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Final ‘ComEd Four’ defendant Jay Doherty sentenced to 1 year in Madigan bribery case

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Tribune

On Tuesday, more than two years after his conviction in the “ComEd Four” bribery trial, [Jay Doherty] is finally set to learn his fate for his role in an elaborate scheme to funnel do-nothing subcontractor payments to associates of then-Speaker Michael Madigan in a bid to help ComEd’s legislative agenda in Springfield.

Doherty is the last of the four defendants to be sentenced in the landmark case, which has dragged on amid the death of the trial judge, fights at the U.S. Supreme Court and a review by the Trump administration of a law used by prosecutors to convict the four of cooking ComEd’s books.

Last month, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore and lobbyist Michael McClain, who was one of Madigan’s closest confidants, were each sentenced to 2-year prison terms. Ex-ComEd executive John Hooker, meanwhile, was given a year and a half behind bars.

Prosecutors have asked U.S. District Judge Manish Shah to give Doherty 15 months in prison, arguing in a recent court filing that he was “integral” to the scheme because “he understood the reason for it (to provide monetary benefits to Madigan allies) and the benefits to ComEd from it, and allowed it to exist under his own contract with ComEd.”

* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner…


* US Attorney Sarah Streicker sticks with the 15 month prison sentence recommendation for Doherty. Jon Seidel


* Doherty to Judge Shah


* Judge Manish Shah: “This secret relationship between Mr. Madigan and ComEd … it wouldn’t have been a secret without you”


* Doherty’s sentence

Doherty is due in prison Sept. 30.

  1 Comment      


SB 328: Protects Working People & Helps Fight Trump’s Predatory MAGA Agenda

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The same front groups, associations and companies that are backing Trump’s predatory MAGA agenda of raising prices, slashing Medicaid, and gutting the Environmental Protection Agency, Food & Drug Administration, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration are also against SB 328.

They wrongly believe our state can’t be pro-worker and pro-business, and want Illinois to turn its back on people who have shared their stories about big corporations that have poisoned them or their loved ones:

“My father was a U.S. Army veteran, a hardworking engineer, and a devoted father to three sons. He should not have suffered from a preventable disease — and our family should not have to navigate legal roadblocks just to pursue accountability.”

— Son of union member who died from lung disease caused by asbestos

SB 328 is good legislation and another way to show that Illinois will always stand up for working families and the most vulnerable.

For more information about SB 328, click here.

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Tarver: No state takeover needed

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As I’ve told you before, the only people who believe that a state takeover of the Chicago Public Schools is likely and desirable are Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson and members of the Chicago Tribune editorial board.

This isn’t 1980

In January 1980, Gov. Jim Thompson hammered out a deal with the city, the Chicago Teachers Union and CPS to have the state essentially take over financial decision-making for Chicago’s public schools. The state was able to borrow on the schools’ behalf and collected new property taxes to finance the debt. The School Finance Authority, created to oversee CPS’ finances, assumed control of CPS budgets and contracting.

State legislators aren’t keen on the idea of being directly responsible for Chicago property tax levies - to say the least.

* More importantly, what the state takeover cheerleaders are ignoring or downplaying is that CPS is now on track to have a fully elected school board after the 2026 elections. And considering the Chicago Teachers Union’s popularity plummet and the union’s many losses during the first round of voting last year, it’s no longer automatically assumed that the union will control an elected majority.

So, why would state legislators, after years of trying to elect that school board, force a state takeover now? It just doesn’t make any sense.

* And Rep. Curtis Tarver, who introduced a state takeover bill last spring, has issued a statement saying he’s finally come to the conclusion that the idea is a non-starter. Politico

State Rep. Curtis Tarver sees “little appetite” for reinstating the School Finance Authority for funding and reforming Chicago Public Schools. After holding a hearing on the issue, Tarver issued a statement, saying, “I understand there is little appetite, including myself, for a full takeover of CPS. Instead, we must work together on a realistic, collaborative path forward that pairs new investment with clear, student-centered reforms.”

* Full statement

Last Thursday’s House Education Committee hearing—prompted by House Bill 4017, which would reinstate the School Finance Authority—was intended to spark a thoughtful conversation about how best to fund and reform Chicago Public Schools. While reinstating the Authority signaled a willingness to explore state oversight, I understand there is little appetite, including myself, for a full takeover of CPS. Instead, we must work together on a realistic, collaborative path forward that pairs new investment with clear, student-centered reforms.

While a certain organization has only recently highlighted the proposed surcharge to fully fund education, I introduced this initiative in 2019. There has been no engagement or even acknowledgement of this concept until last week’s hearing. Rather than focusing on past (seemingly intentional) oversights, I welcome constructive dialogue with all stakeholders to refine and advance a plan that would provide per-pupil funding across every Illinois district. That is the only realistic path forward in Springfield. A Chicago only solution does not have support. This was what I attempted to convey but a nearly three (3) hour hearing’s substantive conversation was hijacked by an organization for its patently false, borderline risible, tactless social media posts and emails.

My position could not be clearer: I care about all students and all children. I want every child to have the promise of the future through access to a quality education, no matter their zip code

HB 4017

    ● No State Takeover Needed: I recognize that most stakeholders prefer local governance. My focus is on partnering with CPS and the City of Chicago—rather than supplanting them—to design reforms tied to any additional funding. We also cannot ignore the fact that there was a request for a fully elected school board. The current hybrid model was only requested due to the result of a municipal election. Furthermore, the hybrid model is no different than the past with mayoral control. The board allows for the majority of board members to be appointed by the mayor.
    ● Statewide Standard: Every other Illinois district follows a legislated equity-based funding formula that guarantees resources flow to the classrooms that need them most.
    ● CPS Today: Without a binding formula, CPS can—and has—allocated funds unevenly, risking a “blank check” scenario that fails to prioritize our highest-need students.
    ● My Ask: Before any new state dollars are released, CPS should agree to adopt a clear, outcome-driven funding formula aligned with statewide equity principles. This will reinforce transparency and direct support to literacy programs, teacher staffing, and wrap-around services in predominantly Black and low-income schools.

Funding and Reform

To build trust and ensure accountability, I agree with Board Member Ellen Rosenfeld’s proposition of a joint working group of state, city, and CPS representatives. Ideally, I would ask that this group would:

1. Map a Multi-Year Funding Roadmap

    ○ Set incremental appropriation targets for the next three fiscal years.
    ○ Align each tranche of new funding with specific reform milestones.

2. End Early-Childhood Testing & Remap Boundaries

    ○ Phase out pre-K and kindergarten entrance exams, which unfairly bar children before they even begin school. In other words, stop testing four (4) year olds for the handful of selective enrollment schools. Especially, when CPS refuses to provide any information about the contents of the test. It is far too subjective and unfair.
    ○ Complete a neighborhood boundary review— “remapping” —so every child can attend a quality campus nearby without testing barriers. This was CPS’ own resolution from 2005 that it has failed to do. Reviewing school boundaries is an extensive process that allows for maximum public input. Undertaking this would help to ensure resources are provided where they are needed most.

3. Adopt an Equity-Based Funding Formula

    ○ Require CPS to implement a formula that ties dollars to measurable student needs—mirroring models used statewide—and report quarterly on progress to the General Assembly.

4. Publish Transparent Budget Reports

    ○ Provide detailed line-item budgets at the school and district levels, publicly available and updated on a quarterly basis rather than annually.

Opportunity for Partnership

My intent is not to cast blame, but to learn from past missteps so we never again leave critical needs unaddressed. I value CPS educators and city leaders as indispensable partners. By coupling new investments with these commonsense reforms, we will ensure that every additional state dollar truly reaches the classroom and advances student outcomes.

My Commitment Going Forward

I remain steadfast in my support for increased state funding of Chicago Public Schools—so long as it’s paired with genuine collaboration, accountability, and a laser focus on closing the achievement gaps that disproportionately affect Black and low-income students. I look forward to convening with the Mayor’s office, CPS administration, parents, and community leaders to finalize this partnership framework. I will not waste time with anyone who is not singularly focused on the children and their education.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

Chicago is facing a $1.12 billion budget shortfall for 2026. The CTA, Metra and Pace face a $770 million mass transit funding shortfall. And the most immediate financial crisis is confronting Chicago Public Schools, which must find a way to erase a $734 million budget shortfall by the end of the month.

Matt Fabian, a partner at Municipal Market Analytics, said the converging crises raise “the odds for the state to help out.”

“Ultimately, the city’s budget situation is going to have to be fixed by the city and the state. And so the state, having just made it worse — even if it’s required under law — raises the potential for the state to help out the city at least in the near term,” Fabian said. “The state has the ability to raise taxes if it needs to. It can design new taxes. It could increase the income tax. It could find ways to extract more money.”

All school districts in the state were warned not to put their federal pandemic money into their ongoing operating budgets. CPS ignored the advice, which is a huge part of its current mess (along with agreeing to a union contract that it clearly cannot afford).

A Chicago municipal bailout would be unheard of, and next to impossible. Also, municipalities have received a ton of money from other sources in this budget.

Only the transit funding issue has wide, theoretical legislative support,

  1 Comment      


Roundup: Texas Dems skedaddle to Illinois to block Trump-backed redistricting (Updated)

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* First, some background from AP

Texas Democrats on Monday prevented their state’s House of Representatives from moving forward, at least for now, with a redrawn congressional map sought by President Donald Trump to shore up Republicans’ 2026 midterm prospects as his political standing falters.

After dozens of Democrats left the state, the Republican-dominated House was unable to establish the quorum of lawmakers required to do business. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has made threats about removing members who are absent from their seats. Democrats counter that Abbott is using “smoke and mirrors” to assert legal authority he does not have.

The Republican-dominated House quickly issued civil arrest warrants for absent Democrats and Abbott ordered state troopers to help find and arrest them, but lawmakers physically outside Texas are beyond the jurisdiction of state authorities. […]

The impasse centers on Trump’s effort to get five more GOP-leaning congressional seats in Texas, at Democrats’ expense, before the midterms. That would bolster his party’s chances of preserving its U.S. House majority, something Republicans were unable to do in the 2018 midterms during Trump’s first presidency. Republicans currently hold 25 of Texas’ 38 seats. That’s nearly a 2-to-1 advantage and already a wider partisan gap than the 2024 presidential results: Trump won 56.1% of Texas ballots, while Democrat Kamala Harris received 42.5%. […]

The Texas House is scheduled to convene again Tuesday afternoon.

* River Bender

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul on Monday issued a statement asserting there is no legal basis for the arrest of Texas lawmakers who have fled to Illinois.

Raoul said Texas law enforcement officers lack authority to detain Texas legislators in Illinois based on civil arrest warrants issued by the Texas House. “In Illinois, the rule of law matters, and law enforcement must have a legitimate legal basis to arrest someone,” Raoul said. “Texas law enforcement officers have no authority to hunt down and make arrests of Texas legislators in Illinois based on a civil arrest warrant issued by the Texas House. The Texas House may have managed to issue civil arrest warrants without having a quorum, but those civil warrants carry no weight in Illinois.”

* Texas Dems held a press conference with Gov. Pritzker, DNC Chair Ken Martin and Illinois Democrats in the suburbs this morning

Reporter: There are three Republicans in the state delegation here in Illinois, you can’t undo what is happening in Texas if that is successful with five Republicans being added there, what’s the extent of the pushback that you could have here in Illinois…

Pritzker: Look number one, we’re very happy to host these heroes and stand up with them, for them. Here in the state of Illinois, it is possible to redistrict, it’s not something that I want to do. It’s not something that any of us want to have to do. We’re hoping that this will be successful, that the fact that there’s no quorum in Texas will be successful. But once again, we’re fighting for democracy. There are no rules anymore, apparently, and so we’re going to have to play by the set of rules that are being set out in front of us. Which, frankly, none of us believes is the right way to operate. And what Congressman Green said is right. This is unconstitutional. This is about standing up for people’s voting rights and standing up for Black and brown people who are going to be iced out by what Donald Trump and Greg Abbott are trying to do. So here in Illinois, we’ll do everything that we can to support that endeavor.

[From Rich: Nominating petitions are already circulating starting today. Remapping would throw a huge monkey wrench into the state process, undoubtedly forcing a delayed primary. It would also require an almost immediate special session. And that means Chicago teachers and transit activists would demand special session action on their priorities. I just don’t see it happening.]

* WGN

Illinois republicans were quick to claim hypocrisy.

“Gov. Pritzker broke his promise to Illinois voters not once but twice for signing one of the most gerrymandered maps in the nation,” said state senate minority leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove). […]

Pritzker, who once campaigned promising to support efforts to take the mapping pen out of politicians’ hands, eventually supported the maps produced by his fellow democrats.

The governor now claims democratic dominance in state elections has little to do with districts being drawn in their favor.

“The fact we are very good in Illinois about delivering for the people of Illinois and the people of Illinois react to that and vote for our candidates is very different than cheating mid-decade and re-writing the rules because their cult leader Donald Trump tells them to do it,” Pritzker said in response to reporters’ questions.

[From Rich: The governor did break his promise on the remap, but only on state maps. He wasn’t asked about federal maps. Also, the new Texas map is being blasted for allegedly violating the Voting Rights Act. Illinois’ congressional maps did not face that challenge.]

* Daily Herald

About 30 Texas Democrats, including House Minority Leader Gene Wu, sought sanctuary in Illinois on Sunday. They landed at O’Hare International Airport then immediately headed to the DuPage Democratic office by car and charter bus for the news conference, [DuPage County Democratic Party Chair Reid McCollum] said.

McCollum believes Pritzker’s staff considered the office because of the success the organization has had turning DuPage County Democratic.

“This was an opportunity to highlight the Democratic success in the area,” he said.

While he wouldn’t give specifics, McCollum acknowledged the Texans are staying in the West suburbs.

* CNN

Democratic Texas State Rep. Lulu Flores said that she and several other members of the Texas delegation who traveled to Illinois “plan to stay as long as it takes” in an effort to stall the aggressive Republican redistricting push back home.

“You just heard that the special session lasts til August 19. That’s the very least time that we expect to be out here,” Flores said in an interview on CNN.

Flores said that she hoped efforts by Democratic governors in states such as California, New York and Illinois to pursue their own redistricting plans in response to the developments in Texas would ultimately dissuade Republicans.

…Adding… The Illinois Freedom Caucus…

The Illinois Freedom Caucus says it is time for Governor Pritzker to stop the media stunts and send the Texas Democratic lawmakers hiding in Illinois back to Texas.

In an effort to prevent a quorum in the Texas Legislature and delay important votes, Texas Democratic lawmakers are hiding out in Illinois at the invitation of Gov. JB Pritzker. The Illinois Freedom Caucus is calling on Pritzker to stop the kabuki theater and focus on the problems facing Illinois residents instead.

“Our offices are flooded with phone calls about rising utility bills – bills that have gone up thanks to JB Pritzker’s radical green energy policies. The unemployment rate in Illinois is one of the highest in the nation. And Illinois now has the highest property taxes in the country. We have serious problems in our state and what is our Governor doing about it? Not a thing. All he is doing is trying to bolster his fledgling presidential campaign by harboring truant, derelict legislators from Texas who refuse to do the job they were elected to do. JB Pritzker seems to have an obsession with aiding and abetting fugitives, whether they be criminal illegals or truant Democratic lawmakers.

The idea that these legislators would seek refuge in Illinois because of “partisan” legislative redistricting is the very definition of irony given that Illinois’ own maps look like a 3-year-old drew them in crayon. The faux outrage must be called out. If JB Pritzker and these fugitive lawmakers really cared about their constituents, they would go home and get back to work.”

* More…

    * The Hill | 5 things to know on Texas’s political showdown: This isn’t the first time Texas Democrats, who have long been a minority in the state chambers, have turned to this strategy to try to stall a particularly controversial plan state Republicans were proposing. They fled in 2003 when Republicans were pursuing an earlier middecade redistricting plan and again in 2021 to try to stop a bill to implement new voting restrictions. In both cases, the proposals were delayed but ultimately passed. The quorum break comes in the middle of a 30-day special session called by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), after President Trump put pressure on Texas to redraw lines and boost GOP numbers. Democrats could try to run out the clock on the current session but couldn’t keep Abbott from calling another.

    * Tribune | Texas Democrats who left state prevent vote, for now, on Trump’s efforts to add GOP House seats: “This is not just rigging the system in Texas,” Pritzker said Sunday. “It’s about rigging the system against the rights of all Americans for years to come.” U.S. Rep. Marc Veasey of Texas urged other Democratic governors to join Pritzker, Newsom and Hochul. Democrats, Veasey said, have too often “shown up to a gun fight with good intentions, no knives.” But “that era is over,” Veasey declared Monday from Illinois. “We are not going to unilaterally disarm.”

    * WBEZ | Texas Democrats ready to stay in Illinois ‘as long as it takes’ to fight GOP congressional maps: At a news conference at the IBEW Local 701 headquarters in Warrenville, U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi called the situation a “man-made catastrophe for democracy” while standing alongside some of the 40 Texas Democrats taking refuge in Illinois. He also said it was a chance for Democrats to show constituents they are willing to stand up against Republican incursions into political norms, after criticisms of responses by Democrats to recent power grabs from Trump and state Republicans. “We have to recognize we’re at this crossroads,” Krishnamoorthi told the Sun-Times on Monday night. “Democrats can either play nice, or we can say if they go down that path, two can play at that game.”

  11 Comments      


Hexaware: Your Globally Local IT Services Partner

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As a global IT services company rooted in communities around the world, Hexaware combines deep industry expertise with cutting-edge solutions to boost productivity, create new opportunities, and strengthen economies everywhere. Our Corporate Video showcases our transparent, action-oriented approach—from local community initiatives to enterprise-scale programs—designed to deliver real results you can see and measure.

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CPS gets larger share of state dollars but still $1.6B short of adequacy (Updated)

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and here for some background. The Illinois State Board of Education on Friday

​The Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) today released annual allocations for Evidence-Based Funding (EBF) for Fiscal Year 2026, reflecting continued and historic commitment to equitable school funding. Under Governor JB Pritzker, the state has increased EBF by $2.1 billion, bringing the total annual investment to $8.9 billion.

The General Assembly appropriated an additional $307 million for EBF in FY 2026. Of that amount, $5.2 million is specifically earmarked to support new alternative schools that serve students with specialized needs. The remaining $301.8 million is designated for distribution through EBF tiers, with 99% of the new funds going to the state’s highest-need districts. […]

Nine years of investments in EBF have raised the funding floor, accomplishing the main goal of EBF, which is to focus increases in state funding toward districts with the greatest need. The number of fully funded districts, those at or above 90% adequacy, has grown from 194 in FY 2018 to 313 in FY 2026. The formula considers enrollment, student demographics, local funding capacity, and 34 cost factors outlined in statute to ensure funding is responsive and equitable.

Every school district will receive at least the same amount of funding as last year through the Base Minimum Funding, with the additional FY 2026 EBF Tier appropriation of $301.8 million distributed equitably based on district need. This year’s increase in EBF investment reflects a pause in funding for the Property Tax Relief Grant, which is typically allocated $50 million.

While the FY 2026 investment reinforces Illinois’ strong trajectory toward equity, this year’s data reflects a slight dip in the average Percentage of Adequacy across Illinois school districts due to changing economic conditions. A 41.3% drop in Corporate Personal Property Replacement Tax (CPPRT) revenue, combined with rising education costs, resulted in a modest decline in the average funding adequacy for districts below 90%, from 77.1% in FY 2025 to 76.6% in FY 2026. Still, that average remains nearly 10 percentage points higher than in FY 2018, when it was just 67.1%.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

Chicago Public Schools will receive an additional $76 million from the state this fiscal year for a total of $1.9 billion, according to new data released by the state on Friday.

The new figures indicate Chicago had a significant drop in local tax revenue and an increase in the number of English learners, giving it higher priority for additional state dollars. The new calculations also show that CPS is less adequately funded under the state’s formula than it was last year and will now need about $1.6 billion to reach adequate funding.

* WBEZ’s Sarah Karp

CPS is one of more than 300 under-funded districts that is getting a smaller percentage of what it needs compared to just a year ago. State law calls for all schools to be funded to at least 90% of adequacy by 2027, but the Center on Tax and Budget Accountability says that at the current rate the state is funding education, it will take until at least 2034 to reach that level.

For CPS, the percent toward adequacy dropped from 79% to 73%. Statewide, the average percent toward adequacy decreased slightly — by about half a percentage point — to 76.6%. The state points to a significant decrease in revenue from a state tax on corporations, as well as “rising education costs,” such as inflation and cost-of-living raises, for the drop in adequacy. […]

Meanwhile, CPS is grappling with a $734 million budget deficit and has not approved a budget for the coming school year. By law, a balanced budget must be presented next week so that required hearings can take place before the budget is approved at the end of August.

In terms of adequacy levels, the state has once again categorized CPS in Tier 1 — among the districts furthest from adequacy — a position the district shed just two years ago. But the upside of being in this category is that it gets more of the state’s pot of money for education. As a result, CPS will get $76 million more this year than it got last year.

* More from Chalkbeat Chicago

The state’s second largest district serving almost 34,000 students, Elgin’s U-46, dropped from Tier 1 to Tier 2 and will receive less than last year due to a decline in average student enrollment and students from low-income households. The district will receive an additional $4.8 million, almost $14 million less than it received last year in new money.

Rockford School District 205, the state’s third largest district serving about 26,418 students, is expected to receive an additional $19.7 million in state dollars — $9.5 million more than last year. The district has seen an increase in average student enrollment, English learners, and a significant decrease in local property tax revenues.


…Adding…
The Chicago Teachers Union last week…

You can’t make this up.

The state that withholds money from our district held a hearing yesterday to find out why the district is in financial trouble.
State representative Curtis Tarver, who represents Chicago students and their families, called a hearing on CPS school finance to reiterate why he and his colleagues have no solutions or any political will to fund CPS and stabilize successful programs like sustainable community schools.

Here are the facts: While our students go without librarians, art teachers, and basic supplies, Illinois’ wealthiest 5 percent are getting handed $8 billion in Trump tax cuts from his recent budget bill. Add in the $10 billion in tax breaks already baked into Gov. Pritzker’s budget for tech corporations and the ultra-rich, and you’re looking at $18 billion in giveaways to those who need it least.

That’s enough to eliminate CPS’s entire $1.2 billion funding gap 15 times over.

Reminder: It is 2025, not 2012, and we are no longer debating already failed arguments on retirement security versus smaller class sizes. Working families deserve both.

* Related…

    * WBEZ | CPS must present a plan to close its deficit within 9 days: What are the options?: Since taking over in June, interim Chicago Public Schools CEO and Supt. Macquline King has been laser-focused on coming up with a plan to close the school district’s $734 million budget deficit. King and her team now have less than two weeks to present a budget in time for legally required hearings and a vote at the Aug. 28 Board of Education meeting.

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools cuts 480 janitor positions as it ends all private custodial contracts: The move, which comes as the district is working to close a $734 million deficit, sparked an immediate rebuke and demand for reconsideration from the two unions representing school custodians. Starting Sept. 30, CPS will oversee 2,100 full-time custodians and end seven contracts with private custodial companies. The change will mean cutting about 1,250 private custodians and ending a longstanding practice of contracting with private companies to help clean schools.

    * ABC Chicago | IL lawmakers want Chicago Public Schools fully funded, don’t feel all funding should come from state: But while many Thursday acknowledged the state legislature will need to step in, there is also a realization that none of this will happen before the 2026 budget is voted on. There was also pushback by the very legislator who’s proposed the millionaires tax. “There’s no votes outside the city of Chicago to just send the city of Chicago money without sending money to the rest of the state,” said state Rep. Curtis Tarver, assistant majority leader and a Democrat representing Chicago.

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois lawmakers offer no quick solutions for CPS during district finances hearing: “I’m hopeful that we can move past the rhetoric, the talking points and unrealistic demands, and get down to business about how we can do better by CPS and its students,” said Illinois Democrat Rep. Ann Williams, who represents neighborhoods on the North Side of Chicago and chairs the House Executive Committee. Illinois has increased funding for K-12 schools across the state by more than $2 billion under a funding formula created eight years ago, of which $1.1 billion has gone to CPS. The state set a goal to “adequately” fund all school districts by 2027, but they’re projected to miss that deadline. According to the state’s formula last year, Chicago schools need almost $1.2 billion to be considered adequately funded.

  23 Comments      


Open thread

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  9 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Rep. Darin LaHood won’t run for Illinois governor, he says. NBC Chicago

    - Republican Rep. Darin LaHood announced Monday that he will not run for governor in Illinois, and will instead seek reelection to Congress.
    - If LaHood had decided to run, he would have been the highest profile Republican to throw their hat in the ring during the current election cycle.
    - DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick has announced a run for the office, along with suburban businessman Joseph Severino.
    - Today marks the first day for candidates in Illinois to begin circulating petitions for the 2026 primary election in the state.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | They’re here. They’re queer. They’re farming. New generation of LGBTQ farmers more visible and vocal: Scheider and Alem never thought they would be able to own a farm — the financial hurdles were just too great. But Schneider had a knack for the work, and was drawn to the idea of running their own business. The couple both took a business class after Schneider’s apprenticeship — and then took the leap to farming at Windy City’s incubator farm in Bronzeville. Their farm, Otter Oaks, is named for Schneider’s grandfather’s ranch.

* Austin Weekly News | Dem party role contested as Davis retires, Welch and Harmon vie for seat : Don Harmon, State Senate President and Democratic Oak Park Township Committeeman, said Sunday that he will be circulating nominating petitions for the party office of 7th District State Central Committeeman, an office Davis has held since 1998. Meanwhile, Harmon’s counterpart in the Illinois General Assembly, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch has started actively campaigning for the post and has secured an endorsement from Davis and 18 other political figures, including River Forest Village President Cathy Adduci and State Rep. LaShawn Ford.

* Sun-Times | Chicago immigration judges fired by Trump White House call for transparency about their terminations: Jennifer Peyton, a former assistant chief immigration judge in Chicago, said she has watched more than 100 judicial colleagues be abruptly terminated, transferred or resign this year. Peyton and Carla Espinoza are among a group of dozens of judges who have been terminated without explanation since President Donald Trump took office in January. Both women spoke out Monday about what they called a lack of transparency and due process — adding they’re concerned about a staggering 3.5 million backlog in immigration cases. “Since January 2025, immigration courts… are no longer honoring or offering due process like it did when I was appointed in September 2016. The court system has been systematically and intentionally destroyed, defunded and politicized by this administration,” Peyton said at a Chicago press conference alongside Sen. Dick Durbin. “I don’t know why this has happened, but I fear for our country and for justice.”

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Police use of force is declining, according to University of Illinois study: Researchers with the school’s Cline Center for Advanced Social Research compiled data to track and identify the use of lethal force by officers throughout the country. They found that from 2021 to 2023 the number of such incidents fell by 24 percent nationally. The drop was about the same in Illinois. The report includes any incident in which police used a firearm, including those with nonfatal outcomes, as well as any other use of force that resulted in a death. But it doesn’t draw conclusions as to why the decrease is occurring.

* Shaw Local | Girls flag football surges in Illinois as hundreds more take the field in year two: Last fall, hundreds of first-year players from 156 schools competed in the inaugural season of girls flag football in Illinois – up from the 22 in 2021, when Crystal Lake’s Gustavo Silva, the Chicago Bears’ director of football development, kicked off a pilot program in Chicago. More than 200 schools are expected to have teams this fall, IHSA assistant executive director Tracie Henry said. Silva’s big goal for the 2026-27 school year is 300.

*** Statehouse News ***

* FYI



* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights trustee launches bid for state Senate seat: Arlington Heights Trustee Carina Santa Maria is running for the state Senate seat held by Mark Walker, who isn’t seeking reelection next year. Santa Maria, elected to the village board last April, is the first Democratic candidate to declare her candidacy for the 27th District opening since Walker’s announcement last Tuesday. She filed paperwork Thursday with the Illinois State Board of Elections that formally amends her candidate political committee in order to seek the General Assembly office. The committee is chaired by Wheeling Township Supervisor Maria Zeller Brauer, while Arlington Heights Memorial Library board Trustee Darnell McClaney serves as treasurer.

* WaPo | Inside Texas Democrats’ plan to seek refuge with Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker: Soon his staff was talking daily with Texas Democrats. And early this week, he stood next to state lawmakers as they explained their escape to Chicago, assembled in front of a “JB” backdrop advertising Pritzker’s reelection campaign. “This is a righteous act of courage,” Pritzker said. “When you show people that you have the will to fight, well, they can muster the will to fight, too.”

* WAND | Illinois to start tracking firefighter cause of death in 2026: The Associated Firefighters of Illinois asked lawmakers to require the State Fire Marshal’s office to track and record the manner of death for firefighters across the state. Sponsors said it is important to evaluate the types of death these first responders are experiencing, whether it is suicide or various types of cancer.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Are ghost buses all but gone? Canceled CTA buses will now be noted on tracker apps: The CTA began publicly sharing the data on canceled buses earlier this spring. But it wasn’t until recently that the phone app Transit began showing canceled buses to CTA riders — marking them with a line through their scheduled time. It is currently the only application that has incorporated CTA’s new data. The Ventra app, Google Maps and Apple Maps don’t show canceled buses yet — but they will soon, according to the CTA.

* Crain’s | In downtown Chicago’s condo market, the hits keep coming: Last week was rough on the downtown condo market, with nine different examples popping up to show that the price declines of the fraught early 2020s aren’t over. Several condos sold for prices below what they went for 15 years ago or more. Sellers on a high floor in a showcase tower put their condo on the market at $1.2 million off what they paid for it in 2022. And one North Michigan Avenue’s million-dollar sale price was below what it went for in 2019, 2011 and 2009.

* AP | In ‘Sinners’ and his music, Buddy Guy is keeping the blues alive. It hasn’t been easy.: For the eight-time Grammy Award-winning musician, those recognitions aren’t priority. The longevity of the music that made his life is his primary concern. “Like I promised B.B. King, Muddy Waters and all of them,” he tells The Associated Press over the phone, “I do the best I can to keep the blues alive.” Which he does with the Chicago blues venue Buddy Guy’s Legends, which the artist opened in 1989.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘We will hide them at our own legal peril’: DuPage Democratic leader pledges to protect Texan lawmakers: “This was an opportunity to highlight the Democratic success in the area,” he said. While he wouldn’t give specifics, McCollum acknowledged the Texans are staying in the West suburbs. […] If the Texas Democrats are trying to run out the clock on the session, McCollum said they’re welcome to stay in DuPage County for the duration. “I will dig a bunker and stock it,” McCollum said. “We will hide them at our own legal peril, until hell freezes over if need be.”

* Crain’s | Northwestern’s president is appearing again before Congress. Here’s what to know: Unlike in a typical congressional hearing, the appearance will be closed to the media and the public, though it will be transcribed, according to a spokesperson for the committee. No information was available on whether the transcription will be released. Details on how many committee members will take part in the interview and if it will include both House Democrats and Republicans, in a similar fashion to a regular committee hearing, were also unavailable.

* Tribune | Cuts ripple across Northwestern, as faculty warn of dire situation: “Let’s say they unfreeze the funds. The damage is done,” said Guillermo Oliver, a professor in the Division of Nephrology and Hypertension. “Let’s be clear, this is not going to be, ‘OK, back to business.’” Northwestern never received formal notification of the funding freeze in April, which came amid several federal probes into allegations of antisemitism. The Evanston-based university has been spending about $10 million a week to keep research afloat, faculty told the Tribune in June.

* Daily Southtown | Harvey police: House party shooting that injured 4-year-old part of long-standing conflict between ‘bad actors’: At a news conference Monday in front of the Harvey police station, police Chief Cameron Biddings provided more details about the shooting, and said the violence was part of a longstanding conflict between “individuals with a long and disruptive history within our city.” “We now know who the bad actors are. These are not random acts of violence or anonymous individuals,” Biddings said. “We are very familiar with them, and frankly, they have caused harm within our community for far too long.” Biddings said police have increased patrols in the area and are looking at “pursuing charges where applicable.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Paramount Theatre cancels its Bold subscription series due to Aurora funding cut: Aurora has seen political change in recent weeks. Former mayor Richard Irvin, who had staked much of the city’s future on downtown Aurora becoming a long-term hub for arts and entertainment, was defeated by John Laesch, who is now in office and has said Aurora now faces a gap between revenue and expenses. As the Tribune has reported, Laesch already has canceled plans for the proposed construction of new 4,000-seat music venue to be known as the City of Lights Center, and has said at a public meeting both that the city faced a “significant hole” between revenue and expenses and that the city’s subsidy of the existing historic theater was “too much.”

* Daily Herald | Lake County forest preserve to sell land for Fort Sheridan National Cemetery expansion: Three pending moves by the Lake County Forest Preserve District will allow for the expansion of the Fort Sheridan National Cemetery, create a new preserve in far northeastern Lake County and enlarge another near Round Lake. The district for several years has been discussing a deal with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, which wants to expand the cemetery near Lake Bluff with columbaria structures for the interment of cremated remains.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | ISU, IWU and Heartland international student enrollment is down, following national trend: In a statement, ISU said it estimated the entering class of international students will be about a third smaller. Though their overall numbers are small, Heartland and IWU entering classes both will be down around 17% compared with last year. Last year’s IWU international student cohort was above the post-pandemic average, said a spokesperson. ISU said it’s expecting about 100 new international students to show up for classes, though it won’t have a precise count until after the 10th day of classes. That number is equivalent to roughly 17% of last year’s total international student enrollment.

* WCIA | New DMV+ in Champaign making visits faster: This is the first DMV+ outside of Springfield and Chicago to open, and it’s a decision that’s been in the works since 2023. “It essentially started as soon as we took office and we knew that we wanted to create some more efficiencies, we knew we wanted to bring more services,” Giannoulias said. Customers at the DMV can now get certified copies of business records, can file items for LLCs, and get documents needed for things like adoption or international business. Before Monday, that could only be accomplished in Springfield or Chicago.

* WGLT | Bloomington mobile home park residents reach settlement over tenants’ rights lawsuit: The agreements between the tenants and Oak Wood Properties include the amendment of the model lease and community rules to conform with Illinois law, according to PSLS. They will also disclose rent increase projections and notice of tenants’ rights, PSLS said. The disclosure of rights informs tenants that signing a new lease is not a requirement to stay in the park, they cannot be evicted for choosing to not sign a new lease, tenants can automatically renew a lease and can only be given a new proposal at the time, PSLS said. It also will tell tenants they can only be charged fees itemized in the lease and any past notices in conflict are null and void, according to PSLS.

* WJBD | Marion County Fair Board President Pleased with Fair Week: Marion County Fair Board President Doug Telford says it was a good fair week even with the extremely hot start. Telford reviewed the week as the fair came to a close on Saturday night. “We started extremely hot, but I will brag on the Marion county fair board. The fair board members, we all pulled together. We pulled through the heat and we made sure to have every show ready for the grandstands. The community come out and supported us through the heat. Unfortunately, that’s all we had was a lot of hot air the first few nights. It turned off and got cooler towards the end of the week. The community come out again for us. It’s been a good week all and all.”

*** National ***

* WaPo | U.S. visa bonds would charge some foreign travelers $15,000 deposits: The State Department plans to start running a pilot program this month that would require some foreign travelers to pay up to $15,000 for a reimbursable visa bond that deters them from staying in the U.S. longer than they’re allowed for business or tourism. Some details are outlined in a public notice that appeared Monday on the Federal Register, but many are still unclear, including which countries would be targeted by the program.

* The Hill | RFK Jr. ‘reviewing’ ouster of preventive task force members : The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force is composed of medical experts who serve four-year terms on a volunteer basis. They are appointed by the HHS secretary and are supposed to be shielded from political influence. The task force reviews reams of scientific evidence to make recommendations on services such as cancer screenings, HIV prevention medications and more. It makes its recommendations using a grading scale, and ObamaCare requires insurers to cover services the task force recommends with a “grade” of A or B at no cost to patients.

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Tuesday, Aug 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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