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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

The Trump administration’s refocusing of federal resources on immigration has landed at the Chicago office of the IRS’s criminal investigation bureau, where agents accustomed to working complex financial cases are now being prepared for unprecedented special assignments to help track down undocumented immigrants, a memo obtained by the Tribune shows.

The communication sent to staff this week by Ramsey Covington, special agent in charge of the IRS-Criminal Investigation’s Chicago field office, said he was still “working to get legal advice/clarification” on the situation, but that as many as a dozen Chicago-based agents were expected to be detailed to the Department of Homeland Security’s local immigration efforts for up to six months.

The plan to “deputize” IRS agents, which was first revealed in February in a leaked letter from Department of Homeland Secretary Kristi Noem, is uncharted territory and comes with several snags, including that IRS agents are not trained on federal immigration and border security laws, collectively known as “Title 8,” and could potentially face civil lawsuits if they overstep their authority.

The memo from Covington sought to allay any fears in the ranks, though he acknowledged the situation was “fluid” and he was still seeking clarification from the Department of Justice on his office’s exact role. No agents would be put in the field without proper clearance, Covington assured.

* Brenden Moore

Anyone who knew Emma Shafer knows exactly where she would have been last Wednesday. […]

Emma was a friend and ally to immigrants, whether they were living here with permanent legal status or not. Among the many organizations she gave her time to was the Springfield Immigrant Advocacy Network, which assists immigrant and refugee families in Illinois’ capital city. […]

I am not an objective person here. Emma was my friend, and I’ve gotten to know her remarkable family well since her passing. But even if it were a total stranger, my view would be the same: The immediate family’s opinion is the only one that matters. If they do not want their deceased loved one to become a poster child for a political cause, then those wishes should be respected.

Noem was joined at the presser by other people whose relatives were allegedly killed by people without legal status. If that’s how they want to honor their loved ones’ memories, that’s fine.

But the political theater in Springfield last Wednesday was built around the narrative of Emma’s case. And without her family’s blessing, that was wrong.

Sadly, it is just one example of a political culture that has become increasingly callous and cruel. It is one where many political operators seemingly throw basic decency out the window and don’t offer a shred of genuine empathy.

Go read the rest.

* WGN

The Illinois High School Association, the state’s governing body for high school athletics, will collaborate with state lawmakers over a bill that aims to allow student-athletes to compete in more sporting events not sanctioned by the IHSA while their high school seasons are going on.

The IHSA announced in a news release this week that it’s working with state Sen. Ram Villivalam (D-Chicago) and state Rep. Janet Yang Rohr (D-Naperville) to expand opportunities for student-athletes to compete in local and national sporting events, based on the two lawmakers’ work on House Bill 3037, known as the Right to Play Act.

The bill has passed the Illinois House and is currently awaiting further action in the Senate.

* Sen. Robert Peters picked up an endorsement from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders


*** Statewide ***

* CBS Chicago | Illinois DMV services affected by nationwide outage impacting U.S. passport verification, Giannoulias says: The Secretary of State’s office confirmed DMVs are running as normal and released the following statement: “We activated a process that we put in place to enable us to process U.S. passports and immigration documents from other countries at our DMV facilities. We are not experiencing any delays at our DMVs as a result.”

* WLDS | Illinois Filling Potholes: Illinois spent $19-million last year to fill the holes on the interstate system, and other highways. […] Paul Wappel of the state transportation department says you can expect more of the same this year. He says crews on on the road now, working through the summer heat. Wappel says the crews will be working through the summer.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WBEZ | Young candidates are trying to unseat incumbents in Illinois and beyond: The 2020 presidential election was a contest between two of the oldest candidates in U.S. history, and the average age of a U.S. senator is 65. However, there’s also been a recent uptick in Gen Z and millennial candidates running for public office. Reset talks with journalists and a state representative about the rise in political candidacies by young people.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Former deputy seeks release as Illinois Supreme Court hears arguments: Grayson has been in custody since his arrest last year following the shooting of Sonya Massey in her home during a 911 call about a prowler. On Wednesday, Grayson’s defense argued that he would not jeopardize his trial by violating any release conditions. They emphasized that Grayson would comply with all regulations if released. The prosecution countered by highlighting Grayson’s history of disregarding regulations, suggesting he may pose a danger to the community if released.

* PJ Star | Why Peoria won’t reconsider its recent decision to pass a grocery tax: There was no official debate about Peoria’s freshly passed grocery tax on Tuesday night, but there were more accusations of political gamesmanship lobbed around the horseshoe as a motion to reconsider the tax failed to gain traction. Peoria’s 1% grocery tax, which was passed last month to replace the 1% state grocery tax that will end on Jan. 1, 2026, will remain in place after a motion to reconsider the tax put forward by councilmember Zach Oyler failed.

* WCIA | Champaign County honors lives lost in the line of duty for National Police Week: Signing up to be in law enforcement is no easy task. That’s why Champaign County took time to honor their officers during National Police Week. The community came out to support the men and women who have lost their lives in the line of duty Tuesday morning. The ceremony focused on officers in Champaign County and throughout the state, calling each person’s name one by one.

* BND | Infection control among safety issues in metro-east hospitals, watchdog report says: Illinois moved up in the state rankings this spring, with three additional “A” hospitals bringing the Land of Lincoln from 23rd to 20th in the nation for the greatest percentage of “A” hospitals. Out of eight local hospitals, one saw an improved grade this spring compared to the fall, and none got lower letter grades.

* WCIA | ‘Humbling and exciting’: Sullivan interim band director up for Grammy award: Mattoon’s Christopher Keniley is officially a quarter finalist for the 2026 Grammy Music Educator Award. He took over leadership of the Sullivan band program after tragedy struck last year and kept the music steady through sorrow.

* WSIL | Football at John A. Logan College? Local impact under review: John A. Logan College is exploring the potential of launching a football program. Board Chairman Aaron R. Smith has formed a special advisory committee to evaluate its feasibility. “This isn’t something we’re rushing into,” said Chairman Smith. “We’ve seen another college in southern Illinois begin exploring the same idea, and we believe it makes sense for us to take a serious look as well. But to be clear — if the committee’s findings suggest it isn’t financially viable, I would not be in favor of moving forward. Ultimately, any decision would rest with the full board.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago principals union blasts CPS CEO budget planning, calling it ‘magical’ and ‘false’: In a letter to members, obtained by WBEZ, the Chicago Principals & Administrators Association says their understanding is that school-level budgets are based on the premise that CPS will get increased state funding, receive all promised federal funding and, the most unlikely, the city will liquidate all of its special taxing districts called TIFs. CEO Pedro Martinez has advocated for TIFs to be liquidated, but it is considered extremely unrealistic.

* Crain’s | City panel OKs subsidy for 400-unit office-to-apartment conversion: The Chicago Community Development Commission today approved the tax-increment financing money for a $184 million conversion of the 41-story tower at 105 W. Adams St. The proposal from a venture of Chicago-based Primera Group is the sixth project born out of a program launched in 2022 by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot and continued by Mayor Brandon Johnson to help developers transform empty office space on and near LaSalle Street into apartments.

* Block Club | Mayor Brandon Johnson Says He Hasn’t Done Enough To Convince Chicago Of Job He’s Doing: Reports indicate Johnson is now preparing to appoint his chief operating officer, John Roberson, a City Hall veteran and one-time aviation commissioner, as CTA president. Transit advocacy groups are calling on Johnson to conduct a nationwide search for the role, which they say should be filled by someone with “deep experience running a public transit system in a major metropolitan region” to rebuild trust with riders. But Johnson told Block Club on Monday that a nationwide search had already been completed.

* Sun-Times | First-of-its-kind community law office opens in Roseland, offering families legal defense and support: The prospect of Johnson tapping Roberson for the role drew opposition at last week’s meeting of the CTA board, which has final approval of the agency’s next president. Johnson would not confirm that Roberson was his selection — though he still defended Roberson’s credentials. “Here’s someone who has managed aviation buildings, he managed the Democratic National Convention. Here’s someone who has strong roots in the city of Chicago, who understands why transportation is important,” Johnson said. “This is a person who was highly respected and regarded and has my complete confidence.”

* Fox Chicago | Chicago crash: Driver slams into parked ISP squad car on I-290, police say: The driver of the Dodge, Cordell Franklin, 40, of Chicago, did not report any injuries from the crash, ISP said. Police did not say if any troopers were injured. Franklin was cited for driving under the influence, illegal transportation of alcohol, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, improper lane usage, following too closely, operating an uninsured motor vehicle, and a Move Over Law violation.

* WBEZ | Section 8 renters say landlords routinely reject their housing choice vouchers: Tens of thousands of Chicago-area residents rely on federal rental assistance through the Housing Choice Voucher program, often referred to as Section 8, to help pay for rent in the private market. While local and state laws bar landlords from discriminating against voucher holders, recent discrimination complaints and lawsuits have shown the legislation hasn’t moved the needle. Some voucher holders say it is routine to encounter landlords who say they don’t participate in the program.

* Block Club | Pokémon Fossil Exhibit Coming To Field Museum Next Year: The exhibition is set to open May 22, 2026, and it will be the first time it has appeared outside of Japan, according to a Field Museum news release. It merges the worlds of video games and archeology, with visitors able to compare fossil Pokémon with real-world fossils. The Pokémon exhibit was developed by Japan’s National Museum of Nature and Science, The Pokémon Company group and the Field Museum. It’ll feature “professors” from the Pokémon world, an “Excavator Pikachu” and Field Museum scientists who can help visitors examine fossils from both worlds, including real ones of dinosaurs.

* Sun-Times | Tracking the Bears on NFL schedule release day: New head coach Ben Johnson will make his Week 1 debut in a “Monday Night Football” home game against the rival Vikings, per Jordan Schultz of Fox Sports. The Bears already know two prominent games on their schedule. On Monday, the Bears learned they will play at the Eagles on Nov. 28 at 2 p.m. in Amazon Prime Video’s Black Friday game.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Northwestern faces another federal investigation alleging discrimination against Jewish students: In a statement, the agency and the Trump administration accused Northwestern and other elite universities of failing to protect Jewish students during the widespread campus protests following the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks by Hamas on Israel and Israel’s military response in Gaza. “The investigation will examine whether the University complied with its obligations under Title VI not to discriminate against Jewish students, such that it denied them an educational opportunity or benefit,” a HHS statement released Tuesday morning said.

* Daily Herald | Carpentersville purchases former Kohl’s building at Spring Hill Mall for $2 million: Kohl’s, which closed in April, was the last available property at the mall. West Dundee purchased the remainder of the property, including portions within the Carpentersville village limits, for $10.25 million. “While the village has generally abided by the policy of not becoming an investor in commercial property, the Kohl’s location is integral to the village’s ongoing interest in the area,” Village Attorney Brad Stewart wrote in a memo to trustees.

* Daily Herald | ‘Moving in a new direction’: Carpentersville names new village manager:The action comes two weeks after an April 29 closed-door meeting resulted in John O’Sullivan’s firing. The former village administrator confirmed last week his termination and said he cleared out his office on April 30. Without discussion, trustees formally approved O’Sullivan’s removal. They then named Brad Stewart, who has served as the village attorney for seven years, as village manager, effective June 1. “We’re moving in a new direction,” Village President John Skillman said after Tuesday’s meeting.

*** National ***

* Business Insider | VW and Rivian’s new $22,500 car proves cheap EVs don’t have to be low-tech, the Tesla rival’s software boss says: The Tesla rival is partnering with Volkswagen to provide technology for a new $22,500 electric car, and Wassym Bensaid, Rivian’s chief software officer, said the coming EV wouldn’t compromise on tech despite its low price point. VW and Rivian announced a deal last year for the German car giant to invest over $5 billion in the startup and form a joint company to develop next-generation software and EV technology, with Bensaid and VW exec Carsten Helbing as co-CEOs.

* AP | More than 1,000 Starbucks baristas go on strike to protest new dress code: The mass layoffs come just weeks after Microsoft reported strong sales and profits that beat Wall Street expectations for the January-March quarter, which investors took as a dose of relief during a turbulent time for the tech sector and U.S. economy. “I think many people have this conception of layoffs as something that struggling companies have to do to save themselves, which is one reason for layoffs but it’s not the only reason,” said Daniel Zhao, lead economist at workplace reviews site Glassdoor. “Big tech companies have trimmed their workforces as they rearrange their strategies and pull back from the more aggressive hiring that they did during the early post-pandemic years.”

  3 Comments      


Don’t Greenwash Discrimination: Demand Inclusive Labor Standards In Energy Storage Legislation

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois charts its path toward a clean energy future, lawmakers must remember the promises made under CEJA—the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. CEJA was never just about clean energy; it was about equitable clean energy. That means creating good-paying union jobs for all workers, especially those from historically excluded Black and Brown communities.

Yet today, a new energy storage bill threatens to undo that vision. Without strong, inclusive Project Labor Agreement (PLA) language, this legislation risks handing energy jobs to a narrow slice of the construction industry—jobs that will go disproportionately to white, politically connected workers, while locking out the very communities CEJA aimed to uplift.

We can’t let Illinois’ clean energy transition be built on the backs of exclusion. Labor unity means every union has a seat at the table—not just the favored few. Ironworkers, roofers, painters, bricklayers, glaziers, boilermakers, cement masons, carpenters, millwrights and many other crafts helped build this state and deserve a shot at building its future.

Lawmakers: don’t sell out working families. Reject any energy storage legislation that doesn’t include inclusive PLA language. Because when we say “green jobs,” we should mean jobs that are union, local, and equitable.

This isn’t just about jobs—it’s about justice, too.

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Question of the day

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Wut

His legacy is synonymous with Rosemont, but it’s likely many of the visitors to the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center didn’t know or even remember the man whose name is on the building.

Thanks to patented technology and a dose of artificial intelligence, you’ll soon be able to meet the Northwest suburban politician and power broker.

The Rosemont village board this week agreed to spend $176,265 to bring the town’s founding mayor back to life in the form of a walking, talking animatronic figure that will be designed by Jacksonville, Florida-based Sally Dark Rides.

The robotic mayor will be the centerpiece of a 4,300-square-foot local history museum being built out on the first floor of the new village hall at 9501 Technology Blvd., next to the Fashion Outlets of Chicago. […]

The robot will be motion activated to speak when visitors are nearby. What’s still to be decided is whether it will have a set of prerecorded lines, or interact with patrons in conversation.

* The Question: What historic Illinois figures would you like to see reincarnated as walking, talking AI robots? Explain.

  34 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Try again

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From WAND TV

“We do not have a revenue problem,” said Rep. Jed Davis (R-Yorkville). “We have a priority problem. This money isn’t ours. It’s the people’s money. So it’s time to put it back into their pockets and live by a simple principle, which is spend less and live better.” […]

Davis plans to release his budget proposal for public viewing Wednesday.

* From Rep. Davis today

After my agency-by-agency review, I’m proposing a $44 billion budget - a whopping 20% reduction from the Governor’s plan. This proposal isn’t about slashing essential services. It’s about rooting out waste, restoring fiscal sanity, and ending government overreach. We can reduce the size of government without hurting the people who fund it.

* But then Rep. Davis goes on to list a ton of capital projects (click here and see them for yourself), which won’t reduce the operating budget, which he claims to be cutting. For example

IL Dept of Corrections Capital Improvements ($900M FY25)

Deferred Maintenance and Infrastructure ($450M FY25)

Quantum Manufacturing Subsidies ($500M FY25)

Grants to Local Governments and Organizations ($487M FY25)

Broadband Expansions ($150M FY25)

Statewide Road Construction ($1.34B FY25)

Electric Vehicle Infrastructure ($149M FY25)

Wastewater Loan Programs ($1.63B FY25)

* Davis also proposes $681 million in cuts to Climate and Clean Energy Programs, which are heavily federally funded (for now).

* Cuts to DCFS? But of course

IL Dept of Children and Family Services, Aging ($509 million increase FY24 to FY25)

* Shorting pension payments? Check

Pension Contributions ($160M)

* Summer EBT is a federal program administered by the state

Summer EBT Programs ($600M FY25)

  30 Comments      


Musical interlude

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Boat Drink Caucus reunited last night at Boone’s during the Dave Caucus party and a good time was had by all

Even some members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus attended and appeared to be enjoying themselves.

* From the comptroller’s office: “Comptroller Mendoza’s staff surprised her with a Barber’s Shop Quartet serenade from the Land of Lincoln Chorus for her birthday after she spoke at the Firefighters’ Memorial Tuesday.” Here’s a clip

  3 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

A bill that would restrict landlords’ ability to charge move-in fees, background check fees and late fees is working its way through the Illinois Legislature.

The legislation’s sponsors argue that the fees some building owners charge go well beyond the cost of turning over units and create additional hurdles for renters in an already challenging market, while those in the real estate industry say the bill would limit how housing providers can protect themselves from bad tenants and cause them to pass the costs on in the form of higher rents.

In its current form, HB 3564 would ban move-in and application fees, cap fees for background checks at $20 and limit late fees to a small percentage of the monthly rent (i.e., $10 for the first $1,000 and 5% of any amount exceeding that). The bill is scheduled to go before a Senate committee on May 14. […]

Michael Glasser, president of the Neighborhood Building Owners Alliance, said many landlords in Chicago are charging these fees in lieu of taking a security deposit. Chicago’s Residential Landlord & Tenant Ordinance has stringent requirements for handling security deposits and severe legal penalties for violating them, so many building owners and managers in the city opt to charge a smaller, nonrefundable fee to go toward covering any damage rather than opening themselves up to that risk, Glasser said. He’s advocated for reforming the ordinance instead.

* Sen. Mark Walker

The whole digital assets industry, commonly called “crypto,” is booming in Illinois and in our country. […]

In Illinois, we need a balance between fostering innovation and growth in high-tech industries, and protecting consumers from fraud and abuse.

The Illinois Digital Assets and Consumer Protection Act (DACPA) is designed to do both. The act would require digital asset businesses to register, have measures to address cybersecurity risks and establish consumer protections, including disclosures. […]

An essential part of this bill is that it exempts companies who use block chain for managing goods and inventory, peer-to-peer transactions, digital contracts, artists selling NFTs, and developers of supportive and innovative software. It also exempts those already subject to regulation by other relevant government agencies such as the Commodity Futures Trading Commission or U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. In fact, the intent of the bill is to foster an environment where innovators and entrepreneurs can grow into broader markets and achieve their goals. […]

It’s time for some crypto-bros to put on their big boy pants.

* SEIU Healthcare Illinois…

As Illinois faces an urgent crisis where seniors can’t get the care they need and workers can’t afford to stay in the industry, a grassroots coalition will hold a lobby day and rally on Wednesday, May 14 to call on legislators to support SB 0120 and HB 1330, legislation that would raise wages for home care workers and help address the workforce shortage that is resulting in care gaps for seniors.

During the day of action, seniors and care workers with SEIU Healthcare Illinois will lobby and rally at the Illinois Capitol to send a clear message to Illinois lawmakers: Care Can’t Wait.

The Care Can’t Wait campaign, driven by workers, advocates, care recipients and their families, is fighting to ensure seniors can access quality, affordable and dignified care in the setting of their choice. The coalition is demanding the state legislature increase the wage floor for home care workers serving seniors in the Community Care Program from $18/hr to $20/hr in 2026 via a Department on Aging rate increase in the budget. Home care workers are leaving the industry in droves – at a rate 50% higher than the average occupation – because they can’t afford to stay. Over 20,000 seniors in Illinois who need home care services are not receiving care – which means they can’t age with dignity in their homes. Raising wages is critical to making sure experienced home care workers can stay in the industry and provide the quality care so many seniors and people with disabilities depend on across Illinois.

Given forecasts of declining state revenues, advocates and elected allies are demanding that major corporations and the ultra-wealthy pay their fair share in taxes to ensure that Illinois has the resources for the investments that seniors and working families need.

With the May 31 deadline for state budget approval quickly approaching, the clock is ticking for care workers and the seniors they serve. For home care workers, a modest $2 an hour increase would ensure they have the support they need to make ends meet and stay in the industry.

* Subscribers know more. Center Square

In a state that has been striving to get more electric vehicles on the roads, an Illinois lawmaker wants to place restrictions on how consumers can buy an EV.

State Sen. Ram Villivallam’s Senate Bill 1939 would prevent future independent EV manufacturers from selling cars except through auto dealer networks.

“We want to continue to support our auto dealers to do the work that they’re doing and do it even more, especially at a time where Tesla is doing terrible,” said Villivallam, D-Chicago.

Tesla and Rivian currently sell their vehicles directly to the customer. They would not be affected by the legislation.

* Sen. Suzy Glowiak Hilton…

To further protect children in state care from being placed in dangerous home environments, State Senator Suzy Glowiak Hilton advanced legislation that would expand the list of individuals prohibited from taking on the care of a child in foster or adoptive capacities.

“Children under state care have already endured hardship, including the loss of their familiar living situation,” said Glowiak Hilton (D-Western Springs). “This legislation aims to close dangerous loopholes to ensure their placements are as safe and stable as possible.”

House Bill 871 would prohibit the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services from placing a child in a foster or adoptive home with an individual who has a record of human or sex trafficking.

Current law already prevents placements with individuals convicted of certain violent felonies, but the law’s application varies depending on the type of placement and who in the household has the conviction. Glowiak Hilton’s bill would close any gaps in interpretation by making it clear that human and sex trafficking convictions disqualify someone from receiving final placement approval, regardless of the placement type. […]

House Bill 871 passed the Senate Child Welfare Committee on Tuesday.

* Sen. Dave Koehler…

State Senator Dave Koehler is leading legislation to ease the financial burden on student teachers and provide incentives for experienced educators to mentor Illinois’ next generation of teachers.

“Our state needs talented, dedicated teachers and that starts with removing some of the financial hurdles students face when pursuing an education degree,” said Koehler (D-Peoria). “This program will help aspiring teachers afford the costs of student teaching while rewarding experienced educators who guide them along the way.”

House Bill 1375 would establish a stipend program through the Illinois Board of Higher Education, offering student teachers stipends of up to $10,000 per semester for a maximum of two consecutive semesters. The program also would include stipends of $2,000 per semester for cooperating teachers who mentor student teachers, which are also limited to two consecutive semesters each year.

The program is set to reduce the financial strain on education majors during the critical student-teaching phase and incentivize experienced educators to continue mentoring. […]

House Bill 1375 was heard today in the Senate Appropriations – Education Committee and awaits further consideration.

* WAND

A plan to help guide the use of artificial intelligence in schools is moving forward during the final weeks of session.

The Illinois State Board of Education would be tasked with creating the first framework for evaluating and implementing AI technology for teachers and students.

Statewide guidance for school districts and educators could include explanation of basic AI concepts and specific ways it can be used to inform teaching or learning while preserving human relationships. […]

Senate Bill 1920 also requires the guidance to touch upon impacts of artificial intelligence on student data privacy and best practices for developing student literacy with AI. The State Board of Education would develop and publish the guidance by July 1, 2026 and provide continuous updates as it deems necessary. […]

Senate Bill 1920 could also update the state’s internet safety education curriculum by recommending instruction on safe and responsible use of artificial intelligence, similar to social media websites, chat rooms, e-mail, and instant messaging.

* WIFR

Illinois Representative Maurice West (D-67) steps into the Rock River Valley Blood Center on Monday to discuss his bill (HB 1179) and raise awareness on the importance of passing such bills to “save lives.”

“This will give another incentive to community members to donate blood because it’s needed. It’s very much needed across the board,” Rep. West said.

The bill states that, if passed, it would create an incentive that would provide a $250 tax credit for those who donate their blood four times or more per taxable year.

To be eligible for the tax credit, donors would have to donate their blood to one of the non-profit blood donation centers in Illinois, including the Rock River Valley Blood Center, the Red Cross, Versiti, Vitalant, and Impact Life Blood Services.

HB1179 did not advance before House deadlines.

* Sen. Julie Morrison…

Today, children have internet access at every turn — from tablets to phones and other smart devices — putting them at greater risk of exploitation. To help protect children from this growing threat, State Senator Julie Morrison is working with the Illinois State Police to expand their authority to investigate and put an end to these internet crimes.

“Online predators don’t limit themselves based on county lines, so neither should our police investigations,” said Morrison (D-Lake Forest). “This legislation removes barriers to allow state police to act quickly and effectively when children are targeted online.”

House Bill 2586 would give ISP’s Division of Criminal Investigation broader jurisdiction to pursue online child exploitation cases and work alongside local task forces across the state. The legislation aims to improve response times, close jurisdictional gaps and strengthen coordination between agencies working to protect children from digital threats. These changes would bring Illinois in line with Alicia’s Law, a national initiative that empowers specialized law enforcement units to track and prosecute predators who target children online.

In addition to expanding protections for children, the bill includes several technical changes to update ISP’s procedures related to task force liability coverage, the security of criminal justice systems and the handling of commercial vehicle safety checks. […]

House Bill 2586 passed the Senate Criminal Law Committee on Tuesday.

  16 Comments      


340B Drug Discount Savings Help Patients In Need – Vote YES On SB 2385/HB 3350

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Every day, hospitals go above and beyond for their patients. Take the case of a critically ill patient who received 47 days of care at OSF HealthCare Saint Francis Medical Center in Peoria for a serious brain infection. The patient had no insurance, so the hospital’s care team coordinated a Medicaid application.

At discharge, the patient needed antibiotics and antiviral drugs costing $16,000 for self-pay, but which the hospital could offer for $12,000 through the federal 340B drug discount program. It was still beyond the patient’s means, so the hospital secured a donor to cover the cost.

While hospitals are working to ensure the best possible patient outcomes, pharmaceutical companies are devising ways to limit access to lifesaving medications. The 340B program was created to increase access to care and enhance services for uninsured and low-income patients.

In 2023, OSF HealthCare experienced a 31% decrease in drug discount savings because of drugmaker restrictions, such as limiting hospitals to only one contract pharmacy within a defined mileage radius. “The reduction in revenue directly impacts our ability to consistently fund programs aimed at improving access to healthcare in our rural communities or fund patient assistance programs,” the system said.

Support Senate Bill 2385 and House Bill 3350 to support optimal health for all. Learn more.

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Harmon on transit funding: ‘Perhaps the greatest accountability is cutting off the checks’ (Updated)

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate President Don Harmon and House Speaker Chris Welch spoke at the annual Illinois Manufacturers’ Association/Illinois Retail Merchants Association lobby day last week. Among other things, they were asked these questions: “How do you see the transit playing out? Is it something that gets done this spring? Is it a Fall issue? Does reform come first and maybe revenue second? How do you see the transit solution coming together?”

Harmon: Well, I have said from the onset, the cliff can be a crisis, or it can be an opportunity. And my starting point in this has always been we need to build the transit system for 2050, not try to rebuild the one from 1975. It’s just a very different world and we need to internalize that and make sure we’re thinking about the rider. And so for those reasons, I’ve been relatively agnostic on governance. Reforms are necessary. The rider-focused reforms. Any of our constituents should be able to walk out their front door and get anywhere in the RTA service area without worrying whether they were on a CTA bus or a Pace bus, CTA, L or a Metra train. They should have one app on their phone or one card in their pocket and one schedule. All of this needs to be focused on the rider, because you all need people to get to work. You need people to shop. You need people to be able to get around. So Senator Villivalam, our Transportation chair has been leading hearings on the Senate side, and has done a very good job. He certainly makes a case timing wise, that sooner is better than later. I would say that even if we tackle the reforms, I don’t know that there’s going to be a check cut on May 31st to the transit agencies. We are going to need to hold them accountable to reinvent the system so that it serves the people that we all represent who work for you all.

Welch: Let’s also make sure folks understand that when we talk about transit, we’re not just talking about the Chicago area, the Chicago metropolitan area, we’re also talking about downstate transit. We’re talking about transit systems throughout the state. And I think transit is extremely important to the business community. It’s important to labor and the workforce. It’s important to the environment, less cars on the road, if you get get the busses and trains running right. And so this is something in the House that, you know, we put a working group together last year that’s led by Eva-Dina Delgado and Kam Buckner, two of the leaders on my team that are really passionate about the transit issue. They’ve had a number of meetings with all of the stakeholders at the table. By all reports that are coming in to me, those conversations are going well. They’ve been some real tough conversations, and they listened to the charge that the President and I gave them, and they’ve been addressing reforms and governance first. I don’t even think you can talk about money at all until they agree on what those revenue, those reforms and governance issues are going to look like. […]

I think we’re on the same page in the sense that we’re not looking to give anyone a blank check. We don’t have blank checks to give out. We have to be able to leave here and explain it, you know, to a sixth grader. You know, here are the reforms. Here’s the governance structure that is in place that now makes sense compared to what was there. And here’s what we have to do to provide reliability for riders. Here’s what we have to do to make sure riders are safe. Here are the things that you know people have demanded, and we’re giving it to you. I think if we can demonstrate that people will will understand that you have to pay for it.

Harmon: Recognizing your point that this is a statewide issue. We are focusing to some degree on the RTA region because of the peculiarities of that system. I can walk out my back door a half a block to a CTA bus stop, or a half a mile to a Pace bus stop that will take me to either a CTA L line or to a metro station. It shouldn’t be that complicated. And the accountability issue is a huge one. There’s a deep lack of trust. I think it was more than a decade ago we mandated a unified fare card so that you didn’t have to get a different ticket for each of your transfers. That still hasn’t been done. So perhaps the greatest accountability is cutting off the checks, and I think that we’re trying to build into this, the funding comes only with rider focused reform.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

…Adding… Hmm…

Senate Transportation Chair Ram Villivalam and Assistant Majority Leader Marcus C. Evans, Jr. will provide an update on transit negotiations and the General Assembly’s work to address Illinois’ $770 million transit fiscal cliff.

If left unaddressed by May 31, Illinoisans could experience disruptions or discontinuation of transit service, increased commute times via car and public transit, and potential job losses for the thousands of transit workers in our communities.

The impacts of failure will be felt statewide, and cuts to service cannot be easily reversed, even if funding is restored later.

Who: Illinois Senator Ram Villivalam, Illinois State Representative Marcus C. Evans, Carrie Lee Patterson (Actor/Director), Tiffany Rebb (CTA Bus Operator), and Orlando Rojas (Metra Conductor)

When: May 15, 2025
8:00 a.m.-8:30 AM

* More…

The Chicago City Council Committee on Transportation and Public Way today voted overwhelmingly to support a resolution calling on the Illinois General Assembly to invest $1.5 billion in transit to avert the impending transit fiscal cliff and reform Northeastern Illinois’ transit system to ensure transit is fast, frequent, reliable, clean, and safe. In response, the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition released the following statement:

    “With just over two weeks left for Illinois lawmakers to act on the transit fiscal cliff that will result in a massive 40% cut to all public transit trains and bus service, the Chicago City Council’s overwhelming support of $1.5 billion in transit funding and significant reforms reflects the dire need for a monumental solution to the current crisis. Approximately one million Chicagoans and visitors rely on public transit daily to access jobs, healthcare, retail, and recreation throughout the Chicagoland region; the public transit system is a major employer providing essential services; and public transit delivers significant environmental and climate benefits.

    “The current status quo stands in the way of taking Chicagoans where they want to go safely and affordably, and alders and Chicagoans across the region alike agree that $1.5 billion in funding is needed this spring to close the funding gap and transform the system to deliver a world-class public transit system for Illinoisans across the Chicagoland region.”

  19 Comments      


Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025.

The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward.

A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors.

Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores.

Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/

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Open thread

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Spring is in full swing…

* What’s going on? Keep it Illinois-centric please…

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Cook County Health braces for $110M budget hit as state eyes immigrant healthcare cuts.Fox Chicago

    - Cook County could lose $110 million in state funding under a proposal to cut health care for undocumented immigrants.
    - Latino lawmakers are urging the governor to reconsider, warning the cuts could cost lives.
    - Cook County Health officials say they will continue providing care, but expect a heavier strain on emergency services.

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by the Illinois Pharmaceutical Reform Alliance

*************************************************

* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGN | Pritzker’s 2026 budget proposal is $500 million short: “We’ve conditioned our members to understand how tight this budget year is going to be,” said Senate President Don Harmon. “That won’t eliminate spending pressures, but I think people understand this is a different year than last year or the year before.”

* Subscribers know more. Crain’s | Pritzker budget team slashes state’s revenue forecast by $536 million: Among the culprits: $351 million less in corporate income taxes because of a lower forecast for corporate profits; and $289 million less in individual income taxes because of recently reduced forecasts of employment, lower wages and salaries growth, and lower estimated stock market performance. The new budget forecast also predicts $150 million less in sales taxes and $70 million less from the federal government.

* Farm Week | IL-EATS reinstated for remainder of fiscal year: Sufficient funding to finish out the state fiscal year 2025 was determined by the Illinois Department of Human Services and the Illinois Department of Agriculture in March after USDA reversed its decision to cease reimbursements for the program, which is funded through Local Food Processing Agreement (LFPA) grants. IL-EATS producers have been paid fully for their January 2025 and February 2025 invoices. Of the three rounds of funding, the third round is being terminated and will not be available, meaning funding will continue until the end of the fiscal year, July 1.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Consumer advocates tell regulators to slash rate hike requests from Ameren, Nicor: Nicor Gas, which serves 2.3 million customers in northern and western Illinois, requested the largest gas rate plan in state history — roughly equivalent to $7.50 per month for the average residential customer. Ameren Illinois, which has about 800,000 downstate customers, requested an increase that translates to between $8 to $10 higher monthly bills for a typical residential customer. Regulators at the Illinois Commerce Commission are expected to announce a decision as to whether to approve or alter the hikes in November. The new rates would go into effect at the start of 2026.

* Fox Chicago | These are Illinois’ wealthiest counties, according to a new study: Lake County leads Illinois in wealth, according to a new report from SmartAsset, which analyzed income, home values, and investment income across all U.S. counties. The annual study used a combination of three financial metrics—median income, investment income, and median home value—to produce a “Wealth Index” score for each county.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | Illinois education officials address audit findings: Officials from the Illinois State Board of Education testified before the Legislative Audit Commission Tuesday, after a compliance review listed 15 findings. State Superintendent of Education Tony Sanders said the board has taken corrective action for eight of the issues. “Specific corrective action ISBE has taken include implementing financial controls to ensure the future appropriation amounts are properly stated and reported,” Sanders said.

* Fox Chicago | Chicago state lawmaker launches bid for Congressional seat: State Sen. Robert Peters, a Democrat from Chicago, announced his campaign for a U.S. House seat representing parts of the city’s South Side and southern suburbs in the 2026 midterm election. […] Peters, a Chicago South Side native, has served in the state legislature since 2019. His district includes a large portion of the Chicago lakeshore from the city’s downtown area to the far South Side.

Adding: Sen. Peters announced an endorsement from Bernie Sanders this morning.

* Jim Nowlan | Will the Illinois GOP show up for the 2026 state elections?: We are in the important pre-primary phase of the 2026 elections in Illinois (circulation of petitions opens in September), when prospective candidates strut their endorsements — and money raised — in efforts to scare off possible opponents. In our basically one-party state, Democratic wannabes are coming off a long bench to make their cases. In contrast, Republicans have no bench of experienced, well-known prospects to speak of. Because of extreme gerrymandering, the GOP has few state legislators and no statewide officials whatsoever. Attractive but no-name candidates are being counseled by Republican insiders that this is a no-win year for the GOP and it’s better to stay out.

* WAND | Illinois Freedom Caucus suggests state should only spend $44 billion for Fiscal Year 2026: Gov. JB Pritzker presented a $55 billion budget in February, but the Freedom Caucus told reporters in Springfield Tuesday that lawmakers only need to approve $44 billion. The Eastern Illinois Republicans said the state should cut funding for free migrant healthcare, “DEI education” in K-12 schools, and social equity projects in Democratic cities.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago mayor commits $7 million to raises for early childhood education workers: Mayor Brandon Johnson announced Tuesday that Chicago will spend $7 million on increasing salaries for 3,000 early childhood workers, as part of an effort to pay them closer to what their counterparts at K-12 schools earn. The money will boost wages by 5-10% for a range of staffers whose jobs are funded by state money, including teachers and teacher assistants at dozens of community-based early childhood providers. These providers are part of the city’s early learning system overseen by the Department of Family and Support Services, or DFSS, city officials said.

* Sun-Times | City Council committee removes ‘paper ceiling’ requiring college degree for city jobs: Citing the skyrocketing cost of a college education, a City Council committee agreed Tuesday to remove that “paper ceiling” by allowing candidates for city jobs to substitute work experience for a diploma. The Committee on Workforce Development moved to abolish what many consider an irrelevant and discriminatory barrier at the behest of Ald Gilbert Villegas (36th), a retired Marine who served in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm.

* Tribune | City commission approves $67 million in TIF funds for massive Central Loop renovation: The largest project envisioned so far for the LaSalle Street Reimagined program took a step closer to reality Tuesday when the Community Development Commission recommended that City Council approve it. Council approval would unlock $67 million in tax increment financing funds for redevelopment of the historic Clark Adams Building, a 41-story tower at 105 W. Adams St. just east of LaSalle Street in the Central Loop. The funds will help its development team transform dozens of vacant floors into hundreds of new apartments, including 121 reserved as affordable.

* Sun-Times | Chicago tries again to crack down on Airbnbs, vacation rental industry: A “transparency ordinance” championed by Ald. Bennett Lawson requires Airbnb and Vrbo to share much more information with neighbors who have to live with the sometimes rowdy consequences of vacation rentals.

* WTTW | Analyzing Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson at the Midpoint: Lurching from Crisis to Crisis While Working to ‘Disrupt Status Quo’: Johnson has repeatedly said he was elected to “disrupt the status quo.” On Wednesday, he told WTTW News that he had done just that, even as federal officials during the Biden administration “left cities in peril.” “We responded to that crisis. as we have in the past, with the full force of government,” Johnson said, ticking off a list of accomplishments, including a significant drop in homicides.

* NBC Chicago | Undercover investigation reveals Chicago cab drivers overcharging riders: It’s illegal for Chicago cab drivers to demand flat rates higher than the metered rate or “refuse any person transportation,” but a NBC 5 Responds investigation revealed they do both — a lot. “[Drivers] may be potentially kind of … singling out tourists or people who may not know better, as opposed to local residents,” said Lay.

* NBC Chicago | Chicago is slowly sinking, raising risk of structural damage and flooding: The study, published in Nature Cities on May 8, examined the 28 most-populated cities in the United States and found that 25 of them are experiencing the phenomenon known as “land subsidence.” […] According to researchers, Chicago is one of nine cities where areas are sinking by more than two millimeters per year. In all, around 98% of the city is sinking to some degree.

* AP | “Shoeless” Joe Jackson, 7 other “Black Sox” reinstated by MLB; how they got banned for fixing 1919 World Series: The other seven former White Sox players who have been removed from MLB’s permanent ineligibility list include first baseman Arnold “Chick” Gandil, pitcher Eddie Cicotte, center fielder Oscar “Happy” Felsch, infielder Fred McMullin, shortstop Charles “Swede” Risberg, third baseman George “Buck” Weaver, and pitcher Claude “Lefty” Williams. They were accused of taking bribes from gambling concerns to intentionally lose the World Series that year against the Cincinnati Reds. The scandal ultimately led to the appointment of the first baseball commissioner, Kenesaw Mountain Landis, who banned the implicated White Sox players despite their acquittal on criminal charges.

* WBEZ | Why is there a $1,000 fine for building a nuclear bomb in Chicago?: The ordinance was proposed during a period when Chicago’s City Council was extremely divided. The so-called “Council Wars” pitted Harold Washington, Chicago’s first Black mayor, against a mostly white majority led by Ald. Ed Vrydolak, 10th Ward. Hell-bent on blocking all the mayor’s proposals, Vrydolak made it difficult for anything to get done.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Scientists join the fight against basement flooding in Chatham: ‘The cavalry is coming’: Volunteers are measuring rainfall in their yards, a local nonprofit is rallying support, and scientists at universities including the University of Illinois, Chicago State and Northwestern are gathering data with soil moisture sensors, radar, weather balloons, and groundwater probes. The scientists are participating as part of the Department of Energy’s five-year, $25 million Community Research on Climate and Urban Science (CROCUS) project, which aims to better understand and predict urban weather challenges in Chicago, including heat waves and flooding.

* Daily Herald | Change at the top: Moran takes the reins in Barrington from Darch: Mike Moran was sworn in Monday as Barrington’s new village president, succeeding Karen Darch who stepped down after 20 years in the position. Prior to that, she spent 10 years as trustee. Incumbent trustees Jennifer Wondrasek and Todd Sholeen also began their new terms, while newly elected Trustee Lauren Klauer and Village Clerk Jim Dillon took their oaths. In his first address, Moran paid tribute to what he called Darch’s lasting legacy: “Karen has led with vision, strength, and unwavering commitment to the people of Barrington.”

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park rehires former Village Manager George Koczwara, some trustees wanted more time: Orland Park officials voted Monday to rehire former Village Manager George Koczwara, although some trustees urged the board to take more time before making a decision. Koczwara was manager for five years before leaving last June, and is being rehired, effective immediately, at a salary of $207,000. The village attorney will also draft a one-year employment agreement.

* Daily Herald | New Arlington Heights mayor taps election opponent as his second-in-command: “Tom has been a wonderful trustee for a number of years now, and with everything as it went in the election, he was a fantastic candidate, and I think the community wholeheartedly would endorse Tom helping out to the next level on this board,” Tinaglia said. The president pro tem — appointed every two years in May following municipal elections — fills in for the mayor at meetings, ribbon cuttings and community events.

* Daily Herald | ‘How do they do it?’: Endangered piping plovers return to the same spot in Waukegan for a second year: The area the Waukegan plovers occupy is under surveillance and violators who try to enter are heavily fined. Public access is not allowed and monitors are issued permits and must pass security. There currently are 30 confirmed pairs in the Great Lakes with 29 active nests, most at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore in northern Michigan, Semel said.

*** Downstate ***

* Crain’s | After Lion collapse, Pritzker finds new electric bus partner: He says Damera, a Canadian distributor of electric mini-buses, will open an assembly line in the Peoria area that will employ 90 people. The state is offering the company unspecified incentives to launch a facility that will include assembly lines, testing zones, quality control, storage and administrative offices, along with areas for battery assembly and charging infrastructure.

* PJ Star | Not just ’scared straight’: Why a Peoria non-profit brought at-risk youth to county jail: Carl Cannon wants to make things clear up front: He is not in the business of doing scared-straight programs. “This is different,” Cannon, the founder of Elite Community Outreach, said before a Friday event with at-risk youth at the Peoria County Jail. “You pay attention. This is not a playground. What you have in front of you is somebody’s life. I will bounce you out of here quick, fast and in a hurry if I see you distracting anyone around you. These men in front of you wish they had this opportunity when they were your age. They didn’t, so don’t you play with this.”

* WPSD | Two southern Illinois towns pass bans of herbal drug kratom: The Marion and Herrin city councils each voted on Monday to ban kratom, an herbal substance, from being sold in their cities during their respective council meetings. While kratom is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for any medical use, it is legal in many places in the United States, marketed as herbal supplements. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, much is still unknown about chemical compounds related to kratom, the short- and long-term health and safety impacts of kratom use and kratom’s potential therapeutic uses.

* BND | Belleville school board appoints two members, including one familiar face: After serving 10 years, Sauerwein planned to retire from the board to spend more time with his new grandchild. His term ended this spring and he did not seek re-election. But Sauerwein said he had second thoughts. The 2025-2026 school year will usher in several administration shifts — including a new superintendent, Marshaun C. Warren, and Sauerwein said he wanted to be part of the new era.

* SJ-R | Mail delivery changes coming to Springfield area in July. What you need to know: David Steiner, a FedEx board member, will replace Louis DeJoy as Postmaster General, raising concerns about privatization in Illinois. Unions, including the National Association of Letter Carriers and Illinois representatives, oppose Steiner’s appointment due to his corporate ties and anti-union history. Changes coming in July include slower mail collection in rural Sangamon County and adjustments to Springfield’s mail processing.

* WCIA | NASA provides $1M for AI-Astronomy led by U of I grad student: Under the guidance of Principal Investigator Professor Xin Liu, DeepDISC-Euclid addresses one of the most critical challenges of the European Space Agency Euclid mission: The precise detection and classification of blended astronomical objects in deep, multi-band, high-resolution imaging.

*** National ***

* AP | Biden-era ‘junk fee’ rule takes effect; Ticketmaster to display fees more clearly: Ticketmaster, long a subject of complaints about hidden fees and other issues, was among those targeted by the new rule, announced in December by the Federal Trade Commission. The rule requires ticket sellers, hotels, vacation rental platforms and others to disclose processing fees, cleaning fees and other charges up front.

  7 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Pritzker suggests Axelrod comments may be linked to Rahm Emanuel’s ambitions

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for some background. WBEZ yesterday

David Axelrod, former chief strategist and senior advisor to President Barack Obama in his winning 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, said if Pritzker harbors White House ambitions, he ought to think hard about leaving Springfield after two terms because of the political volatility that being governor can bring.

“Third terms are notoriously perilous, and things that can go wrong tend to go wrong in third terms,” Axelrod said. “If your attention is divided between running for president, which is a hellacious job in itself, and…dealing with crises at home, that is a very difficult balance to strike.

“I honestly think time may be better spent for him if he wants to run for president, traveling the country and interacting with people and not just speaking, but listening. It would enrich him as a candidate and give him a head start. So you have to balance the risks and rewards of each decision. And in my view, the risks of running again [for governor] are greater than the possible rewards,” said Axelrod, a CNN commentator and host of the political podcast, “The Axe Files.” […]

Democratic political strategist Pete Giangreco had roles in nine presidential campaigns dating back to 1984, including Obama’s two victories and the 1992 and 1996 wins by Democrat Bill Clinton. Like Axelrod, Giangreco sees more time in Illinois’ Executive Mansion as a move fraught with risk for Pritzker if the governor has any desire to seek the White House. […]

“Every time Gov. Pritzker goes to New Hampshire and starts swinging a bat at the president, the president’s going to retaliate,” Giangreco said. “If you have a guy at 1600 Pennsylvania who wakes up every morning trying to figure out how to screw Illinois because the governor said something, that’s like a new dynamic that no one’s ever seen before. It’s like you can do one or the other: You can govern or you can run for president.

“The stakes are too high to try to do both,” Giangreco said.


Rich suggested yesterday
that Axelrod and Pete Giangreco might be saying this to boost former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel for governor.

* Gov. JB Pritzker hopped on CNN yesterday and talked about Rich’s speculation

* The transcript…

Reporter: Is Axelrod right?

Pritzker: David’s a friend of mine. Here’s what I can say, I think he has in mind the idea that his friend Rahm Emanuel would like to run for governor of Illinois. [He] probably wouldn’t run for governor if I were running for reelection. So that’s one thing that I think he’s considering.

The other thing I think he’s suggesting, he’s not wrong. When you talk to people who’ve considered running for a third term, they would tell you that sometimes third terms don’t work out for people. It hasn’t happened very often, but if you look at Jay Inslee in Washington State, he had a fabulous third term and really accomplished quite a lot, and was able to finish a lot of things that he started in his first two terms. So it can happen either way. Frankly, you can have a flub that occurs in your first term or in second, it could happen in your third term. Things happen.

My focus is on lifting up the people of the state of Illinois, advancing the cause of the economy for our state, and making sure that I’m bringing what I have been, I think, for the last six and a half years, which is fiscal stability to a state that really wasn’t stable for many years before

Subscribers know more.

Discuss.

  28 Comments      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Wednesday, May 14, 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.

  Comment      


Manar: Trump, Musk are to blame for revenue dip

Wednesday, May 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

[Bumped up from last night for visibility.]

* Deputy Governor for Budget and Economy Andy Manar…

Each year, the Governor and the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget (GOMB) team use the most up-to-date and conservative data available. The Pritzker Administration has always prioritized fiscal responsibility and taken a cautious approach to revenue forecasting, often projecting below actual revenues, throughout the budget process and will continue to do so. This year has brought unprecedented set of challenges, as Donald Trump and Elon Musk push efforts that would strip Illinois of vital tax dollars and deny residents the services and protections they depend on.

The downward revision of the state’s revenue estimate in the April report from GOMB is largely driven by the economic uncertainty and anxiety fueled by the Trump Administration and Republicans in Congress. Their reckless economic policies have already triggered the first quarterly decline in the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in three years and are driving up costs for working families. This growing national instability poses a serious risk to Illinois continued economic progress and outlook.

This week, the White House and Republicans are working through a federal budget that slashes funding for essential programs like education, housing, and medical research. These cuts would drive up costs and put critical services for working families at risk across Illinois. There is no state in the union, including Illinois, that can ever match the scope and scale of the federal government’s budget and their obligations to taxpayers.

Despite these federal headwinds, the Governor remains firmly committed to fiscal responsibility and safeguarding the progress Illinois has achieved. He will continue to increase the state’s Budget Stabilization Fund, improve the state’s pension funded ratio, and ensure timely payment of the state’s bills. Alongside this, the administration remains committed to maintaining investments in education, healthcare, and other core services. The Governor has made it clear: he will only sign a balanced budget. At the same time, he has warned of the devastating impact on working families if Trump and Congressional Republicans succeed in their cruel cuts Medicaid, SNAP, and other critical safety net programs.

Governor Pritzker and the GOMB team will continue working closely with legislators to deliver a balanced budget that keeps Illinois on a stable fiscal path while safeguarding the services families depend on.

Thoughts?

…Adding… From the GOMB report

The revised forecast total, assuming the General Assembly enacting the FY26 adjustments included in the FY26 introduced budget, totals $54,917 million, or $536 million (or 1%) below the General Funds revenue forecast submitted with the FY26 introduced budget.

  19 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTVO

Damera, a Canadian distributor of electric buses, is expanding into the United States, with its first assembly plant to be built in Illinois.

The news was announced Tuesday by Gov. JB Pritzker while meeting with Damera leadership during a business development trip to Washington D.C. […]

Damera is the North American distributor of the Turkey-based company Karsan’s eJEST minibus, which can hold 19 passengers and travel 130 miles on a single charge.

Damera plans to open a facility in the greater Peoria region to sell and service the eJEST and establish the first U.S. assembly plant.

The announcement represents an investment of $31.5 million in the Illinois economy over four years.

* Block Club Chicago

The immigration crackdown was widely publicized and at least partly televised, but federal officials still haven’t revealed how many people they rounded up during sweeps in Chicago in January.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have never released a list or even a summary of who its agents arrested here in the raids ordered by President Donald Trump after his inauguration. ICE has also concealed what those people were charged with and where federal agents took them.

ICE has continued to withhold the information even after a formal records request and multiple follow-up inquiries.

So Block Club Chicago is suing ICE and its parent department, Homeland Security, for violating the federal Freedom of Information Act, a law the protects citizens’ right to information about their government.

*** Statewide ***

* Brownfield Ag News | Illinois Ag looking to build Mexico partnership: Jerry Costello says agriculture relies on strong trading partnerships. “We exported a little over $1.5 billion in corn to Mexico last year, so they are a major major trading partner.” He says, “We have close to $3 billion of agricultural trade that we do with Mexico.” He tells Brownfield that an April trade mission to the country by the state’s top officials was aimed at strengthening that relationship, and it seems to be paying off. “Reassuring the Mexican people, the Mexican government, that we appreciate their business.” He says, “We appreciate the bilateral trade and have already had Zoom meetings and what have you with some of the Mexican companies as far as follow up. So, it was a great trade mission.”

* Press Release | Illinois Blue PAC Launches in Support of Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton’s Senate Campaign: Formed to support a candidate whose story, record, and leadership have sparked early enthusiasm across Illinois, Illinois Blue PAC aims to help elevate Stratton’s message and ensure voters across the state hear from a leader who brings both lived experience and statewide impact to the race.

* WGN | Krishnamoorthi launches 1st digital ad in campaign for US Senate: The advertisement highlights Krishnamoorthi’s first day on the campaign trail, including a stop at his childhood home in Peoria. Efforts to underscore his ties to downstate could prove important, as multiple Chicago-based Democrats compete for support in new areas. The video will run on YouTube and other social media platforms. Krishnamoorthi says in the ad that he’s running to fight for “everyday people.” It also features the five-term Congressman’s signature tagline, urging voters to forgo his lengthy last name and simply refer to him as “Raja.”

* WIFR | Travelers invited to take survey on Illinois’ transportation system: The Traveler Opinion Survey is available now through May 30. Any Illinois resident over the age of 18 is invited to take the survey. In 2024, more than 1,700 responses were received and previous survey results are available here.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | It can be difficult to find therapists who take health insurance in Illinois. Lawmakers are considering a bill to change that: The bill would require private insurers to pay in-network therapists at least 141% of the rate Medicare pays for the same behavioral health or substance use disorder service. It also aims to cut red tape for therapists. The bill would prohibit insurers from requiring therapists to submit more documentation to get reimbursed for 60-minute sessions as compared with shorter sessions, and prohibit insurers from denying coverage for multiple behavioral health services or substance use disorder services for the same patient in one day.

* Donovan Griffith, Jack Lavin and Lou Sandoval | Illinois needs more housing. Here’s how we build it.: Collectively, we represent over 5,000 private businesses across Illinois of every size and sector in urban, suburban and rural communities. We know how business works. We also know how investment works, and more importantly, how it pays off. Businesses are ready to invest, grow, and create jobs in Illinois, and having a robust and accessible housing stock is essential. The Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit is the smartest, most fiscally responsible way to drive investment in affordable housing.

* NBC | Big change coming to Illinois hotels this summer thanks to new law: According to the text of the “Small Single-Use Plastic Bottle Act,” hotels in Illinois with 50 or more rooms will no longer be permitted to provide small single-use plastic bottles containing personal care products like shampoo or body wash. That same requirement will go into effect for all other Illinois hotels beginning on Jan. 1, 2026, according to the text of the bill.

*** Chicago ***

* Bloomberg | Chicago taps Loop Capital founder to fix $1 billion budget hole: Reynolds, who began his muni career as a short-term bond trader in 1981 and founded Chicago-based Loop in 1997, will serve as co-chair of the group with Chicago Urban League CEO Karen Freeman-Wilson, the former mayor of Gary, Indiana. Johnson, who confirmed the appointments in an interview at City Hall, said the group will meet for the first time on Saturday. Reynolds and Freeman-Wilson didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on Monday. The group, expected to include civic, labor, business and elected leaders, will convene to help the nation’s third-largest city address its massive fiscal challenges. Chicago’s budget shortfalls are growing, its pension debt has ballooned to about $37 billion, and spending is outpacing revenue.

* Tribune | As Johnson administration touts ‘Cut the Tape,’ affordable housing developers want faster progress: While she understands that shifting organizational culture takes time and appreciates the Johnson administration’s focus on this issue, Gonzalez said developers like her signed up for an “Army haircut” when it comes to changes in the building process, not a light trim. As Cut the Tape efforts take shape, another Johnson housing initiative aimed at spurring affordable development was passed by the City Council Wednesday after weeks of debate. These endeavors come as Chicago, like other cities across the country, faces serious housing shortages, especially for affordable units.

* Crain’s | Where are all the granny flats Chicago was promised 4 years ago?: In the spring of 2021, when Chicago was getting ready to start a test run of allowing accessory dwelling units, or ADUs, on residential lots, architect Jim Hall decided, he says, “I wanted to be the guy doing this new typology of building.” […] In the four years since the ordinance took effect in May 2021, “I’ve built zero ADUs,” Hall says. Two of Hall’s ADU designs for clients advanced to the permitting stage, but when contractors estimated what construction would cost—$275,000 to $300,000—Hall says “the homeowners decided it was a little too much of an investment” and didn’t build.

* Block Club Chicago | As CPS Tries To Sell Closed Schools, Wadsworth Available, South Shore High Off Market: “These schools are no longer in great condition,” district property manager Jason Powell said. “Over time, they’ve been broken into, vandalized, stripped; people take electric, people take plumbing, break windows, any number of things.” The former Wadsworth site at 6420 S. University Ave. in Woodlawn has the highest minimum bid of any of the sites at $3 million. Powell described the 120,000-square-foot building as being “in very good shape.”

* WTTW | ‘Very Sick’ Ex-Ald. Carrie Austin Could Endure Trial With Additional Medical Care, Expert Testifies: Dr. Susan Russell, a pulmonologist with the Northwestern Medicine Canning Thoracic Institute, had determined that Austin was too ill with chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder too ill to help craft a defense to the charges she took bribes from a developer and lied to FBI agents. But under questioning by Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Peabody, Russell said that while Austin would face an “increased” risk of her disease worsening during a trial where she was provided with necessary medical care, it would not be “substantial,” the legal standard for calling off the trial now set for Nov. 3.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | DuPage County Board District 5 incumbents Sadia Covert, Dawn DeSart to seek reelection: Sadia Covert and Dawn DeSart have confirmed that they will be running for reelection in District 5. Covert will be seeking a four-year term while DeSart will be running for a two-year term. District 5 comprises most of Naperville and sections of Aurora in DuPage. Covert’s and DeSart’s intentions to run come in the wake of Naperville City Councilman Ian Holzhauer announcing last week that he will be challenging Covert for the four-year District 5 seat as a Democrat.

* Daily Southtown | Harvey Ald. Colby Chapman’s arrest fuels pushback against decorum rules, Mayor Christopher Clark clears council room: Chapman was arrested April 28 and charged with disorderly conduct and resisting a police officer, according to court records. Her next court appearance is June 4. She said her mother was also arrested during the meeting. “My passion for the issues facing our residents sometimes pushes me beyond procedural boundaries, but my intent has always been to speak for those who are voiceless,” Chapman said. The alderwoman said she was trying to ask questions about a redevelopment agreement for a blighted property at 60 E.155th St., which she said is owned by one of her constituents, 89-year-old Betty Allen.

* Daily Herald | A ‘generational project’: Naperville ready to revisit 5th Avenue redevelopment potential: The area was previously targeted for an ambitious mix of housing, offices, parking garages, retail as well as health and wellness space and a public plaza. But the project never got off the drawing board amid pandemic uncertainty and neighborhood concerns, despite many iterations. Now, Naperville officials are set to revisit the issue with the help of the Urban Land Institute. The organization ULI Chicago is assembling a panel of real estate professionals who will offer a fresh look at the city-owned properties around the 5th Avenue train station and the redevelopment possibilities.

* CNN | Google has a solution for those ‘unpaid toll’ text scams: The next time you’re about to tap a text message to resolve an unpaid toll balance, your Android phone may warn you to think twice. Google is updating its scam text detection technology to spot hoaxes like these, which are among the most common types of text-related schemes according to the Federal Trade Commission.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Indian Prairie District 204 Superintendent Adrian Talley named Educator of the Year by DuPage education group: In recent years, the district has secured a $1.25 million grant from Endeavor Health for school-based counseling services, along with a $500,000 state grant for counseling for high school students and a $500,000 grant from Edward Elmhurst Health for mental health assistance for students in lower grades. The district also recently held its third annual mental health symposium, which now includes participation from nearby school districts.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Federal Dept. of Transportation commits to funding Springfield Rail project: After some uncertainty following the Trump Administration’s freeze on federal funding, lawmakers announced that the U.S. Department of Transportation has fully obligated $157,126,494 in federal funding for the final part of the Springfield Rail Improvements Project. “Securing funding for the Springfield Rail Improvements Project has been a top priority of mine, and with the funding now finalized, we’re one step closer to transforming our downtown, reducing rail noise, and making our streets safer. This project is also creating good-paying union jobs, benefiting families across our community,” said Congresswoman Budzinski. “I’m incredibly proud to have worked alongside Senators Durbin and Duckworth to bring this vital funding home. Together, we’re not only connecting communities but also building a stronger, more efficient, and reliable transportation system for the future!”

* WSIL | Fallen firefighter remembered; Pope County emergency personnel and others recognized in firefighter ceremony: The Illinois Fire Service gathered to remember a fallen firefighter and to honor distinguished services for other firefighters at the 32nd Annual Fallen Firefighter Memorial and Medal of Honor Ceremony. “Today, we gather with gratitude in our hearts as we honor the brave firefighters of Illinois—those who are serving every day and those who made the ultimate sacrifice in the line of duty, said Governor JB Pritzker. “To the families who have lost loved ones, your sacrifice is not forgotten. We hold their memories close and vow to carry their legacies forward with dignity and respect as we support, invest in, and stand beside the fire service.”

* WAND | Jake Owen coming to perform at the Illinois State Fair: With 10 No. 1 singles and more than 2.5 billion U.S. on-demand streams, Owen is a standout performer in the country music scene. His laid-back style and chart-topping songs like “Barefoot Blue Jean Night,” “Beachin’,” and “The One That Got Away” have made him a household name.

* WGLT | Illinois Wesleyan adds permanent provost, dean of faculty: Miles replaces interim provost Dave Marvin, a business professor who is retiring after more than three decades at the university. Marvin stepped into the role when interim provost Abigail Kerr left the university a year ago. Kerr had stepped in for then-provost Mark Brodl, who stepped down and to return to teaching.

* JG-TC | No damage reported in Coles County following earthquake: No damage has been reported in Coles County following a magnitude 3.3 earthquake that occurred here late Monday evening. The U.S. Geological Survey reported that the epicenter of the quake at 11:43 p.m. was approximately four miles south of Lerna in southern Coles County and it occurred about 6 miles below the surface

*** National ***

* AP | Harvard loses another $450 million in grants in escalating battle with Trump administration: In a letter to Harvard on Tuesday, a federal antisemitism task force said Harvard will lose grants from eight federal agencies in addition to $2.2 billion that was previously frozen by the Trump administration. The letter said Harvard has become a “breeding ground for virtue signaling and discrimination” and faces a “steep, uphill battle” to reclaim its legacy as a place of academic excellence.

* SF Chronicle | Gas stoves nearly double children’s cancer risk, Stanford study finds: The study, published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials, is the first to evaluate cancer risks from benzene generated during gas stove combustion and to estimate leukemia cases attributable to these emissions. […] Benzene, a known carcinogen also found in gasoline and cigarette smoke, is released during the use of natural gas or propane stoves. The findings showed that children’s lifetime cancer risk from this exposure is 1.85 times higher than that of adults.

* The Verge | Don’t delete that ‘Lopez Voice Assistant’ email — it’s about Apple’s Siri settlement: The settlement is related to Lopez v. Apple Inc, a 2019 class action lawsuit that alleged that Apple violated user privacy by recording their conversations and forwarding them to third-party contractors. Apple agreed to the settlement earlier this year but denied the allegations. Several of us at The Verge received emails about the settlement in recent days, sent from info@lopezvoiceassistantsettlement.com. Mine included my name, claimant identification code, confirmation code, and a description of the settlement.

  2 Comments      


AG Raoul to jointly file two new lawsuits over federal immigration enforcement threats that could slam Illinois’ budget

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tuesday press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul, California Attorney General Rob Bonta, New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin and Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha, as part of a coalition of 20 attorneys general, announced today they will file two separate lawsuits against the Trump administration for attempting to illegally coerce their states into sweeping immigration enforcement by threatening to withhold billions in federal funding for emergency services and infrastructure.

Raoul and the coalition will file a lawsuit against the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem. Raoul, Bonta, Platkin, Neronha and Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown, along with the coalition, will file a second lawsuit against the Department of Transportation (DOT) and DOT Secretary Sean Duffy. Each agency has imposed sweeping new conditions that would require the states and state agencies to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement efforts or lose out on billions of federal dollars that states use to protect public safety and transportation infrastructure.

“The funding states receive from FEMA and the Department of Transportation are, quite literally, lifesaving. States rely on billions of dollars appropriated by Congress to help our residents recover from natural disasters and emergencies, and to keep them safe as they travel our roads, railways and the skies,” Raoul said. “This critical funding has nothing to do with immigration, and the administration’s attempts to hold it hostage unless states agree to do the federal government’s job of civil immigration enforcement is unconstitutional and outrageous. I am proud of the continued collaboration between state attorneys general and am committed to using all tools at our disposal to fight the Trump administration’s ongoing attempts to play politics with Americans’ lives.”

Raoul and the attorneys general explain that Congress has established dozens of federal grant programs administered by FEMA and the DOT. The money Congress appropriated to those programs funds projects that range from disaster relief and flood mitigation to railroad, bridge and airport construction.

In February, Secretary Noem directed DHS and its sub-agencies, including FEMA, to cease federal funding to jurisdictions that do not assist the federal government in the enforcement of federal immigration law. In March, DHS amended the terms and conditions it places on federal funds to require recipients to certify that they will assist in enforcing federal immigration law.

Soon after Noem’s decision, DOT Secretary Duffy issued a letter to grant recipients informing them of his intent to require all state and local governments to assist in federal immigration enforcement as a condition of obtaining DOT funds. Those funds include grants for highway construction, public transportation maintenance, and competitive funds for airport and railway improvement.

In recent weeks, state grant applicants have seen similar immigration-enforcement language added to the terms and conditions governing grants administered by the Federal Railroad Administration, the Federal Highway Administration and the Federal Transit Administration.

In their lawsuit against FEMA, Raoul and the coalition point out that the immigration conditions exceed FEMA’s legal authority. The coalition further explains the conditions are unconstitutional because Congress appropriated the billions of federal dollars to help states prepare for, protect against, respond to and recover from catastrophic disasters. The safety and well-being of Americans could be at risk if states are forced to forfeit hundreds of millions of dollars in federal emergency preparedness and response funds. Last year, Illinois alone received more than $122 million in federal funding from FEMA. Raoul and the attorneys general emphasize these conditions will also damage the carefully built trust between law enforcement and immigrant communities that is critical to promoting public safety.

In their lawsuit against the DOT, Raoul and the coalition point out that imposing an immigration-enforcement condition on all federal transportation funds, which Congress appropriated to support critical infrastructure projects, is beyond the agency’s legal authority. The coalition states rely upon DOT money to fund highway development and airport safety projects, to prevent injuries and fatalities from traffic accidents, and to protect against train collisions. Last year, Illinois was awarded more than $2 billion in DOT grant money, which is used to maintain the National Highway System, state and local roads and bridges, bike paths, transit facilities, public ports, and airports. Raoul and the attorneys general contend that withholding the federal funding will damage public infrastructure across the county and will undermine public trust and cooperation in criminal investigations.

Joining Attorney Generals Raoul, Bonta, Platkin and Neronha in filing the lawsuits are attorneys general from Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Washington, Wisconsin and Vermont.

* Meanwhile, AG Raoul will be speaking tonight at the Hoogland…

Join the Citizens Club of Springfield on May 13 for a special evening program with Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul. The event, the first program in the Bob Gray Evening Series of the Citizens Club, will be held from 7 - 8 p.m. at the Hoogland Center for The Arts in the LRS Theatre. The Attorney General will talk about a wide array of topics and issues involving his office. This program is free and open to the public.

  Comment      


Axelrod, Giangreco urge Pritzker not to run for reelection

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WBEZ

David Axelrod, former chief strategist and senior advisor to President Barack Obama in his winning 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns, said if Pritzker harbors White House ambitions, he ought to think hard about leaving Springfield after two terms because of the political volatility that being governor can bring.

“Third terms are notoriously perilous, and things that can go wrong tend to go wrong in third terms,” Axelrod said. “If your attention is divided between running for president, which is a hellacious job in itself, and…dealing with crises at home, that is a very difficult balance to strike.

“I honestly think time may be better spent for him if he wants to run for president, traveling the country and interacting with people and not just speaking, but listening. It would enrich him as a candidate and give him a head start. So you have to balance the risks and rewards of each decision. And in my view, the risks of running again [for governor] are greater than the possible rewards,” said Axelrod, a CNN commentator and host of the political podcast, “The Axe Files.” […]

Democratic political strategist Pete Giangreco had roles in nine presidential campaigns dating back to 1984, including Obama’s two victories and the 1992 and 1996 wins by Democrat Bill Clinton. Like Axelrod, Giangreco sees more time in Illinois’ Executive Mansion as a move fraught with risk for Pritzker if the governor has any desire to seek the White House. […]

“Every time Gov. Pritzker goes to New Hampshire and starts swinging a bat at the president, the president’s going to retaliate,” Giangreco said. “If you have a guy at 1600 Pennsylvania who wakes up every morning trying to figure out how to screw Illinois because the governor said something, that’s like a new dynamic that no one’s ever seen before. It’s like you can do one or the other: You can govern or you can run for president.

“The stakes are too high to try to do both,” Giangreco said.

Kinda wondering if maybe those two have someone else in mind for the top state job. Perhaps a certain someone who doesn’t have all ten of his fingers who might possibly have felt targeted by some of Pritzker’s remarks in New Hampshire?

What I find ironic about the current conversation surrounding our Party is that the voices flocking to podcasts and cable news shows to admonish fellow Democrats for not caring enough about the struggles of working families – are the same ones who, when it comes to relieving the struggles of real people, have been timid, not bold. […]

And now that this culture of timidity is on full display, those same do-nothing Democrats want to blame our losses on our defense of black people and trans kids and immigrants — instead of their own lack of guts and gumption.

Anyway, your thoughts on this topic?

  75 Comments      


Repeal IFPA Now

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Sean Rathjen, CEO of Consumers CU:
IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities.
“Our cards are absolutely critical to our members.”
Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Credit Union Members!


Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Speaker Welch on possible return to Springfield, the budget and his members

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

At a luncheon event last week, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch discussed how the uncertainty [out of Washington, DC] could force lawmakers back to Springfield this summer to make adjustments to the budget that goes into effect July 1.

“We’re going to pass the budget here in the next couple of weeks with the information we know. There’s a lot of things we don’t know,” the Hillside Democrat said. “The only thing we can do is be committed to a process that’s going to have everyone at the table and continue to say we’re not going to spend more than we’re bringing in.” […]

Welch, meanwhile, at the hotel event noted every budget “is its own preacher” and lawmakers “in many ways play the hand we’re dealt.”

“We’re going to pass balanced budgets,” he said. “And listen, when you’re in charge of a large group of tax-and-spend Democrats, that ain’t always easy.”

Discuss.

  10 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The New York Times and the Illinois Answers Project published a trio of stories today about a bill that limits laws allowing the eviction of tenants under “crime-free” housing policies.…

In the most comprehensive statewide review to date, the news organizations examined cases in which renters were found to have violated the ordinances in 25 Illinois towns. Reporters interviewed dozens of landlords and tenants, and gathered police records. Ultimately they found more than 2,000 enforcement incidents across the state from 2019 to 2024.

City officials ordered landlords to evict tenants in nearly 500 of those cases.

The outcomes were unclear in most of the remaining cases because none of the cities tracked what happened after they sent violation letters. Landlords can seek an eviction even when cities do not demand it.

About a third of the 2,000 violation letters cited serious crimes. Landlords were ordered to evict or take other actions against renters caught in possession of drugs or charged with violent felonies. Sometimes, there were multiple accusations and a long trail of police interactions or neighbor complaints.

But a majority of the cases fell short of that. More than 1,300 were for misdemeanors or noncriminal offenses, many of which were never pursued by prosecutors. Most cities have crafted their laws so they can evict tenants even if the renters are never convicted of a crime, or never proved to have harmed their neighbors. […]

[A] bill being debated in the Illinois State Senate, would create sweeping regulations for the laws and make it more difficult for people to be evicted if they have not been convicted. The bill is scheduled for a Senate committee vote this week.

* More. New York TImes

In 2015, Illinois passed statewide legislation prohibiting what was found to be one of the most troubling unintended consequences of crime-free housing programs: The ordinances sometimes punished the victims of crimes. […]

The 2015 legislation made it illegal to use crime-free housing laws against renters who called 911 to report incidents of domestic or sexual violence. Iowa and Pennsylvania made similar changes after the evictions of battered women in those states were publicized.

But the new provisions have not adequately protected victims, according to many people who originally fought for the changes, because police officers still must decide whether to categorize an incident as domestic violence.


A recent report
issued by a coalition of housing advocates in Illinois found that in many municipalities, domestic violence reports were still triggering evictions. In the Chicago suburb of Rolling Meadows, for instance, a majority of the removal orders in 2023 were prompted by domestic violence calls. In Belleville, in Southern Illinois, domestic violence 911 calls led to more than a hundred eviction orders from 2021 to 2024.

* St. Louis Public Radio

Two bills in the Illinois General Assembly that would require some school districts to change their mascots, logos and team names have stalled in the Senate — but still have paths forward.

One, HB1237, would prohibit the use of Native American mascots across the state. The other, HB3527, would bar references to those with disabilities. Both passed the House earlier this year, but lawmakers did not meet Friday’s deadline to pass the bills out of committee and onto the Senate floor.

If the first bill passed, at least 11 schools in the Metro East — including the Collinsville Kahoks, Granite City Warriors, Mascoutah Indians and Cahokia Comanches — may be required to phase out their mascots. The Freeburg Midgets would be forced to change by the second bill.

The development that both did not make it out of committee on time has led opponents to declare a temporary victory. Collinsville and Granite City’s superintendents said the communities’ voices were heard.

* WAND

The Illinois House could crack down on the growing threat of dangerous synthetic drugs by adding a powerful animal tranquilizer to the list of Schedule III controlled substances. Sponsors and advocates say xylazine has been seen in a disturbing rise of overdose cases.

Xylazine is not approved for human use, but experts say the tranquilizer has been cut into fentanyl, cocaine, and heroin to enhance the effect of those drugs. Senate Bill 1773 could strengthen criminal penalties for unlawful possession or distribution of xylazine to give law enforcement and public health leaders the tools they need to respond. […]

Xylazine was detected in 45 overdose deaths in 2020 and in more than 200 deaths in 2022, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health. However, the ACLU of Illinois strongly opposes the legislation as attorneys argue this bill will punish people instead of getting the drug off the street.

“Let’s be clear, the majority of individuals arrested for drug possession are not kingpins or high-level traffickers,” said ACLU attorney Ben Ruddell. “Rather, they are often unhoused, unemployed, survivors of trauma, and struggling with substance use disorder.”

* WGN

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker’s proposal to ban student cell phone usage during class is moving swiftly through Springfield with bipartisan support. […]

A survey found that 90% of National Education Association members support the policy. […]

The ban would be implemented at the start of the 2026 school year.

And exceptions would include IEPs, students with disabilities, emergency use and other situations determined by the school. […]

Just last week, [SB2427] passed the house education policy committee with one nay vote.

* WIFR

Illinois lawmakers weigh legislation that would put mobile panic buttons in schools and hospitals. If passed, it would become the country’s first panic button mandate in a hospital setting.

Illinois lawmakers passed legislation in 2020 called the Hotel and Casino Employee Safety Act, which mandates that hotels and casinos equip employees with safety devices.

Senate Bill 1435 is an amendment to the University of Illinois Hospital Act and Hospital Licensing Act. It ensures that all employees of a hospital have a panic button attached to their staff identification card. […]

The Senate Executive Committee will review Senate Bill 1435 later this month.

  7 Comments      


Illinois Medicaid: Working Together To Support The Health Of Our Families, Communities, And State

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Coordinating lifesaving care for Niah across states

Nearly half of all babies born in Illinois are covered by Medicaid.

“Niah,” of Naperville, is among them.

Born in 2021, Niah was diagnosed with a complex heart condition, including congenital abnormalities and cardiac arrhythmia. Soon after her first birthday, Niah’s doctors determined that she needed lifesaving heart surgery—quickly.

The challenge? Niah’s condition was so unique that only a handful of specialists in the U.S. could treat it. Surgeons at Boston Children’s Hospital were ready to take the case.

Niah’s care team and Medicaid health plan worked together to get her swiftly approved for the procedure, arranging an air ambulance to transport Niah. The health plan also coordinated travel and lodging for Niah’s parents to be with her. Their care coordinator
called every day to check in and ensure their needs were met.

Niah’s surgery was a success. Today, she is a curious, energetic toddler who sees renowned specialists back home in Illinois for ongoing care.

Paid for by the Illinois Association of Medicaid Health Plans

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Maybe just adapt to a better reality

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The setup…


* From the editorial

So declining fertility rates certainly have broader implications for the U.S. Which brings up the question: Why are people having fewer babies?

In our opinion, one of the biggest — and most misunderstood — factors in this debate, is that it’s become prohibitively expensive to start a family. So as U.S. policymakers try to gin up another baby boom, they should ask themselves: Are the conditions right for women to want to have more kids?

The decision to have them is as much an act of love and good fortune as it is a calculation. […]

But let’s be clear: We should be doing everything we can to remove artificial barriers that prevent people who want a family from having children.

Really? That editorial board has preached austerity since it was founded. Sit the heck down.

* As I’ve pointed out before, the actual numbers reveal something that almost nobody ever wants to talk about.

Live birth rates for girls aged 15-19 plunged by 67 percent between 2005 and 2023. And live birth rates for college-age women dropped by 46 percent during the same time period

I can’t imagine anyone wanting to jack up the birthrate for teen girls. Yuck. And it’s wholly understandable why college-age women would be putting off pregnancies.

* You can’t just snap your fingers and bring back the “good old days,” which weren’t, it turns out, all that “good” because our birthrate growth was wholly dependent on teen girls and young women who were foregoing their education and career dreams.

By all means, find the resources to make parents’ lives easier. But also, maybe just learn to adapt to what appears to be an improved reality for women.

  43 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Dean Olsen at the Illinois Times

In 2023, the Springfield metro area posted the highest Black poverty rate in Illinois – 40.3% – and the fourth-highest Black poverty rate among more than 240 other metro areas in the United States with 10,000 or more Black residents. Springfield’s metro area includes all of Sangamon and Menard counties.

In 2017, Springfield metro’s Black poverty rate was 40.8% – the highest in the state, and the 11th highest in the country. The Black poverty rate dropped by less than one percentage point in Springfield between 2017 and 2023. It dropped by larger amounts in the Bloomington, Champaign, Chicago, Peoria, Rockford and Kankakee metro areas, as well as statewide and nationwide.

The gap between Black and white poverty rates in the Springfield area actually increased by one-third. In 2017, the Black rate was 3.7 times higher than the white rate, but it was 4.8 times higher in 2023 because the white poverty rate dropped from 11% in 2017 to 8.28% in 2023.

The gap between median annual income for Black households ($33,112) and white households ($80,191) in the Springfield metro area was the second-largest in the country in 2023 for areas with 5,000 or more Black households. Black median household income in the Springfield area was almost 59% lower than median household income for whites. […]

When adjusted for inflation, Springfield’s Black median household income in 2023 was actually $23 lower than in 2017. In contrast, white households experienced an inflation-adjusted gain of $1,135, or 1.4%, in median household income between 2017 and 2023. […]

Meanwhile, inflation-adjusted Black median household income in the Decatur area rose by more than $6,400, or 21%, between 2017 and 2023. Black household income rose by more than $5,100, or 11%, in the Chicago area, and by almost $3,300, or 8.6% in Champaign-Urbana, while remaining about the same in the Rockford area.

Everybody at the Statehouse needs to be paying attention to these awful Springfield trends. Go read the rest.

  8 Comments      


Don’t Greenwash Discrimination: Demand Inclusive Labor Standards In Energy Storage Legislation

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois charts its path toward a clean energy future, lawmakers must remember the promises made under CEJA—the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. CEJA was never just about clean energy; it was about equitable clean energy. That means creating good-paying union jobs for all workers, especially those from historically excluded Black and Brown communities.

Yet today, a new energy storage bill threatens to undo that vision. Without strong, inclusive Project Labor Agreement (PLA) language, this legislation risks handing energy jobs to a narrow slice of the construction industry—jobs that will go disproportionately to white, politically connected workers, while locking out the very communities CEJA aimed to uplift.

We can’t let Illinois’ clean energy transition be built on the backs of exclusion. Labor unity means every union has a seat at the table—not just the favored few. Ironworkers, roofers, painters, bricklayers, glaziers, boilermakers, cement masons, carpenters, millwrights and many other crafts helped build this state and deserve a shot at building its future.

Lawmakers: don’t sell out working families. Reject any energy storage legislation that doesn’t include inclusive PLA language. Because when we say “green jobs,” we should mean jobs that are union, local, and equitable.

This isn’t just about jobs—it’s about justice, too.

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Sen. Robert Peters launches bid to succeed Robin Kelly

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were told earlier. Press release

Democratic State Senator Robert Peters announced his candidacy for Congress in Illinois’ 2nd District on Tuesday, pledging to be a champion for working people and a fighter against the Trump agenda.

Peters, a South Side native, was a community organizer before becoming a state senator, where he has led efforts for criminal justice reform and workers’ rights.

“I’m running for Congress to take on the billionaires in charge of Washington and to build a government that delivers for the people,” said Robert Peters. “Donald Trump and Elon Musk are taking a wrecking ball to our fundamental rights, and we need a proven fighter in Congress to stand up to them and their extremist followers.

“This moment demands that we stand up for the freedoms of not only ourselves, but also our neighbors. We need leaders in Congress who will protect Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and our fundamental rights. We must come together to make government work for everyone — not just the wealthy and big corporations. I’m ready to organize with communities across the district to advance that vision together.”

In Springfield, Peters serves as majority whip and chair of the Labor Committee, and is the former Senate chair of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus. He’s spearheaded groundbreaking legislation, including the Illinois Pretrial Fairness Act, which reformed the broken bail system in Illinois in favor of more equitable and data-driven approaches, and has championed policies that will help Illinois families succeed, like raising the minimum wage, expanding workplace protections, and investing in affordable housing. He helped lead the charge to pass the Healthcare Protection Act, which took on greedy insurance companies and brought more fairness and transparency to our system to put patients first.

Robert graduated from Mount Carmel High School and earned a Bachelor of Science in Social Sciences from Kansas State University. Robert lives on the South Side, just blocks from where he grew up, with his wife, Grace, a nonprofit leader. Robert’s Jewish faith guides him in his commitment to social justice. He is an active member of KAM Isaiah Israel synagogue.

For more information about Robert Peters and his campaign for Congress, visit robertpetersforcongress.com

* Sen. Peters is not up for election next year, so he’ll get a free swing at the seat. His launch video


* More…

    * WGN | Rep. Kelly takes campaign for Durbin’s seat to City Club of Chicago: Hours after announcing the endorsement of more than a dozen of her congressional colleagues, Rep. Robin Kelly on Monday took her stump speech to the City Club of Chicago for lunch with political movers and shakers. Kelly, 69, last week launched a campaign to replace Sen. Dick Durbin, who announced in April his intention to not seek a sixth term in office. “I know I would bring effective leadership,” Kelly told those gathered. “I have a proven history of being successful, effective and solution oriented on every single job that I’ve had.”

    * Windy City Times | Gay Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison announces congressional bid: Today, Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison announced his candidacy for Congress in Illinois’ Eighth Congressional District. He released this statement on his historic candidacy: “As the grandson of immigrants and a member of the LGBTQ+ community, I never saw people like me in leadership growing up. That is why it means so much to me to announce I am running for Congress.

    * Tribune | Who will fill Dick Durbin’s US Senate seat in Illinois? Here are the candidates: The election is expected to be hotly contested, with statewide officeholders and congressional leaders vying for the treasured post. The winner of the Democratic primary will likely have an advantage given how blue Illinois’ electorate is, but several Republicans also are weighing a run. Durbin’s retirement means U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth will become Illinois’ senior senator.

    * WCBU | A Rockford Democrat wants to offer a ‘different vision’ in Illinois’ 16th Congressional District: A lifelong resident of Rockford is joining a growing field of candidates from both the left and right looking to unseat Illinois U.S. Congressman Darin LaHood in 2026. Democrat Paul Nolley describes himself as coming from a working class family with a working class background. His father was a mechanic and his mom worked several jobs, both of them without a college education.

    * Tribune | Democratic digital creator likely facing field of local politicians to succeed US Rep. Jan Schakowsky: Kat Abughazaleh, a 26-year-old newcomer to the Chicago region who is banking on her blunt messaging and massive online following to earn her a place on Capitol Hill, might have been the first to announce she was running for the congressional seat — even before the 80-year-old Schakowsky said she wouldn’t run again. But Abughazaleh won’t be the last. One state legislator, state Sen. Laura Fine of Glenview, joined the race within hours of Schakowsky’s announcement. Other local politicians are expected to follow soon, setting up a confrontation between candidates employing new media savvy and those relying on grassroots support and old-school organizing.

Thoughts?

  8 Comments      


Protect The 340B Drug Discount Program: Support SB 2385/HB 3350 To Preserve Healthcare Services For Underserved Rural Communities

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Southern Illinois Healthcare (SIH) serves a 16-county rural area that’s considered medically underserved and, in some counties, over 20% of residents live in poverty. The federal 340B drug discount program has been a lifeline for hospitals that are often the sole providers of care in communities with high poverty levels. Savings from the 340B program have helped SIH meet the healthcare needs of underserved southern Illinois communities.

Because of 340B, SIH has been able to promote health and well-being by expanding access to care and providing additional services, including cancer care and infusion services; chronic disease and diabetes self-management programs; and behavioral health support and services.

Yet, recent barriers by pharmaceutical companies are limiting access to drug savings that hospitals use to invest in patients. Such roadblocks include limiting contract pharmacy relationships to one per covered entity, radius requirements, claims share/data requirements and National Drug Code restrictions.

“These constraints amount to over $2 million annually which could have gone to patients,” said SIH Chief Financial Officer Warren Ladner. “The negative impact of the manufacturer restrictions includes medication adherence issues (missed doses, delays) and impact continuity of care, resulting in readmissions and an overall increase in our health system’s total cost of care.”

Vote YES Senate Bill 2385 and House Bill 3350 to preserve the intent of the 340B program. Learn more.

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Open thread

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Democratic governors blast GOP’s “impossible” Medicaid proposal. Axios

    - Democratic governors warned that proposed House Republican cuts to Medicaid—estimated at over $880 billion—would be “impossible” for states to absorb or replace with state funds.
    - The 23 governors, issued a statement calling the cuts “disastrous.”
    - The Congressional Budget Office has not calculated the exact amount Republicans would reduce spending by, but they estimated on Monday that the overall cuts from the Energy and Commerce committee — which covers the Medicaid budget — would be more than $880 billion.
    - Democrats also criticized proposed GOP changes to SNAP that would require states to help fund benefits, calling it a harmful cost shift to already strained state budgets.

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************

Sponsored by Environment Illinois

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* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Tight fiscal picture, federal funding uncertainty complicate state budget talks: At a luncheon event last week, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch discussed how the uncertainty could force lawmakers back to Springfield this summer to make adjustments to the budget that goes into effect July 1. “We’re going to pass the budget here in the next couple of weeks with the information we know. There’s a lot of things we don’t know,” the Hillside Democrat said. “The only thing we can do is be committed to a process that’s going to have everyone at the table and continue to say we’re not going to spend more than we’re bringing in.”

* Crain’s | U of I’s scrapped Discovery Partners Institute project in South Loop to undergo state audit: Illinois officials will be taking a closer look at the scuttled Discovery Partners Institute project in the South Loop, a now-scrapped plan to build a $285 million research and teaching facility on the south end of the 62-acre neighborhood development known as The 78. The Illinois Audit Commission approved a resolution late last month calling on the Illinois Auditor General to investigate the reported $30 million in taxpayer funds spent on the project led by the University of Illinois.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Congresswoman Robin Kelly embraces underdog status in bid to succeed US Sen. Dick Durbin: Despite having more years in public office than other candidates in the Democratic primary race to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly on Monday embraced her underdog status in the nascent campaign against a pair of opponents expected to be flush with campaign cash. To take on Republican President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, both of whom will still be in office when Durbin’s successor is seated after next year’s election, “you need a fighter, someone that’s not afraid,” the seven-term congresswoman from south suburban Matteson said during an hourlong appearance before the City Club of Chicago. It was Kelly’s first major public event in Illinois since joining the race last week.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Center Square | IL state rep asks tollway to explain error costing taxpayers $44.6 million: State Rep. Tom Weber, R-Fox lake, said a report from The Daily Herald highlights how a contract for tollway construction west of Chicago went to the wrong company. Weber said the work agreement on the I-88, I-290 and I-294 interchange was given to a company from out of state, even though state law gives preference to Illinois companies bidding up to 4% higher. “The new contractor came in who, because of our 4% Illinois preference law, that was the mistake that was made,” Weber said

* Fortune | Democratic state treasurers rip GOP over budget bill — ‘taxing Barbies and G.I. Joes if you can even find them on store shelves’: Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs said House Republicans are executing the play President Trump called for by reducing health care spending to fund tax cuts for wealthy Americans. The impact, said Frerichs, will be that millions of Americans lose access to health care, including hundreds of thousands in Illinois.

*** Chicago ***

* Bloomberg | Pritzker Scores Quantum Win as Australian Firm Picks Chicago Hub: The Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park, which will be under construction over the next two years, has signed a letter of intent with Diraq, an Australian firm working on expanding technology using silicon quantum dot spin qubits, which quantum computers use to exchange information. Diraq will use the park’s “On-Ramp,” a program that provides more than 2,000 square feet of space and specialized equipment while the campus is under development at the site of a former US Steel plant.

* Chicago Reader | How to navigate the Cook County court system after a shooting: The Trace spoke with six experts—victim advocates and survivors—to learn about the ways people can better prepare. While each expert acknowledged that there isn’t a single best approach because what might benefit one person could hinder another, they shared advice based on what the people they’ve worked with have found useful. They suggested having a plan before every court appearance, leaning on people who can provide support, and bracing for the blunt, unfiltered nature of a trial. We’ve compiled some of their wisdom here with the hopes that it might help other Chicagoans navigate this complicated journey.

* Sun-Times | City Council’s Latino Caucus picks Johnson critic as new chair: One of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s most outspoken critics, Ald. Andre Vasquez, is the newly elected chair of the City Council’s 14-member Latino Caucus — and promises to turn up the heat on the embattled mayor to bolster Latino hiring and contracting. Vasquez (40th) replaces Ald. Rossana Rodriguez-Sanchez (33rd), who has had only praise for the embattled mayor, in part, because she is one of Johnson’s allies.

* Tribune | Swath of Lincoln Yards site, still mostly empty 6 years after winning City Council approval, could be sold: The company is assessing the feasibility of buying the 53-acre site’s northern half, which developer Sterling Bay surrendered to lender Bank OZK earlier this year, according to a source familiar with the potential deal. JDL has stayed mum about the possible sale and what it might do with the empty plot of land along the North Branch of the Chicago River north of Cortland Street. What sort of changes JDL may need from Sterling Bay’s original redevelopment agreement with the city, and any new zoning approvals it may need, are not clear.

* Crain’s | Mixed-income housing plan for old Cabrini grounds lines up $46M for final phase: Holsten started redeveloping the site in 2004, as the Chicago Housing Authority demolished most of Cabrini-Green Homes, the massive public housing project that at its peak housed 15,000 people but became widely known for its problems with poverty and crime. The broader development, Parkside at Old Town, will total nearly 800 units. The demolition drew criticism from housing advocates who argued the plan would displace residents from their homes. A lawsuit from a residents group resulted in a consent decree mandating the development of 700 units of public housing on the Near North Side. Holsten and other developers started partnering with CHA to build new housing as the towers came down.

* Sun-Times | Chicago police recruit arrested with ’suspected crack cocaine’ at training academy has case tossed: The court record offers no indication why the felony drug charge was tossed out during his first hearing. But the recruit’s lawyer, Tim Grace, said the case was dropped after testing proved the alleged contraband wasn’t actually narcotics. On April 21, the 24-year-old recruit was acting as a crime suspect being searched for drugs when he was found with four baggies with green dollar signs that contained “suspect crack cocaine,” according to police reports. The recruit had been given phony heroin in a bag with blue stars.

* Tribune | Cop on mayor’s detail suspended after allegedly drinking at Trump inauguration celebration, showing up for work: Records obtained by the Tribune show Najera allegedly was drunk when arrived for the shift at the mayor’s home after leaving the inauguration celebration at Trump Tower. A breathalyzer test administered that night revealed a .134 BAC, according to Chicago Police Department internal affairs records. A department supervisor confiscated Najera’s gun and he was immediately stripped of his police powers. He was given a 25-day suspension which the department reported he has yet to serve.

* WGN | Construction underway at Gompers Park amid ongoing safety concerns: While no tents were set up in Gompers Park as of Monday evening, there were tents seen across Pulaski Road in Eugene Field Park. In a statement released to WGN News, the Chicago Park District said it will continue to collaborate with the City on finding amicable means to resettle tent inhabitants.

* WGN | Chicago climate report: Lack of rain puts Chicagoland in drought territory: So far this month, we’ve only seen two days with measurable rainfall. May is typically our soggiest month of the year. We’re about an inch and a half behind where we should be almost halfway into the month. The lack of rainfall has pushed many of us around Chicagoland back into some form of drought condition. The latest USDA Drought Outlook that’s released weekly on Thursdays has most of us in “abnormally dry” which is the lowest drought level and some spots with “moderate drought” towards the NW corner of Illinois.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County property tax bills likely to be delayed: The delay is the latest setback for county officials. Aside from tax bill delays during the pandemic, tax officials have been at odds or openly feuding for several years over the accuracy of assessments, the expense of tech upgrades and plain politics. Assessor Fritz Kaegi’s office is blaming Tyler Technologies, the contractor in charge of updating the data systems across the county’s property tax offices, for the delay. Other property tax officials, however, say Kaegi is at fault for failing to prioritize this issue and missing a foundational step in the tax process.

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan’s temporary casino hits revenue milestone; permanent facility plans moving ‘full steam ahead’: Reaching a revenue milestone in March of nearly $10.9 million, American Place continues to draw customers from northern Illinois, southern Wisconsin, and elsewhere in Chicagoland, leading Full House President and CEO Daniel R. Lee to tout its role for the company. Lee said in a May 8 press release that American Place took “meaningful strides” in the first quarter of this year at its temporary facility, and anticipates a much stronger performance once the permanent resort and casino opens.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Transition team for Aurora Mayor-elect John Laesch busy ahead of Tuesday inauguration: Laesch, who has been an alderman at-large for the past two years, is set to give a speech at Tuesday’s inauguration about his plans and vision for Aurora, according to a city news release. He told The Beacon-News on Monday that his transition team has been making good progress in its advisory role. The primary purpose of the team, Laesch said, has been to bring in subject matter experts to help discuss topics he may not specialize in. Chuck Nelson said Laesch’s transition team also represents a good cross section of the city, from elected officials and civic leaders to engaged citizenry.

* ABC Chicago | Harvey residents seek investigation into mayor’s office after alderwoman arrested during meeting: Residents claim they have continuously been silenced by the mayor’s office, a claim also being made by 2nd Ward Alderwoman Colby Chapman. “I witness a troubling pattern in our governance, a pattern of silencing voices and shielding decision from public view,” Chapman said. Chapman was arrested during a council meeting two weeks ago, she said, while trying to speak on behalf of a resident. The city council voted to censure her and remove her from the meeting, as seen on video.

* Daily Herald | Warm weather bringing more ticks to the suburbs: As of Wednesday, the DuPage County Health Department reported 32 tick sightings from residents using its Citizen Reporter app. In all of 2024, the department received a total of 42 reports on the app. “We’re on pace to be higher than last year,” said Matt Fullam, environmental health program manager for the DuPage County Health Department.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Bloomington City Council lends its support to shelter village proposal: The council unanimously approved a resolution supporting the sale of the property, where the shelter village known as “The Bridge” will be developed, from Connect Transit to Home Sweet Home Ministries [HSHM]. “This project really represents collaboration. It represents a step forward, and one that’s really rooted in dignity and care,” said council member Cody Hendricks. “Is it going to be perfect? No, nothing ever is. But it’s a start and it’s the right start.

* WGEM | Quincy City Council introduces ordinance that could shorten meetings: A new ordinance was introduced that would wrap all petitions and resolutions into a consent agenda. “Weeks where we have a large number of public comments and a long agenda, it’s hard to really still be in it,” 3rd Ward Alderwoman Kelly Mays said. Mays started the discussion during the first presentation of the ordinance. Aldermen Greg Fletcher and Jeff Bergman both voiced their displeasure with the ordinance citing a lack of transparency.

* WAND | Building the future: Mattoon HS students construct house from the ground up: Led by Construction Trades Teacher Troy Haacke, the Building Trades program at Mattoon High School gives students real-world experience in the construction industry. Haacke told WAND News the students do it all, from laying the foundation to installing drywall and painting walls. The class, offered to juniors and seniors, combines classroom learning with on-site work. Students first learn tools and equipment safety, construction terms, blueprint reading, and material estimating before moving onto the job site. There, they assist with everything from framing and roofing to electrical wiring and siding installation.

*** National ***

* NYT | Why Patients Are Being Forced to Switch to a 2nd-Choice Obesity Drug: CVS Caremark decided to stop offering Zepbound in favor of Wegovy for weight loss. It’s the latest example of limits imposed by insurance that disrupt treatments for patients.

* Bolts | A New Crackdown on Ballot Initiatives Unnerves Florida Organizers: The legislation makes it a felony for a volunteer to collect more than 25 signatures for a campaign from people outside their family without getting approval from the state, which requires background checks and training.

* NYT | Pope’s Family History Offers a Glimpse Into the American Creole Journey: The pope’s maternal grandparents, both of whom are described as Black or “mulatto” in various historical records, lived in the city’s Seventh Ward, an area that is traditionally Catholic and a melting pot of people with African, Caribbean and European roots.

* The Verge | Ticketmaster will finally show the full price of your ticket up front: Now, when you’re shopping for tickets, Ticketmaster will display a ticket’s full price, alongside a dropdown menu that you can select to see how much you’re paying for the “Face Value” of a ticket and the service fee. You still won’t see local taxes or delivery fees until checkout.

  5 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, May 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, May 13, 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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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Catching up with the congressionals
* Do better
* Big Beautiful Bill roundup: Pritzker says special session may not be needed, warns 330,000 Illinoisans could lose Medicaid; Planned Parenthood of Illinois pledges to continue care despite cuts (Updated)
* RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
* 'The Chosen One' tones himself down
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
* Yesterday's stories

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