Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton’s campaign sent this email out earlier today.…
* But if you keep reading Moore’s piece, there are some caveats…
* Meanwhile, yet another candidate is jumping into the race for the 9th Congressional District…
* Andrew’s launch video… * ABC Chicago…
* WSIL | ISP urges safety following four motorcycle-related deaths in the last week: The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) says that while motorcycles make up only about 3% of registered vehicles, they contribute to 12% of roadway deaths. Illinois Department of Transportation data shows that so far for 2025, Illinois has seen 44 motorcycle-related deaths. * Don Harmon | I disagree with the Illinois State Board of Elections that my campaign violated fundraising limits: At the heart of this matter is confusion surrounding a fundamental element of our campaign finance laws. We wanted fairness, so we wrote these provisions so that neither House nor Senate candidates have an advantage over the other. Because House candidates always run for two-year terms and Senate candidates more often run for four-year terms, we took pains to ensure the campaign limits didn’t confer advantages to one over the other. The election board’s interpretation runs completely counter to that fundamental ingredient. * WAND | Plan creating guidance for AI technology in Illinois schools awaits Pritzker’s approval: State lawmakers started the spring session knowing there was an urgent need for regulation as schools navigate the growing role of AI in education. “We found more than 90% of teachers find that AI is something they believe will make a great difference for students in the future,” said Teach Plus Illinois Policy Director Bill Curtin. “But, less than half of them were getting training from their districts or schools on how to use it safely or well.” * NCSL | State School Bus Stop-Arm Camera Laws: A growing number of states are attempting to catch and punish motorists who pass stopped school buses by allowing cameras to be placed on the outside of the bus to record such illegal passing. At least 26 states have school bus stop-arm camera laws. * WAND | Alpa-gal awareness bill awaits Pritzker’s signature amid rise in tick bites: The Illinois TICK Act would specifically address alpha-gal syndrome, which is a potentially life threatening allergic reaction triggered by a tick bite. Anyone bitten by a Lone Star tick will have an allergy to red meat due to the infection. Some people don’t know they have the disease until they go into anaphylactic shock while eating red meat. Rep. Dan Swanson (R-Woodhull) filed this bill because his mother suffers from the disease. * Crain’s | Johnson confirms he’s ’seriously considering’ naming Burnett to run CHA: At an unrelated press conference, Johnson today confirmed Burnett “is someone that I am seriously considering, along with two other potential candidates.” “Walter Burnett has just been an incredible asset to the people of Chicago,” he said. “His lived experience around public housing is the type of experience that is rare. You very rarely find someone who has that type of compassion and understanding around the value of building more affordable housing, particularly low-income housing.” * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson open to future Chicago NASCAR race, suggests date change: Mayor Brandon Johnson is open to NASCAR returning to Chicago, but hinted Tuesday the city may need a better deal before stock car drivers again race through its streets. NASCAR has 90 days to request a contract extension with the Chicago Park District. If the racing authority wants to win city leaders over, it could need to change race dates, the mayor said Tuesday. “The Fourth of July is already, quite frankly, it is a heavier burden for our law enforcement because of so much activity,” Johnson said at a City Hall news conference. “It’s something that will be part of the larger discussion if, in fact, NASCAR returns, what is the optimal time.” * Crain’s | Blue Cross parent renames Medicare offerings following Cigna deal: The Chicago-based parent of Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Illinois, which purchased Cigna’s Medicare business for $3.3 billion in March, is set to start offering insurance products later this year pending regulatory approval, according to a Tuesday news release. Nonprofit HCSC could only sell Blue Cross and Blue Shield policies, including Medicare Advantage plans, in Illinois, Montana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas before the Cigna deal. It now has access to the Medicare Advantage market in 25 additional states and Washington, D.C., the national Part D market and the Medigap market in 48 states and Washington, D.C. * Crain’s | American Airlines goes back to court to stop gate shuffle at O’Hare: “The gate redetermination has now entered a critical phase and, absent this court’s intervention, will occur on Oct. 1, 2025 — 90 days away,” American said in a complaint filed July 3 in U.S. District Court in Chicago. “At that point, it will likely become impossible to undo the damage as this litigation unfolds over time.” American and Chicago-based United are the two largest carriers at O’Hare. Under the city’s reallocation plan, United will have about 42% of the space at O’Hare to board and unload passengers, compared with 30% for American. Currently, United has about 40% and American has about 32%. * Daily Southtown | Mother McAuley student leaders join colleagues from around the world to help ‘change the narrative’ on immigration: About 50 young women from schools from 10 schools as close as Mother McAuley Liberal Arts High School in Chicago’s Mount Greenwood neighborhood to those as far away as Belize, Honduras and Jamaica recently came together to provide a carnival-like experience for immigrant families served by Catherine’s Caring Cause in Chicago. The four-day Conference of Mercy Student Leaders, hosted at Saint Xavier University in Chicago this year, offered students in the Mercy education system an opportunity to further develop their leadership skills along with a good dose of empathy. * WBEZ | Some drag queens saw fewer gigs, shows amid muted corporate participation during Pride Month: In past years, “I would start getting emails and messages in April … and by the time May comes, I’d have a full schedule for June,” Jones told the Sun-Times. Jones was not the only drag queen to report getting fewer job offers as companies and brands opted to hold quieter Pride Month celebrations here and nationally. A survey by Gravity Research found that that 39% of Fortune 500 and Global 1000 companies planned to reduce Pride-related engagement in 2025. More than 60% of those surveyed cited the Trump administration’s policies toward LGBTQ+ issues as “the top reason for rethinking Pride strategies.” * Chicago Reader | Greg Obis, new owner of Chicago Mastering Service: At Chicago Mastering, we do stuff at a pretty high level. In Chicago at least, there’s probably us and Carl Saff that are doing this. This room is totally nuts—it’s like listening to music underneath a microscope. And we have all the latest tools in order to get music to where it needs to be. But frankly, not everybody has a budget for that, and it’s going to continue to be a challenge in the future to convince people that doing it at this level is worthwhile. * Sun-Times | Angel Reese joins chorus of WNBA players frustrated with officiating: * Sun-Times | White Sox to honor late closer Bobby Jenks with ‘45’ patches on uniforms for rest of season: “When he came out, you knew everything was going to be OK,” Sox fan Pat Reisinger of La Grange said outside Rate Field, imitating former Sox manager Ozzie Guillen’s signature “wide” gesture that would summon the hefty Jenks from the left-field bullpen. “I get chills thinking about those moments.” The Sox will honor the big man, who was at the center of a slew of the biggest moments in franchise history, by adding “45” patches to players’ uniforms for the rest of the season, team officials said. * Naperville Sun | Naperville-area students bringing their new product to national pitch competition: A team of Naperville-area teen entrepreneurs who created a business designed to make travel smoother will compete this coming week as one of five national finalists in the INCubatoredu National Pitch competition in Chicago. It was no easy task getting there. It took nearly a year of brainstorming and development, business plan writing and website creation before Naperville North High School students Bremen Dinh and Noah Wrodarczyk and Metea Valley High School student Alex Liu were ready to face off in the local competitions that would take them to the national stage. * Shaw Local | Lockport raises newly designed city flag at Heritage Village: The City of Lockport held an official flag raising for its newly designed City Flag, a project spearheaded by a local Boy Scout. Zachary Dylkiewicz, 14, proposed the creation of a city flag to the Lockport City Council in May 2024, and its creation was the basis of his Eagle Scout project. * Daily Herald | Why Lake Zurich’s July 4 fireworks fizzled: Assistant Village Manager Michael Duebner said the fireworks were canceled Friday morning around 9:30 a.m. after rain made it unsafe to load fireworks onto launch barges. The downpour also deprived the village of the time needed to get the show underway, which usually takes about 12 hours. Lake Zurich residents were expecting fireworks Friday night at Paulus Park, but were notified on the village’s Facebook page about the cancellation just before 10 a.m. * Daily Herald | Hanover Township seeking donation of school supplies, backpacks for annual distribution: Most needed items include backpacks, notebooks, loose leaf paper, pencils, markers, crayons, scissors, flash drives, pens, and glue sticks. Donations of supplies or retail gift cards to buy supplies are appreciated. Last year, 2,552 backpacks filled with school supplies were given to township youth. * Tribune | State fines, reprimands Champaign abortion doctor accused of leaving half a fetus inside Indiana patient: Dr. Keith Reisinger-Kindle of Equity Clinic must pay a $5,000 fine and complete 20 hours of continuing medical education for “failing to evaluate a patient before a procedure which resulted in hospitalization due to complications,” according to the May 16 disciplinary action by the state regulatory agency. Reisinger-Kindle did not immediately return Tribune requests for comment on the reprimand and fine by the state. He also has not responded to previous requests for comment on the lawsuit, which is still pending. An attorney representing the physician declined to comment. * Pantagraph | McLean County prosecutor appointed to judgeship, filling Logan County vacancy: A McLean County prosecutor will be the newest associate circuit judge in the 11th Judicial Circuit. Emily Young has been appointed to fill the vacancy left by retiring Associate Judge William Workman, Chief Judge Casey Costigan announced Tuesday. “We are pleased to welcome Ms. Young to the bench,” Costigan said in a news release. “She is a highly capable attorney with a strong commitment to fairness and the judicial temperament our courts require.” * WCIA | Fourth lawsuit filed against PBL teacher, coach accused of sexual misconduct, school district: A fourth Jane Doe is filing a lawsuit against suspended Paxton-Buckley-Loda teacher and coach Robert Pacey, who was accused of sexual misconduct, as well as other district employees. Last month, WCIA reported that three separate Jane Does said Pacey inappropriately touched them, hit one of them, and made one of them change in front of him. This newest lawsuit also named Junior High principal Josh Didier and two former superintendents — Travis Duley and Cliff McClure. The suit alleged that they didn’t do enough with the at least 22 reports made by parents, students and teachers combined. * WSIL | Free food boxes available for Carbondale residents this summer: Residents can pick up food boxes by driving through the West parking lot of City Hall during the event. For those unable to leave their homes, delivery is available within Carbondale city limits for residents with mobility challenges. Requests for food box delivery must be submitted by 12 p.m. on Friday, July 11. Deliveries will only be made to addresses within Carbondale. * WICS | Illinois State Fair set to kick off August 7: Rebecca Clark, the manager of the Illinois State Fair, expressed excitement about the upcoming event. “You turn the calendar and July 4th is over and everybody starts thinking about the Illinois State Fair, which is great because we’re just 4 weeks away from the start of this annual event,” said Clark. She added, “Things are really starting to take shape, our grounds are getting under way and are getting improved upon, and we’re really getting ready.” * WCIA | ‘The deadliest natural disaster globally’: U of I professor says flash flood emergency response should be reevaluated: Some critics are blaming the National Weather Service forecast, saying it didn’t predict the amount of rain the region saw. “But that’s not really relevant because when you know that you have so much rainfall falling in a specific area, you’re going to get the flash flood,” said Barros. She pointed out another difficulty in trying to predict flash flooding specifically. […] Going forward, Barros said, improving the alert systems may be the answer. She added that while weather prediction models aren’t perfect, they provide solid precipitation numbers up to two days in advance. * WaPo | A Marco Rubio impostor is using AI voice to call high-level officials: An impostor pretending to be Secretary of State Marco Rubio contacted foreign ministers, a U.S. governor and a member of Congress by sending them voice and text messages that mimic Rubio’s voice and writing style using artificial intelligence-powered software, according to a senior U.S. official and a State Department cable obtained by The Washington Post. * AP | Minnesota state Sen. John Hoffman, shot 9 times by a man posing as an officer, leaves the hospital: “John has been moved to a rehab facility, but still has a long road to recovery ahead,” the family said in a statement Monday night. The family released a photo showing a smiling Hoffman giving a thumbs-up while standing with a suitcase on rollers, ready to leave the hospital. * NPR | The health of U.S. kids has declined significantly since 2007, a new study finds: “They just seem to be sicker. And it turns out they are,” says Forrest, a professor of pediatrics at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. In a new study in the journal JAMA, Forrest and his colleagues report that the health of America’s children has significantly worsened across several key indicators since 2007. They found that a U.S. child was 15% to 20% more likely to have a chronic condition in 2023 than a child in 2011. In particular, the prevalence of depression, anxiety, sleep apnea and obesity all increased, as did rates of autism, behavioral problems, developmental delays and attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.
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SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In the final hours of the state’s legislative session, SB 328 was quietly introduced and passed giving lawmakers and the public little time to review and debate this legislation. Now, it’s sitting on the Governor’s desk. If signed, it will allow trial lawyers to drag companies into Illinois courts for lawsuits that have nothing to do with Illinois. Businesses could be sued here simply for being registered in the state — even if the alleged harm occurred elsewhere. And it puts jobs and our state’s economy at risk. Even New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed a nearly identical bill twice, calling it a “massive expansion” of jurisdiction that would deter job creation and burden the courts. Governor Pritzker has a choice: Veto the legislation to protect Illinois jobs and businesses — or signal to employers that Illinois is open season for out-of-state lawsuits. Learn more and make your voice heard: ![]()
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Question of the day
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Tribune’s Alice Yin…
The Question: Should home rule units of government be allowed to enact progressive taxes on their own? Explain.
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SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department
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Meta deal is Constellation’s blueprint for four Illinois nuclear plants
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Utility Dive last month…
* The Tribune today…
* Related…
* AP News | Amazon to spend $20B on data centers in Pennsylvania, including one next to a nuclear power plant: One data center is being built next to northeastern Pennsylvania’s Susquehanna nuclear power plant, where it intends to get its power. The other will be in Fairless Hills at a logistics campus, the Keystone Trade Center, on what was once a U.S. Steel mill. Amazon said that data center will get its power through the electricity grid. At a news conference in Berwick in the shadow of the power plant, Gov. Josh Shapiro called it the largest private sector investment in Pennsylvania’s history. Monday’s announcement, he said, is “just the beginning” because his administration is working with Amazon on additional data center projects in Pennsylvania. * Trellis | 7 companies helping Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft go nuclear: The Baltimore-based producer, which operates the largest U.S. nuclear fleet with 21 reactors, is Microsoft’s partner for the Three Mile Island restart. It’s also the supplier for Meta’s 20-year-long power purchase agreement, announced June 3, to buy 1.1 gigawatts of nuclear energy from the Clinton Clean Energy Center in Illinois. Meta’s commitment will support an expansion of the facility’s output and deliver $13.5 million in annual tax revenue, according to the announcement. The site had been slated for retirement. * Center Square | Meta involvement in Clinton nuclear plant sparks debate over IL energy future: Halbrook said that Illinoisans aren’t losing electricity in this deal, Meta is only buying credit for clean energy, not the power itself. When state subsidies for the Clinton plant expire in 2027, Meta will take over that cost, easing the burden on ratepayers. “Meta will pick up where [the Future Energy Jobs Act] ratepayer subsidy sunsets in 2027 and carry that forward,” Halbrook said. “That’s a good thing for ratepayers. But there are still a lot of questions that need answering.” * Tech Crunch | Meta buys over 1 GW of renewables to power its data centers: The social media company announced Thursday it will buy 791 megawatts of solar and wind power in Ohio, Arkansas, and Texas from project developer Invenergy. And on Wednesday, Meta said it would buy the environmental attributes from two of Adapture Renewables’ solar farms in Texas, totaling 360 megawatts. Meta has been on a renewable buying spree. Last month, it signed a deal to buy 650 megawatts across two solar projects being built by AES, a utility and power-generation company. Earlier this month, the tech company inked a deal with XGS Energy to build a 150-megawatt enhanced geothermal power plant in New Mexico.
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Crowded 9th Congressional District race grows as Sen. Simmons joins the field (Updated)
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Chicago Tribune…
Sen. Simmons jumping into the race isn’t a surprise, he participated in a campaign event with other Democratic challengers last month. * Politico…
Click here for Sen. Simmons’ campaign website. * The launch video… Thoughts? …Adding… A new challenger appears… ![]()
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois Senate President Don Harmon appeals potential $9.8 million fine for improperly accepting campaign cash. Tribune…
- Harmon’s attorney, Michael Kasper, argues the penalties are based on an “absurd” interpretation of the law, claiming a $100,001 self-contribution in January 2023 should have lifted fundraising caps through at least the end of 2024. - “The staff’s analysis would create an absurd system that unfairly benefits self-funding candidates and also turns campaign finance compliance into simple accounting gimmicks,” Kasper wrote. - Kasper also outlined a legal argument defending Harmon’s last-minute attempt this spring to pass a measure that would have negated the case and the $9.8 million penalty. Click here to read the appeal. * Related stories…
∙ Tribune: Illinois Senate President Don Harmon faces potential $9.8 million fine for improperly accepting campaign cash ∙ CBS Chicago: Illinois election officials say Senate President Don Harmon accepted campaign cash over limit * Sun-Times | Feds want nearly 6 years for former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore: The feds say a former ComEd CEO who “enthusiastically and unreservedly authorized” a criminal conspiracy aimed at former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan deserves a sentence of nearly six years in prison. Anne Pramaggiore “made the choice to participate in a years-long conspiracy that corrupted the legislative process in Springfield,” federal prosecutors wrote in a 64-page court filing Monday night. “As CEO of ComEd and then CEO of Exelon Utilities, Pramaggiore could have put an end to these crimes at any time,” they said. “She had that power.” * Tribune | Illinois-based American Academy of Pediatrics sues Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over vaccine changes: The Illinois-based American Academy of Pediatrics and five other prominent medical groups are suing Robert F. Kennedy Jr., over changes made to COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for children and pregnant women. The lawsuit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, alleges that a decision in May to remove COVID-19 vaccines from the federal list of recommended vaccines for healthy children and pregnant women was unlawful and “endangering the lives of patients.” * QC Times | Norine Hammond announces run for reelection to Illinois House: Norine Hammond plans to run for reelection to the Illinois House of Representatives, she announced Monday. […] Hammond said in Monday’s news release that she remains committed to promoting transparency, fiscal responsibility and policies to serve rural communities. “Throughout my tenure, I’ve worked to ensure our voices are heard in Springfield,” Hammond said in the news release. “Too often, laws are written with only one county in mind, ignoring the unique needs and values of our region. I’ve opposed policies out of step with our principles — measures that would never gain support in western or downstate Illinois — and have stood for a government that represents all citizens.” * Tribune | Chicago adult education programs in limbo as Trump administration withholds funding: “It’s created havoc in the whole system,” said Mark Mulroe, president of A Safe Haven. “It’s just like a cleaver, without any ability to transition into it.” The nonprofit provides transitional housing across the Chicago area and other social services including GED classes. In addition to adult education, the affected grants support before- and after-school activities, teacher training and English-language support. The grants were already appropriated by Congress through continuing resolution and signed into law by Trump in March. * Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson determined to push for Council vote on ‘granny flats’ measure next week: Mayor Brandon Johnson may or may not have the votes to give single-family homeowners carte blanche to turn their attics, basements, garages and coach houses into revenue-generating “granny flats,” but he’s determined to try, setting the stage for a showdown vote at next week’s City Council meeting. Senior mayoral advisor Jason Lee said Monday it’s time to bring to a head — in a way that maximizes the number of affordable units created — the yearlong debate aimed at determining whether to legalize accessory dwelling units citywide “by right,” or require a special use permit for those added residential units. * Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson open to keeping NASCAR in Chicago — after exploring date change, top aide says: Senior mayoral adviser Jason Lee acknowledged that there are “some real limitations on moving the date” based on NASCAR’s overall schedule and “some of the local events in Chicago in the same footprint” in and around Grant Park. But now that the event’s three-year contract has expired, a search for alternative dates is the next step. NASCAR has 90 days to request a contract extension from the Chicago Park District. “Certainly, there is interest in seeing if it can work on another date, just because of some of the challenges that the 4th of July weekend present,” Lee told the Sun-Times on Monday. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Here’s what some Chicagoans want to see in a new Chicago Public Schools leader: The next chief of Chicago Public Schools should prioritize high-quality instruction, make schools feel safe, and have strong communication skills, said respondents in a recent survey conducted as part of the Chicago Board of Education’s search process for the district’s next leader. Zencity — a company focused on community engagement and research — conducted an analysis of about 2,700 respondents that it recruited on its own, and separately looked at results of another 880 people who received the survey from a board member or Alma Advisory Group, the firm that CPS has hired to conduct the CEO search. * Crain’s | Chicago startup aims to protect homebuyers from HOA surprises: Green suggested his clients buy a policy with HOA Warranty, a new product devised by a former Chicago real estate agent to protect against unexpected special assessments. Based on experience with other clients and other buildings, Green estimated a special assessment could cost these buyers between $5,000 and $7,000. The buyers spent $800 in hopes it will keep them from having to pay $5,000-plus later. If there’s no special assessment, they’re out $800. * Sun-Times | Lou Della Evans Reid, legendary gospel choir director, has died at 94: “It was a really big, rich, robust harmonic style of gospel singing,” said gospel music broadcaster Bob Marovich. “She was this diminutive person, under five feet tall, in front of this big choir, and she’s jumping and shaking her fist … Other musicians, if they wanted musical nourishment, they would go there. It was that powerful. “To watch her perform was an event itself,” Marovich said. “She was a very physical choir director, and then she’d turn around and direct the audience, too.” * Sun-Times | Jeff Tobolski’s ‘web of corruption’ deserves 5½ years in prison, feds say: Federal prosecutors want a prison sentence of more than 5 ½ years for former Cook County Commissioner Jeff Tobolski, who they say “went on an aggressive and persistent cash grab to enrich himself” while holding elected office. Assistant U.S. Attorney Tiffany Ardam wrote in a 12-page court filing Monday that “the sheer breadth of Tobolski’s corrupt schemes is staggering,” that he “created a vast web of corruption” by enlisting others in his wrongdoing, and that he cracked jokes about it all. * WGN | ‘It’s egregious’: Country Club Hills School District 160 under fire for mismanagement and financial missteps: Since then, Williams has continued to be a very vocal participant in school board meetings, which is where WGN-TV met her in May. It emerged then that the district’s finances might need some scrutiny, so WGN-TV started digging into the spending habits of Superintendent Duane Meighan and the rest of the board, namely former president and current secretary, Jacqueline Doss. […] The lengthy list of issues includes—in just the last two and a half years—district credit card reports in Meighan’s name, showing hundreds of thousands of dollars spent on high end hotel stays and upscale restaurants. * ABC Chicago | Charges dropped against Harvey Alderwoman Colby Chapman: According to the Harvey police chief, the Cook County State’s Attorney office dropped the felony charges against Alderwoman Colby Chapman. Chapman was accused of pushing an officer’s arm and pulling away as she was removed from a meeting back in April. Harvey Police Chief Cameron Biddings said in a statement in part, “I am disappointed and concerned by the State’s Attorney’s decision to drop felony charges against Alderwoman Chapman without so much as a grand jury hearing, despite the clear evidence that she struck a Harvey police officer while resisting lawful orders. * Daily Herald | Schaumburg lowering requirements for electric-vehicle capability at new multifamily buildings: Schaumburg trustees are expected to use their home-rule authority Tuesday to adopt less stringent electric vehicle requirements for any new large-scale multifamily construction. State law that took effect 18 months ago requires EV chargers for every parking space at larger multifamily developments, but Schaumburg is asking for only 20%. “We want to be conscious of the environment, but there’s also the question of what’s reasonable,” Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly said. “The general feeling was that things aren’t going to move as fast (in the electric-vehicle market) as they have been.” * Aurora Beacon News | National nonprofit supports Aurora’s free pet microchip program with grant: A free pet microchipping program by the city of Aurora will continue for another year after the city was awarded a grant from national nonprofit Petco Love, officials announced Sunday. Aurora residents can call 311 to set up an appointment to get their pet microchipped for free through the program. Microchips are small implants put under a pet’s skin that contains contact information for the pet’s owner when read by a certain device. * Daily Herald | Three-story sporting, dining and entertainment venue coming to St. Charles: Expected to open next spring in the Fox Haven Square development on the east side of St. Charles, Harbor House will bring three stories of entertainment and activities, including the area’s first padel courts. Padel is a racket sport that combines elements of tennis and squash. In addition to three padel courts, the 46,000-square-foot venue will feature six indoor pickleball courts, seven duckpin bowling lanes, pingpong tables and a darts gallery. Every level will have outdoor patio space with bocce courts and other lawn games. * STLPR | Have Trump and U.S. Steel given up on Granite City? Many in the Metro East fear so: Granite City Mayor Mike Parkinson and two state lawmakers, Sen. Erica Harriss, R-Glen Carbon, and Rep. Amy Elik, R-Godfrey, have written separate letters to the White House, advocating for the steel mill. “Granite City needs your help, President Trump, to gain the investment from U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel that will allow this plant to be a leader once again making high-quality steel here in the U.S.A.,” the two lawmakers wrote. After more than two decades of what some residents see as numerous empty promises and a lack of investment from U.S. Steel, many steelworkers, current and retired, feel frustrated that Granite City Works appears to be on the losing end of this massive deal that Trump helped broker. * BND | Pride, hope and fear at naturalization ceremony in metro-east: Simisola Adefionie, who immigrated from Nigeria nine years ago, says the crackdown on immigration under the Trump administration added stress to the process. “I feel so relieved,” she said. “Now I can go visit home without worrying about if I will be able to come back.” Adefioie said it’s hard for immigrants to travel without fear of being entry back into the country they’ve come to know and love. When her father was dying, she elected not to attempt a visit out of concern she would be denied entry back into the U.S. Her mother still has not met her children. * IPM Newsroom | The killing of Sonya Massey – one year later: The year after the shooting, there have been developments. The Massey Commission, aimed at changing policing and how mental health access is handled, was created. The Commission has held numerous hearings in the community and organized several events in recent days to honor Massey, including a balloon launch earlier Sunday. “We must work together to never, ever forget the God-loving woman who was tragically taken from our community by an act of violence,” Mayor Misty Buscher told the crowd. * NPR Illinois | Ken Page explains the 1908 Race Riot and how its legacy continues in Springfield today: The 1908 Race Riot is a dark moment in Springfield’s history, yet many grew up not knowing about the tragedy that set back Black businesses and families for many years to come. President of the Springfield Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Ken Page spoke to Community Voices about the riot and how its legacy continues today. He also shared his experience growing up in Selma, Ala. during the civil rights movement and how it led him to the ACLU. * WCIA | ‘Having more space… a cleaner space’: Douglas Co. starting shelter renovations: Douglas County Animal Control is beginning to work on renovations. While nothing has drastically changed, as you walk down the hall — you can definitely see their vision coming together. The biggest change so far is the kennel placed in the back — the shelter manager said they’re making progress slowly but surely. Building manager Riley Weinstock said the improvements will help them take better care of their animals. * WGLT | Advocacy group for people with criminal records launches Fully Free BloNo chapter: The Fully Free BloNo launch party from 3 to 7 p.m. includes a hog roast and other food and drinks. There’s no cost to attend, and it’s open to the public. The event aims to build community, but it’s also a call to action, according to organizers. “A person’s felony shouldn’t have to follow them the rest of their life. We feel like once they complete their sentences, it should be over with,” said Toy Beasley, a Bloomington resident and an organizer who helped launch the group. * NYT | I.R.S. Says Churches Can Endorse Candidates From the Pulpit: The agency made that statement in a court filing intended to settle a lawsuit filed by two Texas churches and an association of Christian broadcasters. The plaintiffs that sued the I.R.S. had previously asked a federal court in Texas to create an even broader exemption — to rule that all nonprofits, religious and secular, were free to endorse candidates to their members. That would have erased a bedrock idea of American nonprofit law: that tax-exempt groups cannot be used as tools of any campaign. Instead, the I.R.S. agreed to a narrower carveout — one that experts in nonprofit law said might sharply increase politicking in churches, even though it mainly seemed to formalize what already seemed to be the agency’s unspoken policy. * ABC | TSA to end shoes-off policy for airport security screening: An unexpected memo went out to TSA officers across the country last week stating the new policy will allow all passengers to keep their shoes on in all screening lanes at many airports across the country, starting Sunday. The goal is to roll the new policy out to all U.S. airports shortly, according to the memo. Previously, only passengers in the TSA PreCheck line were able to keep their shoes on in most cases. * NYT | OpenAI and Microsoft Bankroll New A.I. Training for Teachers: The American Federation of Teachers said it would use the $23 million, including $500,000 from the A.I. start-up Anthropic, to create a national training center. The tech industry’s campaign to embed artificial intelligence chatbots in classrooms is accelerating. The American Federation of Teachers, the second-largest U.S. teachers’ union, said on Tuesday that it would start an A.I. training hub for educators with $23 million in funding from three leading chatbot makers: Microsoft, OpenAI and Anthropic. * The Athletic | Pride progress? As gay pro athletes consider coming out, each announcement makes a mark: It was never Jason Collins’ intention to be a spokesperson or the leader of a cause. He just wanted to live a life that was open and honest, a life untangled from the usual excuses and dodges that are in the playbook when you’re in the closet. But when you emerge as the first active, openly gay player in NBA history, as Collins did in 2013, you can’t not be a spokesperson. One of the constants in the evolution of the openly gay athlete in the major North American men’s professional sports leagues — the NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL and MLS — is that everyone who comes out is providing a for-free blueprint for those who dare to be next.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jul 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* The governor is set to headline the Cap Times Fest in September…
* Capitol News Illinois | ‘We think about the state in the same way’: Mitchell ready to back up Pritzker: Pritzker told reporters in the days after he launched his campaign he was looking for a running mate who shared the same affinity for Illinois and was qualified to step in as governor if required. He said he picked Mitchell more than a week before announcing his reelection in late June, but he declined to say how many people he considered. “He is somebody that I have grown to trust,” Pritzker said at an event in Peoria. “I’ve seen him usher enormous legislation through the legislature. … He’s a guy who knows how to get big things done and I’ve worked with him to get it done and I’m excited for the people of Illinois to get to know him.” * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker’s running mate is a fellow Chicagoan, but says he will ‘represent all of Illinois’: The Chicago versus downstate dynamic in has been an source of friction in state politics for years, and Pritzker’s choice figures to play into that issue going forward. For his part, Mitchell, 38, said he is ready to meet people from all over Illinois. “In a tavern, at a bar, at a coffee shop, I’m willing to go anywhere, because my goal is to represent all of Illinois,” he said, after he and Pritzker spent about a half hour greeting a crowd of supporters and early lunch customers at Peach’s, whose website features a photo of former President Barack Obama at the restaurant’s counter. * Sun-Times | Chicago sees least violent Fourth of July in at least 6 years: Nine people were killed and 40 others were injured in citywide violence over the holiday weekend, making it the least violent Fourth of July weekend in at least six years. The weekend runs from 5 p.m. Thursday to 5 a.m. Monday, meaning late Wednesday’s mass shooting — which left four dead and 14 others injured — was not counted in the total. At a summer safety news conference Thursday, Deputy Mayor Garien Gatewood said the city had extended hours of street outreach workers to 3 a.m. and Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling said police planned to target areas where large groups gather, such as beaches, to help ensure a safer weekend which was enough to keep violence in the city at bay. * Crain’s | Ald. Walter Burnett in the running to lead the Chicago Housing Authority: If bypassed, he’s flirting with a run for Congress if U.S. Rep. Danny Davis doesn’t seek a 16th term. And if neither option pans out, he’s considering offers from the private sector. The only near certainty is if and when he does depart the City Council, he’ll push to keep the seat in the family. “I’m at that age. I’m 30 years in, so we’re looking at all of our options,” Burnett told Crain’s, saying the CHA appointment is only under consideration by Johnson. * Chicago Reader | Chicago keeps controversial police promotion list secret: Chicago police superintendent Eddie Johnson took the unprecedented step of publicly releasing the names of officers who had received merit-based promotions since 2006, along with their nominators. […] But the brief window of transparency has slammed shut. After revelations about his 2016 merit promotion to sergeant prompted greater scrutiny, Poulos’s 2024 promotion to lieutenant happened in the dark—because the city now claims that the release of records about the manner of an officer’s promotion would be an invasion of their privacy, a claim rejected by public records and civil rights attorneys. The public has no way of knowing whether he received his most recent promotion through the exam or the merit system. * Out | These two Black transgender women are ‘shining beacons’ leading Chicago through anti-trans backlash: Commissioner Precious Brady-Davis, who made history in 2024 as the first Black openly transgender woman elected to public office in Cook County, and Channyn Lynne Parker, CEO of Brave Space Alliance, are confronting a national moment marked by cruelty, disinformation, and legislative assault. In candid interviews, both described their work not as survival but as leadership — grounded in service, community, and defiance of erasure. “I feel that Republicans, the President of the United States, were elected on the backs of $250 million worth of lies,” Brady-Davis said, referring to the documented ad spending by Trump-aligned campaigns that saturated network television with anti-trans content in 2024. “That ad campaign wasn’t just about winning votes — it was about trying to erase us.” * Crain’s | Look inside the new Chicago Board of Trade museum: Open outcry trading pit relics, an immersive theater, and nods to the Chicago Board of Trade Building’s history in movies and TV are part of a new museum opening this week at the Loop landmark, an attraction the tower’s owner and city officials hope will help bring new foot traffic to vacancy-ridden LaSalle Street. Boosted by a $250,000 grant from the city’s Small Business Improvement Fund, a new Chicago Board of Trade Building Museum officially debuts tomorrow on the ground floor at 141 W. Jackson Blvd. * Block Club | Strange Bar Sunday Has Tracked Chicago’s Weirdest Watering Holes For More Than A Decade: The pair’s Strange Bar Sunday Instagram account follows them as they explore dives, clubs, bars and everything in between. At first, the men only had each other as followers. They now have tens of thousands of fans, but their approach, presented in “fly-on-the-wall,” documentary-style posts, hasn’t changed, they said. * Lake McHenry Scanner | Lake County deputy files lawsuit against sheriff, state’s attorney alleging he was demoted as part of political retaliation: Ari Briskman, who is a Lake County sheriff’s deputy, filed a lawsuit last week in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois against Lake County Sheriff John D. Idleburg and Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart. Briskman alleges that Idleburg and Rinehart violated his First Amendment rights of free speech and association. […] Rinehart is accused of “consorting” with Idleburg in generating the complaint and “working together [to] orchestrate the disciplinary action against Briskman.” The suit said Idleburg sent sheriff’s deputies to Cole’s office to “interrogate her” about the circumstances of the photo while they demanded documents, emails, photos and other information from Cole. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora considers facility improvement projects totaling $1 million: The Aurora City Council at its meeting Tuesday is set to consider two facility improvement projects totaling roughly $1 million. One project would replace the roofs of two downtown city buildings, including the fifth floor of City Hall, while the other would renovate a room within the Aurora Police Department headquarters building to expand the department’s digital forensic program. Last Tuesday, the Aurora City Council’s Committee of the Whole placed both items on the upcoming Aurora City Council meeting’s consent agenda, which is typically reserved for routine or non-controversial items that are all approved with one vote instead of needing to vote on and talk about each individual item. The Committee of the Whole did not specifically discuss either of the two projects. * Daily Southtown | South, southwest suburban libraries to receive $1.3 million in state funding: Nearly 50 libraries in the south and southwestern suburbs will receive more than $1.3 million in state funding as part of an annual grant program awarding more than 600 public libraries across Illinois $20 million. The Orland Park and Oak Lawn public libraries will receive the largest grant, at just over $86,000 each. Orland Park Public Library Director Mary Adamowski said the library plans to use the money to expand its collection of books and materials. * Tribune | Long after the fuss over Pope Leo XIV, the village of Dolton will still be here: If you’re planning a pilgrimage to the pope’s hometown this summer, keep that in mind: Dolton was never a remarkable place, and never asked to be considered remarkable. […] Dolton has good history and bad history, and lawns, stores, squirrels, parks, good people, bad people, boring people, people with too much to say, people with nothing to say. It’s seen plenty of characters: The grandma in the 1800s who would drag her rocking chair out to new railroad construction sites and knit all day, hoping to block yet another soot-spewing steam engine from lumbering into town. The mayor (Ira Hastings) who served from 1935 to 1957, having found his calling after knocking around minor-league baseball — a stint so bad, he played on 12 different teams in only four years and retired with exactly zero home runs and zero RBIs. More ominously, there was that friendly guy down at the local trophy shop (Trophys Are Us), the one who turned out to be a serial killer (David Maust). And that Marine radio operator who was in Desert Storm, who also turned out to be a serial killer (Andrew Urdiales). * Daily Herald | Kane County voters asked to confirm clerk’s office has up-to-date info: Clerk John A. Cunningham said the cards were mailed in June and asked voters to review them, make sure information on the card is correct and contact his office in case of any errors. “The card is your official documentation as a registered voter in Kane County,” Cunningham said in a news release. * WCIA | Family of Sonya Massey celebrates her life, community provides support 1 year after her death: Sunday marked the one year anniversary of the death of Sonya Massey. For her community — a year spent fighting for justice in the wake of tragedy. […] Her death ended up sparking a movement… a campaign that her family continues to fight for. Now, they want people to know her name or better yet, say her name. “Our goal is, to do whatever we have to do to make sure that this does not happen again,” Ray said. * WCIA | Chatham Strong Fest raises $140k for families impacted by after-school tragedy: That’s why organizers created the Chatham Strong Festival to show just how resilient their village is when faced with tragedy. “I think just having children, everyone who also has a small child or could have been impacted by this, needs to show that we want to help the families, whatever they may need now or in the future,” Nichole White said. Organizers said they’ve already raised more than $140,000 out of a goal of $250,000. People looking to help the Chatham families out can donate by clicking here. * Crain’s | Rockford-based health system closes one of its hospitals: Mercyhealth has closed its Javon Bea Hospital-Rockton and filed for a temporary suspension of services, while some medical offices at the campus in Rockford remain open. Rockford-based Mercyhealth has hospitals in Southern Wisconsin and Northern Illinois, including a second Javon Bea Hospital campus in Rockford and a hospital in Crystal Lake. […] Mercyhealth has said in filings that the patient census at Rockton is not large enough to warrant continued operations and that other hospitals in the Rockford area, including its Javon Bea Hospital-Riverside, are more than sufficient to meet the community’s needs. * Advantage News | Raley formalizes bid for Congress: Randy Raley will seek the Democrat nomination in the 2026 primary, promising a quote “bullet train” style campaign where he plans to introduce himself to voters across the sprawling 15th District. His hope is to advance to next year’s general election, then defeat incumbent Republican Mary Miller. * Banking Dive | NCUA closes 2 credit unions in 2 days: The National Credit Union Administration said Tuesday it has liquidated Marion, Illinois-based Aldersgate Federal Credit Union, which was placed into conservatorship last month. Aldersgate FCU violated several provisions of the Federal Credit Union Act and NCUA rules and regulations, including operating in an “unsafe and unsound manner,” the agency said. * WNIJ | Off-grid charging benches on Northern Illinois University’s campus in line with its sustainability goals: Northern Illinois University received four benches for free from a solar charging company. They’ve got eight charging spots and a shady overhang where the solar panel is installed. Matt Deitch is the program director with Northern Illinois Sustainability Center. He said that small changes like this around campus can have a big impact. “And it seems like something that that’s so simple, right?” he said, “but at the same time, it’s this really innovative thing. Why don’t we have these all over? Why do we not have these at every college campus or every place where people are meeting? As we see what they can do, people will be more interested in having them around.” * Illinois Times | An intermission for change: Temporary closure brings much-needed refresh to UIS Performing Arts Center: The Public Affairs Center building at UIS is undergoing a major plumbing replacement project that will temporarily close the UIS Studio Theatre and Sangamon Auditorium. While this may be disappointing news for the patrons who look forward to our events, it also marks the beginning of an exciting new chapter. Because, let’s face it, after more than 40 years, Sangamon Auditorium is ready for its “second act.” * WCIA | Train partially derails in Decatur, cleanup underway: Norfolk Southern:: Officers with the Decatur Police Department responded around 8 a.m. The fire department also responded to the scene Monday morning to ensure that there was no danger to the public. A representative from Norfolk Southern said the cars were loaded up with soybeans, and that no one was injured in the accident. * The Atlantic | RFK Jr.’s Autism Time Machine: The problem begins, in the researchers’ view, with Kennedy’s grasp of the science, which they say he either doesn’t understand or refuses to acknowledge. For instance, Kennedy has complained that too much money has been spent studying genetic causes of autism, describing this avenue as “a dead end.” Between sessions at the conference, the geneticist Joseph Buxbaum sat with us in an empty meeting room and sketched out on a piece of cardboard the numbers and timeline that demonstrate all that’s wrong with this viewpoint. Autism’s genetic underpinnings were first uncovered through studies of twins in the 1970s. Access to the human genome has now revealed that about 80 percent of the odds of being autistic are rooted in heritability. At INSAR this year, one of the most optimistic presentations focused on the progress being made toward genetics-based treatments. “It is shocking,” Buxbaum said of Kennedy’s apparent disregard for experts’ input. * Huff Post | National Public Health Groups Sue RFK Jr. Over Vaccine Policy: The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Physicians and other major national public health organizations filed a lawsuit Monday against Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to defend science-based vaccine policy. The groups are suing Kennedy over his “arbitrary and capricious” directive to change COVID vaccine recommendations for children and pregnant people. Specifically, they are charging Kennedy and HHS with intentionally misleading the public about anti-vaccine rhetoric, through actions like blocking communications from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and announcing studies to investigate non-existent links between vaccines and autism. * NYT | Officials Feared Flood Risk to Youth Camps but Rejected Warning System: Kerr County had discussed buying such things as water gauges and sirens after previous flood disasters. But as with many rural Texas counties, cost was an issue. Eight years ago, in the aftermath of yet another river flood in the Texas Hill Country, officials in Kerr County debated whether more needed to be done to build a warning system along the banks of the Guadalupe River. But was that enough? Officials considered supplementing the system with sirens and river gauges, along with other modern communications tools. “We can do all the water-level monitoring we want, but if we don’t get that information to the public in a timely way, then this whole thing is not worth it,” said Tom Moser, a Kerr County commissioner at the time. * AP | National Guard troops protect immigration officers in large-scale LA operation: About 90 members of the California National Guard and over a dozen military vehicles like Humvees are helping protect immigration officers Monday as they carry out a raid in a Los Angeles park, defense officials said. The operation in MacArthur Park, which is in a neighborhood with a large immigrant population about 2 miles west of downtown LA, includes 17 Humvees, four tactical vehicles, two ambulances and the armed soldiers. It comes after President Donald Trump deployed thousands of Guard members and active duty Marines to the city last month following protests over previous immigration raids.
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Catching up with the congressionals
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Politico…
* Sen. Robert Peters…
The full fundraising picture won’t be clear until the FEC’s July 15 deadline. * Daniel Biss…
* More from the 9th Congressional District…
* Politico…
* Evanston Now…
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Do better
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
Tight budget? Ok, sure, but that $5 million for NASCAR’s operating expenses could’ve come in handy. And I’m sure there were other useless re-appropriations just like this one…
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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)
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for reactions to the budget reconciliation bill’s passage. AP…
The Tribune’s Olivia Olander wrote a nice explainer last month on the $100 million ’safety valve’ Pritzker can use to fill budget holes.
* WTTW…
* Sun-Times…
* WTTW…
…Adding… Gov. JB Pritzker…
* More…
* NPR Illinois | Miller, Budzinski vote along party lines on Trump’s megabill: Rep. Miller, a Republican from Oakland in east central Illinois, went along with Trump. “The One Big, Beautiful Bill is a once-in-a-generation victory for the American people,” said Congresswoman Mary Miller. “It delivers on President Trump’s America First agenda with bold, decisive, and immediate action. This is the most pro-worker, pro-family, pro-America legislation I have voted for during my time in Congress, and I was proud to help get it across the finish line for the hardworking Americans across my district.” Miller, in a news release, called it an historic victory for American workers, families, and farmers. It eliminates taxes on tips and overtime, delivers permanent tax relief for small businesses and working families, and expands critical support for American agriculture. * AP | Rural hospitals brace for financial hits or even closure under Republicans’ $1 trillion Medicaid cut: “Our budget is pretty heavily reliant on the Medicaid reimbursement, so if we do see a cut of that, it’ll be difficult to keep the doors open,” said Sherman, who works at Webster County Community Hospital in the small Nebraska town of Red Cloud just north of the Kansas border. If those facilities close, many locals would see their five-minute trip to Webster County hospital turn into a nearly hour-long ride to the nearest hospital offering the same services. * Talking Points Memo | Congress Throws More Money at Removing Immigrants than Most Countries Spend on Their Armies: It’s hard to convey just how big the new budget makes the country’s immigration enforcement infrastructure. The Bureau of Prisons? Bigger than that. The FBI? Bigger. The Marine Corps? Bigger even than that, by some estimates. All in all, the bill directs around $170 billion through 2029 to various forms of immigration enforcement, according to an analysis by the American Immigration Council and TPM’s own read of the legislation. ICE, responsible for enforcement, detentions, and removals, will oversee much of the spending. * KFF Health News | GOP governors stay silent amid plans to slash Medicaid spending in their states: KFF Health News contacted all 19 governors for comment on the legislation’s Medicaid cuts. Only six responded. Most said they backed imposing a work requirement on adult Medicaid enrollees. “Implementing work requirements for able-bodied adults is a good and necessary reform so that Medicaid is being used for temporary assistance and not a permanent entitlement,” said Drew Galang, a spokesperson for Gov. Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia. * Disability Scoop | Congress Approves Nearly $1 Trillion In Cuts To Medicaid Threatening Disability Services: The Medicaid cuts will take effect at the end of 2026 and roll out over 10 years, according to the American Association of People with Disabilities. “This is a devastating day for disabled Americans,” said Maria Town, the group’s president and CEO. “The catastrophic effects of this bill will reverberate for generations to come.” While the measure does not explicitly include changes to disability services, advocates have been warning for months that there is no way to insulate people with disabilities if the federal government chops its investment in Medicaid. * Chalkbeat | How Trump’s sweeping tax and domestic policy bill will affect children and schools: “When you take it all together it’s kind of like an assault on children and families policy-wise,” said Megan Curran, the director of policy at the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia University. “We’re going to see that the effects reverberate well beyond what we’re even understanding” right now, she said, “and schools are going to be on the front lines.” The nearly 900-page bill also creates a new voucher-like program that will pay for private school scholarships — a major victory for school choice advocates who have successfully expanded similar programs in several states, but have previously failed to enact a nationwide version. States will be allowed to opt out. * IPM | Illinois environmental advocates aim to strengthen ties with lawmakers, increase outreach amid federal policy changes: With recent federal rollbacks on environmental protections during the Trump administration, IEC has stated that it has had to rethink its advocacy strategies. Caldwell said a key focus of the organization is to strengthen its relationships with Republican and Democratic government officials. “Something new that we’re bringing in and beefing up is our federal presence in our state-to-federal work,” [Cate Caldwell, the senior policy manager for the Illinois Environmental Council, said.]“You know, [we are] continuing to relationship-build, continuing to advocate for the policies, continuing to listen to the residents and the people and the constituents that are actually being affected.” * The Hill | Social Security no taxes message on Trump bill raises eyebrows: President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” is sending mixed messages about whether most Americans are required to pay federal income taxes on their Social Security benefits. “It’s a mixed bag for seniors, because some seniors will get some tax relief; the cost of that, though, is borne by the entire Social Security system,” Alex Lawson, executive director of left-leaning advocacy organization Social Security Works, told USA Today. * AP | What’s in the tax and spending bill that Trump has signed into law: It temporarily would add new tax deductions on tip, overtime and auto loans. There’s also a $6,000 deduction for older adults who earn no more than $75,000 a year, a nod to his pledge to end taxes on Social Security benefits. It would boost the $2,000 child tax credit to $2,200. Millions of families at lower income levels would not get the full credit.
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RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path. Retailers like Brad in Peoria enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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‘The Chosen One’ tones himself down
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
* Space limitations precluded me from including this part of the interview…
Discuss.
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Open thread
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Black Sabbath played their final concert over the weekend. The Louisville Leopard Percussionists will open our day… Ozzy met the band later. That video is also worth a watch.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois lawmakers have mixed results in efforts to rein in AI. Tribune…
- Although several of those measures failed to come to a vote, the Democratic-controlled General Assembly is only six months into its two-year term and all of the legislation remains in play. - Last week, the states got a reprieve from the federal government after a provision aimed at preventing states from regulating AI was removed from the massive, Trump-backed tax breaks bill that he signed into law. * Tribune | Supreme Court ruling means ‘harder work’ for Illinois and others fighting Trump administration actions: At this point, no one knows the full implications of last week’s decision, said Carolyn Shapiro, former Illinois solicitor general. In the decision, the Supreme Court said lower courts generally can’t issue an injunction to prevent the federal government — or any defendant — “from doing an illegal thing to people who aren’t in front of the court,” Shapiro said. * WAND | IL EATS program ends, cuts access to local produce and meats: For more than a year, the Illinois Equitable Access Towards Sustainable Systems (IL EATS) connected local farmers with their neighbors in need. Farmers would sell their products to food banks and be reimbursed by the federal government. When the funding ran out earlier this year, the Illinois government stepped in to fill the gap. However, that funding ended July 1, 2025, so now the IL EATS program is done. * Tribune | President Donald Trump promises clean water. His proposed budget guts needed protections: Clean water grants to states would be cut to $303.5 million, down from $2.76 billion set aside in President Joe Biden’s last budget. Illinois’ share would dip to $11 million, compared with $105.5 million this year. States loan the money to cities and towns at low interest rates, enabling communities to spread out the cost of critical government services people take for granted, such as replacing leaky street mains, maintaining treatment plants and rehabbing water towers. * Tribune | Illinois nursing homes ranked among the worst in the nation; residents call for action: And a Tribune search of records kept by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services showed Illinois has some 250 homes with a quality rating of just one star out of five. To be sure, more than six dozen of the roughly 1,200 long-term care facilities in the state have earned all five stars. But advocates like Payne say that at too many nursing homes, profits are prioritized over care. “They all operate on the same business model,” Payne said. “That’s getting as much money out of each facility as possible.” * IPM News | Students in Illinois will be automatically admitted to colleges under a new law. Eastern Illinois University is already trying the strategy out: Direct admission has been successful at Eastern, according to Tierney. “It’s still early this year, but we’re projecting our third year of enrollment growth within the areas that we are completing direct admission.” Like half of the state’s universities, Eastern experienced overall decline in freshmen enrollment last year. Tierney said direct admission is one way to stabilize that. * WGLT | Midwest states east of ‘tornado alley’ are bearing the brunt of severe storm season: “We have had quite an active season altogether, when we’re looking at the United States as a whole,” said Jana Houser, an associate professor in the atmospheric sciences program at The Ohio State University. The national tornado count is just above where it was at this time last year, which was a particularly high tornado year overall. Since 2010, 2025 is the second-most active year up to this time, with 1,297 tornadoes reported as of the end of June. * WGLT | State Rep. Dennis Tipsword seeks reelection: “Democrats in Illinois continue to raise taxes, increase the cost of living, empower criminals, and protect their own power — all of which drive our families and businesses out of state,” Tipsword said in a news release. “I’m running for re-election because we need someone who fights back.”, the chief deputy of the Woodford County Sheriff’s Office and a small business owner, was lead sponsor on 10 bills in the last legislative session, many of them law enforcement-related, including one that calls for members of the Illinois General Assembly to participate in an annual law enforcement education program. None was called for a vote. * WCIS | Sangamon County Sheriff anticipates Pritzker to enact Sonya Massey Bill: As Sonya Massey’s death anniversary is just days away, that bill is still sitting on Governor Pritzker’s desk. As community members wait for Governor Pritzker’s decision, the Sangamon County Sheriff, Paula Crouch, said she is in full support of the bill. Crouch said a lot of the changes Senator Turner is asking for, have already been implemented into their background check processes. * Quad-City Times | Rock Island state senator explains vote against budget: Sen. Mike Halpin, D-Rock Island, broke with his party and voted against the state’s fiscal year 2026 budget. In a sit-down interview with the Dispatch-Argus/Quad-City Times, Halpin discussed the 2025 spring session, saying he voted no on the budget due to it failing to address the needs for the Quad-Cities region and higher education. Specifically, he said, for Western Illinois University-Quad Cities. However, he said the budget had many good aspects that he supported. * Sun-Times | CPS struggling to cobble together retroactive teacher raises promised in contract: Chicago Public Schools is so cash-strapped that its new interim CEO and board president are scrambling to find a way to send out back pay owed to teachers and staff that was negotiated in the Chicago Teachers Union contract, which was settled in March. The CTU won 4% raises plus additional salary increases for experience and advanced degrees. Because the old contract expired last June, the raises cover a whole school year and will cost the district more than $100 million. Teachers and staff are expecting CPS to deliver that retroactive pay this summer. “The district has every intention of satisfying the obligation and will continue to work feverishly to do so,” said Chicago Board of Education President Sean Harden. “Any delay should not be taken as we are not going to pay. We have an absolute commitment.” * Sun-Times | Fatal lifeguard shooting at Douglass Park was ‘years in the making’: Ald. Monique Scott (24th) and her brother, ex-Ald. Michael Scott, both of whom served as Douglass Park supervisors, feared a tragedy like the June 26 shooting death of a teen, allegedly by a lifeguard, would happen because they say the park district has too few lifeguards, too little staff training and inadequate park security. * Tribune | Supreme Court ruling casts doubt on birthright citizenship for immigrant families in Chicago: The 6-3 high court decision doesn’t directly address whether birthright citizenship, which is spelled out in the 14th Amendment, applies to the children of immigrants. But the ruling has opened the possibility that President Donald Trump can fulfill the executive order he signed on his first day in office of his second term and block U.S.-born children of immigrants from obtaining citizenship in most of the country — although not, for now, Illinois — until courts decide whether Trump’s efforts are constitutional. The ruling has spurred a scramble among immigrants, activists and legal experts who worry that well-established rules for citizenship could suddenly change. While immigration law is notoriously complex and can change rapidly, one bright line has remained constant for more than a century: People born in the United States are considered citizens. * Sun-Times | Chicago doc was called out of retirement to fight COVID-19, now state pension fund demands he repay $80,000: But the lead UIC researcher who enlisted him lamented that Ghassemi could be paid only a part-time salary so his state pension would remain intact. “I said, ‘Don’t worry. The people are dying right and left. We should not talk about the compensation,’ ” Ghassemi says. Eventually, Ghassemi was bumped to full-time pay but only after getting assurances from UIC and the State Universities Retirement System that his grant-funded work wouldn’t threaten his pension, according to Ghassemi. But now the state pension system has accused Ghassemi of double-dipping — and it’s demanding that he pay back more than $80,000. * Crain’s | Hospital air conditioning failures put pressure on for-profit owner: With temperatures poised to soar into the 90s this long holiday weekend, Weiss Memorial Hospital in Uptown remains without air conditioning for inpatient services, while its sister hospital in Oak Park is experiencing its own issues. And the company that bought the struggling Medicaid-dependent hospitals in 2022 has given few updates on when Weiss may return to normal operation or the status of conditions at West Suburban Medical Center. * WTTW | ‘I Need to Know the Truth’: Krystal Rivera’s Family Calls for Additional Investigation After Officer Fatally Shot by Partner: The family’s attorney, Antonio Romanucci, on Wednesday criticized the Chicago Police Department’s narrative of the incident thus far, saying something “isn’t right” about Rivera’s death. […] Rivera’s family called for a separate investigation into the shooting led by the Illinois State Police and sought to pressure Chicago police officials to publish the not-yet-available body and dash camera footage from the fatal shooting. […] Prosecutors said Rivera’s partner then “accidentally discharged” his firearm, striking and killing Rivera. No other shots were fired during the encounter. Romanucci on Wednesday argued that Baker shouldn’t have even been with the police department at all, as the Chicago Sun-Times and the Illinois Answers Project reported he racked up three suspensions and two reprimands since becoming an officer in 2021. * Sun-Times | Mayor mum on NASCAR’s future in Chicago: Mayor Brandon Johnson dodged direct questions along pit row Sunday afternoon about whether the NASCAR Chicago Street Race returns for another lap next year, while Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) said Chicago needs a deal that benefits both parties. When asked if he or his administration would be meeting with NASCAR to discuss a future extension, Johnson deflected to talk about the weather, a topic of concern for many race attendees this weekend. “Right now, we’re just going to talk with God and make sure we keep the clouds back. That’s the most important conversation right now,” Johnson said. “When I get done praying, and the weather holds up, then we’ll have a conversation afterward.” * Tribune | Rains hold off until after NASCAR race but outcome is the same as Shane van Gisbergen wins again: Shane van Gisbergen of New Zealand swept the Chicago Street Race weekend, winning his fourth of six eligible races. “I’m a lucky guy, I got to drive for two great teams in JR Motorsports and Trackhouse,” Van Gisbergen said. “Cool to win here again, I’ve had a great run with this place and I’ve really enjoyed it. “(Chicago) has changed my life. I hope it stays next year,” he said. * Tribune | As the WNBA expands, Chicago Sky players are looking ahead to new CBA after rejecting the league’s 1st offer: Expansion has been a primary goal of the WNBA for years. But initial responses to the three new teams around the league were mixed. Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham drew particular ire after saying she didn’t “know how excited people are to be going to Detroit or (Cleveland)” for games. Sky forward Angel Reese and Williams voiced more enthusiasm for the incoming teams, noting the rich history of women’s basketball in Detroit and Cleveland and the passionate sports fandom of Philadelphia. But their excitement for the league’s growth was tempered by the reality of the ongoing CBA negotiations. * Block Club | Damen Silos To Be Demolished After City Approves Permits, Ending Preservation Battle: The city’s Department of Buildings on Thursday issued the demolition permits for the Damen Silos, 2900 S. Damen Ave., records show. Demolition is set to begin after the Fourth of July weekend, Ald. Julia Ramirez (12th) said on Facebook. The five demolition permits — one for each building on the site — were approved less than a week after city officials outlined a safety and environmental plan for the silos’ removal. That plan was criticized by some Southwest Side neighbors at a community meeting, with neighbors highlighting environmental concerns and calling for the site to be preserved and redeveloped into a public amenity, possibly as a festival grounds. * WBEZ| Why most Chicagoans once moved on a single Moving Day: “Why everyone would want to move on one day in the calendar year is baffling,” said Paul Durica, the Chicago History Museum’s director of exhibitions. “And almost every [contemporaneous account] acknowledges that. It’s, like, ‘Why have we adopted this system? It’s not at all efficient. It’s overwhelming. It’s chaotic.’ ” Yet, from at least 1840 to the late 1940s, that’s what Chicagoans did, usually on May 1 but also on Oct. 1. The late Chicago historian Perry Duis estimated that, at one point, a third of the population changed residences annually. * Sun-Times | Bobby Jenks, legendary White Sox closer and 2005 World Series hero, dies at 44: Bobby Jenks, the closer adored by White Sox fans for his everyman attitude and a blazing fastball that helped seal the team’s only World Series title in the last century, has died at 44, the team announced Saturday. Jenks died Friday in Portugal, where he had been undergoing treatment for adenocarcinoma, a form of stomach cancer. * Jay Mariotti | Bobby Jenks had no money and died - where were the Chicago White Sox: Jenks? I contacted White Sox Charities via e-mail and asked: Did Jerry Reinsdorf visit Jenks in Portugal? Did he offer money? I haven’t heard back and won’t hear back. There is no use in calling team communications staffers, who bleed what Reinsdorf says, true or not. The Athletic — unlike the Tribune, unlike the Sun-Times, unlike traditionalists in a sad media town — was the only Chicago site to cover the Jenks story in detail. The franchise fathers, after initially posting a message on Instagram — “thinking of Bobby as he is being treated” — indicated they were “standing with you, Bobby.” But in April, reporter Sam Blum wrote: “(S)pecifics on his condition, even for the White Sox organization, haven’t been easy to come by.” Not easy to come by? Then Blum wrote the Sox asked concerned humans to buy Jenks shirts via an event, with the Ronald McDonald House in the Chicago area. The team said Jenks would choose a charity for “proceeds.” That happened in April. * Catching up with the congressionals…
* Press Release | Biss For Congress Announces Quarterly Fundraising Total of More Than $700,000: The Daniel Biss for Congress campaign announced it raised more than $700,000 in the second quarter of 2025, the highest quarterly fundraising total to date for any candidate running in the Illinois 9th Congressional District primary. The campaign ended the quarter with more than $640,000 in cash on hand, putting Biss in a strong financial position as the race unfolds. * Daily Southtown | More than $1 million spent in Orland Park, Tinley Park mayoral campaigns: When he ran for a full term as Orland Park’s village clerk in 1991, James Dodge figures he spent about $3,000. Flash forward to this past spring’s mayoral election. In the months leading up to the April 1 election, Dodge and his political committees shelled out nearly $190,000, according to state campaign finance reports. He defeated Keith Pekau, who was seeking a third term and running with his own slate of candidates. Pekau, through two election committees, spent almost twice as much as Dodge, campaign filings for the first quarter show. * Rep. Bob Morgan | What patriotism means to me three years after the Highland Park mass shooting: Last year, I co-founded Legislators for Safer Communities (SAFER), a coalition of state lawmakers from all 50 states who are committed to advancing commonsense gun laws. We come from red states, blue states and everything in between, but we are united by a simple idea: No American should have to fear getting shot while shopping for groceries, going to school, sitting in a house of worship or attending a Fourth of July parade. State by state, we are advancing policies proven to reduce gun violence: universal background checks, safe storage laws, domestic violence firearm restrictions, and, yes, limits on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. We are also pushing for stronger protections for public officials and election workers because a democracy in which people are afraid to serve is not a democracy at all. * Daily Herald | ‘We’re not seeing much of a letup:’ REAL ID stampede cuts into access to other services: A suburban reader told us it took days to secure an in-person DMV appointment at a convenient location for vision and written tests to renew his license. He finally found one shortly before his license expired by jumping on the SOS website at 6:30 a.m. One important takeaway is to start the scheduling process soon after you receive your renewal notice so there’s no last-minute panic. Asked if the demand for REAL ID has cut into regular driver services, secretary of state spokesman Scott Burnham said, “yes.” * Daily Herald | ‘It’s just getting out of control’: More towns restricting kids from electric bikes and scooters: After neighboring Elk Grove Village and Schaumburg approved sets of new rules last month, residents in Arlington Heights complained to village leaders this week about children riding up and down darkened streets, paths around Lake Arlington and even the downtown Arlington Alfresco pedestrian area. “It’s just getting out of control,” said Mindy Bowes, who lives a block north of the 50-acre man-made Lake Arlington. “These kids don’t wear helmets. They don’t stop at stop signs. They don’t stop at the lights either. It’s just getting very dangerous.” * Daily Herald | ‘A rare gem’? This Chain O’ Lakes island is no paradise, but it can be yours for $200,000: While the rectangular piece of land is only about 100 yards from Blarney Island, a legendary hot spot and self-proclaimed “Greatest Boating Bar in the World,” it may as well be light-years away. What structures remain are dilapidated. Its seawall needs repairs. Aside from two fires, there reportedly has been no regular activity on the island in at least 25 years. * WAND | CWLP opens enrollment in ‘Helping Homes’ program for low-income homeowners: The Springfield City Water, Light and Power’s Energy Services Office will open enrollment in its “Helping Homes” program beginning July 15. The program helps low-income homeowners reduce their energy costs by installing new energy-saving retrofits in their homes. The retrofits can include insulation, central air conditioner or heat pump replacement, caulking and weather-stripping, lighting upgrades and other energy-saving measures * Illinois Times | Chelsey Farley tells her story: Chelsey Farley burst into tears while speaking with a reporter almost 10 months after a motorcycle she was riding on collided with a car driven by a recently retired Springfield police officer. […] She blamed her recent injury on former police sergeant Michael Egan because of the lasting impact the crash has had on her ability to be steady on her feet. “This is still him,” she said, looking down at her leg. * WCIA | U of I researchers aim to help farmers by improving production, irrigation: Mohamad Alipour, an assistant civil engineering professor at the University of Illinois, joined WCIA’s Amanda Brennan in the studio to talk about a research project which is using drones to help farmers. Alipour said the team is developing ways to monitor soil and crop moisture with drones; the drones use a sensor that allow them to see through the plant and into the soil. * ESPN | Brian Campbell wins John Deere Classic for 2nd playoff victory: Brian Campbell won for the second time this year on the PGA Tour, both in a playoff, when he closed with a 4-under 67 and beat Emiliano Grillo with a par on the first extra hole Sunday in the John Deere Classic. It extended the win-or-bust season for Campbell, who won the Mexico Open in a playoff in late February. He has finished out of the top 30 every tournament except for his two victories. * WGLT | B-N tourism group gets state grant for Route 66 renovations at Sprague’s in Normal: The Bloomington-Normal Area Convention and Visitors Bureau [CVB] has received a $150,000 state tourism grant to further restore Sprague’s Super Service in Normal ahead of Route 66’s 100th anniversary next year. It’s among a total of $6.3 million from three grant programs announced this week by Gov. JB Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity [DCEO]. * Illinois Times | Innovate Springfield moving to Horace Mann building: A rental contract, finalized between UIS and Horace Mann in recent days, will allow Innovate Springfield to relocate from rented space it has occupied for the past decade at 15 S. Old State Capitol Plaza to more spacious digs at Horace Mann in September. The 2.5-year lease for 9,800 square feet inside the six-floor Horace Mann building also will allow UIS to formally launch the innovation center, of which the Innovate Springfield business incubator will be a part, according to Robert Kerr, UIS executive director of innovation and opportunity. * WGEM | Over 100 pool players from across the country take a shot at championship titles this week in Quincy: The competition started on Sunday morning. This is the third year the Billiard Congress of America and Greater Midwest Pool Players Association have hosted a tournament at the Oakley-Lindsay Center. Players from across the nation will compete for a place in the world championships in September. Organizers said this year, over 100 juniors are competing this week. * Bolts | How the GOP Megabill Would Turbocharge Local Immigration Enforcement: The bill would massively scale up immigration detention facilities to the tune of $45 billion over five years, help recruit thousands of new Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and devote $47 billion to building a border wall, more than three times what the first Trump administration spent on the wall, plus billions more for conducting operations at the border—all on top of funds that Congress has already appropriated to ICE and other federal agencies. And it would rain money—at least $14 billion—on local law enforcement departments to incentivize them to partner with federal authorities and serve as a force multiplier for ICE. * Novogradac | Senate Finance Committee Releases FY 2025 Budget Reconciliation Bill that Includes Permanent LIHTC Expansion, Novogradac Estimates 1.22 Million Additional Affordable Rental Homes over 2026-2035: The SFC portion of the reconciliation bill includes two permanent LIHTC provisions effective starting in 2026: A reduction in the 50% financed-by test for housing financed by private activity bonds (PABs) to 25%, and a permanent 12% increase (not 12.5% as in the four-year provision of the House-passed reconciliation bill) in 9% low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) allocations. The congressional Joint Committee on Taxation scored these LIHTC provisions as costing $15.7 billion over 2026-2035, only $1.6 billion more than the four-year House LIHTC provisions. * Brennan Center | Online Ad Spending in 2024 Election Totaled at Least $1.9 Billion: There were partisan differences, too: While both sides of the aisle spent on efforts to persuade voters, spending in favor of Democrats was more likely to have fundraising as a goal, and spending in favor of Republicans was more likely to include get-out-the-vote efforts. Additionally, pro-Democratic spenders put a somewhat greater portion of ad money toward contrasting their party’s candidates with their opponents compared with pro-Republican spenders, who spent more on simply promoting their own candidates. * WIRED | Meteorologists Say the National Weather Service Did Its Job in Texas: Some local and state officials have said that insufficient forecasts from the National Weather Service caught the region off guard. That claim has been amplified by pundits across social media, who say that cuts to the NWS and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, its parent organization, inevitably led to the failure in Texas. But meteorologists who spoke to WIRED say that the NWS accurately predicted the risk of flooding in Texas and could not have foreseen the extreme severity of the storm. What’s more, they say that what the NWS did forecast this week underscores the need to sustain funding to the crucial agency. * AP | Texas officials face scrutiny over response to catastrophic and deadly flooding: The National Weather Service sent out a series of flash flood warnings in the early hours Friday before issuing flash flood emergencies — a rare alert notifying of imminent danger. Local officials have insisted that no one saw the flood potential coming and have defended their actions. “There’s going to be a lot of finger-pointing, a lot of second-guessing and Monday morning quarterbacking,” said Republican U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, whose district includes Kerr County. “There’s a lot of people saying ‘why’ and ‘how,’ and I understand that.”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Jul 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Jul 7, 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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Selected react to budget reconciliation bill passage (Updated x3 - Comments open)
Thursday, Jul 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Lots of stuff here, but I’ve tried to mostly focus on press releases with actual budget numbers/projections. From the Illinois Health and Hospital Association…
* Excerpt from Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s statement…
* From Gov. JB Pritzker earlier today…
* US Rep. Mary Miller…
* US Rep. Darin LaHood…
* Citizens Utility Board…
…Adding… Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition…
…Adding… Speaker Welch…
…Adding… Sun-Times…
More releases have been posted here.
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Reader comments closed for Independence Day
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * We talked about this recording last month. Turn it up…
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Some fiscal news
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup (Updated)
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
Sen. Halpin voted against the FY26 budget and the revenue omnibus. Earlier this week, he told WVIK his vote was due to underfunding higher education in Illinois. * Some familiar names in Illinois media are moving around. Tina Sfondeles is now the Sun-Times’ national political reporter…
* Long-time Tribune reporter Ray Long has retired…
* Amy Jacobson was let go…
* WGN…
…Adding… Capitol News Illinois…
* WSIL | ISP urges safety following four motorcycle-related deaths in the last week: The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) says that while motorcycles make up only about 3% of registered vehicles, they contribute to 12% of roadway deaths. Illinois Department of Transportation data shows that so far for 2025, Illinois has seen 44 motorcycle-related deaths. * Crain’s | Five Illinois cases part of DOJ’s massive health care fraud ‘takedown’: Federal prosecutors unveiled a massive number of criminal indictments, including five in Illinois, alleging COVID-19 testing fraud and a range of other schemes totaling $14.6 billion in losses from fraudulent claims. The 2025 National Health Care Fraud Takedown resulted in criminal charges against 324 defendants, including 96 doctors, nurse practitioners, pharmacists and other licensed medical professionals, in 50 federal districts, the U.S. Department of Justice announced yesterday. * WICS | Sonya Massey’s family speaks out on her memory, days before death anniversary: Massey’s family said she was a hard working mother who ensured her kids were well taken care of. Sonya stuck to a simple routine of going to work, coming home to cook, clean and spend time with her kids. Sontae Massey said while the world remembers Sonya as the tiny woman speaking to the police in the final moments of her life, she’s so much more than that. “I miss her everyday,” Sontae said. “I miss the Sonya that, I would go over to mom’s house, and we would crack jokes, and she would make fun of me and she would share a laugh with me. I miss that Sonya.” * UIS News | UIS Innocence Project secures exoneration of six men after 124 years of wrongful imprisonment: The Illinois Innocence Project, based at the University of Illinois Springfield, announced the full exoneration of six clients in Cook County today after they collectively served 124 years in prison for a murder they did not commit. Brothers Robert Cardona and Gregorio Cardona, Lowell Higgins-Bey, Harry Rodriguez, Michael McCastle and Fernando Gomez were all teenagers or young adults when they were wrongfully convicted in 1989. Their exoneration follows decades of advocacy and a 2022 post-conviction DNA test that excluded all six men and identified an unknown male as the likely perpetrator. * Crain’s | Why rural Illinois hospitals are bracing for fallout from GOP-backed Medicaid cuts: A recent report by University of North Carolina health care researchers pegged hospitals in Illinois’ 12th Congressional District as being at risk, because either they’ve posted negative margins for three consecutive years or they are among the top 10% of the most Medicaid-dependent rural hospitals in the country. Other rural hospitals at risk of stopping services, converting or closing are in downstate Dixon, Danville and Hoopeston. Republican U.S. Rep. Mike Bost represents the 12th District at the southern tip of Illinois. Bost’s office did not return a request from Crain’s to explain why he voted for the bill, dubbed the “Big Beautiful Bill,” when it passed out of the U.S. House. * KSDK | Her body was found in an Illinois farmer’s field; 35 years later she has been identified: A woman who was killed and had her body left in a farmer’s field in rural Troy, Illinois has been positively identified 35 years later through advanced technologies, Madison County Sheriff Jeff Connor announced Tuesday. While detectives have some answers, police still need help finding the killer. Wendy Nadine Michel, who would be 65 years old today, disappeared sometime in the summer of 1990 and her body was found by a farmer in a field near Lebanon Road and Troy O’Fallon Road on July 20, 1990. Investigators believe the body had been there for about a week. * WGLT | Some massage therapists feel heard as Bloomington modifies regulations, but concerns linger: For the first time, the City of Bloomington is regulating an industry that it says has been a source for sex trafficking and other illicit behavior. A number of massage therapists in the city pushed back, claiming they were being unfairly held in suspicion. They also took exception to proposed annual fees and language referring to dress code, individual therapists’ personal information and physical characteristics. The city dropped the fees and some personal info requirements when it approved the new regulations June 23. That muted some of the criticism, though message therapists say the stigma remains regarding public perceptions of what they do. * Rockford Register Star | Rockford terminates officer who had twice been accused of battering suspects: Months after he was acquitted by a jury of misdemeanor battery charges, a Rockford Police Department officer accused of smashing a handcuffed man’s head into a window has been fired. Officer Frank Fabiani was terminated after an internal police department review of the May 14, 2022, incident, according to a June 24 termination letter written by Rockford Police Chief Carla Redd. In the letter, Redd writes that Fabiani violated department general orders and rules of conduct after handcuffing Alize Jones, a suspect in a domestic violence investigation. * WGEM | New pavilion raised at Adams County Fairground: round 25 volunteers with the help from workers at Maas Construction helped raise the new Heritage Farms Pavilion at the Adams County Fairgrounds Tuesday. This is a legacy project for the Adams County Bicentennial Commission. The new pavilion will be a tribute to the 86 farms in Adams County that have been owned continuously by the same family for at least 150 years. * WSIL | Anne West Library Adds Inclusive Workstations Thanks to Local College and Rotary Club Partnership: Thanks to a unique partnership between the Carterville Rotary Club and John A. Logan College, the library now features, a wheelchair-accessible workstation, and a first-of-its-kind desk with an attached playpen, designed to help parents work or study while keeping their toddlers safe and close. Mary Stoner, Director at the Anne West Lindsey District Library, says “In our children’s area, we wanted to provide a kind of workstation area for mom or dad so they can check their email or do a little work, but keep their little one in a safe space.” * WIFR | A look into Transform Rockford since its inception in 2013: Back in 2013, Transform Rockford came together after the city was ranked as one of the most miserable cities in the United States. Following the rankings, the goal was simple: help the Forest City become a top 25 community by 2025. “What Transform did was, I think, change the mindset of the community. It showed the community what’s possible,” said Wally Haas, the current executive director of Transform Rockford. * Chicago Reader | Jobs, block clubs, investment: How Chicagoans are interrupting violence at its roots: Breakthrough, INVC, Chicago CRED (Create Real Economic Destiny), and other violence interruption organizers include workforce development, behavioral health counseling, and job placement to enhance their direct outreach to people involved in violent altercations. That outreach attempts to prevent retaliatory shootings, set up nonaggression agreements among gangs, and pull people off the street. By combining these approaches with workforce development, they hope to break cycles of violence, one person at a time, for good. * Crain’s | CBRE lures office leasing team from its new Chicago landlord: CBRE has bolstered its bench of office leasing agents in Chicago, luring the team that recently signed the real estate services giant as a tenant at an office tower along the Chicago River. The brokerage announced it has hired Greg Tait, Maggie Brophy and Jamion Hartley to join its local office from Newport Beach, Calif.-based real estate firm Irvine. The move comes after CBRE leased about 55,000 square feet at Irvine’s 60-story skyscraper at 300 N. LaSalle St., where it is relocating its Chicago office from 321 N. Clark St. * Sun-Times | Social venture Mona helps microlender Kiva distribute $200,000 in loans to Chicago entrepreneurs: Social venture Mona and the University of Chicago’s Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation have helped 23 Chicago-area entrepreneurs get $200,000 worth of zero-interest loans from Kiva, a global microloan platform. Mona and the Polsky Center collaborated with Kiva, which has distributed the loans to mostly South Side businesses in the past year. The loans of up to $15,000 also have no fees. Applications are still open on Mona’s website. Borrowers include healthy snack brand Ms. P’s Gluten Free; Ecodunia, maker of bags and accessories from Kenya; and Ilava, which makes clothing in Tanzania. * NBC Chicago | Recent Northwestern grad hopes to save parents from deportation: Bryan Carcamo graduated from the school with honors earlier this year, but his parents were not there to see him walk across the state due to fears related to their immigration status. “I made it to Northwestern, and it would have meant the world to me to have my parents among the crowds of families,” he said. His parents have been living, working, and raising a family in Compton, California for 20 years without legal status. The worry is that they will soon be detained and deported, which has led Carcamo to advocate on behalf of his parents and other undocumented immigrants. * Daily Southtown | Another attempt to stop 143rd Street widening fails at Will County committee meeting: A Will County committee voted 4-2 Tuesday to advance the five-year transportation improvement plan for full County Board approval after some board members tried unsuccessfully to remove a controversial road project in Homer Glen for the second time in a month. The County Board last month voted against removing the 143rd Street road widening project from the transportation plan, which offers a snapshot of the county’s future projects in its 258-mile road system. The board then opted to send the plan back to its Public Works and Transportation Committee for a closer look. * ABC Chicago | Blue Island shutting down embattled mobile home park, residents don’t know what’s next: Thursday is the deadline the city of Blue Island has given to the owners of Forest View Mobile Home Park to come up with a plan to shut the property down. Officials have said the city has spent two years trying to get management to clean up its act. Its residents are now caught in the middle, unsure where they will go. The park is currently made up of empty lots, broken up streets and abandoned and stripped-down trailers. It’s a community in dire need of maintenance. But, for residents, it’s home. * Tribune | Downers Grove teacher accused of sexual abuse loses bid to ease pretrial release restriction: A DuPage County judge Wednesday denied a request from a former Downers Grove high school teacher to reduce the distance she must keep from the student she is accused of sexually abusing. Christina Formella, 30, faces 55 counts of criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, indecent solicitation of a child and grooming. Prosecutors say she had sexual relations with the student more than 50 times, including at least 45 times at Downers Grove South High School where she once worked as a special education teacher and coach. * Daily Southtown | Dolton buying Pope Leo XIV’s childhood home in village, price uncertain: The Village Board at a special meeting Tuesday voted unanimously to move forward on buying the house at 212 East 141st Place, and said there are plans to buy an adjacent home. Mayor Jason House told reporters after the meeting he hoped the village could close on the purchase in a couple of weeks, but that the final purchase price is still up in the air. House said the chance to buy the home is a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity” and a “historic movement moving forward” for Dolton. * NBC Chicago | Giant pothole on I-294 in suburbs leaves 30 cars stranded; lanes reopen: More than two dozen cars were stranded with flat tires on Interstate 294 Monday morning and lanes were closed for hours due to a large pothole in the middle of the road, Illinois State Police said. The pothole — approximately eight feet by three feet — was on the Tri-State Tollway in the northbound lanes at mile marker 19.75, ISP said, near the Mile Long Bridge in Cook County. Two left lanes on the tollway were closed for maintenance for several hours. * Daily Herald | Moderate drought conditions exist for much of northern Illinois: Precipitation over the past 30 days across northern Illinois has been below normal, recording only 3 to 4 inches of rainfall, according to Illinois State Climatologist. From April 1 through June 29, the entire northern half of the state registered less than 10 inches of precipitation, according to the Illinois State Climatologist. * Shaw Local | Buy a drive-thru pork chop, chicken or walleye dinner, help Kane County Farm Bureau Foundation: The Kane County Farm Bureau Foundation is raising funds for college scholarships by hosting Fay’s Drive-Thru BBQ pork chop, chicken and grilled walleye dinners from 3 to 7 p.m. Thursday, July 3, at its headquarters, 2N710 Randall Road, St. Charles. * AP | Wisconsin Supreme Court’s liberal majority strikes down 176-year-old abortion ban: The justices concluded that “the legislature impliedly repealed” the ban “by enacting comprehensive legislation about virtually every aspect of abortion including where, when, and how healthcare providers may lawfully perform abortions,” Justice Rebecca Dallet wrote for the majority. “That comprehensive legislation so thoroughly covers the entire subject of abortion that it was clearly meant as a substitute for the 19th century near-total ban on abortion.” * Inside Climate | NIH Scientists Link Air Pollution and Lung Cancer Mutations in Non-Smokers: In their study, published in the journal Nature, Landi and colleagues from the National Institutes of Health’s NCI and the University of California San Diego analyzed the lung tumors of 871 nonsmokers from 28 locations across four continents. They found that the tumors of patients in highly polluted areas had many more genetic mutations than those in areas with cleaner air, and exhibited a diversity of mutations, including patterns typically found in smokers. * NYT | Pardoned Jan. 6 Rioter Who Threatened Police Joins Justice Dept.: A former F.B.I. agent who was charged with encouraging the mob that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to kill police officers has been named as an adviser to the Justice Department task force that President Trump established to seek retribution against his political enemies. The former agent, Jared L. Wise, is serving as a counselor to Ed Martin, the director of the so-called Weaponization Working Group, according to people familiar with the group’s activities.
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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments. Retailers like Steve in Metro East enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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Groups warn about plan that doesn’t appear to be in the works
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
Click here for the full report, but just keep in mind that nobody has so far proposed a full electrification plan. And the governor’s spokesperson told me “that’s never been our approach.” * I collected some responses. From the Illinois Environmental Council…
* From the governor’s spokesperson Alex Gough…
* I followed up with Monique Garcia, who wrote the initial press release…
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SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department
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Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid’s large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * US Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi adds $3.1 million to his already bulging Senate war chest. Press release…
Click here for a little more on that poll. * Sun-Times…
* We told subscribers about this next topic earlier today. The Illinois GOP is pouncing on a Facebook comment from Rep. Harry Benton, who took a swipe at Gov. JB Pritzker’s LG pick.…
* From the Illinois Republican Party’s Facebook page… Benton told me he only met Mitchell once. “I don’t really feel like getting in the middle of a fight, but, you know, the one time I met him, he was dismissive, didn’t, didn’t care.” Mitchell told Rich he didn’t remember meeting Benton. * Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid announces big cash stash…
Rep. Rashid told Rich this week that, despite some rumors floating around, he’s running for reelection. * Illinois Democratic County Chairs’ Association…
* Related…
* Crain’s | Stratton raises $1M in U.S. Senate bid: The campaign didn’t release an exact amount or details on donors, which should be available in filings later this month. The race to succeed U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin in 2026 is already crowded. Stratton faces off against fellow Democratic U.S. Reps. Raja Krishnamoorthi, a prodigious fundraiser who has amassed a war chest of more than $19 million, and Robin Kelly, who had about $2 million on hand at the end of the first quarter, according to Federal Election Commission reports. * CBS Chicago | State Rep. Hoan Huynh running to succeed Jan Schakowsky in Congress for Illinois’ 9th District: Huynh is currently the Illinois General Assembly as the representative for the state’s 13th district, which covers parts of Uptown, Andersonville and Lincoln Square. He filed paperwork to run for Congress late Tuesday night. He released a campaign video Wednesday morning, becoming the eleventh candidate to enter the race for the Democratic nomination. He joins other popular elected officials in the area, including Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss and State Senator Laura Fine.
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Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were told yesterday. Evanston Now…
* Sun-Times…
* Rep. Huynh’s launch video… Thoughts? …Adding… From Rep. Huynh’s campaign website… Ope. * Related…
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Roundup: Pritzker taps Christian Mitchell for LG
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Tribune…
* Sun-Times… Besides being first in the line of succession to the governor’s office, lieutenant governors don’t have specific responsibilities assigned by the Illinois constitution beyond those “that may be delegated to him by the Governor.” * More…
* Pantagraph | Pritzker names former state lawmaker as running mate: In this sense, it is the most low-profile statewide office in Illinois. One former lieutenant governor even resigned the office out of sheer boredom and lack of responsibility. However, some have been called upon to ascend to the top job, most recently Pat Quinn upon the impeachment and removal of Gov. Rod Blagojevich in 2009. […] In Mitchell, Pritzker tapped someone with both political and policy chops. As a state legislator, Mitchell fended off multiple Chicago Teachers Union-packed primary challenges. In 2018, he was named interim executive director of the Democratic Party of Illinois. * ABC Chicago | Gov. JB Pritzker to hit campaign trail with new running mate Christian Mitchell Wednesday: Christian Mitchell, Governor JB Pritzker’s pick to be the state’s next lieutenant governor, will be hitting the campaign trail Wednesday morning alongside the governor. The two will be stopping by a South Side staple, Peach’s Restaurant in Bronzeville Wednesday morning. * Daily Herald | Pritzker picks former deputy, state Rep. Christian Mitchell as running mate: If Pritzker plunges into an all-absorbing presidential campaign, Mitchell would be a loyal, competent second-in-command, political scientist Kent Redfield said. “If you wanted somebody that knows Pritzker, knows the legislative and executive (branches), and could manage the governor’s office if the governor was running for president, it certainly would make sense,” added Redfield, University of Illinois at Springfield professor emeritus. * Capitol City Now | A conversation with a candidate for Lieutenant Governor: He’s gone from the public sector, to the private sector, back to the public sector. Christian Mitchell is a candidate for Lieutenant Governor, running alongside incumbent Gov. JB Pritzker. WTAX’s Dave Dahl talked to Mitchell for the WTAX Morning Newswatch. * WGN | Gov. Pritzker announces Christian Mitchell as pick for Lieutenant Governor: To run for lieutenant governor, Mitchell said he’ll leave the University of Chicago where he oversees government relations. From 2013 to 2019, Mitchell represented parts of the South Side in the state legislature distinguishing himself as a policy wonk. He later served as deputy governor, playing a key role in the Pritzker administration’s response to COVID-19. “He tasked me and others in the office to be in charge of effectively our medical supply chain and to make sure that we had all of the PPE, the gloves, the masks, the ventilators we needed to make sure that our frontline health care heroes could keep doing their work,” Mitchell explained.
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Open thread
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * A California-based Mexican music band featuring a black Sousaphone and a crazy-great slapping bass player with 19 million views in two weeks. The menacing vibe is thorough and real. You gotta love it… Paris, France is my sky I watched that video about 15 times last night. Don’t miss it. Optional discussion topic: July 4th plans?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Pritzker signs health care legislation. Capitol News Illinois…
- House Bill 1697, known as the Prescription Drug Affordability Act, will impose new restrictions on practices of pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, a powerful but little-understood segment of the pharmaceutical industry. - Under the legislation, PBMs will be prohibited from steering consumers toward large pharmacies in which they have a financial interest. They will also be prohibited from engaging in “spread pricing” – the practice of charging health plans a higher price for a drug than the PBM pays a pharmacy for dispensing the drug. * Related stories…
∙ 25News Now: In Peoria, governor touts bipartisan bills aimed at affordable healthcare access ∙ WMBD: Gov. JB Pritzker signs healthcare bills at OSF Healthcare * The Governor is on the campaign trail today with a stop at Peach’s Restaurant in Bronzeville at 11:45 am. * WNIJ | Illinois State Climatologist discusses the future of local weather forecasting: This week Illinois State Climatologist Dr. Trent Ford has been highlighting some possibilities of what federal funding cuts to weather services may look like. Today, Ford shares the effects those cuts could have for local weather forecasters. On top of government funding, local weather forecasters also face uncertainty from their local stations, such as the possibility of weather hubs, as opposed to the current model of forecasters and meteorologists delivering their predictions and information from their local affiliates. * Press release | AG Raoul wins court order blocking Trump administration’s dismantling of HHS: Attorney General Kwame Raoul today secured a preliminary junction halting Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s attempt to dismantle the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), ensuring continued access to critical public health and social service programs. On May 5, Attorney General Raoul and a coalition of state attorneys general filed a lawsuit to stop the administration’s sweeping and unlawful restructuring directive, which left HHS unable to carry out many of its most vital functions. Today, Judge Melissa R. Dubose of the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island blocked the administration’s mass layoffs at several key HHS agencies while the case proceeds. * Shaw Local | Wisconsin pot purchases boosting market on our side of Cheddar Curtain: Marijuana Moment said Evers’ February budget request projected the Badger State could realize $58.1 million in pot revenue in fiscal 2027 through 15% wholesale and 10% retail taxes. That’s a far cry from a 2023 Wisconsin Department of Revenue study showing a legalization plan could generate almost $170 million per year. All those numbers make sense in light of a 2022 report wherein Wisconsin officials estimated their residents spent more than $121 million on marijuana here, pumping $36 million into our public coffers. * IPM News | Illinois immigrant advocate responds to birthright citizenship ruling and increased immigration enforcement around the state: ”People whose rights are going to be violated by executive action are going to need to file their own lawsuits or join class action lawsuits that may get filed, and the ability of courts to issue emergency orders in those lawsuits is now very limited. Unfortunately, the executive order could now go into effect while that litigation is moving through the court system. That, unfortunately, is going to mean that countless children — countless families — are essentially going to be stateless.” * Tribune | Go big and stay home! Why Illinois loves its roadside monsters: “Illinois is like a wonderland of large things,” said Rolando Pujol, whose dizzying new book, “The Great American Retro Road Trip: A Celebration of Roadside Americana,” is an obsessive taxonomy of the vintage fiberglass megafauna (and more) amongst us. “My Illinois to-see list numbers in the hundreds. But incongruous, anomalous, larger-than-life objects are American DNA, part of our collective self-identity. We develop attachment to large things. They become signposts in our lives.” * Sun-Times | AG Kwame Raoul joins suit against Trump administration over immigrant Medicaid data: The suit, announced Tuesday, seeks to stop federal immigration officials from securing more health documentation or using already obtained Medicaid records of millions nationwide to target enrollees for immigration enforcement. The attorneys general said the data transfer was not only illegal, but could have a chilling effect on noncitizens and their citizen loved ones enrolling into state healthcare programs they otherwise qualify for due to fear of deportation. * WBEZ | A state lawmaker wants to bring an overdose prevention site pilot program to Illinois: A bill that could help bring pilot programs for overdose prevention sites to Illinois didn’t pass during the recent legislative session. WBEZ’s Isabela Nieto breaks down what happened and why it matters. * WGLT | Illinois becomes first state to include music therapy in Medicaid as federal cuts loom in ‘Big Beautiful Bill’: Effective July 1, Illinois is the first state to allow music therapists to bill Medicaid for services—something Julie Englesdorfer said is a game-changer. Englesdorfer graduated from Illinois State University’s music therapy program and has remained in the area, founding Harmonium Music Therapy in Bloomington. But making ends meet in what she calls a “niche” field has been difficult. Englesdorfer’s inability to bill insurance has long created an accessibility barrier, with the average session costing around $120/hour. * WBEZ | CPS is reducing assistants assigned to some special ed classes, worrying educators and parents: Theresa Nuestro’s sons are among the thousands of Chicago Public School students who depend on special education classroom assistants to keep them safe and focused in classes. […] They worry CPS is trying to find savings on the backs of their children, as has happened in the past. “SECAs are the front-line responders when my son’s blood sugar levels drop to dangerously low levels,” said Nuestro, whose sons are both on the autism spectrum. One has a severe peanut allergy and the other is diabetic. “It is the SECA who communicates when my son is struggling to self-regulate. … These moments are daily life for many autistic students and without adequate SECA support, our children struggle to learn.” * The Guardian | Six Chicago men exonerated in 1987 stabbing death of government official: A Chicago judge threw out the convictions on Tuesday of six men who served a combined 124 years in prison for the 1987 stabbing death of a local government official. Attorneys for the men successfully petitioned a Cook county court to overturn the convictions based on new DNA evidence as well as allegations of misconduct by a now retired Chicago police detective linked to at least 51 other wrongful convictions. * Block Club | How Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ Will Impact Local Food Pantries: ‘People Are Going To Suffer’: In January, Martin was laid off from his job as a nonprofit case manager. He’s actively looking for work, but for now, he relies on the food pantry at 4256 N. Ridgeway Ave. and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits for food. He could soon face additional hardship. Under significant cuts to SNAP being considered in Congress, as part of President Donald Trump’s “big beautiful bill,” people ages 55-64 would be subject to a work requirement to receive SNAP benefits — an expansion of existing work requirements that could affect more than 200,000 people living in Illinois. * Crain’s | CommonSpirit commits $6M to mental health efforts in Chicago: Grants — totaling $6,369,123 — will be awarded to the Catholic Healthcare Foundation of Northern Illinois, which will receive $5,469,123, and Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago, which will receive $900,000, the system said in a press release. Catholic Healthcare Foundation will use the funds to expand behavioral health services available to youth and families on Chicago’s Southwest Side, it said. * WTTW | CTA Launches Next Round of Rider Feedback Pop-Ups Following ‘Strong Turnout’: The events are designed for CTA leaders and staff to have open, informal conversations with riders about service, safety, improvements and rider priorities, according to the transit agency. The feedback will be used by the agency to help plan for the next CTA budget and prioritize future investments, according to the agency. The next round of events will be held at eight transit system locations and are scheduled to start in mid-July and run through the end of the month. Events will be held from 4-6 p.m. * Crain’s | Cook County opens first modular homes in $12 million affordable housing push: Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle will open the first two of 120 planned modular-built houses today, a little more than a year after the county board approved spending $12 million, or $100,000 per unit, to build the homes as new affordable housing options. […] The pair of houses is the start of an initial dozen in this neighborhood, each built in Inherent’s factory 3.5 miles away in North Lawndale and delivered by truck as two pieces—first floor and second floor—to the lot. * Daily Herald | Ascension closure of delivery services sparks protest: Protesters gathered outside Ascension Alexian Brothers Hospital in Elk Grove Village Tuesday, opposing Ascension’s decision to discontinue baby deliveries at the hospital. It would involve closing the Women and Infant Services department, which offers labor, delivery and postpartum care, a special care nursery and lactation services. Ascension plans to consolidate these services at Ascension Saint Alexius Women and Children’s Hospital in Hoffman Estates. * Daily Herald | New Arlington Heights streaming tax could cost residents $61 a year: Village officials are considering an extra charge on streaming services to help fund staffing for a fifth fire department ambulance that is hitting the streets this year, amid increased call volumes. Meanwhile, some village trustees this week pushed back on whether to retain a 1% grocery tax the state will stop collecting at the end of the year. * Daily Herald | Fermilab leader during search for top quark dies: John Peoples was asked in the mid-1990s about the value of doing pure scientific research — that which has no predetermined benefit. […] Peoples was the director of Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory at the time, charged with overseeing spending hundreds of millions of dollars researching particle physics. It was just after the Batavia-based laboratory was receiving worldwide acclaim for its role in discovering the top quark. He died June 25, at age 92, according to an announcement from Fermilab. * Daily Southtown | South Holland to levy nonresident fee for Friday fireworks display: People who don’t live in South Holland will be charged a $10 fee if they want to see the village’s fireworks display Friday night. South Holland residents will be admitted for free after showing proof of residency, such as a driver’s license or utility bill. * WGLT | ‘We have to stay in the game’: Illinois State opts in to direct payments to student-athletes: July 1 marks the first day colleges and universities can make direct payments to athletes through Name, Image and Likeness [NIL] deals. The decision stems from a settlement with the NCAA involving student compensation, previously from NIL deals being permitted for student-athletes. ISU Athletics Director Jeri Beggs said ISU needs to move its NIL in-house to remain competitive. “Right now if you can’t offer a decent NIL package to a men’s basketball player or women’s basketball player, they won’t come here. In order to be competitive, we have to stay in the game,” Beggs said. * BND | Shiloh sued tax collector for millions from its TIFs. Here’s how it was settled: For years, Shiloh argued in circuit and appellate courts that the county tax collector shorted the village a year’s worth of revenue from two of its tax increment financing districts. […] A TIF district is limited to 23 years. The village and county disagreed over when payments from the two TIF districts Shiloh created in 1998 should end. The county stopped sending Shiloh the TIF revenue in calendar year 2021. But Shiloh thought it should have continued into tax year 2021 — money the village levied in 2021 and the county collected from taxpayers in 2022. * Rock River Current | West announces nearly $13M in state funding for local initiatives, including upgrades to Fairgrounds Park in Rockford: The money was all secured as part of the $55.1 billion budget that Gov. JB Pritzker signed on June 16. West’s announcement includes new initiatives, such as upgrades to Fairgrounds Park, and continuations of past funding, such as the restaurant relief grants that are designed to correct a spike in unemployment taxes caused by the coronavirus pandemic. * WCIA | Coles Co. Board approves wind project: The Coles County Board voted to approve the Coles Wind Project Tuesday night. It narrowly passed with six members of the board voting to approve it and five voting against the project. * BND | Fireworks and festivities: Where to celebrate Fourth of July around the metro-east: The Alton Fireworks Spectacular will be held from 5 to 10 p.m. Thursday, July 3 with the fireworks beginning at dusk, around 9 to 9:30 p.m. The celebration is held at the Alton Amphitheater, and will also include food trucks and live entertainment. * NYT | Paramount to Pay Trump $16 Million to Settle ‘60 Minutes’ Lawsuit: Paramount said late Tuesday that it has agreed to pay President Trump $16 million to settle his lawsuit over the editing of an interview on the CBS News program “60 Minutes,” an extraordinary concession to a sitting president by a major media organization. Paramount said its payment includes Mr. Trump’s legal fees and costs and that the money, minus the legal fees, will be paid to Mr. Trump’s future presidential library. […] But Shari Redstone, the chair and controlling shareholder of Paramount, told her board that she favored exploring a settlement with Mr. Trump. Some executives at the company viewed the president’s lawsuit as a potential hurdle to completing a multibillion-dollar sale of the company to the Hollywood studio Skydance, which requires the Trump administration’s approval. * WaPo | Trump to cut protections for home health aides, migrant farmworkers: The U.S. Labor Department announced plans this week to slash more than 60 regulations — including eliminating overtime and minimum wage protections for home health care workers and union organizing rights for migrant farmworkers. The effort to deregulate the federal agency that governs workers’ rights and protections in the United States aims to deliver on President Donald Trump’s promise to “restore American prosperity,” the agency said. * WaPo | A Trans Pilot Was Falsely Blamed for a Plane Crash. Now She’s Fighting the Right-Wing Disinfo Machine: Within two days, the rumor spread like wildfire. The morning of January 31, Jo Ellis, a part-time pilot with the Virginia Army National Guard, woke up to messages from a friend warning that she was being named online as the pilot who killed innocent passengers in the deadly crash. At first, Ellis thought it was an isolated claim—someone erroneously connected her to the crash, because just days earlier she had written an essay on being a transgender pilot from Virginia. But once she logged in to Facebook, she realized she was wrong.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition (Updated)
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Jul 2, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Jul 2, 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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