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Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * We need some time off. The Chairman of the Board will play us out… All summer long, we sang a song
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * AP…
Illinois was set to lose over $240 million in funding. * The Chicago Abortion Fund…
* Governor Pritzker is headed to North Carolina this weekend to keynote the state Democratic Party’s Unity Dinner. The North Carolina GOP is on the attack…
* Daily Herald | Mundelein’s Henning sets sights on Johnson’s state Senate seat: Attorney Chris Henning will seek the Republican nomination in the 30th Senate District next March. The post now is held by Democrat Adriane Johnson of Buffalo Grove. Henning is a U.S. Army veteran who has never held elected office. In a news release from the Senate Republican Victory Fund, Henning said he’s “lived the same struggles so many families in our district are facing.” “We need leaders who not only understand those challenges but who are willing to fight for real solutions,” he said. * Streetsblog Chicago | State Sen. Ram Villivalam: Here’s how we can stop Chicagoland transit from falling off the fiscal cliff: “And so I think those negotiations, those committee hearings, the piece of legislation, the CMAP report, they really represent what reforms are in the legislation that we have, and a lot of the funding concepts came from those meetings and reports as well. Long story short, I think that we put our product forward in the Senate, and we believe there’s wide consensus on the reforms. And in terms of the funding, it was our plan for $1.5 billion in funding for the entire state public transit systems. And so we’re looking forward to having the conversation with the House and Governor’s Office. If they have a better plan, we’re all ears. If there’s no other plan, we’d like to see our legislation move forward,” Sen. Villivalam said. * Aurora Beacon-News | State Sen. Donald DeWitte will not seek reelection in 2026, says current priority is transit fiscal cliff: He told The Beacon-News he’s not planning to retire, but wants to “redirect (his) energy” to some other opportunity in public service. He said he wouldn’t definitively rule out running for another office, but said he wasn’t seeking anything currently. But, for now, he said the mass transit fiscal cliff is “number one on (his) plate right now” as he finishes out his term in the General Assembly in Springfield. Chicago area transit agencies are currently facing a $771 million budget shortfall, according to past reporting. Illinois lawmakers recently adjourned their spring legislative session without passing legislation that would avert the fiscal cliff. * Crain’s | Jury sides with CME in $2.1 billion class action by former pit traders: A jury has found in favor of CME Group in a decade-old class action brought by former pit traders who claimed the value of their memberships tanked during the shift to electronic trading. The plaintiffs, a group of nearly 4,000 traders, had been seeking $2.149 billion in damages from the exchange operator for the lost value of their memberships following the 2012 opening of CME’s data center in suburban Aurora. The jury reached the verdict this afternoon following a three-week trial in the case, which was first filed in 2014. * Sun-Times | Chicago’s federal judges choose Andrew Boutros as top prosecutor: U.S. District Chief Judge Virginia Kendall signed a general order dated Thursday that said the “full court” had “approved the appointment” of Boutros, effective Aug. 5. It said the judges met in executive session Monday. Boutros joins a growing list of court-appointed U.S. attorneys originally appointed by President Donald Trump’s attorney general, and not voted on by the Senate. The orders providing for the court appointments have varied in detail, with some noting they were made by “unanimous” or “affirmative vote” of a court’s judges. * Sun-Times | Last remnant of Columbus statue being removed from Grant Park as city looks to add ‘rotating art’: Newly appointed Chicago Park District Supt. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa issued a statement saying the temporary art would “celebrate Chicago’s diverse communities” in a proposed “Peoples’ Plaza.” The new plaza is expected to open in late summer or early fall after pavement restoration. Ron Onesti, president of the Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans, viewed the move as a betrayal of the innovative agreement he cut with Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration nearly three months ago. * Tribune | Former Robert Emmet Elementary School in Austin gets new life as community center, workforce development facility: The second life of the building, now called the Aspire Center for Workforce Innovation, is the brainchild of the community group Austin Coming Together and the nonprofit Westside Health Authority. They envisioned continuing its history as a community resource, rather than let it fall into private hands. “Austin is surrounded by manufacturing zones on three sides, but even with all the jobs around us, there wasn’t the infrastructure to get people the certifications and training they need to be considered for those jobs,” said Natalie Goodin, interim director of the new center. The partners brought in architecture firm Lamar Johnson Collaborative to design the $40 million renovation, which transformed the fenced-off parking lot into a community plaza and added a three-story, glass-walled entrance that glows at night. * Daily Southtown | Immigrant brothers work as a doctor and lawyer, but at Lollapalooza they’re the Donut Dudes: Going to night prayer at 3 a.m. wasn’t always easy for Khader and Mohammed “Moe” Zahdan when they were boys, so their dad used a little fatherly ingenuity to encourage them — he took them to a local donut shop afterwards. That fostered a love of donuts in the brothers, who also inherited an entrepreneurial streak from both their parents, and eventually led them to open Donut Dudes at 10301 S. Kedzie Ave. a few years ago in Mt. Greenwood. They’ve since expanded to a kiosk at 10559 S. Harlem Ave. in Chicago Ridge, and are regular vendors at Lollapalooza and Taste of Chicago. * Tribune | Impact of Trump’s immigration crackdown felt in Chicago suburbs: Now, community members say it’s more challenging to secure a job without proper documentation. Recordings of plainclothes officers raiding factories, approaching vehicles or setting up in vacant parking lots near homes have become commonplace on social media. People leave their homes each day, preparing for the eventuality that they might not return. In a statement sent to the Tribune, a spokesperson for Nestlé said that it aims to fill the positions by “converting as many of our current temporary workers as possible and through direct hiring,” but did not specify how many of the 600-700 positions have been filled. * Press Release | Elizabeth Granato Wins Cook County Board of Commissioners Endorsements: Today, Cook County Commissioners Scott Britton (14th District), Bill Lowry (3rd District), Stanley Moore (4th District), and Josina Morita (13th District) endorsed Elizabeth Granato for a seat on the Cook County Board of Commissioners. […] Granato announced her candidacy earlier this week with the backing of the Bricklayers & Allied Craftworkers ADC 1 Illinois and Ironworkers District Council of Chicago & Vicinity. * Crain’s | Prime Healthcare replaces Joliet hospital chief: Prime Healthcare, the new owner of St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet and seven other former Ascension Illinois hospitals, announced today that Barbara Martin is leaving her position as chief executive officer of the Joliet hospital and would be replaced by an interim CEO, effective immediately. The California-based for-profit health system thanked Martin for her contribution and said she had come out of retirement to helm the financially troubled hospital in March 2024. Martin was stepping into a contentious labor dispute with nurses who had held three strikes in the span of several months. * Daily Herald | Elgin cold case detectives launch season 2 of hit podcast, seeking to solve 1970s murders and disappearance of Barbara Glueckert: Less than 50 days after the first episode dropped, authorities pulled her 1980 Toyota Celica from the Fox River on March 25. The skeletal remains inside quickly were identified as Karen’s. Det. Andrew Houghton said Karen’s cause of death officially remains undetermined, but police believe it was a tragic accident. There was no evidence of trauma to her remains, the car was found with the key in the ignition, in fourth gear, its windows closed and the emergency brake activated — all indications that it was driven into the river, not pushed. The discovery helped catapult “Somebody Knows Something” into the podcast stratosphere — it became among the top 1% in downloads nationally — and thrust Houghton and partner Matt Vartanian into the spotlight. They appeared on national TV, were featured speakers at the True Crime Podcast Festival in Boston last week, and next month will travel to Denver for the CrimeCon Clue Awards, where they’re among three finalists for “America’s Greatest Detective.” * WTTW | 4 Piping Plover Chicks Just Landed in Waukegan. Ecologists Released the Captive-Reared Fledglings in Hopes of a New Generation: The arrival of the four chicks — two males and two females — was a much-needed morale boost for monitors after Waukegan’s piping plover mates, Blaze and Pepper, lost three of their four hatchlings this summer. It was a stark contrast to the pair’s first charmed breeding season in 2024, when they successfully reared three chicks. Their lone survivor in 2025, the newly named Aster, has immediately taken to the newcomers, Lueck said. “All five of them were together,” she said. “It was magical.” * Daily Herald | Kane County humane group takes in pets from Texas after catastrophic floods: Rescue animals from parts of Texas devastated by catastrophic flooding this month arrived at the Aurora Municipal Airport on Thursday and were taken in by area shelters. The plane transporting dozens of animals landed in Aurora, and more than a dozen went to four Illinois shelters, including Anderson Humane in Kane County. * Muddy River News | QPS superintendent issues new public statement in wake of Denman Elementary controversy: Todd Pettit set out to reassure those who spoke at the meeting that their comments were taken seriously about years of conduct that included taping of students’ mouths and birthday spankings. He said the administration did all it could to get input from those directly involved after a November 2024 DCFS investigation concluded that the conduct of teachers Kimberly Kirby and Jennifer Oitker was inappropriate, but did not rise to the level of criminality or abuse. “We hear those in our community who are frustrated, sad, disappointed, and even angry about the events and how QPS has addressed the situation,” Pettit’s statement read. “While we cannot force or compel anyone to agree with the manner it was handled, we are hopeful that people can acknowledge, or even respect, that QPS has sought to follow the facts and evidence wherever it led. We have been open to and sought to interview any parent and/or student who has raised a complaint and accepted an invitation to meet in person or by phone.” * President and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association Mark Denzler… * WCIA | DACC Board finalizes contract for new President: At a June 26 meeting, DACC’s Board of Trustees officially named Dr. Randy Fletcher as the next President of the college. Following his appointment, it was announced on July 24 that the Board approved a four-year employment contract outlining key terms of his presidency. Dr. Fletcher, who had been serving as Interim President since December 2024, started his official term on July 1 and will continue in the role through June 30, 2029. * WICS | Illinois State Fair enhances security with new measures: Additional security measures are being implemented at the Grandstand to maintain a safe environment for event attendees and entertainers. New this year are metal detectors and bag checks at all Grandstand entrances. Bags larger than 14″x8″, including backpacks and duffle bags, will not be allowed. * WCIA | Hundreds of music students travel from 28 states, perfecting marching band skills at EIU: About 1,000 students from 28 different states are dedicating parts of their summer to Smith Walbridge Clinics (SWC), a unique program on the Eastern Illinois University campus. Each week focuses on a different aspect of the marching arts, such as skills for drumline, color guard, and drum majors alike. The final two weeks of the camp are tailored for drum majors, those who lead and conduct bands, at the high school and college levels. * Stat News | Trump seeks to make it easier for people with mental illnesses to be involuntarily committed: The administration wants to expand involuntary commitments by reversing judicial policies that restrict the use of the controversial approach and by providing grants, legal advice, and other assistance to local and state governments. The order also directs several agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services, to audit grant recipients to ensure no money flows to organizations that promote policies that clash with the administration’s stated values. […] Many public health professionals believe that involuntary commitment should be used as a last resort, if it is used at all. They suggested that involuntary treatment lacks sufficient evidence for its expansion and would only dissuade individuals from seeking care. * WIRED | How Trump Killed Cancer Research: He paused NIH grant-making for more than two months, holding up an estimated $1.5 billion in funding. He effectively halted clinical trials of new drugs. He laid off thousands of employees at the FDA, the NIH, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the Department of Veterans Affairs, an estimated $35 million in already-funded research—including for cancer—was thrown into jeopardy when Trump instituted a hiring freeze. At the EPA, staff were instructed to cancel existing grants, including to the Health Effects Institute, which has published research on the link between air pollution and cancer. And in the stopgap funding measure, set to expire in September, Republicans cut about 60 percent from the Defense Department’s Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs—including funding for research on breast and ovarian cancers. (The programs for pancreatic, kidney, and lung cancer disappeared from the agency’s list of funded projects and rolled under another program, which did not receive any additional funding for 2025.) At the National Institutes of Health, some grants resumed and others were slated for termination. The current state of US cancer research could fairly be described as—confusion. * Slate | Millions of Americans Need These Drugs. RFK Jr.’s Minions Have Them in Their Crosshairs: Of the 10 panelists, only one—the sole specialist in maternal mood disorders at the event—argued for SSRIs’ safety and value. The others insisted, with just as much of a sense of authority and certainty, that the medications were ineffective and that they caused miscarriages, hemorrhaging, autism, ADHD, cardiac birth defects, fetal alcohol syndrome, and other frightening outcomes. For any pregnant woman tuning in or later hearing about the two-hour conversation, it would be hard to come away without a sense of confusion and anxiety about taking antidepressants.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign updates
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Three-quarters of OEIG investigations into Paycheck Protection Program abuses resulted in misconduct findings
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the Office of Executive Inspector General…
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SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In the final hours of the state’s legislative session, SB 328 was quietly introduced and passed giving lawmakers and the public little time to review and debate this legislation. Now, it’s sitting on the Governor’s desk. If signed, it will allow trial lawyers to drag companies into Illinois courts for lawsuits that have nothing to do with Illinois. Businesses could be sued here simply for being registered in the state — even if the alleged harm occurred elsewhere. And it puts jobs and our state’s economy at risk. Even New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed a nearly identical bill twice, calling it a “massive expansion” of jurisdiction that would deter job creation and burden the courts. Governor Pritzker has a choice: Veto the legislation to protect Illinois jobs and businesses — or signal to employers that Illinois is open season for out-of-state lawsuits. Learn more and make your voice heard: ![]()
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Sen. Dale Fowler honors term limit pledge, won’t seek reelection; Rep. Paul Jacobs launches bid for 59th Senate seat
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * KFVS…
* Rep. Paul Jacobs…
Democrat Chip Markel announced last week he’s running for the open 118th House seat. Rep. Paul Jacobs’ campaign said “Not at this time” when asked if they have a challenger in mind for Markel.
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Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] As a global IT services company rooted in communities around the world, Hexaware combines deep industry expertise with cutting-edge solutions to boost productivity, create new opportunities, and strengthen economies everywhere. Our Corporate Video showcases our transparent, action-oriented approach—from local community initiatives to enterprise-scale programs—designed to deliver real results you can see and measure.
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Pritzker to meet with Texas Dems as Trump urges GOP remaps (Updated)
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Some context from Capitol News Illinois’ Ben Szalinski…
* Press release…
Thoughts? …Adding… Leader McCombie…
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SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department
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Open thread
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * I was listening to some of the late Chuck Mangione’s songs after work yesterday and this one sounded strangely familiar, but I couldn’t place it. About two minutes in I realized that one of the high school jazz bands I played in (Tooele, Utah under conductor C. Roy Ferrin) performed it… What’s going on?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: ‘You preferred secrecy and lies’: Madigan confidant gets 2 years for role in ComEd bribery scheme. Capitol News Illinois…
- McClain is the third of his “ComEd Four” co-defendants to face sentencing for his role in a yearslong bribery scheme aimed at Madigan, in which the speaker’s allies got jobs and contracts at electric utility Commonwealth Edison to grease the wheels for major legislation the company was pushing at the Statehouse. - Like Madigan, McClain plans to appeal and will be asking to stay out of prison while the legal process plays out. * Related stories…
∙ Tribune: Judge hands 2 years in prison to ex-ComEd lobbyist Michael McClain, calls bribery scheme with Speaker Madigan a ‘criminal alliance’ * Crain’s | Johnson rules out property tax hike in 2026 budget: “I will not be proposing a property tax increase in my budget,” Johnson told reporters today at an unrelated press conference. “I’m going to continue to work hard to find progressive revenue so that we can continue to make the critical investments transforming our city.” During a discussion with Bloomberg News on July 22, CFO Jill Jaworski said “it is likely that that will be part of the package” when asked about a property tax hike. * Sun-Times | ICE arrests person without warrant at Maywood Courthouse, coalition says: A two-minute video shows two people in plainclothes, who advocates say are agents with U.S. Immigration Customs and Enforcement, surround a man and hold onto his arm, at the Maywood Courthouse. The two never appeared to have shown a warrant or identify themselves during the video, which was shared by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. “This incident is an escalation by the federal government, and is yet another example of ICE denying immigrants their constitutional rights to due process,” ICIRR said in a statement. […] ICE did not immediately respond to a request for comment late Thursday. * WTTW | State Farm’s Insurance Rate Increase Sparks Backlash From Advocates, Lawmakers: Abe Scarr, director of the Illinois Public Interest Research Group, said those types of regulations are important to keep insurance companies in check. He said Illinois should be like other states and adopt basic laws that give public institutions the authority to review rates and determine whether increases are excessive. “It’s not necessarily the case that it means they need to raise rates by half a billion dollars,” Scarr said. “Fundamentally, we think that rate increases of this size shouldn’t be allowed to go through without some scrutiny from public institutions. This makes the case quite clearly for the need for Illinois to adopt very basic consumer protections that almost every other state has.” * WTTW | At 1st City Council Hearing on Consent Decree in 15 Months, No Sign of Urgency Around Reform Push: None of the alderpeople at the sparsely attended committee hearing, which lasted for approximately an hour, pressed Deputy Chief Ralph Cruz or Executive Director Allyson Clark-Henson of CPD’s Office of Constitutional Policing and Reform on why CPD had fully complied with just 16% of the court order known as the consent decree by the end of 2024. Only Ald. Raymond Lopez (15th Ward) expressed frustration with the time it was taking for CPD to change the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers, as required by the now nearly six-and-a-half-year-old binding court order. * WTTW | Top Prosecutor Calls Program Allowing CPD Officers to Directly File Felony Gun Charges ‘Overwhelming Success.’ Critics Renew Objections: The pilot program has been in effect for nearly seven months in the South Side’s Englewood (7th) Police District and for nearly five months in the Calumet (5th) Police District. In all other parts of Chicago and Cook County, an assistant state’s attorney must sign off before felony gun possession charges are filed. Officers assigned to the Englewood District used the pilot program to charge 68 people with gun possession between January and July, according to data provided to WTTW News by the State’s Attorney’s Office. * Tribune | Chicago Public Schools struggles to solve budget woes as deadline looms: In an update at a Chicago Board of Education meeting Thursday, CPS Chief Budget Officer Michael Sitkowski reiterated the district has identified $165 million in spending reductions, including cuts to its administrative staff, vendor contracts and operational efficiencies. That leaves CPS with just a few weeks to balance its books, facing hundreds of millions of deficit. Sitkowski told the board that the district is prioritizing cuts that have less impact on the classroom. * Chalkbeat Chicago | To accommodate bus routes, 22 Chicago school bell times will change this fall: Arrival and dismissal times will be pushed back by 15-30 minutes at nearly all of the schools and families and staff at each school were notified of the changes last week, said CPS spokesperson Evan Moore. District officials did not provide exact bell schedules for each school. * Tribune | Long-delayed $250 million Bally’s Chicago IPO may finally close in August: Eight months after launching its $250 million initial public offering, Bally’s Chicago is making a final push to solicit investors and complete the long-stalled offering within weeks. The IPO, which has navigated lawsuits and regulatory delays, was refiled for a second time July 15 with the Securities and Exchange Commission to update the company’s financials, according to the company. Bally’s Chicago is hoping to get SEC approval and close the offering by early August, according to a note to prospective investors Wednesday. * Sun-Times | Chicago Tribune lays off 8 from newsroom, including 5 union members: The Chicago Tribune laid off eight employees Thursday, five of whom were members of the paper’s union. The cuts amount to roughly 10% of the newsroom. The laid-off employees include three non-Chicago Tribune Guild editors and reporters who covered housing, food and the Bears, the guild shared on social media. Leaders at the Chicago Tribune and Alden Global Capital, which owns Tribune Publishing, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. * Daily Southtown | Former Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard released from contempt, fines in one FOIA lawsuit; village assessed in another: After several weeks of back and forth between attorneys, a Cook County judge Thursday released former Dolton Mayor Tiffany Henyard from contempt for repeated violations of court orders in an ongoing lawsuit. Henyard will also no longer be held accountable for fines incurred for each day she failed to produce records requested by the nonprofit Edgar County Watchdogs in early 2024, as her affidavit was judged as sufficient in proving she no longer has them. * WGN | Former suburban mayor charged (again), this time with forgery: The sordid story of a suburban mayor—previously accused of lying about being threatened by a village trustee—took another twist when he was charged with election-related forgery. WGN Investigates has learned former Glendale Heights village president Chodri Khokhar turned himself in to authorities Thursday after being charged with forgery and perjury. Prosecutors accuse Khokhar of forging signatures on petitions in a failed bid to remain on the ballot for re-election in 2024. * Daily Herald | Former Glendale Heights village president accused of forgery, perjury: The forgery charges accuse Khokhar of submitting a petition, with the intent to defraud, that contained three signatures that were not genuine. The perjury charge accuses Khokhar of “knowingly making a false statement, under oath or affirmation, which he did not believe to be true,” certifying that the signatures were done in his presence and were genuine. Khokhar denied the allegations on Thursday, adding the charges are “100%” nonsense. * Daily Southtown | More problems at troubled Park Forest apartments that village claims are unsafe: Separately, in a court filing earlier this month, the village said that Autumn Ridge, with nearly 400 apartment units in Will County, is unsafe and a public nuisance. The filing calls on a Will County judge to appoint a receiver who will collect rents and make necessary repairs, which Park Forest complains cover virtually every aspect of the buildings, including plumbing, roofs, windows and electrical systems. The complaint alleges Autumn Ridge ownership and management “have permitted the structures…to remain in constant and continuous disrepair.” The latest issue concerns lack of natural gas service to some adjacent townhouse units as well as air conditioning still being out at one of the four high-rise apartment buildings, Mayor Joseph Woods said Monday. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council delays consideration of grocery tax extension: Aurora receives around $4.5 million in revenue through the grocery sales tax each year. Without those funds, which help pay for public safety, road maintenance, public works, community programs and environmental services, the city would likely need to look to alternative funding sources or make cuts to services, Chief Financial Officer Stacey Peterson previously said. City officials, especially Mayor John Laesch, have been saying the city is in a difficult financial state. During his inauguration speech in May, he said that the city is in “serious debt,” that his administration needs to get the city’s “financial house in order” and that residents will likely be seeing a property tax increase. * Shaw Local | Will County sheriff’s lieutenant fired after internal investigation of fatal shooting: A Will County sheriff’s lieutenant who avoided charges over the fatal shooting of a hostage taker who surrendered to police has been fired following an internal investigation of the incident. Sheriff’s Lt. John Allen was the subject of an investigation conducted by a retired law enforcement officer over the fatal 2022 shooting of Gregory Walker, 65, of Crest Hill. Earlier this year, a $2.7 million settlement was reached between Will County and Walker’s family in a federal lawsuit case regarding the shooting. * WGN | State’s 3rd human West Nile Virus case of 2025 confirmed in DuPage County: Health officials from the DuPage County Health Department (DCHD) confirmed Thursday that the county’s first human case of West Nile Virus (WNV) had been detected in a resident in Glen Ellyn. The resident who contracted the case is in their 50s and began experiencing symptoms in mid-July. * Daily Southtown | As federal funding dries up, 94-year-old Drama Group in Chicago Heights gets ‘proactive’: “It’s not putting us in danger of closing. We still have a great deal of money in our savings, but it’s us being proactive,” said MaryEllen Fawk, president of The Drama Group board. “It’s important for us just to keep looking at where we will be in five years.” President Donald Trump’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2026 includes the elimination of the National Endowment for the Arts, the federal agency awards grants to nonprofits, arts agencies and organizations in support of arts projects across the country. * Naperville Sun | All lead water service lines in Naperville will be removed by 2029, official says: When the 68 lead service line replacements being done this year are complete, there will be only 207 left to do – less than 1% of the city’s more than 42,000 water service lines, Darrell Blenniss said. The replacement is part of broader state and federal initiatives governing lead service lines, which are the pipes that connect a municipal water main to a residence or business. Last October, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced that all drinking water systems must have their lead service lines replaced by 2037. Those lines have the potential to release harmful particles into water that’s used for drinking and cooking. * Elgin Courier-News | Elgin plans to remove lead water service lines at 900 more properties in 2026: That will bring the total to nearly 3,800 of the approximate 10,000 lead lines that need to be removed by 2037. More than 1,000 lines were replaced this year, officials said. As part of the ongoing process, the Elgin City Council this week approved a $683,000 contract with Engineering Enterprises Inc. to do the work needed so the city can apply for state funding to help offset the cost involved with taking out old lead lines and replacing them with copper, officials said. * Sun-Times | Ironworkers new Broadview training facility is a glassy, bold roadside attraction: Next time you’re on I-290 west of Chicago — a stretch of road that’s notorious for traffic tie-ups — there’s now a good reason to slow down a bit, courtesy of Ironworkers Local 63. The union built a 12,000-square-foot training center that’s visible from the expressway at 25th Avenue. It’s a hardworking industrial facility filled with equipment and lab space that give apprentices hands-on experience learning skyscraper facade construction and other aspects of architectural and ornamental metalwork. But the building also punches far above its weight, design-wise, with a sharp, transparent curved glass facade that changes moods depending on the sky — giving the training center a certain grace and beauty that’s worth a bit of gapers’ block. * WCIA | ‘Complete garbage’; Sonya Massey’s family reacts to Grayson’s motions of self-defense: One claims Sonya was the initial aggressor in the viral body camera footage of the shooting. The motion says she “directed an act of violence” against Grayson by throwing boiling water in his direction. Reacting to this new development, Sonya’s cousin Sonate Massey called the claim “complete garbage.” “Everyone on this planet who watched that video knows what happened,” Sontae said. * WIFR | Concerned neighbor sounds alarm on sirens shutting down near Byron Nuclear Plant: Federal law requires companies like Constellation to maintain alert systems for anyone near nuclear facilities. Recent approval from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has updated Constellation Energy’s procedure. Rather than own and operate 68 sirens around the company’s Byron nuclear power plant, Constellation will switch to alerting those nearby by pinging phones. * WGLT | Longtime McLean County Sheriff’s lieutenant announces candidacy for top post: McLean County Sheriff’s Lt. Jon Albee is running for sheriff. “While I take great pride in the responsibilities and expectations of being the sheriff, I’d like to think I’m no different than anyone here, but I also know this position comes with high expectations and to do the right thing — even when no one is watching,” said Albee in announcing his candidacy. * IPM Newsroom | Danville youth aim to find solutions to combat gun violence with upcoming town hall: The event, called “Voices for Change”, will take place on Thursday, July 31, at 6 p.m. at the Laura Lee Fellowship House. It is organized entirely by local youth and supported by the non-profit Project Success. Organizers say the goal is to create space for young people to speak about their experiences with gun violence and share ideas for preventing it. The town hall will include presentations, personal stories from survivors and a Q&A session with community leaders. Resources for counseling and support will also be available. * WGLT | Scope for imagination and small town vision: 4th vintage arcade in McLean: About 20 minutes south of Bloomington on old Route 66 [or I-55, if you prefer speed to scenery] is the town of McLean, population 743. McLean is home to Arcadia, the multi-site vintage arcade full of pinball machines and classic games from the ’80s, ’90s, and early 2000s. And soon there will be another new arcade in McLean — Arcadia Unlimited will be opening this fall and will eventually feature more than 500 restored arcade games, including rare and vintage games. With likely the highest arcades-to-people ratio in the world, McLean has become a national hub for restored pinball machines, classic games and arcade oddities because of the creativity and vision of one man: John Yates, the purveyor and singular imagination behind Arcadia. * BND | Coach who was fired by one metro-east school district is hired by another: After retiring in June from coaching at East St. Louis Senior High School, Barry Malloyd continued to work as Mason Clark Middle School’s juvenile transition coordinator and athletic director. He was fired from this second job weeks after he was accused of letting a convicted sex offender be around student athletes — an assertion he vehemently denies. Cahokia Unit School District 187 Superintendent Curtis McCall Jr. said that, pending paperwork and an orientation process, the district intends to hire Malloyd as the high school’s head boys track and field coach. “His track record speaks for itself as a champion of children,” McCall said, referencing Malloyd’s multi-decade coaching career. * WCIA | 171st Coles County Fair opens Sunday: Events begin Sunday at noon with the opening of the Merchants Building. The carnival opens at 5 p.m. and 30 minutes later, the first grandstand event of the fair will begin — the Miss Coles County pageants. Other grandstand events throughout the week include harness racing, a truck and tractor pull, a demolition derby and bull riding. There will also be an art exhibition, livestock and horse shows and a K-9 demonstration by Coles County law enforcement. * Steve Kornacki | How redistricting could change the fight for the House majority: In the coming weeks, Republicans in Texas and Ohio are expected to redraw their states’ congressional maps. Their intent is transparent: to bolster their party’s chances of protecting its super-slim House majority in next year’s midterm elections. As it stands now, there are 220 Republican districts, meaning the party can afford a net loss of no more than two seats in 2026 and still keep the House. In theory, the redistricting effort could shift as many as eight seats from the Democratic to the GOP column, although the ultimate yield will depend on how aggressive the GOP gets — and how much the courts and voters will tolerate. * The Atlantic | Two Democrats Are Bolting From a Bipartisan Governors’ Group: At least two Democratic governors—Tim Walz of Minnesota, the 2024 vice-presidential nominee, and Laura Kelly of Kansas—plan to stop paying dues to the organization this month when they are asked to renew their membership. They have concluded that the organization’s usefulness is now in doubt, according to two people familiar with the governors’ thinking, who requested anonymity to speak about plans that were not yet public. Other Democratic-governors’ offices have also been discussing their frustrations with the NGA and how they should respond, three other people familiar with the governors’ thinking told us.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Jul 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Jul 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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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Illinois Department of Employment Security…
* Illinois Times | Illinois keeps 988 services for LGBT+ youth: In a statement emailed to Illinois Times, nonprofit Phoenix Center Springfield, which supports people of varied identities and backgrounds, celebrated the decision to continue specialized services for 988 in Illinois. “We know that LGBTQ+ youth are at greater risk for suicidal thoughts and behaviors due to factors such as discrimination, stigma and lack of support. This makes the 988 hotline crucial to those youth and their well-being. It is truly a matter of life or death,” the statement reads. * Capitol News Illinois | Media literacy education lacks consistency across Illinois: About one-third of respondents to a survey conducted by the University of Illinois Springfield indicated they spend more than one class period but no more than one week covering the topic, while about 29 percent spend more than three weeks’ worth of class periods. Sixteen percent of schools surveyed discuss media literacy during a single class period over the course of a full school year. Illinois became the first state in the nation to require public high schools to teach media literacy, which can include lessons on accessing information, analyzing and evaluating media messages, reflecting on how media affects the consumption of information and triggers emotions, and how to engage in thoughtful conversations with people using facts and reason. The state-mandated lessons began with the 2022-2023 school year. * Illinois Environmental Council Executive Director Jennifer Walling | Protect families from lead contamination: Yet, outside of Cook County and Springfield, many Illinois residents, especially those in disadvantaged communities, remain at risk due to the large presence of lead pipes in need of replacement. Illinois needs clear, statewide leadership to prioritize proactive tools like filter distribution. One promising pathway is the use of the federally approved 1115 Medicaid waiver, which allows states to implement cost-effective and targeted interventions not traditionally covered by Medicaid. This includes environmental health measures like certified water filter distribution, tailored to address local risks and health disparities. * Dispatch-Argus | Illinois bill would bar police, ICE agents from wearing masks: The bill, filed by state Rep. Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, would also require officers not engaged in an undercover assignment to display their name or badge number and the agency in which they work for on their uniform. Similar legislation has been introduced by Democrats in California, Massachusetts and New York. Democratic members of Congress have also introduced legislation that would ban ICE agents from wearing masks. The push comes after reports that ICE agents, most visibly in Los Angeles but also in other parts of the country, have worn plain clothes, donned masks and operated out of unmarked vehicles during immigration raids. * WAND | Illinois could soon empower certified nurse midwives, address maternal healthcare deserts: The proposal could allow midwives to provide home birth services if they have a written collaborative agreement with local doctors or other healthcare providers. Advanced practice registered nurses certified as midwives would also have the ability to provide out of hospital births if they have been granted clinical privileges from a birth center. “In a healthcare provider shortage area or maternal care desert, a certified midwife can collaborate with a full practice authority,” said Rep. Yolanda Morris (D-Chicago). * Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker calls Texas GOP’s remap effort ‘cheating,’ doesn’t rule out Illinois response: The process, however, would have to go through Illinois’ legislature. “That’s not something we’re pursuing,” a spokesperson for Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, said. * WTTW | Inspector General Launches New Dashboard to Track CPD Overtime Spending Amid Budget Crisis: The new database launched after WTTW News reported CPD spent $273.8 million on overtime last year, 6.5% less than in 2023 and but still more than two and a half times the $100 million earmarked for police overtime by the Chicago City Council as part of the city’s 2024 budget, according to data published by the city’s Office of Budget and Management. * Crain’s | Chicago-area warehouse space is almost full. Are developers getting back to building?: The question hovering over the market now is when the new supply spigot will turn back on with any noticeable force. As of the end of June, Colliers tracked just 9.3 million square feet of industrial development projects in the Chicago area under construction, down 32% from the same time in 2024 and the lowest level of active warehouse construction in seven years. Senner said he expects more capital to start flowing into Chicago-area industrial projects over the next few quarters, especially after the market has shown sustained low vacancy. * Block Club | Winnemac Park Neighbors Blindsided After Acre Of Natural Prairie Mowed Down: “Scientifically, there’s no objection to the fact that they did this mow. However, to mow down roughly one acre, all at the same time, during the middle of summer with no warning to the community is, understandably, very upsetting,” Williamson said. The landscaper arrived at the park a little before 8 a.m. Wednesday and was greeted by a group of neighbors who demanded to know why he was using a commercial lawnmower to cut back a large section of the park’s prairie habitat and tried to stop him, neighbor Ben Sanda and park council member Tessa Groll told Block Club. * Daily Herald | CHSN, WCIU agree to simulcast seven White Sox games, starting with Cubs series this weekend: Chicago Sports Network and Weigel Broadcasting Co.’s WCIU, The U, have announced a new partnership to simulcast seven White Sox games this season, beginning with this weekend’s Crosstown Series against the Cubs. With five of the seven simulcast games airing on Friday nights, this agreement gives CHSN a platform to showcase the final Friday Night All Access broadcasts of the season. * Sun-Times | A Chicago orchestra invited the public to perform — and 250 people brought instruments: “I honestly feel that this is one of the most important things the Chicago Philharmonic does,” said Scott Speck, the ensemble’s artistic director and principal conductor. “We want to be an orchestra that speaks to the people of Chicago in every community, in all the communities. And if you don’t come to us, we’ll come to you.” The Philharmonic started Side By Side 10 years ago through the Chicago Parks District’s free annual “Night Out in the Parks” program. The program grew out of the group’s high school outreach. * Block Club | Edgewater’s Jazz In The Yard Series Turns Senn High School’s Lawn Into Concert Grounds: The series is a bright spot to come out of the pandemic, which left a void for musicians and fans alike. While looking to find a safe way to play in summer 2020, Knight partnered with bass player Justin Peterson, who lived in the same Glenwood Avenue building as Knight. The duo held pandemic-friendly practices in the building’s backyard. They eventually invited Evanston-based drummer Jeff Stitely to join in. The sound was a lure for music-hungry neighbors, and the group quickly developed an audience. * Block Club | Sister Pat Murphy, Longtime Immigrant Rights Champion And South Side Icon, Dies At 96: Born in suburban Skokie, Murphy joined the religious order of the Sisters of Mercy in 1947, meeting Sister JoAnn Persch. The two became known as a “rabble-rousing” pair who spent decades fighting for immigrant rights in Chicago and across the country. Murphy protested into her later years at immigration detention centers and beyond, even getting arrested at the United States Capitol rotunda when she was 90. Combining faith-based activism and political resistance, Murphy used the five critical concerns of the Sisters of Mercy — immigration, Earth, nonviolence, racism and women — to motivate her mission. * Daily Southtown | Harvey layoffs to hit 10% of city workforce, ongoing financial ‘crisis’ cited: Mayor Christopher Clark said in a news release announcing the layoffs, effective Aug. 23, will cause some disruption of city services but that public safety functions, including police and fire protection, will continue. Clark said Harvey faces $149 million debt, and $12.2 million in unpaid commercial property taxes in just one year. He said some commercial property owners have piled up decades of unpaid taxes. * Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan accepting offers for much-needed apartment building; ‘There is a severe housing shortage in Lake County’: Mayor Sam Cummingham said the proposed project could have a similar impact on the city’s downtown, and community in general, as the Genesee Theatre, which was renovated and reopened in 2004 after sitting vacant for 15 years. “Waukegan is due for this,” he said. “This is the spirit of progress synonymous with our Genesee Theatre. It is part of rebuilding Waukegan. It is what we envisioned when we updated our comprehensive plan in 2020.” * Elgin Courier-News | East Dundee OKs spending $508,000 to remove lead water lines: East Dundee plans to spend more than a half million dollars this year removing lead service lines that bring water into village homes and businesses. The $508,000 earmarked for the first year of the Lead Service Line Replacement project will pay for the removal of pipes leading to 36 of the 300 properties known to have lead service lines, said Phil Cotter, director of public works. * Crain’s | NASCAR wants to revive the Chicagoland Speedway: “While we currently do not have a timeline or specific series, we do hope to bring NASCAR racing back to Chicagoland Speedway at some point in the future,” the spokesperson said. The Chicagoland Speedway, which NASCAR owns, is located in Joliet, about 50 miles southwest of Chicago’s downtown. * NPR Illinois | Sean Grayson moved to the Sangamon County jail: “The transfer was made to accommodate ongoing medical procedures and follow-up appointments that, due to operational needs of the Sheriff’s Office, require him to be housed in Springfield,” said Sangamon County Sheriff Paula Crouch. “This decision was made after consultation between correctional and medical staff to ensure access to required services while maintaining secure custody.” Crouch added Grayson will be housed in a secure unit. “Appropriate safety precautions are in place to manage his custody and ensure the secure operation of the facility,” she said. * Illinois Times | Last call is earlier than ever: Police say they are receiving fewer calls to break up fights and keep the peace at bars in Springfield and elsewhere in Sangamon County since last year’s elimination of liquor licenses that allowed patrons to be served until 3 a.m. But bar owners say they have suffered economically, and they believe the decisions of the Springfield City Council and Sangamon County Board were unjustified. “It definitely has had a big impact,” said Barry Friedman, owner of The Alamo, 115 N. Fifth St., in Springfield, where bars now can stay open only as late as 2 a.m. * BND | Granite City schools see big changes: restructuring, class hours and admin shuffle: Starting in fall 2025, the district’s elementary schools, at minimum, will serve grades kindergarten through six, with two schools serving pre-K students as well. This comes with shifting boundaries and, at some schools, new administration. The reconfiguration is part of the district’s ongoing effort to create more educational consistency between its schools, Manager of District Communications and Transportation Chris Mitchell said. * WSIL | Mine Rescue Teams Suit Up for Life-Saving Competition in Southern Illinois: This week, miners from across the tri-state region gathered in Marion, Illinois, not for work, but for something that could one day save lives. Ten elite teams from Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky put their skills to the test during the annual Mine Rescue Competition, hosted by the Illinois Mine Rescue Association. The event simulates underground emergencies to assess rescue team response in high-pressure, high-stakes conditions. “They’ve gotta be benched to make sure there’s no leaks, no defects in it— and it’s gonna protect their life when they’re working in a low environment,” said Shawn Batty, President of the Illinois Mine Rescue Association. “But unfortunately, there are times they get called out.” * Illinois Times | Baseball stadium may get new owner: Robin Roberts Stadium, the century-old baseball stadium on the city’s north end, has been a political hot potato for the last several years but appears to be on the cusp of new ownership. The ownership of the Springfield Lucky Horseshoes contends the facility has been poorly maintained and has become an embarrassment to the community. The Springfield Park District board counters that it spends hundreds of thousands of dollars every year to maintain and improve the facility. For months, lawyers have been meeting behind closed doors trying to hammer out an agreement to end the Park District’s ownership of the facility. * AP | Trump administration canceled a $4.9B loan guarantee for a line to deliver green power: The Trump administration on Wednesday canceled a $4.9 billion federal loan guarantee for a new high-voltage transmission line for delivering solar and wind-generated electricity from the Midwest to the eastern U.S., but the company indicated that project would go forward anyway. The U.S. Department of Energy declared that it is “not critical for the federal government to have a role” in the first phase of Chicago-based Invenergy’s planned Grain Belt Express. The department also questioned whether the $11 billion project could meet the financial conditions required for a loan guarantee. * Texas Tribune | Texas Republicans, including Gov. Abbott, were reluctant to redraw the state’s congressional maps. Then Trump got involved: Trump’s involvement underscores the immense power he holds over Texas Republicans and shows how far the president will go to protect his Washington trifecta that has handed him sweeping legislative wins, even if that means irritating those who are voting to approve his agenda in Congress. If Republicans lose control of the House in next year’s midterms, Trump’s agenda would be stalled and his remaining two lame-duck years in the White House would likely be replete with Democratic-led investigations. * Fox Business | Hershey raising chocolate prices by double-digits as cocoa costs soar: report: Due to an “unprecedented” increase in the cost of cocoa, prices of the chocolate maker’s products will rise by a percentage roughly in the double-digits, a Hershey spokesperson said Tuesday, according to Reuters. The increase accounts for both a higher list price and changes to the weight and amount of candy in its products’ packaging, Bloomberg News reported.
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IDFPR still hasn’t implemented 2023 doctor shortage law, but now there’s a new issue
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Sun-Times in April…
* Unfortunately, IDFPR is doing its usual (subpar) IDFPR job…
* Anyway, from the Cato Institute…
The guy who was busted by ICE received his training in the United States, so this isn’t a great comparison. But it is illustrative of how the federal government’s strong emphasis on immigration enforcement can clash with states’ policy objectives…
* Back to the Sun-Times story… ![]()
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Madigan confidant Mike McClain sentenced to 2 years in corruption case
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Tribune…
* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner…
* McClain’s lawyer urged Judge Shah to be “very careful” and give “the least amount of incarceration that is necessary”…
* Prosecutors have revised their sentencing recommendation for McClain, now asking for 36 months instead of the nearly six years originally recommended…
* John Seidel…
* Judge Shah’s sentence…
McClain is due in prison October 30th. …Adding…
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Study shows Chicago homicides down 33 percent from last July, down 25 percent from summer of 2019
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Council on Criminal Justice…
In the cities studied, homicides were down 17 percent from July of last year through the end of June this year. Homicides decreased nationally by 14 percent from July of 2019 through June of 2025. So, Chicago is about double the decreases in the other states. * Percent change in homicide in 29 cities, January to June, 2019-25… ![]() Homicides in Chicago are also down 13 percent from July of last year through the end of June this year. New York City homicides increased by 17 percent during the same time period. Chicago homicides increased every July-June 12-month period starting in July of 2020 through June of last year: 30 percent 20-21; 39 percent 21-22; 27 percent 22-23; 4 percent 23-24. * Background…
* And more from the NY Times…
Except penalties have not increased in Illinois since 2019. Some might say the same about enforcement.
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Catching up with the federal candidates
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The International Association of Fire Fighters Local 742 has endorsed Biss for the 9th Congressional District…
* Daily Herald…
* WSIU…
* Politico…
* More on Boykin from the Chicago Crusader…
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Rate Croke’s Comptroller launch video
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Press Release…
* The video…
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Open thread
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Michael McClain, lobbyist and Madigan confidant at the center of the ComEd bribery scandal, finally faces sentencing. Tribune…
- McClain, 77, will be the third of the four defendants to be sentenced in the case, and as with the others, U.S. District Judge Manish Shah will have wide latitude in deciding a punishment. - Earlier this week, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore was given two years in prison, while John Hooker, the utility’s former top internal lobbyist, received a year and a half behind bars at a hearing last week. * Governor Pritzker will attend the Jesse White Building Dedication Ceremony at 1:30 pm at 115 S. LaSalle Street in Chicago, honoring Illinois’ longest-serving Secretary of State. Click here to watch. * Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker calls Texas GOP’s remap effort ‘cheating,’ doesn’t rule out Illinois response: Gov. JB Pritzker is leaving the door open to changing Illinois’ congressional maps to “counterbalance” an attempt by Texas politicians to add more Republican seats to the U.S. House. The Texas legislature is meeting in special session this week with 18 items on their agenda, including redrawing the state’s congressional maps after President Donald Trump urged the state to redraw district boundaries ahead of the 2026 midterm election in hopes of adding five more Republicans to Texas’ congressional delegation and insulating his party against any seats they might lose elsewhere in the country. * Illinois Times | NPR Illinois celebrates 50 years: NPR Illinois delivers a combination of locally produced programs and syndicated National Public Radio shows such as All Things Considered, Morning Edition and Fresh Air. The station covers local topics in unique ways through programs such as Community Voices and State Week, and recently launched the J-Corps citizen journalist initiative where regular people report on issues in their communities. A 50th anniversary exhibit and programming will commemorate NPR Illinois’ milestone year. But with the imminent withdrawal of government support for public media around the country, will NPR Illinois still be broadcasting for the next 50 weeks, let alone the next 50 years? * Press Release | AG Raoul issues statement on court affirming nationwide injunction against unconstitutional birthright citizenship order: “No president can arbitrarily pick and choose which children born in the United States are allowed to be citizens of this country. Birthright citizenship has been enshrined in our Constitution in unambiguous language for more than 150 years, and no president has the authority to override the Constitution. The district court could not have been more right in February when it deemed the president’s order as being ‘blatantly unconstitutional.’ * Shaw Local | State Sen. Don DeWitte will not seek reelection: State Sen. Don DeWitte, a St. Charles Republican, announced that he will not seek reelection next year. DeWitte plans to serve out his current term, which ends in January 2027, according to a news release. DeWitte said in a news release that that his decision is not a retirement from public life but rather a redirection of his energy. * Tribune | ‘No cuts are going to be good cuts’: CPS parents, community frustrated with budget deficit woes: Reductions of nearly 2,000 educators and staff members in the past month have already affected Griffin’s life. While his sons do not communicate in the same way most people do, they are happy and developing, Griffin said, something he partially attributes to the district’s specialized programs and educators. CPS partially attributes the shortfall to several factors, including historic pension obligations, increasing costs of maintaining CPS buildings, and the rising needs for required services for students with disabilities. To minimize the budget gap, the district is now weighing decisions that have the potential to shift the trajectory of student education across the district for years to come. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago school board president says borrowing could solve CPS’s budget woes — but not in ‘isolation’: Chicago school board President Sean Harden laid out a case Wednesday for borrowing as “a viable option” for closing the district’s $734 million budget deficit. But he said it must be paired with long-term solutions to solve CPS’s larger financial crisis. “The centerpiece is children and education, and if the tool that we have to protect that is borrowing, then that’s the tool that we’ll use,” Harden said in an unrelated interview with Chalkbeat. “But we’re also saying: ‘Give us different tools, and then we will use that.’” * Sun-Times | City to invest $40 million to modernize shelters for unhoused people: With 750 permanent shelter beds in seven neighborhoods slated to become “fully accessible,” Mayor Brandon Johnson called a new initiative “the most significant step forward in the history of Chicago in our mission to make housing a human right.” * Sun-Times | A third crooked Bridgeport bank employee sentenced to home confinement, ordered to help repay $27 million: Cathy Torres, an ex-loan officer at Washington Federal Bank for Savings, faced five years in prison, but a federal judge agreed with a recommendation from prosecutors for a lighter sentence because of her cooperation. * Fox Chicago | American Airlines has canceled hundreds of Chicago flights this August: report: Flight schedule data from Cirium, shared with the newspaper, showed American has removed about 800 flights out of O’Hare for August, cutting roughly 76,000 seats. Among the routes most-affected by flight cuts are Detroit, Newark, Cleveland, Albuquerque — and Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport. An American Airlines spokesperson told The Arizona Republic that the reductions reflect the airline’s finalized schedule, which is typically set 100 days in advance. Airlines often start with a placeholder schedule nearly a year ahead and then adjust based on demand and operational factors like staffing, the spokesperson said. * WGN | Infleqtion plans $50M quantum computer at Illinois Quantum Microelectronics Park on South Side: “This technology has extraordinary potential,” said Gil Quiniones, CEO of ComEd. “It could lead to breakthroughs in major economic sectors from energy, health care, cybersecurity, finance and more.” The biggest announcement from happenings at the event came from Infleqtion, one of three tenant companies at the 128-acre Illinois Quantum Microelectronics Park (IQMP) on the South Side. The company announced it will build the first utility scale quantum computer based on neutral atom technology—a $50 million investment in the IQMP’s growing infrastructure. * Sun-Times | Joffrey Ballet will remain at Lyric Opera House an additional seven years: Chicago’s Joffrey Ballet will remain the resident dance company of the Lyric Opera House for an additional seven years, the companies announced Wednesday. The Joffrey’s current lease was slated to end following the 2027 season, but this extension will keep the city’s top ballet company at the massive downtown opera house through 2034. Joffrey first began performing under Lyric’s roof in October 2021, after a delay caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. “Joffrey’s move to the Lyric Opera House, a partnership between two of Chicago’s leading cultural institutions, has opened the door to bigger, bolder storytelling,” Joffrey’s President and CEO Greg Cameron said in a statement. * WGN | Report: MLB to officially announce Wrigley Field as 2027 All-Star Game host: Crain’s Justin Laurence reported Wednesday that Major League Baseball is set to officially recognize Wrigley Field as the host of the 2027 MLB All-Star Game on Aug. 1. Sources told Laurence MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and city officials will be in attendance for an event making the announcement official in Chicago. The Score’s Bruce Levine first reported Wrigley Field would host the 2027 MLB All-Star Game back in late May, with the official announcement to come later this summer. * Chicago Reader | Cook County state’s attorney stops maintaining lists of discredited cops: Reporters learned in May that O’Neill Burke had abruptly discontinued use of the disclosure list after previously providing it in February, according to her office’s responses to public records requests filed by the Invisible Institute and the Reader. And, instead of retaining Foxx’s publicly available do not call list, O’Neill Burke replaced it with a shorter, internal list of officers who were stripped of police powers by local law enforcement agencies. Although the vast majority—but not all—of the officers on Foxx’s do not call list had been relieved of their police powers, that list and O’Neill Burke’s internal list vary substantially from one another. * NBC Chicago | Hollywood Casino Joliet riverboat to close after 30 years on Des Plaines River: Hollywood Casino Joliet’s parent company, PENN Entertainment, Inc., announced the July 29 closure comes amid preparations for the new $185 million land-based property opening August 11, pending customary regulatory approvals. All gaming operations at the riverboat property will maintain normal operating hours until closing at 5:59 a.m. July 29 and the hotel near the casino property will accept reservations up to July 26, according to the announcement. * Sun-Times | Amazon sued, accused of bias by former Matteson warehouse worker: Mario Willis, an African American with a disability, was an Amazon packer at a warehouse in south suburban Matteson who was fired in May 2023. He said Amazon discriminated against him and retaliated after he saw a female worker sexually harass and grope another female colleague, according to a complaint filed July 9 in Cook County Circuit Court. “Amazon egregiously punished an employee who tried to do the right thing by standing up for his co-worker,” said Heidi Karr Sleper, a lawyer at Workplace Law Partners who represents Willis. “Not many warehouse employees and lawyers have the resources to fight back against a corporation the size of Amazon.” * Tribune | Charges dismissed against Kees Firearms owners: After more than two years in court, Will County prosecutors moved Monday to drop several criminal charges, first filed in 2023, against two New Lenox business owners, after a circuit court judge denied their request to reschedule the trial date. Jeffery Regnier, the owner of Kee Firearms and Training in New Lenox, and Greta Keranen, with Kee Construction, will not face charges of theft by deception, burglary, loan fraud, wire fraud or burglary fraud, unless the state decides to refile the charges. * Daily Herald | Buffalo Grove spurns apartment proposal after developer suggests increasing density: Village board members expressed frustration during Monday’s meeting as David Schwartz of SFP Properties suggested to trustees he needed to update the plan by either increasing the density of the project, perhaps adding a building, or going to an originally proposed townhouse concept. “You kind of threw us a curve,” Village President Eric Smith said. The proposal for the apartments, which would be located just west of the Riverwalk Place Apartments, targeted primarily young professionals and empty nesters, with rents projected as high as $4,000. * Daily Southtown | Orland fire district, firefighers union, debate ambulance service level after unit taken offline: Firefighters in Orland Park and the president of the Orland Fire Protection District Board are at odds over whether paramedic service and response times in the district have suffered since an ambulance was taken out of service early last month. […] Board President Beth Damas Kaspar, in a statement Tuesday, insisted that in reviewing data since the ambulance was taken offline, paramedic services have not suffered and the ambulance “is not needed to maintain the excellent services provided by the District.” Orland Professional Firefighters, the union representing firefighters, insists the president is wrong, and said the ambulance taken out of service had covered the “busiest area of Orland” and that there is a “dire need for additional ambulance staffing.” * Daily Herald | Demolition of massive former Sears HQ in Hoffman Estates reaches completion: “Of course, we will continue crushing concrete and asphalt for reuse as fill as we get the site pad ready,” said Katy Hancock, vice president of public relations for Dallas-based Compass Datacenters. “All of this will be completed by end of August 2025, slightly ahead of schedule.” That’s when the 273-acre site at the west end of the village will transition to a construction site for Compass’ five hyperscale data centers, each more than a quarter-million square feet. * Daily Southtown | Oak Lawn bans kratom and THC products, though won’t enforce for now: Despite the Oak Lawn Village Board voting Tuesday to prohibit the sale of kratom and THC products, Mayor Terry Vorderer says the village will wait to enforce the law. The prohibition of kratom and THC products, including Delta-9, was added to the tobacco retail regulation ordinance. But Vorderer said he learned from attorneys after the vote the ordinance may need to be reworked. * Daily Herald | Fox Lake enacts rules for e-bikes and e-scooters to enhance safety, promote responsible use: Fox Lake has become the latest community to enact rules regulating electric bikes and electric scooters on village roads and sidewalks. The village board Tuesday approved an ordinance to address growing concerns over safety, speed regulation and appropriate areas for e-bikes and e-scooters to be used. “We have been having a lot of incidents of careless operators,” said police Chief Dawn DeServi. She said general safety and a desire to get ahead of the situation before anything disastrous occurred was the reason for the action. * WCIA | Sean Grayson files new motions claiming self-defense in shooting of Sonya Massey: Grayson and his attorneys filed three motions on Wednesday, asking that Judge Ryan Cadagin admit evidence showing two things about Massey: her existing state of mind and alleged propensity for violence. The third motion was a cease-and-desist order, asking that the Massey Commission end alleged activities in Peoria County, where Grayson’s trial will take place. In their motions, Grayson’s lawyers claimed that Massey was “purported to have been mentally troubled” in the days and hours before her death, and that in the days before, she was involved in acts of violence with neighbors. * WICS | Former deputy’s defense files motions in Sonya Massey case: Grayson’s team claims that events leading up to Massey’s death indicate a propensity for violence and describe her as “mentally troubled.” According to the first motion, on June 27, Massey texted a car salesperson, stating she was “not okay” and feared she was “about to die” at St. John’s Hospital. On July 5, a day before her death, Massey’s mother, Donna, took her to the hospital after calling 911, reporting that Massey was having a mental breakdown and had broken her car window. * WICS | Former Springfield officer sentenced for sexual misconduct: Taylor Staff, a former Springfield police officer, has pleaded guilty to multiple charges, including aggravated criminal sexual abuse, two counts of official misconduct, custodial sexual misconduct, and criminal sexual abuse. […] The charges stem from incidents involving three separate victims that occurred while Staff was on duty between January and July 2020. Staff was arrested in 2021. * WCIA | Mattoon taking the next steps to prevent algae appearing again: Last week WCIA reported that the city was taking steps to prevent that toxic algae bloom from popping up. They applied for a permit to use algaecide…a chemical to kill it… but were waiting for approval. Although there’s still a lot to be done, the EPA did approve it. Now, the hope is Mattoon will continue making progress. * WGLT | McLean County Democrats leader will seek state party position: Patrick Cortesi, chair of the McLean County Democratic Party, has announced his candidacy for Democratic state central committeeman in Illinois’ 16th Congressional District. Each congressional district in the state has two central committeemen, who work as the governing body of the state party. The 34 members elect the executive director and chair of the state party. Cortesi said the position would be in addition to his role in the county’s Democratic Party and it would not impede on his other duties. * WGEM | Quincy Public Schools report $12 million operating budget surplus: QPS Chief of Business Operations Ryan Whicker revealed Quincy Public Schools is under budget with a $12 million surplus in their operating funds. “It’s probably the biggest one we’ve had since I’ve been here, which is 10 years,” Whicker said. According to Whicker, the funds come from the third and final round of Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief funds that started during the COVID Pandemic. * BND | What’s up with the barricades at the Market Square Building in Belleville?: The city of Belleville has set up barriers and caution tape on the sidewalk in front of a downtown building because a decorative section of the roof’s cornice fell off. One piece of the rigid foam material from the Market Square Building at the corner of East Main and North High streets was spotted on the ground Friday morning and another piece was removed later in the day, according to city Building Commissioner Steve Thouvenot. * WSIL | Several Franklin County organizations step up to host school supply drives and giveaways: The Southern Illinois Back to School Expo in Marion has been one of the largest school supply drives and “one-stop shops” for getting kids ready to start the school year strong in years past. However, the expo’s officials say due to funding issues, they had to cancel. Now several Franklin County organizations are stepping up to fill in the gap. Take Action Today, Benton’s Fire and Police Departments, and Ziegler’s Fire Department are stepping up to make sure the kids have what they need to go back to school. * AP | Why are data nerds racing to save US government statistics?: After watching data sets be altered or disappear from U.S. government websites in unprecedented ways after President Donald Trump began his second term, an army of outside statisticians, demographers and computer scientists have joined forces to capture, preserve and share data sets, sometimes clandestinely. Their goal is to make sure they are available in the future, believing that democracy suffers when policymakers don’t have reliable data and that national statistics should be above partisan politics. * NYT | Alden Global Capital Makes a Play for The Dallas Morning News: MediaNews Group, the newspaper operator owned by the investment firm Alden Global Capital, put in a bid on Tuesday to buy The Dallas Morning News, a last-minute twist in the sale of a publication that has been locally owned for 140 years. This month, the media conglomerate Hearst agreed to acquire DallasNews Corporation, the parent company of The Dallas Morning News, in a deal valued at $75 million, or $14 a share. That deal has been approved by the boards of each company and was expected to close later this year.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Thursday, Jul 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Thursday, Jul 24, 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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