous Substances Act of Illinois, as set forth in section 13 of that Act (430 ILCS 35/13).
 
Action: Signed
 
Effective: Immediately
 

* From the Tribune earlier this month

A proposed law on the governor’s desk would expand the reach of personal injury lawyers, allowing them to file suit against any business operating in Illinois that exposes individuals to toxic substances — even if the company and the plaintiffs are based in another state.

Trial lawyers say the measure would offer fairness and convenience, primarily for Illinois residents who are injured in other states. Traditionally those plaintiffs have had to file suit in the state where they were hurt or where the company is headquartered. […]

Under the measure, any company that registers to do business in Illinois could be brought into court to face allegations of harm from toxic substances. Cases of this type routinely involve multiple defendants, and under the measure only one of them needs to be from Illinois.

An Illinois resident who is injured in multiple states, such as someone who was exposed to asbestos while working at his employer’s plants around the country, would be able to sue in his home state, rather than having to file in multiple jurisdictions, said Tim Cavanagh, president of the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association.

* The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association called on the governor to veto the bill. Crain’s

Several trade groups are urging Gov. JB Pritzker to veto the bill. They include the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, Illinois Restaurant Association and the Chicagoland and Illinois chambers of commerce. […]

“If this bill is enacted, it’s going to create a black eye for Illinois when we’re pursuing economic development opportunities,” says Mark Denzler, CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association. ”Illinois does not need another burden to overcome in attracting business.”

* Mark Denzler, CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, told this to Rich today…

I’m an outspoken advocate for Illinois, and have been very supportive of the governor and the General Assembly and a lot of things they’ve done.

This is a huge step backward. Illinois is now going to be only the second state in the nation with this. And this is getting national attention in an unwanted way from the business community. And again, we take a couple steps forward, and then this is an unforced error where we’re taking steps backward. And the business community across the United States has paid attention to it.

In our opinion they should let the courts in Pennsylvania work through this to see if it is unconstitutional. But why create a black eye for Illinois when we’ve made so many positive steps?

* The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association…

The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association thanks Gov. JB Pritzker for acting to protect those who live and work in our state from toxic substances by signing Senate Bill 328 into law. We applaud the governor for rejecting the Trumpian propaganda campaign of lies and fear-mongering mounted by the opponents to this urgently needed measure.

The sole intent of this new law is to provide the possibility of a more complete justice for grievous harms done to people by corporations that failed to protect their employees or customers from exposure to toxic substances. It will allow individuals who have suffered due to the actions of a company doing business in Illinois to hold accountable all businesses that contributed to their injury or illness, not just those that are legally or physically headquartered here.

For those who are sick or dying, who cannot navigate the process of retaining legal counsel and filing suits in multiple states, nor endure the rigors of extensive and expensive travel for court proceedings, this change is a godsend and will ease the already considerable burdens they bear.

We also thank the members of the General Assembly who voted to send SB 328 to the governor. They, too, are to be commended for recognizing that, while those at the nation’s capitol strip away health, workplace and environmental protections, Illinois chooses a different path and will not tolerate people being exploited and hurt by big-money special interests.

The truth is that Illinois is a very good state for business. It always has been and will continue to be now that SB 328 has become law. We have a highly skilled workforce, robust transportation networks and a wide range of economic sectors, including agriculture, arts, education, health care, logistics, manufacturing and professional services. We are an example for the nation that proves it’s not necessary to embrace race-to-the-bottom policies that trample workers’ rights and eliminate consumer protections to thrive.

Gov. Pritzker’s signature on SB 328 has added additional teeth to our laws that will deter big businesses from behaving badly by putting profits before people and unfairly forcing Illinois taxpayers to clean up the messes irresponsible corporations leave behind.

* Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

“I am deeply disappointed that Gov. Pritzker ignored our calls to join the Governor of New York in vetoing this special interest legislation that will further deter businesses from investing in Illinois. Under Gov. Pritzker, Illinois is a bottom five state in the nation for economic growth and job creation because of bad business policies like SB 328. Gov. Pritzker and his legislative allies continue to protect special interest insiders at the expense of working families across Illinois.”

* Press release…

Statement from Leading Business Groups on Gov. Pritzker Signing Sweeping Legal Overreach Legislation SB 328

Illinois’ business community issued the following statement following Gov. JB Pritzker signing SB 328.

“We are disappointed that Gov. JB Pritzker did not take this opportunity to protect the citizens, business community and economy of Illinois by vetoing SB 328. By failing to reject this disastrous proposal, businesses and taxpayers will now be vulnerable to predatory lawsuits that will clog up our legal system and stymie our economic growth.

This measure, brought forth by trial lawyers in the final hours of the legislative session, creates a significant and concerning expansion of liability for out-of-state businesses operating in Illinois. Under this law, any company simply registered to do business in Illinois is subject to lawsuits, even when the underlying claims and parties have no connection to the state. Rather than moving to Illinois and creating new jobs and economic investment, many businesses will avoid our state entirely, undermining the momentum our state has worked so hard to create.

We urge Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly to refocus their efforts on economic growth and expansion, which benefits all workers, families and communities.”

* House Minority Leader Tony McCombie…

“At a time when Illinois should be focused on growth and opportunity, Democrats have once again chosen to reward trial lawyers at the expense of job creators. Our state already ranks at the top in all the wrong categories, and with Governor Pritzker signing SB 328, he’s turning up the heat on an already hostile business climate.”

…Adding… Jennifer Walling at the Illinois Environmental Council…

“We thank Governor Pritzker for signing SB328 to close a dangerous loophole that allowed out-of-state polluters to harm Illinois communities without accountability,” said Jennifer Walling, Executive Director of the Illinois Environmental Council. “This law ensures polluters—not Illinois residents—pay for the damage they cause.”

Illinois has long been recognized as a leader in environmental protection and public health. However, a significant loophole in our laws has allowed some of the worst polluters to evade accountability, simply because they are headquartered out of state. With the signing of Senate Bill 328 (SB328), Governor Pritzker has taken a commendable step toward closing this dangerous gap.

This new law addresses a critical issue: when out-of-state corporations use hazardous substances in their Illinois operations, they can sometimes escape responsibility in Illinois courts. This has left our communities, suffering from toxic pollution and long-term illnesses, without full recourse under our own laws.

One glaring example of this issue is the PFAS contamination, a group of highly problematic chemicals used in manufacturing. These so-called “forever chemicals” have been detected in drinking water systems throughout Illinois, linked to severe health issues, including cancer and thyroid disease. Disturbingly, many corporations responsible for this pollution operate far beyond our state borders, often evading legal accountability for the harm they cause to Illinois residents and our water.

The enactment of SB328 ensures that foreign corporations conducting business in Illinois will be held to the same legal standards as Illinois-based companies when they cause harm through hazardous substances. This means that polluters, whether they are based in Chicago, St. Louis, or even Shanghai, will be held accountable for the damage they inflict on our communities.

  1 Comment      


Stand by for news

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bunch of bills into law today, including a pretty controversial bill backed by the trial lawyers. He also vetoed a bill backed by Treasurer Michael Frerichs.

We’re working on a couple of posts and trying to gather some react.

Meanwhile, several press releases from legislators about their bill signings have been posted on our press release app.

  Comment      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* [From Rich]: The US Department of Justice has responded to the Illinois State Board of Elections’ decision to not fully comply immediately with a request for voter registration documents, including drives’ licenses numbers, Social Security numbers and dates of birth. More on that refusal is here. But the DOJ’s response cites several federal laws allowing the access to the information (including the last four Social Security digits). Click here for that. A board spokesperson says the federal response is “under review.”

* As subscribers know, Rep. Buckner floated an event surcharge during a City Club appearance in June. Sun-Times

A key player in the Springfield scramble to save mass transit said Friday there will be a fall bailout that uses a mix of tax hikes and a modest fare increase to avert dire service cuts at CTA, Metra and Pace.

State Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) even floated a new idea to add to the revenue mix: a “large event surcharge” that would add anywhere from $1 to $3 to the price of tickets to major concerts and sporting events.

“It can be a catalyst to increase ridership,” Buckner said. “If you’re going to Lollapalooza and you’re paying an extra buck or $2 on your ticket each day, that ticket also doubles as your pass on the system for that day. That’s not just putting money in the coffers. It’s actually getting people to give back to the system and to use the system, which is what we’ve got to find a way to do as well.”

Buckner said a stalled $1.50-per delivery tax proposal could be part of the revenue mix but, “I don’t know if the $1.50 that the Senate did was the right level.”

* South Side Weekly

A data broker that allows users to obtain information about incarcerated people could be a digital backdoor enabling U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to access the personal data of thousands of immigrants in Cook County.

At a Cook County Board meeting last year, commissioners raised concerns about the Sheriff’s use of the system, called VINE (Victim Information [and] Notification Everyday), but voted to keep it. VINE notifies crime victims when an offender or defendant is released from jail, transferred, or has a change in custody status.

ICE’s access to that data goes far beyond the public’s, letting agents combine VINE jail records with personal data to build profiles that can pinpoint where people live and work. Immigrant rights advocates contend that the data, intended for victim notification, has been repurposed into commercial databases ICE uses to locate and arrest immigrants.

Now, advocates are renewing their push to get the Board to amend the County’s contract with VINE after its current contract ends in November.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Block Club | Private Pools Across Chicago Shut Down All Summer Thanks To Health Dept. Delays: While the City of Chicago used to do a large number of pool inspections, Martin said the city passed off most pool inspection responsibilities to the state in 2024 because of the increased workload caused by hosting the Democratic National Convention. Since then, the state has done most of the city’s pool inspections, which occur annually, Martin said.

* Tribune | Illinois’ rental assistance program has restarted. Here’s what you need to know.: While the program saw a third of its funds wiped away for the 2026 fiscal year that began July 1, $50 million in state funds are available. The reduction came as rents in Chicago keep rising and after the state grappled with serious fiscal challenges when balancing its budget this year, issues exacerbated by a federal government focused on axing spending. State lawmakers cut spending in various areas beyond housing as well.

*** Chicago ***

* Compact | The Crisis of the University Started Long Before Trump: The story of the University of Chicago is in one sense unique. No peer institution has borrowed so much in relation to its assets; none spends remotely as large a percentage of tuition on servicing debt. Despite gifts and the surge in the stock market, the University’s endowment has actually shrunk under its current president from 2021 to 2024 because it has been liquidating assets to mask the size of its deficits. But its story also distills forces and trends in American higher education that are corroding ideals, and wasting money, throughout the land.

* Sun-Times | We’ve been tracking grocery prices in Chicago: Coffee and ground beef are up: For the last nine months, the Sun-Times has been tracking grocery prices for 35 items at four major Chicago retailers — and the prices keep getting higher. Our latest price check this month found a number of items increased, causing our total shopping basket to be higher at most of the stores. The total for our basket at Jewel-Osco was $276.65, up by $3.30 from July — and up $14.20 since we started tracking prices in December. At Mariano’s, our total was $270.15, an increase of $3.20 compared to July’s basket total.

* Tribune | ‘There definitely was a need’: CPS, communities host back-to-school events to big crowds: Educational book and supply costs in the average U.S. city have increased by about 1.3% from January to July, according to data maintained by the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank. Since July 2023, those prices have increased by more than 10%. Average weekly wages, in comparison, grew by 0.2% in Cook County in 2024, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

* WBEZ | Savannah Bananas, the Harlem Globetrotters of baseball, to make Chicago debut at Rate Field: When the Savannah Bananas take the field at Rate Field Friday and Saturday evenings, it will be the first time Chicago gets a taste of what’s come to be known as Banana Ball (think baseball’s version of the Harlem Globetrotters). “The Bananas are the perfect combination of a world where baseball meets a circus, meets a concert … something for everybody,” said team spokesman Sam Bauman.

* Block Club | Chicagoans Unite To Expand Search For Bam Bam, The Service Dog Stolen From A Blind Man: While Bam Bam has still not been found, a team of neighbors and animal lovers have created an email tip line, a fundraiser for search efforts and a Facebook page to keep the community up to date and streamline the search on Santiago’s behalf. A website was also made with all the information in one spot, including a link to download flyers.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | State trooper, a youth hockey referee, arrested on federal child porn charges: An Illinois state trooper who also served as a youth hockey referee was arrested on child pornography charges this week while at work at the agency’s Des Plaines headquarters, authorities said. Colin Gruenke, 38, of Deerfield, was charged in a criminal complaint unsealed in U.S. District Court on Thursday with one count of distribution of child pornography, court records show. Prosecutors are seeking to have Gruenke held without bond pending trial, and a detention hearing is set for Monday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Young Kim.

* Daily Herald | Former Kane County coroner Rob Russell announces bid for sheriff: Russell cited his dozen years as coroner as instrumental in boosting his positive name recognition throughout the county. “I’m very proud of the work we did during my three terms as coroner,” Russell said in the release. “I was encouraged by Democrats, Republicans, and independents to succeed Sheriff (Ron) Hain.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council pushes back on possible reductions in support for Paramount: The presentation described the city’s use of American Rescue Plan Act, or ARPA, funds during the COVID-19 pandemic, money which had to be obligated by 2024 and spent by 2025, Aurora Chief Financial Officer Stacy Peterson told the council. Much of that funding was spent on ongoing costs, she said, like the ShotSpotter system, body cameras and dash cameras for the police, the addition of 49 full-time employees and financial support to things like the Aurora Civic Center Authority.

* Daily Southtown | South, southwest suburban districts align Title IX policies with new federal guidance: Orland High School District 230 and Bremen High School District 228 are among districts statewide that received suggested Title IX policy revisions from the Illinois Association of School Boards’ Policy Reference Education Subscription Service in April, aiming to bring schools in compliance with federal law and best practices, said Jennifer Waterman, director of communications for District 230. The Title IX revisions revert the policy back to its 2020 version, which removes protections for students facing sex discrimination, meaning students facing discrimination on the basis of sex stereotypes, sex characteristics, pregnancy or related conditions, sexual orientation and/or gender identity, as defined in the 2024 policy, are no longer protected.

* Daily Southtown | Governors State University predicts loss of revenue with Trump pullback on student visas: “Every administration has a different viewpoint on how they handle international students,” said Paul McGuinness, the Governors State vice president for student affairs and enrollment management. “But there’s also a difference in the type of institution and how you might benefit from students.” The Trump administration canceled visas of international students at institutions including the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Northwestern University and the University of Chicago as part of a larger movement nationwide.

* Naperville Sun | Ribbon-cutting event held for new DuPage County Crisis Recovery Center: The DuPage County Board and DuPage County Health Department cut the ribbon this week on the county’s new Crisis Recovery Center, which will offer around-the-clock support for individuals experiencing a mental health or substance use crisis. Expected to officially open the first week of September, the center is the first of its kind in Illinois to provide mental health crisis services for children and adults, officials said in a news release. It aims to reduce unnecessary hospital emergency room visits as well as interactions with police that put a strain on public resources, the release said.

* Tribune | Two priests who serve the poor at Evanston church could be forced to leave U.S., parish fears: The archdiocese, like many others in the United States, is facing a shortage of priests as fewer men choose that vocation. Some Chicagoland parishes rely on immigrant priests to fill the gap. Nearly 60% of younger diocesan priests — under the age of 50 — who serve in the Archdiocese of Chicago are immigrants, according to a 2023 report. The number is a considerable contrast with priests over the age of 50, of whom 81% were born in the U.S. The average age of a priest in 2023 was 64.

*** Downstate ***

* Sun-Times | Corn dogs & cows: Scenes from the 2025 Illinois State Fair: The 2025 Illinois State Fair in Springfield ends Aug. 17. From livestock competitions to carnival rides and festival eats to the butter cow, attendees experienced several activities highlighting Illinois’ farming industry. Here’s some of what the Sun-Times saw during our visit.

* We made sure to get our annual pork burger from the Pork Pavilion


* BND | Metro-east elementary starts school year without its principal: Madonna Harris served as an assistant principal at Collinsville Middle School for seven years before retiring in May 2025. When Maryville Elementary Principal Charity Eugea was unable to start the school year due to health concerns, the district called Harris in to be the school’s acting principal, Collinsville school district superintendent Brad Skertich said.

* WGLT | Past State Farm Holiday Classic president arrested, charged with theft from the charity tournament: Police have arrested a past president of the State Farm Holiday Classic for allegedly stealing from a nonprofit that runs the charity high school basketball tournament. 39-year-old Kyle W. Myers of Normal has pleaded not guilty to theft of more than $100,000 and less than $500,000 over a two-year time frame.

*** National ***

* NYT | How Train Riders With Disabilities Are Faring on Amtrak: Passengers are facing blocked wheelchair space, getting stuck in doors and suffering other indignities 35 years after the Americans With Disabilities Act became law. […] The couple, who estimate that they’ve spent 560 hours on Amtrak together in the last three years, traveling coast-to-coast five times, said that riding the train is still much easier than flying. But the indignities they’ve experienced — not just trash cans and a faulty app but also incorrectly deployed boarding ramps, inaccessible dining cars and more — have left them with the sense that they must constantly advocate to receive the services they’re entitled to by law.

* AP | The US plans to build a $750M fly factory in Texas to stop a flesh-eating cattle parasite: Secretary Brooke Rollins announced Friday that the U.S. Department of Agriculture hopes to be producing and releasing sterile male New World screwworm flies into the wild within a year from the new factory on Moore Air Base outside Edinburg, Texas, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the border. She also said the USDA plans to deploy $100 million in technology, such as fly traps and lures, and step up border patrols by “tick riders” mounted on horseback and train dogs to sniff out the parasite.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A couple of campaign updates

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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A look at the numbers

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The chairman of the Texas Republican Party said Thursday that he thinks Illinois is winnable for the GOP in 2026, despite the party’s lack of success in recent elections.

Speaking to a joint meeting of the Illinois party’s state central committee and county chairs, Abraham George pointed to the fact that Donald Trump won 43.5% of the vote in Illinois in the 2024 presidential election. That was three points more than he received in 2020, when he lost his first reelection bid to Democrat Joe Biden, and nearly five points more than he received in his first presidential run in 2016. The closer margins, however, were mostly due to fewer votes for Democratic candidate Kamala Harris, as Trump improved his vote total by just over 2,000 from 2020 to 2024.

“That’s not a blue state anymore. That’s a purple state,” George said. “This state can flip to a Republican pretty fast.”

* Sun-Times

Texas Republican Party Chair Abraham George, who earlier drew cheers in saying Illinois could flip to red, was asked how the state can do that while struggling to find recognizable candidates to run in statewide contests.

“That’s up to the Illinois Republican Party to do that. But Donald Trump got 43% in Illinois, and I think it is trending toward a Republican state in the last six cycles,” George said. “It seems to be more red every single time. So I think if they put in some work into it, it can become a real challenge for Democrats to win.”

Rounded presidential and gubernatorial results for the past six cycles

    2024: 54-43 Dem
    2022: 55-42 Dem
    2020: 58-41 Dem
    2018: 55-39-4 Dem
    2016: 56-39-4 Dem
    2014: 50-46 GOP

2020 was a particularly huge year for Democrats, and 2014 was Pat Quinn’s defeat (after beating Bill Brady by less than a point four years earlier).

Other than that, the Democratic results have been pretty static, while the Republican results have nudged up a wee bit (although the third party candidates in 2018 and 2016 appeared to hurt their numbers).

* Meanwhile, the Democratic Party of Illinois dropped some oppo yesterday…

While Illinois Democrats continue to support their Texas colleagues’ fight for democracy, the Illinois Republican Party today hosted far-right Texas GOP Chair Abraham George as their featured speaker. The Democratic Party of Illinois released the following statement:

“In true ILGOP fashion, they’re once again platforming violence, bad ethics, government overreach, and imposing their values on your lives. Instead of using their time and energy to fight the authoritarianism and fundamentalism that marginalizes so many Americans, they invite those ideals to breakfast.”

These are the values the ILGOP are celebrating:

  17 Comments      


Catching up with the congressionals (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Evanston Now

Democratic congressional primary candidate Kat Abughazaleh appeared Thursday afternoon at a rally of Evanston residents opposed to a planned Popeyes restaurant. […]

The 26-year-old content creator said she was “so moved” by the protest, adding, “our leaders often ignore what we’re fighting for.” […]

Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss is also among the candidates in the crowded Democratic primary seeking to succeed Jan Schakowsky in representing the 9th Congressional District. […]

[The protestors] been calling on Biss to — in the words of the mural painted this week on the center’s wall — “Say no to Popeyes.”

[From Rich: So, the idea here is that a congressional candidate is helping force a South Asian-owned Popeyes franchisee to sell his building to a White woman under the guise of “helping small businesses” and “under represented communities” and “healthy choices”? Did I get that right?]

* Evanston Now political reporter Matthew Eadie

* More from the press release…

On Friday, August 15th, Bushra Amiwala will host Democratic lawmakers from Texas at the Muslim Community Center in Morton Grove, Illinois. The prayer event, open to the public, will run from 1:00 to 2:30pm.

Texas State Representatives Salman Bhojani, Suleman Lalani and many others who wish not to be disclosed at this time will attend. They have walked out of the Texas legislature to prevent the GOP from redrawing the state’s U.S. House maps. The proposal the Democrats aim to prevent would flagrantly gerrymander the state in favor of Republicans, disenfranchising thousands of voters.

Bushra Amiwala, a candidate running to represent Illinois’ 9th Congressional District, is proud to welcome the lawmakers into her community.

“Gerrymandering is far too common in Republican districts. Democrats have sued against gerrymandering, won those suits, and had those rulings ignored by Republicans in power,” said Amiwala, the first Gen Z elected official in the country. “Congressional maps should reflect the populations and demographics of the United States. If they don’t, then we need a new vision of what democracy looks like in this country.”

* Meanwhile…Evanston Round Table

With the candidate petition circulation period set to begin on Tuesday, Evanston resident and former Niles Township High School District 219 board member Jill Manrique filed paperwork on Monday morning to launch a March 2026 Democratic Primary bid for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District seat.

Manrique now joins more than a dozen other candidates vying to succeed longtime U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who has held the position since 1999 and announced her impending retirement in May. […]

Unlike many other candidates, Manrique has not registered a website or made any official statement announcing her campaign yet, but she said she has plans for a “more robust launch in the future.”

“I do have folks around me that are here to help and not only collect signatures, but spread the word amongst our community,” she said. “So right now we are going to focus on circulating petitions, continuing to build our base and gain strength.”

* US Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi in the Sun-Times

Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi on Monday unveiled a detailed “Trump accountability plan” for his U.S. Senate campaign, vowing he would push to restrict ICE agents from wearing masks, block “radical” judges nominated by President Donald Trump, and introduce constitutional amendments to block self-pardons and a potential presidential third term.

Krishnamoorthi’s 17-point plan also includes a push for legislation that would make executive orders targeting individuals or specific entities invalid — and another bill that would give anyone targeted by the Department of Justice for denaturalization the right to a jury trial and the right to counsel. […]

“My plan outlines how, as Illinois’ next U.S. Senator, I’ll use every tool in my toolbox to limit the damage he can do to this country and its citizens — while making sure a Trump-like White House, one without deference for the rule of law, due process, and civil rights — never happens again,” Krishnamoorthi said in a statement to the Sun-Times. […]

Krishnamoorthi’s package includes a direct response to Texas Republicans and their current Trump-backed redistricting plan. The plan includes legislation to end mid-decade redistricting and require states to use independent commissions or three-judge panels for redistricting and another bill to ban federal agents from arresting state legislators for not attending legislative sessions or leaving their state. Krishnamoorthi also wants legislation passed that would deny federal election grants and funding to states that trigger mid-cycle redistricting for partisan purposes.

* Illinois’ GOP congressional delegation skipped Republican Day at the State Fair yesterday. Mitchell Armentrout at the Sun-Times

[U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood] and his two fellow Republican members of the Illinois congressional delegation, Reps. Mary Miller and Mike Bost, weren’t at their party’s State Fair rally. None of them faces major challengers in their deep-red downstate districts.

…Adding… US Senator Bernie Sanders is stopping in Chicago for a rally with Congresswoman Delia Ramirez and 2nd CD candidate state Sen. Robert Peters


  23 Comments      


It’s now a law

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Gov. JB Pritzker on Thursday signed two measures aimed at strengthening union protections in Illinois amid the Trump administration’s stripping of federal workers’ union contracts.

The signing comes after the Federal Emergency Management Agency joined at least three other federal agencies in canceling contracts with unions to comply with a March executive order that said collective bargaining requirements no longer applied to many federal agencies. President Donald Trump said the cancellations were allowed because the agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, play a role in national security, a claim that labor groups are disputing in court.

“With my signature, we are restoring hard fought worker protections that Trump and Congress are trying to destroy, protections that were established under the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Coal Mine Safety Act,” Pritzker said. “This new state law means Trump can’t take these rights away from Illinois workers.”

One measure requires that the Illinois Department of Labor replace any repealed federal occupational safety standard with a state standard to protect workers across the state. A second measure signed into law changes the Prevailing Wage Act and ensures that workers are paid the Illinois prevailing wage whenever it is higher than the federal rate when federal construction projects are administered by a state or local government.

* More from the governor’s press release

HB1189 amends the Prevailing Wage Act, to ensure that when federal construction projects are administered by a state or local government, workers are paid the Illinois prevailing wage whenever it is higher than the federal rate. This ensures timely, fair compensation that reflects current local labor conditions, rather than waiting for federal adjustments.

HB2488, which the Governor signed previously but was highlighted at today’s ceremony, eliminates references to a federal program in the Equal Pay Act to ensure that federal changes do not undermine the state requirement that private employers with 100 or more employees report on employee wages by gender and race or ethnicity. The bill also clarifies that apprentices are not subject to a lower fringe benefit rate than journeymen under the Prevailing Wage Act.

* 25News Now

An Illinois law taking effect next year will prioritize child internet crimes.

Illinois is joining 13 other states in enforcing “Alicia’s Law”, or HB2586, which will help prioritize state resources to combat child internet predators after Gov. JB Pritzker signed the bill on Monday.

Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly said ISP has opened 145 cases of internet child crimes in 2025. He said with the new law, internet crimes against kids are now a statutory, legal, and required mission of state police.

“About four years ago, ISP really started to focus on these internet crimes against children cases,” said Kelly. “We work very closely with our federal partners and our partners in the attorney general’s office. This something that has become a bigger part of what we do.”

* We told you about this recently-signed law last month. ABC Chicago

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker recently signed a bill to crack down on squatting, but that law doesn’t go into effect until January 1. […]

[Army veteran Bradford Robinson] says his realtor came by his property last month to show a prospective buyer the house, but when they arrived, the lockbox had been broken and the locks were changed. […]

“The young lady in the house showed [the police] a bogus lease,” Robinson said. “With that being said, with the lease, the police said there’s nothing that they could do… the police actually asked me to have you come out to do a report because you seem to have a little bit more pull in getting things done.” […]

State Representative La Shawn Ford, who co-sponsored the squatter bill, met with the veteran to see what he could do to help.

“I’ve been working with Speaker Welch, and we’re gonna do everything we can,” Rep. Ford said. “I asked if we can file a bill to make it effective in October.”

  9 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC7 last December

Serious test questions about a Chicago lab could change the outcome of hundreds of impaired driving convictions in Illinois and that could unlock the jail doors for some DUI convicts.

After a months-long investigation, the ABC7 I-Team discovered some test results from a prominent Chicago lab used by prosecutors have been deemed unreliable and could be inaccurate.

The lab, University of Illinois Chicago Analytical Forensic Testing Laboratory, is accused of providing flawed test results in cases of driving-under the influence of marijuana, many of them resulting in motorists convicted and sent to jail, and there are allegations of a cover-up. […]

The University of Illinois Chicago has now stopped doing tests for marijuana in law enforcement cases

* Maya Dukmasova did a deep dive for Injustice Watch. Some dot points

• Faulty science: Between 2016 and 2024 a forensic toxicology lab at the University of Illinois Chicago tested people’s bodily fluids for DUI-cannabis investigations using scientifically discredited methods and faulty machinery.
• A crisis concealed: Lab management knew its machines were not producing reliable results for THC blood tests, yet for years failed to notify law enforcement or fix their testing methods.
• Wrongful convictions: The senior forensic toxicologist at the lab testified in court cases in misleading ways, prosecutors later admitted, contributing to people being convicted for DUI offenses with little or no evidence they were intoxicated.
• Lack of transparency: After shuttering its human testing program last year, the lab finally issued a disclosure to 17 prosecutors’ offices admitting their test results may have been compromised going back years. However, the University of Illinois hasn’t taken any steps to notify the people whose body fluids were tested about the possibly compromised results.
• No oversight: Illinois has no meaningful forensic science oversight system. A recently created state forensic science commission has no authority to investigate complaints, shut down labs, discipline analysts, or issue legally binding findings.

* A few excerpts

In a months-long investigation — including more than 45 Freedom of Information Act requests, more than 100 interviews, and a review of some 8,000 pages of public records — Injustice Watch found more than 2,200 cases in which body fluids were tested for THC by the UIC lab between 2016 and 2024. In addition to improperly testing urine for DUI-cannabis investigations, these sources indicate the lab was for years unable to differentiate between legal and illegal types of THC in people’s body fluids. Worse, internal records examined by Injustice Watch suggest the lab was aware of some of the problems in its testing since at least 2021 but continued to perform tests and report results to law enforcement, mostly in DUI cases. [UIC forensic toxicologist Jennifer Bash], meanwhile, repeatedly testified about the lab’s findings in inaccurate and misleading ways. […]

Injustice Watch also found university officials charged with overseeing the lab were focused on the lab’s financial performance, and not on the quality of its scientific work. According to internal emails, officials’ eventual decision to shut down human testing at the lab came as a result of its failure to generate revenue. […]

For nearly three years, the UIC lab kept testing blood and urine in DUI cases using a method unable to properly detect the presence of delta-9 THC — even though the state’s legal limits are tied exclusively to delta-9. […]

The accrediting agency’s audit report detailed a slew of problems at the lab: months of missing records on “calibrators and controls used in THC quantitative testing”; years of missing evaluations on THC measurement uncertainty; no procedure to “preclude an individual from technically reviewing their own work”; no instructions for reporting inconclusive results; failure to properly review and document complaints about laboratory activities. The instrument used for THC screening hadn’t received required annual maintenance in nearly two years. […]

Texas has a state law requiring prosecutors to continuously disclose evidence to defendants; prosecutors can be disciplined for failing to do so. There’s a “junk science writ” that allows people to seek new trials if they can show flaws in the forensic evidence used to convict them. Most recently, the state created a portal making crime lab files directly open to both prosecutors and defense attorneys, eliminating some of the burdens of transmitting evidence. […]

In researching an upcoming book, Stout found only eight states with laws requiring forensics labs to be accredited or certified to produce evidence used in criminal prosecutions. In this environment, bad science can flourish because most defendants, police officers, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and judges do not have the expertise to evaluate the validity of what scientists say.

Go read the rest, particularly if you are a legislator involved with this topic.

  6 Comments      


Again, what the heck is going on here? (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Remember this Sun-Times and the Illinois Answers Project story from yesterday?

Carlos Baker, the Chicago police officer who shot and killed his partner Krystal Rivera during a foot pursuit earlier this year, allegedly attacked a female officer late Sunday at a bar in Wicker Park, the Chicago Sun-Times and Illinois Answers Project have learned.

The officer who was injured in the attack filed a police report while she was being treated for a split lip at Rush University Medical Center, alleging that Baker and another woman beat her late Sunday at DSTRKT Bar & Grill, 1540 N. Milwaukee Ave.

* Believe it or not, it gets worse. Sara Machi with CBS2

Already under investigation for the on-duty shooting of his partner Krystal Rivera, Chicago Police Officer Carlos Baker may have misrepresented himself and violated department policy in the aftermath of a bar fight in Wicker Park last weekend. […]

While reporting on the initial incident, CBS News Chicago learned from an employee at a neighboring business that Baker called their shop, identified himself as a police officer investigating the bar fight — in which he is actually listed as a suspect — and asked for access to the surveillance cameras.

The employee showed CBS News Chicago the business’ caller ID, which showed Baker’s last name and phone number and a time stamp, 3:01 p.m. Wednesday, as news was breaking about the bar fight.

When a CBS News Chicago reporter called the number and left a voicemail, she promptly received a call back by a man who identified himself as Carlos Baker. He asked if “our restaurant” cameras are working and if they had video of the Sunday night incident.

When told he was speaking to a reporter, Baker hung up.

This guy appears to be a complete menace.

* Oh, and one more thing

Chicago police say Baker is now on medical leave but has not been stripped of his police powers. He still has his badge and service weapon

I’m just saying, but if I was in CPD management, I’d be worried that every day this guy has police powers is another day the city could be on the hook for another lawsuit.

Then again, those payouts come from a separate pile of city budget cash, so CPD has no incentive to prevent fiscal problems caused by bad actors. Maybe that ought to be changed.

* And maybe FOP Chicago Lodge 7 President John Catanzara might think about retracting his premature and intense defense of Officer Baker last month

There is nothing nefarious here. The department is not hiding anything. It is simply trying to support an officer and honor the family and the fallen officer Crystal Rivera.

…Adding… The Sun-Times’ Tom Schuba


  23 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Republicans rally around President Donald Trump, but internal infighting continues. Tribune

    - Illinois Republicans used their day at the State Fair on Thursday to pledge their allegiance to President Donald Trump and the Trump-backed plan to redistrict Texas’ congressional boundaries to gain GOP seats that led to that state’s House Democrats fleeing to Illinois to try to block it.
    - With the circulation of candidacy petitions well underway, the party has yet to formally field a full slate of candidates against Democrats who hold all statewide offices.
    - House Minority Leader Tony McCombie expressed confidence that by the time petitions are filed at the end of October for the state’s March 17 primary, “I know we’re going to have a full slate” of candidates for statewide office.

* Related stories…

* I didn’t think Coldplay was on the Grandstand lineup this year…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Pritzker signs union protection bills amid Trump war on federal unions: One measure requires that the Illinois Department of Labor replace any repealed federal occupational safety standard with a state standard to protect workers across the state. A second measure signed into law changes the Prevailing Wage Act and ensures that workers are paid the Illinois prevailing wage whenever it is higher than the federal rate when federal construction projects are administered by a state or local government.

* Tribune | Texas House Democrats planning their departure from Illinois and back to Austin: “Under the advice of legal counsel, Democrats must return to Texas to build a strong public legislative record for the upcoming legal battle against a map that violates both the current Voting Rights Act and the Constitution,” a statement from the Texas House Democratic Caucus said. “Trump thought he could easily get his way in Texas with compliant Republicans, but Democrats fought back ferociously and took the fight to Trump across America. We will return to the House floor and to the courthouse with a clear message: The fight to protect voting rights has only begun,” the Texas Democrats said of the Trump-backed Texas remap effort.

*** Statewide ***

* WCIA | Illinois scientists reassess threatened species for first time in nearly 40 years: After collecting and analyzing the data, the team updated the S-ranks for each species. The team learned that the Laurentian fragile fern, the small whorled pogonia, and a plant known as goosefoot corn salad have been wiped out in Illinois. But, they also learned that 71 species are now less endangered than they were in 1987. Only three species are more endangered today, compared to 40 years ago.

* STL PR | Illinois and Missouri used to be covered in prairie. A new book traces its ‘ruin and redemption’: In a new book, “Sea of Grass: The Conquest, Ruin and Redemption of Nature on the American Prairie,” environmental journalists Dave Hage and Josephine Marcotty chronicle the history and future of this essential landscape. Hage and Marcotty were guests on St. Louis on the Air on Wednesday. “Many of us Midwesterners think, ‘Oh, it’s that flat, boring part before you get to the mountains,’” Hage said. “What we discovered working on the book, and what many scientists and ecologists have discovered in the last couple of decades, is that, in fact, the prairie is an incredibly rich ecosystem and an invaluable ecosystem in terms of the health of our planet.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol City Now | On Republican Day at the State Fair, Pritzker signs workers’ protection bills at Springfield union office: Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton — also one of several candidates running for U.S. Senate — didn’t mince words when also claiming Trump is trying to do harm to Illinois. “The President of the United States — a man notorious for abusing and manipulating workers — is actively using his office to attack the rights of all workers and labor unions,” said Stratton. “Whether he knows it or not, in doing so, he’s highlighting why Illinois’ work is so crucial.”

* WMBD | Illinois bill could help people with opioid addiction disorder: An Illinois bill could change harm reduction strategies across the state to help those addicted to opioids. The proposal would change homeless shelter rules. Any shelter that receives state funds would not be able to kick somebody out on the sole basis of a drug sobriety rule.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago Public Schools deficit deadline: CPS started the summer with a $734 million deficit for the school year that begins Aug. 18. WBEZ and the Sun-Times are tracking how the Board of Education and CPS officials work to close the budget hole, this month and long-term.

* WBEZ | CPS board rebuffs budget plan from school district leaders: Eleven of 21 members sent a letter to interim CEO Macquline King saying these two items need to be in the budget for this school year. It comes a day after King’s staff presented its budget proposal and touted that it could close a $734 million budget deficit without a loan. The proposal included the municipal pension payment, but made it contingent on the state or the city sending the school district more than it is anticipating in the budget.

* Evanston Roundtable | CTA looks to better utilize vacant L station retail space: The topic came up on July 9, when the Chicago Transit Board, CTA’s governing body, discussed an ordinance to raise rates at parking lots owned by the agency. The discussion led to a conversation about redeveloping underutilized CTA-owned parking lots and garages, which dovetailed into a conversation about vacant retail spaces. […] During the July transit board meeting, CTA Chief Innovation Officer Molly Poppe said that, while the agency still sees many retail spaces as revenue generators, it’s also looking into offering some spaces for “community benefit.” Chief Financial Officer Tom McKone added that those uses may still generate revenue, since that kind of activation could bring in more potential riders to stations.

* Sun-Times | Cutting parking requirements for homes built near transit aims to help fix housing crisis: Passed by the Chicago City Council on July 16, the ordinance gives developers the option to reduce — what was historically required — off-street parking in new or rehabbed housing projects. Depending on its proximity to a CTA or Metra stop, off-street parking can be reduced by up to 50%, or even eliminated. Off-street parking typically takes the form of surface parking lots or parking garages.

* Sun-Times | Past his term’s midpoint, Mayor Johnson’s job approval rating stands at 26%, survey shows: Well past midterm and a year before his reelection campaign begins in earnest, Mayor Brandon Johnson has a 26% approval rating with a majority of Chicagoans unhappy with his job performance — no matter where they live, what race they are and how much money they earn. The good news for the first-term mayor is that he had nowhere to go but up since polling earlier this year showed him languishing in single digits.

* Tribune | Streeterville residents back Northwestern’s hospital construction plan, but worry about loss of green space: After listening to Northwestern Memorial Hospital officials outline a proposal to build a 1.2 million-square-foot tower on a vacant lot in Streeterville, residents at a Wednesday night community meeting were mostly supportive of the project. Many also mourned the impending loss of one of the neighborhood’s few green spaces. “It was so nice of the hospital to plant wildflowers there that we can enjoy,” said Deborah Gershbein, president of Streeterville Organization of Active Residents, which co-hosted the community meeting with Ald. Brian Hopkins, (2nd). “But we will all need health care, and we’re so fortunate that the heart of this community has such a wonderful hospital, and (with these plans) it will get better.”

* Tribune | Lawyer for CHA who used ChatGPT to cite fake court case sanctioned in separate case for improper AI use: A lawyer hired by the Chicago Housing Authority recently revealed that her citation of a fictitious court case when defending the agency in a case involving the alleged poisoning of two children by lead paint was a result of using ChatGPT and failing to check her work. Turns out, it was not her first time improperly using artificial intelligence, court records show. A motion to dismiss and a reply in support of the motion to dismiss were filed in February and April, respectively, in the chancery case Calderon v. Dynamic Manufacturing, Inc. In the case, a woman alleges she was subject to a hostile work environment by her employer, violating her rights under the Illinois Human Rights Act, court records show. Combined, the two court filings contained 12 hallucinated case citations by attorney Danielle Malaty.

* Block Club | Lakeview’s Kelly Park Still Hasn’t Seen Upgrades 6 Years After They Were Promised: Neighbors spent years raising money and pushing for upgrades at Kelly Park, but the project keeps getting delayed despite more than $1 million in funding. Park district officials say work will start this fall, but neighbors aren’t so sure.

* WTTW | Chicago Program Put 30,000 Young People to Work This Summer: Mayor Brandon Johnson says he’s been working to expand the program and increase youth hiring in the city, surpassing a goal to provide funding for 1,000 more positions. Last summer, Johnson expanded the program with an additional 2,400 positions. He has said that investing more in services like summer jobs programs can help reduce crime by providing productive activities for young people.

* Block Club | Cubs To Host First-Ever Oktoberfest In Wrigleyville This Fall: The festival will take place Sept. 19-21 in the Toyota Camry Lot at 1126 W. Grace St. It will be open to all ages and will feature traditional Oktoberfest staples like a ceremonial keg tap, beer tents, carnival rides, live music and themed competitions. The food lineup will include Oktoberfest staples like bratwurst with sauerkraut, giant pretzels with mustard or beer cheese, schnitzel, potato salad and sweet treats like apple strudel. And also plenty of beer.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘I’ve got questions’: Town hall to address proposed closure of Elk Grove hospital’s maternity ward: Since the July 1 announcement, Elk Grove Village Mayor Craig Johnson said he’s had many conversations with Ascension Illinois CEO Polly Davenport, who plans to attend the town hall meeting with other top hospital officials. “They are going to have an opportunity to explain to this community what is happening at Alexian Brothers today and what the future of Alexian Brothers is going to look like,” Johnson said. “This is an important issue for this community. Elk Grove has partnered with Alexian Brothers for 60 years. … Obviously we’ve got some concerns. This is a chance for all of our residents to ask the questions.”

* Shaw Local | Joliet City Council could vote on adopting local grocery tax next week: The Joliet City Council is expected to vote next week on a local 1% grocery tax. The tax would replace the 1% state grocery tax that is ending Jan. 1. The state law eliminating the tax gives municipalities the option of replacing it with a local tax to maintain revenues that otherwise would go away.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council approves renewing ShotSpotter service for next three years: On Tuesday, the Aurora City Council gave final approval for the city to renew its contract with ShotSpotter, a service that detects gunfire within a certain area, for three years. The city has used the service by SoundThinking, Inc., since it was first approved by the City Council in 2022, according to past reporting. Roughly two square miles of Aurora is covered by ShotSpotter, according to past reporting. The coverage areas include certain neighborhoods or other areas that historically have had more gunfire, while leaving out the areas that have not.

* Evanston Round Table | ‘It’s just been a disaster’: Parents of Special Olympics athletes angry, heartbroken at city’s treatment of Woodson: Woodson, the program coordinator responsible for Evanston’s Special Olympics teams and accessible recreation was dismissed for an “inability to improve his performance” in administrative duties, according to personnel files released by the city. His removal was cemented on Tuesday when he submitted a notice of retirement to the city. But his dismissal has resulted in sobbing kids. Scores of angry, disappointed and mistrustful parents. Canceled athletic events. Protests at public events. In the minds of the parents who spoke to the RoundTable, the city pressured their coach, friend and mentor to end his relationship with the city’s Special Recreation program where he worked for 35 years. Since then, anxiety overwhelms athletes and parents.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg’s Septemberfest grounds adapting to village hall construction: And even though construction of a new building has started, the space available for the fest is only a little less than when the previous village hall had been standing there for 52 years. The most significant loss of space is between the construction site and the pond to the north, where many artists and crafters used to set up. As a result, Summit Drive will be closed from Schaumburg Road for a stretch southward to accommodate these vendors in the street.

* Shaw Local | New Hollywood Casino Joliet opens with fanfare, seen as regional destination: The new Hollywood Casino Joliet opened Monday with fanfare that included a traditional Chinese lion dance and an announcement that the casino has become an official sponsor of the Chicago Bears. Executives also honored their Joliet roots, recognizing seven employees who have been with the casino since a group of local investors opened it in 1992.

*** Downstate ***

* IPM News | Local grocery tax will continue in Savoy when Illinois phases out statewide collection: “This is not a new tax, but rather a longstanding revenue source for the village of Savoy and for every community in Illinois that’s been in place for decades,” said Village Administrator Andy Quarnstrom during an August 6 board meeting. The tax represents one cent for every dollar spent on food products at a grocery store. It will not apply to other items available at a grocery store such as home goods, alcohol, soft drinks and candy. The current statewide grocery tax accounts for $350,000 to $450,000 in revenue for Savoy, according to village documents.

* WGLT | McLean County Board fills vacancy in District 3, approves more wind turbines: County Administrator Cassy Taylor said the special use application will add 35 wind turbines to a field with 58 turbines already in operation. Since federal tax cuts outlined in President Trump’s tax and spending bill, some renewable energy developers have had to rethink their projects currently in the pipeline. Board chair Elizabeth Johnston said she is not personally aware of any move by developers to speed up construction. “These were projects that were already in the wings, even before the election last year and before some of the changes coming out of [Washington,] D.C. this year,” Johnston said. “I’m not feeling the urgency, I haven’t seen necessarily the urgency in the county, in the zoning board of appeals meeting.”

* WJBD | Salem teen wins big at State Fair: Kaolin Lewis earlier won reserve overall for the Simmental breed and was grand champion in the Land of Lincoln Simmental competition. Lewis also showed a Charolais Heifer that was also a grand champion. Lewis is in her fifth year showing at the state fair and is a seven-year member of the Marion County Pioneers 4-H club.

*** National ***

* NYT | SpaceX Gets Billions From the Government. It Gives Little to Nothing Back in Taxes.: The rocket maker’s finances have long been secret because the company is privately held. But the documents reviewed by The Times show that SpaceX can seize on a legal tax benefit that allows it to use the more than $5 billion in losses it racked up by late 2021 to offset paying future taxable income. President Trump made a change in 2017, during his first term, that eliminated the tax benefit’s expiration date for all companies. For SpaceX, that means that nearly $3 billion of its losses can be indefinitely applied against future taxable income.

* NYT | Draft of White House Report Suggests Kennedy Won’t Push Strict Pesticide Regulations: A highly anticipated White House report on the health of American children would stop short of proposing direct restrictions on ultraprocessed foods and pesticides that the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has called major threats, according to a draft of the document that was reviewed by The New York Times.

* WaPo | Landmark plastic talks collapse with the U.S. opposing key production limits: After spurning other global environmental efforts, the United States showed up in force in Switzerland for landmark plastic treaty talks — seeking a deal, the Trump administration said, but opposing the production limits that many other nations saw as the main solution.

* WaPo | Electricity prices are surging, opening up a new line of attacks against Republicans: They are crafting an argument that not only have prices not come down but the sweeping tax and spending law Trump signed into law in July will make energy costs worse. That legislation, among other things, rolled back clean energy tax credits that were expanded in the Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden signed into law in 2022, which could make solar and wind energy projects less financially feasible. It also reoriented government spending toward fossil fuels. Following the passage of that bill, Trump signed an executive order compelling his administration to “crack down on remaining loopholes allowing access to renewable energy tax breaks,” our colleague Jake Spring reported.

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