Pritzker: ‘I don’t see any reason why we would have a special session’ but ‘every day is different’
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * From the governor’s press conference today…
Please pardon all transcription errors.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Background is here if you need it. The Illinois Realtors Association has spent more than $500,000 on a “consumer awareness campaign” targeting some Democratic lawmakers, including Sen. Linda Holmes, who voted yes on the Senate’s transit plan… * Sun-Times…
* WTTW…
* Governor JB Pritzker…
* Chalkbeat Chicago | Trump Administration’s Changes To Head Start Sow Uncertainty Among Illinois Child Care Providers: For now, Lauri Morrison-Frichtl, executive director of the Illinois Head Start Association, said her organization is encouraging Head Start providers not to implement any new policies until there is further guidance from the Trump administration. However, she doesn’t know when that will happen. “From what we hear, the Office of Head Start has been told by the administration to work on guidance,” said Morrison-Frichtl. “It’ll be weeks before any guidance comes out, or months. I’d be surprised if we have it by the end of the summer.” * WTTW | Ex-House Speaker Michael Madigan Files Notice of Appeal Challenging Landmark Corruption Convictions: In an expected move, Madigan on Wednesday filed his notice of appeal to the Seventh Circuit Court after he was convicted in February on 10 felony charges including bribery and wire fraud. While he’s scheduled to begin serving a 7.5-year prison sentence in October, the former speaker this month had already asked to remain free while he challenges those convictions. * Tribune | Lake County treasurer has hopes for statewide post: At the Cook County session, [Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim of Mundelein] stressed her background in technology and pledged to bring “innovation and modernize how we manage money in the state,” according to the Tribune. “These are unprecedented times, and people we love are afraid, and we need a fighter at every level.” In emailed answers to questions from the Tribune, Kim said she can provide “a local executive’s perspective” to the comptroller’s job. She said she wants to run for the office because she thinks it needs someone who understands how to responsibly manage public dollars. * Center Square | Fiscal differences remain as Illinois lawmaker urges for transit special session: State Sen. Mike Simmons, D-Chicago, made the call Monday during a ceremony to mark the reopening of four Chicago Transit Authority train stations on the city’s North Side. “I as a state senator am calling on my colleagues to come back to Springfield and have a special session so that we can fully fund public transit. We need a special session today, not next month and not in the veto session,” Simmons said. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s CFO says property tax hike ‘likely’ in 2026 budget: Asked in an interview with Bloomberg’s Romaine Bostick whether a property tax increase would again be proposed for the city’s 2026 budget, Chief Financial Officer Jill Jaworski said “it is likely that that will be part of the package,” without addressing how to garner support from the City Council to pass it. One of Johnson’s “budgeteers” last year, Ald. Matt O’Shea, 19th, said he would need to see major cuts and efficiencies to be won over. “And if it doesn’t happen, I’m a no vote, and so are the majority of my colleagues,” he said. “We need to start talking about stuff we never talked about before.” * Tribune | Ald. Walter Burnett’s wife violated Chicago Housing Authority ethics policy: Williams-Burnett serves as the chair of the Chicago Intellect political action committee and did not disclose the position to CHA, a violation of the Hatch Act — the federal law that restricts the political activity of some government workers and a component of CHA’s ethics policy. “It is our conclusion that (Williams-)Burnett violated the Ethics Policy in her false and intentional denial of holding any position with the PAC or knowing anything of its activity,” said the CHA ethics officer in an April 2022 email to then-CHA CEO Tracey Scott, the human resources director and inspector general. * Chicago Mag | A Brief History of Nepotism in Chicago Politics: Nepotism in politics is back in the news, if it ever actually left. Alderperson Walter Burnett Jr. is resigning from the City Council, and hopes to see his 29-year-old son, Walter III, appointed to his seat. All indications are that Mayor Brandon Johnson will honor the father’s wish to pass his job down to the next generation of Burnetts. As Mike Royko wrote in Boss, nepotism “is part of the system of the Machine…A Chicago Rip Van Winkle could awaken to the political news columns and, reading the names, think that time had stood still.” Royko then offered a Biblical accounting of fathers who had passed down power to their sons: “Edward Dunne, mayor, begat Robert Jerome Dunne, judge; John J. Touhy, ward boss and holder of many offices, begat John M. Touhy, Illinois House Speaker,” and so on and so forth. In Chicago, power is not earned, it’s inherited. * Crain’s | Northern Trust denies holding merger talks with Bank of New York Mellon: Northern Trust denied it has held merger talks with Bank of New York Mellon, throwing cold water on speculation about a deal that would move control of the homegrown institution out of Chicago. “I want to reaffirm our commitment to remain independent,” Northern Trust’s chairman and chief executive officer, Michael O’Grady, said in prepared remarks during a conference call with analysts following the release of its quarterly earnings report. “Contrary to recent speculation, during my tenure as CEO, we have never entertained discussions regarding the sale of the company with any financial institution, nor do we intend to.” * WTTW | Chicago Spent $510.9M on Overtime in 2024, Including $273.8M for Police, Down Slightly From Last Year: The Chicago Police Department spent $273.8 million on overtime last year, 6.5% less than in 2023 and but still more than two and a half times the $100 million earmarked for police overtime by the Chicago City Council as part of the city’s 2024 budget, according to data published by the city’s Office of Budget and Management. * Crain’s | Farmer’s Fridge finds fresh momentum: Farmer’s Fridge menu items have doubled in the last few years, from roughly 25 to about 50 offerings ranging from salads, sandwiches and snacks, as well as breakfast items, all of which have a shelf life of about five to seven days. Snacks include items such as hand-dipped dark chocolate trail mix, and meals include steak chopped salad with roasted potatoes and shaved Parmesan, with prices ranging from $5 to $14. The menu is meant to be healthy, but not “diet food,” said Saunders. “So that you don’t feel like you’re compromising at all.” * Daily Herald | It just works: Chicago Dog Deep Dish pizza collab from Portillo’s, Lou Malnati’s surprisingly delicious: This unholy union actually works. It turns out you can put neon green relish on a pizza. It was like a marriage of two people who have very little in common, but somehow they’re good together. All the ingredients from the two classics are there. * Block Club | Rosa’s Lounge Launches Independent Record Label To Spotlight Chicago’s ‘Unrecorded’ Talent: Willenson said the label will focus on elevating local blues, R&B and rock-adjacent musicians who don’t have the resources or time to record an album but who have exemplary talent, or those with a specific project in mind and connection to Rosa’s. Rosa’s Lounge Records is a joint venture between the founders and artists, who will retain their music rights and license them to the record label so the musicians can maintain control over their intellectual property, Willenson said. * Sun-Times | Bears will lean on Dennis Allen’s experience — and grit — at defensive coordinator: Dennis Allen is down his best player. The Bears’ new defensive coordinator will have to operate the next few weeks of training camp without cornerback Jaylon Johnson, whom the Bears say has a leg injury that he suffered during offseason workouts. “I know Jaylon’s going to do everything he can to get himself back and get himself ready as quickly as possible,” Allen said Wednesday after the Bears’ first practice at Halas Hall. “He’s a consummate professional. So I feel good about him being ready when his body’s ready to go. So from that standpoint, not a ton of concern there.” * The Triibe | ‘We cannot give up.’ Chicago mothers push for accountability from the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office: McFadden’s grief is prolonged, she says, because of the lack of timely closure regarding Malcolm’s death. That time lapse is why she and other moms are advocating for a “compassionate system” of death notification and identification within the medical examiner’s office. Additionally, at least one family is proposing legislation that calls for an end to unchecked immunity that shields the medical examiner’s office from accountability when it fails to properly identify bodies or notify families in a timely and compassionate manner. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora launches five public transition committees to gather community input: The Public Transition Committees span topics such as finances, sustainability, housing, public safety and education, according to a recent city news release announcing the new committees and their members. Over the next few months, the committees will create formal recommendations to the Mayor’s Office that will together form a “master transition document” planned to be released in late fall, the news release said. * Lake County News-Sun | Another drowning reported at busy Illinois Beach State Park: Recovery operations continued Wednesday for the body of a 14-year-old boy who drowned at Illinois Beach State Park at around 4 p.m. Tuesday, according to Beach Park Fire Chief Tom Stahl. It’s at least the second drowning this summer at the park, where first responders have complained more equipment and manpower are needed to handle emergencies in the wake of beach-related improvements the state has made in recent years. The Lake County Sheriff’s Office, Lake County Forest Preserves, and the Winthrop Harbor, Waukegan and Pleasant Prairie fire departments were aiding in the search, Stahl said. The Coast Guard was also involved. * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights Park District celebrates 100th anniversary with a giant chair: A giant Adirondack chair is traveling across Arlington Heights as part of the Arlington Heights Park District’s centennial celebration. The giant blue chair — marked with the park district’s 100th anniversary logo — has appeared at a different location every week since April. The chair moved to Carriage Walk Park on Wednesday. “People love it, and for us, it’s so great to see so many families being able to make memories,” said Amy Lewandowski, chair of the district’s 100th anniversary committee. * Illinois Times | Massey Commission makes plans for work to continue: “(Sonya’s cousin) Sontae Massey and many other members of the commission have made it no secret that we want the work to continue,” commission cochair JoAnn Johnson told Illinois Times after Monday’s meeting. “As we’ve always said, we want systemic change. We want widespread change; we don’t want Band-Aids,” said Johnson, who worked for Illinois State Police for almost 30 years. “We want to see citywide, countywide change, and that’s going to take longer than 10, 11 months. We’re just really hitting our stride.” * WCIA | Mahomet announces next Chief of Police: On Tuesday, it was reported that the village will be naming David Smysor as its next Police Chief at a special board of trustees meeting on Aug. 12. Smysor will be replacing the outgoing chief, Mike Metzler, who is retiring on Sept. 30. Smysor will officially assume the new role on Oct. 1. He is currently serving as the Deputy Chief of Police for the City of Urbana Police Department where he is responsible for strategic oversight of department operations including patrol, investigations and administration divisions. Smysor has been a law enforcement officer for 24 years, all with Urbana Police where he started as a patrol officer in 2001. * WCIA | Piatt Co. couple saves substance abuse recovery program: Jan Gantz and Stephen Lyons, a married couple from Piatt County, saved a substance abuse recovery program at Piatt County Mental Health Center last Thursday with a donation of $100,000. The program — the Recovery Oriented System of Care — provides counseling and social events for people working towards recovery. […] “We have lost a grandson to an overdose,” Gantz said. “His siblings, Harper and Sage and Finn, I just want to say that this is, in a way, a memorial to your brother.” * WGLT | Residents of an East Bloomington enclave live without reliable quality water: David Smith and his family owned the well and the pipes to houses from the start of the subdivision. McLean County Board member Corey Beirne’s district includes Colonial Meadows. Beirne said David Smith died two to three years ago. “He left it to an individual that has been running it. Unfortunately, this person is not a water professional or a utility professional and has been in a bit over his head and is unfortunately in an unsustainable spot right now, just can’t meet the needs of the community,” said Beirne. * BND | Another metro-east festival cancels event as security problems persist: Community festivals in the metro-east have faced problems with fights and crowd disturbances including the “stampede” of about 300 teenagers at Belleville’s Oktoberfest in 2022. As a result, outdoor festivals are being closed ahead of schedule and two have been canceled altogether. Organizers of NickFest at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in O’Fallon announced this month that they have canceled their 2026 event after police were called to the festival in May when fights were reported. Most of the fights occurred in the neighborhood near the festival, a police spokesman said. * WSIL | Florida trio fined $29K for wildlife violations in southern Illinois: The combined fines of $29,491 include civil penalties for the unlawful harvest of White-Tailed Bucks, the state’s attorney stated. A portion of these fines will support the Illinois Conservation Police Operations Fund. Additionally, the poachers will reportedly face 11 ½ years of revocation in 48 states due to the Interstate Wildlife Violators Compact. Tripp said the three men traveled to Illinois with a semi-automatic rifle equipped with a night vision scope and an infrared spotlight. Tripp also said they spent hours at night locating and shooting deer from their vehicle, later loading the carcasses into a rental truck. * WGLT | Illinois Shakes outperforms 2024 with 10 days to go: All three productions are now open at the Illinois Shakespeare Festival [ISF] and ticket sales have already exceeded last season’s box office, including a handful of sold-out performances. The festival’s full houses are an endorsement festival artistic director Robert Quinlan’s inaugural season. The season was built around celebrating the power of theater, with new productions of two of Shakespeare’s best-known titles—Hamlet and A Midsummer Night’s Dream—plus the festival debut of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. * NPR | Trump aims to get rid of AI regulations and finance exports to win AI race: In total, there will be more than 90 policy actions taken in the coming year, said Michael Kratsios, head of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy — though details on many of those actions are still in development, and will rely on input from the AI industry and others. Kratsios told reporters that federal procurement rules will be changed to allow only AI platforms deemed free from “ideological bias” such as DEI initiatives. * NYT | What if Everything We Know About Sacagawea Is Wrong?: Jerome Dancing Bull, a Hidatsa elder, took the microphone first. The day was warm enough that someone had propped the door open to the outside; the sun was blindingly bright, the prairie a labrador’s scruff in the distance. “They got it all wrong!” he told the people in the room, referring to the bare-bones, truncated life sketched out for Sacagawea by Lewis and Clark and the historians who followed them. In that telling, Sacagawea was born a member of the Shoshone tribe in present-day Idaho, was kidnapped by the Hidatsa as a child, spent most of 1805 and 1806 with the expedition and died in 1812, while she was still in her 20s. The Hidatsas insist that she was a member of their tribe all along and died more than 50 years later, in 1869. And not of old age, either: She was shot to death. * AP | US home sales fade in June as national median sales price hits an all-time high of $435,300: Existing home sales fell 2.7% last month from May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.93 million units, the National Association of Realtors said Wednesday. Sales were flat compared with June last year. The latest home sales fell short of the 4.01 million pace economists were expecting, according to FactSet. Home prices increased on an annual basis for the 24th consecutive month to reach record heights.
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Question of the day
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
* From the report…
* Seattle revenues… ![]() * The Question: Should the state allow Chicago and other home rule municipalities to establish this payroll expense tax? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Planned Parenthood names new CEO, Medicaid funding remains on the chopping block
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Planned Parenthood of Illinois…
* On Monday, the New York Times reported most Planned Parenthood clinics have been cut off from Medicaid funding…
* The Tribune…
…Adding… PPIL has said it would need $16 million annually to maintain its current service without Medicaid funding. I asked Governor JB Pritzker yesterday if he would commit to covering the funding gap…
* More…
* Cal Matters | Planned Parenthood of California loses $300 million in federal funding under court order: California Planned Parenthood, the largest abortion provider in the state, lost all federal funding this week under a preliminary court order that allows the money to be withheld while a larger legal dispute plays out. Planned Parenthood Federation of America sued the Trump Administration on behalf of its members earlier in July over provisions of the congressional reconciliation bill — also known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” — that prohibited Medicaid reimbursements for large nonprofit health clinics that provide abortions. The lawsuit argues that the law defunds Planned Parenthood’s services in violation of multiple constitutional amendments. The ruling, which left both parties dissatisfied, partly blocked the law from taking effect but only for a small fraction of Planned Parenthood organizations. None of California’s Planned Parenthood health centers are included.
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Rahm before and after
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Presidential ambition is a heckuva drug… ![]() * Partial transcript…
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RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Retail creates more jobs in Illinois than any other private sector employer, with one out of every four workers employed by the retail sector. Importantly, retail is an industry in which everyone, regardless of credentials, can find a viable career path. Retailers like John and Ian in Macomb enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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Groups react to yet another PJM auction-induced price spike
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
And it’s gonna get even worse next year. * Clean Grid Alliance…
* Citizens Utility Board…
* Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition…
* Gov. Pritzker said this week that he was committed to passing an energy bill next spring…
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SB 328 Puts Illinois’s Economy At Risk
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] In the final hours of the state’s legislative session, SB 328 was quietly introduced and passed giving lawmakers and the public little time to review and debate this legislation. Now, it’s sitting on the Governor’s desk. If signed, it will allow trial lawyers to drag companies into Illinois courts for lawsuits that have nothing to do with Illinois. Businesses could be sued here simply for being registered in the state — even if the alleged harm occurred elsewhere. And it puts jobs and our state’s economy at risk. Even New York Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed a nearly identical bill twice, calling it a “massive expansion” of jurisdiction that would deter job creation and burden the courts. Governor Pritzker has a choice: Veto the legislation to protect Illinois jobs and businesses — or signal to employers that Illinois is open season for out-of-state lawsuits. Learn more and make your voice heard: ![]()
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Open thread
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * “Billy Corgan has cited the significance of ‘Sweet Leaf’ as an influence on The Smashing Pumpkins sound in numerous interviews, noting that he first heard the song from his uncle’s copy of Master of Reality when he was 8 years old and thought ‘this is what God sounds like’”… And soon the world will love you sweet leaf Any news by you?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: CPS board members ask Pritzker, lawmakers to call special session on school funding. Sun-Times…
- The state has put more than $300 million in new money into the funding formula each year since it was approved in 2018. Yet, with those increases, it won’t be fully funded until at least 2034, despite the deadline of 2027 set in the law, according to the Center on Budget and Tax Accountability. - So far, neither Gov. JB Pritzker, nor legislative leaders, are jumping to heed the call. Asked Tuesday, Pritzker’s office referred to a previous statement in which the governor said he would like to provide more money for education, but finding the dollars to do so was a challenge. * Governor Pritzker will be at Venue SIX10 at 1 pm to deliver opening remarks at the Global Quantum Forum. At 2 pm, the governor will announce a new IQMP tenant. Click here to watch. * Sun-Times | Cane sugar Coca-Cola coming this fall, and Illinois corn farmers worry about financial impact: After the announcement Tuesday, Corn Refiners Association president and CEO John Bode told the Sun-Times in a statement that “an increased use of U.S. cane sugar is certain to lead to a corresponding increase in imports of foreign cane sugar.” “Replacing high-fructose corn syrup with cane sugar would cost thousands of American food manufacturing jobs, depress farm income, and expand the trade deficit,” Bode added. * Sun-Times | ComEd bills likely to remain high as AI, data centers suck up power: ComEd’s rate hikes this summer are directly related to the high demand across the country. After a recent “auction” to determine what those payments to power companies will be in 2026, it appears that electric customers will not get a break from high bills anytime soon. In fact, signs point to even higher electric bills by the middle of next year. Electric rates just went up June 1, and most customers didn’t see the increases on their bills until this month. * CBS Chicago | Gov. Pritzker says state of Illinois is seeing major drop in violent crime alongside Chicago: Gov. Pritzker also said there has been a similar drop in crime statewide. “Shootings and homicides on our highways are down 60, 70, 80% depending on where you look — but certainly in the Chicago area — and that’s a result of more officers, investment in technology, making sure that we have summer jobs for kids, and making sure that we’re investing in areas that have high poverty rates. All of that works, I think, to reduce crime rate in the city of Chicago, and well as across the state of Illinois.” * Daily Herald | How sweating corn will intensify this week’s Midwest heat wave: In the week ahead, some of the country’s most oppressive heat and humidity will be found in the Corn Belt, an area of the United States that stretches from the Dakotas to Ohio, sending heat index values toward a dangerous 115 degrees. Illinois, Missouri, Minnesota, Iowa, Indiana and the Dakotas are forecast to have humidity levels that rival or exceed Florida’s. According to Iowa state climatologist Justin Glisan, this is the time of the year when humidity contributions from corn sweat are highest — around the time of tasseling and pollination, when the flower emerges from the corn stalk. * Austin Weekly News | As Ford plans state house exit, open seat draws early bids: Thomas Gary, an Oak Parker who has served on the Triton College board and in the U.S. Navy Reserve for 27 years, announced late last week that he will run for Ford’s seat. Pastor John J. Harrell, a pastor with both Austin and Proviso Township roots, has also filed to run. Harrell is an Austin resident and pastor of New Hope Baptist Church in Austin. He also leads Proviso Baptist Church in Maywood and is on the board of Loretto Hospital and Hire 360 Workforce Development. He filed his candidacy with the state on July 10. * WAND | House GOP want Illinois to support ICE, Democrats hope to ban police from wearing masks: This comes as Rep. Barbara Hernandez (D-Aurora) has filed a bill to ban law enforcement from wearing masks and neck gaiters while interacting with the public. At least 15 House Democrats hope to fine police officers wearing masks. Law enforcement could be charged with a Class A misdemeanor for multiple offenses. House Bill 4086 would also allow the state to put money from fines into a special fund to provide immigrant family services. * WGN | Chicago’s budget deficit threatened by pension bill that awaits Pritzker’s signature: To cover the adjustment, fiscal watchdogs project Chicago taxpayers would be on the hook for $60 million in 2027 and $754 million by 2055. “We’re still evaluating the bill. Obviously, there is a lot to consider here,” Pritzker said Tuesday. * WGLT | Consumer advocate pushes for legislative action regarding State Farm rate spike: Over the last three years, Illinois policyholders live in the only state outside of Utah who have faced 50% increases in their homeowner’s insurance. Illinois Public Interest Research Group State [PIRG] Director Abe Scarr said those increases will “impact countless families across the state.” About 1.5 million State Farm policyholders will be impacted by the near half-billion rate hike — a 27% hike. Scarr and PIRG are advocating for more regulatory control over insurance rate increases. * Evanston Now | Pritzker: ‘Confident’ of transit funding solution: Evanston Now asked the governor about the likelihood of state lawmakers coming up with a transit funding solution before the $770 million “fiscal cliff” kicks in next year. Unless that deficit is headed off, area transit agencies project massive service cuts, layoffs, and fare increases. Pritzker said if the amount of legislative work put in on resolving the crisis is any indicator, “I’m confident something will get done.” “Some of the issues are hard,” Pritzker added, “which is why this has been taking so long.” * Tribune | Chicago Housing Authority resident leaders voice opposition to Ald. Walter Burnett as potential next CEO: The residents — 14 people who make up CHA’s Central Advisory Council, an elected resident board — said Ald. Walter Burnett is not fit to lead the nation’s third-largest public housing authority and will sell off CHA’s land for non-public housing purposes. “It doesn’t matter that he grew up in Cabrini-Green,” said Mary Baggett, who represents the CHA’s Near West Side community on the resident council. “He never helps public housing residents ever.” “I always stand up and fight for the residents,” Burnett, who said he lives near CHA housing, told the Tribune. “I sit in the shadows of public housing because I know the culture, I grew up in the culture and I respect the culture.” * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson wants CTA smoking crackdown after aldermen’s call: Mayor Brandon Johnson promised Tuesday to crack down on smoking on Chicago Transit Authority trains and buses, latching onto an effort already underway in the City Council. Johnson signed an executive order directing city departments to send social workers onto the transit system and City Hall lobbyists to push for more safety funding in Springfield. The mayor said he was “fed up” and signaled a hesitant openness to ramping up police enforcement. But he shared few specifics on what anti-smoking efforts will look like and how much they will cost during an afternoon news conference. * Block Club | Mayor Vows To Curb Smoking On The CTA After Years Of Complaints: ‘It Has Got To Stop’: Johnson’s executive order directs the city’s public health and family and support services departments to deploy mental health workers, such as Crisis Assistance Response and Engagement teams, to trains and platforms to provide additional outreach to people who are unhoused or experiencing mental health episodes. It also asks those agencies to explore the feasibility of forming “Transit Health Response Teams” that would “engage smokers and offer on-site counseling, smoking cessation resources and long-term treatment,” according to a press release. * Sun-Times | Chicago cop who tested positive for marijuana can keep job, police board rules: Police Supt. Larry Snelling had pushed to fire Officer Marshall Andrews Jr. for failing a random drug test in August 2021, but the board instead voted Thursday to suspend the veteran cop for 90 days. “While the board has discharged officers from CPD in the past for using cannabis, medical and recreational use of cannabis is now permitted by Illinois state law,” the board wrote in its written ruling, noting that future discipline will be assessed “on a case-by-case basis.” Still, the ruling could set a precedent for two other pending disciplinary cases in which officers face firing for allegedly using cannabis. * ABC Chicago | Secret Service one of few federal agencies currently hiring; Chicago field office talks recruitment: Every week, up to 10 recruits from around Chicago attempt to score a minimum of 20 points on the Applicant Physical Abilities Test that includes timed push-ups, an agility run, sit-ups and finally a mile-and-a-half run. “We give them the scoring chart. We give them the test. So, they know when they show up, what they’re going to be tested on. They know what they need in each section to pass,” said Biljana Spasojevic, assistant to the special agent in charge. * ABC Chicago | Downtown Chicago fed building lockdown, standoff ends after roughly 9 hours, evacuation: The man was seen being taken out on a stretcher, but he appeared alert and conscious, with a wound on his neck. His condition is not known. A U.S. Marshals spokesperson said he would be taken to a hospital, and no one else was injured in the incident. * WBEZ | ‘Unpleasant, uncomfortable and maybe dangerous’ temps are headed to Chicago. Here’s how to stay safe: The heat index is expected to hit 105 to 115 degrees in the metro area on Wednesday, according to the National Weather Service. And the setting sun won’t provide much relief — temperatures will likely remain above 90 degrees well into the night. But don’t expect any temperature records to be broken, said Gino Izzi, a meteorologist with the weather service’s office in Romeoville. “It will be unpleasant, uncomfortable and maybe dangerous,” Izzi said. “But this is pretty normal for this time of the year.” * Sun-Times | Work on replacement of Chicago Avenue Bridge to begin next month: The Chicago Department of Transportation announced Tuesday that construction on the Chicago Avenue Bridge and the Halsted Street viaduct would begin in early August and continue through the end of 2026. * NBC Chicago | Chicago’s Union Station celebrates its 100th birthday: Union Station is “a great American success story” by becoming Amtrak’s main connecting hub, says Joseph Schwieterman, DePaul University professor and author of “Terminal Town,” a history of Chicago’s transportation hubs. “While other stations closed, trains were rerouted into it, raising its national profile,” Schwieterman told the Sun-Times. * ABC Chicago | Immigrant rights groups demand action on ICE facility in western suburbs: The protesters are calling on the county and state to shut down ICE’s Broadview facility. It’s not officially categorized as a detention center, and is said to be increasingly housing people for longer than even ICE’s own standards. Marching into the Loop’s Cook County Administration Building, a group of protesters Tuesday tried and failed to hand deliver a letter addressed to Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke and Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul. They are calling on the lawmakers to use existing state law to shut down the immigration processing facility in Broadview. * Daily Herald | Rep. Underwood has massive fundraising lead over GOP’s Marter: Democratic U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood of Naperville has a massive fundraising lead over the perennial Republican candidate hoping to capture her 14th District seat in 2026, federal records show. Underwood’s campaign committee ended June with nearly $1.2 million in the bank — roughly 60 times what the GOP’s Jim Marter of Oswego had put together as of the same date, according to quarterly financial reports filed last week with the Federal Election Commission. The FEC has no financial reports from a second challenger, Democrat Roman G. Valenciano of Earlville, who aims to take on Underwood in the March primary. * Daily Southtown | Thornton Township officials ask for time to manage finances as residents question supervisor’s salary: The first budgets taken on by Supervisor Napoleon Harris passed unanimously but faced questions from some in the nearly full audience. People who criticized former Supervisor Tiffany Henyard expressed frustration that Harris was carrying on of the former supervisor’s $202,000 salary. “My comment is to you, Supervisor Harris, what motivated you to seek the supervisor position of Thornton Township?” asked Jennifer Robertz during the public comment period. “Was it solely for the six-figure compensation, or did you feel the sense of entitlement to become the most powerful figure in the Southland?” * Daily Southtown | Orland Township votes to end lease for secretary of state motor vehicle office: Township trustees raised questions about safety and parking before voting 3-2 to end the lease, which is for $1 a year. The secretary of state leases 1,100 square feet inside the township offices and renewed the lease, for a five-year term, this February, said Scott Burnham, a spokesman for the secretary of state. He said at the time the lease was renewed no complaints or issues about the office were raised. Under the terms of the lease, the township has to provide 90-day notice to end a lease, so the office would presumably be closing later in October, Burnham said. * Harvey World Herald | Alders contest accuracy of meeting minutes as residents call for transparency and accessibility: During the approval of minutes from the April 28, May 12, and June 9 sessions, Colby Chapman (2nd) made a motion to have the minutes sent to the legislative committee for further review. Her motion failed. Ald. Tracy Key (4th) voiced significant concerns about the accuracy of the meeting minutes. “The minutes don’t include everything that happened in the meeting,” Key said. “We need to have a better procedure for documenting what occurs during these sessions.” Mayor Chris Clark responded by noting that the existing rules, established by the prior administration, specify that minutes do not need to be verbatim. “Number one, minutes do not have to be verbatim,” he said. “Number two, if someone has an issue, even though they don’t have to be verbatim, we can address it, but we have to follow procedure.” * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights board divided on public sleeping ban: At the heart of the debate are complaints from downtown condominium owners about a group of people loitering in front of their building. Those clash with concerns from advocacy groups that any local ordinance would be a step toward criminalizing homelessness. While nothing is set in stone, the mayor and trustees debated potential restrictions that would prohibit anyone from staying on public property — such as park benches — during the overnight hours and for consecutive nights. * Center Square | Watchdog demands probe of Illinois public library amid property tax push: Americans for Prosperity–Illinois filed a 35-count ethics complaint and is now urging Sangamon County State’s Attorney John Milhiser and Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul to hold officials accountable. “Through our [Freedom of Information Act] investigation, we found that the library used public funds to conduct a survey about the tax referendum and promised respondents their answers would remain confidential. But they turned that information over to the board president and the campaign committee, a clear violation of state law,” said Costin. “It’s deeply troubling to see personal data used to fuel a political campaign aimed at raising taxes on Illinois residents.” * WCIA | Effingham School Dist. at risk of losing afterschool programs over lack of funds: The district’s programming is funded by a federal grant called the 21st Century Community Learning Centers grant. Superintendent Andrew Johnson addressed the status of this funding during the district’s Board of Education meeting on Monday, saying that around the start of July, the district was informed the federal government would no longer provide that grant. “From my understanding, there were multiple states that sued the government,” Johnson said. “And it appears, though I don’t have confirmation, that there is a very good chance that that is going to be back on the table and allocated and paid out.” * Shaw Local | Sycamore approves 1% grocery tax: ‘Our job is to do what’s best for the city,’ mayor says: Sycamore has joined DeKalb, Genoa and Sandwich by also enacting a 1% grocery tax, which will replace the expiring state tax on most grocery items come January. The Sycamore City Council approved the new local tax in a 6-1 vote Monday. Fourth Ward Alderman Ben Bumpus was the only alderperson to vote against the measure. * SJ-R | ‘Increasingly tense, but hopeful’: Talks between school district, teachers union continue: The president of the Springfield Education Association described the situation between the union and District 186 Public Schools as “increasingly tense, but hopeful.” The comment by Aaron Graves came after 80 or so union members wearing red shirts attended the July 21 board of education meeting and on the eve of a new round of negotiations. The July 22 session will be the first with a federal mediator called in by the union to help move the talks, which began in January, along. * Secure Community Network | Secure Community Network Launches Illinois-Iowa Security Program: The Secure Community Network (SCN), the official safety and security organization for the Jewish community in North America, is proud to announce the launch of the Illinois-Iowa Security Program. Ken Scarlette, a highly respected veteran law enforcement leader, will serve as the region’s new Regional Security Advisor (RSA). Scarlette joined SCN in June 2025 following a distinguished 27-year career with the Springfield, Illinois Police Department, where he most recently served as Chief of Police. In his new role, Scarlette will oversee the safety and security operations for the Jewish Federations of Champaign-Urbana, Peoria, Greater Rockford, Springfield, Greater Des Moines, Quad Cities, and Sioux City. His work will include conducting facility assessments, leading trainings and drills, advising on threat mitigation, and coordinating responses to critical incidents. The area includes more than 11,000 Jewish residents and over 60 Jewish facilities, including synagogues, schools, community centers, and other centers of Jewish life. * BND | 3 victims of serial killer identified by Illinois police and SIUE students: In a new partnership with Southern Illinois University Edwardsville students, Illinois State Police have identified three victims of an infamous St. Louis-area serial killer and also brought charges for a murder that had gone unsolved for 14 years. State police Director Brendan Kelly said that the internship program helped law enforcement identify Kelly Johson, Crystal Lay and Carol Jean Hemphill and that all were victims of Maury Travis. Kelly said Travis killed 17 women in the early 2000s. * WEEK 25 | Pekin political hopeful arrested for murder-for-hire plot: That investigation led officers to the door of Alison L. Salinas, who was arrested Tuesday afternoon in connection to the murder-for-hire plot. […] Salinas was the owner of Busy Beez Bakery, a now-shuttered business in Pekin, in which five of its employees claim they were not paid for their services. This discovery led to an investigation by the Illinois Department of Labor, which can be read about here. Salinas was also a one-time political candidate, running as a Republican for U.S. Senate against Democratic U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth. However, her name did not appear on the 2022 Republican primary ballot. * WCIA | Gibson City drive-in to host celebration of life for co-owner: “To honor her memory and the lasting legacy she left for me I am hosting a Celebration of Life for her at the drive-in on Sunday July 27th as a means for folks to join us and show appreciation and support for an incredible young woman taken far too soon from this world and those that loved her,” Nora’s husband, Ben Harroun, wrote in a post on the drive-in’s website. Some of the food stands will be open and the money raised from the event will go to the family, medical bills, and charities that were important to Nora. Tab’s Chocolate will also be at the event. * Muddy River News | Quincy Plan Commission gives green light for six-story hotel with rooftop bar: A special permit to allow for an exemption to the height limitations was requested by Sam Adler, the managing director for the St. Louis-based real estate development firm New + Found. Adler said the property at 200 Maine is one of three riverfront properties currently in development under the company. The budget for the project sits around $35 million and is estimated to be completed by fall 2027, pending approval. * ProPublica | He Came to the U.S. to Support His Sick Child. He Was Detained. Then He Disappeared: Now, a case-by-case examination of each of the deportees, along with interviews with their lawyers and family members, reveals another jarring reality: Most of the men were not hiding from federal authorities but were instead moving through the nation’s immigration system. They were either in the middle of their cases, which normally should have protected them from deportation, or they had already been ordered deported and should have first been given the option to be sent back to a country they chose. * WaPo | Ozzy Osbourne’s fame never felt as big as his music: Osbourne sang about war and madness in a dismal moan that he often torqued to resemble a dying ambulance siren, frequently cutting through the noise of rock-and-roll writ large. Warning the meek and the powerless of the ugly future being designed by the rich and the powerful, he helped make the people’s music into something unprecedentedly loud and invigorating and paranoid and fun. But that kind of balancing act can weigh heavily on a working-class boy from Birmingham, so in the 1980s, Osbourne transformed himself into a mascot for heavy metal hedonism — until his god-tier antics finally caught up with him on Tuesday when he died at 76. Throughout the second half of Osbourne’s unbelievable life, the American media consistently tried to reduce his courageous freakiness to a joke, initially positing him as a shock-rock punch line, then later as a hapless dad on the pioneering MTV reality series “The Osbournes.” Yet, as impossibly famous as he continued to become, his music remained more immense than his celebrity. * Rolling Stone | Election Gambling Is About to Blow Up With Polymarket Back in U.S.: More than three years after prediction-market startup Polymarket was blocked in the U.S. as part of a settlement with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for failing to register as a derivatives trading platform, the company announced it had found a path back into the country. “Polymarket has acquired QCEX, a CFTC-regulated exchange and clearinghouse, for $112 million,” founder and CEO Shayne Coplan wrote on X on Monday. “This paves the way for us to welcome American traders again. I’ve waited a long time to say this: Polymarket is coming home.” Established in 2020, Polymarket allows users to bet on the outcomes of events ranging from national elections to the timing of a potential Israel–Hamas ceasefire, Bitcoin reaching a certain price threshold, how many times Elon Musk will post online in a given week, and when the next version of ChatGPT may be available. * Bloomberg | EPA Plans to Ditch Key Climate Policy, Washington Post Says: The US Environmental Protection Agency is considering scrapping a landmark almost two-decade old legal opinion that greenhouse gas emissions are harmful to human health, the Washington Post reported. The so-called endangerment finding, published in 2009, has been the legal basis of a wide range of climate rules under the Clean Air Act. A draft proposal to formally abandon the policy is being considered by the EPA, though is still subject to change, the newspaper reported, citing two sources familiar with the details which it didn’t name.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Jul 23, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Jul 23, 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
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* From the report…
* Block Club | The Flashy Fugitives: Ex-Loretto Leader And Pal Accused Of Stealing Millions Are Living Large In Dubai: Block Club reviewed public records, videos and photos that paint a picture of their new lives: Suhail has opened a luxury plastic surgery clinic in a posh neighborhood in Dubai and has attended events with politicians and influencers, donning designer watches and jeweled rings. Ahmed is making increasingly overt appeals to President Donald Trump in what appears to be a bid for clemency. In the United States, they left behind tens of millions of dollars, pricey properties, expensive cars — and unpaid bills. * Crain’s | Sterling Bay looks to sell development site next to Lincoln Yards: After trying for years to jump-start the development and secure a new financial partner after two primary backers sought to sell their stakes in the project, Sterling Bay handed over the northern part of the site to its lender, Little Rock, Ark.,-based Bank OZK, in March. The developer still controls the southern portion of the proposed megaproject site in partnership with J.P. Morgan Asset Management. * Sun-Times | Federal gun ban upheld in George Floyd rioting-related case involving noncitizen in Chicago: Federal officials didn’t violate the constitution when they enforced a gun ban against an immigrant without legal status from Mexico, the U.S. appeals court in Chicago decided earlier this month. U.S. District Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman had dismissed an indictment against Heriberto Carbajal-Flores last year when she found the law he was charged with violated the Second Amendment’s right to bear arms. But the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed Coleman’s ruling on July 16 and sent the case back to her for reconsideration. * Sun-Times | The final act of Chicago’s Damen Silos, star of movies, hip-hop videos and architectural photography: When the amateur architectural photographer Deborah Mercer learned that the Damen Silos would soon be demolished, she decided to go capture them while she still could. “Went to pay my respects to the Damen Silos, soon to be demolished due to the owner’s lack of imagination,” Mercer wrote on BlueSky, a social media platform where she frequently posts her photos of historic Chicago buildings. For some in the city’s cultural community, the demolition of the historic grain silos represents a visual gut-punch. The structures — icons of urban decay as they sat empty for nearly five decades — have been a popular backdrop for filmmakers, musicians and skyline photographers and served as a canvas for many graffiti artists who ignored the “No Trespassing” signs. The silos even appeared in the 2014 movie Transformers: Age of Extinction. * Lake County News-Sun | Residents air fears, frustrations at congressman’s town hall; ‘Abuses we’re seeing … are significant and appalling’: Most calls to the office of U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider, D-Highland Park, concern what he terms the “big bad bill,” otherwise known as the “big beautiful bill” signed by President Donald Trump on July 4. But questions at Schneider’s most recent town hall, like those from Andi Kenney of Deerfield and Dr. Sarah Kelly, also focused on healthcare or fear of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. Kelly said she was concerned about cuts to funding for low-income medical students creating exorbitant student debt, and Kenney wanted to know how to curb the alleged abuses of ICE personnel and the treatment of the people they arrest. * NBC Chicago | ‘Huge disservice’: Busy Orland Park DMV location to close, Illinois Secretary of State says: A statement from Giannoulias’ office late Monday slammed the Orland Township Trustees’ decision, calling it a “huge disservice to residents,” and said it was made without providing proper notice to or consulting with Secretary of State staff or board members. […] Shortly after Giannoulias’ statement, Orland Township Trustee Ken Duffy posted a contentious response, saying the location was “not” one of Illinois’ busiest DMVs and that the board’s “issues with the DMV” were previously communicated to Giannoualias’ office. “Sorry that your staff did not provide you with that information,” Duffy’s post said. … Coleman twice refused to dismiss the case against Carbajal-Flores but ended up throwing it out because of the Supreme Court’s 2022 ruling in a gun-rights case called New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. … Andrew Willinger, a Duke University law professor, said Carbajal-Flores’ case is “a pretty good illustration of how with Bruen you quickly do just get into the historical weeds.” * Crain’s | Kaegi snub spotlights property tax headaches — and a looming political battle: In a move that could have big implications for local property taxpayers, the county’s Democratic Party last week formally endorsed Lyons Township Assessor Patrick Hynes in an effort to unseat Kaegi in the 2026 primary election. The slating by the party’s 80 committee members frames two-term incumbent Kaegi as an outsider trying to retain his seat next year. Whether the backing ultimately makes a difference to Cook County voters remains to be seen. But the party’s decision to back a challenger sends a loud message about taxpayers’ frustration with the way property taxes have been calculated over the last several years. * WBEZ | How Chicago-area malls are adapting for a new era: A “reader’s choice” report from USA Today says two Chicagoland malls — Oakbrook Center and The Fashion Outlets of Chicago — are among the best in the nation. Reset looks at what makes these and other Chicago-area shopping centers great and discusses how local malls are changing to draw visitors at a time when malls nationwide have been in decline. * Daily Southtown | Health care provider Aunt Martha’s commits to continue serving patients who lose Medicaid: Raul Garza, president and CEO of Aunt Martha’s Health & Wellness, which has 22 health centers including five in the south suburbs, doesn’t know exactly how many of the more than 50,000 patients Aunt Martha’s serves will lose Medicaid coverage due to President Trump’s massive spending and tax cut law. But at Aunt Martha’s, where 65% to 70% of patients are on Medicaid, the federally qualified health center has no plans to drop patients who lose Medicaid coverage. * WCIA | Clerical error caused appearance of missing money at Paris school: State’s Attorney: In June, WCIA reported that an Edgar County school district thought they lost more than $700,000 over six years. The Paris School District said they received less money from the county then they’d requested from 2018 until 2024. Now, after an investigation, the Edgar County State’s Attorney said there was never any missing money to begin with. He said the false alarm was all due to a clerical error. * WGLT | Looming cuts to SNAP threaten food insecurity resources in McLean County: Eligibility requirements to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program [SNAP] — wrapped into the GOP megabill signed into law on July 4 — means about 360,000 Illinoisans could lose food assistance benefits, according to a statewide analysis. More than 20,000 McLean County residents receive SNAP. SNAP recipients must now work or volunteer 80 hours per month unless they have dependents age 14 or younger, are medically certified as physically or mentally unfit for employment or are pregnant. The law expands work requirements to all non-disabled adults, including those age 55-64, who were previously exempt. * BND | Metro-east funeral home owner, village trustee indicted on income tax fraud: A member of the St. Jacob board of trustees, who is also the owner and director of Richeson Funeral Home in Troy, has been indicted on charges of income tax fraud. Guideon Richeson, 68, was indicted on July 17 on 11 counts related to the alleged fraud and failure to keep books, according to Madison County court documents. Richeson declined to comment on the charges. Court records state Richeson failed to submit tax return paperwork since the 2020 tax year. He also failed to provide books and records from 2017 to 2020. * WGLT | Heartland Community College board elects alum to fill trustee vacancy: The Board of Trustees at Heartland Community College has named an HCC alumnus to fill a recent vacancy. Senesta “Angell” Howard of Bloomington was voted as a trustee at Tuesday night’s board meeting. She will be officially seated on Aug. 19. Howard’s seat previously belonged to Cecelia Long, whose term was set to expire in 2029. Long had been on the board since 2021 and was reelected for a six-year term in 2023. She resigned in June with plans to pursue personal and professional opportunities outside the district. * NYT | Trump Told Park Workers to Report Displays That ‘Disparage’ Americans. Here’s What They Flagged.: At Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolina, the Trump administration is set to review, and possibly remove or alter, signs about how climate change is causing sea levels to rise. At Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, the administration will soon decide whether to take down exhibits on the brutality of slavery. And at Castillo de San Marcos National Monument in Florida, Trump officials are scrutinizing language about the imprisonment of Native Americans inside the Spanish stone fortress.
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Pritzker on Texas remap, Stratton not being slated, whether state should opt in to new federal tax credit for private schools (Updated)
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Gov. Pritzker was asked today whether Illinois should redraw its congressional districts now that Texas is planning to redraw its own districts to reduce the number of Democratic congresscritters…
Please pardon all transcription errors. …Adding… Leader McCombie…
* He was also asked about the Cook County Democratic Party deciding not to slate anyone for US Senate, even though the lt. governor is one of the candidates…
* Pritzker was also asked if the state would opt into a new federal tax credit for private school students…
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Ozzy Osbourne
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
He hosted a massive concert just a few weeks ago. It’s great that he got his well-deserved tribute while he was still alive. * My brother Devin and I went to see Ozzy during the 2017 eclipse. Some video I took… * One of my favorite Black Sabbath songs. Turn it up… * Another classic…
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A thorny question in corn country
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Tribune…
This is probably going to be an unpopular question in corn country, but why do we have to pay cash money to business owners (farmers) in order to save their own land when doing that on their own is actually more profitable? * I reached out to the Illinois Corn Growers Association, but did not hear back. I also reached out to the Illinois Environmental Council. Its response…
Thoughts?
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When PURPOSE Guides Progress Across Illinois And Around The World
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Hexaware, a leading global IT services company with deep local roots, exists to empower organizations from Springfield to Singapore with innovative technology and unwavering partnership. Our Purpose Statement Video reveals how we align our mission with your goals—driving digital transformation, fostering inclusive growth, and delivering measurable outcomes for every community we serve.
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A quick fact check
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * There’s so much wrong with this Homeland Security press release. He wasn’t released “onto the streets of Chicago,” for one. Much more importantly, Megan Bos’ mom and the Lake County Coroner have both said she wasn’t decapitated, and the coroner said there were no signs of trauma or struggle. The local cops are now investigating threats against the county judge who released the guy, but, prior to the Pretrial Fairness Act, accused people were routinely released on cash bail for the same offense. There’s more, but behold…
* And, despite the claims of the Illinois Freedom Caucus, the suspect hasn’t been accused of killing Megan Bos because, as noted above, there is no evidence of trauma…
* I asked the Illinois Network for Pretrial Justice for a response because I have yet to see any local news media outlets try to inform their own coverage. Excerpt…
* Also…
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SB 328: Separating Lies From Truth
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department
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It’s just a resolution: Chicago leaders call on Springfield to ban masks, require identification for ICE agents (Updated)
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The Hill…
* NBC Chicago…
* Block Club Chicago today…
* The Gothamist…
…Adding… Rep. Patrick Sheehan…
Thoughts? * More…
* The Tribune | ‘We’re tired of this’: Cicero residents demand action from town president after Latina aunt stopped by federal agents: Vanessa Mendoza, an early childhood educator in Cicero, was gathering materials for her classroom in late June when she paused to look at Facebook. What she saw shocked her. Posted on the social media site was a video of her aunt, Rocío, being pulled over by unidentified agents driving black vehicles who questioned her citizenship — despite her legal status to be in the United States. The agents did not specify why they pulled Rocío over or which agency they were affiliated with, Mendoza, 32, who grew up in Cicero, said at a news conference outside the town hall Thursday morning. After Rocío showed identification, she was not arrested or detained, her niece added. * WaPo | ICE chief stands by mask use in immigration raids, despite criticism: On Sunday, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (D) voiced her objections to the practice in a television interview, saying: “These masked men pull up in unmarked cars and jump out of the cars with rifles and detain people. So, for the average citizen, it looks like it’s a violent kidnapping.” Protests in Los Angeles over the immigration raids prompted the unprecedented deployment of thousands of National Guard troops and Marines to the city in June. * Axios | ICE arrests of noncriminals spike in Illinois: In January, ICE arrested 160 people in Illinois, of whom 31% had no criminal charge, an Axios analysis found. By June, 61% of the 333 people ICE arrested in the state had no criminal charge.
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Open thread
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * What’s going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois joins suit to block Trump administration from barring undocumented immigrants from public benefits. Sun-Times…
- The attorneys general argued the federal government misapplied the rules around the programs, redesignating entire programs inappropriately and conditioning aid already approved by Congress — which the suit called unconstitutional. - The Illinois Head Start Association and the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois have also filed a lawsuit over what they say are a series of attempts to dismantle the program. They said it would be amended to include the new rule changes as well. * Related stories…
∙ Chalkbeat: Head Start advocates pursue legal challenge to new Trump policy barring undocumented children ∙ WTTW: Advocates Denounce Plan to Ban Undocumented Children From Head Start: ‘Where is the Compassion?’ * Governor Pritzker will speak 1 pm today from Chicago’s Union Station, celebrating 100 years of service. Click here to watch. * Capitol News Illinois | Federal housing credit expansion could increase affordable rental units in Illinois: report: The latest domestic policy plan signed by President Donald Trump on July 4 will increase available funding by 12% for a key tax credit used by developers to offset a portion of construction costs. It also lowers the threshold of private investment needed to take advantage of another tax credit. It’s a lesser publicized inclusion in the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” that cleared Congress with only Republican support, a bill more widely publicized for its cuts to Medicaid, food assistance and individual income taxes. * Tribune | Economic opportunities tied to climate goals, Gov. JB Pritzker says at Aspen conference: Though Pritzker recently announced that he will seek a third term as governor, many have speculated that he will throw his hat in the ring for the 2028 presidential election. Pritzker did not comment on a potential 2028 candidacy but when asked if he thought he’d make a good president, he said he thinks “the bar has been set pretty low.” “(Democrats) still believe that the most important role that we have in government is to stand up for working families, for the most vulnerable, for the middle class,” he said. “Do Democrats get it right all the time? No, and I think that it is as much a failure of messaging as anything else. I’m not suggesting that Democrats haven’t gotten policies wrong. But let’s not walk away from civil rights because we lost an election.” * Crain’s | Chicago’s $1 billion quantum computer to start operating in 2028: The startup behind Chicago’s more than $1 billion quantum computing deal said operations are expected to start in three years, a win for Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, who backed the investment and is widely seen as a potential presidential candidate. PsiQuantum Corp. will start construction at the state’s new quantum and microelectronics park in the South Side of Chicago later this year, Chief Executive Officer Jeremy O’Brien said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Chicago office. The supercomputer — one of two utility-scale, fault-tolerant machines the company is building globally — is expected to be online in 2028, he said. * WTWO | Illinois governor announces applications for Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program: The Illinois governor and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO) announced that applications are open for the fifth round of the Illinois Works Pre-Apprenticeship Program. The program provides training opportunities, expands the talent pipeline, and boosts diversity in the construction industry and other building trades. Grantees for the program are selected through a competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity process. * CBS Chicago | Corn sweat from crops exacerbates humidity during Illinois heat waves: CBS News Chicago Meteorologist Kylee Miller explained the effects of transpiration are showing up in this week’s forecasts. “Dew points could be about 5 to 10 degrees actually higher, adding with that corn sweat, compared to what Mother Nature is giving us,” Miller said. Other crops, like alfalfa and sugarcane, have higher evapotranspiration averages than corn. The evapotranspiration average for alfalfa is 6 to 8 mm/day for alfalfa and 5 to 7 mm/day for sugarcane, compared with 3.5 to 5mm/day for corn. * ABC Chicago | Gov. Pritzker signs ‘Squatter Bill’ into law, making it easier for police to remove trespassers: The law differentiates squatters from tenants, making it easier for property owners to regain control of their home. “This outdated eviction law has treated squatters the same as tenants, leaving property owners in limbo and tying the hands of law enforcement,” Pritzker said. The law also establishes a clear distinction between lawful tenants and unlawful squatters, ensuring that property owners are no longer forced to navigate a long court process to remove unauthorized occupants. * WCIA | Republican legislators call on IL governor to participate in federal school choice program: State Representative Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville) said it’s the best way to ensure low-income students get the best education they can. He’s sponsoring a resolution calling on Governor J.B. Pritzker to participate. “The money needs to follow the student, not the system, not the bureaucracy,” Halbrook said. “And this is a great opportunity to give students that are in schools that are failing, gives them an opportunity to excel.” * WEEK 25 | Pritzker chooses Peoria’s Allen for economic development panel: Peoria’s 4th District City Council member Andre Allen is Gov. JB Pritzker’s choice to serve on the Tri-County River Valley Development Authority, which issues tax-free bonds to finance economic development projects. The authority serves Peoria, Tazewell, and Woodford counties. In a release, the governor’s office said Allen is a “collaborative and results-driven leader with extensive experience in government administration, civic engagement, and higher education.” * Tribune | Gambling machines in Chicago bars, airports? Aldermen weigh revenue potential: Johnson’s top finance leaders shared with aldermen a study analyzing how legalizing the machines would affect city finances Monday during a Revenue Subcommittee meeting. Under the state’s current tax structure, the payout would be underwhelming, Chief Financial Officer Jill Jaworski said. “We don’t expect it to make a big impact,” she said. “Maybe we make $10 million one year and lose $5 million another.” The study by gambling consulting firm Christiansen Capitol Advisors LLC determined legalization would likely neither make nor cost the city money. While the machines would generate tax revenue, legalizing them would take business away from slot machines at Bally’s Casino. * Tribune | Police Department brass accused Mayor Brandon Johnson’s budget office of ‘systemically’ delaying paychecks: Police Department Deputy Director Ryan Fitzsimons emailed multiple officials in Johnson’s budget office June 2 to alert them of the department’s overdue A-forms, paperwork required to process paychecks for new hires and promotions. After following up the next day to confirm that police recruits were not getting their first paychecks, he sent an additional message June 10 saying Johnson’s budget office was purposely sitting on the forms. […] A joint statement last week from the mayor’s office, the Office of Budget Management and Chicago police acknowledged that about 60 police academy recruits saw late paychecks, along with six Chicago Fire Department employees. The response cast the snafu as an “administrative” error that has since been rectified. * WTTW | City Council Panel Skeptical of Study Showing Legal Video Gambling Won’t Ring Up Jackpot: But several alderpeople questioned the validity of the Christiansen analysis, with Ald. Andre Vasquez (40th Ward) saying the potential job losses seemed “made up.” Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd Ward) questioned why the Christiansen analysis did not include Rivers Casino in his analysis, noting that its revenues have increased even after Des Plaines legalized video gambling. Ald. Jeanette Taylor (20th Ward) called the presentation of the Christiansen study “disingenuous” and called its analysis “flawed.” * WBEZ | A family came to Chicago seeking asylum. He was deported. Now she wants to leave: Maria enrolled in President Donald Trump’s new, voluntary self-deportation program. Trump is promising travel assistance and a stipend of $1,000. Maria says that, stipend or not, she just wants to go back to Venezuela. “What I want is to leave,” Maria says in Spanish while her 2- and 6-year olds played in the family’s nearly empty apartment. Her 9-year-old lay on the floor watching a show on a small phone. “I’ve lost everything here,” the mothers says, looking around. Maria’s husband, Marcos, was recently deported to Venezuela. He says he spent nearly three months in 10 different detention centers after being arrested in Chicago as part of a wave of detentions under Trump. At their request, WBEZ is not using their real names because they fear retaliation. * Sun-Times | Thomas Durkin dies at 78; Chicago lawyer ensured the rights of ‘the most demonized among us’: The trial lawyer was best known for taking on high-profile federal cases often related to accusations of terrorism and violations of civil rights, though he didn’t seek them out, his son Matt Durkin said. “They found him.” “He really believed in the principle that everyone, no matter how derided you are, you are owed your constitutional right to defense,” Matt Durkin said. “He would never say no. … It didn’t matter who it was, a white-collar defendant, a public official, or someone accused of doing a heinous crime, he was going to be your fiercest advocate.” * Sun-Times | Suddenly potent White Sox offense overpowers Rays for season-best four-game wining streak: ‘Offensive juggernaut’’ was not a phrase often uttered in the same sentence as ‘‘White Sox’’ before the All-Star break — at least not without a tongue planted firmly in cheek. But that’s the only way to describe MLB’s hottest offense coming out of the break, which has powered the Sox to a season-high four-game winning streak. A day after the Sox completed a weekend sweep of the Pirates that saw them rack up 27 runs, they overpowered the Rays 8-3 in their latest dominant effort. * Cook County Bureau of Asset Management chief Elizabeth Granato has entered the race for the 12th District County Board seat. Press release…
Granato, married to state Sen. Ram Villivalam, faces competition from Cat Sharp, who has the support of outgoing Commissioner Bridget Degnen. * ABC Chicago | Cook County SA O’Neill Burke to attend hearing on domestic violence: Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke has been on a mission to restructure her office for tougher prosecution in cases of domestic violence, something she has referred to as a “house of fire.” Tuesday will be the first hearing that specifically targets domestic violence since 2023 and Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke is expected to announce how she’s restructuring the prosecutor’s office to increase lock ups and help fight domestic violence crimes. * Daily Herald | Authorities investigating threats against Lake County judge: But the ICE action Saturday quickly garnered social media attention. “The Lake County Sheriff’s Office is aware of threatening social media posts and harassing correspondence directed at the judge who presided over the initial court hearing of Luis Mendoza-Gonzalez,” Lake County Sheriff’s Deputy Chief Chris Covelli said Monday. “We have launched an investigation into the matter,” he added. “Making threats, especially against a sitting judge, crosses the line from protected speech to potential criminal conduct, and we take such behavior very seriously.” * Shaw Local | McHenry County aims to increase security for judges by removing personal info: ‘Days we’re living in’: Removing the personal information of 18 judges from the internet, including the dark web, is the aim of a contract newly approved by the McHenry County Board. McHenry County Circuit Court Administrator Dan Wallis said IronWall by Incogni system, which also will scrub his and his deputy administrators’ personal information, is “unfortunately” necessary. * Daily Southtown | More problems at troubled Park Forest apartments that village claims are unsafe: More problems have surfaced at a troubled Park Forest apartment complex, where air-conditioning woes earlier this summer left many residents sweltering during a heat wave. Separately, in a court filing earlier this month, the village said that Autumn Ridge, with nearly 400 apartment units in Will County, is unsafe and a public nuisance. The filing calls on a Will County judge to appoint a receiver who will collect rents and make necessary repairs, which Park Forest complains cover virtually every aspect of the buildings, including plumbing, roofs, windows and electrical systems. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora City Council to vote on doubling hotel room tax: The city’s Hotel Occupancy Tax rate is currently set at 3%, but many nearby communities have higher rates that are similar to what is being proposed, according to Chief Financial Officer Chris Minick. He estimates that the proposed 6% rate would bring in an additional $1.1 million for the city each year, especially after the opening of the new $360 million Hollywood Casino-Aurora resort. * Aurora Beacon-News | Proposed data center project in Yorkville advances to City Council for discussion: The development site is just over 1,000 acres — a total of 20 parcels — in the northwest corner of Yorkville on the border with Sugar Grove, generally located northwest of Route 47 and Galena Road, south of Baseline Road and east of Ashe Road, according to the agenda item from the July 9 Planning and Zoning Commission meeting. There would be a total of 14 data center buildings, along with two electrical substations, a utility switchyard and stormwater detention basins, according to plans. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora likely to stay in Fox River dam removal study: The state and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers previously recommended the removal of nine dams along the Fox River, including the two in downtown Aurora, for environmental reasons. But following concerns and questions from many of the communities that would be impacted, including Aurora, the Corps said last year that it would be taking another look at those recommendations to more broadly study the effects of dam removal. Mayor John Laesch is set to send a letter to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers letting the agency know Aurora wants to stay part of the study. The letter does not commit the city to either remove or keep the dams. * Tribune | Olmsted Society offers free Vintage Base Ball exhibition in Riverside: Visitors at this free event will watch baseball players in reproductions of historical uniforms play baseball the way the sport was played in the 1860s. The annual event began in 2019, the sesquicentennial of the year landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted and architect Calvert Vaux, who had previously collaborated on the plan for New York City’s Central Park, created the general plan for Riverside. * WGLT | Normal approves funding pause and audit of mental health sales tax fund: McLean County Board chair Elizabeth Johnston said if all three governing bodies approve, the next step would be to have discussions on what such an audit would survey. “We believe the time is right for all three parties to come together,” said Pam Reece, city manager. “We’ve had good conversations, the county attorney and the county administrator’s office drafted the language, worked with us on language that we believe the Normal Town Council and ultimately Bloomington and the county [board] can support.” * WJBD | Salem City Council to be asked to move forward on water, sewer, and TIF projects: Three TIF agreements will come before the council. Cindy Quinn and Quinn Realty are requesting $20,000 in TIF assistance to help renovate the ‘Old Library’ at 402 South Broadway into her new offices. Work will include repairs to the brickwork, a new roof and exterior and interior painting. Paul and Lynn Riehm of Riehm Renovations is requesting half of the remaining $ 70,000 in reimbursable expenses be paid now to allow for the renovation of their second building in the 300 block of West Main to be completed more quickly. Brice McGee of the ‘Odd Fellows’ building at 115 East Main is seeking $750 or 50-percent reimbursement for the outside painting of the building. * BND | Professional “kings” rocked, rolled and remembered at metro-east Elvis Festival: The convention consisted of three days of scheduled performances from each Elvis, along with heaps of merchandise paying homage to both the original Elvis and those who honor his legacy through imitation. Fans as near as a mile down the street and as far away as Norway came to see the show. “It took us more than 12 hours to drive here,” said Paula Harrison of Richmond, Wisconsin “I saw Elvis in the 60s and it was so incredible that I knew I just had to come.” * WSIL | Touch of Nature’s new trailhead opens with $500K support: The trailhead pavilion was made possible by a $500,000 donation from SIU Credit Union. Mike Lantrip, CEO of SIU Credit Union, expressed the credit union’s commitment, saying, “We wanted to do something for SIU and the region. We think it’s going to help put Southern Illinois on the map even more.” Touch of Nature has welcomed more than 50,000 visitors this year and serves as an introduction to SIU through various programs and events. A new Wildlife Habitat Education Center is also in development, with a groundbreaking ceremony scheduled for August. * WCIA | ‘Football is for everyone;’ Watseka Warriors hosting camp for disabled children: It’s called the “Tackling Disabilities Football Camp,” and it will take place on Saturday, July 26. Each camper will be paired one-on-one with one of the Warriors football players to serve as their buddy through the camp and through the stations. Those stations will include football activities such as passing, catching, kicking, tackling, running and even touchdown celebrations. * WIRED | EPA Employees Still in the Dark as Agency Dismantles Scientific Research Office: On a call with ORD administrators and staff held Monday afternoon, audio of which was obtained by WIRED, leadership—including ORD acting administrator Maureen Gwinn—was unable to answer basic questions from employees, including a timeline for when the agency planned to permanently end ORD, how many employees would be transferred to other offices, and how many would lose their jobs. Employees at ORD who spoke with WIRED say that Friday’s public-facing email was the first concrete news they had heard about their organization’s future. One worker told WIRED that employees often learned more from news outlets, including WIRED, “than we do from our management.” * Politico | ICE will ‘flood the zone’ in NYC: The Department of Homeland Security will “flood the zone” with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in New York City after the City Council blocked federal law enforcement agencies from opening an office in the city jails, President Donald Trump’s border czar Tom Homan said Monday morning.
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Jul 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Jul 22, 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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