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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker’s campaign…

As Donald Trump marks 100 days in office, the Pritzker political operation is launching a new video series: ‘The Real Cost of Trump’s Cuts.’ The series will feature direct to camera videos highlighting Illinoisans whose lives have been upended by Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s destruction of the federal government.

In just 100 days, workers have lost their jobs, seniors have struggled to get food or access their social security payments, and families have had their childcare jeopardized. As Trump and Musk gut services that working people rely on to give the wealthy a tax break, the new series aims to tell the stories of their destruction and damage.

Moses’ national security job offer was rescinded when Elon Musk’s DOGE team came in and haphazardly cut positions. He has a family history of working in government and was excited to continue the tradition. Instead, Moses is now unemployed and left without insurance as he tries to take care of his ailing mother.

“Donald Trump and Elon Musk are ruining people’s lives to fund the largest tax break in history for the wealthiest Americans. Illinoisans across the state are paying the price for Trump and Musk’s’ cruelty, and their stories deserve to be heard,” said JB for Governor Senior Political Advisor Mike Ollen.

* The video


Thoughts?

*** Statewide ***

* IPM News | The federal library department has put almost all of its staff on leave. What does that mean for your town’s library?: Libraries across rural Illinois rely on federal funding more than their suburban and urban counterparts. According to IMLS data from 2019 for Illinois, federal funding made up about 1.63% of rural library operating budgets, compared to 0.43% of city library budgets. Most of the libraries that received large percentages of their budgets from the federal government in 2019 and 2022 were in rural areas or towns.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘Hurting very, very badly’: YNOT founder shares statement on Chatham tragedy: In a post on Facebook, YNOT Founder Jaime Loftus addressed the loss of four female students — some as young as 7-years-old — and also revealed new details about the crash as it was caught on camera. Loftus said the car that hit their building was seen leaving Walnut Street, traveling through a farm field and crossing Breckenridge Road, before hitting the building. Due to the time of the crash, there were students and staff present in the building for the after-school programs.

* WAND | U of I Researchers give update on dust storm study: On April 10, the team shared some of their findings so far through the University of Illinois’ farmdoc project. “The bottom line is bare soil,” reads the article’s conclusion. “It is always the most critical component for any dust storm.” The presence of bare soil at the time of the storm combined with unique weather conditions, which included dry days that turned colder later in April, said Professor Jonathan Coppess in an interview with WAND’s Agribusiness Today.

* WCIA | New manufacturing facility planning to add dozens of jobs to Champaign-Urbana: The company is opening a center near Apollo and Olympian Drives in Champaign. The space is wide open now, as crews start to build power distribution units for data centers. “Our technology essentially takes the power from the utility, brings it into the data center, cleans it up, protects it, and distributes it to the racks appropriately so that the servers that run things like your Google searches are run on clean power and are protected from failure,” Evan El Koury, the company’s president, explained. He said he is excited to work with engineering students at U of I, and others with similar experience, as he expects to add 50-75 jobs in the next few months.

* WCIA | ‘We miss him’; Fallen Illinois State Troopers honored on Workers Memorial Day: In Champaign, two state troopers were honored for making the ultimate sacrifice. Family members sat in the front of the ceremony in Dodds Park. Behind them, a line of state troopers stood honoring their colleagues, 28-year-old Corey Thompsen and 45-year-old Todd Hanneken, whose lives were cut short while on duty in Champaign County. […] “We miss him,” John said. “He was a young man at 28 years old just beginning. He’d been on the force about five, going on six years.”

* WICS | Illinois Secretary of State’s Vehicle Show to celebrate 75th year in 2025: The Illinois Secretary of State’s Vehicle Show is set to celebrate its 75th anniversary this fall, with a special highlight on the 70th anniversary of the iconic Chrysler 300. Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias announced that the event will take place on Saturday, September 6, 2025, from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in downtown Springfield. A limited number of commemorative license plates featuring the Chrysler 300 are now available for $35 per pair until June 10. Illinois vehicle owners who purchase the plates may display them on their vehicles for up to 60 days before the show, from July 8 to September 6, 2025.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Highland Park officials settle on permanent memorial sites for July 4 mass shooting: Highland Park city officials are moving forward with the recommendation of two sites for a permanent memorial to the victims of the July 4, 2022, parade mass shooting. Last week, the 24-year-old Highwood man who pleaded guilty to 21 counts of first-degree murder and 48 counts of attempted first-degree murder received seven life sentences for the July 4 shooting. He killed seven people and wounded 48 others that day.

* NBC Chicago | Niles demolishes ‘Leaning Tower’ YMCA building to make way for shopping, entertainment: A big wrecking ball was in suburban Niles Monday morning, right near the suburb’s historic “Leaning Tower of Niles” to make way for a giant new development with shopping and dining and more, according to an announcement. The Leaning Tower YMCA residential building, located at 6300 W. Touhy Ave., was demolished starting at 10 a.m., the announcement said. It’s part of a “significant step” in the village’s plan to revitalize the area, the announcement added.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Oswego trustees discuss options for possible grocery tax: The state tax was a revenue generator for Oswego, Lamberg has said, saying that “using actual 2024 sales tax data received from businesses that sell groceries, staff estimates the village received $1 million to $1.25 million in (state) grocery tax revenue in 2024.” “Implementing a 1% local grocery tax will maintain the village’s revenue base,” she has said.

* Pioneer Press | Morton Grove trustees approve local 1% grocery tax as state one is repealed: Officials said that without imposing the local tax, Morton Grove stands to lose more than $150,000 in sales tax revenue. Village Administrator Charles Meyer explained the ordinance before the board at its April 22 meeting amended a current village code to add a new article entitled “municipal grocery tax.”

* Crain’s | Congress wants to question Northwestern’s president — again: The U.S. House Committee on Education & Workforce is seeking a transcribed interview with Northwestern University President Michael Schill over allegations of antisemitism on campus. In a letter sent to the school, U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Mich., the committee’s chair, accused Schill of failing to fulfill commitments made in front of congressional leaders last year over his plan to combat antisemitism on campus.

* Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows police sergeant on leave after arrest in road rage shooting: Saez, 58, of Elgin, is charged with two felony counts of aggravated battery and one felony count of reckless discharge of a firearm. During a detention hearing Friday, a Kane County judge ordered him to be released with pretrial conditions — including that he must surrender all firearms — pending his next court date June 12. Saez’s attorney Alex Bederka said Monday he is now in the discovery process collecting videos of the incident, including from a nearby gas station and witnesses, and may be prepared to comment further after the next court hearing.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | ‘I didn’t take this job because I thought it would be easy’: Chicago’s new U.S. attorney balances office’s tradition with new directives from DC: In his first interview since assuming the powerful law enforcement post three weeks ago, however, Boutros said he’ll be doing it with less manpower than in recent years, as there are now fewer than 100 federal criminal prosecutors and a hiring freeze mandated by the president that has no end in sight. “I didn’t take this job because I thought it would be easy,” Boutros told a group of reporters who cover the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. “I took this job knowing full well that there are tremendous pressures and expectations put on being U.S. attorney. …I expect this to be a tough job. But I believe and continue to believe that I am the right person for this job and I will work tirelessly to carry out the mandate to the best of my ability.”

* Crain’s | Johnson joins lawsuit seeking to prevent Trump’s federal government overhaul: The city of Chicago has joined other cities, unions and nonprofits in filing a lawsuit asking a judge to block President Donald Trump’s administration from firing federal workers and implementing a sweeping reorganization of the government. Arguing that Trump lacks the sole authority to force an overhaul of the federal government without congressional approval, the lawsuit seeks an injunction to prevent the downsizing, which Mayor Brandon Johnson says is already “disrupting vital city services.”

* Sun-Times | Revised teen curfew proposal poised for Council committee approval — over Mayor Johnson’s objections: With 31 co-sponsors, downtown Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) plans to push the compromise through the City Council’s Committee on Public Safety he chairs in hopes of preventing large groups of young people summoned by social media from assembling downtown with violent consequences, known as “teen trends.” “The city should definitely anticipate litigation being filed over this proposal,” said Sheila Bedi, a clinical law professor at Northwestern University. “I’ve heard no amendments that would suggest that any of the constitutional issues have been redressed.”

* Sun-Times | Developer convicted in crooked Bridgeport bank embezzlement scheme get almost 7 years: A real estate developer was sentenced Tuesday to almost seven years in prison for collecting more than $2.6 million as part of a massive embezzlement scheme that caused a clout-heavy Bridgeport bank to fail. Miroslaw Krejza lived off the loans he collected from Washington Federal Bank for Savings from 2005-17, ostensibly to develop several Northwest Side houses, federal prosecutors said.

* Block Club | New DuSable Park Plans Would Bring A Boardwalk, Lush Greenery To The Lakefront: The 3.5-acre park at 401 N. DuSable Lake Shore Drive is on a small peninsula east of Lake Shore Drive. It has been in the works since 1987, when former Mayor Harold Washington gave the land to the Park District to develop a park in honor of Jean Baptiste Point du Sable. Ross Barney Architects and Brook Architecture, selected as the lead design firms for the park in 2022, submitted their plans this month, two years after being awarded the project.

*** National ***

* AP | UPS to cut 20k jobs, close 70 facilities as it reduces Amazon shipping volume: “The actions we are taking to reconfigure our network and reduce cost across our business could not be timelier,” CEO Carol Tomé said in a statement on Tuesday. “The macro environment may be uncertain, but with our actions, we will emerge as an even stronger, more nimble UPS.” UPS announced three months that it had reached a deal with Amazon to lower its volume by more than 50% by the second half of 2026.

* Crain’s | U.S. Supreme Court rules against Advocate Christ in fight over billions in Medicare payments: In the 7-2 decision on Advocate Christ Medical Center v. Kennedy announced Tuesday, the high court determined the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services does not need to count all beneficiaries enrolled in both Medicare and Supplemental Security Income, or SSI, when tallying how many low-income patients a hospital treats. As a result, health systems will get paid less than they sought.

* Report: A Call to End Daylight Saving Time—Implications for Public Health: Many studies seem to show an acute worsening of health with the spring transition, but not the fall transition, suggesting the health issues are due not only to acute changes in clock time but also to the discrepancy between clock time and circadian rhythm. The effect of a chronic discrepancy between personal schedule and innate circadian rhythm, called social jet lag, is well studied in the sleep medicine literature. This chronic misalignment is associated with obesity, metabolic syndrome, heart disease, and depression. Because studies show that ST aligns better with circadian rhythm, a permanent DST will impose chronic social jet lag on the population.

  3 Comments      


Progressive groups unveil menu of tax proposals

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Illinois Revenue Alliance

Members include: Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, Chicago Teachers Union, Grassroots Collaborative, Healthy Illinois, Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, Jewish Council on Urban Affairs, ONE Northside, PEER Illinois, SEIU Healthcare, Shriver Center on Poverty Law, The People’s Lobby, Workers Center for Racial Justice.

* Excerpts from the more detailed page

Proposal: Impose a 10% tax on digital advertising revenue on corporations that make over $150 million from digital ads. This tax would only impact the largest corporations profiting off of our personal data. Revenue Estimate: FY25-$775 Million, FY26-$895 Million

Proposal: Illinois should implement worldwide combined reporting worldwide combined reporting (WWCR) for corporate tax filing. This would require multinational corporations to include the income of their foreign subsidiaries when calculating Illinois’ share of their profits. Currently, six states and DC states require corporate filings to include foreign subsidiaries located in known tax haven countries. One state, Alaska, requires WWCR for oil companies. Revenue Estimate: $1.2 Billion.

Proposal: Apply Illinois’ corporate income tax and personal property replacement tax to GILTI, a 9.5% tax rate. Since the federal government only taxes 50% of GILTI, Illinois should tax the other half. This would impact large multinationals with access to offshore tax havens. Revenue Estimate: $200 Million.

Proposal: Place a 17% surcharge on all carried interest income by hedge fund and private equity executives, the percentage by which carried interest is under-taxed federally. This would eliminate these executives’ tax advantage while preserving the incentive to be a successful hedge fund manager. Revenue Estimate: $1.5 billion.

Proposal: Impose a “mark-to-market” wealth tax, which would apply Illinois’ personal income tax (4.95%) to the appreciation of billionaire’s assets. This solution was also proposed in the Biden-Harris administration’s FY 2025 budget. Revenue Estimate: $840 million

Proposal: Impose a tax of 7% on long-term capital gains on assets other than real estate over $250,000 in a given tax year. The average income of an individual being taxed under this surcharge is $4.2 million, and over 99% of the tax would be paid by people in the top 20% of income. Revenue Estimate: $1.7 billion

Proposal: Raise the Illinois corporate income tax rate from 7% to7.92%, which is the maximum increase allowed underthe IL constitution (tax limited to 8/5 of the personal income tax). Revenue Estimate: $830 million (2)

Proposal: Eliminate the remaining corporate tax loopholes identified by the governor’s administration, which include:

    * Manufacturing Equipment Subsidy: Remove production-related tangible personal property from the manufacturing machinery and equipment sales tax exemption (loophole originally closed in 2008 but reopened in 2019).
    * Corporate Construction Subsidy: Eliminate the add-on corporate income tax credits for construction job payroll.
    * Biodiesel Sales Tax: Accelerate the expiration of the remaining sales tax exemptions for biodiesel, which is scheduled to sunset in 2030.

Revenue Estimate: $175 million

Proposal: Reduce the state estate tax exemption to $2 million, returning it to the more equitable level it was set at until 2011. Revenue Estimate: $150 million

More at the link.

Which ones do you like and which ones do you not like?

  40 Comments      


Securing The Future: How Ironworkers Power Energy Storage With Precision And Skill

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois accelerates toward a clean energy future, ironworkers are doing more than just supporting the transition—they’re making it possible with safe, skilled, and reliable rigging and equipment setting on some of the state’s most critical energy storage projects.

Thanks to bold investments by Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly, energy storage—especially battery systems—has become a centerpiece of the state’s green infrastructure. Behind the scenes, union ironworkers are the ones rigging and setting massive battery units and essential equipment with unmatched precision. These are not just construction tasks—they’re mission-critical operations that demand expertise, coordination, and an unwavering commitment to safety.

From anchoring battery enclosures to securing large-scale energy storage units in place, ironworkers are central to ensuring these projects meet performance and safety standards. Their contribution is foundational to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), which is reshaping how Illinois stores and delivers clean power.

Including highly trained union labor on these complex jobs not only protects workers and communities—it guarantees the success of each installation. When you see a battery system supporting solar or wind energy in Illinois, know that ironworkers had a hand in setting it safely, skillfully, and reliably.

In every bolt tightened and every rig lifted, ironworkers are powering a greener tomorrow.

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Feds accuse Madigan of lying during testimony, ask judge to deny new trial

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From the federal government’s latest filing

The UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, by and through its attorney, Andrew S. Boutros, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, respectfully submits this response in opposition to the post-trial motions filed by defendant Michael J. Madigan (R. 396, 401).

The evidence presented at trial overwhelmingly proved that (i) Madigan solicited and accepted bribes paid by Commonwealth Edison in exchange for Madigan’s official action on legislation, in the form of jobs (including no-show jobs) for Madigan’s allies; and that (ii) Madigan agreed to use his position as Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives to try to get Chicago Alderman Daniel Solis appointed to a paid State board position, in exchange for Solis steering business to Madigan’s private law firm.

Madigan’s motion for judgment of acquittal under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 ignores the overwhelming evidence presented over 11 weeks of trial and the deferential standard that must be applied. Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, there was ample evidence to convict Madigan on all charges on which the jury found him guilty. Madigan has failed to meet the nearly insurmountable hurdle he faces in attempting to overturn the jury’s verdict through a judgment of acquittal.

Madigan’s motion for a new trial under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33 is similarly ill-founded. For the reasons discussed below, the trial record conclusively demonstrates that there were no errors during the trial that jeopardized his substantial rights. […]

Madigan ignores the standard applicable to a Rule 29 motion and presents a cherry-picked version of the evidence presented at trial. The evidence, particularly when considered in the light most favorable to the government, abundantly proved Madigan’s guilt as to the counts of conviction. There is no basis for the Court to take the extraordinary step of overturning the jury’s verdict.

* From Madigan’s March post-trial motion for a new trial

The Court should grant a new trial “if there is a reasonable possibility that a trial error had a prejudicial effect on the jury’s verdict. The Court has broad discretion in making this determination because it “heard all the evidence, watched both the witnesses and the jury,” and is in the best position to determine whether any improper evidence “tipped the scale against” a defendant. Id. at 438. Additionally, if the Court “believes there is a serious danger that a miscarriage of justice has occurred—that is, that an innocent person has been convicted—[he] has the power to set the verdict aside, even if he does not think that he made any erroneous rulings at the trial.” […]

Madigan is entitled to a new trial because jury instruction and evidentiary errors had a prejudicial effect on the jury’s verdict. In addition to these errors, a new trial is required because the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence, as described in the Motion for Judgment of Acquittal. […]

Madigan also proposed the following jury instruction, which the Court declined to give:

If the defendant believes in good faith that he is acting within the law or that his actions comply with the law, he cannot be said to have acted corruptly or with the purpose to obtain an unlawful benefit for himself or someone else. This is so even if the defendant’s belief was objectively unreasonable. However, you may consider the reasonableness of the defendant’s belief together with all the other evidence to determine whether the defendant held the belief in good faith. […]

The jury should have been instructed on the accurate mens rea. That is, a defendant acts “corruptly” when he specifically intends to receive a private financial benefit in violation of his legal duty to faithfully represent his constituents and the citizens of Illinois. Instead, the instructions reduced the mens rea to mere “knowledge” requiring only that the defendant understand that an exchange occurred.

“Section 666(a)(1)(B) makes it a crime for state and local officials to ‘corruptly’ accept a payment ‘intending to be influenced or rewarded’ for an official act.” Snyder v. United States, 603 U.S. 1, 10 (2024). The Supreme Court recently explained that that Section 666 requires: (1) “that the official have a corrupt state of mind[;] and [(2)] accept (or agree to accept) the payment intending to be influenced in the official act.”. The Seventh Circuit has also made clear that the requirement of corrupt intent is a key safeguard against criminalizing innocent conduct.

* Back to the feds

Madigan asks this Court to ignore binding Circuit precedent and impose a heightened mens rea standard under § 666, where none exists.

Before the jury instruction conference, Madigan asked the Court to instruct the jury that “[a] person acts corruptly when that person acts with the knowledge that his conduct is unlawful.” R. 261 at 95. On January 19, 2025, after the Court’s initial ruling on the term “corruptly” (Tr. 8105-19), Madigan shifted positions and offered a new proposed definition of “corruptly,” that a “defendant acts corruptly when he specifically intends to receive a private financial benefit in violation of his legal duty to faithfully represent his constituents and the citizens of Illinois.” R. 317 at 9 (copying Madigan’s email to the Court dated January 19, 2025).

The Court properly declined to give Madigan’s novel proposed definition of “corruptly.” Instead, the Court instructed the jury, largely consistent with the Seventh Circuit Pattern Instructions, but adding the specific requirement of an intended “exchange,” that:

A defendant acts “corruptly” if he acted with the understanding that a ‘thing of value’ is to be exchanged for an “official act” with the intent to influence or reward a State agent in connection with his official duties . . . In other words, the government must prove that when a defendant solicited, demanded, accepted, or agreed to accept, a “thing of value” with the intent to be influenced or rewarded in connection with his official duties, the defendant did so knowing it was a “this for that” exchange of a “thing of value” for an “official action.”

* The federal government’s list of Madigan’s alleged lies

Although the government’s evidence amply supports the verdict, Madigan’s lies on the witness stand gave the jury additional reason to find that he acted with corrupt intent, (jury may conclude based on false testimony, that the opposite of the false testimony is in fact true). The jury clearly discredited Madigan’s testimony that he never traded official action for private gain and never believed that any company to whom he recommended people intended for him to trade official action. Madigan lied on numerous other occasions:

    • Madigan lied when he testified that McClain never said he believed or suspected that any of the people that Madigan and McClain had referred were not working. This testimony was a lie, as demonstrated by a call the jury heard between Madigan and McClain in which they laughed about the fact that multiple people were paid by ComEd for little work.

    • Madigan lied about his involvement with Ed Moody’s contract. Specifically, during his direct examination, Madigan was shown Government Exhibit 248, a December 7, 2018, call where McClain asked Madigan: “So do you want us to keep going with Ed Moody under that ComEd agreement or do you want us to pull off a little bit because of this Recorder of Deeds thing?” Madigan told two lies to the jury. First, he claimed that he merely understood McClain to be “asking for some advice.” Id. Second, Madigan claimed that McClain’s request for advice was because Moody now had a full-time government job (as Recorder of Deeds), as opposed to his prior part-time job with the Cook County Board. Id. (“in light of his [Moody’s] assumption of a full-time executive position, that he ought to pull back on his extra work with ComEd”). This testimony was false. As an initial matter, Ed Moody had a full-time job that Madigan helped obtain with the Circuit Court of Cook County from 1993 to 2016, as Madigan acknowledged during cross examination. And Madigan’s claim that McClain was merely asking for “advice” makes no sense. McClain was clearly asking for instruction from Madigan. GX248 (“Do you want us to keep going with Ed Moody” and “Do you want me to call Ed and tell him?”) In both instances, Madigan gave instructions to McClain, demonstrating his knowledge of and control over the subcontractor arrangement.

    • On direct examination, Madigan testified that his motivation for recommending people for jobs was to help people who came to the 13th Ward office in need. Madigan testified that he viewed it as part of his job as a legislator and as Speaker to help people, including with jobs. Madigan’s testimony on direct glaringly omitted any mention that in return for finding employment, Madigan expected certain of those individuals to do political work for Madigan. On cross-examination, Madigan was confronted with an interview he gave on this topic in 2009 (GX1) and acknowledged that he used his governmental position to help find jobs for people with the expectation that some of those people would do unpaid political work for Madigan in return. Madigan’s true motivations for finding jobs for his associates demonstrated why Madigan wanted to secure payments for people like Ed Moody and Ray Nice at ComEd and how that work personally benefitted Madigan. Madigan’s attempt to hide his motivation from the jury was an attempt to falsely deny the bribery charges.

    • As another example, Madigan acknowledged helping Kathy Laski finding a job during his direct examination and testified that he met her at a block party. Madigan failed to mention during direct that Laski’s husband had been alderman of the 23rd Ward, which was part of Madigan’s legislative district.

    • Madigan repeatedly lied when he attempted to minimize his relationship with McClain. As just one example, when asked during cross-examination by McClain’s attorney about the repeated times that Madigan went to McClain for help with problems, Madigan testified that he asked for McClain’s help on “some of them, but not all.” Tr. 8856. Madigan refused to admit that he “regularly” asked McClain to help with problems, stating only that “some” problems were “submitted” to McClain. Id. Madigan’s testimony was in stark contrast to the many emails and calls admitted into evidence that showed Madigan relying on McClain to solve sensitive problems for him (including having McClain talk to legislators who served under Madigan) and make numerous job requests on his behalf.

    • Madigan lied when he denied having told Cousineau to round up the final votes necessary to pass FEJA. Tr. 1637-39, with Tr. 8662. Madigan’s denial stood in stark contrast to the evidence, as discussed above, that corroborated Cousineau’s account.

Discuss.

  19 Comments      


Illinois Head Start Association, others sue Trump administration

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Illinois Head Start Association, along with several other Head Start associations from across the country, filed a lawsuit against the federal government late Monday over its plans to eliminate the early childhood development programs nationwide.

The suit alleges the executive branch has disregarded congressional budget extensions, which had allocated funding to the programs through September, as well as the Head Start Act, which has required the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to allocate at least as much funding for Head Start programs as the year before.

It also cites improved economic and health outcomes for children and families who participate in the program and warns of the damage if programs close amid the uncertainty of funding.

“[The federal government’s] actions disrupt — and are designed to disrupt — the ability of Head Start agencies to provide quality service to children and parents,” the suit reads. “They are part and parcel of Defendants’ unlawful policy of winding down the Head Start program without Congressional approval.”

* From the lawsuit

On March 14, 2025 the Administration for Children and Families within HHS issued a letter implementing the President’s ban on “DEI.” The letter threatened funding consequences for agencies that “promote” or “take part” in any “diversity, equity, annd inclusion initiatives.” […]

Illinois HSA members received conflicting responses when they requested guidance about how to comply with the March 14 DEI Ban. Some members were told that their program Specialists could not discuss it. Some members were advised to delete words like “diversity,” “equity,” “inclusion,” and “accessibility” from their renewal applications but to otherwise leave the substance of the programs the same. And other members were instructed to remove entire sections of their applications-such as anti-bias training, and a program goal aimed at addressing marginalization of underrepresented groups in the workplace — and resubmit them. […]

[A] Program Specialist instructed an Illinois agency to remove “non-English speaker” as a selection criteria for participants, yet ensuring access to such participants is how the program complies with its obligation to “welcome children from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds” and to offer “limited English proficient children” “culturally and linguistically appropriate instructional services.”

* LA Times

The lawsuit, filed in the Western District of Washington, also alleged that the administration’s directive to strip the program of diversity, equity and inclusion efforts is “unconstitutionally vague,” violates the free speech of its teachers and does not provide enough guidance for providers to know what must be done to avoid losing federal funding. […]

Head Start, which has provided child care, health screenings and meals to millions of low-income children since its founding in 1965, has faced multiple disruptions since the start of President Trump’s term. Centers faced funding delays after an executive order temporarily froze federal aid in January, causing some providers to struggle to meet payroll and others to shutter temporarily. Then, scores of federal Head Start workers were laid off in February, followed by the closure of five of 12 regional offices in April, including the Region 9 office, which oversees California.

Most recently, a leaked draft of the budget proposal for the Department of Health and Human Services revealed the department’s proposal to totally defund Head Start by 2026. The budget proposal must be approved by Congress.

“We know what this administration’s goal is — they’ve told us,” said ACLU Women’s Rights Project attorney Jennesa Calvo-Friedman, who is lead counsel in the case. “It’s to terminate the Head Start program. We are seeing them already take steps to do that.”

* Back to the lawsuit

In Illinois, roughly 28,000 children are currently enrolled in Head Start. Of those, 14.3 percent are children with disabilities; 3.8 percent are children in foster care; and 7.9 percent are children experiencing homelessness. Nearly two-thirds are children of color, with 41 percent identifying as Black and 36 percent identifying as Hispanic. They live in communities ranging from Chicago, the third largest city in the country, to rural farming areas. To meet these widely and richly diverse needs, Illinois HSA members offer an equally wide array of services, including initiatives focusing on school-readiness for Black boys (which has recently been discontinued); English language learning and job placement resources for immigrant parents; on-site health clinics and food pantries; and regular staff training to reduce bias and improve equitable access to all Head Start services. […] Illinois Head Start agencies employ over 8,700 residents.

* Related…

    * WBEZ | With Head Start preschool on Trump’s chopping block, parents warn of impact on kids: According to the AP, the draft says: “The budget does not fund Head Start” which is consistent with the Trump administration’s “goals of returning control of education to the states and increasing parental control. The federal government should not be in the business of mandating curriculum, locations and performance standards for any form of education.”

    * Chalkbeat Chicago | Illinois Head Start providers worry about the future as Trump eyes potential cuts: Blythe and other Head Start providers in Illinois are concerned about the future of the 60- year-old federal program that serves children from birth to 5. Almost $500 million flowed from the federal government directly to Illinois Head Start providers during fiscal year 2024, according to the Illinois Head Start Association.

    * RiverBender | Riverbend Head Start Joins Illinois Campaign to Save Funding: Riverbend Head Start & Family Services (RHSFS) is teaming up with the Illinois Head Start Association (IHSA) in their #SaveHeadStart advocacy campaign. Head Start locations throughout the state will take part in the “For the People, By the People” photo series, which willhighlight the people and programs that keep Head Start running in our communities. The series will roll out in the coming weeks on social media and the web. The #SaveHeadStart series and other advocacy efforts are in response to an April 16th article in the Washington Post indicating that the White House’s 2026 budget proposal would eliminate funding for Head Start altogether.

  3 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

After more than a decade of negotiations and failed efforts to reduce the use of plastics, Illinois lawmakers are considering legislation that would prohibit large retailers from offering single-use plastic bags and ban the use of most” polystyrene containers in the state over the next four to five years.

Advocates, citing the threat of rising plastic waste to human and environmental health, say the timing for the bills is ripe given rising health concerns about microplastics and the passage of similar legislation in states like New Jersey and California. Retailers also support the measures, calling the requirements balanced and flexible, according to a statement from the Illinois Retail Merchants Association. […]

In addition, some labor unions, including the Illinois Pipe Trades Association and AFL-CIO, oppose the move to do away with foam food containers. Manufacturers have expressed concerns the measures could lead to thousands of layoffs if the facilities that make the banned products are forced to shut down as their in-state customer base disappears.

Two bills are awaiting a vote in the state Senate. One measure would use financial penalties under the jurisdiction of the attorney general and local state’s attorney offices to restrict the sale or distribution of disposable containers made of polystyrene — known by the brand name Styrofoam — with the exception of egg cartons, starting in January 2030. The other bill would prohibit retailers with more than a dozen stores from offering or making available single-use checkout bags by January 2029.

* WGLT

With hate crimes rising across Illinois in the last five years, lawmakers are considering a bill that would allow people to sue if they receive threatening flyers on private property due to protected identity characteristics.

Democratic state Rep. Sharon Chung jumped on the bill as a co-sponsor after Bloomington-Normal faced its own incident recently with antisemitic flyers from white supremist groups. […]

While it has gained support, opponents say the bill’s language is vague and could be weaponized to hurt certain groups such as student protesters and activists.

The National Lawyers Guild Chicago opposed the bill in a statement.

“This legislation raises significant concerns regarding free speech rights and is ripe for potential misuse,” the organization wrote, “If passed, this legislation would deter Illinoisans from engaging in First Amendment protected activity. While attacks on free speech are always concerning, this bill is particularly troubling given the attacks on our democracy the U.S. is currently facing from the Trump administration.”

* KWQC

A new bill in Illinois would try and protect elderly people from scams by putting more power in the hands of financial advisors.

If passed, financial planners would have the power to slow down or freeze transactions that they fear are scams.

Though Democrats passed the bill through the state senate, some are concerned that this could create a liability nightmare for financial institutions.

“There’s already plenty of examples of how that system is in place and could be improved upon, but this isn’t one of them and it sets every organization up, that this bill impacts for severe liability,” Republican State Sen. Jason Plummer said.

* WAND

State lawmakers could pass multiple insurance reform proposals before session ends next month, but researchers believe Illinois should be cautious about overregulation. […]

Lynne McChristian runs the UIUC Office of Risk Management & Insurance Research. McChristian told WAND News Monday that insurers employ nearly 160,000 people across the state and provide benefits for consumers when they face life challenges.

“With insurance, you pay it forward for what you think might happen in the year ahead of the six months ahead,” McChristian said. “Planning for that takes a lot of variables, a lot of planning, and also a great deal of caution.”

Senators could discuss a bill this week to require insurance companies seek approval from the state for any homeowner or auto insurance rate increases, with a cap of 15% per year unless justified. Yet, Senate Bill 268 would also ban insurers from using credit scores or occupation to set premiums.

McChristian said Illinois should look at the unintended consequences states like California and Washington faced after implementing similar policies.

* Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea and Sen. Robert Peters

Every morning, hundreds of thousands of Illinois workers clock in with a simple expectation: to return home safe. But across our state, that basic right is under attack. […]

Last month, the Trump administration’s Robert F. Kennedy Jr. took a sledgehammer to worker safety by gutting the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) — laying off more than 1,000 employees, shuttering research centers, and stalling life-saving rules. This isn’t “trimming the fat.” It is a direct assault on the American workers who rely on these agencies to enforce safety standards to ensure that they return home to their loved ones after a hard day’s work. […]

That’s why we’re fighting back with SB1976, the Illinois Workers’ Rights and Worker Safety Act. This bill ensures that no matter what reckless decisions are made in by the Trump administration, Illinois will uphold the hard-fought federal workplace protections that have existed for decades. More than that, it allows our state to raise the bar on safety, not lower it.

Here’s the truth: a safe job isn’t a luxury. It’s a right. And when that right is stripped away, working people die. Illinois can lead the nation by saying no to dangerous deregulation and yes to real, enforceable worker protections.

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Repeal IFPA Now

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Casey Martin, CEO of Midwest Coalition of Labor CU:
IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities.
“My members are going to come to me to explain something I don’t understand.”
Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Union Members!

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Several bills proposed this legislative session seek to ban certain factors that insurance companies use to set fair and accurate insurance pricing for customers. The bills would ban the use of credit-based insurance scores, zip codes, age, and gender in insurance pricing.

An op-ed published recently in the Chicago Tribune explains why such bans could cause insurance rates to rise for the majority of consumers.

Case in point: When the use of credit was banned in Washington in 2021, more than 60 percent of Washington drivers saw an increase in their insurance premiums. Should similar legislation pass in Illinois, the majority of Illinoisans with better-than-average credit could see premium increases.

With stubbornly high inflation and high property taxes, now is not the time to pass bills that could end up hiking insurance premiums for most Illinoisans.

Click here to learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were briefed on the mayor’s visit this morning. ICYMI: With big problems and modest requests, Mayor Johnson heads to Springfield hoping to break losing streak. Sun-Times

    - Mayor Brandon Johnson wants to revive a tax on prepaid cellphones and calling cards, extend the $5-a-month 911 surcharge, ratchet up funding for the city’s unified shelter system and improve reimbursement rates for transportation, bilingual education and special education services provided by the Chicago Public Schools.
    - “He’s coming down rather late. Time is ticking. You would hope to have these requests earlier in the session,” state Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, said.
    - Johnson is expected to meet Wednesday with Pritzker, Harmon and Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch.

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


Sponsored by the Illinois Pharmaceutical Reform Alliance

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

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker dismisses as ‘ridiculous’ GOP accusations he urged violence in New Hampshire speech: Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday rejected accusations from Republicans — including the state party and the White House — that he was inciting violence with a fiery speech in New Hampshire in which he said Republicans shouldn’t “know a moment of peace.” “That’s ridiculous,” Pritzker said at an unrelated news conference when asked about the GOP response to his speech. “The peace that I’m talking about is making sure that they know at all times that the American public opposes the policies of congressional Republicans and of the White House.”

* AP | Authorities believe crash through Illinois after-school building that killed 4 wasn’t targeted: Authorities said Tuesday they believe a crash through an Illinois after-school building that killed three kids and one teenager wasn’t targeted. A car traveled through a field, then smashed through a building in a small city of Chatham outside Springfield, Illinois, on Monday afternoon. In an update Tuesday morning, police said two 7-year-olds, an 8-year-old and an 18-year-old were killed. Six more children were taken to hospitals and one remains in critical condition. The Illinois driver, who was not injured, was taken to a hospital for evaluation and police said toxicology reports were pending. Police haven’t said if the driver was arrested or taken into custody.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Information of more than 9,000 people potentially exposed in Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois data breach: The personal information of more than 9,300 people may have been exposed in a recent data breach at health insurer Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois, according to the company. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois became aware of the problem in February, according to a notice posted on its website. An unauthorized person may have viewed individuals’ personal health information through the insurer’s online portal for members, called Blue Access for Members, between Nov. 8 and March 5, according to the notice. The breach was related to member account registrations, according to Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Illinois.

* Crain’s | Advocate doctors to drop Blue Cross Illinois HMO plan: “Advocate Physician Partners has informed us that Advocate Physician Partners, including Advocate Medical Group, will be leaving BCBSIL’s HMO Illinois network on July 1, 2025,” BCBSIL said in an emailed statement. “This change does not impact Advocate Health hospitals or other facilities, which will remain in the HMO Illinois network.” “HMO Illinois members can select a new medical group in the Blues plans’s HMOI network by May 31, or they will be assigned to a new medical group effective July 1,” the statement said.

* Sun-Times | Tariffs, funding cuts and migrant raids — how Trump hit Chicago and Illinois in his first 100 days in office: Gov. JB Pritzker has loudly sounded the alarm on the impacts of the Trump administration’s actions, including in late January when he said the administration was “either lying to us or they are critically incompetent” — amid a directive to temporarily freeze federal grants and loans pending a spending analysis aimed at rooting out “wokeness.” Since then, Pritzker has toured the state to highlight Trump cuts to healthcare, child care, infrastructure and Social Security. On Monday, the Democratic governor continued that message at the University of Illinois at Chicago to highlight what he called a “slash and burn” campaign affecting higher education.

* Daily Herald | ‘The drunk driving of our time’: Teens must now watch distracted driving video to get learner’s permit: “Make no mistake, distracted driving is an epidemic in America. It is the drunk driving of our time,” Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said last week while announcing the “One Road. One Focus” public safety campaign. The campaign will include requiring teens watch the video when applying for a learner’s permit, as well as billboards warning about the consequences of taking your eyes off the road and more police patrols.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson hesitant on giving police ‘snap’ teen curfew power: Mayor Brandon Johnson wavered Monday on the idea of giving Chicago police the power to declare “snap” curfews to rein in so-called teen takeovers, days before aldermen are set to consider such a measure. Johnson sidestepped questions about how he will respond to the curfew push led by Ald. Brian Hopkins in the wake of two recent high-profile, large teen gatherings that ended in shootings. The mayor pointed to ongoing negotiations, but did not say what he wants to see enacted.

* Block Club | Violent Crime Down In Chicago, Matching National Trend, City Leaders Say: Mayor Brandon Johnson and Chicago Police Department Supt. Larry Snelling are touting a decline in violent crime this year in Chicago, a shift that comes as cities across the country have seen a reduction in homicides and other crimes since a post-pandemic spike. Flanked by fellow mayors and police chiefs Monday morning at a Chicago meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors that focused on public safety, Johnson and Snelling broadly argued that city and department initiatives — such as a robbery task force introduced last year — have contributed to the city reporting fewer crimes in most categories so far in 2025.

* Sun-Times | West Side flood victims still struggling with mold, damage almost 2 years on: Shaw, 43, said she has been helping people with flood damage since the storm hit July 3, 2023, leading to more than 12,000 reports of flooded basements. First she helped people through the process as part of the West Side Long Term Recovery Group, created after the flooding. Now she volunteers her time to guide seniors through the red tape. “It’s been one headache after another,” Shaw said. […] She said the initial payouts from the FEMA program were not enough, averaging around $3,000 to $4,000. She shared news that FEMA has allocated an additional $426 million for victims of the 2023 and 2024 floods in and around Chicago.

* Tribune | Funeral services to honor fallen Chicago Fire Department Capt. David Meyer scheduled for this morning in Niles: Meyer, 54, served as a captain of Truck 29 and spent most of his roughly three-decade career on the West Side. He is survived by his wife, four children and his parents, according to his obituary, which noted that “his devotion to his family was known to all who met him.” Around 4 a.m. Wednesday, Meyer responded to a garage fire in the 5500 block of West Crystal Street. The fire was extinguished, but Meyer was critically injured when the roof of the garage collapsed on top of him as he was working.

* Block Club | West Loop Neighbors Demand ‘Justice For John’ After Beloved Doorman Shot Dead By CTA Worker: John Flemister was fatally shot outside the UIC CTA station by a worker who didn’t have a concealed carry license, officials said. The worker wasn’t charged with Flemister’s death. “We feel like there’s a one-sided story being told,” one resident said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Recommended for discipline, Kane County cop who muted his cameras amid car chase, fatal shooting is promoted: Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain has promoted an officer who just two weeks ago was publicly criticized by the area’s top prosecutor for turning off the audio of his squad camera and bodycam during a car chase that ended in the fatal shooting of the suspect by police. Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser said at an April 11 news conference there would be no charges against the three cops who fired on James Moriarty on May 24, 2023, killing him after a high-speed chase and crash in the far western suburbs.

* WSPY | Elburn trustee Lou Santoyo enters Kane County Sheriff race: Retired Cook County Sheriff’s Police Detective and Elburn Village Trustee Lou Santoyo has officially launched his campaign for Kane County Sheriff. At a campaign kick-off event last week in downtown Aurora, Santoyo said his goal is to restore the trust and honor behind the badge, not just wear one. He emphasized that law enforcement should be built on trust, not fear. […] He’s running as a Republican in the 2026 election.

* Daily Herald | Mundelein Mayor Steve Lentz honored as he prepares to leave office: Lentz presided over his last full village board meeting Monday night. A tribute video — featuring testimonials from family members, former trustees and others — played on the boardroom’s TV screens before Trustee Tim Wilson read a resolution lauding Lentz for his service. Wilson spoke of Lentz’s “extraordinary service, vision and commitment, which have improved the lives of countless residents.” Additionally, Mayor-elect Robin Meier thanked Lentz for educating her about the job and creating a smooth transition. She takes office May 12.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Metro-east school district moves toward restrictive cell phone policy:Currently, Collinsville High School students may use devices in the classroom for educational purposes with teacher permission, during passing periods, before school and at lunch. At its May meeting, the Collinsville Community Unit School District 10 board might change this policy, requiring that high school students have their cell phones off and put away during instructional time and passing periods.

* SJ-R | With more backing from county, Massey Commission has familiar name as assistant managing director: Sontae Massey, a cousin of Sonya Massey, a Black woman who was fatally shot by a former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy in her home in an unincorporated neighborhood of Springfield on July 6, is now assistant managing director after previously serving on the commission. The commission has become “a forum for analysis and inquiry into the systems and conditions” that serve as context for Massey’s killing as well as others who have suffered at the hands of first responders in the county.

* Crain’s | U of I faculty votes to joins Big Ten alliance to defend against Trump attacks: Faculty at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign adopted a resolution today to join a mutual defense pact with other Big Ten schools as a way to blunt the Trump administration’s aggressive posture toward higher education. U of I is the first university in Illinois to join the Big Ten mutual defense pact, which has now been adopted by a growing list of Big Ten universities as faculty push to create a unified front to defend academic freedoms against the Trump administration’s attacks.

* ABC Chicago | University of Illinois shares class of 2024 success rates report: The new report found that 90% of graduates were employed before leaving campus last year. […] Ninety-one percent of graduates who found jobs participated in an internship of some kind or studied abroad, according to the study. Also, the average salary for an Illinois graduate was $75,000 last year, with a $5,000 signing bonus, according to the report.

* Photos: PJ Star | McClugage Bridge truss falls in nighttime implosion

*** National ***

* NPR | The White House threatens sanctuary cities in another EO, but courts are skeptical: The Trump administration has previously tried to withhold funding from sanctuary cities and states. During President Trump’s first term, the Justice Department tried to withhold funding from several jurisdictions — but they fought back, and were often able to defeat those efforts in court. […] Last week, a federal judge blocked the administration’s latest effort to withhold funding from 16 jurisdictions, including San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, Minneapolis, St. Paul and New Haven. “Here we are again,” wrote U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco, who found that the Trump administration’s actions were likely unconstitutional and granted a preliminary injunction.

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

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Apr 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Apr 29, 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, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The cost to attend state universities has been rising, and some institutions have said they’ll have to continue pushing the brunt of state budget shortfalls onto students and families if there isn’t a change.

Data from the Illinois Board of Higher Education, which oversees public universities, shows university income has had to make up for the steady loss of funding from the state since around fiscal year 2009 as compared to inflation.

Since that point, state investment hasn’t kept up with inflation, and tuition and fees have risen steadily despite the fact that Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration has regularly increased higher education funding. The fiscal year 2026 proposed budget includes a 3% increase for higher education in the general fund for operating costs – which is about the same as the rate of inflation.

The cost of tuition and fees for statewide undergraduates on average has risen 10% higher since FY09 than if it had simply kept pace with inflation. For graduate students, that discrepancy is 16%.

* WAND

A donation from an anonymous donor is keeping the Soybean Innovation Lab at the U of I operational after the USAID closure.

In February, the USAID-funded Feed the Future Soybean Innovation Lab at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign was told to stop working.

This, after 12 years of work towards developing a global soybean value chain supporting Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Australia.

SIL director Pete Goldsmith was able to find funding from the university to keep the lab operating until April 15, which was to be the last day.

“We will use the gift to restart our efforts with our partners and clients bringing soybean to the Lower Shire Valley of southern Malawi — diversifying the Lower Shire economy and leveraging recent World Bank irrigation investments,” said Goldsmith.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

Amy Blythe stays up at night thinking about what will happen to kids and families if federal funding is cut for Head Start, an early childhood education program serving low-income families.

Blythe is the assistant vice president of Early Learning Services at Easterseals, which serves 1,500 kids throughout Chicagoland and Rockford. Some of those children receive Head Start services through community-based programs her organization partners with.

Head Start providers such as hers are able to support families with formula, diapers, and food throughout the day and in cases of an emergency, such as a house fire or when a family can’t find transportation to get to work, Blythe said. But since President Donald Trump took office in January, there have been disruptions to child care services for families and kids. […]

Blythe and other Head Start providers in Illinois are concerned about the future of the 60- year-old federal program that serves children from birth to 5. Almost $500 million flowed from the federal government directly to Illinois Head Start providers during fiscal year 2024, according to the Illinois Head Start Association.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | Illinois officials advocate for workplace safety during workers memorial: Members of trade and labor unions used the anniversary of the creation of the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Act, also known as OSHA, for the memorial. Nick Yelverton is president of the Springfield and Central Illinois Trades and Labor Council. “On this Workers Memorial Day, we honor and remember those who lost their lives on the job and affirm every worker’s basic right to a safe and healthy workplace,” he said during the ceremony. Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea also honored fallen workers, and the creation of OSHA.

* WICS | Illinois to host virtual event on high-speed rail feasibility study in April 2025: The High-Speed Railway Commission, in collaboration with the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), is set to host its inaugural virtual public event in April 2025. The event aims to introduce the concept of high-speed passenger rail service, present study findings, and gather public feedback on the Illinois High-Speed Rail Feasibility Study. The study examines the potential for establishing a high-speed rail network within Illinois, focusing on a corridor from Chicago to St. Louis. It also considers connections to existing Amtrak, Metra, and MetroLink services, as well as additional key cities across the state, including Rockford, Moline, Peoria, and Decatur.

* WAND | Capparelli to seek Republican Senate nomination: Businessman and educator R. Cary Capparelli is seeking the Republican nomination for the United States Senate from Illinois. Capparelli is the son of the late Ralph C. Capparelli who served in the Illinois House of Representatives as a moderate Democrat for 17 terms.

* WBEZ | With Head Start preschool on Trump’s chopping block, parents warn of impact on kids: President Donald Trump’s administration seeks to kill Head Start next year as part of a large reduction in federal government programs and services. Any hint that the child care program for low-income families may be in danger brings Bahena to tears. “I feel, oh, man, I’m gonna, I’m getting kind of emotional,” said the 28-year-old mom. “Eliminating Head Start would keep families poor. It would keep them uneducated and hungry … hungry for opportunities for quality of life.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools floats hundreds of layoffs as it looks to close $529 million budget gap: Between 1,600 and 1,700 positions based inside schools could be cut, according to a presentation used to brief board members obtained by Chalkbeat. However, it’s not clear if the number represents a net reduction in the overall number of CPS employees. The district currently employs more than 41,000 people.

* Tribune | Bally’s Chicago files amended IPO eliminating minority investor requirement: Casino executives say they are confident the IPO, which was challenged by two federal lawsuits over alleged discrimination against white men, will pass muster with regulators and still meet a 25% minority investment requirement for Bally’s Chicago with the city. “Thousands of qualified minorities have already applied,” said Chris Jewett, Bally’s senior vice president of corporate development. “We’re going to meet the goal.”

* Crain’s | Judge probes whether Trump retaliated against Jenner & Block: A federal judge hearing Jenner & Block’s motion to shut down an executive order from President Donald Trump targeting the firm’s operations questioned the government’s motivations behind its actions. The government said in court today the actions detailed in the order, which include revoking security clearances for Jenner employees and limiting the firm’s access to federal buildings, are well within the president’s power, particularly since those moves are related to national security and government secrets.

* WTTW | After Objections, CPD Agrees to Rule Revision That Would Ban Stops and Searches Based on Race: Reform Groups: The coalition of police reform groups behind the consent decree — the federal court order requiring the CPD to change the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers — told U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer that CPD had revised proposed new rules designed to limit when Chicago police officers can stop and search Chicagoans after they objected in February. Had CPD failed to agree to revise the policy by Saturday, the coalition indicated it would ask Pallmeyer to intervene and force changes to the policy, which they said violated the U.S. Constitution and the consent decree as originally proposed.

* Sun-Times | City Council members negotiating response to ‘teen takeovers’: Participants said they were given a map of the beach and broke off into groups to discuss what they would do to try to keep the gatherings from getting out of hand. Responses ran the gamut. “On one extreme, you had people talking about cutting off the parking lots, shutting down buses,” recalled participant Kofi Ademola, with GoodKids MadCity. “Completely trying to prevent young people from even getting access to the beach.

* Crain’s | What American Airlines says about its battle with United at O’Hare: “First, if United is gaining share in Chicago, they’re gaining it from somebody other than us. So, let’s start there,” Steve Johnson, American’s vice chairman, told analysts on April 24 when the Fort Worth-based carrier reported earnings. He said the carrier isn’t giving up on Chicago: “I mean, it’s a huge market. It’s a huge business market. It’s our third-largest hub. It’s a really key part of our network. It has been profitable in the past, even as a shared hub.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Cyber incident causes outages at DuPage County sheriff’s office, courthouse: “The county was made aware of a cyber incident occurring around 2:30 a.m. that is impacting the sheriff’s office, the 18th Judicial Circuit Court and the Circuit Court Clerk’s Office,” DuPage County Chief Judge Bonnie Wheaton, Circuit Court Clerk Candace Adams and Sheriff Jim Mendrick said in a joint emailed statement. In-person court operations have been minimally impacted and are expected to continue as scheduled, the statement said. There has been no impact on jail operations or on public safety, officials said.

* NBC Chicago | New shopping, entertainment districts coming to Niles as part of major ‘renaissance’: After more than 45 years, suburban Niles is seeing a redevelopment “renaissance,” with new buildings, apartments, and at least two brand-new shopping, dining and entertainment districts set to revitalize once-booming parts of the village. “We’ve got a lot going on here in the village right now,” Niles Mayor George D. Alpogianis said Monday. “We’re in what we’ve deemed a sort of ‘Renaissance Era’ — a lot of building going on, more building that’s been done over the last two and a half decades plus.”

* Daily Herald | Long Story Short Pub writing new chapter in Barrington history: It is a joint venture of Long & Co. Jewelers owner Brian Long, who owns the building, and Bryan McGonigal, who owned the cherished McGonigal’s Pub, which closed at the end of 2023. Boloney’s, which closed in 2017, once occupied space next to another Barrington icon, The Catlow Theater, which Long and his family are reviving. Now Boloney’s is coming back to life at Long Story Short as Boloney’s East. […] The pub will operate with a “cold kitchen” concept, avoiding the need for fryers, stoves, or ventilation hoods that would trigger costly building code upgrades.

*** Downstate ***

* USA Today | NWS forecasts chance of showers, dusty winds in Illinois this week. Here’s the forecast: Southern winds between 20-45 mph may combine with dry soils on Monday, leading to blowing dust and poor visibility in rural areas. This could cause travel difficulties for high-profile vehicles. The NWS recommends using caution while driving and slowing down and pulling off the road if you encounter dust.

* WGLT | Some ISU students left feeling uneasy after 2nd shooting near campus during this school year : Aniyah Weddington, a junior psychology major, was at the Bone when Sunday’s shooting happened outside a student group’s event. Weddington was there for the event – a new-member presentation for an ISU sorority in the Bone’s Brown Ballroom. One of her sisters said she heard gunshots, then people started to evacuate. “Chairs were trampled over. People were trampled over. People got hurt. Scratched, scraped,” said Weddington. “There were parents, grandparents, children there. It was honestly very scary.”

* WICS | Two New Deputies Sworn in for Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office: Sheriff Paula Crouch led the ceremony, highlighting the importance of public service and the responsibility that comes with wearing the badge. She noted that bringing new deputies onto the team helps strengthen the department’s mission of providing professional, community-focused law enforcement. Nicholas Sunley of Pleasant Plains, and Evan Chastain of Rochester told us, “We are excited to begin this journey of serving Sangamon County and engaging with the community.”

*** National ***

* Poynter | Access to public records and officials is worsening, investigative reporters warn in survey: Nearly 70% of investigative journalists in the U.S. reported “limited access to records or sources” as their greatest barrier in doing accountability journalism, according to a survey from the University of Florida released Wednesday. The survey, released in conjunction with UF’s awarding of the Collier Prize for State and Government Accountability, found that many investigative journalists face issues obtaining public records and interviews with government officials. Compounding their difficulties are financial, political and public pressures. Fifty-one journalists working at state or regional news organizations responded to the survey in March.

  6 Comments      


Healing Communities: Illinois Hospitals Are Bringing Care To Communities

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

When it comes to stroke care, getting patients to the hospital within the “golden hour” increases their chances for survival and reduces their risk of long-term brain damage, when treated with a clot-busting drug called TPA. What if that hour could be cut in half by bringing the “hospital” to the patient? Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital is doing just that with its Mobile Stroke Unit. This specialized ambulance serves DuPage County’s half a million residents over 150 square miles.

The Mobile Stroke Unit is also a prime example of how Illinois hospitals are making needed healthcare accessible to communities, in this case reaching patients within a critical time frame and administering TPA in the ambulance for optimal health outcomes.

Other hospitals across the state are similarly meeting the need for accessible care through such initiatives as a women’s wellness center, a mobile van providing mammograms, community health screenings, programs to address youth mental health and more.

While most known for the services provided within their facilities, hospitals know healthcare shouldn’t stop there. For healthy communities, care must also be offered in the community. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.

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More on Stratton’s Duckworth endorsement

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel briefly mentioned this earlier today, but let’s take a closer look, starting with Capitol News Illinois

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth endorsed Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton on Monday in the 2026 Democratic primary for Illinois’ open seat to replace longtime Sen. Dick Durbin.

Duckworth’s endorsement comes after Gov. JB Pritzker endorsed Stratton on Friday, one day after she entered the Senate contest. With no other Democratic candidates announcing campaigns for the 2026 primary by Monday morning, Stratton secured the endorsement of two of the state’s top Democrats before fielding any competition. […]

U.S. Reps. Lauren Underwood, of Naperville, Raja Krishnamoorthi, of Schaumburg, Robin Kelly, of Matteson, and state Treasurer Mike Frerichs, of Chicago, all have said they are considering entering the race.

* Press release, which was issued at about 5 this morning…

Statement from Tammy Duckworth:

“Juliana has not only proven to be an experienced and effective Lieutenant Governor—she’s demonstrated time and again that she truly understands and cares for working people. Their struggles are her struggles. Their wins are her wins. Her many years spent in public service, along with her experience as a mom to four daughters and a caregiver to her own mother, have given her the tenacity, grit and perspective to be a true advocate on behalf of working families. I’d be honored to have her by my side in the Senate as we work to deliver real results for Illinoisans, and I’m proud to endorse her campaign for the United States Senate.”

Statement from Juliana Stratton:

“Tammy is a true leader for Illinois who doesn’t back down from a challenge. She exemplifies the kind of leadership working families deserve and spends every day looking for new opportunities to help communities across our states flourish. I’m so honored to have her support and I will work tirelessly to bring her spirit of resilience to this campaign.”

* Video

* Politico

Congresswoman Robin Kelly said she will make an announcement this week “about my plans moving forward to ensure all Illinoisans have a proven fighter, someone grounded in service and compassion, in Washington,” according to a statement.

If Kelly does win the race, she’d be almost 77 at the end of her first term. Stratton would be 67.

  63 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chalkbeat Chicago

With just over a month left in the spring legislative session, Illinois lawmakers are advancing a number of education-related bills, including ones that would restrict the use of cellphones in classrooms, no longer require student test scores to be a part of teacher evaluations, and protect federal rights for students with disabilities in the mediation process with districts. […]

Bills moving quickly through the legislature […]

Limiting school districts from asking families of students with disabilities to waive their rights: When disputes arise regarding a child’s Individualized Education Programs, Illinois school districts will often ask parents to sign waivers during mediation. For example, a parent could waive their child’s right to transportation in exchange for a placement at a private therapeutic day school. Recently, special education advocates who support parents during mediations with districts say they have seen districts slip in language requiring parents to waive their right to bring complaints against a school district for 10 years in exchange for additional support. To fix this issue, House Bill 2337 would require school districts to use waivers that are limited to the child involved in the mediation process, only related to claims raised in the complaint that initiated the process, and limited to a reasonable amount of time. The bill is currently in the Senate.

Unlinking teacher evaluations and student test scores: Under the Obama administration, states were incentivized to use student test scores in teacher performance evaluations. More than a decade later, many states and lawmakers have changed their minds. In Illinois, Senate Bill 28 would undo a requirement passed in 2010 and now allow school districts to decide whether students’ test scores should be a part of teacher evaluations. The bill passed an education committee in the House on Wednesday.

Ensuring teacher professional development matches literacy standards: The Illinois State Board of Education created the state’s comprehensive literacy plan in 2024 after education advocates pushed for legislation to help change how reading is taught in schools. Now, lawmakers are considering House Bill 1368, which would require companies that provide professional development to teachers related to literacy be aligned with the state’s literacy plan. It’s currently in the Senate’s education committee.

* Quad City Times

Students, staff, and administrators at Western Illinois University Quad-Cities are asking Illinois lawmakers for $7.2 million in operational funding to develop WIU-QC’s Innovation Campus vision.

Sponsored by Sen. Mike Halpin (D-Rock Island), Senate Bill 1308 would appropriate $7.2 million toward WIU-QC operations — funding the campus has gone without since its construction — as the university seeks to reimagine its purpose and programming in the Quad-Cities region. The bill includes a provision to evaluate annual funding appropriations.

“This wonderful facility here (WIU-QC) was funded by the state to build,” said Everett Hamner, a WIU English professor and SB 1308 petitioner. “But it never received any operational funding.” […]

If SB 1308 passes, proposed operational funds would be available for WIU-QC to use immediately. This funding could help with a range of future Innovation Campus costs, such as:

    - Providing facilities for the Quad Cities Manufacturing Institute (QCMI), a partnership between the University of Illinois, Iowa State University and the INN.
    - Expanding WIU’s Small Business Development Center to include international trade and outreach, an “APEX Accelerator” procurement site for the Rock Island Arsenal and other collaborations, as well as providing space and training in those/related areas.
    - Developing new programs aligned with WIU’s strategic plan, the Thrive Illinois report and the IBHE Thrive Quad-Cities report.
    - Build on existing education, mental health, economic development and engineering programs.

* Illinois Policy lead for Advanced Energy United Samarth Medakkar and Climate Control Group’s Senior marketing sustainability manager Joe Parsons

Energy bills are rising throughout the country, and consumers are looking for tech solutions that can help reduce their monthly electric and gas costs. To help consumers, Illinois legislators have proposed several bills that would increase adoption of geothermal heat pumps. […]

Despite the proven benefits and early interest in geothermal heat pumps and thermal energy networks, Illinois has a lot more work to do to realize the benefits of geothermal technologies across the state. Two bills currently pending in the state Legislature would help consumers access geothermal heating and cooling.

The first, HB 3399, or the Geothermal Homes & Business Act, would create a geothermal renewable energy credit program, allowing geothermal projects in Illinois to generate revenue because these systems reduce peak demand and improve grid resilience, benefiting everyone paying into the utility system. If enacted, the program would make it quicker to recoup the upfront investment from installing geothermal heat pumps, leading to more installations and more job opportunities for drillers, HVAC contractors and electricians.

Similarly, HB 3609, or the Thermal Energy Network & Jobs Act, would increase adoption of geothermal technologies in highly efficient multi-building systems, and spur economic development and driller and pipe fitter job growth, as the bill would require every public utility to propose one to three thermal energy network pilot projects. Pilot programs are critical to understanding the costs and scalability of different applications of thermal energy networks.

* Daily Southtown

Local keepers of the history of the Underground Railroad in the Chicago area and south suburbs are applauding progress of state legislation to create a statewide commission devoted to the subject.

They say creation of the Illinois Freedom Trails Commission could increase educational opportunities into an important segment of American history largely unknown to many people, and perhaps boost tourism centered on the journeys of “freedom seekers” through Illinois. […]

Legislation creating the commission recently passed through the state Senate and could be taken up soon by the House, according to state Rep. Debbie Meyers-Martin, D-Matteson, chief co-sponsor in the House. […]

The commission would have a chair and 10 members appointed by the governor, with the commission’s goals including furthering research into the trail taken by freedom seekers, establishing an online database and biographical information about key persons identified with the Underground Railroad, according to the legislation.

* National Federation of Independent Businesses

The Illinois Senate extended its committee and third-reading deadlines to May 9 for a bill that would impose a job tax on Illinois employers and employees.

SB 2413 (Villivalam) would impose a payroll (or job) tax on Illinois workers and employers to fund a state-run paid-leave program.

The proposal is currently in the Paid Leave Subcommittee of the Senate Executive Committee.

The legislation calls for a beginning payroll tax of 1.12% on wages to go into effect on January 1, 2027.

Initially the employee would pay 40% of the payroll tax and employers with 25 or more employees would pay the remaining 60%.

Beginning January 1, 2029, all employers would be required to pay 60% of the payroll tax.

The payroll tax percentage could fluctuate based upon the program’s spending but, in the proposal, it is capped at 1.25% of wages.

Minnesota passed a similar proposal in 2023 and—even before the program has fully gone into effect—the state has already increased the payroll tax it initially imposed on Minnesota jobs.

Under the proposal, employees would be eligible for up to 18 weeks of paid family and medical leave per year. In addition to the 18 weeks, employees would be eligible to take an additional 9 weeks of paid leave for pregnancy-related issues.

Authorized reasons for leave include:

    - Personal-health issues
    - Physical or psychological care of a family member
    - Birth, adoption, or placement of a child
    - Pregnancy-related issues
    - Personal or family member’s experience of - domestic or sexual violence

* Lore Baker, the CEO and President of the Aurora-based Association for Individual Development

Every day, the Association for Individual Development (AID) witnesses the growing demand for affordable homes. Individuals facing developmental, intellectual, physical and mental health challenges as well as those who are chronically unhoused are struggling to find homes they can afford, putting their stability and well-being at risk.

We know how to meet this need — by building more affordable housing — but we need the right tools to make it happen. The Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit is one of those tools. This proposed state legislation will help shovel-ready developments cross the finish line and bring urgently needed homes to vulnerable communities across the state. […]

We secured highly competitive federal tax credits for the development but found it necessary to leverage other financing to move the development towards construction. If the Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit were in place now, we would be able to create more afford able homes for residents in need. […]

The Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit (HB 1147/SB 62) is a proven, bipartisan solution to this crisis. This proposal has already been adopted in more than 25 other states, and it would create a stable and predictable funding source for affordable housing development. The state does not spend a dime until developments are completed. This minimizes taxpayer risk while maximizing public benefit and ensures that private investment flows into Illinois communities, helping to build high-quality housing without requiring state funds upfront.

  9 Comments      


Do better

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

As you likely know by now, a federal jury deadlocked last week on all three corruption charges against Sen. Emil Jones III, D-Chicago. U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood declared a mistrial after polling individual jurors and arriving at the conclusion that they could not possibly reach a verdict.

When you think of the Chicago U.S. attorney’s legendary Public Corruption and Organized Crime Unit, the thing that immediately comes to mind is its hugely successful conviction rate — mid-to-high 90 percentile.

But the unit has run into some serious trouble lately.

In the last seven months, the U.S. attorney’s office has prosecuted 37 public corruption charges against four defendants — former AT&T President Paul La Schiazza, accused of bribing former House Speaker Michael Madigan; Madigan himself; Madigan’s top adviser Mike McClain and Jones.

The juries in those trials voted to acquit on seven charges (all Madigan) and deadlocked on another 20 charges.

Just 10 of those 37 charges have so far resulted in guilty verdicts (all Madigan), for a paltry 27% initial conviction rate — or 25% if you’re only counting the number of defendants.

Some of these charges could be prosecuted again, of course, and La Schiazza is scheduled for a retrial in early June. But an initial 27% conviction rate demands some serious introspection from the FBI and the U.S. attorney’s office. They obviously need to build better cases and then more competently prosecute them.

Like the La Schiazza case, the charges against Jones seemed to be too much of a stretch. The federal government’s mole, red-light camera company SafeSpeed’s co-founder Omar Maani, pushed Jones to come up with a dollar amount to contribute ahead of the senator’s campaign fundraiser. After Jones finally told Maani, “you can raise me five grand” and then asked for a job for his former intern, the mole turned the conversation to Jones’ legislative proposal.

A month later, Jones tried telling Maani that he didn’t necessarily have to cover $5,000 worth of expenses for a job fair — the workaround the FBI’s mole had asked the senator to come up with — but Maani cut him off before Jones could finish his sentence.

More importantly, the money never changed hands, and Jones never amended the bill that Maani was so concerned with. I could easily see why the jury would be divided.

The whole thing has also felt sloppy and slipshod ever since the trial began.

Sometimes, the errors were small. One of the federal prosecutors didn’t seem to understand how Jones arrived in the Senate. The prosecutor, for example, believed Jones was appointed to replace his father, former Senate President Emil Jones, but the senator was actually named to the ballot when his dad dropped out of the race.

The prosecution’s star witness, its mole Maani, bragged to the jury that he had been bribing politicians since his 20s, and told the jury that he gave $23,000 cash to a suburban mayor via one of the most influential Democratic attorneys in Cook County (neither of them have ever been charged). The alleged cash giveaway was intended to show Maani’s “appreciation.”

Maani was probably not the best witness, to say the least, particularly since prosecutors had no other real evidence indicating a pattern of corruption by Jones. The feds have never said why they chose to target Jones.

The overtly familiar, late-night phone texting evidence the feds introduced between Jones and his former male intern appeared, in my opinion, to try to out the senator as gay and seemed like a tactic from a dark, bygone era.

Even so, as Wood rightly reminded Jones at the end of the proceedings last week, he was not acquitted. His bond terms are still in place. The feds could come at him again in a new trial.

But before the U.S. attorney’s office makes its decision about whether to retry Jones or not, the top brass needs to figure out why they have had such a miserably low initial conviction rate lately.

I want as many public corruption convictions as possible. Lock them up if they truly deserve it. But confidence is undermined when the conviction rate falls so low.

Do better, please.

  19 Comments      


Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

What if Illinois could expand its energy grid, attract AI and emerging tech companies to the state, and provide over 60,000 new jobs with no impact on communities or the environment?

SOO Green makes it possible.

Built along existing rail corridors, this underground transmission project will deliver 2,100 MW of low-cost reliable power making the electric grid more resilient in the face of extreme weather while unlocking billions in economic investments for Illinois.

The SOO Green Advantage:

    • Accelerates Illinois’ Clean Energy & Jobs Act goals
    • 60,000+ new jobs
    • Lower energy costs for families and businesses
    • $26 billion in economic benefits statewide
    • $9.8 billion in health benefits by reducing emissions

With SOO Green all ratepayers will enjoy a more reliable grid, protection from rising energy costs, and a stronger economy for Illinois.

Learn more at www.soogreen.com.

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Roundup: Pritzker calls out ‘do-nothing’ Democrats in New Hampshire (Updated)

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were briefed this morning. The Associated Press

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker sharply criticized fellow Democrats on Sunday for not doing enough to oppose President Donald Trump, drawing a clear divide between himself and other high-profile Democrats seen as future presidential contenders.

Pritzker delivered the keynote address at the New Hampshire Democratic Party’s McIntyre-Shaheen 100 Club Dinner, the latest and most high-profile in a series of speeches this year.

While Pritzker continued to attack Trump, he also focused on what he says are shortcomings in his own party, assailing Democrats for listening to “a bunch of know-nothing political types” instead of everyday Americans. Without naming names, he called out Democrats “flocking to podcasts and cable news shows to admonish fellow Democrats for not caring enough about the struggles of working families.”

“Those same do-nothing Democrats want to blame our losses on our defense of Black people, of trans kids, of immigrants, instead of their own lack of guts and gumption,” Pritzker said.

* The Washington Post

The billionaire Democratic governor repeatedly brought the crowd to its feet with acidic attacks on the morals and ethics of the president, adviser and top donor Elon Musk, as well as members of the president’s Cabinet. He slammed their efforts to dismantle government programs that the most vulnerable Americans rely on and said the Democratic Party must “abandon the culture of incrementalism that has led us to swallow their cruelty.” It is time for his party, he said, to “knock the rust off poll-tested language” that has obscured “our better instincts.”

Pritzker was most searing in his condemnation of what he cast as the Trump administration’s infringement on the rights enshrined in the Constitution, stating that it should be easy for Democrats to say “it’s wrong to snatch a person off the street and ship them to a foreign gulag with no chance to defend themselves in a court of law.”

“Never before in my life have I called for mass protests, for mobilization, for disruption. But I am now,” Pritzker said to a standing ovation accompanied by whistles and cheers from the audience. “These Republicans cannot know a moment of peace. They must understand that we will fight their cruelty with every megaphone and microphone that we have. We must castigate them on the soap box and then punish them at the ballot box.” […]

One of Pritzker’s advantages among the potential White House aspirants is his ability to swing at Trump from a solidly blue state where the legislature is controlled by Democrats. From the outset, he took a more combative approach than other potential rivals such as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, Democrats who represent narrowly divided states and initially emphasized their interest in bipartisan collaboration with Trump.

Pritzker also has not faced the same kind of constraints as other top contenders such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who was one of Trump’s top antagonists in 2024 but now needs Trump’s cooperation to help him secure the nearly $40 billion in federal disaster aid that he has requested to rebuild Pacific Palisades and Altadena after the devastating fires in January.

* New York Times

Mr. Pritzker, of course, rebuffed any suggestion that his appearance on Sunday night in Manchester, N.H., represented the opening bell of the 2028 Democratic primary race. He said he was focused on backing the party’s efforts in next year’s midterm elections. […]

“I’m one of the people leading the fight, and that is my role,” he said in an interview before his speech. “We’ve done an awful lot in Illinois, and we can be doing those things in other states.” […]

“The main divide within the Democratic Party is not between left and right — it’s whether you think this is a constitutional crisis or this is politics as usual,” said Ezra Levin, a co-founder of the progressive activist group Indivisible. “Pritzker is really demonstrating what it looks like to lead an opposition party against the overreaching authority of the federal government.”

In recent months, Mr. Pritzker has preached a gospel of staunch resistance to some of the most engaged Democratic activists across the country, delivering the keynote speech at party fund-raisers in Illinois and Austin, Texas, and at an annual gala for the Human Rights Campaign in Los Angeles. Next month, he is set to speak at a fund-raising dinner in Detroit for the Michigan Democratic Party.

* WMUR New Hampshire

In a one-on-one interview with WMUR Political Director Adam Sexton, Pritzker said he is fully focused on helping Democrats in the 2026 midterms.

“It is wrong to snatch people off the street with no chance to defend themselves in a court of law,” he said. […]

Pritzker brushed off any talk of a 2028 presidential run. News 9 asked if he thinks Democrats should restore New Hampshire to the top of their primary calendar.

“I don’t know what the DNC is going to do. I don’t have any control over that. I’m not on the DNC. But New Hampshire is very important because it’s an example of a place where you can come, you don’t have to spend a lot of money, you can meet people, and they’ll be the judge,” he said.

* More…

Thoughts?

…Adding… ILGOP…

Pritzker Calls For Violence Toward Republicans

While world leaders meet at the Vatican for the Pope’s funeral to discuss the goal of peace, Governor Pritzker calls on us to do the opposite: “Republicans cannot know a moment of peace.”

CHICAGO — Last night, JB Pritzker’s attempt to woo New Hampshire Democrats as he barrels towards the 2028 Democrat primary was full of divisive and inflammatory rhetoric. Pritzker’s obsession, to insult and to chastise President Trump, showed forcefully as he stoked the crowd in calling for political violence against Republicans.

“JB Pritzker’s ego-driven obsession with becoming President is putting Illinois, and Republicans across the country, at risk,” said ILGOP Chairman Kathy Salvi. “His inflammatory and dangerous speech is focused on further dividing our country and I hope to see Illinois Democrats condemn his call for violence.”

“Last night, Pritzker showed us that instead of helping hardworking families, he would rather raise their taxes, defend MS-13 gang members and watch businesses flee Illinois,” Salvi continued. “It’s become clear that Pritzker’s only priority is what’s best for him and his presidential bid. This weekend’s trip to New Hampshire is further proof that he’s already left Illinois behind.”

Don’t forget that Pritzker is an old pro at this shtick, considering how he’s attempted to become the leader of the Democrat party for the last three years. See for yourself:

FIRST: Pritzker traveled to New Hampshire in 2022 to raise his profile and set up a future presidential run.

THEN: Pritzker refused to quash rumors that he would leave Illinois to run for president when Democrats launched their soft coup against Joe Biden.

THEN: When Kamala Harris was announced as the Democrats’ preferred choice, Pritzker launched a full-court press campaign to become her vice president.

THEN: After failing to earn the nod as the vice-presidential nominee, Pritzker immediately pivoted and is working to become the Democrats’ choice for president in 2028.

NOW: Pritzker is in New Hampshire, wooing Democrat donors and soft launching a presidential campaign focused on lies, division and insults.

  84 Comments      


Public Pressure Mounts For Nursing Home Accountability On Care And Safe Staffing

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In recent weeks, advocates for quality senior care have been joined by concerned lawmakers in an escalating and increasingly public call to ensure public funding is used to address the longstanding short staffing crisis in Illinois nursing homes.

In a March 12th S-T op-ed, SEIU Healthcare Executive VP Erica Bland noted that the COVID-19 crisis “revealed the true extent and human cost of the understaffing crisis.” The crisis, she said, has not improved.

Then, on April 8th, SEIU released a new report on the state of long-term care in Illinois and was joined by lawmakers, Alzheimer’s Association and AARP for a Blue Room press conference. The report detailed the failure of the industry to address longstanding short staffing: despite $15 billion in public funding over the past five years—including hundreds of millions intended to support staffing—1 in 5 nursing homes still fail to meet the legal minimum staffing standards.

The report caught the attention of the media, with coverage by Crain’s, FOX, NBC, CBS in Chicago, Springfield’s WICS, and other outlets. A follow up press conference on April 17th provided an example of the impact of short staffing at an individual facility, Southpoint Nursing Home, and gained additional coverage in Chicago on FOX and NBC—and a lengthy WVON interview.

The growing public concern about short staffing sends a clear message. It’s time to pass HB2507 to ensure public funding goes to care and not to profit.

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Open thread

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I saw this band in 1978 when they opened for Styx. My best friend and I went to that show specifically to see Thin Lizzy

Don’t believe a word
Words are only spoken

What’s happening in your local world?

  10 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The world could use more men like Matt Jones, may he rest in peace

Matthew Patrick Jones, age 59, of Edwards, Illinois, passed away peacefully on Saturday, April 26, 2025, in the garden of the Richard L. Owens Hospice Home in Peoria, following a valiant four-plus-year battle with glioblastoma multiforme. A courageous fighter in the courtroom and in life, Matt was born on September 30, 1965, in Pekin, Illinois.

Matt was a beloved husband, father, son, brother, and dedicated attorney whose career in public service will be remembered for his strength as a prosecutor, his trusted expertise in criminal policy, and his popularity as a law school professor. He will be forever remembered for his kindness, wit, generosity, and his exceptional ability to cultivate meaningful, bipartisan criminal justice reform. Matt believed deeply in the importance of ethics, collaboration, and compromise in state government.

He earned a sterling reputation in Springfield and on Capitol Hill for bridging political divides on critical issues, including juvenile justice reform, pretrial fairness, and violence against women and children. Matt developed and led trainings for new attorneys, mentored trial advocacy skills among Illinois prosecutors, advocated zealously on behalf of state’s attorneys, and championed justice for survivors of violent crime and domestic violence. A brilliant legal mind, Matt was respected and relied upon by members of the Illinois General Assembly, Congress, judges, peers across the country, and former clients alike. […]

While Matt made an impact in state and national politics as a criminal policy expert, he also aspired to run for elected office someday. Whether he would have served as state’s attorney, judge, or senator ultimately doesn’t matter; Matt Jones achieved something far greater: he prioritized doing what was right over personal ambition, he treasured his family and friendships, he lifted his community, and he championed justice throughout Illinois. He made a lasting impact on so many and lived his life to the fullest. For that alone, he is deeply mourned.

Memorial contributions may be made to the W.D. Boyce Council, Scouting America, in support of the ‘Be Brave Initiative,‘ a new scholarship fund created in Matt’s memory.

* At 2:30, Governor Pritzker will join a rally supporting students as a continuation of his “Standing Up for Illinois” tour. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Casino crime logs show thefts, fights, patrons passing counterfeit bills: Rivers — the state’s busiest and most profitable casino, located in the shadows of O’Hare Airport — had the most reported crime of the eight casinos in Chicago and the suburbs, with more than 1,500 crimes logged from 2020 to early this year out of roughly 3,800 reported at those casinos by the Illinois Gaming Board, according to records from the government agency. Those cases are a tiny fraction of the 31.3 million trips through casino turnstiles during that time, including about 13 million visits to Rivers.

* ProPublica | The untold story of how Missourian Ed Martin ghostwrote online attacks against a Metro East judge: The attacks on Judge John Barberis in the fall of 2016 appeared on his personal Facebook page. They impugned his ethics, criticized a recent ruling and branded him as a “politician” with the “LOWEST rating for a judge in Illinois.” […] After Barberis dealt Martin a major setback in the case in October 2016, the attacks began. The Facebook user who posted them, Priscilla Gray, had worked in several roles for Schlafly but was not a party to the case, and her comments read like those of an aggrieved outsider. Almost two years later, the truth emerged as Cori’s lawyers gathered evidence for her lawsuit: Behind the posts about the judge was none other than Martin.

* Daily Herald | ‘This is your LAST WARNING’: Tollway texting you about unpaid fees? Don’t believe it: The Illinois tollway is alerting I-PASS customers of a phishing scam using texts with dire but fake warnings intended to trick people into divulging personal information. “Toll text scams are occurring nationwide. The Illinois tollway is advising customers to disregard these phishing texts. These messages are not associated with the Illinois tollway or our customer data,” agency leaders said Friday.

*** Statehouse News ***

* US Senator Tammy Duckworth endorses Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton for Durbin’s Senate seat.

* Sun-Times | Feds no longer seeking $3.1 million from Michael Madigan: The feds notified U.S. District Judge John Blakey of their position in a two-page status update filed Friday. It said prosecutors continue “to stand on the legal arguments” made March 28, when they first argued Madigan should forfeit the $3.1 million. However, it said, “the government has decided to no longer seek a forfeiture judgment” in Madigan’s case. “This decision is independent from any other issue or briefing in this matter,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker wrote. “The government’s position in this filing relates solely to forfeiture and not to any other issue in the case.”

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Facing Trump’s trade war, Illinois soybean farmers say they’ve seen this before: “Last time, we lost about 20% market share,” said Todd Main, director of market development for the Illinois Soybean Association. “The federal government put some financing programs to help cover the revenue stream for that first year that farmers lost. But that lasted one year, and the 20% market share never came back.” “I think it’s going to be a disaster for Illinois soybean growers,” said William Ridley, an agricultural economist at the University of Illinois.

* Sun-Times | Taking advantage of Illinois’ new turkey gun regulations: Richard Music used a .410 shotgun, now allowed under new Illinois regulations, to bag a big turkey on opening day of Illinois’ spring turkey season in the north zone.

*** Chicago ***

* Daily Herald | The parking meter was paid, but minutes later, a $70 ticket from Chicago: “There should be no discrepancy,” Chicago Alderman Scott Waguespack said. But it’s a familiar complaint. “Over the years, I’ve got people calling from all over the city asking for help” with undeserved tickets. Concerns range from mistakes about the time frame to inadequate signage supposed to alert drivers if parking isn’t allowed, he explained.

* Sun-Times | University of Chicago Crime Lab boss: Most conventional wisdom about what causes shootings is wrong:
America has a fundamental misunderstanding of what drives violence, and that’s gotten in the way of doing more to prevent shootings. That’s the premise of the new book “Unforgiving Places” by University of Chicago Crime Lab director Jens Ludwig. Ludwig, an economist, talked about that in an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times that has been edited for length and clarity.

* Block Club | Lincoln Square Car-Free Zone Extended To May As Neighbors Make The Most Of Street Closure: The car-free zone was originally slated to end Sunday. But a decades-old brick electrical vault at the intersection is damaged and needs emergency repairs before the rest of construction can move forward, said Josh Mark, Ald. Matt Martin’s (47th) chief of staff. The work means the closure will stretch into May.

* Crain’s | In legal fight over disputed artwork, Art Institute dealt a big blow: In her ruling, New York Supreme Court Judge Althea Drysdale agreed with New York officials that the work had been stolen from Grünbaum by the Nazis, adding that the museum’s own provenance inquiries of the artwork “fell short of their self-imposed standard.” The museum filed an appeal notice to the ruling yesterday. In an email, a spokesperson for the Art Institute said it is “disappointed” in the court’s decision and “will look at all available options for appeal.”

* Tribune | Diagnosed with colorectal cancer at age 44, WGN’s Mike Lowe shared his battle with viewers. Now, he’s at a turning point.: It was a message from his doctor — the results of his latest colonoscopy, a test meant to show whether six weeks of radiation and four months of chemotherapy had worked. The results were exactly what he had hoped to see: The cancer was no longer detectable. “Getting those results, it was just the most amazing feeling,” Lowe said. “I think back to one year ago, when I went to the initial doctor’s appointment … .In some ways it feels like forever and in some ways it feels like the blink of an eye — but what a year.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Federal cuts threaten program that allows suburban libraries to share books: President Donald Trump last month ordered the gutting of the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a federal agency that serves as a key source of funding for museums, libraries and educational institutions across the country. The cuts, which are still being rolled out, could prove devastating to the interlibrary loan program throughout the region. RAILS and the Illinois Heartland Library System, the state’s other major library delivery service that reaches southern and central parts of Illinois, receive about $2.5 million annually for delivery services, about one-third of their budgets, through IMLS funding. Though the state was told to expect this year’s award around April 20, the program officer who oversees Illinois funding has been terminated and the money has not yet arrived, according to a spokesman for Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias.

* Tribune | Cook County Circuit Court clerk reports progress on transparency promises: New Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Mariyana Spyropoulos released a progress report Monday claiming her team is already digging out from a backlog of reports, unfiled civil court documents and “serious financial management issues.” Spyropoulos campaigned on running a tighter ship than her predecessors, promising better transparency around court operations and stricter ethics enforcement. She used the milestone of her first 100 business days in office to make the case she is fixing things.

* Sun-Times | Former Jan. 6 defendant set to stand trial for Skokie woman’s murder: ‘Don’t do this!’: Now Shane Jason Woods, a 47-year-old Taylorville man once sentenced to 4 ½ years in prison for assaulting two people at the U.S. Capitol, faces trial for the first-degree murder of 35-year-old Lauren Wegner of Skokie in that crash detailed in police and court records. The trial is set to begin Monday in Springfield.

* Shaw Local | Underwood talks immigration, education concerns at DeKalb town hall: When asked if she’s considering running for Dick Durbin’s Senate seat in 2026, Underwood downplayed the idea. Durbin, 80, the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, announced this week that he does not plan to seek reelection to a sixth term. “It has truly been a great honor to serve as your congresswoman and I certainly am reflecting on ways to continue my service,” Underwood said.

* Daily Herald | Illinois lawmakers stop in Buffalo Grove to protest federal funding cuts: Democratic state lawmakers gathered Sunday in Buffalo Grove as part of a four-stop bus tour of Chicago and the suburbs to speak out against cuts in federal funding. “We have a federal government that is attacking everything that we hold dear,” state Rep. Daniel Didech of Buffalo Grove said during the “For The People” bus tour stop at the Mike Rylko Community Park amphitheater.

* Crain’s | Spotlight back on Northwestern’s president amid Trump administration jabs: Federal officials continue to circle Northwestern, having already frozen $790 million in federal funds as part of a larger battle with elite universities the administration views as out of step with its policies. Meanwhile, NU faculty are pushing for President Michael Schill to take the fight to Trump and congressional leaders, a move that could stoke more attacks and further imperil the school and its president. “The university president is walking a very fine line right now,” said Ron Culp, a veteran public relations consultant who teaches at DePaul University. “It’s a delicate balancing act to pull off.”

* Daily Southtown | Flossmoor in film: Board approves production regulations after influx of interest: “When we saw that you had to register your dog in Flossmoor but … there was no regulations for film, we were like, ‘oh OK, um, maybe we should reach out,’” Troy said. They worked with the village manager’s office to draft an ordinance the Village Board passed last week. It aims to address residents’ complaints and ensure the community benefits as Flossmoor, a town of 9,700 people, draws more attention from production companies.

* Daily Herald | What you need to know about the local grocery tax most suburbs are adopting: Illinois will eliminate its 1% grocery tax on Jan. 1, joining the majority of states without one. Basically, the state collects the tax and distributes it back to the municipalities where it was collected. In recent years, the tax has generated an estimated $360 million for Illinois’ 1,294 cities, towns and villages. Statements by Gov. JB Pritzker during the early months of 2024 led municipal leaders to anticipate the elimination of the tax. A compromise struck in late spring allowed towns to replace the state tax with ones of their own.

* Shaw Local | Veterans rally in McHenry against ‘goal’ to cut tens of thousands of VA jobs: Over 200 people gathered outside the McHenry Veterans Affairs Clinic with signs and flags Sunday afternoon to protest against potential nationwide staff cuts to the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs. The rally, sponsored by Illinois Veterans for Change, included speakers like former McHenry County Board member Lou Ness and Kat Abughazaleh, a political newcomer who’s running for Congress in Illinois’ 9th District long held by Democrat Rep. Jan Schakowsky.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | One person shot, injured during student group’s event at ISU’s Bone Student Center: One person was injured in a shooting Sunday night during a student organization’s event at the Bone Student Center at Illinois State University, authorities said. Police are still looking for the suspect. The shooting happened around 7:40 p.m. during what ISU called a “registered student organization event” at the Bone. An ISU spokesperson would not identify the student group. There were at least two events happening in the Bone on Sunday night, including a sorority event, witnesses told WGLT.

* Tribune | Health officials urge caution after dead rabbit and squirrel found with rare bacterial disease: The rabbit infected with tularemia was found in Tuscola, a small community south of Champaign, following weeks of reports of ill and dead squirrels in nearby Urbana. One of the rodents had also tested positive for the disease, which is rare but serious and can affect animals and humans. “The presence of infected wildlife may indicate an increased risk of exposure in the area,” the Douglas County Health Department said in a Thursday statement, echoing an announcement made by the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District three days earlier about local squirrel deaths.

* PJ Star | Peoria airport sets new monthly record for passengers: The Peoria airport announced 71,988 departed and arrived in March, breaking the all-time monthly record of 68,447 set in July 2019. “We knew that March,” airport director Gene Olson said, “was going to put up some impressive numbers based on the activity in our parking lots, and we suspected we might set a record. But we didn’t anticipate breaking the all-time monthly record, and we didn’t foresee setting the record by that large of a margin.”

* WGLT | ‘A place to call home’: Habitat for Humanity of McLean County breaks ground on 200th house: Conely said the wait for their very own house was “a long time coming.” She and her three children, 20-year-old daughter Jasharar and 18-year-old and 9-year-old sons Jakalib and Jashawn, have moved repeatedly from different areas of low-income housing or shelters. “I used to stay a long time in the mission, then after the mission and I was there for a couple years, then I move into a two-bedroom, then I had Section 8 for a little bit,” Conely said. “Where I’m at now is not a good neighborhood … [we’re] just holding on until we get our house built.”

*** National ***

* Semafor | The group chats that changed America: This constellation of rolling elite political conversations revolve primarily around the venture capitalist Marc Andreessen and a circle of Silicon Valley figures. None of their participants was surprised to see Trump administration officials firing off secrets and emojis on the platform last month. I did not have the good fortune to be accidentally added to one of the chats, which can be set to make messages disappear after just 30 seconds. But their influence flows through X, Substack, and podcasts, and constitutes a kind of dark matter of American politics and media. The group chats aren’t always primarily a political space, but they are the single most important place in which a stunning realignment toward Donald Trump was shaped and negotiated, and an alliance between Silicon Valley and the new right formed. The group chats are “the memetic upstream of mainstream opinion,” wrote one of their key organizers, Sriram Krishnan, a former partner in the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (typically styled a16z) who is now the White House senior policy adviser for AI.

* WaPo | U.S. attorney for D.C. accuses Wikipedia of ‘propaganda,’ threatens nonprofit status: In the letter dated Thursday, Ed Martin said he sought to determine whether the Wikimedia Foundation’s behavior is in violation of its Section 501(c)(3) status. Martin asked the foundation to provide detailed information about its editorial process, its trust and safety measures, and how it protects its information from foreign actors. “Wikipedia is permitting information manipulation on its platform, including the rewriting of key, historical events and biographical information of current and previous American leaders, as well as other matters implicating the national security and the interests of the United States,” Martin wrote. “Masking propaganda that influences public opinion under the guise of providing informational material is antithetical to Wikimedia’s ‘educational’ mission.”

* WSJ | Elite Universities Form Private Collective to Resist Trump Administration: The informal group currently includes about 10 schools, including Ivies and leading private research universities, mostly in blue states. Strategy discussions gained momentum after the administration’s recent list of demands for sweeping cultural change at Harvard, viewed by many universities as an assault on independence.

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When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study were clear — the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like Armando in Champaign enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Apr 28, 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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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Oh, wow

Let my spirit carry me

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were aware about this issue in March. Capitol News Illinois

Insurance companies are reducing the scope of coverage for some community foster agencies in Illinois, leading to higher costs, diminished coverage and fewer options for agencies who say a continuance of the trend could lead to closures.

If the situation worsens, some foster agencies warn they will have to shut down, sending children in their facilities back under the care of the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, an agency advocates say doesn’t have the capacity to handle an influx of foster children. […]

In an interview with Capitol News Illinois, Pamela Davis, the founder, president and CEO of Nonprofits Insurance Alliance, or NIA, said the organization had never previously done a mass nonrenewal like the one in California. She said insurance companies are struggling to distinguish low-risk foster agencies from high-risk ones, since agencies who are doing a “good job” and those who are doing a “bad job” are getting sued the same.

In Illinois, NIA scaled back its coverage by placing $1 million limits on the coverage that protects agencies against claims for physical or sexual abuse, known as Improper Sexual Conduct and Physical Abuse, or ISCPA, coverage. This means that if a foster agency is sued for sexual or physical abuse, NIA will only cover up to $1 million of the settlement – even as many lawsuits are being settled for much more.

Usually, insurance companies offer umbrella coverage beyond the company’s limit. But NIA is also no longer providing umbrella coverage for ISCPA coverage or social services professionals coverage, which protects the agencies’ social workers if they’re sued for misconduct.

* WGN

The Illinois Gaming Board announced Friday that they are moving to prohibit using credit cards for online sports betting.

They are doing it to “further support responsible gaming,” according to the organization.

The board administrator for the IGB said that gambling addicts can use credit cards to fund their accounts when they do not have the means.

“As part of our review, we determined that prohibiting the use of credit cards to fund sports wagering accounts is a justified and impactful advancement in Illinois sports wagering,” said Illinois Gaming Board Administrator Marcus Fruchter. “There is a growing body of recent research showing that restrictions on credit usage to fund wagering accounts encourages responsible gambling and mitigates the harms of compulsive gambling. Problem gamblers are particularly at risk and studies have shown an often-problematic willingness for compulsive gamblers to use credit cards to place bets.” […]

The IGB’s adopted rules now go to the General Assembly’s Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) for the public comment and approval process.

* Tribune

Gov. JB Pritzker on Thursday tapped a Cook County official to run the Illinois Emergency Management Agency and Office of Homeland Security.

Theodore “Ted” D. Berger most recently worked under Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle as the county’s executive director of emergency management and regional security.

If approved by the state Senate, Berger would be the permanent replacement for Alicia Tate-Nadeau, who started as director of IEMA and OHS in 2019, Pritzker’s first year in office, after more than three decades with the Illinois National Guard. […]

“With decades of emergency management experience and a wealth of knowledge about our State’s many regions, Ted Berger is an exceptionally qualified candidate to lead Illinois’ critical support efforts,” Pritzker said in the news release.

* WAND

Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs announced the new Funding U Illinois No Cosigner Loan, a part of the Student Empowerment Fund.

Frerichs and his team worked together with lawmakers to invest in loan providers that serve Illinois residents. These lenders will offer private loans at affordable rates and will make interest payments to the state. The state will then reinvest these funds to create additional loans for residents of Illinois.

The Student Empowerment Fund was created to provide private college loans for Illinois residents at lower rates than private competitors, helping to bridge the gap with federal financial aid. […]

The No Cosign Loan allows students who have low credit scores or are unable to get an eligible co-signer on their loan application, to get access to financial aid.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Illinois State Bar Association | Quick Takes on Illinois Supreme Court Opinions Issued Thursday, April 24, 2025: Piasa Armory, LLC v. Kwame Raoul, in His Official Capacity as Attorney General of the State of Illinois: The setting of this case could not be more efficiently described than Justice Rochford did at the outset of her opinion for the court. “Section 2-101.5 of the Code of Civil Procedure sets venue in Sangamon and Cook Counties for actions seeking declaratory or injunctive relief from a constitutional challenge to a state statute, rule, or executive order. The circuit court of Madison County ruled that the statute was unconstitutional as applied to individuals residing or injured outside of those two counties.” On this direct appeal to the Supreme Court pursuant to Rule 302(a), enabled by a finding under Rule 304(a), the Supreme Court reversed the circuit court, holding that this venue statute was not unconstitutional on this as-applied challenge.

* Payments Dive | Illinois AG, Durbin defend state card fee law: Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul filed motions Wednesday opposing the banks’ bid for summary judgment and requesting that U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall instead grant the AG summary judgment.

* WBEZ | Pritzker remains quiet on future plans, despite growing national appearances: He’s not done yet: On Sunday, Pritzker is headlining the 2025 McIntyre-Shaheen 100 Club dinner. It’s the largest Democratic fundraiser for New Hampshire, a state that’s held one of the nation’s first primary contests for more than 100 years. All of the appearances are helping Pritzker introduce himself to a wider Democratic audience, even though the two-term governor has not confirmed what his future plans are or if he’ll seek another term in any office at all. Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, said Pritzker is doing what candidates often do if they’re exploring a presidential run: getting name recognition by latching onto an issue partisans care about.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Bears confront their Soldier Field landlord as they scope out Arlington Park move: Bears President Kevin Warren sent a letter to new Park District Superintendent Carlos Ramirez-Rosa detailing the team’s concern over the condition of Soldier Field and requesting documents to provide an overview of maintenance and capital spending. Also requested in the letter: monthly meetings to address the team’s concerns. […] Warren sent the letter, dated April 16 and addressed to Ramirez-Rosa, claiming the team has not had a seat at the table in deciding how capital dollars are spent improving the nearly century-old stadium.

* WBEZ | Offices in the Loop and beyond are being converted to apartments. Can the city do more?: Converting offices to apartments is just one solution for bringing outmoded buildings back to life. The number of projects is higher when factoring in all office conversions: Primo’s Capri Investment Group is working with the Prime Group to redevelop the former Cboe Global Markets headquarters. The partners plan to turn the building into a data center after buying it last summer for $12 million. A report last year by the commercial real estate data company CommercialCafe said that of the 30 biggest cities in the United States, Chicago has the second-highest amount of office space that could be converted to residential use.

* Block Club | Lincoln Square Car-Free Zone Extended To May As Neighbors Make The Most Of Street Closure: An unforeseen, emergency repair of ComEd infrastructure means the 4700 block of North Lincoln Avenue will remain car-free longer than expected, officials said. […] The construction delay means this Sunday’s Ravenswood Run 5K will be rerouted to avoid Lincoln Square. The planned April 28 closure of the 2200 block of West Leland Avenue will also be delayed, Mark said.

* Sun-Times | Long-awaited DuSable Park takes a big step forward: At just 3.4 acres, the long-awaited $15 million Jean-Baptiste Point DuSable Park won’t be the city’s largest public green space, but it has the potential to be one of the best. As it should be. The park is planned for an absolutely prime spot east of DuSable Lake Shore Drive that is bounded by the Chicago River, the Ogden Slip and the lake. Chicagoans have waited 38 years for this park honoring DuSable, watching previous plans come and go.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | An immersive, panoramic view coming soon to a theater near you in Addison: SCREENX debuts in Addison on April 29 with an invitation-only preview of Marvel Studio’s “Thunderbolts,” and public screenings of the film beginning May 1. It offers panoramic views by extending some scenes onto the left and right walls of the auditorium at 1555 W. Lake St. Marcus Theatres President Mark Gramz said SCREENX uses three laser projectors, one pointed at the main center screen and two side projectors directed to opposite walls, which are treated with a reflective screen material.

* WTTW | The Cubs and Bulls Have Nothing on These Champs. Check Out Cook County’s MVP Trees: From a towering 120-foot-tall black oak to a 20-foot redbud, the Forest Preserve District of Cook County has mapped the largest specimen of each tree species identified in the preserves and has made it easier for people to find these “champions.” The district’s Champion Tree Register has been updated with an interactive web tool that not only shows the location of each champion, but also includes a photo and stats like the tree’s height, circumference and the spread of its crown.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Tree plantings in Aurora offer chance to celebrate the environment: “Each year, the city partners with the local school district and travels around the different places planting trees on school grounds as kind of a tribute to Arbor Day but also the seeds of growth – literally,” said Clayton Muhammad, chief communications and equity officer for the city of Aurora. “We like to focus on youth and the importance of trees and watch kids throw some dirt on some of them so they can literally watch the trees grow during their years at the elementary school.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Congressman raises concerns about tariff ‘chaos and uncertainty’ during stop at farm south of Bloomington: Krishnamoorthi spoke Thursday at the Kindred family farm in Atlanta, just southwest of Bloomington-Normal. Owner Ron Kindred said he’s concerned about Trump’s tariffs and any retaliatory actions from China, which consumes more than half of all soybeans exported from the U.S. Illinois is the No. 1 soybean-producing state in the U.S. “With China, they’re our No. 1 customer. If you put all of our other export markets together, it doesn’t equal what China buys from the U.S. in soybeans,” Kindred said. “So, it’s a real concern when your No. 1 customer is the one who’s targeted with tariffs.

* WGLT | DCFS and ISU team up for new high-tech child welfare simulation space in Normal: Illinois State University and the state’s Department of Children and Family Services [DCFS] teamed up on the new Child Protection Training Academy. Located at The Baby Fold at 614 Oglesby Ave., it’s the third of its kind in the state. The ribbon-cutting was Friday. The new space includes mock apartments, a doctor’s office, and courtroom environments where front line workers can practice interviews, assessments and even testimony. Those in training can get practice followed by immediate feedback and coaching. There are cameras and microphones everywhere so trainees can be monitored.

* WCIA | ‘They’re trying to go after us,’ Candlewood Estates residents say they won’t be charged for electrical issues: “They’re trying to go after us,” said Candlewood Estates Tenant Association leader Marcia Green. And she wants the state to right the wrongs she says are happening at a mobile home park in Mahomet. Candlewood Estates’ latest issue is the more than 400 electrical violations the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) has given the property. […] They’re fighting it in court. They say the property is giving out violations to the tenants while electrical boxes are out of code, and people living there say it’s not their responsibility.

* BND | $300M entertainment, retail and residential project in O’Fallon gets OK: “We just have to be patient as it’s being developed,” said incoming Mayor Eric Van Hook, now a City Council member. “I wish it could be here a lot sooner than eight years, but I’m excited for what it’s going to provide to not only O’Fallon residents, but to the people that visit our community, and hopefully they’ll see what we see in it.” Park Place, located just across the street from the popular O’Fallon Family Sports Park in the northwest part of the city, will have single-family homes, duplexes, apartment buildings, townhomes, a hotel, retail facilities, restaurants, office space and entertainment venues. Those include a TopGolf-style driving range.

* SIU | SIU Carbondale student elected to national honors council: An aspiring forensic anthropologist at Southern Illinois University Carbondale has been chosen to serve on the National Collegiate Honors Council Board of Directors, a spot reserved for only five students in the country. Sophomore Natalie Eves of Bloomington, Illinois, is majoring in anthropology with a minor in forensic science and is a student in the University Honors Program. She became interested in joining the 17-member NCHC board after attending a conference a few months before, where she presented her research about mental health. Another student in the SIU System, Aman Pai, a sophomore at SIU Edwardsville, also is one of five student members. Eves and Pai will serve on the board through 2027.

* WICS | Illinois State University and Heartland Community College to sign transfer agreement: Leaders from Illinois State University and Heartland Community College are set to meet on Thursday, May 1, 2025, to sign an articulation agreement aimed at facilitating the transfer of students pursuing a bachelor’s degree in business administration. The signing will take place at the Gregg Chadwick Community Board Room in the Community Commons Building.

*** National ***

* WaPo | RFK Jr.’s absurd statistic on the spike in chronic diseases in the U.S.: In other words, this is another example of Kennedy taking a success story — longer lives and better detection of chronic diseases — to argue that something is rotten. He’s long been a purveyor of the fiction that vaccines cause autism, and one of his key points of evidence is that the percentage of people with autism has increased. But the percentage of people diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder has gone up mainly because of expanded definitions and better detection. There is no blood test for autism, so a diagnosis is based on observations of a person’s behavior. Indeed, while autism diagnoses have increased, those of intellectual disability have decreased, indicating that previously, children may have been misdiagnosed with other conditions.

  3 Comments      


The legal front

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Click here for the lawsuit. Wednesday press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul, as part of a coalition of 12 attorneys general, today filed a lawsuit to block the Trump administration’s illegal tariffs. The case challenges several executive orders that claim the power to increase tariffs without congressional action.

The lawsuit filed by Raoul and the coalition challenges the Trump administration’s executive orders calling for higher tariffs on most products worldwide. These tariffs impose a 145% tariff on most products from China, a 25% tariff on most types of products from Canada and Mexico, and 10% tariffs on most products from the rest of the world. Raoul’s lawsuit also challenges the administration’s plan to raise tariffs on imports from 56 other trading partners on July 9.

“International trade is essential to states’ economies, and the administration’s tariffs will make it more difficult for our residents to purchase the basic goods they need at affordable prices,” Raoul said. “I am proud to join my colleagues in fighting to prevent hardworking Americans from footing the bill for the Trump administration’s unlawful tariffs.”

Raoul and the attorneys general explain in their lawsuit, which was filed in the U.S. Court of International Trade, that only Congress can lay and collect taxes. The administration’s executive orders cite the powers granted by the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA); however, that law applies only when an emergency presents an “unusual and extraordinary threat” from abroad. In short, Raoul and the coalition argue the law does not give the president the power to impose these tariffs. This is the first time in American history that a president has imposed tariffs based on the IEEPA.

In Illinois, the tariffs will cause some state government agencies to agree to pay more for goods to cover the costs of tariffs. For example, the Illinois Department of Innovation & Technology (DOIT) purchases about 15,000 imported personal computers for state employees each year. Because of the tariffs, DOIT was constrained to accept a contract that explicitly permits the vendor to pass on the cost of any tariff to the state of Illinois. Additionally, the uncertainty stemming from the flurry of executive orders makes vendors reluctant to commit to working with the state, impeding long-term procurement planning.

Joining Attorney General Raoul in filing this lawsuit are attorneys general from Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Vermont.

* Click here for the lawsuit. Friday press release…

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul today co-led a coalition of 19 attorneys general in filing a lawsuit seeking to stop the U.S. Department of Education from withholding federal funding from state and local agencies that refuse to abandon lawful programs and policies promoting equal access to education in K-12 classrooms across the nation.

On April 3, 2025, the Department of Education informed state and local agencies that they must accept the Trump administration’s new and legally incoherent interpretation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 with respect to diversity, equity and inclusion efforts – or else risk immediate and catastrophic loss of federal education funds. In Illinois, this would mean the immediate loss of almost $1.4 billion in congressionally mandated financial support for schools.

“The Trump administration is now attempting to illegally stop the allocation of these Congressionally-mandated funds in order to push a vague, anti-DEI agenda at the expense of some of the most vulnerable children in Illinois and across the country,” Raoul said. “I proudly stand with my fellow Attorneys General to defend this important funding and help ensure that all children have access to a quality public education.”

The administration has not defined which diversity, equity and inclusion practices it finds objectionable, or the basis of its legal objections. Illinois, like many other states, refused to certify its compliance under the terms of the administration’s new requirements, explaining that there is no lawful or practical way to do so given the department’s vague, contradictory and legally unsupported interpretation of Title VI. In filing today’s lawsuit, Attorney General Raoul and the coalition seek to bar the department from withholding any funding based on these unlawful conditions.

The funding at stake includes financial support to ensure that students from rural and low-income families have the same access to high-quality education as their peers, provide special education services, recruit and train highly skilled and dedicated teachers, fund programming for non-native speakers to learn English, provide support to vulnerable children in foster care and without housing, and provide technical programs to put our students on the path to careers.

As a condition of receiving these funds, state and local education agencies provide written assurances they will comply with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination based on race, color or national origin. Illinois has consistently and regularly certified its compliance with Title VI and its implementing regulations. However, the Department of Education’s letter conditioned continued federal financial assistance on state and local education agencies certifying that they are not operating programs inconsistent with the Trump administration’s view that some undefined efforts supporting diversity, equity and inclusion are unlawful.

The letter forced state and local agencies to choose between two untenable options. States could refuse to submit a new certification based on the department’s undefined viewpoint on what constitutes unlawful diversity, equity and inclusion programs, curriculum, instruction, and policies, and place federal funding in peril, or certify compliance and attempt to identify and eliminate lawful diversity, equity and inclusion to the detriment of students. Even if those steps were taken, states could still face liability for failing to fully comply with the department’s vague and ill-defined order. Faced with this choice, Illinois informed the department that it stands by its prior certifications of compliance with Title VI and its lawfully issued implementing regulations already in the department’s possession.

In their lawsuit, Raoul and the multistate coalition assert that the department’s attempt to terminate federal education funding based on its misinterpretation of Title VI violates the Spending Clause, the Appropriations Clause, the separation of powers, and the Administrative Procedures Act.

* AP today

The federal government is reversing the termination of legal status for international students around the U.S. after many filed court challenges against the Trump administration crackdown, a government lawyer said Friday.

The records in a federal student database maintained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement had been terminated in recent weeks, often without the students or their schools being notified. Judges around the country had already issued orders temporarily restoring the students’ records in dozens of lawsuits challenging the terminations.

More than 1,200 students nationwide suddenly lost their legal status or had visas revoked, leaving them at risk for deportation. Some left the country while others have gone into hiding or stopped going to class.

In one of the lawsuits, a lawyer for the government read a statement in federal court in Oakland, California, that said ICE was restoring the student status for people whose records were terminated in recent weeks. Also Friday, the statement was read by a government attorney in a separate case in Washington, said lawyer Brian Green, who represents the plaintiff in that case. Green provided The Associated Press with a copy of the statement that the government lawyer emailed to him.

It says: “ICE is developing a policy that will provide a framework for SEVIS record terminations. Until such a policy is issued, the SEVIS records for plaintiff(s) in this case (and other similarly situated plaintiffs) will remain Active or shall be re-activated if not currently active and ICE will not modify the record solely based on the NCIC finding that resulted in the recent SEVIS record termination.”

Context from Politico’s senior legal affairs reporter


By my count, there had been 103 lawsuits filed in the last 20 days, and judges had issued 50 restraining orders requiring the Trump administration to reverse the terminations. Those decisions came in more than 23 states. www.politico.com/news/2025/04…

— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney.bsky.social) April 25, 2025 at 10:30 AM

  5 Comments      


Question of the day

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Now that Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton has announced she’s running for US Senate, who would you like to see Gov. JB Pritzker choose as his running mate if he runs for reelection? Explain.

  40 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Illinois Times

Inspired by reform efforts in Ireland and Germany, Illinois activists are working to pass legislation that would offer more rehabilitation opportunities for youth offenders, allowing them to get their lives back on track and stay out of prison.

Senate Bill 2156, which has passed the Senate and moved to the House, is the first step by bill sponsor Sen. Rachel Ventura, D-Joliet, to improve Illinois’ juvenile justice system.

The bill would create a child reform task force, which would be tasked with gathering data statewide to gauge the effectiveness of the state’s juvenile correction centers. In addition, the task force would be charged with offering rehabilitative, community-based alternatives to juvenile detention.

Ventura said she was inspired to sponsor the bill after meeting with Ireland’s ministers of justice and law enforcement officials. She saw the differences in attitude toward repeated incarceration. Ventura said repeat offenders in the United States are viewed as the problem, while in Ireland, officials see repeat offenders as a failure of the system to properly address why someone continues to act out.

* 25News Now

Senator Dave Koehler (D-Peoria) introduced Senate Bill 1607 to continue the research of an Underground Railroad task force he helped develop a couple of years back. […]

Senator Koehler said the task force finished its work last fall and recommended that legislators establish an Illinois Freedom Trail Commission to continue gathering that vital information. That is where SB1607 comes into play. […]

“Having a data center that would collect all these stories and all this information of what’s going on in Illinois would be an important first step for people to take if they say, ‘Yeah, I want to find out what’s going on in my area.’” said Koehler. […]

Koehler’s bill passed the Senate unanimously on April 9. The Senator said he believes the House of Representatives and Governor JB Pritzker will show their support.

* WAND

A plan ensuring 9-1-1 dispatchers know how to properly teach people to perform CPR over the phone is one step closer to becoming law. […]

Experts have told lawmakers in the House and Senate that the barrier to entry for effective T-CPR is incredibly low and the training requires minimal investment compared to long term healthcare savings and life saves. […]

Senate Bill 1295 passed unanimously out of the House Police & Fire Committee and now moves to the House floor. The proposal passed unanimously out of the Senate earlier this month.

The American Heart Association said more than 350,000 people experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest annually, but only one in ten people survive. The organization said this change could give more people the chance to survive.

* Center Square

Illinois may join a growing number of states that would equip public schools with silent panic alarms in case of an emergency.

New Jersey was the first state to pass what is being called Alyssa’s Law in 2020. Six other states followed suit and 13 more are considering similar legislation. Alyssa’s Law is named after Alyssa Alhadeff, who was killed in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas school shooting in Parkland, Florida. […]

[The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Janet Yang Rohr, D-Naperville,] didn’t provide any cost estimates, but a school district in Florida recently approved a five-year, $3.8 million contract with a company that makes wearable panic buttons. […]

The law would require, for the 2026 fiscal year, the State Board of Education to issue a competitive solicitation to contract for a mobile panic alert system that may be used by each school district.

Alyssa’s law did not make deadlines to get out of the House.

* WAND

A bill heading to the Illinois House floor could help provide important data surrounding firefighter deaths. […]

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.

“If the bill is passed before June 1, 2025, then it would go into effect January 1, 2026,” said Rep. Anna Moeller (D-Elgin). “If passed after May 31, it would go into effect June 1, 2026.”

This proposal passed unanimously out of the House Police & Fire Committee Thursday. Senate Bill 1446 gained unanimous support in the Senate earlier this month.

* Illinois Times

A bill currently being considered by the General Assembly is aimed at making life easier – and more profitable – for small craft beer companies throughout the state. “The majority of Illinois liquor law is pretty much from the 1930s, like Prohibition era,” said Brent Schwoerer, owner, founder and brewmaster at Springfield’s Engrained Brewing Co.

This spring, Schwoerer has plans to open an Engrained “brew deck” at the new Scheels Sports Park, which will be located just across the street from the Engrained restaurant and brewpub, at the MacArthur Boulevard and Interstate 72 interchange. In order to get its products in stores and other retail locations, companies like Engrained can either work with a large distributor or else bring the beer to customers. But under current Illinois liquor laws, Schwoerer would be legally prohibited from carting his own beer across the road to the new sports park due to a strict 200-barrel annual limit on self-distribution.

“We have a lot of excess capacity,” said Schwoerer. “I can do 1,500 barrels out of this facility – I’ll probably do 200 barrels worth of beer just (at Scheels Sports Park).” This potentially means Engrained would be forced to either scale back or even eliminate all other distribution efforts. “Which sucks,” he added.

Schwoerer said that there are 40 breweries in the state of Illinois with the same problem. Many have already reached the 200-barrel cap and are now being financially impacted. […]

Enter SB 1622, introduced to the General Assembly this past February by Illinois State Senator Cristina Castro, D-Elgin. The bill is described as an amendment to the Liquor Control Act of 1934 and would “increase the self-distribution limit for class 3 brewers that meet certain requirements” from the current maximum of 6,200 gallons of beer to 77,500 gallons.

SB1622 missed its extended April 11 committee deadline.

  2 Comments      


Roundup: Mistrial declared after jury deadlocks in Sen. Emil Jones III bribery case

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for yesterday’s coverage. Capitol News Illinois

A federal judge on Thursday declared a mistrial in the case of state Sen. Emil Jones III, D-Chicago, after a jury deadlocked in their deliberations over whether Jones agreed to take bribes from red-light camera entrepreneur-turned-government cooperator Omar Maani in 2019, then lied to the FBI about it.

The senator, who’s served 16 years in Springfield since he replaced his father — former Illinois Senate President Emil Jones Jr. — was charged with three counts of bribery and lying to the FBI. Before they began deliberating Monday, jurors heard eight days of arguments, evidence and testimony, including from Jones himself.

The jury sent an initial note indicating they were at a stalemate on two of the counts late Wednesday, which was met with a legally required instruction from the judge encouraging further deliberations Thursday morning. But nearly 23 hours into deliberations early Thursday afternoon, the jury sent another note telling the judge they’d deadlocked on all three counts.

After polling individual members of the jury while white noise blasted through the courtroom’s speakers, U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood said the majority of jurors believed further deliberations would be unlikely to change anything.

The judge then declared a mistrial over the objections of Jones’ attorneys, who wanted the jury to keep deliberating. […]

On his way out of the courtroom, Jones remarked that now he’d have to “go back to work.”

* Sun-Times

“We did as much due diligence as any jury could,” said one juror, who didn’t want to be named, in a text message to the Chicago Sun-Times. “A group of caring and highly educated people. In the end, some just didn’t feel there was a smoking gun.”

After declaring the mistrial, U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood scheduled a status hearing for June 10. That’s when lawyers are expected to discuss with her what should happen next. […]

A second juror, who also asked not to be named, told the Sun-Times the deliberations featured “a lot of very careful, very detailed, very deliberate discussions about each of the counts.”

“I think everyone in the room understood the gravity and the seriousness of the charges,” the juror said, “and I think everyone was committed to doing the right thing based on the information they had.”

* Tribune

Flanked by his attorneys as he left the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, Jones, 46, thanked the judge, jurors, his attorneys and prosecutors. The son of former Senate President Emil Jones Jr., he was the first sitting member of the state General Assembly to have a jury trial at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse since then-state Rep. Derrick Smith was found guilty of bribery nearly a decade ago.

“I look forward to another fight,” Jones said. […]

After the trial ended, Emil Jones Jr. said he believes in his son’s innocence, though carefully declined to weigh in on whether the government should drop the case.

“They couldn’t win this time. I can’t think of what they should do. I know what they should do, but I won’t even say it,” he told the Tribune.

  24 Comments      


Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Several bills proposed this legislative session seek to ban certain factors that insurance companies use to set fair and accurate insurance pricing for customers. The bills would ban the use of credit-based insurance scores, zip codes, age, and gender in insurance pricing.

An op-ed published recently in the Chicago Tribune explains why such bans could cause insurance rates to rise for the majority of consumers.

Case in point: When the use of credit was banned in Washington in 2021, more than 60 percent of Washington drivers saw an increase in their insurance premiums. Should similar legislation pass in Illinois, the majority of Illinoisans with better-than-average credit could see premium increases.

With stubbornly high inflation and high property taxes, now is not the time to pass bills that could end up hiking insurance premiums for most Illinoisans.

Click here to learn more.

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Durbin on his retirement decision, Pritzker to endorse Stratton (Updated)

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Standing on his backyard deck Thursday – the same place where he declared his 1996 candidacy for U.S. Senate – Illinois’ senior Sen. Dick Durbin reflected on his decision to retire after four decades in Congress.

“I’ve done this my way, making decisions based on family needs and personal needs, and what I thought would serve our state well,” Durbin told reporters with a crowd of staff, family and friends listening in the background. […]

Durbin said he doesn’t believe age has ever gotten in the way of his job.

“I had to project forward,” Durbin said. “The campaign’s going to last two years, and then you’re going to serve six years. So are you ready to make an eight-year commitment? That’s the truth and reality of the United States Senate.”

* Journal Courier

“I didn’t think at this point it was the right thing to do,” [Sen. Durbin] said. “I think it’s the right thing to pass the torch off to another generation.”

“Now we have an opportunity to move forward with the election of a new United States senator,” Durbin said, reiterating the statement from Wednesday’s announcement that the Democratic Party has a “strong bench” of potential candidates.

* WCIA

Now with an end date in sight, Illinois’ senior senator said he will lobby his Republican colleagues to stand up against Trump’s administration, including his tariffs and trade policy.

“I’m gonna beg them to stand up and fight with us to protect the constitutional authority of the United States Senate,” Durbin added. “We can’t give this away… In an emergency situation, [the Constitution] would delegate [trade] to the president. This president is declaring an emergency that doesn’t exist.”

He also said he isn’t giving up on the DREAM Act. He wants to pass the bill that would protect children and young adults with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival status before he leaves in early 2027. He first introduced the bill in 2001.

* Meanwhile… Tribune

Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker is expected Friday to endorse his running mate, Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, for the U.S. Senate, a move that could serve as a politically powerful warning to the rest of an emerging field seeking to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin.

Pritzker’s announcement, scheduled for Friday morning at a church in the Bronzeville neighborhood where Stratton grew up, comes only two days after Durbin made public his decision not to seek a sixth term and just one day after the two-term lieutenant governor formally declared her Senate candidacy.

In prepared remarks shared with the Tribune by sources, Pritzker is expected to describe Stratton as a “tested and steady leader who leads from a place of integrity, pragmatism and dedication” as well as a “passionate and compassionate advocate able to get big things done.”

“At this perilous moment in Washington, Juliana’s fighting spirit and dedication to improving lives is exactly the type of representation Illinoisans need, and I’m proud to endorse her for the United States Senate,” Pritzker’s prepared remarks say.

* Center Square

Outside his home in Springfield Thursday, Durbin said he isn’t endorsing anyone, but has had conversations.

“I did have a conversation with Juliana and she told me that she was interested but she wasn’t going to run against me and others have done the same and when it came to J.B., I gave him a call before I made the announcement yesterday,” Durbin said from his backyard. […]

Durbin laid out at least one quality he would be looking for in a candidate.

“I think that person who is successful in running for this office is going to understand they’ve got to not only represent the entire state, they have to work the entire state,” Durbin said.

The SJ-R reported Sen. Durbin saying he may endorse a candidate in an “extreme case.”

…Adding… Pritzker’s endorsement video

…Adding… Capitol News Illinois’ Hannah Meisel is on the ground

* More…

    * Sun-Times | Rep. Darin LaHood considering GOP primary bid for Sen. Dick Durbin’s seat: LaHood is considering and is open to a primary run for the U.S. Senate seat, according to a source with direct knowledge of the congressman’s thinking. The congressman has about $5.8 million cash on hand to help a potential bid, and he’s seen as one of the few Republicans in the state with the ability to raise significant amounts of money.

    * Sun-Times | Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton becomes first major Democrat to launch Senate bid to replace Durbin: In an interview, Stratton said she’s “not at all” worried about incoming attacks about the Pritzker administration’s policies. She also tried to differentiate herself from the sitting members of Congress who are expected to announce runs. “I certainly feel like the old playbook that we’ve had in Washington just isn’t working, and I think that people are looking for new voices, new leadership, new energy, quite frankly,” Stratton said. “I think we’re hearing that over and over again.”

  45 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Many years ago when I was attending (yet another) college, I’d occasionally go into the library and grab its only copy of Donovan’s “Sunshine Superman” album and head to the basement listening room, where I’d blast it as loud as I could get away with. That listening room was a great escape, and it was free entertainment, which is about all I could afford in those days. Anyway, here’s an awkward video of Donovan’s title track

Superman or Green Lantern ain’t got nothin’ on me

Tell us what’s happening in your part of Illinois.

  10 Comments      


Healing Communities: Illinois Hospitals Support Individual And Community Health And Well-being

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Every hour of every day, Illinois hospitals provide lifesaving care to the communities they serve. Care delivery within their facilities is at the core of what hospitals do—but it’s not all they do. Illinois hospitals prove indispensable to communities by looking at healthcare, health and well-being from several vantage points. Watch our video about how hospitals are working outside their four walls.


Most people don’t see the critical care hospitals provide 24/7 or how hospitals are partnering with local organizations and investing in communities. Yet their benefit to the community is everywhere. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois governor still awaiting Trump guarantee on $1.15B for invasive carp. Michigan Live

    - Governor Pritzker said yesterday he’s still awaiting written guarantees that the federal government will, in fact, fund the $1.15 billion project to block invasive carp from reaching the Great Lakes.
    - Trump unexpectedly pledged to “save Lake Michigan” from invasive carp during an Oval Office meeting with Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and GOP House Speaker Matt Hall, calling the fish “powerful” and the project “very expensive” but necessary.
    - Project advocates had hoped that would be enough to end the impasse with Illinois. But, on Thursday, Pritzker said that he while he was “glad” to see that Whitmer and Trump talked about the project, “we’ve not received any assurance from the federal government, on paper, from the Army Corps of Engineers or from the White House, that they’re not going to withhold those funds once this project starts.”

* Related stories…

Stay tuned for Sen. Dick Durbin and Sen. Emil Jones III roundups.

* The governor will be on 83rd Street at 11 am for the Green Era Urban Growers Collective Week ribbon-cutting. At 2 pm Governor Pritzker will be in Deerfield to announce investment in Illinois from healthcare company Vantive. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WTTW | 12 Years Later, Lawsuit That Called Attention to Conditions at Now-Closed Stateville Prison Settled: The settlement, approved by U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood, vacated Stateville’s general housing unit in September, transferring men to other facilities across the state. “What was considered an impossible outcome at the start of this litigation—the closure of Stateville—became a reality,” filings state.

* NYT | Art Institute of Chicago told to surrender drawing to heirs of man killed in Nazi concentration camp: The drawing “Russian War Prisoner” was purchased by the Art Institute in 1966, but investigators for the Manhattan district attorney’s office had asserted that it and other works once owned by entertainer and art collector Fritz Grünbaum had been looted by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Many of the works created by Schiele, the Austrian Expressionist, that Grünbaum owned ended up in the hands of museums and collectors around the world. Grünbaum’s heirs have spent years working to reclaim them.

*** Downstate ***

* WGEM | Solar company questioned by Adams County Board and Ursa residents: “Please don’t think of this as a ‘check the box’ application. Don’t consider the other solar farms you may have approved in Adams County. This one is different,” Ursa resident Tim Hightower said. One of the main concerns that Ursa residents have with the project is the potential property value decline that could occur if the farm is built. Ursa Creek Solar brought in a real estate appraiser who said that in similar projects, no value decline took place.

* WCIA | Dead rabbit tests positive for tularemia in Douglas Co.: Tularemia is caused by a bacteria called Francisella tularensis. It’s commonly found in animals like rodents, rabbits and hares. Humans, cats and dogs can also become infected. It can be passed on through contact with infected animals, through tick or flea bites, or by inhaling or ingesting infected materials. Symptoms may include skin ulcers, swollen lymph nodes, a sudden fever, chills, headaches, diarrhea, joint pain, muscle aches, cough and weakness.

* WGLT | B-N primary care providers want everyone to know they treat mental health too: “We actually do treat quite a bit of anxiety and depression and address those concerns with our patients,” Hill said. “It’s actually something that is a quality of care measure for us.” It’s a mixed bag whether people know their primary care is available for mental health struggles, Hill said. Some people are really knowledgeable and may schedule an appointment for that purpose. Others have no idea it’s something a primary care doctor can address.

* WTVO | Shelly Leab, co-owner of Poopy’s biker bar, killed in murder-suicide: Police in Clinton, Iowa, identified Leab as the victim in a murder-suicide on Friday. Authorities said Brian Witherspoon, 57, shot Leab, 52, and then himself. […] The family said Leab’s body was found in the home along with her ex-fiancé. “Whether she was lighting up a room with her smile or lending a hand when someone needed it most, Shelly lived with a heart wide open. Shelly had a way of making everyone feel like family. Her warmth, her laugh, and her unwavering love for her people left a lasting impression on every heart she touched. Whether you knew her for a lifetime or just a moment, you felt her kindness,” the bar wrote on Facebook.

* WCIA | Ebertfest and Race Weekend could bring Champaign Co. millions of dollars: Two of the biggest events of the year are happening in Champaign-Urbana at the same time: Ebertfest and the Christie Clinic Illinois Race Weekend. Officials said Ebertfest is expected to bring in around $350,000 while the marathon may top $5 million.

* WGLT | Town of Normal goes in a new direction with Illinois Art Station staff: In a press release, the town announced three new staff members, replacing those who worked for the Normal nonprofit that donated itself to the town earlier this year. The town assumed control of Illinois Art Station on April 1. Both full-time employees, executive director Hannah Johnson and education coordinator Joey Hatch, were not retained as part of the transition. Johnson confirmed with WGLT that she had applied for the job.

* BND | Disabled southern Illinois woman fears loss of home if Medicaid funding is cut: Foushee, 40, is among the thousands of people who use the public health insurance program to pay for long-term, residential care in their communities. For the last 13 years, she has lived at Clinton Manor Living Center in New Baden, a nursing home that also cares for adults like Foushee who have developmental disabilities. She is watching discussions around new budget proposals in Washington, D.C., to find out whether her fears will become reality.

*** Statehouse News ***

* NH Journal | Billionaire Pritzker Bringing Deep-Blue Illinois Politics to NHDem Fundraiser: The billionaire governor of the “Vote Early and Often!” State is bringing his progressive politics to “Live Free or Die” New Hampshire this weekend, at the invitation of Granite State Democrats. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, 60, is heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune and the second-richest politician in America, according to The Wall Street Journal. (Trump is first.) He will take center stage Sunday in Manchester at the New Hampshire Democratic Party’s annual McIntyre-Shaheen 100 Club fundraising dinner. He will reportedly speak about Trump’s authoritarianism.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago school board approves contract with Chicago Teachers Union: The board’s Thursday vote puts the contract into effect; the union’s membership ratified the contract earlier this month with a nearly unanimous vote to approve it from 85% of union members. The four-year contract is expected to cost a total of $1.4 billion. It includes class size limits, requirements to hire hundreds of new staff, including more teacher assistants, and ten additional minutes of preparation time for elementary school teachers — which at some schools could also mean ten more minutes of recess.

* Sun-Times | Oversight chief hits traffic stop rules: ‘Why would we have officers pulling people over for a light bulb?’: The Community Commission for Public Safety and Accountability said officers should be banned from making stops for certain violations, such as missing only a front license plate, a nonfunctioning headlight or loud music.

* Crain’s | American Bar Association cuts 300 jobs after Justice Department pulls grant funding: The group said in a lawsuit seeking to restore the funding that it lost nearly $69 million in obligated federal grant and cooperative agreement funds after it issued support for federal judges who had been the target of Trump’s ire. The ABA pointed to a memo from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche as proof the government’s motivation for canceling the grants was retaliation. Among other actions, the memo prohibited the use of funds to pay for Justice Department employees to attend ABA events or speak at those events while on duty.

* Chicago Reader | Hip-hop prodigy Kaicrewsade puts community first: Kai understands chord progressions and music theory. “That comes from church,” he explains. He says that his church background—and being around “old folk” his entire life—gave him his love for music played on real instruments. “My mother is a singer. She sang in the choir. I was in choir practice growing up. Between my mama and my nana, I stayed in the church. So if I’m not telling the homies how to sing, I trust them that they already got it down,” he says. “I’m a crate-digger and I’m a composer. All I do is sit and listen to jazz all day. It’s not a hobby. It’s literally something I’ve done with my father, my mother. . . . I grew up just listening to so much music.”

* WTTW | The Wrigley Building Is Iconic, But Its Stories Are Little-Known. A New Book Changes That: So an unmissable corporate headquarters was appealing to Wrigley – especially one that had a clock for everyone to look at, an unprecedented amount of electric lighting illuminating its exterior, and a site visible directly up Michigan Avenue from the south, thanks to the street’s slight jog at the river. The site may have been unusually shaped, as a trapezoid tucked into a rectangular street grid, but it allowed the building to have four unique sides that, at the time of its construction, were all highly visible.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Illinois revokes trauma designation at Aurora hospital now owned by Prime Healthcare: The Illinois Department of Public Health revoked the Level II trauma center designation of Mercy Medical Center in Aurora on April 20, four days before Prime Healthcare, the hospital’s new owner, announced it was “withdrawing” the designation. In an emailed statement today, an IDPH spokesman said the state revoked the trauma designation due to Mercy Medical Center’s absence of mandated essential services.

* Daily Herald | District 21 approves administrative restructuring after ouster of top officials: The board action formally eliminates the positions once held by Assistant Superintendent of Finance and Operations Micheal DeBartolo and Assistant Superintendent of Support Services Kim Cline. Both were placed on administrative leave March 21, then told not to return and given severance April 16. New records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act by a parent and shared with the Daily Herald show the two administrators received bigger payouts than previously disclosed.

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park, township officials question proposed vehicle repossession business: “The presence of repo lots can fundamentally change the atmosphere of our communities,” O’Grady said in a news release. “The unease and intimidation felt by residents cannot be overlooked. We want to foster safe neighborhoods where families feel secure, and that can be compromised by the intimidating presence of repossession activities.”

* Daily Herald | Des Plaines enacts grocery tax to avoid losing $1.4 million annually: After some debate and public comment, the city council voted 7-1 Monday night to create the tax. As was the case when the council gave preliminary approval to the plan two weeks ago, 5th Ward Alderman Carla Brookman was the lone dissenter. Illinois is phasing out a tax on grocery items that generates revenue for the communities where the purchases occurred. It will be eliminated as of Jan. 1, 2026.

* Shaw Local | Oswego village trustees debate whether to implement its own 1% grocery tax: Oswego village trustees are considering whether to implement its own grocery tax in light of the state’s 1% grocery tax expiring on Jan. 1 of next year. Like other municipalities, Oswego receives a share of that tax. The village received an estimated $1 million to $1.25 million in grocery tax revenue in 2024.

*** National ***

* WaPo | U.S. agencies alarmed by China’s curbs on exports of rare-earth minerals: While companies search for alternative suppliers and urge the White House to cut a deal that will keep the materials flowing to U.S. manufacturers, the Trump administration is finding there are no easy solutions. China has a lock on the supply of certain elements that are essential to making such things as military drones, consumer electronics and battery-powered vehicles.

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

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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UPDATE: Jones judge declares a mistrial - UPDATE: Jones jury: ‘The jury is unable to reach a unanimous verdict on any of the three counts’ - Jones jury: ‘The jury cannot come to a unanimous verdict on all three counts. No one is willing to surrender their honest beliefs’ (Updated x10)

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Here we go…


More from Seidel

The key note: “The jury cannot come to a unanimous verdict on all three counts. No one is willing to surrender their honest beliefs.”

(The other note was a clarification from the juror with a work conflict Friday.)

Judge Wood notes that, depending on how you read this, it could mean they have a verdict on one or two counts, but not all three. Or it could mean they can’t reach any verdict.

AUSA Prashant Kolluri suggests the judge ask the jurors what they mean by their note. Defense attorney Victor Henderson asks for a five-minute recess to speak with Jones.

Judge Wood says, “I’ll allow five minutes.” But she’s still talking through logistics.

Judge Wood points out that “the jury, to this point, has not been informed that a partial verdict is an option.”

The judge goes on to explain that jurors should be told a partial verdict would be a final verdict as to the count in question.

She notes that some jurors might be uncomfortable with that — and could decline a partial verdict.

Court’s in recess for what’s supposed to be five minutes.

Judge Wood is back on the bench.

This post will be updated.

…Adding… More from Seidel

[AUSA Prashant Kolluri] asks the judge to send the jury a note that says, “has the jury reached a verdict on any count?”

Judge Wood counters with “has the jury reached a unanimous agreement as to any of the counts?”

Defense attorney Robert Earles asks Judge Wood to ask the question orally, with jurors in the courtroom.

So they’re debating a note, versus Judge Wood asking the question out loud.

Kolluri argues a note would be more efficient.

Henderson says the “solemnity of the proceedings” would be advanced by an in-court oral question.

Judge Wood is going to bring the jurors in.

Here they come.

…Adding… Back to Seidel

Judge Wood to the jury: “In a moment I will ask you to go back to the jury room and provide some clarification as to whether the jury has reached unanimous agreement as to any of the three counts.”

Jurors are headed back to the jury room.

…Adding… Seidel

The jury’s response: “The jury is unable to reach a unanimous verdict on any of the three counts.”

Wow.

Hannah Meisel reports: “Judge is giving the parties another 5-10 mins to decide on how they want the court to respond.”

Stay tuned.

…Adding… Seidel

[Prosecutor] Kolluri tells the judge prosecutors want the jury to keep deliberating.

Kolluri also says prosecutors “attempted to confer” with defense.

Doesn’t sound like it went well.

Kolluri asks the judge to send a note asking if any juror thinks “further deliberations would be …”

Judge Wood interrupts: “No. I’m not going to do that.”

Judge Wood says that, if jurors are going to be polled, it should be individually.

Henderson agrees that the jurors should be polled one-by-one in court. Seems likely to happen at sidebar, with the white noise machine on so we can’t hear them.

Hannah Meisel: Judge: I think my position is I ask each juror comes in individually and ask two Qs
1) do you think progress has been made since yesterday?
2) do you believe more deliberations would be fruitful?
After govt worries about public nature, judge says it could be done at sidebar.

…Adding… Seidel

Judge Wood: “Only two of the jurors indicated that they felt any progress had been made since yesterday.”

Judge Wood: “One further defined ‘progress’ as ‘we talked more about it, went back and forth,’ but that juror also could not say that any person actually changed their mind about anything.”

Court’s in recess while the lawyers talk about it.

…Adding… More Seidel

Judge Wood is back.

Prosecutors ask for a mistrial.

Defense objects to mistrial

…Adding… More

Defense attorney Joshua Adams explained to the judge, for the record, that “the lack of unanimity in the jury room is evidence that the government has not met their burden beyond a reasonable doubt.”

Hannah Meisel: Judge Wood, though, cites some case law and points out that Adams’ reason is not a factor.

Discussing the factors required for a mistrial, Judge Wood estimates that the jury has been deliberating for around 24 to 26 hours.

She says they likely heard 30-34 hours of testimony.

Kolluri argues, and he says they learned while speaking to the jurors that there are “multiple jurors on each side that are entrenched.”

Hannah Meisel: Prosecutors are now laying out their arguments for the judge to declare a mistrial. “Nothing more the court can do” and risks exhaustion of jury. Defense rests on their previous objection [meaning they’re not going to explain their position further].

Judge Wood says it “appears” jurors hadn’t taken a formal vote on Count 2 [interstate commerce] when they sent their note Wednesday.

Judge Wood: “I do think the factors here weigh in favor of a mistrial.”

…Adding… Hannah Meisel

[Judge] “I do think the issues here are more complex than they may seem at first blush…”

…So considering all the factors … risk of exhaustion…fact that they’re deadlocked on all 3 counts…

“I do think it’s appropriate at this point to declare a mistrial. So that is what I will do.”

* Sun-Times

The federal bribery trial of Illinois Sen. Emil Jones III ended in a mistrial Thursday after jurors told the judge they were “unable to reach a unanimous verdict on any of the three counts.”

The jurors delivered their news in a note that followed nearly 23 hours of deliberations over four days. They had warned U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood on Wednesday that they’d potentially deadlocked on two of the three charges, which have loomed over the South Side Democrat since 2022.

Their disagreement appeared to have worsened after another day of deliberations Thursday.

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* From Rich: The April 8 Capitol Fax post about 314 Action Fund’s US Senate poll is retracted until we receive a response from the organization. Despite repeated attempts to contact them (email, phone, tweets), they have so far refused to respond to my very simple question about what pollster conducted the survey. That alleged poll claimed the group’s favored US Senate candidate Lauren Underwood was leading the race and that “77 percent of primary voters identify her by name.” I should’ve been more diligent at the time. Sorry.

* Something to keep an eye on


* Tribune

Robert Crimo III will spend the rest of his life in prison for opening fire on spectators at the 2022 Highland Park Independence Day Parade.

Lake County Judge Victoria Rossetti imposed the expected sentence Thursday after listening to statements from 19 survivors and loved ones of people killed in the mass shooting. He was sentenced to seven consecutive natural life sentences without the possibility of parole − one for each of the seven people he murdered — plus an additional 50 years for the four dozen spectators he injured.

“The court finds that the defendant is irretrievably depraved, permanently incorrigible, irreparably corrupt and beyond any rehabilitation,” Rossetti said.

* Rep. Bob Morgan…

“This sentencing marks a solemn but important moment for the Highland Park community. While no punishment can erase the pain or bring back the lives stolen from us, today’s outcome offers a measure of closure for families, survivors, and a city forever altered by senseless violence,” Rep. Morgan said. “I am deeply grateful to Lake County State’s Attorney Eric Rinehart and his team for their tireless work securing this sentence. In addition, I extend my continued thanks to the first responders, mental health professionals, and community leaders who have stood by our neighbors over the past three years.”

Rep. Morgan, who was present with his family during the shooting, honored the lives of Katherine Goldstein, Irina McCarthy, Kevin McCarthy, Stephen Straus, Jacquelyn Sundheim, Nicolas Toledo-Zaragoza, and Eduardo Uvaldo. He reiterated that while today’s sentence brings justice and much-needed closure for Highland Park, the fight to end gun violence must extend beyond this moment.

“Although today’s sentencing provides relief and closure to our community, we must stress that our work is never finished,” Morgan said. “We must continue to ensure that every community across Illinois receives the care, healing, and justice they deserve. No family should have to carry the weight of this kind of loss alone—or in the absence of action.”

Rep. Morgan witnessed firsthand the devastating effects gun violence can have on a community. Highland Park, Illinois, is part of the 58th State Representative District, and he was present at the July 4, 2022, mass shooting with his wife and children, during which 83 rounds were fired in less than 60 seconds, killing seven and injuring 48.

Six months after the Highland Park shooting, Rep. Morgan was the chief sponsor of the Protect Illinois Communities (“PIC”) Act, one of the strongest gun safety laws in the nation. The PIC Act bans the sale of assault weapons—frequently used in mass shootings—as well as large-capacity magazines that hold more than 10 rounds for long guns or more than 15 rounds for handguns.

* Tribune

A federal jury began its fourth day of deliberations Thursday after signaling a potential impasse on two of the charges in the corruption trial of state Sen. Emil Jones III.

Late in the day on Wednesday, the jury sent a note to U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood signaling that they were unable to agree on counts of bribery and lying to the FBI. After consulting with lawyers in the case, Wood told the panel Thursday that a deadlock would be premature at this point in their talks, and to continue deliberating.

The jury also indicated that they would take Friday off from deliberations due to scheduling conflicts, if they do not conclude their work by then.

The panel is faced with determining whether the South Side Democrat is guilty of bribery, use of an interstate facility to solicit bribery and lying to federal agents regarding his dealings with a red-light camera company executive over the summer of 2019.

* Illinois Department of Central Management Services…

The unemployment rate decreased in eleven metro areas and increased in one over-the-year for the year ending March 2025, according to data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Illinois Department of Employment Security (DES). Over- the-year, total nonfarm jobs increased in six metropolitan areas and decreased in six.

“Illinois continues to demonstrate the strength and resilience of its labor market across metro areas statewide,” said Deputy Governor Andy Manar. “We remain focused on expanding opportunities that drive progress for workers, businesses, and the state as a whole.”

The metro areas which had the largest over-the-year percentage increases in total nonfarm jobs were the Champaign-Urbana MSA (+1.9%, +2,300), the Elgin Metropolitan Division (+1.3%, +3,700), the Lake County Metropolitan Division (+0.6%, +2,000), and the Rockford MSA (+0.6%, +900). Total nonfarm jobs in the Chicago- Naperville-Schaumburg Metropolitan Division were up
+10,000 (+0.3%). The metro areas which posted the largest over-the-year decreases in total nonfarm jobs were the Bloomington MSA (-2.5%, -2,400), the Decatur MSA (-2.5%, -1,200), and the Illinois section of the Davenport-Moline-Rock Island IA-IL MSA (-1.8%, -1,600). Industries that saw job growth in the majority of the twelve metro areas included: Private Education and Health Services (eleven areas); Government (eight areas); and Mining and Construction (seven areas).

The metro areas with the largest unemployment rate decreases were the Lake County Metropolitan Division (-1.6 points to 4.6%), the Rockford MSA (-1.5 points to 5.0%), and the Elgin Metropolitan Division (-1.4 points to 4.4%). The Chicago-Naperville-Schaumburg Metropolitan Division reported the only increase (+0.7 point to 5.5%).

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | The Trump administration is pressuring Illinois universities to end a diversity fellowship: Illinois universities are quietly withdrawing from a fellowship aimed at diversifying the state’s college teaching force under pressure from the Trump administration. The U.S. Department of Justice has threatened to sue campuses that take part in the Diversifying Higher Education Faculty in Illinois, or DFI, fellowship. The program is state funded and was created by Illinois lawmakers in an effort to make the state’s college teaching force look more like the Illinois student body.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Aldermen spurning Mayor Brandon Johnson’s new budget working group: ‘It points to a larger problem’: Northwest Side Ald. Ruth Cruz, 30th, told the Tribune on Wednesday she declined the invitation because she believes the best way for her to shape the city’s budget is from outside the mayor’s group. “While I appreciate the consideration, I’m concerned that this group may be more about appearances than a genuine desire for input,” said the freshman alderman, who has often voted with Johnson but recently put more distance between herself and the mayor. “We have seen it for quite some time. Input has been provided and the administration decides to continue with their original plan.”

* Brandon Johnson | We need to bring Chicagoans together to continue investing in people: As we look ahead to this year’s budget, our city faces two distinct challenges. We have a structural imbalance due to decades of neglecting our pension obligations while relying heavily on short-term fixes. At the same time, we face a presidential administration that has threatened to cut the services that Chicagoans rely upon, potentially putting an even greater strain on our municipal budget. In response to the chaos we are seeing at the federal level, we must come together as Chicagoans, roll up our sleeves, and get to work protecting our city services while taking steps to address the structural budget imbalance that has burdened Chicago taxpayers for far too long.

* Chalkbeat | Chicago’s partially-elected school board plans changes to charter school oversight: Now, the relatively new school board is proposing changes to how it handles charter oversight. A resolution on Thursday’s meeting agenda would impose new requirements on operators and is already being opposed by the Illinois Network of Charter Schools, a special interest group that lobbies on behalf of charter schools. The proposed resolution would, among other new stipulations, require operators to give the district 18 months notice of closing a school and assume financial responsibility related to the closure. It also calls on the district to lobby state lawmakers to change state law to stop charters from closing during their renewal term.

* Illinois Answers | Quiet Use of Bonuses for City Council Aides on the Rise: A review by Illinois Answers Project of publicly available payroll data for 259 ward and committee staffers found that 65 council staffers received increases in their salaries between October and December 2024, representing more than $260,000 in taxpayer funds for bonuses. At least 20 staffers saw temporary bumps of at least $5,000 in one-time payouts. The practice has expanded in recent years. In 2022, 16 aldermanic staffers got temporary pay hikes at the end of the year, records show. In 2023, 33 did.

* WTTW | Federal Judge Blocks Trump from Yanking Funding from 16 Sanctuary Cities, Counties in Ruling That Could Bolster Chicago’s Efforts: The injunction issued by U.S. District Judge William Orrick does not apply to Chicago or Cook County but is likely to bolster efforts by city officials to prevent President Donald Trump from blowing a $3 billion hole in Chicago’s budget. San Francisco officials filed the lawsuit on behalf of nine California cities and counties, including Oakland and San Diego, as well as Seattle, Minneapolis, St. Paul and Santa Fe that argued the administration was unlawfully trying to force local officials to aide federal immigration arrests conducting deportation efforts.

* Tribune | Chicago Housing Authority board member reprimanded for ‘sexually graphic conversation,’ report says: The report did not name the board member, nor did it get into the details of the incident. The “allegations of misconduct,” the report said, were received in January 2023, including that the commissioner “may have communicated inappropriately with multiple employees in public forums.” Per OIG policy, the complaint was referred to outside counsel.

* The Triibe | City sues property owners over slum conditions at South Shore building formerly managed by CKO Real Estate: Nearly two weeks after a private meeting between city officials, the property owner and residents about the unlivable conditions of the building at 6952-58 S. Paxton Ave. in South Shore, the city has filed a lawsuit against the owners of the courtyard building formerly managed by CKO Real Estate. The City of Chicago filed the complaint with the Illinois Municipal Department of the Circuit Court of Cook County on April 22, alleging that the owners of the apartment complex on Paxton Avenue failed to comply with multiple municipal codes for the city. The defendants are listed as GRV Jackson Park LLC, the owner; Merchants Bank of Indiana, the mortgage company; and unknown owners and non-record claimants.

* Crain’s | New parks chief says he’s working to keep the Bears in the city: New Chicago Park District Superintendent Carlos Ramirez-Rosa told reporters today he’s begun a relationship with Bears President Kevin Warren and echoed Mayor Brandon Johnson’s optimism the team will remain in Chicago. “The partnership that we’ve had with the Chicago Bears for decades through Soldier Field has benefited the entire city of Chicago and has benefited the Chicago Park District, and so we look forward to continuing that partnership,” he said.

* Block Club | Trilogy Nonprofit Expands To NW Side For Neighbors Seeking Therapy, Recovery Services: Trilogy Mental Wellbeing opened last month at 6200 N. Hiawatha Ave. in Sauganash. Trilogy, a Chicago-based nonprofit, offers therapy, recovery services, employment assistance, residential programs and more. Trilogy, which has been around for more than 50 years, primarily works with clients who are on Medicaid. The nonprofit has operated a location in Rogers Park for more than four decades, but it has been working to expand its reach in recent years.

* NYT | It’s OK, Chicago, Your Air Was Actually Fine on Wednesday: Readings from several popular weather apps had people across Chicago spending much of Wednesday wondering whether their air was safe to breathe — until the dangerously unhealthy levels were revealed to be a glitch.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | New Homer Glen Board OKs subdivision, park improvements: The Village Board also swore in Trustee Rose Reynders and new Trustees Michael LePore and Nicholas Muller after the April 1 election results were certified this week. The new board also advanced several recreation projects, including new lighting and an architectural design for a veterans memorial at Heritage Park. The board gave its support for the town house development proposed by Marth Construction after tabling a vote on it earlier this month. The developer plans to build the Villas of Hidden Valley consisting of 25 ranch duplex buildings for a total of 50 homes on about 21 acres of land near Hidden Valley Trail and 159th Street. The land was previously zoned for a potential commercial use.

* Fox Chicago | Lake County Jail transitions to digital mail system to prevent smuggling: Starting May 27, all personal inmate mail—including letters, photos, and drawings—must be sent to a centralized facility, where it will be scanned and delivered electronically to inmates through their tablets. The jail is partnering with TextBehind to implement the new system.

* Daily Herald | Why Lake County forest preserves wants to take lead on Route 53 corridor property and planning: More than 1,000 acres that comprise the corridor is owned by the Illinois Department of Transportation but the Illinois Department of Natural Resources has taken the lead in determining the future of the properties. The move to assume responsibilities was sparked by Jessica Vealitzek, a forest commissioner from Hawthorn Woods. Since being elected board president by her peers in December she has made securing long-term protection for the corridor a priority.

*** Downstate ***

* WIFR | Harlem Township of Winnebago County Supervisor Gary Jury dies: Harlem Township offices confirm that Supervisor Gary Jury, 82, died around 9 p.m. April 23. Jury has served as a board member of the Winnebago County Board for 14 years and chaired on the Forest Preserve, Operations and Administration, Finance, Economic Development and Public Works committees.

* WJBD | Marion County Board appoints Taxpayer Association member to open board seat: The Marion County Board has unanimously appointed one of the leaders of the Marion County Taxpayers Association to an open seat on the board. Josh Dunahee will fill the District Three seat vacated by Tyson McHenry who resigned last month due to a work scheduling problem. Dunahee grew up in Salem and returned three and a half years ago to manage the XPO freight facility in Salem.

* WCIA | Another Danville school bus involved in crash; no one hurt: Another Danville School District 118 school bus was involved in a crash Thursday morning. The Danville Police Department said a white SUV hit the school bus in the rear around 7:40 a.m. where it was stopped near the intersection of Fairchild and Jackson streets. No one was injured in the crash, and both vehicles drove away from the scene.

*** National ***

* CNBC | March home sales drop to their slowest pace since 2009: Higher mortgage rates and concern over the broader economy are making for a weak start to the all-important spring housing market. Sales of previously owned homes in March fell 5.9% from February to 4.02 million units on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, according to the National Association of Realtors. That’s the slowest March sales pace since 2009.

  6 Comments      


Today’s must-watch video

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Please take a few seconds out of your day and watch…


  6 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Pretty good joke

* The Question: Using as much snark as possible, who would you like to see run for the US Senate here? Make sure to explain your answer. Thanks.

  69 Comments      


Illinois Supreme Court upholds state venue law as applied to only one case

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background from January

The Illinois Supreme Court on Wednesday heard arguments in a case centered on whether a state law passed in 2023 violates the due process rights of Illinoisans outside Sangamon and Cook counties.

A 2023 law restricts certain types of lawsuits – namely challenges to a law’s constitutionality – to courts in those two counties. The law came in response to challenges to the state’s COVID-19 response, a state law ending cash bail and the state’s ban on assault weapons, among others.

These lawsuits – often filed in jurisdictions with sympathetic judges – became a way for some conservatives to make a name for themselves at the state level. Former governor candidate and state Sen. Darren Bailey, R-Xenia, and former attorney general candidate Thomas DeVore both backed high-profile lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of state laws. […]

The case before the Illinois Supreme Court was brought by Piasa Armory, an East Alton gun store. It challenged the constitutionality of an unrelated firearms regulation, the Firearm Industry Responsibility Act, which was also signed into law in 2023. That law subjects firearms groups to civil penalties for violating consumer protection laws.

Piasa Armory almost immediately filed a lawsuit challenging that law in Madison County, about a 30-minute drive from the gun store. The state then tried to move the case to Sangamon County – about 90 minutes from East Alton – citing the then-new law.

But a Madison County judge rejected the state’s attempt to move the case, saying that the law violated the due process rights of residents of other counties by “depriving” them of their ability to mount their best possible case.

The judge had applied his decision to the entire state, but the government argued that the Supreme Court should “rule narrowly” and apply it only to the plaintiff.

* The top court did just that today, and, for good measure, also ruled against the plaintiff

The question before us is the constitutionality of section 2-101.5 as it applies to plaintiff. […]

We initially examine the State’s contention that the circuit court effectively found section 2-101.5 facially unconstitutional by ruling that the statute violated the due process rights of all individuals who reside or were injured outside of Cook and Sangamon County. The State contends that the ruling invalidates the statute in every case where it would otherwise be enforced. We note that a party raising a facial challenge must show that the statute is unconstitutional under any possible set of facts, whereas a party raising an as-applied challenge must establish that the statute is unconstitutional as it applies to the party’s particular facts and circumstances. A successful facial challenge voids the statute, but in a successful as-applied claim, the party may enjoin the statute’s enforcement against only himself.

Here, plaintiff framed its claim in terms of its individual circumstances, but the circuit court broadened its ruling to encompass everyone residing or injured outside of the two named counties. The fact that the circuit court’s ruling encompassed more than just plaintiff was not a de facto declaration that the statute was facially unconstitutional. In fact, plaintiff and the circuit court expressly acknowledged that the statute would be constitutional in certain applications, which would defeat a facial challenge. By definition, an as-applied constitutional claim depends on the particular facts and circumstances of the party asserting the claim, so an examination of plaintiff’s particular situation remains paramount. […]

In the instant case, the circuit court largely considered the “convenience” of Madison County and the “inconvenience” of Sangamon County as a forum for plaintiff in determining that the first two Mathews factors weighed heavily in plaintiff’s favor. The relative convenience of each forum is central in considering a motion filed pursuant to the equitable doctrine of forum non conveniens. However, a forum non conveniens motion “seeks to move the action from one forum with proper venue to another, more convenient forum with proper venue.” The doctrine of forum non conveniens may therefore be applied only when there is more than one proper venue. It is not the correct test here, where the question is whether a statute limiting venue for certain types of constitutional actions against the State violates a plaintiff’s due process rights. We further note that section 2-101.5(b) explicitly states that “[t]he doctrine of forum non conveniens does not apply to actions subject to this Section.” […]

Plaintiff’s underlying case is a facial constitutional challenge of section 2BBBB of the Act. It will therefore most likely be resolved without a trial and thus without the need for witnesses to travel to any courthouse, as well as without much, if any, documentary evidence. As for the additional driving time for counsel, even in a forum non conveniens analysis, counsel’s location is given little weight. Moreover, counsel has the option to appear remotely for hearings, and witnesses may appear remotely under certain circumstances as well. […]

We conclude that the State has some interest in consolidating actions in certain counties, especially in light of recent statewide litigation asserting duplicative constitutional claims. … Still, the State’s interest is not extremely strong given that the Attorney General’s office was previously able to manage the litigation under general venue principles. As we observed in Williams, the Attorney General has satellite offices throughout Illinois and routinely litigates in every county in the state.

Balancing all of the Mathews factors ultimately yields the conclusion that section 2-101.5 is not unconstitutional as applied specifically to plaintiff because requiring plaintiff to litigate in Sangamon County does not deprive it of the opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner. The inconvenience asserted by plaintiff is insufficient for a due process claim, especially considering that Sangamon County is only one hour further, that this case will almost certainly be resolved without trial, and that remote appearances are possible. We recognize that the Attorney General could also appear remotely, but the government’s interest extends beyond the convenience of appearing in - 12 - particular courtrooms, as it seeks to more efficiently handle the type of constitutional case that plaintiff has filed here. Further, the parties are not starting off on an equal footing in the balancing test because the legislature has the power to determine venue (Mapes, 363 Ill. at 230) and we generally do not “interfere with the legislature’s province in determining where venue is proper” […]

(T)hough litigating in Sangamon County may be less convenient for plaintiff than litigating in Madison County, it clearly does not rise to the level of an unconstitutional deprivation of due process.

This was a 6-1 decision, with Justice Overstreet dissenting. Overstreet essentially argued for a much more broad decision, instead of this narrow path.

  6 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chicago Reader

All Ed Cetwinski could think was, “God, I’m out of prison. I can live my life a little bit.” He had just been released from Taylorville Correctional Center after five years behind bars. But even though he’s free from his prison cell, he’s still not free.

Most criminal convictions in Illinois include a period of mandatory supervised release (MSR). It’s like parole, but it’s served as part of a prison sentence rather than in lieu of it. People on MSR must adhere to a litany of conditions, like curfews enforced by electronic monitors. For most people, it lasts from one to three years, but for Cetwinski, it’s not clear how long his MSR term will last.

People convicted of certain sex offenses, like Cetwinski, are required to be on MSR for anywhere from three years to the rest of their lives. But there’s an issue: a permanent address is a requirement for supervised release, and Illinois’s housing banishment laws make it nearly impossible to find housing. […]

The Chicago 400, a grassroots organization of people subject to public conviction registries in Illinois and their allies, is pushing legislation to shrink the size of the housing banishment zone and prevent people from being forced to move if a day care opens nearby. The proposal has yet to be heard in committee, the first step in the legislative session that ends in late May; multiple people involved in negotiations, who are not authorized to speak publicly, say conversations are ongoing.

* Capitol News Illinois

Protesters flooded the rotunda of the Illinois Statehouse earlier this month, urging legislators to increase wages for caregivers of individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The ‘They Deserve More’ coalition — representing advocacy organizations, families and over 90 agencies providing community care — is asking that these direct support personnel, or DSPs, receive at least 150% of Illinois’ minimum wage.

The coalition is also seeking to avoid a cut to state-funded DSP service hours that would result from a provision in Gov. JB Pritzker’s proposed budget for the Illinois Department of Human Services. […]

Demonstrators called for support for two bills moving through the Illinois General Assembly, House Bill 2788 and Senate Bill 1690, which propose raising the base wage for DSPs. Both bills failed to clear the legislature ahead of recent deadlines, but matters pertaining to state funding are generally included in the end-of-session budget package.

Edwina Hernandez, a DSP Recruiter at Cornerstone Services in Joliet, says her agency has trouble providing services to disabled residents due to employee retention challenges. DSPs are the individuals who provide daily personal care such as assisting individuals with eating, grooming and dressing.

“We do have a lot of workers out there who have a heart to serve and a heart to help the community. It’s just the pay,” Hernandez said at the demonstration.

* House Republicans…

On Wednesday, three Illinois House Republicans, who also work as family farmers, held a Capitol news conference to highlight legislation they are sponsoring to support Illinois’ agriculture industry. Specifically, State Representatives Dan Swanson (R-Alpha), Jason R. Bunting (R-Emington), and Wayne Rosenthal (R-Morrisonville) have sponsored legislation they say will help save family farms in Illinois.

State Rep. Dan Swanson is a 6th-generation family farmer near Alpha, Illinois. His family raises various crops and livestock. Swanson says Illinois must do more to preserve agriculture for the future. Swanson has sponsored HB 1501, legislation that creates an income tax credit for the owner of an agricultural asset who sells or rents that asset to a beginning farmer.

“There are young people in Illinois right now who want to get started in farming, but don’t always have the opportunity,” Swanson said. “We need to get that next generation up and running in agriculture. Unfortunately, my bill wasn’t called before the required deadline. We need to get serious about preserving the future of agriculture in Illinois.”

State Rep. Jason R. Bunting operates a family farm in Emington in rural Livingston County. Rep. Bunting noted the very real and dangerous conditions that farmers encounter in several aspects of their work. Rep. Bunting is sponsoring House Resolution 29, which would designate the week of September 15-21, 2025, as Farm Safety Week. Bunting also noted two other bills that would emulate Scott’s Law, which requires drivers to move over and slow down for stopped emergency vehicles. Bunting’s HB 3204 and HB 3205 would make Scott’s Law provisions applicable to farm implements.

“My bill would require drivers to make room for farm equipment on the roads so they can safely pass the equipment,” Bunting said. “This legislation would make the road safer for farmers, and for every other Illinoisan who drives the rural roads of this state, so that we can all make it home safely to our families.”

State Rep. Wayne Rosenthal is the former Director of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources and a 4th-generation family farmer. Rosenthal argued for the Illinois estate tax exemption to be raised to help save family farms from double taxation.

“I know first-hand what this unfair estate tax means to my family and to every other family farm in Illinois,” Rosenthal said. “This isn’t just a tax, it’s a threat to our way of life. Too often, I have heard from families, friends, and neighbors who have been hit hard by this unfair tax. Illinois estate taxes are levied on farm owners when they pass on. Unlike monetary assets that can be moved, land cannot, so our family farms are penalized. Illinois has not adjusted the estate tax on farmland in more than a decade. Inflation has risen, and we haven’t made the necessary changes to our estate tax. We still have time to fix this problem this Session, we need to get to work so we can save Illinois family farms.”

* WAND

The Illinois House Education Policy Committee approved a bill Wednesday to stop police from giving tickets and citations to students for breaking school rules. […]

Lawmakers and advocates filed this plan after ProPublica found 11,800 tickets were handed to students from 2019 to 2022.

“The goal of the bill is to basically say that if it is minor enough to be a municipal violation like vaping or minor fights, keep it in the school,” said Aimee Galvin from Stand for Children Illinois. “School is a unique environment for offering discipline, unlike a business. If something happens at Walgreens, they don’t have an after school detention or say ‘you can’t come to the dance.’” [….]

The legislation passed out of committee on a 9-3 vote and now moves to the House floor for further consideration. Senate Bill 1519 passed out of the Senate on a 37-17 vote earlier this month.

* Center Square

The Illinois House Ethics & Elections Committee met Tuesday evening to discuss the Safeguard Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act. […]

The ethics & elections committee also discussed several election-related bills currently under consideration in the Statehouse.

State Rep. Nabeela Syed, D-Palatine, said she proposed HB 1445 to make polling places accessible for young voters.

“It makes me excited that we have a potential opportunity to make it easier for young voters to have a say in their political process and feel like they are deciding their future and they are deciding the people that elect them,” Syed said. […]

State Rep. Adbelnasser Rashid, D-Bridgeview, proposed House Bill 2998, which provides that all local election authorities shall post requirements and qualifications for running for local offices and petition filing deadlines on the website of the local election authority.

* Fox 2 Now

An Illinois bill that would ban that would ban schools from using Native American names, mascots and logos has passed the Illinois House and is now under review in the Senate. […]

For decades, Collinsville High School has used a “Kahok” mascot name. The name represents a fictional Native American tribe, and many school leaders view it as a symbol of local identity and heritage.
Dr. Mark Skertich, superintendent for the Collinsville School District, issued a public statement on April 10 outlining the district’s stance. The statement reads, in part:

“Our Collinsville High School Kahok mascot is a treasured part of our local community. Our district is home to the Cahokia Mounds World Heritage and State Historic Site, which is located where a large, influential Native American city once stood. Artifacts indicate it was the center of Mississippian culture in its day.

In 2020, our district received a formal written endorsement from the Western Cherokee Nation of Arkansas and Missouri to continue using our Kahok mascot. Their support is based on their belief that the people of the Western Cherokee could be descended from the Cahokia mound builders.”

  19 Comments      


A conversation with the Rabbi helping rebuild Jacksonville’s downtown

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Illinois Times last year

He tools around town in a pickup truck with the license plate “Rabbi R.” He has bought several downtown buildings and is transforming them into retail, entertainment and living spaces. He’s going to bring actual World War II tanks to town and have them fire off a few rounds. He’ll even officiate at a wedding from time to time.

Just who is this man who has in a very short time left an indelible mark on the Jacksonville community?

Meet Rabbi Rob Thomas, 57, a native son of Jacksonville who has returned to his hometown with a mission as bold as the rumbling tanks he likes to drive in his spare time. That mission is to address two chief concerns among current community leaders – the need for more housing and entertainment opportunities. […]

Thomas, an ordained rabbi, is practicing what he preaches with the purchase and rehabilitation of four downtown Jacksonville buildings. The former Kresge Store building on the southeast corner of the square now houses Pizza Records, a retail and entertainment establishment, on the ground floor with two apartments being developed above. A similar plan with retail, restaurant or entertainment establishments below and residential units above is underway for the Andre & Andre Building, formerly the site of Sears; the former Osco Building known locally as the “green monster” and a red brick corner building at 201 E. Morgan St.

“This is the sort of thing that feeds on itself,” Thomas said. “You’ve got a critical mass of people living on the square; therefore, the square needs services for them of every type.”

* The governor was in Jacksonville earlier this week to award the city a $2 million downtown development grant. Pritzker has also included funding in his budget to tear down the abandoned Jacksonville Developmental Center. Rabbi Thomas attended the event and Rich talked to him about his downtown revitalization project…

Rich: How much longer do you think it’s going to be before this task is complete?

Rabbi Thomas: Oh, It’ll never be done. As it says in the Talmud ‘It is not for us to desist from the work, neither are we expected to complete it.’

Rich: Do you have a ballpark of how much you put in?

Thomas: I know an exact figure.

Rich: Can I ask you to tell me what that is?

Thomas: It’s a lot more than you think. […]

Rich: Do you really feel that Jacksonville is going to be back?

Thomas: Since COVID, you can work anywhere. Here’s the key bit of infrastructure you need, high capacity internet. So in the back of that Andre & Andre building (Thomas pointed across the square) is more fiber than you can get in downtown Chicago or downtown Manhattan. I dragged it all in there. And in the back of that building is Google, Netflix, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, I could keep going. I brought them all in.

Rich: So do they have servers over there?

Thomas: Yeah, I’ve got a network Point of Presence (PoP) […] And that connects all over the world to bring in that connectivity. So if you come here and you’ve got a tech or technical business. I need 1,000 lane highway but I need to be 10 feet long anywhere I want to go? Jacksonville. At a much lower cost of living, much more pleasant in many ways.

Rich: You can get a really nice house here.

Thomas: That’s exactly right. So you don’t have to go to Manhattan or Chicago. Come here, buy a lovely home. Maybe you want to fix up a home […] Maybe you want to move into a home. We’ve got options.

* You can kind of see the governor amidst the crowd (President of the Morgan County Democrats Judith Nelson said she sent out a blast email to members), but you can really see four colorful buildings owned by Thomas, who said the top floors will get turned into residential space…

Thomas is the chairman and CEO of Team Cymru, a cybersecurity company. According to the Illinois Times, “Thomas became a venture capitalist investing primarily in tech companies.”

* The event was held next to the Strawn Opera House, another one of Thomas’ projects. Journal Courier

Jacksonville developers are aiming to resurrect an iconic 163-year-old opera house in downtown Jacksonville.

Rabbi Rob and Lauren Thomas took ownership Thursday of the property at 31 S. Central Park Plaza that housed Strawn Opera House. The couple says they plan on rebuilding the opera house to what it looked like when it opened in the mid-19th century. […]

Missouri author Mark Twain spoke at the building on Feb. 1, 1869, during which he delivered a speech on “The American Vandal Abroad.” Irish poet Oscar Wilde delivered a lecture at the hall on March 7, 1882, which the Journal-Courier — then the Jacksonville Journal — reported on the following day.

“Doubtless in his travels in this country Oscar Wilde has had the pleasure of lecturing to larger audiences than the one assembled at the Opera House last night,” the paper said. “But then again, it has been his lot on not a few occasions to face a larger proportion of empty seats that greeted him upon his appearance here.”

The opera house burned down on June 27, 1889. The building erected in its stead had its roof collapse more than a century later in May 1988, leading to its second floor being removed.

Rabbi Thomas told us yesterday that one addition to the opera house, not included in the original designs, will be a clock tower—“because every square should have a clock tower.”

* Thomas and his wife Lauren pose in front of the future opera house…

  12 Comments      


Healing Communities: Illinois Hospitals Support Individual And Community Health And Well-being

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Every hour of every day, Illinois hospitals provide lifesaving care to the communities they serve. Care delivery within their facilities is at the core of what hospitals do—but it’s not all they do. Illinois hospitals prove indispensable to communities by looking at healthcare, health and well-being from several vantage points. Watch our video about how hospitals are working outside their four walls.


Most people don’t see the critical care hospitals provide 24/7 or how hospitals are partnering with local organizations and investing in communities. Yet their benefit to the community is everywhere. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.

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Open thread

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* People

Carlos Santana was rushed to the hospital ahead of his San Antonio show.

In a statement obtained by PEOPLE, a representative for Santana, 77, confirmed that the guitarist will postpone the show at the Majestic Theater scheduled for tonight, Tuesday, April 22.

Michael Vrionis, president of Universal Tone Management and a representative for Santana, said, “It is with profound disappointment that I have to inform you all that tonight’s show in San Antonio has been postponed. Mr. Santana was at the venue (Majestic Theatre) preparing for tonight’s show when he experienced an event that was determined to be dehydration. Out of an abundance of caution and the health of Mr. Santana, the decision to postpone the show was the most prudent course of action.”

He continued, “He is doing well and is looking forward to coming back to San Antonio soon as well as continuing his US Tour. Thank you all very much for your understanding. The show will be rescheduled soon.”

* Soul Sacrifice

What’s up by you?

  10 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study were clear — the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like the Boyer family in Quincy enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Joins 11 Other States in Suing the Trump Administration Over ‘Tax Hikes’ Through Tariffs. CNN

    - The lawsuit seeks a court order to halt the tariffs under International Emergency Economic Powers Act, saying Trump does not have the authority he claims he does.
    - “In the nearly five decades since IEEPA was enacted, no other President has imposed tariffs based on the existence of any national emergency, despite global anti-narcotics campaigns spearheaded by the United States and longstanding trade deficits,” the lawsuit argued.
    - The coalition of states joins other groups that have sued the Trump administration on tariffs. A group of small U.S. businesses filed a lawsuit last week.

* Related stories…

* The race is on: Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton announced she will run for Durbin’s Senate seat this morning. Our coverage is here.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Stellantis still on track to reopen Belvidere plant, as automakers adjust for tariffs: “The launch timing for the plant has not changed,” Stellantis spokesperson Jodi Tinson said in a statement. “We’ll honor the timing indicated in the 2023 Collective Bargaining Agreement, so still expecting to launch in 2027.” The reopening of the idle Belvidere plant was announced in January, alongside plans to build a new Dodge Durango at its Detroit Assembly Complex. In addition to Dodge, Stellantis owns brands such as Chrysler, Jeep and Ram.

* Sun-Times | Jurors say they are stuck in bribery trial of Illinois Sen. Emil Jones III: “At this point, it doesn’t look like the jury can reach a unanimous agreement on Counts 1 and 3,” one of their notes read. “Is there any assistance that can be provided?” Prosecutors have leveled three criminal charges against Jones. Count 1 is the substantive bribery charge. Count 2 accuses the senator of using an email account to facilitate bribery. And Count 3 accuses him of lying to the FBI.

* Sen. Dick Durbin | Why I chose to retire: The challenges facing the Senate with this new administration are historic. They go to the heart of our democracy, and I am anxious to be part of that debate. I can assure you that I will continue to do everything in my power to fight for Illinois and the future of our nation every day of my remaining time in Senate service.

*** Statehouse News ***

* NBC | Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker takes steps to boycott El Salvador in protest of Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s detention: In a release, Pritzker’s office said that it had directed various Illinois pension funds to review whether they are invested in any companies that are based in El Salvador and that it had ordered the Illinois Department of Central Management Services to evaluate whether any state procurement contracts have been granted to companies based in or controlled by El Salvador.

* Center Square | Calls grow for reforms to Illinois’ mass transit systems before awarding funding: With a massive funding shortfall on the horizon, the Illinois Chamber of Commerce is calling on state lawmakers to enact reforms for the state’s mass transit systems before considering funding. The chamber released a report that contains business principles for mass transit reform. Some of the recommendations include prioritizing public safety and making sure the business community has a seat at the table in future policy making.

*** Statewide ***

* Illinois Times | A loss for Illinois farmers and food banks: The decision to eliminate federal funding for programs that support farmers and food banks goes against the Trump administration’s commitment to “Make America Healthy Again” according to advocates for local producers and nonprofit hunger abatement organizations. The U.S. Department of Agriculture in February cut two federal programs, the Local Food for Schools program and the Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement, that collectively received about $1 billion in funding nationwide. The LFPA buys fresh products from farmers at a fair market value, then distributes the food to communities through local food pantries. The USDA has since decided to let the remaining 2024 LFPA contract be spent but has canceled the LFPA contract for July 1 through June 30, 2026.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | McLean County health providers worry about Medicaid cuts: “I’m concerned. I’m alarmed. I’m scared by what I hear, by what this administration is trying to do,” said Democratic U.S. Rep. Eric Sorensen, who represents parts of Bloomington-Normal and Greater Peoria. […] Chestnut Health Systems CEO Dave Sharar said federal money is 60% of Chestnut’s budget, and 70% of its clients are on Medicaid. He said that could threaten Chestnut’s integrated care model.

* Capitol News Illinois | State reports first measles case in southern Illinois: The measles diagnosis involving an adult in far southern Illinois was confirmed through laboratory testing, according to a press release sent out by IDPH. […] “This is not considered an outbreak at this time. IDPH will update the public should there be any notable developments,” the release stated.

* WSIL | Mt. Vernon Airport honors Everett Atkinson; WWII hero passes at 102: The Mt. Vernon Airport is mourning the loss of Evertt Atkinson, a cherished member of the community. Airport officials said Atkinson passed away on Easter Sunday at the age of 102, marking the end of an era for the airport and its community. Airport officials shared some details about his life. Atkinson was a distinguished World War II aviator who started with just a high school education and worked his way up to become an Aircraft Commander in the Boeing B-29 “Superfortress.”

* WJBD | Salem’s new Police Chief sworn in: After being sworn in, Boles addressed those gathered in the city council chambers. “My family is from here,” he said. “My parents were born and raised here. It’s an honor to be here. It’s kind of why I chose here, and we’re going to raise our son here. Thank you for the welcome, and everybody showing up. Everybody’s been great. I love the town and the small town vibe, and I’m happy to be here.”

*** Chicago ***

* ABC Chicago | ABC7 I-Team gets exclusive 1st look at massive Illinois solar farm powering Chicago: On a swath of land about three-and-a-half hours southwest of downtown Chicago, on what was once soybean fields, sits a farm of a different kind: 1.6 million solar panels sprouting up, now helping to power the city. Considered the largest solar park east of the Mississippi, Double Black Diamond’s nearly 4,000 acres straddles both Sangamon and Morgan counties in central Illinois.

* WTTW | Long-Stalled Push for Reparations in Chicago Moving Forward, Johnson Says: A task force formed by Mayor Brandon Johnson nearly a year ago to determine whether and how the city should pay reparations to Chicagoans who are the descendants of enslaved African Americans will start meeting this summer to craft a plan to tackle the thorny issue. The 40-member task force will be charged with developing “Chicago’s first comprehensive reparations study, a critical step forward in acknowledging, addressing and repairing generations of harm experienced by Black communities,” according to a statement from the mayor’s office.

* Sun-Times | ‘How can we help?’ Go to Little Village and chow down on great Mexican food: ICE raids have frightened Little Village residents away from local businesses. Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza is asking their neighbors to fill the void.

* Block Club Chicago | West Side Legal Center’s New HQ Includes Apartments For Restorative Justice Program: The Lawndale Christian Legal Center’s Dr. Dennis Deer Community Justice Center opened Tuesday at 1449 S. Keeler Ave. The $22.5 million multi-use location will function as the central office for the free legal practice to meet with clients and provide referrals to social services. On average, the legal practice sees 300 clients annually. The Deer Center will also offer 20 free apartments to men ages 18 to 25 years old who are sentenced to probation in Cook County Circuit Court as an alternative to incarceration.

* Sun-Times | Steve McMichael, former Bears star and Hall of Famer, dies at 67: In a statement, Bears chairman George McCaskey said it was a “cruel irony that the Bears’ Ironman succumbed” to ALS. The man known as “Mongo” and “Ming the Merciless,” a player with crackling energy and a nonstop mouth who played a record 191 games for the Bears, was robbed of the ability to speak and move. It was almost as though he was being mummified, fellow Hall of Famer Dan Hampton said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Highland Park parade shooter’s sentencing to extend to second day: The daylong hearing also included testimony from over a dozen victims and their families about how their lives had been irreversibly changed since the attack on July 4, 2022, which left seven dead and 48 people wounded. “How do you rebuild a life when it’s been shattered?” Sheila Gutman, who was struck by a bullet in her foot in the attack, told the court.

* Daily Herald | ‘Heavy and heartbreaking’: Highland Park survivors testify as sentencing begins: In a statement read by his daughter, the widower of victim Jacquelyn “Jacki” Sundheim described the pain of his wife’s loss as “fresh, visceral and sometimes too much to bear.” Bruce Sundheim also berated the absent murderer for his “wanton cruelty” and wished him “a life filled with torment, pain and regret.”

* Daily Herald | Barrington breaks ground on long-awaited Route 14 underpass: Several Barrington area dignitaries attended the groundbreaking for the underpass, which will stretch from Valencia Avenue to Hough Street, running underneath the Canadian National Railway tracks. The underpass aims to alleviate traffic congestion and improve emergency response times by separating vehicle and rail traffic. Construction is expected to conclude by July 2027.

* Daily Herald | Smackdown at village hall: Elk Grove mayor wrestles with trash talk, agrees to tag team match: In a spectacle that had all the theatrics of professional wrestling, Elk Grove Village Mayor Craig Johnson accepted a challenge at a village board meeting this week to a summer slugfest. The battle royale involving the colorful seven-term mayor — a former high school wrestling coach — will be part of a series of matches in the ring at this summer’s Elk Grove Rotary Fest.

* Shaw Local | Downers Grove native still on road to COVID recovery: In the five years since the U.S. first reeled from COVID-19, leaving no one unscathed, the novel coronavirus has remained all too familiar to one Downers Grove native, former village commissioner Rich Kulovany. “Family became so much more important after all of this,” Kulovany said.

*** National ***

* WaPo | Trump orders changes to civil rights rules, college accreditation: Separately, Trump signed another order that also dealt with the enforcement of civil rights law as it relates to racial disparities in school discipline. The Biden administration had advised school districts that they may be in violation of civil rights law if they unfairly discipline students from different groups. The new executive order revokes the Biden-era discipline guidance.

* The Atlantic | Tesla’s Remarkably Bad Quarter Is Even Worse Than It Looks: Yesterday evening, Tesla reported first-quarter earnings for 2025, and they were abysmal: Profits dropped 71 percent from the same time last year. Musk sounded bitter on the call with investors that followed, blaming the company’s misfortune on protesters who have raged at Tesla dealerships around the world over his role running DOGE and his ardent support of far-right politicians. “The protests that you’ll see out there, they’re very organized. They’re paid for,” he said, without evidence.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Repeal IFPA Now

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Jody Dabrowski, CEO of Illinois Educators CU:
IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities.
“My members would be so frustrated.”
Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Educators!

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Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton announces Senate run (Updated x3)

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Yesterday, Sen. Dick Durbin said at least a dozen names have expressed interest in his seat. Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton was the first out of the gate this morning to declare her candidacy

* Sun-Times

Stratton currently oversees the administration’s Justice, Equity and Opportunity Initiative and chairs the board of the Restore, Reinvest and Renew Program, which reinvests a portion of cannabis tax revenue into communities experiencing high rates of shootings, unemployment, child poverty and incarceration.

Her campaign touted her work in the Ag Connects Us All Initiative, which helped to highlight the ways in which the agriculture industry could address inequities and food security. It’s also been a way for her to stay connected to the more rural areas of the state.

Last year, Stratton led a Black maternal health initiative that invested $15 million in closing the maternal mortality gap through expanding home visits, capital dollars for community-birth centers, a free diaper program and a child tax credit for low-income families.

Among the potential contenders, Stratton can boast that she’s a statewide official — meaning she’s traveled across the state and has had a visible presence at events with Pritzker for more than six years. She can also take credit for many progressive policies passed during Pritzker’s two terms, including expanded abortion care, an assault weapons ban and raising the minimum wage. That may also serve as easy fodder for a Republican opponent, who could challenge her on some of the administration’s most liberal policies.

…Adding… The Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association…

(DLGA) endorses Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton in her campaign to represent Illinois in the U.S. Senate. With the endorsement, the DLGA is proud to commit seven figures in support of her campaign.

DLGA Chair and Pennsylvania Lt. Governor Austin Davis released the following statement:

“The Democratic Lt. Governors Association is proud to commit to making an impactful investment to support Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton in her run as Illinois’ next U.S. Senator. Democratic lieutenant governors are the Democratic Party’s bench, and with these types of investments, we look forward to helping to elect the next generation of Governors and Senators across the country.”

…Adding… Governor Pritzker was asked about the announcement at an unrelated news conference this morning…

Reporter: Your colleague, Juliana Stratton, Lieutenant Governor, has announced her bid for US Senate to take over the Dick Durbin seat, what’s your reaction to that? And do you plan on endorsing her for Senator Durbin’s seat as his successor.

Pritzker: I apologize to my colleagues for the off topic question. […] In Illinois our senior Senator Dick Durbin announced his retirement yesterday. Our Lieutenant Governor in Illinois announced this morning that she’s going to be running for US Senate.

Well, I think you know, Jeremy, how I feel about her, and she is truly one of the most accomplished people that’s ever held the job of Lieutenant Governor. She’s done so much as a partner in governance of the state. As you know, I think very highly of her. She’s somebody who not only cares deeply, is passionate and compassionate, but again, highly accomplished.

That’s all I can say for now. And you know, I just, I feel strongly about her, and think very highly of her, and I think the voters will too.

…Adding… Earlier this month, Congressman Krishnamoorthi announced he had $19 million cash on hand

Thoughts?

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Apr 24, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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