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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…

For the second time in recent weeks, Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias has uncovered that Illinois license plate camera data has been shared with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and has ordered that access be shut off.

In its continued effort to expand the auditing process for automated license plate reader (ALPR) systems, Giannoulias’ office discovered that the Motorola Solutions technology was being utilized by the Village of Forest Park’s Police Department to give CBP access to its license plate camera data. Motorola has since worked with Forest Park to shut off and disable the data sharing capabilities with CBP and other federal agencies at the direction of the Secretary of State’s office.

This comes off the heels of last week’s announcement where the audit conducted by Giannoulias’ office uncovered that Flock Safety, operator of the largest automated license plate reader system in the nation, had allowed CBP to access Illinois license plate cameras. Following the discovery, Giannoulias ordered the company to shut off access to CBP immediately. In addition, Flock has since paused a nationwide pilot project and data sharing with CBP and other federal agencies.

* Sun-Times

Deploying National Guard troops to Chicago could cost taxpayers nearly $1.6 million per day, according to a nonpartisan federal budget research organization.

The estimate is based on 3,000 troops potentially being sent to Chicago, though no official number has been made public.

The National Priorities Project, a research group that’s part of the progressive nonprofit Institute for Policy Studies, used a figure of $530 per Guard member per day, which was the estimated cost in 2020 when National Guard members were deployed to Washington, D.C., during protests following the death of George Floyd.

The ultimate price tag for a Chicago deployment would be affected by factors such as the pay scale of individual National Guard members and whether the government provides them with housing, said Hanna Homestead, a research analyst with the National Priorities Project.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Security fencing at Chicago’s federal courthouse an early sign of Trump immigration push: The fencing, which surrounds the high-rise courthouse at 219 S. Dearborn St. and is buttressed by concrete barriers, offers added protection should protests break out across the street at Federal Plaza, officials said. The block has been the site of numerous rallies challenging Trump administration initiatives, particularly immigration. Anyone seeking to enter the courthouse Friday morning was being directed to a single entrance through the fence on the northeast corner of Dearborn and Monroe streets. Once past it, however, there was no additional visible security inside the building.

* Sun-Times | Volunteers on ICE patrol in Pilsen, looking for agents: Cepeda and the other patrollers are among the many residents and advocates hoping to prevent or stop federal officials from making arrests by warning families of ICE sightings. Cepeda says they scout alleyways, parking lots and the main streets around the schools while parents are dropping off or waiting for their kids. The idea is to sound the alarm if they spot ICE or other federal agents before they can start making arrests. Their main focus now is around Pilsen schools, but Cepeda says they also want to help protect churches, community organizations and businesses, like restaurants and car washes.

* WTTW | CPS Rebuffs Remote Learning Calls, Says School Remains ‘Best and Safest’ Place for Students Amid ICE and National Guard Fears: “Our students are finalizing their third week of the school year, and our focus remains on teaching and learning,” a CPS spokesperson said in a statement. “Schools are consistently following established procedures to welcome students, provide in-person instruction, and keep families informed of any updates. We remain committed to making sure every CPS school is a safe and supportive place for students each day.”

* Tribune | With Chicago under a microscope, anti-violence group responds to mass shootings in Bronzeville: “I can tell you we’re going to continue to do our job,” said Bamani Obadele, community engagement director for Acclivus, Inc., a community organization that provides violence intervention programs to help people in Chicago’s most vulnerable neighborhoods. “We’re not taking any days off.” City violence data reviewed by the Tribune found that, after last weekend, 10 mass shootings have occurred in Bronzeville since the start of 2019. Cook County court records indicate charges have not been filed in any.

* Crain’s | Free health care clinic moves to shield patients from ICE ahead of surge: CEO Stephanie Wilding said today Community Health’s strategy to ensure patients get access to health care, and stay safe doing it, includes encouraging telehealth visits, using its partnership with Uber Health to transport patients to its flagship clinic, coordinating access to medications and “having someone at the door of our facility to ensure only patients, their companions and those with appointments” are the only ones let in.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s invisible property owners: Like many tenants, Carter knew the name of his property management company. But he didn’t know the names of the people who hired them: the investors ultimately accountable for the caved-in bathroom ceiling, the recurring heat shut-offs and litany of other building code violations he had endured in the past two years. […] In some cases, the anonymity that LLCs provide makes it next to impossible to find out what other buildings a landlord owns, impeding the city’s ability to go after neglectful property owners in a systematic way.

* Crain’s | Re/Max stakes claim in North Shore turf war: The acquisition of one real estate mega-brokerage by another created an opportunity for a third brokerage to dive into the lucrative North Shore market. Compass, the national powerhouse that acquired Chicago market leader @properties Christie’s International Real Estate in December, is selling offices that were made redundant in five North Shore towns. Janice Corley, who owns five Re/Max brokerages in Chicago and the suburbs, is doubling that number by buying the Compass offices in Winnetka, Glencoe, Highland Park, Lake Forest and Glenview, she announced Sept. 3.

* Block Club | Harvest Moon Walk Aims To Shine A Light On Avondale’s Forgotten Riverfront History: “As a city of industry, before there were rails, it was water. That was the transportation network and a vital link between the nation, connecting the Great Lakes Basin all the way to the Gulf of Mexico in New Orleans,” Pogorzelski said. “It played such a pivotal role — but what made it so attractive to industry kept residents away.” The free walk will begin 7 p.m. Sunday at Burning Bush Brewery, 4014 N. Rockwell St., and organizers ask that those interested RSVP on Facebook for a headcount. The walk should last 70-90 minutes, but participants can leave whenever they want, organizers said.

* NBC Chicago | Nearly 100 cars found in Chicago River amid search for missing couple: A crew of divers from downstate Illinois were searching for a missing couple from the 1970s when they uncovered something else beneath the water’s surface. The search efforts, which had been ongoing for at least a week, saw divers come across nearly 100 cars in the river. […] As of Thursday afternoon, the group said it had discovered 97 vehicles, though it anticipates topping 100 shortly. Crews had been in the water searching for Edward and Stefanie Andrews, a married couple who went missing on May 15, 1970. The couple disappeared after leaving a dinner party and crews were searching the water to see if their vehicle may have gone into the River that night. “We’ve searched extensively downtown, as well as other teams throughout the years. Unfortunately, they’ve never been found,” Bussick said. “But we wanted to expand our search in the event that he was confused that night.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘You are not alone’: Suburban communities try to reassure residents ahead of threatened immigration raids: Mundelein, North Chicago and Lake County officials have issued online statements emphasizing their law enforcement officers won’t participate in federal immigration activities. The statements also stress that anyone living in the U.S. has legal rights regardless of citizenship status, and they provided links to groups that can provide information or assistance regarding immigration issues. Aurora officials on Friday emphasized their commitment to the city’s immigrant population ahead of a Mexican historical and cultural celebration scheduled for this weekend.

* Daily Herald | Trump’s National Guard threats upend Mexican parade plans in Waukegan, Chicago: One Mexican Independence Day parade in the Chicago area is postponed. Another doubled its volunteer staff to ensure celebrators’ safety. A third parade’s organizers are watching closely, poised to pivot if the political climate worsens. President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he plans to deploy National Guard troops to Chicago, casting a shadow over the region’s upcoming Mexican Independence Day festivities. The Sept. 16 holiday is usually a time of joy in the Chicago area, where more than 20% of the city’s population is Mexican. Now, community leaders are trying to balance residents’ safety and their cultural celebration.

* Daily Herald | Fox River Grove adds sales tax, plans to lower other fees and taxes: Fox River Grove will add a 1% sales tax starting next year, with officials planning to reduce other taxes and fees for residents to offset the new tax. Board trustees agreed in a 5-1 vote Tuesday to enact a 1% non-home-rule sales tax, with Trustee David Joseph being the sole no vote. At the same meeting, trustees also unanimously approved substantial cuts to a telecommunications tax imposed on residents and businesses.

* Daily Southtown | Lansing District 171 teachers’ union to pay custodian $110,000 in racial discrimination lawsuit settlement: The Sunnybrook Educational Association agreed to pay District 171 custodian Eugene Johnson $110,000 after Johnson alleged the union discriminated against him when it contested his promotion to head custodian in November 2018. […] District 171 Superintendent Erika Millhouse-Pettis said, as of Friday, the union had not made the district aware of the consent decree reached with the EEOC. She confirmed Johnson was not promoted since the union grieved his promotion to head janitor in 2018.

* Evanston Roundtable | Evanston on track to meet greenhouse gas reduction goals: The task force and city staff members agreed in July to put together a presentation that would focus on goals Evanston was supposed to meet in 2025 and earlier, as well as some goals that don’t have a firm timeline. As the RoundTable previously reported, the city has a mixed record of meeting CARP goals. It did not fully meet most of them for 2025, though it saw more progress on some than others, according to a presentation at the June 12 Environmental Board meeting.

*** Downstate ***

* ProPublica | The Floods Kept Coming. He Needed to Grow a Crop That Would Thrive in Water — or to Quit: Corn, soy and wheat were the crops Gerard, now 55, was growing in the early 1990s when he took over his family farm near the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. By then, the floods were already coming more often. Gerard’s grandfather remembered them in 1943 and 1973, but as Gerard began farming, they came every two years — in ’93, ’95 and ’97. […] “I could grow something that would grow in water,” he said. Or quit. But for many farmers, making the transition to a new crop is nearly impossible, as ProPublica and Capitol News Illinois reported this week. Although rice is a commodity crop and Gerard receives insurance subsidies and commodity supports, corn and soybeans dominate U.S. agriculture, especially in the Midwest, and that’s what federal subsidies are set up to support.

* Manufacturing Dive | Boeing begins hiring to replace striking workers at Missouri, Illinois plants: Boeing has begun the hiring process to replace workers on strike at its fighter jet and weapon systems plants in St. Louis and St. Charles, Missouri, and Mascoutah, Illinois. It’s been a month since more than 3,200 Boeing workers, represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers District 837, went on strike at the planemaker’s defense facilities after they voted to reject the company’s second contract offer. Boeing’s “last, best and final offer” withdrew alternative workweek schedules, added a reward for good attendance at $0.50 per hour, and a $5,000 bonus, contingent upon the contract being ratified by the end of the day of Aug. 3. Since the union voted to reject the offer, Boeing said it withdrew the $5,000 ratification bonus.

* WJBD | Centralia Sentinel, Salem Times-Commoner, 13 Other Papers to be sold to Kentucky based group: The family that owns the Centralia Sentinel, Salem Times Commoner, Carlyle Union Banner, Washington County News in Nashville, and the Greenville Advocate has sold the newspapers and 11 others to the Paxton Media Group based in Paducah, Kentucky. The Hoskins family, who owned Better Newspapers, Inc., is selling the newspapers according to a news release from John Cribb of Cribb and Associates, who represented the Hoskins family in the transaction. The terms were not disclosed.

* WCIA | Champaign’s culinary scene getting a new flavor: Bezza Ayalew, the owner of the new restaurant, said that his original plan was to open before the pandemic, but is he grateful that it’s coming now instead. Ayalew is from Ethiopia, but has lived in Champaign for almost twenty years. The closest authentic Ethiopian restaurant is in Chicago or Indianapolis.

* Muddy River News | Old Adams County Courthouse brought back to life in miniature form: Todorov said it was his brother who inspired him to get into doing scale models. Todorov is especially interested in buildings that are of historic significance. While there are still many historic structures standing, he says he was drawn to the buildings that are no longer here. So based on old photos, he began to create. His first choice was the third Adams County Courthouse. It was built in 1876 but was damaged by a tornado in 1945 and then demolished four years later.

*** National ***

* AP | Gregory Bovino, head of Los Angeles campaign, shows how immigration agents rack up arrests: While Trump’s aggressive deportation plans accelerate, Bovino carefully hones his image, both his own and the one projected to the country that shows well-armed officers moving swiftly into place to make arrests. […] Undeterred by court orders over racial profiling, Bovino also revels in breaking norms. Agents have smashed car windows, blown open a door to a house and patrolled the fabled MacArthur Park on horseback. Bovino often appears in tactical gear, as he did outside Gov. Gavin Newsom’s news conference on congressional redistricting on Aug. 14.

* CBS | Appeals court rules Florida’s “Alligator Alcatraz” detention site can stay open: But on Thursday, the panel of appellate court judges froze that ruling. The court concluded that state and federal officials are likely to succeed in showing that the site isn’t subject to the National Environmental Policy Act, because it is a state-operated facility and Florida has not yet received any federal reimbursement for the cost of running the site.

* AP | US hiring stalls with employers reluctant to expand in an economy grown increasingly erratic: The Labor Department reported Friday that U.S. employers — companies, government agencies and nonprofits — added just 22,000 jobs last month, down from 79,000 in July and well below the 80,000 that economists had expected. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.3% last month, also worse than expected and the highest since 2021.

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Trump administration investigating Medicaid spending on immigrants in Illinois, other Democratic states

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* AP and KFF Health News

The Trump administration is taking its immigration crackdown to the health care safety net, launching Medicaid spending probes in at least six Democratic-led states that provide comprehensive health coverage to poor and disabled immigrants living in the U.S. without permanent legal status.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is scouring payments covering health care for immigrants without legal status to ensure there isn’t any waste, fraud or abuse, according to public records obtained by KFF Health News and The Associated Press. While acknowledging that states can bill the federal government for Medicaid emergency and pregnancy care for immigrants without legal status, federal officials have sent letters notifying state health agencies in California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, Oregon and Washington that they are reviewing federal and state payments for medical services, such as prescription drugs and specialty care.

* From the March letter sent to California’s Department of Health Care Services

[T]he Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted an audit that identified $52.7 million in overpaid FFP for Medicaid capitation payments made on behalf of individuals without a satisfactory immigration status and recommended additional work to recover overpayments. To date, [Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services] has collected over $500 million [Federal Financial Participation] for overpayments identified outside of the review period of the [Financial Management Review] and OIG audit. CMS has also been working with the state on corrective action for multiple state deficiencies identified by the state, CMS, and the OIG. […]

If CMS determines that California is using federal money to pay for or subsidize healthcare for individuals without a satisfactory immigration status for which federal funding is prohibited by law, CMS will diligently pursue all available enforcement strategies, including, consistent with applicable law, reductions in federal financial participation and possible referrals to the Attorney General of the United States for possible lawsuit against California.

* More from AP

States under review say they are following the law. […]

Emails show Illinois officials met with CMS and sought an extension to share its data. CMS denied that request and federal regulators told the state that its funding could be withheld.

“Thousands of Illinois residents rely on these programs to lawfully seek critical health care without fear of deportation,” said Melissa Kula, a spokesperson for the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, noting that any federal cut would be “impossible” for the state to backfill.

We’ve asked the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services for its letter, the deadline to turn over the data, and whether any data has been provided. We’ll update when we hear back.

* Related…

    * Fox News | House GOP eyes more Medicaid reforms in second budget reconciliation bill: Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, chair of the House Budget Committee, confirmed to Fox News Digital that his panel had begun laying the groundwork for a second reconciliation package. “Reversing the curse is a continuous effort when you’re $36-plus trillion in the hole,” Arrington said, referencing the national debt. “It’s going to take more than one reconciliation bill to get out of it. So that process is underway.” […] When asked about Medicaid specifically, Arrington said he supported proposals potentially blocking federal dollars from covering transgender medical procedures and from going to illegal immigrants. “I’d be shocked if those don’t go back in, in some form,” he said. “They also happen to be 80-20 issues, like 80% of the American people would expect that that already happens and are shocked that it’s not happening.”

    * CPR News | House Republicans demand health care and Medicaid data from Colorado : In a letter sent Wednesday to Gov. Jared Polis and the state agency that administers Medicaid, House Republicans from the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform asked for detailed information about the “state and local programs that provide health coverage and other services for illegal aliens.” Specifically, they’re demanding lists and information, dating back to 2019, about costs associated with operations and medical procedures done on people unauthorized to be in the country. They asked for the number of individuals denied Medicaid due to unsatisfactory immigration status, a list of every procedure performed on unauthorized immigrants and “all documents and communications” related to Colorado’s charity care programs for immigrants.

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Today’s quotable

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Alice Yin at the Tribune

Speaking at a panel at the Hideout, the mayor again blasted state leaders and called upon them to give Chicago home rule authority to implement new levies because they aren’t “bold” enough to do it themselves. Then without naming him, Johnson appeared to take a shot at Pritzker by comparing the two-term governor and possible candidate in the 2028 presidential race to the governor’s political nemesis, Republican President Donald Trump.

“It is derelict of duty, quite frankly, to have all of this blue power and to make an excuse of why we can’t exercise our power. It’s no different than my complaint or quite frankly my frustration with the president,” Johnson said. “You have Democrats in this country or in Illinois who make excuses of why we can’t show up for working people, and then their cop out is, ‘Well, Mayor Brandon Johnson.’ This is the same mayor that went on a hunger strike.”

Johnson argued the reluctance from Springfield to move on his demand for Chicago Public Schools to receive $1.6 billion more — the mayor’s white whale goal, and one that few believe he can achieve soon given the lack of appetite in the Illinois General Assembly amid an austere budget — is not because of lack of funds. “The money is there,” Johnson countered before casting state leaders as tepid.

“They have supermajorities in both houses,” the mayor said about Illinois Democrats. “We occupy the governor’s mansion. Why are we so afraid to stand up for working people and poor people? It just doesn’t make any sense. It’s unconscionable.”

* One more from Alice…


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Roundup: Chicago braces for ICE raids

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Washington Post reported yesterday the Pentagon has officially approved ICE and Customs and Border Protection to use Naval Station Great Lakes, just outside Chicago, as a base for large-scale immigration raids

The Pentagon has approved the use of a Navy base on the outskirts of Chicago as a staging ground from which the Trump administration can launch operations against undocumented immigrants, said two defense officials familiar with the issue.

Naval Station Great Lakes will serve as a hub in upcoming operations overseen by the Department of Homeland Security, the officials said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.

It could also potentially be used as a place to house National Guard or active-duty service members, if President Donald Trump orders a surge of U.S. troops to the city, as he did this summer in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

The approval comes after DHS sought permission late last month for agents with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other law enforcement personnel to use the base.

* A quick rundown ahead of this weekend…

    • Governor JB Pritzker said yesterday during an unrelated news conference he believes ICE operations will begin early Saturday morning, but said they could start as soon as today.

    • The Sun-Times reported agents are expected to leave the base by 5 am each day and will stay in hotels in nearby suburbs, including Waukegan. The operation is expected to last more than a month.

    • About 140 unmarked vehicles are already on site, and officials are seeking a no-fly zone to keep news helicopters and drones away, according to the Sun-Times.

    • El Grito Chicago, a Mexican Independence Day festival in Grant Park, was canceled yesterday due to concerns about increased immigration enforcement.

    • Organizers of the Pilsen Mexican Independence Day parade say it will go forward with extra precautions.

    • The ICE facility in Broadview will serve as the main processing site CBS Chicago reported yesterday, running seven days a week for roughly 45 consecutive days. Mayor Katrina Thompson told residents that “a large-scale enforcement campaign will soon be underway.” The building’s windows were boarded up Wednesday ahead of anticipated protests.

    • Advocates raised concerns last month about conditions at the Broadview facility, which traditionally was used to process detainees for less than a day. “People were going without beds, with cold food, no showers for three days on average, and that’s completely unacceptable,” Omar Flores, chair of the Immigrants’ Rights Working Committee, told WGN.

* Related stories…

    * WBEZ | Flash-bang grenades and early morning raids: How Trump is planning to target Chicago: At least 30 agents already have arrived at Naval Station Great Lakes near North Chicago, where they’ve been practicing crowd control with shields and flash-bang grenades, the sources said. Similar training has been underway for several months.

    * Sun-Times | Chicago’s Latino leaders urge ‘don’t take the bait’ as city braces for uptick in federal agents: Latino Leadership Council members, former U.S. Rep. Luis Gutiérrez, D-Chicago, and other officials at Daley Plaza Thursday repeatedly emphasized that residents “don’t take the bait” from Trump, suggesting his plan to send troops to Chicago is a ploy to agitate the community. They also called on residents to remain peaceful during protests that might arise from a National Guard deployment to the city.

    * Fox Chicago | Lake County defends immigrant families as agents arrive in Naval Station Great Lakes: Lake County and the City of North Chicago reassured residents that they would not take part in federal immigration enforcement after reports of “unprecedented” operations being coordinated out of Naval Station Great Lakes. In a joint statement released Thursday, officials said the activities are “entirely at the federal level,” adding that Illinois law prohibits state and local police from assisting in immigration enforcement.

    * Tribune | ICE agents detain 2 at county domestic violence courthouse this week. Advocates warn of chilling effect on victims: “It’s an affront to all the work this country has done over the last 40 years to ensure that victims of domestic violence and sexual assault have access to justice,” said Amanda Pyron, president and CEO of The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence. “There’s no other result to an action like this but a deterrent to victims seeking the safety and justice they deserve.” The Cook County public defender’s office confirmed to the Tribune that two of its clients were arrested by immigration agents — a 41-year-old woman on Wednesday and a 40-year-old man on Monday. Officials said they were still gathering information, but said the woman had no criminal background and was not a risk to the public. The woman who was arrested had been charged with two misdemeanor counts of domestic battery, but the charges were dropped on Wednesday, according to court records.

    * Crain’s | As Trump targets Chicago, businesses prep for raids and protests: “Once the agencies come in, you’re going to get protesters, and that will lead to street closures,” says Sam Toia, president of the Illinois Restaurant Association. Immigration raids present a challenge to restaurants on two fronts: Protests and street closures keep patrons away, and the threat of immigration enforcement can keep restaurant workers home. Restaurants still haven’t fully recovered on either front from the COVID-19 pandemic. “Some people will be timid about coming into work and restaurant operators are planning for that,” Toia said, anticipating absenteeism could run as high as 20%. “(Staffing) has gotten a little better, but restaurants are still running pretty tight.”

    * Sun-Times | CTU calls for remote learning option for families amid looming immigration raids: Union President Stacy Davis Gates said the district should have a plan to shift those students to online learning to minimize the impact of being outside of the classroom. But Gates wasn’t optimistic that the district would be able to achieve that. “CPS is not ready for that,” she said, though she noted CPS was in a better position to stand up remote learning than it was when the pandemic hit.

    * WIFR | With ICE raids planned for Chicago, city of Rockford alerts immigrants to know their rights: United States Senator, Dick Durbin agrees with McNamara’s statement, explaining there is a possibily it expands into Rockford. “There is a genuine concern in the Hispanic population that there’s a mass deportation underway,” Durbin explained. Sara Dady, an area immigration lawyer also spoke out. Adding it is important for individuals to know their rights. “Everyone needs to exercise their rights. It’s important to remain calm, know who you’re dealing with, and decline to answer any questions. No one has to be rude; be firm, people can be respectful, but be firm in their rights,” explained Dady.

    * ABC Chicago | Chicago area braces for expanded ICE operations, protests this weekend: People gathered outside Naval Station Great Lakes Thursday night to pray ahead of the expected enforcement. Pastor Julie Contreras with United Giving Hope Church says these operations will separate families while Illinois Republican Chair Kathy Salvi says the administration is following through on its campaign promises.

    * WTTW | Under Threat of ICE Strikes, El Grito Canceled and Communities Prepare for Mexican Independence Day Celebrations: Immigration and Customs Enforcement strike teams are likely to begin operations around Chicago in the coming days, and local officials expect agents to target large gatherings like Sunday’s parade in Little Village and Saturday’s 26th Street Mexican Independence Day Parade in Pilsen. While this weekend’s planned events are still scheduled to proceed, the two-day El Grito Chicago festival scheduled to take place in Grant Park Sept. 13-14 has been postponed due to the threat of raids.

    * NBC | How Chicago and Boston officials are readying for Trump’s promise of more immigration raids: Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey told NBC News in a statement Wednesday that “what we are seeing from Donald Trump across the country isn’t about public safety — it’s about political intimidation.” While there aren’t yet concrete indications of exactly when additional law enforcement could be expected in those cities, immigration enforcement has gone hand in hand with the Trump administration’s sending National Guard troops to Los Angeles and in the federal takeover of Washington, D.C. Trump said late Tuesday that he would be “going in” to Chicago and that he had a right to go into the city to “protect this country.”

    * CNN | Hundreds of undocumented immigrants apprehended in massive ICE raid at Hyundai plant in Georgia: About 450 people were apprehended as several law enforcement agencies descended on the Hyundai Metaplant site in Ellabell, about 25 miles west of Savannah, officials said, in the latest example of the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration at workplaces across the country. The raid halted construction of a factory being built to produce batteries for electric vehicles, the Associated Press reported. The facility has been touted by Georgia’s governor as the largest economic development site in the state’s history, the AP added.

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Pritzker slams DeSantis over end of vaccine mandates

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tampa Bay Times

Florida is set to push for an end to all state vaccine mandates, state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo announced at a news conference Wednesday.

For decades, the state has required numerous vaccines for kids attending school, a list that today includes shots that protect against measles-mumps-rubella, polio, chickenpox and Hepatitis B.

But Ladapo on Wednesday compared these mandates to “slavery,” and promised that they all will soon end.

* I asked the governor’s office for a response. From Matt Hill…

There is no way to make measles, mumps, rubella, or polio great again. Immunizations have saved more than 154 million lives in the last 50 years — and mostly infants.

Governor Pritzker takes public health seriously unlike Gov. DeSantis whose reckless rollback on vaccines puts children’s lives at risk. His Surgeon General’s comparison of lifesaving medicine to slavery is also insulting and dangerous.

In Illinois, we’ll keep standing up for science and protecting our kids.

  26 Comments      


What Illinois Can Learn From Texas On Battery Energy Storage

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

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But last session— without evidence —opponents attempted to claim that battery energy storage wouldn’t work. Try telling that to Texas, where the rapid deployment of battery storage has already prevented blackouts and saved consumers billions.

Called “Ground Zero for the US Battery Boom” by Bloomberg, Texas added enough storage in 2023 to power 3 million homes and drop grid emergency risk during peak hours from 16% to less than 1%. The result? Storage saved consumers an estimated $750 billion in 2024.

Texas has proven that storage is the quickest, cheapest, most reliable way to get consumers relief from skyrocketing, demand-induced price spikes. Storage is a nimble way to address growing populations, power-hungry data centers, and meet other electrification-related power needs. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year.

Illinois lawmakers should follow Texas’s lead and pass SB40 this fall to deploy 6GW of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker says he’ll head to court as soon as troops show up. Crain’s

    - Gov. JB Pritzker says the state’s first move will be to the courthouse if troops come to Chicago as part of the Trump administration’s planned immigration crackdown that’s expected to begin later this week.
    - Pritzker, like other governors, has asserted that President Donald Trump has no authority to dispatch National Guard members or federal troops.
    -In recent days, the White House has been cagey about whether it plans to deploy troops.

* Related Stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGLT | Rivian plans job cuts as it plans for R2 production in Normal: Rivian is cutting about 1.5% of its global workforce as the electric vehicle maker prepares its plant in Normal for production of its new lower-cost sport utility vehicle. The automaker had about 15,000 employees globally at the end of the year. It’s unclear how many of the job cuts could be in Normal. “We have made some recent changes to the commercial team as part of an ongoing effort to improve operational efficiency for R2,” according to a statement from a Rivian spokesperson.

* Sun-Times | In Illinois, soybean is king and helps fuel everything from farmers to Chicago Park District trucks: About 80 park district vehicles are fueled by biodiesel blends made from refined soybean oil. That’s about 25% of its diesel fleet, which includes service and forestry trucks, tractors and mowers. The parks department uses various kinds of clean energy for its vehicles and equipment. It started using soybean-based biodiesel blended with regular diesel in 2011. The liquid fuel can supplement regular diesel often used in heavy vehicles. “It performs better than standard diesel, and the power is the same. It also benefits the health of our employees and park visitors,” Mike Dimitroff, manager of cultural and natural resources for Chicago Park District, said.

*** Statewide ***

* SJ-R | Free monthly STI testing now at all 13 Planned Parenthood Illinois centers: Walk-in patients will be offered a variety of STI tests and have a consultation with a provider. While at the health center, individuals can schedule a wellness visit, make an appointment for other services and get enrolled in Medicaid. Walk-in appointments will end 45 minutes before closing, are first-come, first-served and results are confidential, according to the announcement.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | New Illinois law requires police to act swiftly on missing persons cases: You’ve probably seen it play out on a TV crime drama: A distraught person enters a police station to report a loved one missing, only to be told by the desk officer that there’s nothing they can do about it for at least 24 hours. A new state law championed by a suburban legislator and Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart will keep that scenario the stuff of fiction here in Illinois. Senate Bill 24 — also known as the Missing Persons Identification Act — was signed into law late last month by Gov. JB Pritzker, paving the way for major changes in how police handle missing persons cases.

* Education Week | How This State Is Protecting Undocumented Students’ Right to an Education: House Bill 3247—signed into law by Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker on Aug. 15—is the state’s response to rising fear among local immigrant communities over the Trump administration’s push for increased immigration enforcement across the country, lawmakers and advocates said. The law is also a response to the efforts of policymakers in other states to overturn the 1982 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Plyler v. Doe, which granted a constitutional right to a free, public education to all students regardless of immigration status. Since President Donald Trump’s re-election, policymakers in at least six states have taken actions to challenge Plyler, with at least one of these still in process, and the rest paused or defeated, according to an Education Week analysis.

* WAND | Illinois law could ensure families with NICU babies receive info on early intervention services: The Illinois Department of Human Services’ early intervention program helps children with disabilities or developmental delays up to age three learn and grow. However, many families are unaware they are eligible for these services. This law states hospitals must sign a written letter referring babies to early intervention programs if the child is sent to their neonatal intensive care unit.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago’s Air Force Academy High School to change name, switch to Army JROTC: The school opened in 2009 and was the only wall-to-wall public Air Force Academy high school in the country. It’s been lauded by Mayor Brandon Johnson and is one of six military schools in CPS where participation in JROTC is mandatory. Currently, there are roughly 130 students enrolled, down from more than 300 a decade ago. The deactivation of the Air Force Academy High School JROTC program means there are no longer Air Force JROTC programs in CPS. A program inside Phillips High School was closed for low enrollment in 2022. There are 815 active Air Force JROTC programs at other schools across the country.

* Sun-Times | ‘The powder keg is growing.’ Former Chicagoans in D.C. call guard deployment ‘unprecedented and scary’: “In Chicago, it feels like the powder keg is there. In D.C., I think the powder keg is growing. I’ve had friends who have been in Ubers or have been in situations where people around them have been stolen and arrested and taken to who knows where, and you can feel there’s tension building,” said Albano, 30. “But it does not quite feel as intense of a tension as how the activists and organizers in Chicago are planning to protect immigrant communities and their families and loved ones.”

* ABC Chicago | UIC student sues university police, claiming arrest was unlawful, led to visa revocation: In police body-worn camera video, you can hear one UIC officer say, “Mr. Presta, just to let you know you are being charged with theft under, it’s a class A misdemeanor, under meaning under $500 in value.” “The allegation is he was working out and, at some time during his workout, he stole someone’s little gym bag,” attorney Gregory Kulis told the I-Team. He represents Presta in a new lawsuit against four UIC police officers filed Thursday. Kulis says video evidence shows Presta did not take the bag in question.

* Sun-Times | White Sox’ 2025 loss cause: If 100 is inevitable, at least try to stay under 106: Unless the 50-88 Sox scratch out seven more victories, they’ll be tied to last year’s 121-loss team forever — with the two most “L”-acious seasons in franchise history coming back-to-back.

* Sun-Times | Angel Reese officially suspended after eighth technical foul: Angel Reese will miss the Sky’s game Friday against the Fever. She received her eighth technical foul in the first half Wednesday against the Sun, which triggered a one-game suspension. Coach Tyler Marsh said the Sky appealed the call, but the WNBA issued a statement Thursday confirming the suspension. The Sky have appealed other calls this year without success. Reese was assessed a technical for a “flail” in the second quarter against Sun forward Aaliyah Edwards. There was no whistle on the court, but officials upgraded the play after review. Marsh argued at the time and said he was frustrated by the explanation.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Naperville commission seeks more info before voting on Karis Critical data centers plan: “This is the only zoning district where data centers are permitted,” said Russ Whitaker, an attorney representing Karis. While the development is planned for an appropriately zoned area, it is also in close proximity to multiple residential areas, including the Naper Commons, Danada Woods and Indian Hill Woods subdivisions. Those residents opposed to the project say it will have a negative effect on their health and quality of life as well as the environment. An online petition urging the city to reject the development has been signed by about 1,900 people.

* Daily Herald | Former Arlington Heights school nurse sentenced for misappropriating students’ medicine: Eitz worked at from Aug. 19, 2019 through May 8, 2024, at Westgate Elementary School school, where prosecutors say she was responsible for documenting, storing, handling and administering prescribed medication that “included controlled amphetamine substances” for several students. She was fired in May 2024 amid an investigation into the allegations. In April of this year, the parents of nine Westgate students sued Eitz, school leaders and Arlington Heights Elementary District 25 administrators alleging she intentionally gave children the wrong medication and school leaders had the ability to stop her but “actively chose not to.”

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park passes Israel-Hamas ceasefire resolution, continuation of grocery tax: The board also voted to join neighboring suburbs in creating a 1% municipal grocery tax to begin when a statewide tax expires on Jan. 1. Similar action was taken by neighboring communities including Tinley Park, Homewood and Homer Glen. Milani and Healy voted against the measure while Dodge, Lawrence, Lawler and Leafblad voted in favor.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora committee tables talk of lifting ban on backyard chickens: No official ordinance was drafted, but aldermen who sit on the City Council Rules, Administration and Procedures Committee have spent time at the past several meetings discussing the possibility of allowing backyard chickens within city limits and the logistics of how that may work. They’ve also heard from the city’s Animal Care and Control division about the idea, including its current response to backyard chickens. Currently, city code bans people from keeping dangerous animals, bees or farm animals within city limits, but special permission can be given to things like pony rides and petting zoos.

* Daily Southtown | Blue Island’s random water sampling finds no hot spots for immediate pipe replacement: City Administrator Thomas Wogan said the results met the Environmental Protection Agency’s 90th percentile value, which means lead in the drinking water samples did not exceed 15 parts per billion, comparable to adding 15 drops of a substance to a 10,000-gallon swimming pool, in at least 90% of the homes sampled. Wogan also said no individual homes that were tested met the 90th percentile. He said in June the city would immediately notify any homes that had a high concentration of lead in their sampled drinking water.

* Daily Herald | How runway safety system slowed plane, averted disaster in Wheeling: Installed a decade ago on the north end of Runway 1634, the Engineered Material Arresting System is a rectangular, graded bed of large, concrete blocks that rise slightly above ground level. The blocks can support a person’s weight but are designed to give way under greater pressure, slowing and eventually stopping an aircraft that overruns a runway. Miller compares the system to the emergency escape ramps often found in mountainous areas that help trucks with braking problems stop safely.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Viper Mine coal plant in Central Illinois permanently closed; some caught off guard: On Thursday, Village President of Williamsville Mark Esker said that the coal plant was being torn down and officially closed on Sept. 4. At this time, there is not an estimated completion date on the demolition of the Viper Mine. The mine had been providing coal to the Springfield area over the course of the last 40 years. According to CWLP, the closure of the Viper Mine locations was first made public in November 2024 after the Springfield City Council approved a new coal supply contract with Foresight Coal Sales LLC to serve Dallman 4. However, Esker said he only found out about the closure a few months back when some of the workers laid off at the plants let him know they would be receiving severance.

* WGLT | Dueling letters show rising tension between local leaders over shared sales tax: An Aug. 22 letter sent by Normal Mayor Chris Koos to County Board Chair Elizabeth Johnston contains phrases that accuse the county of “stockpiling” sales tax revenue rather than spending it on purposes approved under a decade old intergovernmental agreement (IGA). The letter, obtained by WGLT through a Freedom of Information Act request, called the $20 million fund balance “excessive.” And it objected to county leadership’s refusal to have its full board consider the town and city request to pause sales tax sharing during negotiations.

* WGLT | Illinois State University approaches 22,000 students as enrollment sets new record: ISU has increased its student headcount by 448 students to 21,994 students this fall. “Given the climate and the environment that is becoming ever so competitive for college admissions, I am very happy with the group we are bringing in,” said Pat Walsh, the university’s director of recruitment and operations for admissions.

* WCIA | Blue Mound water unsafe for kids under six months old: In a news release sent to WCIA, the village said on Sept. 4, samples that were collected the day before showed nitrate levels of 12 milligrams per liter (mg/L). The standard for nitrate is 10 mg/L. Nitrate in drinking water can pose a serious health concern for infants less than six months old. And, nitrate in drinking water can come from natural, industrial, or agricultural sources, like septic systems and run-off. Levels of nitrate in drinking water can change throughout the year.

* WSIL | Bob Odenkirk returns to Carbondale for SIU event in September: The Odenkirks will participate in a public event at The Varsity Center on September 12 from 3-5 p.m. They will discuss their careers in the entertainment industry with H.D. Motyl, an associate professor at SIU’s School of Media Arts. Bob Odenkirk graduated from SIU in 1984 and has since built a successful career as a comedy writer. He is well-known for his roles in “Breaking Bad” and its spinoff “Better Call Saul,” as well as his recent work in the films “Nobody” and “Nobody 2.”

*** National ***

* KPTV Oregon | U.S. Border Czar threatens to ‘flood’ Portland, other cities with ICE agents: PORTLAND Ore. (KPTV) - U.S. Border Czar Tom Homan said Wednesday at a news conference that the Trump administration plans to “flood the zone” with ICE agents in sanctuary cities like Portland, Seattle, and Chicago. “We’ve got 10,000 more agents coming on, we’re going to flood the zone,” Homan said to reporters on the White House lawn. “You’re going to see a ramp up of operations in New York. You’re going to see a ramp up of operations continue in L.A. and, you know, Portland, Seattle. I mean, all these sanctuary cities refuse to work with ICE … we’re going to address that.”

* NYT | The Doctors Are Real, but the Sales Pitches Are Frauds: Dr. Robert H. Lustig is an endocrinologist, a professor emeritus of pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, and an author of best-selling books on obesity. He is absolutely not — despite what you might see and hear on Facebook — hawking “liquid pearls” with dubious claims about weight loss. “No injections, no surgery, just results,” he appears to say in one post. Instead, someone has used artificial intelligence to make a video that imitates him and his voice — all without his knowledge, let alone consent.

* Forbes | AI Startup Flock Thinks It Can Eliminate All Crime In America: Langley offers a prediction: In less than 10 years, Flock’s cameras, airborne and fixed, will eradicate almost all crime in the U.S. (He acknowledges that programs to boost youth employment and cut recidivism will help.) It sounds like a pipe dream from another AI-can-solve- everything tech bro, but Langley, in the face of a wave of opposition from privacy advocates and Flock’s archrival, the $2.1 billion (2024 revenue) police tech giant Axon Enterprise, is a true believer. He’s convinced that America can and should be a place where everyone feels safe. And once it’s draped in a vast net of U.S.-made Flock surveillance tech, it will be.

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Good morning!

Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I tweaked my mom’s meatloaf recipe just a little bit yesterday and then added fresh sweet corn to the gravy. Man, it was good…

* Those are my own homegrown tomatoes, by the way

All winter without ‘em’s a culinary bummer

Weekend plans?

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Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Friday, Sep 5, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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