Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Mayor Brandon Johnson will also be attending the governor’s press conference on President Trump’s planned military deployments. Paris Schutz…
* WTTW | Federal Judge Blocks Trump From Yanking Funding From Chicago Over Immigrant Protections: A federal judge blocked the Trump administration from yanking funding from Chicago and 33 other cities and counties because they have laws designed to protect undocumented immigrants by prohibiting state and local law enforcement officials from helping federal agents. U.S. District Judge William Orrick issued an injunction late Friday that will prevent the Trump administration from blocking funding for some of the nation’s largest cities, including Chicago, Los Angeles, Denver, Boston and Baltimore. * Tribune | After 40 years of covering the city’s West Side, Voice Newspapers faces uncertain future in wake of editor’s death: The publication, today known as the Voice Newspapers, faces an uncertain future after Cummings — who was its acting editor — died in an apartment fire in Austin, which also killed three others, nearly two months ago. In his absence, Jones, likewise still at the top of the Voice masthead as publisher and photography director, has been confronted with how to carry the publication forward. It has not only lost its linchpin, but is also tens of thousands of dollars in debt. Jones, who now lives in Virginia but sat down for an interview with the Tribune about 3 miles west of the Voice Newspapers’ office at 5236 W. North Ave., said he hopes to eventually pass the venture onto successors in the community who will provide the same entrenched coverage he and Cummings brought to the West Side for decades. To do so, though, Jones first needs to ensure the publication is fiscally sound, he said. If he can’t, he’ll have to say goodbye to more than his friend. * Chicago Mag | Polish Party: Artur Wnorowski and Gosia Pieniazek put the fun into their home country’s cuisine with three new restaurants: It wasn’t right away, though, that they fully embraced their heritage cuisine. They had met at a Polish hip-hop festival (yes, that’s a thing) in Chicago in 2007. Two years later, they opened Lokal, where they served European comfort food. “We weren’t presenting it as Polish,” Wnorowski recalls. “Maybe we weren’t ready, maybe Chicago wasn’t ready.” Still, a Polish-influenced pierogi Benedict was a hit on the brunch menu. * Block Club | Polar Express Train Rides At Union Station Have Been Canceled Again This Holiday Season: The rides, which would have been based out of Union Station, 225 S. Canal St., were called off for the 2025 winter season due to extensive city street construction above the station, according to the organizers’ Facebook post. “We understand this event is an important experience for families and hope to return in the future,” organizers said in the post. The Polar Express rides are themed around the book and movie of the same name, and allow families to enjoy a decked-out train ride experience — often in pajamas — where they can meet Santa Claus and leave with a bell. * Tribune | Can Chicago White Sox avoid a 3rd straight 100-loss season? They’ll need to go over .500 the rest of the way: The Sox lost three of their next four before beating the Minnesota Twins 7-3 on Saturday night at Rate Field to improve to 46-83. They need to go 17-16 the rest of the way to avoid a third consecutive 100-loss season. The Sox entered 2023 with just four 100-loss seasons in franchise history (102 in 1932, 101 in 1948, 106 in 1970 and 100 in 2018). They lost 101 games that season and followed it up by completely falling off the cliff, setting the modern major-league record with 121 defeats. They’re on pace for 104 losses this season. To finish with fewer than 100, they’ll need a roll similar to the stretch immediately after the All-Star break when they won 10 of 14. * Daily Herald | District 116 to explain impact of $11 million budgeting error: District officials have emphasized no money is missing but the oversight by a former employee has created ripple effects they are scrambling to address. Doing that involves cutting expenses for the current and next school year. That will include reducing eight administrative positions in 2026-27 and not filling some vacancies, limiting overtime and reducing discretionary budgets by 10% this year. * Daily Southtown | Racist graffiti found at Flossmoor Metra station and park: Police responded about 5:30 a.m., to a report of graffiti painted on a wall near the pedestrian entrance of the Flossmoor Metra station. Two hours later, they were called to Leavitt Park, where similarly “racial and discriminatory” graffiti was found on a sculpture, according to a Flossmoor police news release. Flossmoor police said in both instances the graffiti was covered by public works staff Friday. Police say they are investigating the graffiti in an attempt to identify those responsible. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora police make nearly 500 DUI arrests in 2024, highest in the state besides Chicago and state police, AAIM reports: The department made 473 drunken driving arrests in 2024, an almost 30% increase from the previous year, according to AAIM’s figures. AAIM is a Schaumburg-based citizen activist group founded in 1982 by victims of drunk driving, according to a news release from the group. It has been conducting a statewide survey of Illinois police departments annually since 1990 to analyze the number of DUI arrests police make each year. The survey is funded by a grant from the Illinois Department of Transportation. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor John Laesch looks back on his first 100 days in office: During Aurora Mayor John Laesch’s inauguration speech on May 13, he said not to “look for me to impress anyone in my first 100 days.” Now looking back on those 100 days, Laesch agrees with his past self-assessment. He told The Beacon-News in an interview on Tuesday, two days before his official 100th day in office, that he hasn’t done any “media events or anything like that” to create an “aura of change,” and that he didn’t expect to rush anything through in his early days. * Naperville Sun | West Nile virus detected in Naperville, city urges caution: The two traps that tested positive were on Oleson Drive and Jackson Avenue, according to a news release from the city. In response to the positive samples, city crews have sprayed immediate areas, checked for breeding sites and retreated area catch basins, the release said. The city will take further precautions by spraying the area around Jackson Avenue on Aug. 29 in advance of the start of Last Fling, Naperville’s annual Labor Day Weekend festival. * WGLT | Unit 5 and District 87 start school year with new high school phone policies: “Responsible use” was the emphasis when the Unit 5 superintendent sent an email message Monday, explaining the updated policy to families of students. The policy approved in July restricts personal device use in classrooms to only allow it if a teacher gives permission and it is being used for educational purposes. Phones are allowed outside the classroom, meaning students can use them before and after school, during lunch and between passing periods. * WCIA | Next step for major Central Illinois health network seeking change: After announcing several changes, the next step for OSF took place in a public hearing on Thursday. The changes they’re pushing for, in addition to consolidating their hospitals under one name with two campuses, are closing several of their units like the pediatrics unit, open heart surgery, the ICU, comprehensive physical rehab and the catheterization unit in Urbana. * WSIL | Take on Giant City’s rugged Red Cedar Trail and stone fort history walk: The Red Cedar Trail Challenge invites hikers to tackle the rugged 12-mile trail throughout the month. Participants can take selfies with ten strategically placed password signs along the trail and present them at the Visitor Center to earn a Red Cedar patch. The trail, which takes at least seven hours to hike in full, can be completed in sections. Trail maps are available at the trailhead and the Visitor Center. * CNN | FEMA workers warn agency at risk of Hurricane Katrina-type failures: More than 180 current and former Federal Emergency Management Agency employees – most signing anonymously – sent a sharply worded letter to Congress on Monday, warning that the Trump administration’s sweeping overhaul is gutting the disaster relief agency’s authority and capabilities, undoing two decades of progress since the failures of Hurricane Katrina. Titled “Katrina Declaration,” the letter accuses President Donald Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, whose department oversees FEMA, of eroding the agency’s response capabilities and appointing unqualified leadership. The group calls for FEMA to be shielded from political interference and for its workforce to be protected from politically motivated firings. * WaPo | Harvard’s research is shrinking amid the Trump administration’s freeze: A lab at Harvard Medical School recently discovered something that could change the way cancer, neurodevelopmental disorders and other diseases are understood, treated and prevented. But the federal grants that funded that work were abruptly terminated this spring, as the Trump administration froze more than $2 billion in research funding to Harvard in its fight to force the university to yield to its demands for change.
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Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois consumers are feeling the heat, both from triple-digit temperatures and soaring electricity bills. Ameren customers are seeing 18–22% rate hikes. ComEd has customers paying as much as triple-digit increases. And it’s going to get worse. In July, the PJM Capacity Auction hit another record high - a 22% increase on top of the record highs everyone just started paying. This will already lead to further rate increases next year! As frustration heats up, lawmakers must choose: support competition that drives prices down or fan the flames of electricity inflation with “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation. ROFR kills competition and boosts prices by giving incumbent utilities exclusive rights to build transmission lines. It’s so anti-competitive that both presidents - Biden and Trump - opposed it in 2020 and 2023. As the ICC has said, “The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) believes that competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.” ![]() ROFR would send electricity prices even higher. Springfield should focus on long-term strategies to lower electricity bills, not raise them. As ROFR may resurface this fall, legislators should reject it and stand up for cost-cutting competition that benefits consumers.
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Some days I hate everything and this is one of those days
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * I really don’t like these sorts of videos…
C’mon. Reporting “all is well” at sunrise on the lakefront? Of course it doesn’t feel unsafe there. Maybe try taking an evening walk through Englewood without an Illinois State Police executive detail and then report back to us? However, if DC provides us a good preview, I seriously doubt we’ll see a major federal presence in Englewood or other troubled Chicago neighborhoods. They’ll mainly stick to the high-profile spots like downtown, or the lakefront. So maybe Pritzker’s video is of some use. * Let’s be clear: Imposing the National Guard on a city without any sort of advance cooperation and planning is simply just bad policy. And President Trump gave away the game today when he said…
Well, then maybe don’t “barge in.” But even the president himself acknowledges this is not ideal…
But…
Please. It seems the whole point is to make this look like an invasion instead of an actual attempt to solve a very real problem. Simple solutions are almost always neither, and this will be no exception, unless the feds plan to make this a permanent encampment. And even then, that’s gonna cause other huge problems. Permanent military occupations are not a popular thing. * In my own opinion, Mayor Brandon Johnson framed it best…
His message is spot-on. Unfortunately, the messenger is deeply flawed. * In other news, President Trump issue a press release today entitled “‘Cashless Bail’ Is a Government-Backed Crime Spree.” From that release…
If you read the appellate court’s decision upholding the pretrial release (with lots of supervisory conditions), you’ll see the evidence connecting the defendant to the crime was pretty thin. And the defendant’s court docket indicates he’s been showing up for his hearings. Also, remember that considering the not-strong case initially presented, he probably would’ve been released on cash bail anyway. * More from that press release…
OK, first of all, the man was released by a federal judge, not a local judge. And, secondly, can you imagine the reaction you’d get if you called 911 and reported that somebody threw a sandwich at you? * President Trump also issued an executive order…
Gonna be another court case. Click here for the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice’s press release on this topic.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign stuff
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Today’s number: 8
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * President Trump last week…
* The Black ladies in the red hats belong to @FlipChicagoRed. The group has been relentlessly hyped by outlets like Fox News and made its bones by pitting Black people against migrants…
* Center Square has also highlighted them. Video… More here, and here, and here, and here. * For some reason, Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg never heard of them before. But he did a bit of digging…
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Sen. Karina Villa launches campaign for Comptroller
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were told earlier this morning. After narrowly losing the Cook County Democratic Party’s slating vote last month, Sen. Karina Villa officially announced her bid for Illinois Comptroller today. Press release…
Rep. Margaret Croke, Rep. Stephanie Kifowit and Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim are already in the race for Comptroller. Champaign County Auditor George Danos and former State Sen. Rickey Hendon have also expressed interest in the office. * Villa’s campaign also announced three endorsements…
Thoughts?
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The ‘real’ Chicago way: Let somebody else pay for it
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
I’m still reading the book and Joyce claims that Richard M. Daley had the same “make somebody else pay for it” philosophy as his father.
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Tariffs Impact Everyone
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] At Hello Tokyo, a variety store in Niles, one hundred percent of the merchandise is imported from overseas with much of the inventory originating in Japan and China, thus putting the store directly in the crosshairs of the global tariff battle now taking shape. Tariffs impact everyone. Hello Toyko’s owner, Jin Park, says his store is in a holding pattern to see what to do next, because there’s still a lot of uncertainty. Retailers like Jin 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.
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React to Trump’s threat of National Guard deployment in Chicago (Updated x2)
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for background if you need it. Governor JB Pritzker, Attorney General Kwame Raoul and community leaders will hold a 3 pm press conference emphasizing “there is no emergency that requires President Trump to send military deployments to Chicago.” Click here to watch. * Senate President Don Harmon…
* The Cook County Sheriff’s Office…
* House Speaker Chris Welch…
* Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…
* Chicago Federation of Labor, Equality Illinois, the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Personal PAC and Sierra Club Illinois…
* Gov. JB Pritzker…
* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson…
* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* US Sen. Tammy Duckworth…
* US Sen. Dick Durbin…
* US Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi…
* Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot…
* NYT…
* NBC Chicago…
…Adding… Darren Bailey…
…Adding… Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Johnson, Pritzker, other local leaders ponder steps to counter potential Pentagon plans to deploy National Guard in Chicago. Tribune…
- Mayor Brandon Johnson blasted the reported plan as unconstitutional and vowed legal action if necessary, with Johnson saying Chicago “does not need a military occupation.” - US Sen. Tammy Duckworth has sharply criticized what she said were Trump’s attempts to politicize the nation’s military and use them to “intimidate Americans in their own communities.” * Related stories… * Governor Pritzker will speak at the Illinois Holocaust Museum’s Satellite Campus opening at 10:30 am and hold a 3 pm press conference in downtown Chicago on Trump’s planned military deployments. Click here to watch. * Crain’s | Intersect Illinois undertakes a rebranding as it markets the state’s economy: The organization, which has 56 corporate members, now calls itself the Illinois Economic Development Corp. What the name lacks in pizzazz, it makes up for with pragmatism. To outsiders, who are the group’s primary audience, Intersect Illinois doesn’t say much about what the entity does. “Illinois EDC embodies our sharper strategy and bold vision to make Illinois a premier destination for business and innovation,” Chairman John Atkinson said in a written statement. * Tribune | Justice Department demands Illinois hand over voter data. Election officials are debating compliance: The Labor Day deadline, sent to Illinois State Board of Elections officials via email Thursday, marks an escalation of a conflict that’s been brewing between state and federal officials since the Civil Rights Division of Trump’s Justice Department in late July requested the voter data and a laundry list of other information on Illinois elections and voters. The push for disclosure of Illinois voters’ sensitive personal information is part of a broader effort from the Trump administration to exert federal authority over state-run elections, including shifting the Civil Rights Division’s focus from ensuring access to the polls to combating the specter of voter fraud. Several other states, including neighboring Wisconsin, have received similar data requests this summer, while the Justice Department in recent months has filed lawsuits against election officials in North Carolina and Orange County, California, over issues related to their voter rolls. * Inside Climate News | ‘Forever chemicals’ in drinking water pose challenge for Illinois communities: As part of the new groundwater quality regulations, the Illinois EPA is collecting PFAS data from every water system in the state. The agency provided guidance to local officials through seven PFAS health advisories issued between 2021 and 2024, EPA public information officer Kim Biggs said in an email. “We will continue our work with community water systems to ensure residents receive information on these important issues, as well as working with systems to determine any necessary actions to reduce exposure to PFAS,” Biggs said. * Crain’s | How federal changes to SNAP will put pressure on Illinois’ food system: Farmers markets will also feel the pain, as many accept SNAP and a statewide program enables recipients to double their buying power and farmers to sell more fruits and vegetables. Less SNAP is likely to lead price-conscious shoppers to forgo fruit and vegetables in favor of less nutritious but calorie-dense food such as pizza and hot dogs, experts say. “Wherever SNAP is spent, whether it’s at a corner store, a farmers market, or a larger grocery store, those dollars do not evaporate. They circulate and they feed local economies,” says Connie Spreen, executive director of the nonprofit Experimental Station in Hyde Park, which runs the Link Match program. The program doubles the value of Link purchases at farmers markets by providing matching currency redeemable at the market for fruits and vegetables, according to the program’s website. * CBS | Why utility bills are rapidly rising in some states: The increasing demand is a big reason why the U.S. Energy Information Administration expects residential electricity rates to increase steadily by as much as 18% in the next few years, far outstripping the annual inflation rate of about 2.7%. The fastest way to bring rates down would be to increase supply, but there are challenges. * Daily Herald | How much additional revenue did your school district receive through state’s evidence-based funding formula?: Nearly $1.4 billion is headed to 102 suburban school districts in the Northwest and Western suburbs, ISBE records show. “The additional EBF funding will be used to support educational programming, including hiring the additional teaching staff needed to maintain the district’s current class size targets as well as additional support for our growing English Language Learner populations,” said Wheeling Township Elementary District 21 Superintendent Michael Connolly. “We will also utilize portions of the additional funding to defray the increasing costs of operations, including increased transportation, utility and costs for materials and services.” * WSIL | Giannoulias announces $1.5M in grants to Southern Illinois libraries: Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced nearly $1.5 million in grants for Southern Illinois libraries. He toured the Du Quoin Public Library and visited the State Fair on his recent visit. The Du Quoin library received $12,500 in technology grants and $8,594 in per capita grants. These grants aim to ensure access to quality resources and programming. * Daily Herald | Here’s how new road test rules for seniors, reporting unsafe drivers will work: The rule goes into effect July 1, 2026. At that point, drivers ages 79 and 80 seeking to renew their licenses still will need to visit a DMV and take a vision test. Motorists between the ages of 81 and 86 still will be required to renew their licenses every two years in person at a DMV and take a vision test. Road exams are eliminated for ages 79 through 86. The legislation also allows immediate relatives of unsafe drivers, regardless of age, to report problems to the secretary of state’s office. Issues could be a decline in driving skills or cognitive or medical issues. If authorities find the concerns are credible, a driver would need to submit a medical evaluation and/or have written, vision and behind-the-wheel tests to keep their license. * WCIA | New Illinois law will bring farmers more opportunities at farmers markets: The new law will let smaller producers like Anna process more of her own birds, saving her time and money that would have been spent at big meat lockers. “A lot of the processors are reserved for red meat and with rising cost, a lot of the processors now have minimums and so small producers that are raising less than 100 birds in a batch can’t get into the most popular processor in like a three hour radius,” Morrell said. * STL PR | Warehouse safety bill that followed the deadly Edwardsville tornado is now law: The new requirements are the product of a task force state lawmakers created the following year to study possible legislative solutions after an EF3 tornado tore through half of an Amazon warehouse, killing six employees. The law now mandates all warehouse operators prepare a tornado safety plan, requires new warehouses contain a designated refuge area as a form of shelter and dictates that city and county building inspectors hold a certification from the International Code Council. * Sun-Times | Trump Medicaid cuts threaten ‘the little hospital that could’ on Chicago’s Far South Side: A “firing squad” is how Tim Egan, the hospital’s president, describes the expected cuts. A majority of Roseland patients are on Medicaid, according to the Illinois Hospital Report Card. […] As Khan walks around the 134-bed hospital, he says the expected funding cuts will mean the hospital will have to make do with fewer support staff, like certified nurse assistants and specialists who help treat wounds. They are also already thinking of how to save money by reducing medical equipment like ventilators that were in demand during the peak of the coronavirus pandemic. * Tribune | Aldermen opting out of new tenant powers, but proponents defend anti-gentrification effort: While the Northwest Side Preservation Ordinance aims to slow gentrification by giving tenants a “right of first refusal” and discouraging development that decreases density, a pair of aldermen are opting out. They say the still-nascent law that affects neighborhoods including Avondale, Humboldt Park and Logan Square severely disrupts real estate deals and strips homeowners of the right to control their property. * Sun-Times | In Chicago stop, Bernie Sanders says the ‘day has come and gone’ for America’s oligarchs: Sanders’ “Fighting Oligarchy” Chicago stop also helped to highlight State Sen. Robert Peters, who is running for the 2nd Congressional District, and U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, who is running for reelection in the 3rd Congressional District. * Tribune | Grain Belt Express pits Chicago businessman, politicians and farmers in power line battle: [Michael Polsky’s] Chicago-based company Invenergy is the country’s largest privately held generator of renewable power. And his investors include Blackstone, the world’s biggest private equity firm. But it’s been a seesaw battle, and the outcome is still in doubt. One of the main problems for Polsky’s power line is that it needs to cross lots of farmland in Kansas, Missouri and Illinois. And lots of farmers hate the idea of eminent domain, especially when it’s a private developer such as Polsky who wants their land. * Sun-Times | Illinois Holocaust Museum’s satellite location brings survivor stories to life through virtual reality experiences, interactive holograms: It also features a gallery, “Stories of Survival: Object. Image. Memory.,” which comprises 61 carefully preserved objects and images from Holocaust and global genocide survivors. Museum CEO Bernard Cherkasov said the satellite location is opening during a time when “the world feels in crisis.” “There is dehumanization, there is suffering [and] polarization that’s happening in our own society and around the world,” Cherkasov said. “The Holocaust, as one of the darkest moments in our human history, has so much to teach people now.” * Daily Southtown | Suburban community college presidents among the highest paid in the state: Topping the list are Harper College President Avis Proctor, Oakton College President Joianne Smith, College of Lake County President Lori Suddick and McHenry County College President Clinton Gabbard, based on their latest contracts and salary data from the Illinois Community College Board. Statewide, the salaries for district executive officers range from $169,950 to $377,825. A community college president’s salary in Illinois is on average $246,642, according to ICCB’s 2024 annual salary report. * Daily Herald | Feds appeal judge’s ruling denying intervention in Haymarket’s lawsuit against Itasca: The saga began in 2019 when Haymarket proposed a comprehensive substance use and mental health treatment center in Itasca for people from DuPage County and surrounding communities. Itasca trustees, however, unanimously turned down Haymarket’s zoning request to convert a former Holiday Inn into a 240-bed facility. In response, the nonprofit provider sued the village in January 2022, arguing that officials violated antidiscrimination laws. According to its original complaint, Haymarket is unique among substance use and mental health treatment facilities in the area because it accepts people for treatment regardless of their ability to pay and provides additional services, including career counseling. * Shaw Local | Woodstock hires firm to communications about Route 47 widening: The City Council voted 4-1 Tuesday to approve a contract with Downers Grove-based Metro Strategies. Council member Gregg Hanson was the only one who voted no; Mayor Mike Turner and Council member Melissa McMahon were absent. Council members Bob Seegers, Tom Nierman, Natalie Ziemba and Darrin Flynn voted yes. Hanson said he wasn’t worried about who the contractor was or the dollar amount of the contract, but he said he wanted “some sort of restraint in spending.” * Daily Herald | Lawmakers continuing public events despite disruptive pro-Palestinian protests: The most recent protests occurred last month during events featuring U.S. Reps. Sean Casten of Downers Grove and Bill Foster of Naperville. The legislators were berated over their support of Israel’s war against Hamas and its extremist allies at the expense of Palestinian civilians. Casten and Foster haven’t been the only suburban lawmakers targeted by pro-Palestinian activists. So have U.S. Reps. Brad Schneider of Highland Park and Jan Schakowsky of Evanston. * Shaw Local | Special recreation program serves Will County kids and adults with disabilities: Family bingo, swimming lessons, bumper bowling, walking club, pickleball and Parents’ Day Out are among the fall programs offered by the Northern Will County Special Recreation Association for children and adults with disabilities from ages 3 to 99. Northern Will County Special Recreation Association provides year-round recreation programs and services for children, teens and adults with disabilities. * WGLT | Heartland Head Start wins $4.4 million federal grant renewal: Federally funded Head Start agencies across the country have been anxious in these first months of the second Trump administration. The Project 2025 conservative blueprint that’s guided many of Trump’s moves called for Head Start’s demise, and there already have been unsuccessful attempts to eliminate funding. It was tough timing for Heartland Head Start, whose five-year grant was up for renewal this summer. The agency has faced other challenges in recent years, including numerous leadership changes, workplace-culture complaints, and compliance issues. * The Southern | Environmentalist groups take the fight to Forest Service over logging: Decades after initially fighting against logging operations at the Shawnee National Forest, Friends of Bell Smith Springs are once again taking the fight to the U.S. Forest Service. A lawsuit filed in federal court in July seeks to halt a Forest Service project that has marked 70 acres of trees to be cut in the watershed of Hunting Branch Creek, which flows into Bell Smith Springs. […] “Regardless of what the Forest Service and the timber industry try to sell the public on, never in the history of this planet has a forest been logged back to health,” Stearns said. * Capitol News Illinois | United Methodist Church buys billboard space that hosted Proud Boys sign: In response to the uproar over a Proud Boys message displayed on a billboard near Central Community High School, the United Methodist Church has a simple message: “Hate Divides, Love Unites.” The church purchased billboard space in the same location as the Proud Boys sign, which was removed this week. It paid $2,100 for the next four months. * Tribune | New database catalogs plant species in latest effort to restore prairies: Zinnen was part of a team that recently launched the RELIX database, alongside Jeffrey Matthews, associate professor in natural resources and environmental sciences at the U. of I. RELIX catalogues every plant species in 353 prairie remnants — parts of the native grasslands of the Midwest that were not converted to farmland during colonization. “A good way to think about prairie remnants is, they were spared by accident,” Zinnen said. “These were places that you really couldn’t farm or were not worth farming, and many of them had these kind of lucky conditions to keep them as a prairie community and not be turned into woodland or some type of non-native ecosystem.” * Illinois Times | Securing mental health funding: Social workers and mental health providers informed Sangamon County Mental Health Commission earlier this month about the possible ways they could benefit from dedicated funding and planning from a community mental health board. The vast majority of counties in Illinois have these boards, which approve funding for local social service organizations through some form of tax revenue. The boards, which are also known as 708 Boards, provide a more consistent avenue for mental health providers to fund their work when compared to applying for fixed state or federal grants. * WCIA | Girl Scouts of Central Illinois serving 10K girls in a new building: The new building is three times larger than their last one. They plan to use the space for programs and meetings. There is also a boutique inside. In total, the branch has 10,000 girls serving 38 counties in the area. * WGLT | Town of Normal is working on growth in new strategic plan: The strategic plan focuses on several ever-present initiatives, including housing strategies, infrastructure, and finishing fire station number two. A new item appearing on the radar is planning for infrastructure in north Normal where there is an opportunity for growth, said city manager Pam Reece. “What we’re specifically looking at is the area along Business 51 and I-39, that northwest area of Normal. Growth is going to be driven by infrastructure. It’s going to require water, sewer, storm water services, additional roads. We’ve got our hands full in terms of looking at how to prime that area in the future for growth and take advantage of the highway adjacency,” said Reece. * Illinois Times | Robert Moore reflects on his life: Born in 1943, Moore grew up in the Jim Crow era in a Mississippi farming community. He graduated from an all-Black high school after never experiencing an integrated school. He declined a scholarship to play basketball in junior college and enlisted in the U.S. Army, setting him on a life journey that he boldly designed. He describes all of this in his autobiography, Off My Neck, published Aug. 1. He says the title “doesn’t just reflect a moment. It reflects a lifetime. It bridges my journey as a Black man growing up in Mississippi who found his purpose in life in Illinois.” * CNN | National Guard troops in Washington, DC, begin carrying weapons: US National Guard members deployed to Washington, DC, started carrying their sidearms on Sunday, a spokesperson for the Joint Task Force carrying out the mission told CNN. This follows a directive by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth last week that authorized members of the National Guard, who were deployed as part of President Donald Trump’s anti-crime agenda in the nation’s capital, to begin carrying weapons. * NYT | How Trump Used 10 Emergency Declarations to Justify Hundreds of Actions: Tracking the use of these emergency orders to justify tariff actions is extraordinarily complicated: Mr. Trump has changed rates; extended and further extended deadlines; and made specific adjustments to minimize disruption to particular American industries, among other actions. But the result, at least so far, has been a landscape of punishing rates — starting at 10 percent and going as high as 50 percent — that have taken effect for more than 90 trading partners. Attempts in Congress to block or forestall the tariffs have not been successful, but court challenges remain underway.
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Open thread
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Aug 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Aug 25, 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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Roundup: Pentagon plans military deployment in Chicago after Trump threat
Sunday, Aug 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for some background. Reuters…
* Gov. JB Pritzker…
* CBS Chicago…
* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson…
* Related… * CNN | Officials have been planning for weeks to send National Guard to Chicago as Trump seeks to expand crime crackdown: When asked for comment, the White House on Saturday referred CNN to Trump’s remarks in the Oval Office a day earlier. The president said Friday he hadn’t spoken to the Chicago mayor when asked by a reporter whether he had taken any “concrete steps” toward a crackdown in the city. CNN has reached out to the Pentagon for comment on the potential deployment of troops to Chicago, first reported by The Washington Post. * Tribune | Judge blocks President Trump from cutting funding from Chicago and other cities over ‘sanctuary’ policies: U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco extended a preliminary injunction blocking the administration from cutting off or conditioning the use of federal funds for so-called “sanctuary” jurisdictions. His earlier order protected more than a dozen other cities and counties, including San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. An email to the White House late Friday was not immediately returned. In his ruling, Orrick said the administration had offered no opposition to an extended injunction except to say the first injunction was wrong. It has appealed the first order. * AP | National Guard troops on DC streets for Trump’s crackdown will start carrying guns: The Defense Department didn’t offer any other details about the new development or why it was needed. Hegseth referred to it as “common sense” on social media. No troops have been spotted yet with firearms around the city in the hours after the announcement. But the decision is an escalation in the Republican administration’s intervention in the nation’s capital and comes as nearly 2,000 National Guard members have been stationed in the heavily Democratic city. * Reuters | Trump crime crackdown deploys troops in Washington’s safest sites: By contrast with central Washington, residents of Ward 8 in the city’s southeast - the area with the highest crime rate - said there was not a guardsman in sight. With the ward’s murder rate dwarfing that of most other neighborhoods, many locals said they would welcome troops on their streets. * NYT | See Trump’s Use of Federal Law Enforcement in D.C.: Those agents have roamed the district on patrol, set up checkpoints to stop and search vehicles and have occasionally evicted homeless people from city streets in a highly visible effort to make arrests and project the administration’s show of force. The White House has lauded their efforts in daily news releases, tallying more than 600 arrests over a two-week period — many of them for immigration violations. In the last two weeks before Mr. Trump commandeered the city’s police, 1,182 arrests were made. * Democracy Docket | The States Sending Troops to DC Have Way Worse Crime Problems. Most Didn’t Want to Talk About It: According to a Democracy Docket analysis of the FBI’s Crime in the United States Annual Report, using Offenses Known to Law Enforcement, by State by City in 2024, 53 cities across Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee and West Virginia had higher murder rates than D.C. in 2024. Some of the cities have violent crime rates significantly worse than D.C. Memphis saw 2,501 violent crimes per 100,000 residents in 2024, more than double Washington’s 926. The murder rate in Memphis was 41 per 100,000 residents, compared to 26 for D.C.
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