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Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Link Wray

And the sun was standin’ still
Everything was dark, but I could see

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Frerichs calls Pritzker veto ‘misguided’ (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker vetoed an initiative by Treasurer Michael Frerichs today, citing the danger of SB246 being used to “benefit fringe and extremist groups”…

Today, I veto Senate Bill 246 of the 104th General Assembly. The bill is designed to allow the State Treasurer to create a non-profit investment pool and an electronic payment processing program to benefit 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(5) organizations. Non-profit organizations would be able to deposit funds with the Treasurer and potentially benefit from the Treasurer’s higher investment returns.

The Treasurer’s work to support Illinoisans by addressing the financial needs of Illinois non­ profits has always been commendable, and my administration highly values the critical work many non-profit organizations are doing throughout the State. This legislation is well intended to support the financial needs of Illinois non-profits, and it led community banks and credit unions to recognize there was a gap in services they have been offering. Because of the hard work of the Treasurer and advocates, these private financial institutions have created financial products to meet those needs. My administration is eager to assist in that effort.

Though SB 246 is well-intended and might benefit non-profits whose missions advance interests the state desires to promote, it would unfortunately also allow Illinois’ financial investments to be used to benefit fringe and extremist groups. I cannot sign a bill that unintentionally allows extremist groups to advance their hateful missions by exploiting state services and resources.

This is not an exercise in hypotheticals - hate groups are growing. Some of their members have been elevated by the Trump White House to positions of power and are no longer on the fringes of American society. They are currently attempting to reshape the legal and ethical boundaries of our country from within the federal government. In Illinois we must remain vigilant. While the federal tax rules were designed to prevent hate groups from qualifying for non-profit status, recent changes in policies, rules, and decision-making at the federal level suggest the trend is to accept extreme views and organizations that promote violence and racial discrimination.

On January 6, 2021, the United States Capitol, the Vice President of the United States, and Members of Congress were attacked by a mob attempting to stop the Congressional certification of the electoral votes of the 2020 presidential election. Among those persons found guilty of criminal acts related to the attack were members of the group known as the Oath Keepers.

On January 20, 2025, several members of the Oath Keepers, who were convicted of offenses related to the January 6, 2021 attack received Presidential pardons of their crimes. Subsequently, I directed our state’s hiring agency to consider any participation in the January 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol to be “infamous and disgraceful conduct” for purposes of the Personnel Code and to recognize such participation as antithetical to the mission of the State to prevent the hiring of these individuals. It was and remains important to ensure that Illinois government does not allow the hate and danger that entered the Capitol that day to infiltrate our state’s government and the services we provide.

To support its activities, the Oath Keepers formed the Oath Keepers Educational Foundation, a 50l(c)(3) charitable organization. That organization’s tax-exempt status has since been revoked by the Internal Revenue Service. However, an associated group, the Indiana Oath Keepers, is currently registered as a 50l(c)(3) charitable organization and is in good standing with the Internal Revenue Service. If Senate Bill 246 were signed into law, the possibility remains that the Indiana Oath Keepers could pa1ticipate in this state’s non-profit investment pool, as the bill does not require that a participating non-profit be located in Illinois in order to participate in the program. Oath Keepers is just one of a number of extremist organizations that could become investors in the state’s non-profit investment pool, and our state should not represent or promote the interests of these type of hate groups.

Some have suggested this issue can be resolved through rulemaking, but that would necessitate the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) reviewing administratively proposed rules and voting on whether the standards that have been proposed appropriately limit the charitable organizations that may participate in the Treasurer’s investment pool. A government program that includes standards based on an organization’s views, activities, founders, or members to exclude non-profits with extreme positions could give rise to legal challenges.

I recognize that many non-profits with beneficial missions are facing real financial hardships, perhaps now more than ever. As noted above, my administration has encouraged community banks to offer various unique financial resources to non-profits. Community banking solutions can help give non-profits greater flexibility, such as interest-free revolving lines of credit. I look forward to continuing to foster relationships between non-profits and community banks, and my team stands ready to suppo1t non-profits.

Pursuant to Section 9(b) of A1ticle IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 246, entitled “AN ACT concerning State government,” with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Frerichs himself testified in favor of the bill.

* From Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs…

I am disappointed the governor vetoed this bill. Like the governor, I decry the rise of extremist and hate groups and the efforts of the Trump administration to mainstream hate. I strongly disagree with the governor’s misguided belief that hate groups would use a state investment pool. The bill specifically requires that to be eligible, a nonprofit must provide a copy of their audited financial statements. No hate group would ever agree to that. Sunshine remains the best disinfectant for fighting hate.

Trump is decimating funding for nonprofits throughout Illinois. Make no mistake: Local food pantries, youth and community centers, homeless shelters and other non-profit groups will be hurt. The Nonprofit Investment Pool Act would allow the Illinois State Treasurer’s Office to help those groups combine resources and earn greater investment returns to make up some of Trump’s unconscionable cuts. Every dollar we make through smart investing is another dollar non-profit organizations can invest in our local communities at a time when many non-profits and communities are struggling for resources. They also could generate interest income toward major expenses or purchases for their organizations, including repairs and upgrades to facilities, buying new equipment, or hiring workers.

More than 150 nonprofits, including the Jewish United Fund, the Illinois AFL-CIO, the NAACP/Westside Division, the Illinois CPA Society, the Illinois Environmental Council, and the Sierra Club, sent letters in support of this legislation. We will be discussing potential next steps with our legislative sponsors.

Frerichs also included copies of his letter to the governor urging passage, as well as supportive letters from the Illinois AFL-CIO and the Woodstock Institute.

…Adding… Personal PAC…

“Personal PAC supports Governor Pritzker’s veto of SB 246, a bill that could have opened the door for dangerous, anti-abortion crisis pregnancy centers to gain new funding streams and manipulate more people. These fake clinics mislead, shame, and delay people from accessing abortion care—putting patients’ health and lives at risk. Illinois cannot and will not give resources or policy advantages to organizations whose mission is to block and mislead Illinoians from accessing health care. While the aim of the bill is admirable, the unintended consequences are dangerous.  We applaud the Governor for always standing with patients and their ability to make informed decisions about their bodies.”

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Pritzker signs controversial bill giving personal injury lawyers more reach in suits over toxic substances (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Governor signed a plethora of bills this afternoon, including the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association’s Senate bill 328. From the governor’s press release

Bill Number: SB0328
 
Description: Expands jurisdiction for claims alleging injury or illness resulting from exposure to toxic substances. Under this bill, a foreign corporation consents to general jurisdiction in this state in the limited circumstances involving actions (1) alleging injury or illness resulting from exposure to a substance defined as “toxic” under the Uniform Hazardous Substances Act of Illinois (430 ILCS 35), and (2) where jurisdiction is proper under section 2-209(a) of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-209(a)) as to one or more named co-defendants. By its express terms, SB 328 does not allow the exercise of general jurisdiction over a foreign corporation in actions that are not covered by the Uniform Hazardous Substances Act of Illinois, as set forth in section 13 of that Act (430 ILCS 35/13).
 
Action: Signed
 
Effective: Immediately
 

* From the Tribune earlier this month

A proposed law on the governor’s desk would expand the reach of personal injury lawyers, allowing them to file suit against any business operating in Illinois that exposes individuals to toxic substances — even if the company and the plaintiffs are based in another state.

Trial lawyers say the measure would offer fairness and convenience, primarily for Illinois residents who are injured in other states. Traditionally those plaintiffs have had to file suit in the state where they were hurt or where the company is headquartered. […]

Under the measure, any company that registers to do business in Illinois could be brought into court to face allegations of harm from toxic substances. Cases of this type routinely involve multiple defendants, and under the measure only one of them needs to be from Illinois.

An Illinois resident who is injured in multiple states, such as someone who was exposed to asbestos while working at his employer’s plants around the country, would be able to sue in his home state, rather than having to file in multiple jurisdictions, said Tim Cavanagh, president of the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association.

* The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association called on the governor to veto the bill. Crain’s

Several trade groups are urging Gov. JB Pritzker to veto the bill. They include the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, Illinois Restaurant Association and the Chicagoland and Illinois chambers of commerce. […]

“If this bill is enacted, it’s going to create a black eye for Illinois when we’re pursuing economic development opportunities,” says Mark Denzler, CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association. ”Illinois does not need another burden to overcome in attracting business.”

* Mark Denzler, CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, told this to Rich today…

I’m an outspoken advocate for Illinois, and have been very supportive of the governor and the General Assembly and a lot of things they’ve done.

This is a huge step backward. Illinois is now going to be only the second state in the nation with this. And this is getting national attention in an unwanted way from the business community. And again, we take a couple steps forward, and then this is an unforced error where we’re taking steps backward. And the business community across the United States has paid attention to it.

In our opinion they should let the courts in Pennsylvania work through this to see if it is unconstitutional. But why create a black eye for Illinois when we’ve made so many positive steps?

* The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association…

The Illinois Trial Lawyers Association thanks Gov. JB Pritzker for acting to protect those who live and work in our state from toxic substances by signing Senate Bill 328 into law. We applaud the governor for rejecting the Trumpian propaganda campaign of lies and fear-mongering mounted by the opponents to this urgently needed measure.

The sole intent of this new law is to provide the possibility of a more complete justice for grievous harms done to people by corporations that failed to protect their employees or customers from exposure to toxic substances. It will allow individuals who have suffered due to the actions of a company doing business in Illinois to hold accountable all businesses that contributed to their injury or illness, not just those that are legally or physically headquartered here.

For those who are sick or dying, who cannot navigate the process of retaining legal counsel and filing suits in multiple states, nor endure the rigors of extensive and expensive travel for court proceedings, this change is a godsend and will ease the already considerable burdens they bear.

We also thank the members of the General Assembly who voted to send SB 328 to the governor. They, too, are to be commended for recognizing that, while those at the nation’s capitol strip away health, workplace and environmental protections, Illinois chooses a different path and will not tolerate people being exploited and hurt by big-money special interests.

The truth is that Illinois is a very good state for business. It always has been and will continue to be now that SB 328 has become law. We have a highly skilled workforce, robust transportation networks and a wide range of economic sectors, including agriculture, arts, education, health care, logistics, manufacturing and professional services. We are an example for the nation that proves it’s not necessary to embrace race-to-the-bottom policies that trample workers’ rights and eliminate consumer protections to thrive.

Gov. Pritzker’s signature on SB 328 has added additional teeth to our laws that will deter big businesses from behaving badly by putting profits before people and unfairly forcing Illinois taxpayers to clean up the messes irresponsible corporations leave behind.

* Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

“I am deeply disappointed that Gov. Pritzker ignored our calls to join the Governor of New York in vetoing this special interest legislation that will further deter businesses from investing in Illinois. Under Gov. Pritzker, Illinois is a bottom five state in the nation for economic growth and job creation because of bad business policies like SB 328. Gov. Pritzker and his legislative allies continue to protect special interest insiders at the expense of working families across Illinois.”

* Press release…

Statement from Leading Business Groups on Gov. Pritzker Signing Sweeping Legal Overreach Legislation SB 328

Illinois’ business community issued the following statement following Gov. JB Pritzker signing SB 328.

“We are disappointed that Gov. JB Pritzker did not take this opportunity to protect the citizens, business community and economy of Illinois by vetoing SB 328. By failing to reject this disastrous proposal, businesses and taxpayers will now be vulnerable to predatory lawsuits that will clog up our legal system and stymie our economic growth.

This measure, brought forth by trial lawyers in the final hours of the legislative session, creates a significant and concerning expansion of liability for out-of-state businesses operating in Illinois. Under this law, any company simply registered to do business in Illinois is subject to lawsuits, even when the underlying claims and parties have no connection to the state. Rather than moving to Illinois and creating new jobs and economic investment, many businesses will avoid our state entirely, undermining the momentum our state has worked so hard to create.

We urge Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly to refocus their efforts on economic growth and expansion, which benefits all workers, families and communities.”

* House Minority Leader Tony McCombie…

“At a time when Illinois should be focused on growth and opportunity, Democrats have once again chosen to reward trial lawyers at the expense of job creators. Our state already ranks at the top in all the wrong categories, and with Governor Pritzker signing SB 328, he’s turning up the heat on an already hostile business climate.”

…Adding… Jennifer Walling at the Illinois Environmental Council…

“We thank Governor Pritzker for signing SB328 to close a dangerous loophole that allowed out-of-state polluters to harm Illinois communities without accountability,” said Jennifer Walling, Executive Director of the Illinois Environmental Council. “This law ensures polluters—not Illinois residents—pay for the damage they cause.”

Illinois has long been recognized as a leader in environmental protection and public health. However, a significant loophole in our laws has allowed some of the worst polluters to evade accountability, simply because they are headquartered out of state. With the signing of Senate Bill 328 (SB328), Governor Pritzker has taken a commendable step toward closing this dangerous gap.

This new law addresses a critical issue: when out-of-state corporations use hazardous substances in their Illinois operations, they can sometimes escape responsibility in Illinois courts. This has left our communities, suffering from toxic pollution and long-term illnesses, without full recourse under our own laws.

One glaring example of this issue is the PFAS contamination, a group of highly problematic chemicals used in manufacturing. These so-called “forever chemicals” have been detected in drinking water systems throughout Illinois, linked to severe health issues, including cancer and thyroid disease. Disturbingly, many corporations responsible for this pollution operate far beyond our state borders, often evading legal accountability for the harm they cause to Illinois residents and our water.

The enactment of SB328 ensures that foreign corporations conducting business in Illinois will be held to the same legal standards as Illinois-based companies when they cause harm through hazardous substances. This means that polluters, whether they are based in Chicago, St. Louis, or even Shanghai, will be held accountable for the damage they inflict on our communities.

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Stand by for news

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bunch of bills into law today, including a pretty controversial bill backed by the trial lawyers. He also vetoed a bill backed by Treasurer Michael Frerichs.

We’re working on a couple of posts and trying to gather some react.

Meanwhile, several press releases from legislators about their bill signings have been posted on our press release app.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* [From Rich]: The US Department of Justice has responded to the Illinois State Board of Elections’ decision to not fully comply immediately with a request for voter registration documents, including drives’ licenses numbers, Social Security numbers and dates of birth. More on that refusal is here. But the DOJ’s response cites several federal laws allowing the access to the information (including the last four Social Security digits). Click here for that. A board spokesperson says the federal response is “under review.”

* As subscribers know, Rep. Buckner floated an event surcharge during a City Club appearance in June. Sun-Times

A key player in the Springfield scramble to save mass transit said Friday there will be a fall bailout that uses a mix of tax hikes and a modest fare increase to avert dire service cuts at CTA, Metra and Pace.

State Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) even floated a new idea to add to the revenue mix: a “large event surcharge” that would add anywhere from $1 to $3 to the price of tickets to major concerts and sporting events.

“It can be a catalyst to increase ridership,” Buckner said. “If you’re going to Lollapalooza and you’re paying an extra buck or $2 on your ticket each day, that ticket also doubles as your pass on the system for that day. That’s not just putting money in the coffers. It’s actually getting people to give back to the system and to use the system, which is what we’ve got to find a way to do as well.”

Buckner said a stalled $1.50-per delivery tax proposal could be part of the revenue mix but, “I don’t know if the $1.50 that the Senate did was the right level.”

* South Side Weekly

A data broker that allows users to obtain information about incarcerated people could be a digital backdoor enabling U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to access the personal data of thousands of immigrants in Cook County.

At a Cook County Board meeting last year, commissioners raised concerns about the Sheriff’s use of the system, called VINE (Victim Information [and] Notification Everyday), but voted to keep it. VINE notifies crime victims when an offender or defendant is released from jail, transferred, or has a change in custody status.

ICE’s access to that data goes far beyond the public’s, letting agents combine VINE jail records with personal data to build profiles that can pinpoint where people live and work. Immigrant rights advocates contend that the data, intended for victim notification, has been repurposed into commercial databases ICE uses to locate and arrest immigrants.

Now, advocates are renewing their push to get the Board to amend the County’s contract with VINE after its current contract ends in November.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Block Club | Private Pools Across Chicago Shut Down All Summer Thanks To Health Dept. Delays: While the City of Chicago used to do a large number of pool inspections, Martin said the city passed off most pool inspection responsibilities to the state in 2024 because of the increased workload caused by hosting the Democratic National Convention. Since then, the state has done most of the city’s pool inspections, which occur annually, Martin said.

* Tribune | Illinois’ rental assistance program has restarted. Here’s what you need to know.: While the program saw a third of its funds wiped away for the 2026 fiscal year that began July 1, $50 million in state funds are available. The reduction came as rents in Chicago keep rising and after the state grappled with serious fiscal challenges when balancing its budget this year, issues exacerbated by a federal government focused on axing spending. State lawmakers cut spending in various areas beyond housing as well.

*** Chicago ***

* Compact | The Crisis of the University Started Long Before Trump: The story of the University of Chicago is in one sense unique. No peer institution has borrowed so much in relation to its assets; none spends remotely as large a percentage of tuition on servicing debt. Despite gifts and the surge in the stock market, the University’s endowment has actually shrunk under its current president from 2021 to 2024 because it has been liquidating assets to mask the size of its deficits. But its story also distills forces and trends in American higher education that are corroding ideals, and wasting money, throughout the land.

* Sun-Times | We’ve been tracking grocery prices in Chicago: Coffee and ground beef are up: For the last nine months, the Sun-Times has been tracking grocery prices for 35 items at four major Chicago retailers — and the prices keep getting higher. Our latest price check this month found a number of items increased, causing our total shopping basket to be higher at most of the stores. The total for our basket at Jewel-Osco was $276.65, up by $3.30 from July — and up $14.20 since we started tracking prices in December. At Mariano’s, our total was $270.15, an increase of $3.20 compared to July’s basket total.

* Tribune | ‘There definitely was a need’: CPS, communities host back-to-school events to big crowds: Educational book and supply costs in the average U.S. city have increased by about 1.3% from January to July, according to data maintained by the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank. Since July 2023, those prices have increased by more than 10%. Average weekly wages, in comparison, grew by 0.2% in Cook County in 2024, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

* WBEZ | Savannah Bananas, the Harlem Globetrotters of baseball, to make Chicago debut at Rate Field: When the Savannah Bananas take the field at Rate Field Friday and Saturday evenings, it will be the first time Chicago gets a taste of what’s come to be known as Banana Ball (think baseball’s version of the Harlem Globetrotters). “The Bananas are the perfect combination of a world where baseball meets a circus, meets a concert … something for everybody,” said team spokesman Sam Bauman.

* Block Club | Chicagoans Unite To Expand Search For Bam Bam, The Service Dog Stolen From A Blind Man: While Bam Bam has still not been found, a team of neighbors and animal lovers have created an email tip line, a fundraiser for search efforts and a Facebook page to keep the community up to date and streamline the search on Santiago’s behalf. A website was also made with all the information in one spot, including a link to download flyers.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | State trooper, a youth hockey referee, arrested on federal child porn charges: An Illinois state trooper who also served as a youth hockey referee was arrested on child pornography charges this week while at work at the agency’s Des Plaines headquarters, authorities said. Colin Gruenke, 38, of Deerfield, was charged in a criminal complaint unsealed in U.S. District Court on Thursday with one count of distribution of child pornography, court records show. Prosecutors are seeking to have Gruenke held without bond pending trial, and a detention hearing is set for Monday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Young Kim.

* Daily Herald | Former Kane County coroner Rob Russell announces bid for sheriff: Russell cited his dozen years as coroner as instrumental in boosting his positive name recognition throughout the county. “I’m very proud of the work we did during my three terms as coroner,” Russell said in the release. “I was encouraged by Democrats, Republicans, and independents to succeed Sheriff (Ron) Hain.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council pushes back on possible reductions in support for Paramount: The presentation described the city’s use of American Rescue Plan Act, or ARPA, funds during the COVID-19 pandemic, money which had to be obligated by 2024 and spent by 2025, Aurora Chief Financial Officer Stacy Peterson told the council. Much of that funding was spent on ongoing costs, she said, like the ShotSpotter system, body cameras and dash cameras for the police, the addition of 49 full-time employees and financial support to things like the Aurora Civic Center Authority.

* Daily Southtown | South, southwest suburban districts align Title IX policies with new federal guidance: Orland High School District 230 and Bremen High School District 228 are among districts statewide that received suggested Title IX policy revisions from the Illinois Association of School Boards’ Policy Reference Education Subscription Service in April, aiming to bring schools in compliance with federal law and best practices, said Jennifer Waterman, director of communications for District 230. The Title IX revisions revert the policy back to its 2020 version, which removes protections for students facing sex discrimination, meaning students facing discrimination on the basis of sex stereotypes, sex characteristics, pregnancy or related conditions, sexual orientation and/or gender identity, as defined in the 2024 policy, are no longer protected.

* Daily Southtown | Governors State University predicts loss of revenue with Trump pullback on student visas: “Every administration has a different viewpoint on how they handle international students,” said Paul McGuinness, the Governors State vice president for student affairs and enrollment management. “But there’s also a difference in the type of institution and how you might benefit from students.” The Trump administration canceled visas of international students at institutions including the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Northwestern University and the University of Chicago as part of a larger movement nationwide.

* Naperville Sun | Ribbon-cutting event held for new DuPage County Crisis Recovery Center: The DuPage County Board and DuPage County Health Department cut the ribbon this week on the county’s new Crisis Recovery Center, which will offer around-the-clock support for individuals experiencing a mental health or substance use crisis. Expected to officially open the first week of September, the center is the first of its kind in Illinois to provide mental health crisis services for children and adults, officials said in a news release. It aims to reduce unnecessary hospital emergency room visits as well as interactions with police that put a strain on public resources, the release said.

* Tribune | Two priests who serve the poor at Evanston church could be forced to leave U.S., parish fears: The archdiocese, like many others in the United States, is facing a shortage of priests as fewer men choose that vocation. Some Chicagoland parishes rely on immigrant priests to fill the gap. Nearly 60% of younger diocesan priests — under the age of 50 — who serve in the Archdiocese of Chicago are immigrants, according to a 2023 report. The number is a considerable contrast with priests over the age of 50, of whom 81% were born in the U.S. The average age of a priest in 2023 was 64.

*** Downstate ***

* Sun-Times | Corn dogs & cows: Scenes from the 2025 Illinois State Fair: The 2025 Illinois State Fair in Springfield ends Aug. 17. From livestock competitions to carnival rides and festival eats to the butter cow, attendees experienced several activities highlighting Illinois’ farming industry. Here’s some of what the Sun-Times saw during our visit.

* We made sure to get our annual pork burger from the Pork Pavilion


* BND | Metro-east elementary starts school year without its principal: Madonna Harris served as an assistant principal at Collinsville Middle School for seven years before retiring in May 2025. When Maryville Elementary Principal Charity Eugea was unable to start the school year due to health concerns, the district called Harris in to be the school’s acting principal, Collinsville school district superintendent Brad Skertich said.

* WGLT | Past State Farm Holiday Classic president arrested, charged with theft from the charity tournament: Police have arrested a past president of the State Farm Holiday Classic for allegedly stealing from a nonprofit that runs the charity high school basketball tournament. 39-year-old Kyle W. Myers of Normal has pleaded not guilty to theft of more than $100,000 and less than $500,000 over a two-year time frame.

*** National ***

* NYT | How Train Riders With Disabilities Are Faring on Amtrak: Passengers are facing blocked wheelchair space, getting stuck in doors and suffering other indignities 35 years after the Americans With Disabilities Act became law. […] The couple, who estimate that they’ve spent 560 hours on Amtrak together in the last three years, traveling coast-to-coast five times, said that riding the train is still much easier than flying. But the indignities they’ve experienced — not just trash cans and a faulty app but also incorrectly deployed boarding ramps, inaccessible dining cars and more — have left them with the sense that they must constantly advocate to receive the services they’re entitled to by law.

* AP | The US plans to build a $750M fly factory in Texas to stop a flesh-eating cattle parasite: Secretary Brooke Rollins announced Friday that the U.S. Department of Agriculture hopes to be producing and releasing sterile male New World screwworm flies into the wild within a year from the new factory on Moore Air Base outside Edinburg, Texas, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the border. She also said the USDA plans to deploy $100 million in technology, such as fly traps and lures, and step up border patrols by “tick riders” mounted on horseback and train dogs to sniff out the parasite.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - A couple of campaign updates

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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A look at the numbers

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The chairman of the Texas Republican Party said Thursday that he thinks Illinois is winnable for the GOP in 2026, despite the party’s lack of success in recent elections.

Speaking to a joint meeting of the Illinois party’s state central committee and county chairs, Abraham George pointed to the fact that Donald Trump won 43.5% of the vote in Illinois in the 2024 presidential election. That was three points more than he received in 2020, when he lost his first reelection bid to Democrat Joe Biden, and nearly five points more than he received in his first presidential run in 2016. The closer margins, however, were mostly due to fewer votes for Democratic candidate Kamala Harris, as Trump improved his vote total by just over 2,000 from 2020 to 2024.

“That’s not a blue state anymore. That’s a purple state,” George said. “This state can flip to a Republican pretty fast.”

* Sun-Times

Texas Republican Party Chair Abraham George, who earlier drew cheers in saying Illinois could flip to red, was asked how the state can do that while struggling to find recognizable candidates to run in statewide contests.

“That’s up to the Illinois Republican Party to do that. But Donald Trump got 43% in Illinois, and I think it is trending toward a Republican state in the last six cycles,” George said. “It seems to be more red every single time. So I think if they put in some work into it, it can become a real challenge for Democrats to win.”

Rounded presidential and gubernatorial results for the past six cycles

    2024: 54-43 Dem
    2022: 55-42 Dem
    2020: 58-41 Dem
    2018: 55-39-4 Dem
    2016: 56-39-4 Dem
    2014: 50-46 GOP

2020 was a particularly huge year for Democrats, and 2014 was Pat Quinn’s defeat (after beating Bill Brady by less than a point four years earlier).

Other than that, the Democratic results have been pretty static, while the Republican results have nudged up a wee bit (although the third party candidates in 2018 and 2016 appeared to hurt their numbers).

* Meanwhile, the Democratic Party of Illinois dropped some oppo yesterday…

While Illinois Democrats continue to support their Texas colleagues’ fight for democracy, the Illinois Republican Party today hosted far-right Texas GOP Chair Abraham George as their featured speaker. The Democratic Party of Illinois released the following statement:

“In true ILGOP fashion, they’re once again platforming violence, bad ethics, government overreach, and imposing their values on your lives. Instead of using their time and energy to fight the authoritarianism and fundamentalism that marginalizes so many Americans, they invite those ideals to breakfast.”

These are the values the ILGOP are celebrating:

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Catching up with the congressionals (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Evanston Now

Democratic congressional primary candidate Kat Abughazaleh appeared Thursday afternoon at a rally of Evanston residents opposed to a planned Popeyes restaurant. […]

The 26-year-old content creator said she was “so moved” by the protest, adding, “our leaders often ignore what we’re fighting for.” […]

Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss is also among the candidates in the crowded Democratic primary seeking to succeed Jan Schakowsky in representing the 9th Congressional District. […]

[The protestors] been calling on Biss to — in the words of the mural painted this week on the center’s wall — “Say no to Popeyes.”

[From Rich: So, the idea here is that a congressional candidate is helping force a South Asian-owned Popeyes franchisee to sell his building to a White woman under the guise of “helping small businesses” and “under represented communities” and “healthy choices”? Did I get that right?]

* Evanston Now political reporter Matthew Eadie

* More from the press release…

On Friday, August 15th, Bushra Amiwala will host Democratic lawmakers from Texas at the Muslim Community Center in Morton Grove, Illinois. The prayer event, open to the public, will run from 1:00 to 2:30pm.

Texas State Representatives Salman Bhojani, Suleman Lalani and many others who wish not to be disclosed at this time will attend. They have walked out of the Texas legislature to prevent the GOP from redrawing the state’s U.S. House maps. The proposal the Democrats aim to prevent would flagrantly gerrymander the state in favor of Republicans, disenfranchising thousands of voters.

Bushra Amiwala, a candidate running to represent Illinois’ 9th Congressional District, is proud to welcome the lawmakers into her community.

“Gerrymandering is far too common in Republican districts. Democrats have sued against gerrymandering, won those suits, and had those rulings ignored by Republicans in power,” said Amiwala, the first Gen Z elected official in the country. “Congressional maps should reflect the populations and demographics of the United States. If they don’t, then we need a new vision of what democracy looks like in this country.”

* Meanwhile…Evanston Round Table

With the candidate petition circulation period set to begin on Tuesday, Evanston resident and former Niles Township High School District 219 board member Jill Manrique filed paperwork on Monday morning to launch a March 2026 Democratic Primary bid for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District seat.

Manrique now joins more than a dozen other candidates vying to succeed longtime U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who has held the position since 1999 and announced her impending retirement in May. […]

Unlike many other candidates, Manrique has not registered a website or made any official statement announcing her campaign yet, but she said she has plans for a “more robust launch in the future.”

“I do have folks around me that are here to help and not only collect signatures, but spread the word amongst our community,” she said. “So right now we are going to focus on circulating petitions, continuing to build our base and gain strength.”

* US Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi in the Sun-Times

Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi on Monday unveiled a detailed “Trump accountability plan” for his U.S. Senate campaign, vowing he would push to restrict ICE agents from wearing masks, block “radical” judges nominated by President Donald Trump, and introduce constitutional amendments to block self-pardons and a potential presidential third term.

Krishnamoorthi’s 17-point plan also includes a push for legislation that would make executive orders targeting individuals or specific entities invalid — and another bill that would give anyone targeted by the Department of Justice for denaturalization the right to a jury trial and the right to counsel. […]

“My plan outlines how, as Illinois’ next U.S. Senator, I’ll use every tool in my toolbox to limit the damage he can do to this country and its citizens — while making sure a Trump-like White House, one without deference for the rule of law, due process, and civil rights — never happens again,” Krishnamoorthi said in a statement to the Sun-Times. […]

Krishnamoorthi’s package includes a direct response to Texas Republicans and their current Trump-backed redistricting plan. The plan includes legislation to end mid-decade redistricting and require states to use independent commissions or three-judge panels for redistricting and another bill to ban federal agents from arresting state legislators for not attending legislative sessions or leaving their state. Krishnamoorthi also wants legislation passed that would deny federal election grants and funding to states that trigger mid-cycle redistricting for partisan purposes.

* Illinois’ GOP congressional delegation skipped Republican Day at the State Fair yesterday. Mitchell Armentrout at the Sun-Times

[U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood] and his two fellow Republican members of the Illinois congressional delegation, Reps. Mary Miller and Mike Bost, weren’t at their party’s State Fair rally. None of them faces major challengers in their deep-red downstate districts.

…Adding… US Senator Bernie Sanders is stopping in Chicago for a rally with Congresswoman Delia Ramirez and 2nd CD candidate state Sen. Robert Peters


  23 Comments      


It’s now a law

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Gov. JB Pritzker on Thursday signed two measures aimed at strengthening union protections in Illinois amid the Trump administration’s stripping of federal workers’ union contracts.

The signing comes after the Federal Emergency Management Agency joined at least three other federal agencies in canceling contracts with unions to comply with a March executive order that said collective bargaining requirements no longer applied to many federal agencies. President Donald Trump said the cancellations were allowed because the agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, play a role in national security, a claim that labor groups are disputing in court.

“With my signature, we are restoring hard fought worker protections that Trump and Congress are trying to destroy, protections that were established under the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Coal Mine Safety Act,” Pritzker said. “This new state law means Trump can’t take these rights away from Illinois workers.”

One measure requires that the Illinois Department of Labor replace any repealed federal occupational safety standard with a state standard to protect workers across the state. A second measure signed into law changes the Prevailing Wage Act and ensures that workers are paid the Illinois prevailing wage whenever it is higher than the federal rate when federal construction projects are administered by a state or local government.

* More from the governor’s press release

HB1189 amends the Prevailing Wage Act, to ensure that when federal construction projects are administered by a state or local government, workers are paid the Illinois prevailing wage whenever it is higher than the federal rate. This ensures timely, fair compensation that reflects current local labor conditions, rather than waiting for federal adjustments.

HB2488, which the Governor signed previously but was highlighted at today’s ceremony, eliminates references to a federal program in the Equal Pay Act to ensure that federal changes do not undermine the state requirement that private employers with 100 or more employees report on employee wages by gender and race or ethnicity. The bill also clarifies that apprentices are not subject to a lower fringe benefit rate than journeymen under the Prevailing Wage Act.

* 25News Now

An Illinois law taking effect next year will prioritize child internet crimes.

Illinois is joining 13 other states in enforcing “Alicia’s Law”, or HB2586, which will help prioritize state resources to combat child internet predators after Gov. JB Pritzker signed the bill on Monday.

Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly said ISP has opened 145 cases of internet child crimes in 2025. He said with the new law, internet crimes against kids are now a statutory, legal, and required mission of state police.

“About four years ago, ISP really started to focus on these internet crimes against children cases,” said Kelly. “We work very closely with our federal partners and our partners in the attorney general’s office. This something that has become a bigger part of what we do.”

* We told you about this recently-signed law last month. ABC Chicago

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker recently signed a bill to crack down on squatting, but that law doesn’t go into effect until January 1. […]

[Army veteran Bradford Robinson] says his realtor came by his property last month to show a prospective buyer the house, but when they arrived, the lockbox had been broken and the locks were changed. […]

“The young lady in the house showed [the police] a bogus lease,” Robinson said. “With that being said, with the lease, the police said there’s nothing that they could do… the police actually asked me to have you come out to do a report because you seem to have a little bit more pull in getting things done.” […]

State Representative La Shawn Ford, who co-sponsored the squatter bill, met with the veteran to see what he could do to help.

“I’ve been working with Speaker Welch, and we’re gonna do everything we can,” Rep. Ford said. “I asked if we can file a bill to make it effective in October.”

  9 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC7 last December

Serious test questions about a Chicago lab could change the outcome of hundreds of impaired driving convictions in Illinois and that could unlock the jail doors for some DUI convicts.

After a months-long investigation, the ABC7 I-Team discovered some test results from a prominent Chicago lab used by prosecutors have been deemed unreliable and could be inaccurate.

The lab, University of Illinois Chicago Analytical Forensic Testing Laboratory, is accused of providing flawed test results in cases of driving-under the influence of marijuana, many of them resulting in motorists convicted and sent to jail, and there are allegations of a cover-up. […]

The University of Illinois Chicago has now stopped doing tests for marijuana in law enforcement cases

* Maya Dukmasova did a deep dive for Injustice Watch. Some dot points

• Faulty science: Between 2016 and 2024 a forensic toxicology lab at the University of Illinois Chicago tested people’s bodily fluids for DUI-cannabis investigations using scientifically discredited methods and faulty machinery.
• A crisis concealed: Lab management knew its machines were not producing reliable results for THC blood tests, yet for years failed to notify law enforcement or fix their testing methods.
• Wrongful convictions: The senior forensic toxicologist at the lab testified in court cases in misleading ways, prosecutors later admitted, contributing to people being convicted for DUI offenses with little or no evidence they were intoxicated.
• Lack of transparency: After shuttering its human testing program last year, the lab finally issued a disclosure to 17 prosecutors’ offices admitting their test results may have been compromised going back years. However, the University of Illinois hasn’t taken any steps to notify the people whose body fluids were tested about the possibly compromised results.
• No oversight: Illinois has no meaningful forensic science oversight system. A recently created state forensic science commission has no authority to investigate complaints, shut down labs, discipline analysts, or issue legally binding findings.

* A few excerpts

In a months-long investigation — including more than 45 Freedom of Information Act requests, more than 100 interviews, and a review of some 8,000 pages of public records — Injustice Watch found more than 2,200 cases in which body fluids were tested for THC by the UIC lab between 2016 and 2024. In addition to improperly testing urine for DUI-cannabis investigations, these sources indicate the lab was for years unable to differentiate between legal and illegal types of THC in people’s body fluids. Worse, internal records examined by Injustice Watch suggest the lab was aware of some of the problems in its testing since at least 2021 but continued to perform tests and report results to law enforcement, mostly in DUI cases. [UIC forensic toxicologist Jennifer Bash], meanwhile, repeatedly testified about the lab’s findings in inaccurate and misleading ways. […]

Injustice Watch also found university officials charged with overseeing the lab were focused on the lab’s financial performance, and not on the quality of its scientific work. According to internal emails, officials’ eventual decision to shut down human testing at the lab came as a result of its failure to generate revenue. […]

For nearly three years, the UIC lab kept testing blood and urine in DUI cases using a method unable to properly detect the presence of delta-9 THC — even though the state’s legal limits are tied exclusively to delta-9. […]

The accrediting agency’s audit report detailed a slew of problems at the lab: months of missing records on “calibrators and controls used in THC quantitative testing”; years of missing evaluations on THC measurement uncertainty; no procedure to “preclude an individual from technically reviewing their own work”; no instructions for reporting inconclusive results; failure to properly review and document complaints about laboratory activities. The instrument used for THC screening hadn’t received required annual maintenance in nearly two years. […]

Texas has a state law requiring prosecutors to continuously disclose evidence to defendants; prosecutors can be disciplined for failing to do so. There’s a “junk science writ” that allows people to seek new trials if they can show flaws in the forensic evidence used to convict them. Most recently, the state created a portal making crime lab files directly open to both prosecutors and defense attorneys, eliminating some of the burdens of transmitting evidence. […]

In researching an upcoming book, Stout found only eight states with laws requiring forensics labs to be accredited or certified to produce evidence used in criminal prosecutions. In this environment, bad science can flourish because most defendants, police officers, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and judges do not have the expertise to evaluate the validity of what scientists say.

Go read the rest, particularly if you are a legislator involved with this topic.

  6 Comments      


Again, what the heck is going on here? (Updated)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Remember this Sun-Times and the Illinois Answers Project story from yesterday?

Carlos Baker, the Chicago police officer who shot and killed his partner Krystal Rivera during a foot pursuit earlier this year, allegedly attacked a female officer late Sunday at a bar in Wicker Park, the Chicago Sun-Times and Illinois Answers Project have learned.

The officer who was injured in the attack filed a police report while she was being treated for a split lip at Rush University Medical Center, alleging that Baker and another woman beat her late Sunday at DSTRKT Bar & Grill, 1540 N. Milwaukee Ave.

* Believe it or not, it gets worse. Sara Machi with CBS2

Already under investigation for the on-duty shooting of his partner Krystal Rivera, Chicago Police Officer Carlos Baker may have misrepresented himself and violated department policy in the aftermath of a bar fight in Wicker Park last weekend. […]

While reporting on the initial incident, CBS News Chicago learned from an employee at a neighboring business that Baker called their shop, identified himself as a police officer investigating the bar fight — in which he is actually listed as a suspect — and asked for access to the surveillance cameras.

The employee showed CBS News Chicago the business’ caller ID, which showed Baker’s last name and phone number and a time stamp, 3:01 p.m. Wednesday, as news was breaking about the bar fight.

When a CBS News Chicago reporter called the number and left a voicemail, she promptly received a call back by a man who identified himself as Carlos Baker. He asked if “our restaurant” cameras are working and if they had video of the Sunday night incident.

When told he was speaking to a reporter, Baker hung up.

This guy appears to be a complete menace.

* Oh, and one more thing

Chicago police say Baker is now on medical leave but has not been stripped of his police powers. He still has his badge and service weapon

I’m just saying, but if I was in CPD management, I’d be worried that every day this guy has police powers is another day the city could be on the hook for another lawsuit.

Then again, those payouts come from a separate pile of city budget cash, so CPD has no incentive to prevent fiscal problems caused by bad actors. Maybe that ought to be changed.

* And maybe FOP Chicago Lodge 7 President John Catanzara might think about retracting his premature and intense defense of Officer Baker last month

There is nothing nefarious here. The department is not hiding anything. It is simply trying to support an officer and honor the family and the fallen officer Crystal Rivera.

…Adding… The Sun-Times’ Tom Schuba


  23 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Republicans rally around President Donald Trump, but internal infighting continues. Tribune

    - Illinois Republicans used their day at the State Fair on Thursday to pledge their allegiance to President Donald Trump and the Trump-backed plan to redistrict Texas’ congressional boundaries to gain GOP seats that led to that state’s House Democrats fleeing to Illinois to try to block it.
    - With the circulation of candidacy petitions well underway, the party has yet to formally field a full slate of candidates against Democrats who hold all statewide offices.
    - House Minority Leader Tony McCombie expressed confidence that by the time petitions are filed at the end of October for the state’s March 17 primary, “I know we’re going to have a full slate” of candidates for statewide office.

* Related stories…

* I didn’t think Coldplay was on the Grandstand lineup this year…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Pritzker signs union protection bills amid Trump war on federal unions: One measure requires that the Illinois Department of Labor replace any repealed federal occupational safety standard with a state standard to protect workers across the state. A second measure signed into law changes the Prevailing Wage Act and ensures that workers are paid the Illinois prevailing wage whenever it is higher than the federal rate when federal construction projects are administered by a state or local government.

* Tribune | Texas House Democrats planning their departure from Illinois and back to Austin: “Under the advice of legal counsel, Democrats must return to Texas to build a strong public legislative record for the upcoming legal battle against a map that violates both the current Voting Rights Act and the Constitution,” a statement from the Texas House Democratic Caucus said. “Trump thought he could easily get his way in Texas with compliant Republicans, but Democrats fought back ferociously and took the fight to Trump across America. We will return to the House floor and to the courthouse with a clear message: The fight to protect voting rights has only begun,” the Texas Democrats said of the Trump-backed Texas remap effort.

*** Statewide ***

* WCIA | Illinois scientists reassess threatened species for first time in nearly 40 years: After collecting and analyzing the data, the team updated the S-ranks for each species. The team learned that the Laurentian fragile fern, the small whorled pogonia, and a plant known as goosefoot corn salad have been wiped out in Illinois. But, they also learned that 71 species are now less endangered than they were in 1987. Only three species are more endangered today, compared to 40 years ago.

* STL PR | Illinois and Missouri used to be covered in prairie. A new book traces its ‘ruin and redemption’: In a new book, “Sea of Grass: The Conquest, Ruin and Redemption of Nature on the American Prairie,” environmental journalists Dave Hage and Josephine Marcotty chronicle the history and future of this essential landscape. Hage and Marcotty were guests on St. Louis on the Air on Wednesday. “Many of us Midwesterners think, ‘Oh, it’s that flat, boring part before you get to the mountains,’” Hage said. “What we discovered working on the book, and what many scientists and ecologists have discovered in the last couple of decades, is that, in fact, the prairie is an incredibly rich ecosystem and an invaluable ecosystem in terms of the health of our planet.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol City Now | On Republican Day at the State Fair, Pritzker signs workers’ protection bills at Springfield union office: Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton — also one of several candidates running for U.S. Senate — didn’t mince words when also claiming Trump is trying to do harm to Illinois. “The President of the United States — a man notorious for abusing and manipulating workers — is actively using his office to attack the rights of all workers and labor unions,” said Stratton. “Whether he knows it or not, in doing so, he’s highlighting why Illinois’ work is so crucial.”

* WMBD | Illinois bill could help people with opioid addiction disorder: An Illinois bill could change harm reduction strategies across the state to help those addicted to opioids. The proposal would change homeless shelter rules. Any shelter that receives state funds would not be able to kick somebody out on the sole basis of a drug sobriety rule.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago Public Schools deficit deadline: CPS started the summer with a $734 million deficit for the school year that begins Aug. 18. WBEZ and the Sun-Times are tracking how the Board of Education and CPS officials work to close the budget hole, this month and long-term.

* WBEZ | CPS board rebuffs budget plan from school district leaders: Eleven of 21 members sent a letter to interim CEO Macquline King saying these two items need to be in the budget for this school year. It comes a day after King’s staff presented its budget proposal and touted that it could close a $734 million budget deficit without a loan. The proposal included the municipal pension payment, but made it contingent on the state or the city sending the school district more than it is anticipating in the budget.

* Evanston Roundtable | CTA looks to better utilize vacant L station retail space: The topic came up on July 9, when the Chicago Transit Board, CTA’s governing body, discussed an ordinance to raise rates at parking lots owned by the agency. The discussion led to a conversation about redeveloping underutilized CTA-owned parking lots and garages, which dovetailed into a conversation about vacant retail spaces. […] During the July transit board meeting, CTA Chief Innovation Officer Molly Poppe said that, while the agency still sees many retail spaces as revenue generators, it’s also looking into offering some spaces for “community benefit.” Chief Financial Officer Tom McKone added that those uses may still generate revenue, since that kind of activation could bring in more potential riders to stations.

* Sun-Times | Cutting parking requirements for homes built near transit aims to help fix housing crisis: Passed by the Chicago City Council on July 16, the ordinance gives developers the option to reduce — what was historically required — off-street parking in new or rehabbed housing projects. Depending on its proximity to a CTA or Metra stop, off-street parking can be reduced by up to 50%, or even eliminated. Off-street parking typically takes the form of surface parking lots or parking garages.

* Sun-Times | Past his term’s midpoint, Mayor Johnson’s job approval rating stands at 26%, survey shows: Well past midterm and a year before his reelection campaign begins in earnest, Mayor Brandon Johnson has a 26% approval rating with a majority of Chicagoans unhappy with his job performance — no matter where they live, what race they are and how much money they earn. The good news for the first-term mayor is that he had nowhere to go but up since polling earlier this year showed him languishing in single digits.

* Tribune | Streeterville residents back Northwestern’s hospital construction plan, but worry about loss of green space: After listening to Northwestern Memorial Hospital officials outline a proposal to build a 1.2 million-square-foot tower on a vacant lot in Streeterville, residents at a Wednesday night community meeting were mostly supportive of the project. Many also mourned the impending loss of one of the neighborhood’s few green spaces. “It was so nice of the hospital to plant wildflowers there that we can enjoy,” said Deborah Gershbein, president of Streeterville Organization of Active Residents, which co-hosted the community meeting with Ald. Brian Hopkins, (2nd). “But we will all need health care, and we’re so fortunate that the heart of this community has such a wonderful hospital, and (with these plans) it will get better.”

* Tribune | Lawyer for CHA who used ChatGPT to cite fake court case sanctioned in separate case for improper AI use: A lawyer hired by the Chicago Housing Authority recently revealed that her citation of a fictitious court case when defending the agency in a case involving the alleged poisoning of two children by lead paint was a result of using ChatGPT and failing to check her work. Turns out, it was not her first time improperly using artificial intelligence, court records show. A motion to dismiss and a reply in support of the motion to dismiss were filed in February and April, respectively, in the chancery case Calderon v. Dynamic Manufacturing, Inc. In the case, a woman alleges she was subject to a hostile work environment by her employer, violating her rights under the Illinois Human Rights Act, court records show. Combined, the two court filings contained 12 hallucinated case citations by attorney Danielle Malaty.

* Block Club | Lakeview’s Kelly Park Still Hasn’t Seen Upgrades 6 Years After They Were Promised: Neighbors spent years raising money and pushing for upgrades at Kelly Park, but the project keeps getting delayed despite more than $1 million in funding. Park district officials say work will start this fall, but neighbors aren’t so sure.

* WTTW | Chicago Program Put 30,000 Young People to Work This Summer: Mayor Brandon Johnson says he’s been working to expand the program and increase youth hiring in the city, surpassing a goal to provide funding for 1,000 more positions. Last summer, Johnson expanded the program with an additional 2,400 positions. He has said that investing more in services like summer jobs programs can help reduce crime by providing productive activities for young people.

* Block Club | Cubs To Host First-Ever Oktoberfest In Wrigleyville This Fall: The festival will take place Sept. 19-21 in the Toyota Camry Lot at 1126 W. Grace St. It will be open to all ages and will feature traditional Oktoberfest staples like a ceremonial keg tap, beer tents, carnival rides, live music and themed competitions. The food lineup will include Oktoberfest staples like bratwurst with sauerkraut, giant pretzels with mustard or beer cheese, schnitzel, potato salad and sweet treats like apple strudel. And also plenty of beer.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘I’ve got questions’: Town hall to address proposed closure of Elk Grove hospital’s maternity ward: Since the July 1 announcement, Elk Grove Village Mayor Craig Johnson said he’s had many conversations with Ascension Illinois CEO Polly Davenport, who plans to attend the town hall meeting with other top hospital officials. “They are going to have an opportunity to explain to this community what is happening at Alexian Brothers today and what the future of Alexian Brothers is going to look like,” Johnson said. “This is an important issue for this community. Elk Grove has partnered with Alexian Brothers for 60 years. … Obviously we’ve got some concerns. This is a chance for all of our residents to ask the questions.”

* Shaw Local | Joliet City Council could vote on adopting local grocery tax next week: The Joliet City Council is expected to vote next week on a local 1% grocery tax. The tax would replace the 1% state grocery tax that is ending Jan. 1. The state law eliminating the tax gives municipalities the option of replacing it with a local tax to maintain revenues that otherwise would go away.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council approves renewing ShotSpotter service for next three years: On Tuesday, the Aurora City Council gave final approval for the city to renew its contract with ShotSpotter, a service that detects gunfire within a certain area, for three years. The city has used the service by SoundThinking, Inc., since it was first approved by the City Council in 2022, according to past reporting. Roughly two square miles of Aurora is covered by ShotSpotter, according to past reporting. The coverage areas include certain neighborhoods or other areas that historically have had more gunfire, while leaving out the areas that have not.

* Evanston Round Table | ‘It’s just been a disaster’: Parents of Special Olympics athletes angry, heartbroken at city’s treatment of Woodson: Woodson, the program coordinator responsible for Evanston’s Special Olympics teams and accessible recreation was dismissed for an “inability to improve his performance” in administrative duties, according to personnel files released by the city. His removal was cemented on Tuesday when he submitted a notice of retirement to the city. But his dismissal has resulted in sobbing kids. Scores of angry, disappointed and mistrustful parents. Canceled athletic events. Protests at public events. In the minds of the parents who spoke to the RoundTable, the city pressured their coach, friend and mentor to end his relationship with the city’s Special Recreation program where he worked for 35 years. Since then, anxiety overwhelms athletes and parents.

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg’s Septemberfest grounds adapting to village hall construction: And even though construction of a new building has started, the space available for the fest is only a little less than when the previous village hall had been standing there for 52 years. The most significant loss of space is between the construction site and the pond to the north, where many artists and crafters used to set up. As a result, Summit Drive will be closed from Schaumburg Road for a stretch southward to accommodate these vendors in the street.

* Shaw Local | New Hollywood Casino Joliet opens with fanfare, seen as regional destination: The new Hollywood Casino Joliet opened Monday with fanfare that included a traditional Chinese lion dance and an announcement that the casino has become an official sponsor of the Chicago Bears. Executives also honored their Joliet roots, recognizing seven employees who have been with the casino since a group of local investors opened it in 1992.

*** Downstate ***

* IPM News | Local grocery tax will continue in Savoy when Illinois phases out statewide collection: “This is not a new tax, but rather a longstanding revenue source for the village of Savoy and for every community in Illinois that’s been in place for decades,” said Village Administrator Andy Quarnstrom during an August 6 board meeting. The tax represents one cent for every dollar spent on food products at a grocery store. It will not apply to other items available at a grocery store such as home goods, alcohol, soft drinks and candy. The current statewide grocery tax accounts for $350,000 to $450,000 in revenue for Savoy, according to village documents.

* WGLT | McLean County Board fills vacancy in District 3, approves more wind turbines: County Administrator Cassy Taylor said the special use application will add 35 wind turbines to a field with 58 turbines already in operation. Since federal tax cuts outlined in President Trump’s tax and spending bill, some renewable energy developers have had to rethink their projects currently in the pipeline. Board chair Elizabeth Johnston said she is not personally aware of any move by developers to speed up construction. “These were projects that were already in the wings, even before the election last year and before some of the changes coming out of [Washington,] D.C. this year,” Johnston said. “I’m not feeling the urgency, I haven’t seen necessarily the urgency in the county, in the zoning board of appeals meeting.”

* WJBD | Salem teen wins big at State Fair: Kaolin Lewis earlier won reserve overall for the Simmental breed and was grand champion in the Land of Lincoln Simmental competition. Lewis also showed a Charolais Heifer that was also a grand champion. Lewis is in her fifth year showing at the state fair and is a seven-year member of the Marion County Pioneers 4-H club.

*** National ***

* NYT | SpaceX Gets Billions From the Government. It Gives Little to Nothing Back in Taxes.: The rocket maker’s finances have long been secret because the company is privately held. But the documents reviewed by The Times show that SpaceX can seize on a legal tax benefit that allows it to use the more than $5 billion in losses it racked up by late 2021 to offset paying future taxable income. President Trump made a change in 2017, during his first term, that eliminated the tax benefit’s expiration date for all companies. For SpaceX, that means that nearly $3 billion of its losses can be indefinitely applied against future taxable income.

* NYT | Draft of White House Report Suggests Kennedy Won’t Push Strict Pesticide Regulations: A highly anticipated White House report on the health of American children would stop short of proposing direct restrictions on ultraprocessed foods and pesticides that the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has called major threats, according to a draft of the document that was reviewed by The New York Times.

* WaPo | Landmark plastic talks collapse with the U.S. opposing key production limits: After spurning other global environmental efforts, the United States showed up in force in Switzerland for landmark plastic treaty talks — seeking a deal, the Trump administration said, but opposing the production limits that many other nations saw as the main solution.

* WaPo | Electricity prices are surging, opening up a new line of attacks against Republicans: They are crafting an argument that not only have prices not come down but the sweeping tax and spending law Trump signed into law in July will make energy costs worse. That legislation, among other things, rolled back clean energy tax credits that were expanded in the Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden signed into law in 2022, which could make solar and wind energy projects less financially feasible. It also reoriented government spending toward fossil fuels. Following the passage of that bill, Trump signed an executive order compelling his administration to “crack down on remaining loopholes allowing access to renewable energy tax breaks,” our colleague Jake Spring reported.

  10 Comments      


Open thread

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  3 Comments      


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

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Aug 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller


  Comment      


Live coverage

Friday, Aug 15, 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

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Rumors about Salvi stepping down as Party Chair have been circulating recently


* Tribune

A Homer Glen man who was charged earlier this year with threatening state Rep. Nicole La Ha was found this week unfit to stand trial in Will County Circuit Court.

Steven Brady, 41, of the 13100 block of Rado Drive, faces charges of threatening a public official, a felony, and harassment through electronic communications, a misdemeanor, for allegedly contacting La Ha through her website and saying he would harm the representative and her family.

Brady was evaluated by a licensed psychiatrist and he was found unfit to stand trial, but he is likely to be restored to fitness within a year, according to court documents. […]

A spokesman for La Ha released a statement on her behalf.

“I’m relieved this individual is getting the help he needs,” La Ha’s statement said. “My hope is that this leads to a safer outcome for everyone involved.”

* Sen. Robert Peters

A new law sponsored by State Senator Robert Peters ensures the state maintains strong protections for wage standards, coal mine safety and occupational health, even if federal laws are weakened or repealed. […]

The law prevents the Illinois Department of Labor and Department of Natural Resources from adopting any rules less protective than those in effect under federal law as of April 28, 2025. Peters’ law also requires IDOL to restore any repealed federal occupational safety rules not already covered under state law and allows legal actions against employers who violate them.

These changes will directly affect the well-being, job security and workplace conditions of Illinoisans. Whether someone works in a warehouse, factory or coal mine, Peters is guaranteeing their protections will not vanish in the wake of federal rollbacks – offering peace of mind to the employees and families who rely on the state to protect and, when necessary, strengthen workers’ rights. […]

Senate Bill 1976 was signed into law Thursday and goes into effect Jan. 1, 2026.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | CPS board rebuffs budget plan from school district leaders: The majority of the Chicago Board of Education is demanding the school district’s budget include a controversial $175 million municipal pension payment and a loan to cover costs. Eleven of 21 members sent a letter to interim CEO Macquline King saying these two items need to be in the budget for the upcoming school year. It comes a day after King’s staff presented their budget proposal and touted that they were able to close a $734 million budget deficit without a loan. The budget proposal included the municipal pension payment, but made it contingent on the state or the city sending the school district more than it is anticipating in the budget.

* Crain’s | South Loop residents weigh in on Chicago Fire stadium plan: An online survey of 653 South Loop residents conducted in recent weeks by the South Loop Neighbors community group found 73% of respondents said they were “supportive” and nearly half were “strongly supportive” of the Major League Soccer team’s proposal, the neighborhood group said in a statement, while about 10% of respondents were opposed.

* Crain’s | Northwestern Memorial plans $96.5M project to expand, bridge ICUs: The price tag for the ICU expansion is $96.5 million with a total footprint of 69,741 square feet of new space. Construction is expected to begin in March 2026 and be fully complete by the end of June 2028, if its application before the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board is approved. The project would increase ICU bed capacity in the Galter Pavilion, at 675 N. Saint Clair St., by 22 beds and in the Feinberg Pavilion, at 251 E. Huron, St., by 20 beds. In total, the hospital has 139 ICU beds on the campus now and the 42 new beds would increase that to a total of 181 ICU beds, a 30% increase.

* Crain’s | Chicago Public Media taps Pulitzer winner as new editor-in-chief: Chicago Public Media has named Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Kimbriell Kelly as its next editor-in-chief, effective Sept. 2. She will oversee the combined editorial operations of WBEZ, Vocalo and the Chicago Sun-Times, which CPM unified earlier this year. CEO Melissa Bell this morning announced the appointment in a memo to staffers obtained by Crain’s.

* Block Club Chicago | John Stamos Slated To Appear At Riot Fest After Years Of Online Harassment: Riot Fest has long held a fascination with the “Full House” actor. It seems to have kicked off with a 2013 tweet from the fest wondering if Jessie and the Rippers (Stamos’ fictional “Full House” band) would possibly play the fest. That year, the fest featured a John Stamos butter sculpture; Stamos tweeted he was “flattered” and “pretty frightened.” In 2017, the fest hosted “Have Mercy: The John Stamos Art Show” in which artists across the city offered incredibly detailed portraits of the sitcom star in a variety of formats.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Homelessness report highlights urgent housing needs in Kane County: Over 300 households in 2024 sought emergency housing after fleeing domestic violence, according to the report. An average of 367 people stay in emergency shelters each night, and more than 350 children were housed in emergency shelters or transitional housing during the data collection period. The report showed that affordable housing is in critically short supply, with a 1% vacancy rate for low-cost rental units in Kane County.

* Tribune | Cook County public health head fired for not renewing medical license: After more than two years on the job, Dr. LaMar Hasbrouck was fired this January after failing to renew his medical license, according to his personnel file received as part of a Tribune open records request. Hasbrouck, who said he was “fully transparent” about his licensure status, said the matter “has been amicably resolved” without filing a formal court claim. When Hasbrouck was hired in the spring of 2022, the Chief Operating Officer post was empty for nearly two years — the bulk of the pandemic — before Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle announced Hasbrouck’s hiring. Preckwinkle had let go of the previous public health chief, Dr. Terry Mason, to the surprise of other county officials, as COVID-19 was just beginning to surge in the spring of 2020.

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen joins other towns in replacing state’s 1% grocery tax: While the state plans to eliminate its grocery tax Jan. 1, it provided municipalities the authority to enact a replacement local sales tax. Municipalities that want to implement a 1% grocery sales tax must pass an ordinance and submit it to the Illinois Department of Revenue by Oct. 1 in order for the tax to be imposed on Jan. 1, according to the Illinois Municipal League.

* Daily Herald | DuPage Animal Services celebrates $1 million gift as shelter is ‘overflowing’ with cats: Animal Services accepted the $1 million donation from DuPage Animal Friends. The nonprofit organization has been “energetically fundraising to help pay off the construction costs of the new DuPage Animal Services facility,” DuPage County Board Chair Deb Conroy said. The gift was made possible by the “unwavering benevolence of our donors,” DuPage Animal Friends board president Jennifer Martyn said.

*** Downstate ***

* WJBD | St. Louis postal center audit confirms widespread problems: US Congressman Mike Bost appealed to the U.S. Postal Service for an audit and says he is thankful the Trump administration conducted it, identified the problems and demanded accountability. The Inspector General’s report included 12 recommendations. They include filling vacant positions, improving supervisor oversight, fixing dock congestion, and enforcing proper handling of registered mail. The audit found all the changes would help restore timely and reliable service.

* IPM News | After his first 100 days in office, what’s Urbana Mayor DeShawn Williams planning next?: The city has already hit the ground running, he said, with initiatives like a new comprehensive plan – Imagine Urbana – and funding a reparations study. Williams announced he and his staff are working on the new “Philo Road Ahead” initiative, which will ensure the corridor serves everyone who depends on it.

* WCIA | Emotions run high at PBL school board meeting amid ongoing issues: Ford County residents aired out their concerns at the Paxton-Buckley-Loda school board meeting Wednesday night as they looked to deal with multiple issues within the district. And now, locals are pushing for one public official to announce his resignation. First is the new contracts for the teachers in the union, as the old one has been expired for a couple of months. The meeting also talked about the search for a new superintendent after Travis Duley resigned last school year. And looming over all of it are people still asking for answers concerning Robert Pacey.

* WSIL | Carbondale’s Quatro’s Pizza to celebrate 50 years: “Quatros is more than just a pizza place — it’s a part of our city’s identity,” said William Lo, the Executive Director of the Carbondale Chamber of Commerce. “For 50 years, they’ve brought people together around great food, and we’re excited to honor their legacy.” […] Additionally, the City of Carbondale will recognize Quatro’s contributions with an official proclamation. This will take place during the Carbondale City Council meeting on Tuesday, August 26, 2025, at 6 p.m. at Carbondale City Hall, 200 South Illinois Avenue.

*** National ***

* NPR | The fight is on. How redistricting could unfold in 8 entangled states: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker continues to leave the door open to redistricting the state’s congressional map as he hosts more than two dozen Texas House Democrats in suburban Chicago. “Sure, we could redistrict. It’s possible,” he said Monday. But finding another Democratic seat in Illinois is a tall order.

* WFAA | Private equity firm increases offer to buy out Dallas Morning News parent company: MNG, a subsidiary of Alden Global Capital, increased its offer to buy the DallasNews Corporation, the parent company of the Dallas Morning News, by $1. The increase brings Alden Global Capital’s total “non-binding” offer to $17.50 per share in cash, according to the letter, valuing the company at over $93.6 million. The competing bidder, Hearst, which owns several other major Texas papers, offered to merge with the DallasNews Corporation in July for a price of $14 per share. After Alden Global Capital initially offered $16.50 per share, Hearst increased its offer to $15 per share.

* NYT | Appeals Court Allows DOGE Access to Sensitive Data at Several Agencies: The decision cleared the way for teams put in place this year by Elon Musk to reclaim “high-level I.T. access” to government databases, Judge Julius N. Richardson wrote, over the objections of a number of labor unions who had sued, arguing the move violated federal privacy laws. Writing for the majority, Judge Richardson said the circumstances of the case mirrored those in a lawsuit involving data that the Supreme Court had weighed as an emergency application this year. In an unsigned order in that case, the Supreme Court intervened to allow the DOGE analysts to continue sifting through the records “in order for those members to do their work.”

  16 Comments      


No, he didn’t steal the cop car

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* After yesterday’s Governor’s Day festivities, Isabel and I did some work and then made a beeline to the State Fair’s Pork Patio. Along the way I saw this guy unloading a state police car in a parking lot and just had to stop and ask him some questions…

“Are you undercover or something?” I asked. I mean, all the state cops I’ve ever encountered were clean shaven and straight up and down types.

He smiled broadly and said he wasn’t. I wondered aloud if he was ever asked if he’d stolen the cruiser. He laughed and hinted that may have happened a time or two.

* Turns out, his name is Jeff Bracco and he’s with the Illinois State Police Heritage Foundation

The Illinois State Police Heritage Foundation is a dedicated organization that preserves the history and legacy of the Illinois State Police, educates the public about its vital roles and contributions, inspires future generations to pursue careers in policing, and honors fallen officers while supporting their families.

The foundation has a State Fair booth and they sell t-shirts and other items to help keep things going.

Jeff is a biker (I should’ve guessed) and was in security for 33 years. He met another active member and was asked if he’d like to help drive the old, past-their-prime cruisers in parades and attend special events. “And then it just kind of went from there,” he said.

My basic life motto is learn something new every day and try to meet interesting people. I definitely did that yesterday.

* If the Illinois State Police Heritage Foundation sounds like your kind of thing, click here to learn more.

  6 Comments      


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

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

“This legislation prevents the unfair shifting of responsibility from out-of-state companies that caused the harm to Illinois-based businesses that had potentially smaller roles in causing the injury.”

— Illinois woman whose husband developed cancer caused by inhaling asbestos fibers his father brought home on his clothing from working at an Indiana chemical company

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

For more information about SB 328, click here.

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Texas case another example of how non-Illinois civil warrants don’t (and shouldn’t) mean anything here

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Some background is here if you need it. Isabel told you about this development earlier today

A circuit judge in downstate Quincy has rejected Republican Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s petition to compel Illinois law enforcement to enforce civil warrants issued by the Texas House speaker and arrest Democrats who fled their state to block Republicans from enacting a new GOP-favored congressional map.

In his ruling, Adams County Circuit Judge Scott Larson said repeatedly that the Illinois circuit courts do not have the “inherent power” to consider the case, in part, because the warrants were issued by Texas’ legislative branch and no Texas court has issued a ruling to enforce them.

“This Illinois circuit court does not have the inherent power to initiate, consider and determine whether the actions of foreign legislators while in a special legislative session were contumacious and done for the purpose of willfully evading civil legislative Quorum Warrants issued by the State of Texas House of Representatives,” Larson wrote in his ruling issued Wednesday, using a somewhat archaic term meaning “willfully disobedient to authority.“

Texas’ filing reminds me of one of those DeVore covid specials from back in the day. Same result, too.

* More from the ruling

Further, this court notes that the Quorum Warrants issued by the State of Texas House of Representatives are geographically limited and specifically requests that the Sergeant-at-Arms of the House of Representatives of the State of Texas take into custody the Member, “wherever the Member may be found in the State [Texas].”

* And that brings us to this letter from the Chair of the Texas House Committee on House Administration to Rep. Nick Smith, the Illinois House’s sergeant at arms. I’m not sure what the role of the sergeant at arms is in Texas, but in our House it’s just a legislative title. Smith is not a sworn officer

Dear Mr. Sergeant-at-Arms:

I am writing to request your assistance in executing process ordered by the Texas House of Representatives seeking the return of members absent from House proceedings.

On August 4, 2025, at least fifty members of the Texas House of Representatives absented themselves from legislative proceedings, denying the body a quorum. Exercising its lawful authority under Section 10, Article III, Texas Constitution, and Rule 5, Section 8, Texas House Rules of Procedure, the members present ordered the return of absent members, under civil warrant of arrest if necessary, and the Honorable Dustin Burrows, Speaker of the House, signed civil warrants of arrest for those members yesterday. Copies of those warrants are attached to this letter.

Media reports and social media posts affirmatively indicate that many of these absent Texas House members are present in your state in an effort to avoid execution of the House’s civil warrants of arrest. I request any assistance you are able to provide as the sergeant-at-arms in your state in executing this lawfully ordered process so that the Texas House may complete its vital work for the people of Texas, from disaster relief to education reform.

Sincerely,
[Signed]
Charlie L. Geren
Chairman, House Committee on House Administration
Texas House of Representatives

No response was sent. But here’s a statement from the Illinois House Speaker’s office…

A member of the Texas House of Representatives emailed Leader Nick Smith, who serves as Majority Officer and Sergeant At Arms—a position primarily responsible for maintaining order in meetings of the Illinois House Democratic Caucus. No member of the Illinois House is responsible for attendance at Texas’ session.

* The bigger picture here is that the concept of “civil warrants” is taking on an increasing importance in some minds that it really shouldn’t have.

The most well-known example is how federal immigration authorities expect all state and local law enforcement to help them enforce civil warrants, even if they’re issued on the spot.

Due process is nowhere to be found with these warrants.

Like some other states, Illinois’ official response has been, to Democratic and Republican federal administrations alike: “Go get yourself a criminal warrant from an actual judge and then you’ll have all the cooperation your hearts desire.”

But, for whatever reason, immigration authorities don’t want to go to that trouble, even in cases where obtaining a criminal warrant would be a no-brainer.

* And the same applies with this Texas case. If the Texas House can convince a Texas judge to issue actual criminal warrants for the absconded legislators, then of course Illinois courts and law enforcement would cooperate.

But all they’ve got right now is a piece of (virtual) paper with no force of law behind it outside their own state.

  24 Comments      


Some US Senate stuff

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Finally, a little chippiness in the US Senate race. From Capitol News Illinois

While the three candidates agree on many issues, Stratton has injected contention into the race by pledging not to take money from corporate political action committees.

“I want to make sure that I’m centering the voices of Illinois families and not corporate special interests,” Stratton said.

Stratton raised $1 million in the first quarter of her campaign as of the end of June, but the balance is dwarfed by the $22 million in Krishnamoorthi’s campaign fund and $2 million in Kelly’s. Both Kelly and Krishnamoorthi have received contributions from corporations.

“She’s also hoping for a super PAC to come to her rescue and so it’s very rich for her to accuse others of somehow being beholden to other interests,” Krishnamoorthi said of Stratton.

He’s not wrong.

* Meanwhile

While Pritzker seeks a third term, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin is not running for reelection, opening up his seat for the first time in 30 years. The three most high-profile candidates vying to replace him appeared at the State Fair Wednesday to explain why they deserve to replace the second-highest-ranking Democrat in the U.S. Senate.

“I wouldn’t even begin to pretend like I could somehow replace him, but I aspire to build on his legacy of great progress,” U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi told reporters.

Raja did not elaborate on what that “legacy of great progress” actually entailed.

  19 Comments      


IPA: SB40 With Energy Storage Will Slash Sky-High Electric Bills

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Consumers across Illinois are seeing massive increases in their bills because of inadequate energy supplies and rising demand. And yet a tool that numerous studies have shown could have averted some of these increases now and in the future, battery energy storage, waits for legislative action.

Last session, without evidence, opponents claimed adding energy storage in Illinois would spike ratepayer bills. But no fewer than a half dozen studies in Illinois and across the country from groups like the Illinois Power Agency, Clean Grid Alliance and NRDC have shown that storage saves billions for ratepayers.

The Facts:

    - The IPA analysis of SB40 found that Ameren customers would save “from $5.48/month to $12.15/month by 2030 and $13.82/month to $20.54/month by 2035.”

    - ComEd customers would save “from $1.52/month to $2.32/month by 2030 and $7.89/month to $8.52/month by 2035.”

The facts don’t lie – consumers are seeing the cost of doing nothing in their spiking electric bills NOW. Adding energy storage to Illinois’s electric grid will save consumers billions.

That’s why CUB is asking lawmakers to pass SB40 as the best way “to contain costs for electric customers while managing unprecedented energy demand.”

Illinois must follow the facts and enact SB40 this fall to deploy 6 gigawatts of energy storage by 2035. Click here for more information.

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What the heck is going on here?

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Peter Nickeas, Tom Schuba and Casey Toner for the Sun-Times and the Illinois Answers Project

Carlos Baker, the Chicago police officer who shot and killed his partner Krystal Rivera during a foot pursuit earlier this year, allegedly attacked a female officer late Sunday at a bar in Wicker Park, the Chicago Sun-Times and Illinois Answers Project have learned.

The officer who was injured in the attack filed a police report while she was being treated for a split lip at Rush University Medical Center, alleging that Baker and another woman beat her late Sunday at DSTRKT Bar & Grill, 1540 N. Milwaukee Ave.

Baker and another woman approached the 29-year-old officer while she was waiting for a rideshare vehicle in the bar’s vestibule and pressured her to delete videos taken on her cellphone, according to police sources. During an argument over the videos, Baker and the woman allegedly hit the other officer in the face.

The injured officer escaped, with the help of others, and had a friend take her to Rush Hospital, where she got two stitches to close a cut on her swollen upper lip, sources said. An evidence technician documented the officer’s injuries at her home, sources said.

She told investigators she wasn’t at the bar with Baker or the other woman, and didn’t identify herself as an officer during the attack, sources said. It’s not clear what’s on the videos.

A COPA spokeswoman said the oversight agency is investigating the alleged attack. A police spokeswoman said no arrests have been made.

OK, wait. A female cop is beaten up by a 6′ 5″ man. Witnesses apparently exist. And no arrests have been made days later?

* Back to the story

Baker fatally shot Rivera, a fellow Gresham District tactical officer, during a June 5 foot chase into a Chatham apartment filled with drugs and guns. Officials, and Baker’s lawyer, have referred to the shooting as an accident, but Rivera’s family has called for an outside investigation and the release of body camera videos taken that night.

A Sun-Times and Illinois Answers Project investigation revealed that Rivera had been a key witness to the theft of a Glock handgun that was turned over to police at a buyback event in December 2023 and then stolen from a room full of cops at the Gresham District station.

Rivera told internal affairs investigators she tried to find the gun in her colleague’s bookbags once realizing it was missing. The gun was later used in a series of shootings and was ultimately found on a teenage boy.

“We have so many questions that need to be answered,” the family’s lawyer, Antonio Romanucci, said at a news conference last month. “And we don’t yet trust the narrative that Officer Rivera was shot and killed by her partner during a pursuit of suspects who never fired a shot.”

There’s really something fishy going on here.

* And this excerpt doesn’t inspire any confidence in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office

Since Rivera’s death in early June, the Cook County state’s attorney’s office obtained an order preventing the release of records relating to the internal affairs investigation and an underlying criminal case against the suspects Baker and Rivera were chasing before the shooting.

That order prevented the release of video and other records that would have normally occurred 60 days after the shooting — about one week ago. COPA has said it did not, and does not, seek orders preventing the release of records.

The police department has pointed to that order in denying the release of records related to the shooting, and also denying the release of other records related to Baker and Rivera’s employment and conduct as officers.

The BGA, the Sun-Times and others have asked the court to unseal the files.

* Seriously, how has this guy skated so long?

Baker’s short career as a cop has been marred by disciplinary problems from the start, including a complaint stemming from another interaction with a woman at a bar.

While Baker was still a probationary officer in late 2022, a woman he met on Instagram accused him of tracking her down while she was on a date and lifting his shirt to reveal a gun inside the Bluelight bar across from the police station at Belmont and Western avenues.

The investigation was handled by a special squad in the Civilian Office of Police Accountability that deals with sexual misconduct complaints, but it was never referred to the police department for a criminal investigation. COPA’s probe was closed when an investigator was unable to reach the victim, records show.

Baker has faced more than a dozen allegations of misconduct since joining the police department in December 2021. The complaint over the Bluelight incident and a handful of others were lodged when he was still a probationary officer and could have been summarily fired.

The police department hasn’t explained why Baker was able to keep his job when he was the subject of serious complaints during his probationary period. The department also declined to answer most other questions posed about Baker’s conduct or the shooting in June that left his partner dead.

Awful. All of this is just so awful.

  35 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Democratic Senate candidates jockey for Durbin’s seat on Governor’s Day at state fair. Sun-Times

    -The spotlight, a whole seven months ahead of the Democratic primary, came on Governor’s Day activities in Springfield, as Democrats collectively vowed to fight President Donald Trump and to fight for middle class priorities.
    -All three candidates have said they’ve spoken to Durbin about an endorsement, but it’s unclear whether the senator will choose a side in a competitive race that is also becoming one of the most expensive in the country.
    - The candidates so far have focused on identifying themselves to voters in their campaigns, and not on attacking each other.

* Related stories…

* At 10:30 am, governor Pritzker will sign a package of worker rights bills. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | ‘We signed up for this’: Texas Democrats in Illinois vow to continue fight against GOP redistricting: Asked if the group would fly back this weekend after the session ends Friday, state Rep. Donna Howard said at a Planned Parenthood of Illinois event Wednesday in Chicago that “there’s no plan at this point, we’re watching day by day what goes on.”

* Democracy Docket | Illinois Judge Rules Against Arresting Quorum-Breaking Texas Lawmakers: Illinois Judge Scott Larson determined the court did not have the power to initiate contempt proceedings against Texas Democrats, saying Paxton’s emergency motion and petition “do not cite any authority to allow this court to obtain subject matter jurisdiction to initiate the requested contempt proceedings.”

* Sun-Times | ‘Fair play:’ Democratic Senate candidates jockey for Durbin’s seat on Governor’s Day at state fair: All three major Senate Democratic candidates have said they’ve spoken to Durbin about an endorsement, but it’s unclear whether the senator will choose a side in a competitive race that is also becoming one of the most expensive in the country.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Subscribers know more. Sun-Times | Illinois Dem leaders Welch, Harmon eye same state central committee post: “I don’t think there’s a fissure,” Welch told the Sun-Times as he mingled among supporters before a Governor’s Day rally on the Springfield state fairgrounds. “He’s circulated for it in the past. He’s been in that district before. Before the [2021 congressional district] remap, I was in the 4th Congressional, now I’m in the 7th Congressional. It’s something I had never thought about, but the congressman himself [Davis] said it was something I should at least look at.”

* WHBF | Illinois State Police to increase efforts to stop human trafficking: According to a release from ISP, the move comes with the signing of the Illinois Statewide Trauma-Informed Response to Human Trafficking Act (SB2323). “As Illinois continues to enhance its strategies to combat human trafficking, it’s crucial that we ensure survivors — no matter who they are or where they live — have access to the resources they need,” Gov. JB Pritzker said. “This vital legislation marks a coordinated, multi-agency effort to better identify, protect, and support our most vulnerable, making Illinois a safer place for everyone.”

* ABC Chicago | ‘Don’t have 6 months to wait’: Veteran says squatters took over home, but new law not yet in effect: “I just feel totally violated,” Army veteran Bradford Robinson said. “I really have no words for it. I’m an emotional wreck.” This time, an Army veteran says his South Side home is the latest target. Robinson says his realtor came by his property last month to show a prospective buyer the house, but when they arrived, the lockbox had been broken and the locks were changed. […] “The young lady in the house showed them a bogus lease,” Robinson said. “With that being said, with the lease, the police said there’s nothing that they could do… the police actually asked me to have you come out to do a report because you seem to have a little bit more pull in getting things done.”

* Center Square | Governor suggests ending nuclear ban as lawmaker files pro-nuclear bill: When asked about high energy costs at the Illinois State Fair Wednesday, the governor said Illinois could do something important by lifting the decades-old moratorium. “We already got rid of it on small modular nuclear. We can do that on large nuclear. It’s going to be an important part of a transition to renewable energy everywhere,” Pritzker said.

* WICS | Governor Pritzker buys Grand Champion Steer for $105K at Illinois State Fair: For the sixth consecutive year, Governor JB Pritzker and First Lady MK Pritzker purchased the Grand Champion Steer for $105,000, donating the prize-winning animal to Feeding Illinois to support families in need across the state. […] Proceeds from the sale assist exhibitors in funding their college education or investing in future projects. Generous contributions, such as CME Group’s $50,000 gift, provide $5,000 scholarships to the next generation of agriculture leaders.

*** Chicago ***

* WBEZ | CPS budget plan hedges on city pension payment, but some board members are insisting it be paid: Chicago Public School leaders on Wednesday presented a budget proposal, wiping away a $734 million deficit by a combination of mechanisms: cuts to operations and central office, refinancing debt, using $65 million from a reserve fund, counting a philanthropic donation in the budget and expecting $379 million from the city from a TIF surplus. […] Jitu Brown said he and other school board members will not vote for a budget in which the pension payment is not guaranteed. Brown, an elected member, is part of the majority of the board that is aligned with Mayor Brandon Johnson, who appointed 11 of the 21.

* Sun-Times | CPS to cut Safe Passage workers’ hours in budget crunch: Safe Passage workers who supervise Chicago Public Schools students as they walk to and from school will see their hours cut this year amid a budget crunch. Ronan Shableski, interim chief of safety and security at CPS, told Board of Education members at a meeting Wednesday that the program’s budget is being reduced, but the schedule changes will help ensure coverage to all 191 schools with Safe Passage routes. Workers will be on the streets for 30 fewer minutes in the mornings and afternoons — an hour less every day.

* Sun-Times | Chicago aims to have largest number of air-pollution monitors in the U.S.: The plan is to have the monitors up by the end of summer as city officials try to get a handle on the poor air quality that severely affects the polluted Far South Side, Southwest Side and West Side neighborhoods. The sensors will not be used to enforce pollution violations, however. Their use is intended to help shape city planning and practices around industrial development, planning, zoning and land use and establish public health safeguards to mitigate the pollution.

* Injustice Watch | How A Rogue Laboratory Got People Convicted For Driving High: It would take more than six years for Thompson to be exonerated, along with more than a dozen other DuPage County defendants who had been convicted of low-level DUI-cannabis charges with the help of Bash’s lab work and testimony. By then, Bash would resign and UIC would shut down her lab right as an accrediting agency’s audit uncovered a range of unacceptable problems in its operations. Prosecutors’ offices in some of the 17 counties for which the lab provided testing would also issue disclosures to defendants about Bash’s “inaccurate and unqualified testimony.”

* Crain’s | Chicago Fed chief says upcoming policy meetings will be ‘live’: Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said the central bank’s meetings this fall will be “live” as he and his colleagues try to interpret mixed economic data and how best to adjust interest rates in response. “As we go into the fall, these are going to be some live meetings and we’re going to have to figure it out,” Goolsbee said Wednesday at an event in Springfield, Illinois, referencing a word often used to describe a Fed meeting where it’s unknown beforehand how policymakers will vote.

* Crain’s | Lawsuit alleges Lettuce Entertain You staged a ‘corporate coup’: Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises and co-founder Rich Melman are facing a lawsuit that alleges the restaurant group pushed a longtime business partner out of equity in one of its concepts, the Joe’s Seafood, Prime Steak & Stone Crab chain, in what the suit calls a “corporate coup.” The lawsuit, filed in Cook County Circuit Court on Friday, alleges Lettuce Entertain You and Melman fraudulently transferred ownership from business partner Gerard Centioli and Icon, a company formed by Centioli and Melman in 1999 to expand restaurants like Joe’s Stone Crab, in a “fake sale.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* 404 Media | Feds Used Local Cop’s Password to Do Immigration Surveillance With Flock Cameras: Our reporting set off an internal investigation into what these searches were for, and who did them, according to the documents obtained by Unraveled. According to a July 9 investigation report written by the Palos Heights Police Department, Hutchinson was the only task force member who had access to Flock. Information about what the search was actually for is redacted in the internal investigation, and neither the Palos Heights Police Department nor the DEA has said what it was for. “Hutchinson advised that it was common that he allowed others to use his login to Flock during the course of their drug investigations. TFO Hutchinson spoke to his group and learned that one of the DEA agents completed these searches and used his login information,” the report says. The DEA agent (whose name is redacted in the report) “did in fact use Hutchinson’s login for federal investigations in late January 2025 without Hutchinson’s knowledge of said use.”

* Daily Southtown Judge rejects early eviction plan for Blue Island mobile home residents: Blue Island City Administrator Thomas Wogan said in an email that “the matter before the court today regarding how the property is vacated and the mobile home park operations are ceased is primarily a matter between the owners of Forest View and the remaining residents.” “As previously stated, the City strongly urges the Forest View owners to take responsibility for this situation and work to rehome the remaining residents,” Wogan said.

* Lake County News-Sun | Lake County officials discuss the challenges of public transportation during town hall meeting: Johnson, Vallivalam, state Sen. Mary Edly-Allen, D-Libertyville, and Lake County Board Chair Sandy Hart, D-Lake Bluff, presented their ideas on the future of public transportation in the Chicago area at a town hall on Monday in Vernon Hills to gather ideas and urge support. With $200 million earmarked for downstate Illinois, Vallivalam said the rest of the money will be spent on public transportation in Chicago, suburban Cook County, and collar counties Lake, McHenry, DuPage, Kane, and Will counties.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville D203 teachers ready to strike if contract talks remain stalled, officials say: Ross Berkley, president of the Naperville Unit Education Association, which represents more than 1,500 teachers and licensed staff for nearly 16,000 district students, said in a statement that a strike is the last thing teachers want to do. “We’d much rather be in our classrooms with our students than out on the picket line,” Berkley said. “But we’re also willing to do whatever is necessary to make sure our students have the best education possible. If we do go on strike, we also want to reassure parents and our community that we will give plenty of notice before so arrangements for childcare can be made.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | St. Charles City Council rejects contract extension with coal-reliant electricity provider: On Monday, the City Council voted against renewing the contract at a special meeting of its Government Services Committee on Monday evening, meaning the matter will not advance to the City Council meeting next week for a vote. The Government Services Committee is a committee of the whole, meaning all City Council members sit on the panel. St. Charles is one of 32 municipalities across Illinois that are part of IMEA, a nonprofit joint action agency that sells electric power to municipally-owned utilities, per its website. The city began purchasing partial electric power for its electric utility with IMEA in 1999, and entered into its current contract to get all of its electric power from IMEA in 2004, according to past reporting.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Emergency repair work happening Thursday at CyrusOne data center in Aurora after weather delays: But, on Monday, CyrusOne said the repairs scheduled for Tuesday had to be delayed for safety reasons as a result of weather changes, a move it announced via its web page dedicated to communicating with residents about sound issues from the facility, which is located at the corner of Eola and Diehl roads on Aurora’s far East Side near Interstate 88. The rescheduled repairs are now planned from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 14.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ADM could resume CO2 injections soon in Decatur after EPA issues final order: The EPA added that its final order will ensure future injections are safe. Some of ADM’s compliance measures include implementing certain parts of the permit’s emergency and remedial response plan for a failure of monitoring well integrity. An ADM spokesperson said the company recently entered into an updated Administrative Order of Consent with the EPA.

* WQAD | Homeless shelters in the Quad Cities running out of room: In total, there’s only 224 shelter beds throughout the Quad Cities. That’s while there are 488 people experiencing homelessness in the Illinois Quad Cities. This past winter, Project NOW used their building at 418 10th St. in Rock Island as an emergency overflow during especially frigid nights. Throughout a 90 day period, they say 180 different people used their shelter, with 2,214 shelter nights provided.

* SJ-R | Harness racing horse dies in catastrophic accident at Illinois State Fair: Gardner told The State Journal-Register the filly might have been spooked by one of the carnival rides. “Once they lose their driver, they’re just a wild horse, a loose horse,” said Gardner, a veteran horseman who brought 11 horses to Springfield from southern Illinois for the State Fair.

* WGLT | Central Illinois nonprofits meet, explore benefits of partnerships: In these times of economic uncertainty, nonprofits may find leaning on each other is a source of strength and sustainability, said Erik Rankin, who heads the foundation. “Dwindling budgets, smaller staff sizes and still then the request to do the same things you’ve always done. … there’s a real challenge in that,” he said, adding cross-group collaborations are a way for nonprofits to ask, “Is there a way for us to tackle this same problem together?”

* WGLT | Rock City Democrat travels to Bloomington-Normal and beyond in bid for state position from 16th Congressional District: Kevin Lamm of Rock City is seeking a state party position as the Democratic state central committeeman for Illinois’ 16th Congressional District. The seat is currently held by John Daniel, who is not seeking re-election. Each congressional district in the state has two central committeemen, who work as the governing body of the state party. The 34 members elect the executive director and chair of the state party.

* WGLT | 16th Congressional District candidate Scott Best runs as outsider, even from other Democrats : Scott Best of Normal is a worker at Rivian. He’s running in the 2026 election as an outsider, even from fellow Democrats. “It’s the people versus the corporate captured political establishment,” said Best. He said Gov. JB Pritzker has done a lot good for the state, but takes him to task for not doing more for workers.

* WCIA | 400 immigrants become citizens at IL State Fair naturalization ceremony: “It takes dedication, resilience and courage. Many of you balance jobs, families and countless responsibilities while preparing for this moment,” Senator Tammy Duckworth said as she addressed the crowd. Along with Duckworth the crowd was cheered on by Governor Pritzker, Representative Nikki Budzinski, and Senator Dick Durbin.

* Telegraph | Governor JB Pritzker visits Grafton’s military memorial, weighs state aid: According to Morrow, Grafton has already been accepting private donations from veterans and Grafton citizens, starting the campaign in October 2023. The city has collected around $3 million to complete Phase 1 of the memorial. The estimated cost to complete Phase 1 is around $2.5 to $3 million, although Morrow said that he expects that cost to fluctuate.

*** National ***

* WaPo | After CDC shooting, its employees turn their anger to RFK Jr. and Trump: Documents from the shooter’s home showed his discontent with coronavirus vaccines, authorities said. CDC workers want RFK Jr. to denounce vaccine misinformation.

* WIRED | War of the Worlds Isn’t Just Bad. It’s Also Shameless Tech Propaganda: The shameless promotion of tech brands doesn’t end there. Radford’s daughter, Faith, a Georgetown-educated biochemist, somehow has the bright idea of removing a large chunk of debris from her leg—causing near-fatal bleeding. Thankfully, Mark Goodman, her Amazon delivery driver boyfriend, is able to make a tourniquet out of packaging tape because, according to him, he’s a “pro.” Even minor characters get caught up in the Amazon Savior motif. When the world-saving Amazon Prime Air drone overturns on the way to the DHS building, a houseless person only helps to fix it after being rewarded with a $1,000 Amazon gift card.

  13 Comments      


Open thread

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The Cars with a possible Vonnegut reference

Purple hum, assorted cards

How’s it going?

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

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Thursday, Aug 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* We told you last month that 12 trans Illinois Army National Guard soldiers had submitted voluntary separation papers. One of them was Dahlia Dahl, daughter of statehouse reporter Dave Dahl. From St. Louis Public Radio

Four members of the Missouri National Guard and 12 members of the Illinois National Guard are seeking voluntary separations from the military because they are transgender. This came after the Trump administration set a June 6 deadline for trans military members to apply to leave on their own or be removed from service.

Spc. Dahlia Dahl is one of them. The 22-year-old from Chatham, Illinois, enlisted three years ago to serve her country and to pay for a degree at Southern Illinois University Carbondale.

The choice wasn’t an easy one. Service members who did not identify themselves as trans to their superiors before the deadline face possible investigation and involuntary removal.

“I had to volunteer myself, because I could either walk out or I could be carried out,” Dahl said of her decision to seek voluntary separation. “I don’t want to leave. I wanted to finish out my contract, at least.”

Dahl’s departure from the armed forces will mean the end to her educational benefits, but an honorable discharge will maintain her veteran status and health care coverage.

Dahl is attending college, so she’ll lose that assistance.

In response, here’s Rep. Kelly Cassidy (D-Chicago)…

My promise when Speaker Welch asked me to lead the Dobbs Working Group was that we would focus on finding ways to at least blunt the impact of coming federal actions. This one seems like a no brainer - a dozen impacted guards, some of whom are also losing the scholarships that they earned through their service.

At minimum, we should ensure that these students get to complete their educations by providing tuition waivers for Illinois university students impacted by these cruel orders. I’ve asked working group staff to look into the best way to protect these students.

* ABC Chicago

On Wednesday morning, the party faithful gathered for an annual breakfast meeting, where Gov. JB Pritzker welcomed House Minority leader Hakeem Jeffries as the keynote speaker.

The annual Democratic County Chairs Brunch is an opportunity for the party to reflect on accomplishments and chart their path forward, as they look to the 2026 midterm elections.

Nearly 1,900 Democrats from across the state packed the Bank of Springfield Convention Center in a show of party unity aimed at building excitement heading into this election season. […]

With a competitive race for the U.S. Senate seat that is being vacated by Dick Durbin, all three of the leading Democratic candidates got their moments to make their pitches to the party.

* Views from the Director’s Lawn by Capitol News Illinois’ Ben Szalinski


* Texas House Democrats will continue to stay in Illinois. The Texas House Democratic Caucus

“What happens next is entirely up to Greg Abbott. After deliberation among our caucus, we have reached a consensus: Texas House Democrats refuse to give him a quorum to pass his racist maps that silence more than 2 million Black and Latino Texans — in keeping with our original promise to Texans, the First Called Special Session will never make quorum again, defeating Abbott’s first attempt at passing his racial gerrymander. […]

“Texas House Democrats will issue our demands for a second special session on Friday. Abbott can choose to govern for Texas families, or he can keep serving Trump and face the consequences we’ve unleashed nationwide.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Eye On Illinois | Libraries could get grant money for security measures – will bomb threats persist?: As frequently observed here, legislation billed as protective often amounts to enhancing penalties in hopes of protective or preventive effects. SB 1550 is different in that it does (subject to appropriations) create an actual pathway for physical protection of people and public property. Yet if fortifying public spaces deterred threats, there would be a downturn in such activity instead of a demonstrated increase. It’s apparent that the intent is to frame money as a response to fear. And politicians typically aren’t forthright about limits of their own power, but that makes it incumbent on voters to read between the lines to understand what’s actually happening.

* Center Square | Illinois law empowers officials to crack down on predatory towing: State Sen. Celina Villanueva, D-Chicago, sponsored the bill in response to frequent complaints in her urban district. In 2023, over 500 predatory tows were reported statewide, most in the Chicago area, according to the ICC. “I frequently hear from my constituents and neighbors about bad experiences with rogue tow operators who ignore state rules meant to protect drivers,” Villanueva said at a news conference during spring legislative session. “Many of you have likely heard about motorists scammed by predatory towers, whose cars were taken miles away or whose belongings were held for weeks.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Who picks the person to lead Chicago schools? Elected officials and legal experts disagree.: At the time, State Sen. Rob Martwick, who represents parts of Chicago’s Northwest Side and some suburbs, said newly-elected and appointed board members had been asking him who has the power to choose the next CEO. […] In the email obtained by Chalkbeat through a Freedom of Information Act request, Martwick cited a section of Illinois’ school code that was first written when Chicago’s schools were put under mayoral control in 1995. It states: “The Mayor shall appoint a full-time, compensated chief executive officer, and his or her compensation as such chief executive officer shall be determined by the Mayor.”

* Sun-Times | No charges for Chicago police officers involved in deadly shoot-out with Dexter Reed: Prosecutors determined the evidence presented to them didn’t warrant criminal charges — a decision upheld by an independent appellate review. Lawyers for the Reed family didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday. The Civilian Office of Police Accountability’s administrative investigation remains open. A COPA spokeswoman said the agency is “working on an expeditious closing.”

* Evanston Now | Another transit fiscal cliff: The transit authority in Philadelphia says unless a state funding package is approved by this Thursday the first round of service cuts to bus, rail and trolley service will go into effect ten days later. […] Other than the time frame and dollars involved, the Philadelphia situation is basically the same as what could happen to Metra, CTA, and PACE in the Chicago area … massive service cuts plus fare increases in 2026 unless there is a state assistance plan.

* Crain’s | Johnson rules out proposed $1.5B corporate payroll tax: The tax, put forward by the Institute for the Public Good, was presented as a “third option” to avoid the annual discussion over seeking a large property tax hike or drastically cutting city services, but was always considered in legally murky waters. Johnson had directed his administration, including the Law Department, to explore ways to craft the tax to pass legal muster, but city attorneys determined that, like other progressive revenue ideas, the tax exceeds the city’s so-called home rule authority and would first require state approval, according to sources familiar with budget discussions.

* Block Club | Can EV Ambassadors In Bronzeville Help Chicago Drivers Go Electric?: Illinois has big plans for electric vehicles — but they won’t happen unless residents of its biggest city, Chicago, embrace the battery-powered cars. That’s where EV ambassadors like William Davis come in. Davis is one of a handful of community leaders working with utility ComEd under a new program that’s meant to convince skeptical individuals and businesses to electrify, and to connect them with incentives to do so. “People don’t understand how EVs work, how they make their lives better,” he said, or ​“from a socioeconomic standpoint, why it’s urgent to accelerate this transition from internal combustion engines to EVs.”

* Tribune | Chicago Latin Restaurant Weeks returns with fewer participating restaurants due to immigration uncertainty: While there is a diverse lineup and a variety of specials to pick from, this year’s 20 participating restaurants is almost half what the number was last year, largely due to the political climate. Organizers for Latin Restaurant Weeks said many of its usual roster of restaurants are feeling the economic and emotional effects of the Trump administration’s intensified immigration enforcement in the city and suburbs, forcing them to fly under the radar.

* Sun-Times | Chicago reports first human cases of West Nile virus for 2025: The first three human cases of West Nile virus this season in Chicago were reported Tuesday. The patients range in age from 40 to 80 years old and live on the Northwest and South Sides. Their symptoms began in late July or early August, the Chicago Department of Public Health said. Though they are the first cases of the virus reported in Chicago in 2025, three other people have contracted West Nile this year in Illinois, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health. Those cases were reported in DuPage, Lake and downstate Wayne counties.

* Sun-Times | O’Hare reaches all-time June high in passenger traffic: The over eight million travelers at the airport marked the busiest June in its 70 year history and the second busiest month of all time only behind July 2019, the mayor’s office said.

* Block Club | City Launches Arts Relief Fund To Help Cultural Organizations Affected By Federal Funding Cuts: The program will offer one-time grants between $10,000 and $25,000 to eligible nonprofit arts and culture organizations in Chicago. The deadline to apply is Aug. 20. The fund will help ensure continued access to vital cultural programming across the city, according to the city’s cultural affairs department. Priority for grants will be given to organizations previously awarded funding by the National Endowment of the Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities, Institute of Museum and Library Services and other affected federal agencies.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg Township road commissioner wants refund for website he says wasn’t ‘delivered’ on time: Lee disputes that, arguing the website at st-roads.org did go live before its July 19 deadline. He said its features include real-time weather reporting and an AI assistant that can reduce the workload of township employees by answering basic questions. “To this day, it’s credited to Mr. Buelow,” Lee said. “It’s up to him whether he wants to take the credit.” But even when informed of the website address Tuesday, Buelow was steadfast control of the site wasn’t turned over to him as highway commissioner and was critical of its content. “I could go on Squarespace and put that up in an hour,” he said. “This isn’t worth $44,000.”

* Daily Herald | Naperville Unit District 203 teachers authorize strike: The authorization vote gives the bargaining team the authority to declare a strike; however, there are currently no plans for a walkout, according to a news release issued Tuesday. Students are set to return to school Thursday. A strike is the “the last thing we want to do,” union President Ross Berkley said in a statement.

* Sun-Times | Highland Park violence prevention activists take commercial approach in targeting gun companies: The founders of the Highland Park Peace Project aren’t just going after Smith & Wesson, Sig Sauer and other gunmakers. Instead, they’re aiming for the bottom lines of companies that do business with them, compiling a public database of dozens of law firms, banks, retailers and more, and branding them as “enablers” of violence or “heroes” in their movement — and encouraging consumers to spend accordingly. “We’re coming at it from an angle that is capitalism-based, rather than waiting around for legislative action,” said Highland Park Peace Project co-founder Stephanie Jacobs, who narrowly escaped the parade shooting herself.

* Block Club | Invasive Shrubs Cover Nearly 80% Of Chicago-Area Forests. Can Conservationists Turn Things Around?: Two years ago, the forest preserve was a “wall” of invasive buckthorn shrubs, said Braum, a northwest regional ecologist with the Forest Preserves of Cook County. Those dense buckthorn trees were cleared from the area last winter, but a new crop of waist-high shoots now stand in their place. Forest preserves workers treated the shoots with herbicide last month, in continuation of a cycle that’s become emblematic of the modern-day task of looking after Chicago-area forests: A recent study found that nearly 80 percent of forests in and around the city are infested with invasive shrubs. “You can’t just remove all the invasives and say ‘you’re done,’” Braum said. “It takes constant maintenance.”

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park police union votes no confidence in police chief: More than three dozen Tinley Park police officers signed a vote of no confidence citing 63 reasons why they think police Chief Thomas Tilton should be removed from his position, according to a statement from the Metropolitan Alliance of Police Tinley Park Chapter 192 union. All Tinley Park officers in the union, except officers on probation, signed the document alleging the department has experienced a decline in morale, disregard for staff concerns, a lack of strategic and overall vision, inadequate or absent decisions, operational uncertainty and reduced efficiency due to Tilton’s leadership, according to union representative Ray Violetto, a retired detective.

*** Downstate ***

* Crain’s | Gotion to start making EV batteries in Manteno next month: With the addition of two manufacturing lines to assemble EV batteries and commercial chargers, Gotion will have five production lines in operation in Manteno, Chen Li, president of Gotion Americas, tells Crain’s. Another line, which makes residential and consumer energy-storage products for applications such as solar, started in April. Gotion is converting and expanding a 1.5 million-square-foot former Kmart distribution center into a battery-production facility with plans to ultimately hire 2,600 workers in one of the largest manufacturing projects landed by Illinois in a generation.

* WCIA | Lake Mattoon beach staying closed:
The area has been closed since Thursday due to toxic algae concerns. Although city officials got approval to spray for algae from the Illinois EPA, the heat and rain is causing them to push the project back until temperatures cool off. “It was more of a drinking thing in the beginning. And I think it’s becoming, in light of everybody, it’s not just Lake Mattoon, it’s not Lake Paradise. It’s probably almost every lake in the state of Illinois and in the country. You can go out there now. I mean, in New Jersey, New York, Idaho, Colorado, Indiana, Missouri, everybody’s seen this same issue,” Mattoon Public Works Director, David Clark, said.

* Smile Politely | Parkland is rolling out a new mobile education unit: The Cobra Pathfinder will officially make its debut this fall. This mobile unit will contain interactive equipment that focuses on Parkland’s various fields of study, including automotive, welding, health professions, agriculture, and more. The vehicle’s goal is to aid in promoting careers and academic programs, which was made possible by the Illinois Community College Board Taking Back the Trades grant.

* WSIL | DuQuoin State Fair announces 2025 Grandstand lineup: The Grandstand will host harness racing, ARCA and USAC auto events, and performances by popular country and rock stars. Tickets are available at the Du Quoin Grandstand box office or through Ticketmaster.

*** National ***

* CNN | NY attorney general sues Zelle parent company, alleging the payment service enabled widespread fraud: The NY AG’s lawsuit claims that in its rush to sign up new customers, Zelle allowed safety precautions to fall by the wayside. The lawsuit claims that scammers were able to sign up for Zelle through a quick registration process that lacked verification steps, allowing them to pose as businesses and government entities, tricking unsuspecting users into sending funds under false pretenses.

  5 Comments      


Pritzker gives unnecessary ‘tutorial’

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* First, some background

If current trends continue, Illinois will have to pay 15% of the total SNAP benefit costs, which, according to the governor’s office, would be $705 million a year.

The reason the state is on the hook for 15% of benefit costs is because of its high SNAP payment error rate, which stood at 11.56% in fiscal year 2024, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The state’s error rates for underpayments to SNAP beneficiaries was less than 1%, but its overpayment error rate was 10.6%.

The new federal law requires that states with SNAP payment error rates of 10% or higher must pay 15% of SNAP benefit costs. The state will struggle mightily to afford that, so lots of people may lose their food aid if things don’t change.

Eleven states, including New York and New Jersey plus the District of Columbia, had higher error rates than Illinois, but 38 had lower error rates.

If Illinois could reduce its error rate to above 8% but below 10% — on par with states like Michigan, Ohio and Texas then it would pay 10% of benefit costs, or $470 million a year.

Reducing Illinois’ error rate to a recent 15-year average of what the Food Resource and Action Center says was 7.1%, would make its annual penalty 5% of benefit costs — or $235 million a year.

And if Pritzker’s administration could decrease the error rate below 6%, then the state would face no additional state penalties at all.

Illinois achieved those lower error rates five times between 2011 and 2017. Eight smaller states, including Wisconsin, had error rates below 6% in FY24.

* Now, this post isn’t about Israel and Palestine, but you’ll see how it develops in a bit. From Gov. JB Pritzker’s gaggle today…

Reporter: Can you talk about how that vote opposed to sending weapons to Israel? Your take on it? Should Palestine be recognized as a state, and how should the next administration treat it?

Pritzker: I’ve responded before, so I’m not going to spend a lot of time, and I’ll just say this. I think the purpose of that resolution, I didn’t introduce it, but the purpose of the resolution seems to have been to send a message that Israel needs to deliver food aid to people who are starving in Gaza. And I wholeheartedly agree with that sentiment. People are dying because they can’t get food aid there. Oh, by the way, people in the United States will die when they can’t get food aid because of SNAP cuts. So I’m all for us making sure that the Israelis work with us and international community to deliver food to people in need. […]

Isabel: Has there been any progress with reducing the SNAP error rate?

Pritzker: So I don’t know if you understand the SNAP error rate. I just want to give you a little tutorial. I promise it will be short. The SNAP error rate on average in the United States, average state SNAP error rate about 11 percent. Guess what Illinois is, about 11 percent.

What they’re doing, the Republicans, is they’re setting a new bar at 6 percent and saying, If you can’t get to 6 percent we’re going to take SNAP away or charge you a whole bunch of money. So how do they want us to get to 6 percent by cutting people off of SNAP? That is what they’ve done.

So we are working very hard to make sure that we’ve got a process for determining the eligibility of people, making sure we hit the error rate that we need to as best we can. And we’re working very hard every single day to effectuate that. But it’s going to take money to do that. The federal government is not giving us any money to do that, never has before, by the way, but now they’re costing us money. So we want to make sure that we’re actually delivering to the maximum number of people that need SNAP.

I would add one more thing about the error rate. It’s not just an error, as if we’re giving too much money to people. Sometimes the error is we’re giving too little money to people because they don’t report all of their expenses, and so we don’t know exactly how little they actually are taking home. And so that is considered part of that error rate. Once again, Republicans don’t care that we’re under providing. They just want to cut everybody off of SNAP. That is why they’ve set this SNAP error rate so low.

1) Condescending much?

2) As pointed out above, 6 percent is the rate where no penalty is incurred. But increasingly smaller penalties will be assessed at various levels below 10 percent. And, as noted above, Illinois has achieved error rates of 6 percent or lower several times in the past. Yes, times change, but states have had no incentive until now to lower its error rates. Not saying this is a good thing, just saying there’s a new reality afoot and it could cost taxpayers a lot of money or cut people off nutrition assistance.

3) And finally, as mentioned above, the under-payment error rate last year for Illinois was miniscule.

  18 Comments      


From the mouths of babes

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I have it on good authority (from her mother) that the child who said this also expressed similar opinions about Sen. Dick Durbin and US House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries yesterday…


Heh.

  8 Comments      


Consumers Are Getting Slammed With Higher Electric Rates – Don’t Add Fuel To The Fire With ROFR

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois consumers are feeling the heat, both from triple-digit temperatures and soaring electricity bills. Ameren customers are seeing 18–22% rate hikes. ComEd has customers paying as much as triple-digit increases.

And it’s going to get worse. In July, the PJM Capacity Auction hit another record high - a 22% increase on top of the record highs everyone just started paying. This will already lead to further rate increases next year!

As frustration heats up, lawmakers must choose: support competition that drives prices down or fan the flames of electricity inflation with “Right of First Refusal” (ROFR) legislation.

ROFR kills competition and boosts prices by giving incumbent utilities exclusive rights to build transmission lines. It’s so anti-competitive that both presidents - Biden and Trump - opposed it in 2020 and 2023.

As the ICC has said, “The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) believes that competition among transmission developers spurs innovative results and helps control costs.”

ROFR would send electricity prices even higher. Springfield should focus on long-term strategies to lower electricity bills, not raise them. As ROFR may resurface this fall, legislators should reject it and stand up for cost-cutting competition that benefits consumers.

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* As noted in this Sun-Times article, the debate over expanding the sales tax to cover services has played out ad nauseum for many, many decades. But the devil is always in the details

For decades, Chicago mayors and their finance teams have been lobbying the Illinois General Assembly to broaden the sales tax umbrella to professional services.

The idea has gone nowhere in Springfield — even though it has a potential annual yield of $305 million for the city alone.

But that legislative losing streak didn’t stop [Chicago’s Chief Financial Officer Jill Jaworski] from making a renewed pitch to a luncheon crowd filled with powerful movers and shakers. She said the biggest reason Chicago has such a high sales tax rate is because the sales tax base is so narrow and does not include professional services.

During the 1950s, 70% of consumer spending was on goods. Now, it’s down to 50% on goods and the other half on services, she said. And that’s not including health care and housing services.

“I have a gym membership. I get a massage every month. I get my nails done. I get my hair done. I consume a lot of services. … I’m going to pay an interior decorator to help me with a couple of rooms in my house I want to redo. I pay no taxes on any of that,” she said.

“Like most people sitting in this room, I can afford to pay taxes on the activities that I engage in that are, frankly, luxury activities. And I should be paying taxes on them. I should be paying a higher percentage of my income on the … activities that I enjoy. They are a major part of our economy. … Whereas somebody who is living paycheck-to-paycheck is paying taxes on most everything they do. That is regressive, and it’s unfair.”

Taxing interior decorator services is one thing (and likely wouldn’t raise much money), but a tax on haircuts is in no way a “luxury tax” and has always been a tough one because barbers and stylists have their clients’ undivided attention for maybe a half an hour or more. And they can use that time to rail against a new tax. That sort of politicking is very effective - particularly if you’re a legislator at the mercy of someone with a pair of scissors in their hand. Same goes for car repairs, etc.

* The Question: What services would you tax and what services would you not tax? Explain.

  32 Comments      


Tracy says he’ll run for US Senate, plus more campaign news

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Don Tracy, a community leader from Central Illinois, announced today he will run for US Senate to defend the American Dream for working families in Illinois.

“Illinois working families need someone who will fight for them in Washington,” said Tracy. “I’ve spent my career fighting for small businesses and working families, and I’m ready to take that fight to the US Senate.”

Public service is important to Don, with a lifetime spent in community service, most often in volunteer positions. He has served as Chairman of the Illinois Republican Party, Chairman of the Illinois Gaming Board, Secretary of the Illinois Bar Foundation, President of the Sangamon County Bar Association, Chairman of the Illinois Corporate Acts Advisory Committee, and President of the Abraham Lincoln Association, among other community leadership positions.

Tracy’s top priority in Washington will be to lower the cost-of-living for working families. “With the sky-high cost-of-living, life is unaffordable for many working families—especially in Illinois, where we suffer under the highest tax burden in the nation and an economy that lags the rest of the Midwest because of tax-and-spend Democrats. The American Dream seems out of reach for many everyday Illinoisans. That is unacceptable.”

Tracy learned the value of hard work from an early age, having started working for his family’s business when he was 10 years old. Now an attorney for nearly 50 years, Tracy is Senior Counsel at Brown, Hay & Stephens, the oldest law firm in Illinois, where Abraham Lincoln famously practiced law for four years.

“I see what career politicians with extreme progressive agendas are doing to our country, and I have to step up to defend common sense,” explained Tracy as his motivation for running. “Here in Illinois, we know the value of a hard day’s work and we’re not afraid to roll up our sleeves and fight for what we believe in. I will champion our Midwestern values in Washington and take on the special interests.”

With Dick Durbin retiring, Illinois is losing its only statewide officeholder not from Chicago or Cook County. Born and raised in Mount Sterling in Western Illinois and having raised his own family in Springfield in Central Illinois, Don has deep ties to “downstate Illinois.” As the oldest of 12 children, family has always been important to Don. He and his wife, Wanda, have 4 children and 8 grandchildren.

Tracy concluded: “I will represent all of Illinois, not just Chicago. Too many of our politicians seem to forget Illinois has 102 counties, and the working families in every county deserve to have their voices heard. It’s the everyday Illinoisans who make up this state, and I will be proud to bring their voices to the halls of Congress.”

Don Tracy is available for phone and video interviews throughout the day on Wednesday. He will also be in attendance at Republican Day at the Illinois State Fair on Thursday and will hold a press gaggle from the Director’s Lawn at 11:45am.

* Subscribers know a lot more, but here’s a bit from Politico

The AFL-CIO summer barbecue on Tuesday doubled as a campaign kickoff for four Democratic candidates running for state comptroller in 2026.

Spotted: State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit worked the crowd with a clipboard in hand, collecting the signatures she’ll need to get on the ballot. Nearby, fellow state Rep. Margaret Croke talked to county party chairs holding plates of barbecue chicken. Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim’s team fanned out with campaign stickers. And state Sen. Karina Villa, who hasn’t officially joined the race, roamed the event to gather petition signatures.

* Media advisory…

TODAY: Governor JB Pritzker to Host Governor’s Day on the Director’s Lawn at the Illinois State Fair

WHAT: Governor JB Pritzker and fellow constitutional officers to bring Democrats together for Governor’s Day at the Illinois State Fair.

WHEN: Today, Wednesday, August 13 — Doors open at 11:30 AM, speaking program to follow around 12:30 PM

WHERE: Illinois State Fair Director’s Lawn, 801 Sangamon Avenue, Springfield, IL 62706

NOTE: Media availability to follow the speaking program.

* Moylan’s last dance, from the Journal & Topics

Longtime State Rep. Marty Moylan (D-55th) will seek a seventh term in the Illinois House of Representatives and if he’s victorious, it will be his last.

Moylan, 74, was first elected state representative in 2013. Prior to that, he served as mayor of Des Plaines and 2nd ward alderman. He was also a business agent for the Chicagoland electrical union. His son, Colt, is currently 2nd ward alderman and works for the same union as his father did. Moylan has been involved in numerous local political campaigns for decades. Once he’s retired, Moylan vowed to continue his involvement in local elections and politics.

One of the primary reasons he wants to serve for another two years is to work on completion of the Chicago area’s mass transit funding bill. Moylan explained that he has been working on that legislation for the last year. While a proposed bill could be approved in the November General Assembly Veto Session, it’s unlikely because it would require a larger than usual number of votes in favor. After January, the number of votes required for passage is 60, said Moylan.

* More…

    * Hanley officially kicks off bid for state senate: Winnetka’s Patrick Hanley officially launched his campaign to replace State Sen. Laura Fine in Springfield Tuesday evening with a large crowd of supporters at Sketchbook Brewing Co. in Skokie. Hanley, an environmental activist, business owner and political organizer who co-founded Operation Swing State last year, announced Tuesday night his name will officially be on next March’s ballot after receiving enough signatures exactly one week after petitioning kicked off. The biggest name backing Hanely is U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who is retiring from Congress at the end of her term. Over a dozen Democrats, including Fine, are vying to replace her in Washington. […] Hanley’s only competitor in the Democratic primary is Rachel Ruttenberg of Evanston, who kicked off her campaign at an event in early June, with endorsements from Illinois House Majority Leader Robyn Gabel and Reps. Rep. Tracy Katz Muhl and Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz.

    * GOP candidate for 17th Congressional District is active early this election cycle: Vancil expressed skepticism of official sources like the Fed and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. “The jobs report numbers and everything, it’s one number one month, and then they retract it a couple weeks later. And who knows what the right answer is or what the real answer is anymore. I’d love to see interest rates come back down. Let’s get this housing going. The housing market nationwide is just stagnant. Nobody’s selling,” he said. Vancil also backs President Trump’s tariffs, though cautiously.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Illinois State Fair Event List

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Tariffs Impact Everyone

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The increased costs associated with tariffs impact all of us, affecting millions of people. Retailers like Luckeyia Murry, owner of Luckeyia’s Balloons & Distribution in Homewood, are faced with challenging business decisions because of escalating tariffs. Luckeyia has seen rising prices for balloons, helium tanks, and nearly every other item needed for her business. Despite these obstacles, she, like many small retailer owners, remains committed to her community and her business. The Illinois Retail Merchants Association has found that while retailers are trying to hold-off on price increases, it’s impossible to absorb the extra expenses for numerous business owners who function on very small margins – which forces consumers to pay more.

Retailers like Luckeyia Murry enrich our economy and strengthen our communities, even during the uncertainty of increased tariff expenses. IRMA is showcasing some of the many retailers who continue to make Illinois work.

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Roundup: Pritzker signs Sonya Massey Act

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

Police agencies in Illinois will soon be required to do more thorough background checks on prospective officers.

The measure signed by Gov. JB Pritzker Tuesday came in response to the July 2024 shooting death of Sonya Massey in Sangamon County by a sheriff’s deputy. Massey had called police to report a prowler and was in her home when she was shot to death by Deputy Sean Grayson while removing a pot of boiling water from the stove, with permission.

The signing came at the governor’s Capitol office, where he was flanked by members of Massey’s family, including daughter Jeanette “Summer” Massey, son Malachi Hill-Massey and mom Donna Massey, among others.

“I just want to say I miss my mom every day – like every day. And it hurts that she’s not here with me,” Massey’s son, Hill-Massey said at a news conference. “But I am very happy that we could also get a bill put in her name and her name could live on for forever.”

* Sun-Times

State Sen. Doris Turner, a sponsor of the bill and friend of the Massey family, was overcome with emotions at Tuesday’s bill signing.

“I will tell you unequivocally, in my 25 years of elected office, this is the least political thing I have ever done, but it’s the most important thing I have ever done,” Turner said.

Following the shooting, Turner reached out to Massey’s mother, Donna Massey, to try and console her. Donna Massey told Turner; “Nothing else matters to me. I just want you to get justice for my baby.”

“I immediately made her that promise,” Turner said. “And that promise has guided my every step, my every action, from that day to this one.”

* AP

The 31-year-old Grayson was 14 months into his career as a Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy when he answered Massey’s call. His arrest two weeks later prompted an examination of his record, which showed several trouble spots.

In his early 20s, he was convicted of driving under the influence twice within a year, the first of which got him kicked out of the Army. He had four law enforcement jobs — mostly part-time — in six years. One past employer noted that he was sloppy in handling evidence and called him a braggart. Others said he was impulsive.

* More from Capitol News Illinois

Under the new law, a police department or sheriff’s office making a hire would be required to request employment personnel files from the applicant’s previous employers, including other law enforcement agencies. The previous employer would be required to share the information within 14 days.

Law enforcement applicants would be required to sign a document authorizing the release of information, including military service records, police discipline databases, employment and criminal history, driving records, academic credentials, a credit check, and more.

Information provided is to be unredacted, except for data such as financial information and social security numbers. If the former employer denies a request, the prospective employer may ask a court to intervene and could be reimbursed for associated fees and costs.

The law specifically states that if an existing collective bargaining agreement conflicts with the law, the law will not supersede it. But once the law takes effect, no expiring collective bargaining agreement can be extended in a form that contradicts the law.

It also exempts any information if a state’s attorney in the county where the applicant was previously employed provides a written directive stating the previous employer is not legally authorized to provide it.

* More…

    * WCIA | Governor Pritzker signs Sonya Massey’s law: The law is the first of its kind in the United States. Both the Illinois Sheriff’s Association and the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police helped craft the legislation. “The association firmly believes there should be minimum background standards for individuals seeking to protect and serve our communities.” ILACP Executive Director Kenny Winslow said. “We are one-step closer to ensuring that background checks will be more thorough and only those candidates of the highest moral character will be among the police force.”

    * WGN | Sonya Massey Act targets police misconduct with stricter hiring standards:
    Grayson had previously worked at six police departments in a four-year time span, including the Logan County Sheriff’s Office and the Girard Police Department, where he had a history of disciplinary issues. He also pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor DUI cases and was discharged from the Army before his career in law enforcement.

    * ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker signs police reform bill named for Sonya Massey, woman killed by deputy: The measure passed out of the Senate unanimously and out of the House with a vote of 101-to-12. […] For the family and the bill’s sponsors, the hope is this law will bring more accountability to police agencies across the state by making them liable for who they hire. “He should have been fired from the very first one. It was one of those days where I believe would be they were just trying to get rid of him and move him along to the next place, so he’ll be someone else’s problem,” state Sen. Doris Turner said.

  7 Comments      


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

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

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

“Because of my career, I was exposed to a tremendous amount of asbestos coming from various automotive companies. These companies came into our state, sold their products, and now are trying to skirt having to pay for what they did [by] trying to make me file a lawsuit in the state where they are headquartered, or ever worse, in Germany or some other country when all of the asbestos was in Illinois? That doesn’t seem fair.”

— Retired union mechanic from Chicago suburbs suffering from asbestos-caused cancer

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

For more information about SB 328, click here.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois proposes lowering scores students need to be deemed proficient on state tests. Chalkbeat Chicago

    - Under the proposed changes, 53% of students would be considered proficient in English language arts, 38% would be proficient in math, and 45% would be in science, according to a presentation shared by state education officials Tuesday. Last year, 41% of students were proficient in English language arts, 28% were proficient in math, and 53% were in science.
    - On the ACT, a college entrance exam all Illinois high schoolers must take, juniors would need to score an 18 in English language arts and a 19 in math and a 19 in science to be labeled as proficient. In the past, students needed to score a 540 on the SAT in both math and English languages arts.
    - Illinois is not the only state to change the cut scores of its standardized tests. States such as Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Alaska, and New York have made similar adjustments to their assessment systems, according to a report by The 74.

* Related stories…

* Governor Pritzker will be at the Orr Building at 11 am for a naturalization oath ceremony, at the Director’s Lawn at 12:30 pm for Governor’s Day, and will wrap up the day at the Coliseum at 4:30 pm for the Governor’s Sale of Champions. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WGLT | First major public defense reform in decades awaits governor’s pen: The Funded Advocacy and Independent Representation [FAIR] Act establishes a statewide public defender’s office aimed at providing relief, oversight and independence for public defenders. “The right to an attorney is not just the right to a warm body in court, but the right to a meaningful defense,” said Stephanie Kollmann, policy director of the Children and Family Justice Center at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

* Tribune | Anjanette Young ordinance slated for vote — without no-knock warrant ban: Instead the Anjanette Young ordinance, named after the Black social worker who police handcuffed and left naked in her home while serving a warrant at the wrong address, will require cops to wait 30 seconds before entry. It’s a compromise accepted by both Young and her main council ally, Ald. Maria Hadden, one that reflects the shift in the political climate since demand for police accountability reached a fever pitch during the Black Lives Matter movement that exploded in 2020.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | State Senator Mary Edly-Allen Announces Candidacy for 10th District State Central Committeewoman: State Senator Mary Edly-Allen (Grayslake),  proudly announces her candidacy for the open seat for State Central Committeewoman for Illinois’ 10th Congressional District. A lifelong advocate for Democratic values, Senator Edly-Allen brings over 25 years of experience living, working, and organizing in the district she calls home. For nearly two years, Edly-Allen has served as the President of Lake County Democratic Women (LCDW) and has led with energy, vision, and purpose.  She has worked hard mentoring, supporting, and helping elect a new generation of strong Democratic candidates to local offices across the 10th Congressional District and throughout Lake County. Her leadership has revitalized local engagement and strengthened the Democratic bench.

* Journal-Topics | State Rep. Moylan Gearing Up For 7th And Final Term: One of the primary reasons he wants to serve for another two years is to work on completion of the Chicago area’s mass transit funding bill. Moylan explained that he has been working on that legislation for the last year. While a proposed bill could be approved in the November General Assembly Veto Session, it’s unlikely because it would require a larger than usual number of votes in favor. After January, the number of votes required for passage is 60, said Moylan.

* Evanston Now | Hanley officially kicks off bid for state senate: Hanley, an environmental activist, business owner and political organizer who co-founded Operation Swing State last year, announced Tuesday night his name will officially be on next March’s ballot after receiving enough signatures exactly one week after petitioning kicked off. The biggest name backing Hanely is U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, who is retiring from Congress at the end of her term. Over a dozen Democrats, including Fine, are vying to replace her in Washington.

* Tribune | In Illinois, Democratic House leader Hakeem Jeffries says affordability could be key message for the midterms: “Housing costs are too high. Grocery costs are too high. Utility costs are too high. Insurance costs are too high. Child care costs are too high,” Jeffries said, flanked by U.S. Rep. Nikki Budzinski and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, both of Springfield. “America is too expensive. We need to drive down the high cost of living. Donald Trump has failed to do it.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Trump kills union contracts for Chicago EPA workers: A local union official said she believes Trump’s motive is to actually remove workers’ rights as his administration begins to dismantle the government agency charged with keeping air, water and land protected from polluters. Businesses have long complained about their costs to comply with environmental regulations. “No one with half a brain thinks that we are a national security organization. This is an attempt to just silence federal workers,” said Nicole Cantello, an EPA lawyer and the president of American Federation of Government Employees Local 704 for the last six years.

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson resolves contract with firefighters union, without major concessions: Pay raises included in the six-year agreement — up to 20% depending on the rate of inflation — are identical to those awarded to Chicago police officers in the contract that Johnson extended and sweetened. Local 2 was demanding 20 more ambulances, along with paramedics to staff them. Johnson wanted to reshape the Chicago Fire Department to handle emergency medical assistance demands that make up two-thirds of all calls for service. But there will be no increase in the 80 ambulances on the streets of Chicago, and no change to the minimum staffing requirement that mandates five employees on every piece of fire apparatus.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson joins Mauser packaging picket line in Little Village: Teamsters Local 705 made the announcement that the mayor will speak at the picket line. More than 100 employees walked off the job on June 9. Teamsters said the company “broke the law and refused to bargain in good faith.”

* Sun-Times | Illinois’ regressive tax structure is ‘crime of the century’ that needs to be solved, Chicago’s CFO says: Jill Jaworski, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s chief financial officer, said the state’s tax inequities can only be solved by switching from a flat state income tax to a graduated tax, and by extending the state sales tax to professional services.

* Tribune | Student sues, alleging CPS failed to do a ‘thorough’ background check on guard charged with assaulting her: Before the alleged assault and prior to being hired at Farragut in 2021, Campoverde was arrested more than 15 times and was found guilty of disorderly conduct, one cannabis possession case in Lake County and trespassing in Will County, the lawsuit and court records state. He’s never been convicted of a violent crime, however, and most of the charges against him were dismissed.

* Block Club | The Chicago Air And Water Show Returns This Weekend. Here’s Everything You Need To Know: This year’s show recognizes the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and Marine Corps. Headliners include returning acts from the U.S. Army Parachute Team Golden Knights and the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Orland Park District 135 Board seeks more involvement in hiring decisions amid community frustration: Other board members also expressed empathy for community members who spoke during recent public comment periods, many expressing concerns about district administrators creating a toxic workplace and criticizing the recent hiring of Tremaine Harris as assistant principal of the Century Junior High. In response, the seven-person board that includes three members voted in this year discussed ways to better scrutinize the district’s hiring picks before approving them and to vet the social media accounts of candidates.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights hits the brakes on full-scale ban for youth on e-bikes, e-scooters: Police Chief Nick Pecora’s initial draft ordinance called for an all-encompassing ban on minors under 16 operating so-called “motorized mobility vehicles or devices” on sidewalks and streets. But following comments from adult advocates and even some youth riders, village board members late Monday agreed to claw back the proposed regulations. The rules — pending a final vote Sept. 2 — would bar youth from operating Class 3 e-bikes, which can go 28 mph, but permit anyone of any age to ride Class 1 and 2 e-bikes, e-scooters and other devices.

* Daily Herald | Kane County Board rejects solar electricity site near Elgin: Currently, soybeans are being grown in the northern area. The southern part of the site is a flood plain. Forty-four people signed a petition against the proposal. Neighbors were concerned about the loss of the pastoral view from their homes. They also raised concerns about traffic to the site, the fencing, and the types of trees and plants that would have been used to screen the view of the panels from their properties.

* Daily Herald | ‘Tremendous potential’: ULI Chicago to present ideas for Naperville’s 5th Avenue area: “It’s really an important node for the city,” says Jon Talty, CEO of Chicago-based OKW Architects. “The idea of that train station deserves kind of some gravitas in terms of one getting off the train and feeling like they’ve arrived somewhere.” Talty chairs an Urban Land Institute panel bringing fresh eyes to an underdeveloped area that has “tremendous potential.”

* Daily Herald | Northwest Cook drivers among Illinois’ best, Naperville drivers some of the worst, study says: That’s according to an analysis of self-reported data collected by insurance marketplace platform LendingTree. “The state has pretty good drivers in general, but there are places people can do better,” said Rob Bhatt, an insurance analyst with North Carolina-based LendingTree. Naperville was the only suburb in the bottom five of the analysis, reporting 16 driving-related incidents per 1,000 drivers, placing its drivers fourth worst in the state.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Opponents, supporters of solar farm at Belleville cemetery face off at meeting: “It looks like it’s going to court,” said opponent Jesse Berger, who had warned earlier that the city was opening itself up to legal challenges if it proceeded with the controversial project. “It may be the only way to get it stopped. (Officials) aren’t backing down,” he said. About 60 people gathered on Thursday evening at the Southwestern Illinois Justice and Workplace Development Campus. The city had been required to hold the meeting under guidelines of a state program that’s providing financial incentives for the project.

* WGLT | City of Bloomington to host free symposium to discuss future of inclusion and access: The City of Bloomington will host an Inclusion & Access Compliance symposium from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Aug. 26 at Heartland Community College’s Astroth Building, 1500 W. Raab Road in Normal. The theme of the free symposium, “Navigating Inclusion: Bringing Divides in a Shifting Landscape,” will bring experts, leaders and community members to dive into strategies for advancing diversity, equity and inclusion [DEI] in a changing professional and political landscape.

* WCIA | Urbana City Council approves new Deputy Police Chief: The council unanimously approved the appointment of Zachery Mikalik to Deputy Chief during its meeting on Monday. Mikalik, an 18-year veteran of the department, formerly served as a Patrol Officer, Patrol Sergeant and as a Lieutenant with the Illinois National Guard. He currently serves as Services Division Commander, leading initiatives in officer training, wellness, community engagement, and system modernization.

* WCIA | Marching for a contract: PBL teachers starting school year with expired contracts: A group of teachers in Ford County flooded a highway with a message, while also trying to get the attention of their administrators. Dozens of teachers from the Paxton-Buckley-Loda School District marched to show their unity in a trying time. School starts on Thursday, and they will begin without a new contract. “We wanted to walk in to the meeting together to show that we are all in this together,” President of the Paxton-Buckley-Loda Education Association (PBLEA) Union, Amy Johnson, said.

*** National ***

* 404 Media | UK Asks People to Delete Emails In Order to Save Water During Drought: It’s a brutally hot August across the world, but especially in Europe where high temperatures have caused wildfires and droughts. In the UK, the water shortage is so bad that the government is urging citizens to help save water by deleting old emails. It really helps lighten the load on water hungry datacenters, you see.

* AP | What to know about Trump’s potential change in federal marijuana policy: Trump said Monday that he hopes to decide in the coming weeks about whether to support changes to the way marijuana is regulated. The renewed focus on marijuana comes more than a year after former President Joe Biden’s administration formally proposed reclassifying marijuana. No decision was made before Biden left office. Meanwhile, many states have already gone further than the federal government by legalizing the recreational use of marijuana for adults or allowing it for medical purposes.

  16 Comments      


Open thread

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Whatever anyone else has told you, this is not primitive music. Drummer Paul Cook amplifies the anarchic chaos but somehow holds it all together with his loud and swingy syncopation using every surface within his reach. Cookie’s masterful, pounding, crashing triplets as the song builds to its ultimate crescendo always blow. my. mind

No future

How’s life by you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Wednesday, Aug 13, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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* Jim Edgar (Updated and comments opened)
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* Reader comments closed for the weekend
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Bailey releases poll showing him ahead in Republican primary, but lots of undecideds
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Various stuff
* Pritzker signs executive order to 'protect vaccine access'
* A quick briefing on Ted Dabrowski's running mate (Updated)
* Trump says the National Guard will deploy to Memphis though he “would have preferred going to Chicago” (Updated)
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
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