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Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Civic groups blast union-backed Tier Two pension bill

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Civic organizations sent a letter to the governor and the four tops about a bill to reform Tier 2 pensions

Dear Governor Pritzker, President Harmon, Speaker Welch, Leader Curran, and Leader McCombie:

As we enter the final days of session, our collection of civic organizations is concerned about a final push for pension legislation that could undo much of the progress Illinois has made on slowing down pension liability growth.

Tier 2 pension legislation billed as “Tier 2 Safe Harbor Fixes” has surfaced in SB1937, House Amendment 1, sponsored by Rep. Jay Hoffman. Other amendments could emerge before the scheduled May 31 close of session.

The proposed amendments go far beyond the Governor’s pension proposal as introduced in the FY2026 budget. They would be detrimental to the long-term fiscal stability and credit rating of the State of Illinois, contrary to claims their proponents have made. Moreover, proposals covering the City of Chicago and other municipalities have received very little scrutiny, exacerbating the risk to taxpayers and the state budget if adopted.

We are writing to express support for the caution and care Gov. Pritzker and the legislative leaders have applied before proceeding with any pension legislation during the spring session. However, the eleventh-hour filing of massive pension bills and the possibility they could be acted on swiftly compels us to reiterate the importance of care and diligence in consideration of any pension legislation.

Before implementation of any pension bill, actuarial estimates of the cost should be undertaken and distributed to all stakeholders. In addition, any pension legislation that is passed is permanent and benefits may not be reduced ever moving forward. So, a quick passage of a bill could severely impact the long-term fiscal condition of the state.

Too much is at stake. There is no legal imperative to act ahead of the close of session. And more information is needed before the state responsibly can take action to address any shortfalls in the existing Tier 2 program.

We’ve written about this issue in two recent commentary pieces that highlight our concerns:

We know that you are committed to protecting the fiscal progress our state has made over the past few years and understand the importance of protecting Illinois’ credit rating. If there is a chance that legislation could move toward a vote, we respectfully request a meeting with you in your Springfield offices before the legislature takes any action.

We greatly appreciate the work that you are doing and the challenges of the current fiscal situation that confronts the state. We are on hand to work with you in addressing the state’s pension challenges in ways that ultimately inure to the benefit of the state, employees and retirees, and all the people of Illinois.

Many thanks for your consideration.

Sincerely,

Derek Douglas, Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago
David Greising, Better Government Association
Joe Ferguson, Civic Federation
Jack Lavin, Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce
Lou Sandoval, Illinois Chamber of Commerce

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After saying everything is on the table, Pritzker says a budget including broad tax increases would be vetoed

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Back in May, Rich wrote that ‘unexpectedly’ Pritzker wouldn’t rule out a service tax for mass transit revenue. An excerpt

Gov. JB Pritzker unexpectedly moved away last week from his longstanding opposition to taxing services, saying he didn’t want to start taking ideas off the table as lawmakers search for ways to fund and reform the Chicago region’s mass transit system. […]

So, my associate Isabel Miller (who contributed to this column) asked Pritzker during an unrelated media event if he wanted to take any state taxes off the table before the talks heat up, including the service tax.

“I have never been in favor of that before,” Pritzker said of the service tax. He has indeed opposed the tax all the way back to his first 2018 gubernatorial campaign, often calling it regressive.

“There may need to be a source of revenue here,” Pritzker said, “but that’s not something that I have favored in the past.”

As far as specifically ruling out a service tax, however, the governor said: “I really don’t want to start saying, ‘We’re not going to do this, we’re not going to do that.’ At this point, there are just so many pieces of this that we have to look at before we’re going to pay for what’s necessary here as we come off of support from the federal government and making sure we’re restoring transit services.”

* Today, the governor completely shut down an expansion of the sales tax to services during a press gaggle…

Reporter: Last week, House Democrats were presented a menu of options in caucus on revenue since they weren’t so hot in some of your ideas in your introduced budget. One of them was a broadening the sales tax to cover services. Would you support that idea? And if not, what revenue options are you considering to balance the budget?

Pritzker: No, I’ve been opposed to any taxes that are broad based or that would affect working families in this budget.

Reporter: What would you do about a budget that had stuff like that in it?

Pritzker: I’m telling you, anything that’s broad based and that would have a negative impact on working families. I would veto a budget like that. […]

Reporter: Governor you said you would veto a budget that had a broad tax increase. Do the legislative leaders share that sentiment? Have you had conversations with Welch and Harmon about that?

Pritzker: I’ve been pretty clear with everybody that you know, individual income taxes, corporate income taxes, sales taxes. We are not about raising those taxes at all. I would veto a bill that does that.

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* More on the transit reform package from Crain’s

The bill does not include revenue options, and it remains unclear if lawmakers will punt consideration of the funding structure until later in the year. Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, is expected to propose his own measure that will address governance of the agencies and put forward a mix of revenue ideas that have been hotly debated in recent weeks. […]

If funding is not approved by May 31, the CTA would need to hold a series of hearings in the fall ahead of approving a 2026 budget that outlines the significant cuts to services that will be implemented if the new revenue is not secured. That would create an even tighter timeline to provide clarity over new funding sources.

“I am calculating the distance between ensuring that there’s funding and how we can continue to grow our system, and we’re going to stick to it and work as hard as we can these next few days to be able to come to a reasonable resolution to ensure that the 300 million riders that we had just last year alone that that number continues to expand,” [Mayor Brandon Johnson said.]

* Daily Herald

The conflict between Metra and the Union Pacific is deepening over the cost of the commuter railroad using the freight giant’s tracks.

Last week, UP presented Metra with new pricing to access its lines in the Chicago region, effective July 1. […]

Metra responded by asking a federal judge to rule that UP “cannot unilaterally force Metra, its riders and the taxpayers to bear a significant increase in the compensation paid to Union Pacific.” […]

Metra states in an ongoing lawsuit that it was paying UP about $21 million to use the tracks and both sides had agreed it was reasonable to continue that rate.

But now, UP is insisting “on an annual payment of $40.7 million just for use of the tracks,” the lawsuit says. In addition, “Union Pacific is demanding substantial additional rental payments for properties necessary to operate the UP Lines.”

* Even more transit news from the Tribune

For nearly five years, the Chicago Transit Authority paid a small group of employees to stay home and not work at least two days a week, a state watchdog has found.

The employees in question worked in the agency’s vault operations unit, which is responsible for processing money taken from CTA fareboxes. Those workers were not able to perform any of their assigned duties from home, but were nevertheless assigned to work remotely at least two days a week since the beginning of the pandemic, continuing to do so even after the agency-wide return to office date in May 2022, according to a report from the Office of Executive Inspector General.

A total of 10 employees were paid just under $1.13 million for days they were not working since the start of the pandemic, the OEIG found. The bulk of the payments were made between the onset of the pandemic and the agency’s return-to-office date in May 2022, but the employees were paid $303,932 for remote work between May 2022 and Feb. 1 of this year.

The report, dated Feb. 21, also determined that several CTA managers were aware of the practice of paying workers for remote days during which they could not work but “took no action to reduce or stop such waste.”

* Illinois Answers

The Child Care Assistance Program, also known as CCAP, is the largest government child care subsidy. It significantly reduces monthly costs for families and it can be an essential source of income for child care businesses, particularly in Cook County.

Yet it doesn’t provide enough relief for many families and providers, an Illinois Answers Project investigation found.

Illinois continues to put limits on CCAP far stricter than federal recommendations. These restrictions exclude up to 130,000 children, who could be eligible under national guidelines, from receiving support, according to the most recent estimates of Illinois’ program.

The state also caps payments for some child care providers at rates that are near the lowest in the nation.

These restrictions, studies show, can impact a family’s ability to provide stability, pursue higher paying jobs and set up their children for lifelong success.

The number of child care providers that participate in CCAP has also plummeted in recent years, the investigation found.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release | Healthy IL Springfield Presser Urges Gov., Lawmakers to Stand Strong: If Illinois legislators and Gov. J.B. Pritzker impose preemptive state health care cuts now, they will play right into the Trump administration’s hands, warned state legislators and a coalition of health care advocates at a Wednesday news conference. “It’s critical that we come together now and reject this politics of division and fear,” said Enddy Almonord, director of the Healthy Illinois Campaign. “If we falter now in defense of health care for all Illinoisans, the next targets will be state-funded programs for maternal health, children’s health coverage, reproductive choice, HIV/AIDS prevention and more.” Instead, the state should wait to see what cuts are in the final Reconciliation Act that Congress approves, then strategize to counter those cuts, coalition members said.

* Tribune | Lawmakers advance bill aimed at curbing third-party restaurant reservations: A bill heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk is aimed at protecting local restaurants from third-party vendors that buy and resell reservations, which proponents say can lead to costly no-shows and consumer fraud. If the measure is signed into law by Pritzker, Illinois would join states including New York and Florida in attempting to bar third-party reservation services from listing, advertising, promoting or selling reservations without a written agreement with the restaurant.

* WTVO | Illinois bill to allow bachelor’s degrees at community colleges has been revived: “Chicago State is hemorrhaging, and you, as an administration, are handing them Band-Aids, and they need stitches,” said State Rep. Curtis Tarver II (D). “Then you come in and you provide a bill that’s going to be even worse for them. And I’m saying as we sit here, the Black Caucus has an issue with the bill. The sponsors are obviously aware that it’s not a secret.”

* Chadwick Hagan | Rewilding — a not so wild part of Illinois’ conservation strategy: Illinois took a bold step toward redefining conservation. With broad bipartisan support, the Illinois House and Senate recently passed House Bill 2726, marking a turning point: Rewilding — restoring ecosystems through natural processes and minimal human interaction — is no longer fringe. It’s a practical, forward-looking approach to land use rooted in science and shaped by local needs. Once signed into law, HB 2726 will make Illinois the first state to formally define rewilding as part of its conservation strategy. The bill establishes a landowner-friendly program under the state’s Department of Natural Resources, and it complements federal initiatives like the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program but remains clearly state-led.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson fans the flames of his political war against President Trump: “You have a president that is cutting off medicine and food, a president that is working to erase culture. I mean, you can’t make this stuff up. He’s doing it in plain sight,” Johnson told reporters. “You have to fight and resist it with everything that’s in you. … This is a fight that this generation has to show up for.”

* Sun-Times | Ex-CPD officer expected to serve a week in prison after guilty plea in cop husband’s fatal shooting: Under a plea deal accepted Tuesday, Jacqueline Villasenor agreed to a sentence of more than six years. However, with Illinois’ day-for-day sentencing law and credit for the years she spent on electronic monitoring awaiting trial, Jacqueline Villasenor is expected to serve about seven days in the Illinois Department of Corrections, plus a year of supervised release, according to her attorney.

* Crain’s | University of Chicago lands more than $18 million for new institute: The foundation’s gift to UChicago was part of a donation spree totaling $90 million to establish similar institutes at four of the nation’s top research universities, including the University of Michigan, the University of California, Berkeley and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

* Sun-Times | Data breach affects as many as 38,000 University of Chicago Medicine patients: UChicago Medicine was notified of the incident last month by Nationwide Recovery Services Inc., a now former third-party vendor that specializes in recovery management, customer service and collections. Between July 5 and July 11, 2024, someone gained unauthorized access to NRS systems and was able to get information from certain files and folders, UChicago Medicine said in a statement.

* WBEZ | ‘You’re not just representing yourself’: CPS senior on her year on the Chicago School Board: Carchi’s time on the board wasn’t without moments of uncertainty. The last year has been tumultuous, with the entire board resigning in October, CPS CEO Pedro Martinez getting fired and the transition to a partially elected board. Though as a student representative, Carchi didn’t get an official vote, she found ways to insert her voice. […] Carchi, 18, played an active role in that process by “talking to people, asking questions, having lunch with people and discussing things informally, having one-on-one conversations,” Debby Pope, a board member, said.

* CBS Chicago | Viral Leo High School choir video leads to “America’s Got Talent” audition: Audrina Sinclair’s viral video posted after her visit to Leo High School last February caught the attention of producers at “America’s Got Talent.” The Instagram reel has over 2.7 million views and features the Leo High School choir on Chicago’s South Side. […] The local choir flew to Los Angeles for an audition. The school hosted a watch party to cheer on the choir members during their big audition.

* Block Club | South Siders ‘Puzzled,’ Smitten By Concrete Cadillac Housed In Hyde Park Parking Garage: A 1957 Cadillac DeVille, encased in concrete using instructions by artist Wolf Vostell, moved into a University of Chicago garage in 2016. Now, the team of artists, conservators and tradespeople who helped save it are working to finish a book on the sculpture.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | New Hollywood Casino Joliet set to open earlier than expected: Hollywood Casino Joliet, which is leaving its longtime riverboat home, announced Wednesday it is planning to move into its new land-based facility Aug. 11, pending regulatory approval. […] Construction is nearing completion on the new $185 million Hollywood Casino Joliet in the Rock Run Collection, a sprawling 310-acre mixed-use development adjacent to the Interstate 80 and Interstate 55 interchange. The facility will feature expanded gaming, with 1,000 slots, 43 table games, a retail sportsbook, a 10,000-square-foot event center and restaurants.

* Homewood-Flossmor Chronicle | Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller explores run for 2nd District seat: Cook County Commissioner Donna Miller announced Wednesday, May 28, that she is forming an exploratory committee to run for Congress in the 2nd Congressional District in response to requests by supporters. Currently, Miller is serving her second term on the Cook County board, representing the 6th District, which includes Homewood. U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (D-Ill.) has announced she is running for U.S. Senate and will not be filing to run again for the 2nd District House seat, which represents Homewood and Flossmoor.

* Daily Herald | Suburban spellers still in the game at Scripps National Spelling Bee: Visharad Sathish of Grayslake, Tyler Kochanski of Fox River Grove, Yahya Mohammed of Hoffman Estates, and Shruthi Ayyagari of Aurora head into the quarterfinals today. “I’m pretty excited and nervous,” 12-year-old Visharad, a seventh-grader at Lake Forest Country Day School, told the Daily Herald before leaving for the competition being held in Maryland. “It is nerve-wracking to compete on stage in front of everyone.”

*** Downstate ***

* WSIL | Rep. Mike Bost attending Veterans Forum in Mt. Vernon: Rep. Bost says he will speak directly to veterans about expanding access to VA care, streamlining benefits, and getting high-quality service. […] This event is not open to the public and requires an RSVP before attending.

* WCIA | Champaign school board to decide on separation agreement with superintendent: Earlier this month, the district passed an RFP – or a request for proposal – to begin the process of hiring a firm to look for their next superintendent. So if the agreement is approved on Thursday, the board will continue that process – but without Boozer in the fold. They will also vote on appointing current District Director of Facilities & Services Daniel Casillas as acting superintendent. The agenda said this would be pending the appointment of an interim superintendent.

* WGLT | Bloomington council approves $36M bond issue for water department improvements: Water department head Ed Andrews said the money will help pay for programs like replacing the city’s lead lines that Bloomington hopes to finish in the next 10 years. About 5,700 lead lines remain in the city by its estimation, mostly in older neighborhoods. The bond issue is estimated to cover water improvements for fiscal year 2025 and 2026, but there are plenty of other projects in the pipeline.

* SJ-R | Two downtown businesses score a spot statewide for showcasing artisanship: Annually the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economy Opportunity, or DCEO, and the office of tourism welcomes a select group of small, locally owned businesses from the different sections of the state to join the program. Ceramics Made by Rosie and Whimsy Tea Company have earned their spot on the list, cemented by their impact in downtown Springfield.

* WNIJ | Pawpaw Planting Event at Northern Illinois University: The project is led by The Little Pawpaw Foundation, founded by pawpaw enthusiast Austin Cliffe, in partnership with NIU’s Office of Campus Sustainability, the Northern Illinois Center for Community Sustainability (NICCS), and organizers of the annual Paw Paw Festival. Pawpaw (Asimina triloba) is the largest edible fruit native to North America. Its custard-smooth flesh carries tropical notes of banana, mango, and pineapple, and it is rich in vitamin C, potassium, and essential amino acids. Pawpaws thrive in partial shade and require minimal chemical input, making them ideal for low-maintenance food forests and regional sustainability research.

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | The ‘Man-Eater’ Screwworm Is Coming: s of this month, the parasite has advanced 1,600 miles through eight countries to reach Oaxaca and Veracruz in Mexico, with 700 miles left to go until the Texas border. The U.S. subsequently suspended live-cattle imports from Mexico. After this latest news broke, I spoke with Wayne Cockrell, a Texas rancher who fears the screwworm’s return to Texas is now a matter of when, not if. The anti-screwworm program cannot produce enough sterile flies to stop the parasite’s advance, much less beat it back down to Panama, Cockrell explained. He has followed the outbreak closely as the chair of the cattle-health committee for the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association, even visiting the sterile-fly factory recently. “There’s a sense of dread on my part now,” he told me.

* The American Prospect | Senate Democrats Have Been Handed a Tool to Stop the Big Beautiful Bill: California has already announced that it will sue to maintain its waiver, charging that the Senate had no authority to overturn it. But the Senate operates largely on precedent, and now that the parliamentarian has been disregarded on this point, virtually any action the executive branch takes could be construed as a rule, and therefore subject to fast-track congressional review. For this reason, Democrats could subject the Senate to time-consuming resolution votes repeatedly, to such a degree that the Senate would not have time to do anything else for the rest of this session of Congress. In other words, Democrats could respond to the waiver vote by paralyzing the Senate, and stopping the giant Trump tax bill from ever reaching the floor.

* CoStar | Nation’s first Stargate data center in West Texas is already in expansion mode: The artificial intelligence industry’s ambitious Stargate Project is already in expansion mode in West Texas as work begins on a second phase of the 875-acre site — a tract bigger than New York City’s Central Park — to bring a total of eight buildings with 1.2 gigawatts of power. AI infrastructure provider Crusoe said the next phase, in addition to the first stage still under construction, is bringing the high-profile data center project to a total of about 4 million square feet at the sprawling campus in Abilene, Texas, a city about 150 miles west of Fort Worth.

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Prosecutors say ComEd Four sentencing on track

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jon Seidel

Four former ComEd executives and lobbyists are on a clear path to sentencing for their conspiracy aimed at ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan, despite a last-minute challenge to their convictions and President Donald Trump’s review of a key law in the case.

Madigan ally Michael McClain, former ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggiore, ex-ComEd lobbyist John Hooker and onetime City Club President Jay Doherty are all set to be sentenced this summer. A jury found them guilty more than two years ago, in May 2023.

On Wednesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker told U.S. District Judge Manish Shah that officials in Washington, D.C., had rejected a challenge to the convictions based on Trump’s ordered review of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. […]

Separately, the defense attorneys had also recently challenged the convictions under the U.S. Supreme Court’s March decision revolving around the 2022 conviction of former Chicago Ald. Patrick Daley Thompson.

The high court undid a lower court ruling in Thompson’s case, finding that a law he’d been convicted under outlaws false statements but not misleading ones. Shah on Wednesday rejected the argument that the convictions for falsifying ComEd’s books should therefore fall.

There’s more.

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Illinois Medicaid: Working Together To Support The Health Of Our Families, Communities, And State

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Coordinating lifesaving care for Niah across states

Nearly half of all babies born in Illinois are covered by Medicaid.

“Niah,” of Naperville, is among them.

Born in 2021, Niah was diagnosed with a complex heart condition, including congenital abnormalities and cardiac arrhythmia. Soon after her first birthday, Niah’s doctors determined that she needed lifesaving heart surgery—quickly.

The challenge? Niah’s condition was so unique that only a handful of specialists in the U.S. could treat it. Surgeons at Boston Children’s Hospital were ready to take the case.

Niah’s care team and Medicaid health plan worked together to get her swiftly approved for the procedure, arranging an air ambulance to transport Niah. The health plan also coordinated travel and lodging for Niah’s parents to be with her. Their care coordinator
called every day to check in and ensure their needs were met.

Niah’s surgery was a success. Today, she is a curious, energetic toddler who sees renowned specialists back home in Illinois for ongoing care.

Paid for by the Illinois Association of Medicaid Health Plans

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Caption contest!

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Seersucker Day was last week, but the House decided to have its own version today. House Speaker Chris Welch and House Minority Leader Tony McCombie were among those who gathered by the grand staircase…

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Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

SOO Green makes it possible.

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

The SOO Green Advantage:

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

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

Learn more at www.soogreen.com.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition (Updated)

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Transit governance reform bill surfaces, but without a revenue source (Updated x3)

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Organized labor will not back a transit bill that doesn’t address the upcoming fiscal cliff. And, so far, this bill has no revenue source(s) attached to it…


Anyway, tell us what you think about what’s in the bill.

…Adding… From Isabel: Some excerpts from the transit reform plan

The Authority shall appoint the members of the Transition Working Group by April 30, 2026.

The Service Boards shall work closely with the Authority and provide all relevant data and information necessary to complete the transition plan. The Authority shall have access to and the right to examine and copy all books, documents, papers, records, or other source data of a Service Board relevant to any information submitted under this Section.

The transition plan shall evaluate and propose a transition plan for each of the following:

    - Establishing a new process and coordination between the Authority and the Service Boards to create the 5-Year Capital Program. This process shall be established by January 1, 2027.

    - The creation of a universal fare instrument and necessary coordination between the Authority and the Service Boards. This process shall be established by July 1, 2027.

    - The development and deployment of a police force, as outlined under Section 2.11. A police force transition plan shall be completed by January 1, 2028, outlining steps already taken to create a new Transit Police Force department and future plans for hiring, training, and technology to be used. This report shall also include the organizational structure of the police force, the number of officers, detectives, and other staff employed.

As part of the development of the transition plan, the Authority and the hired third party shall evaluate the existing policy processes performed by the Authority and each of the Service Boards and develop a process for efficient and effective operations by both the Authority and the Service Boards for:

    - procurement, with special consideration given to the consolidation of bulk fuel purchases, information technology services, consulting contracts, and a subscriptions;
    - service planning;
    - grant administration;
    - marketing;
    - lobbying;
    - communication, media, and graphics design;
    - governmental and legislative affairs; and
    - information technology.

More on the police force…

The Cook County Sheriff shall establish a multijurisdictional NITA Law Enforcement Task Force led by the Cook County Sheriff’s Office in cooperation with the Chicago Police Department, the METRA Police, the Illinois State Police, the Sheriff’s Offices of other counties in the metropolitan region, and other municipal police departments in the metropolitan region. Law enforcement agencies within the metropolitan region not explicitly named in this subsection may participate on the Task Force upon request of the Cook County Sheriff.

The Task Force shall be created under an intergovernmental agreement and be dedicated to combating violent and other types of crime with the primary mission of preservation of life and reducing the occurrence and the fear of crime on the public transit system of the Northern Illinois Transit Authority. The objectives of the Task Force shall include, but shall not be limited to, reducing and preventing violent crimes and other illegal activities. The Task Force shall also assist and coordinate with the Chief Transit Safety Officer in the Chief Transit Safety Officer’s efforts to enforce the Authority’s and Service Boards’ codes of conduct and to solve quality of life issues for transit riders and staff.
(c) The Task Force may develop and acquire information, training, tools, and resources necessary to implement a data-driven approach to policing, with an emphasis on:

    (1) preventing violent crime in known hotspots, property crime, and code of conduct violations that are crimes; and
    (2) identifying and arresting persons accused of violent crime. […]

The Task Force shall recognize and use best practices of community-oriented policing and procedural justice. The Task Force may develop potential partnerships with faith-based and community organizations to achieve its goals, including, but not limited to, partnering with social service organizations, to assist persons experiencing homelessness obtain shelter and other services and to assist persons experiencing a mental health or behavioral crisis in connecting with appropriate services.

…Adding… WTTW

The bill calls for NITA’s board to have five directors appointed by the mayor of Chicago, five appointed by the governor, five appointed by the Cook County Board president, and one director each appointed by the board chairs of Kane, Lake, McHenry, DuPage and Will counties. They must have “diverse and substantial relevant experience and expertise for overseeing the planning, operation, and funding of a regional transportation system.”

And, it will lessen the onerous farebox recovery ratio requirement, which mandates that some 50% of operating revenue come from passenger fares — far higher than peer agencies around the U.S. The bill sets an initial benchmark of 25%.

The measure calls for developing a plan by Jan. 1, 2028, to create a dedicated police force. It also creates a transit ambassador program, an effort many passengers and transit advocates have clamored for as a way to improve rider experience, as well as assisting people sheltering on the system. And it gives NITA the authority to participate in transit-oriented development, a move many transit advocates had hoped to see. […]

The language of the bill is clear about delegation of authority, saying that the NITA “has ultimate responsibility for providing the metropolitan region with a high-quality public transportation system” and “shall have the final responsibility for allocating duties among” CTA, Metra and Pace.

…Adding… Subscribers got the heads-up this morning. Tribune

For nearly five years, the Chicago Transit Authority paid a small group of employees to stay home and not work at least two days a week, a state watchdog found.

The employees in question worked in the agency’s “vault operations” unit, which is responsible for processing money taken from CTA fareboxes. Those workers could not actually perform any of their assigned duties from home, but were nevertheless assigned to work remotely at least two days a week since the beginning of the pandemic, continuing to do so even after the agency-wide return to office date in May 2022, according to a report from the Office of Executive Inspector General.

A total of 10 employees were paid just under $1.13 million for days they spent not working since the start of the pandemic, the OEIG found. The bulk of the payments were made between the onset of the pandemic and the agency’s return-to-office date in May 2022, but the employees were paid $303,932 for remote work between May 2022 and Feb. 1 of this year. […]

“Although paying employees may have been necessary in the very beginning of the pandemic, the CTA’s payment for no work continued week after week for five years,” the report said. “No justifiable reason for this continued payment was provided in any CTA documents or by any of the relevant CTA employees interviewed.”

  26 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol City Now

A bill which Second Amendment advocates see as a threat – a “gun storage” bill – is on the move. An Illinois House committee passed it Tuesday afternoon, putting it a House vote away from going to the governor’s desk.

“How is a firearm owner supposed to know if the individual they’re dealing with us an at-risk person?” asked State Rep. Patrick Windhorst (R-Metropolis).

“It’s my understanding there is a ‘reasonableness’ standard,” said the sponsor, State Rep. Maura Hirschauer (D-Batavia). “If you can reasonably know that a person is at risk. It’s that ‘reasonableness’ standard that applies.”

The bill, which a gun lobbyist says has already been declared unconstitutional, passed the House Gun Violence Prevention Committee on a partisan vote.

* Capitol News Illinois

Illinois police officers soon could be required to undergo trauma-informed sexual assault training if the governor signs a bill passed by Illinois lawmakers last week.

Senate Bill 1195, dubbed Anna’s Law, mandates police officers take part in trauma-informed programs, procedures and practices that are intended to “minimize traumatization of the victim” before being sworn in as an officer.

The bill passed the House and Senate unanimously and now awaits approval from the governor to become law.

Currently, Illinois law enforcement officials must undergo a variety of training programs before being sworn in – including training that provides education on “cultural perception and common myths of sexual assault and sexual abuse.”

Anna’s Law would mandate that training on the issue of sexual assault and abuse and teach officers how to identity and address conflicts of interest, such as when an officer knows the victims or the perpetrator.

* Chicago Coalition to end Homelessness…

A new state law will shine a light on how school districts across Illinois allocate federal Title I funding to support students experiencing homelessness, many of whom currently receive woefully little targeted support.

A recent analysis released by the Chicago Coalition to End Homelessness found that many Illinois school districts are severely under-allocating funds for students experiencing homelessness, with one school district allocating just 33 cents per homeless student.

Of the school districts where data was available, one in four allocated less than $10 per homeless student in federal Title I funds over the course of a school year. Half allocated less than $20 per homeless student.

Federal law requires school districts receiving Title I, Part A funding to reserve a portion of funds that is “reasonable and necessary” to ensure students experiencing homelessness can fully participate in school. However, some districts allocate so little that it raises concerns about whether this support is sufficient to achieve that goal. […]

Currently, this data is not publicly available, resulting in a lack of transparency about how much funding districts set aside and how it is spent.

House Bill 3377 aims to address this gap in funding by increasing public access to Title I set-aside data. The bill passed unanimously out of the Illinois State Senate on May 22 and will now go to Gov. Pritzker for approval. Once signed into law, this new legislation will help districts make more informed resource allocation decisions and equip advocates with data to highlight where support is falling short.

* WAND

he bipartisan plan to prohibit expulsions from kindergarten through 2nd grade is moving to the Senate floor.

This bill requires superintendents to provide verbal or written approval to suspend K-2 students for longer than three days.

Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford (D-Maywood) told the Senate Education Committee Tuesday that suspensions should not last longer than it takes districts to review, amend, or develop behavior intervention and safety plans for a student. […]

House Bill 3772 passed unanimously out of the Senate Education Committee Tuesday. It previously passed out of the House on a 62-46 vote.

* The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association…

The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association (IMA) and biotechnology research and development groups PhRMA and iBIO, have released the following statement regarding legislation that fails to advance meaningful reforms to the 340B Drug Pricing Program:

“We support the initial intent of the 340B Drug Pricing Program, which was designed to provide discounted medications to eligible healthcare providers serving low-income and vulnerable populations. Pharmaceutical manufacturers are committed to improving access to medicines in underserved communities, which is why we are calling for greater oversight and transparency of this vital program. Unfortunately, the program is increasingly being used by large, affluent health systems with little assurance savings are reaching the intended patients. The current legislation provides substantial protection for covered entities while obscuring the disclosure of their financial arrangements, making it impossible to see how much benefit is diverted from patients to these intermediaries. This proposal will do nothing to ensure low-income patients see reduced drug prices. We urge policymakers to slow this process and focus on meaningful reforms to ensure this program best serves patients while preserving the continued growth of this life-saving industry.”

* WAND

A state Democratic plan to stop life insurance companies from discriminating customers based on their criminal history passed the Illinois Senate insurance committee Tuesday.

It would stop all insurance companies from limiting or denying life insurance coverage if the customer has committed a felony in the past.

State Sen. Adriane Johnson (D-Waukegan) said insurance companies should not discriminate based on a felony conviction. […]

The legislation passed out of the Senate committee on a partisan 8-4 vote. It will now head to the Senate floor, where lawmakers could talk about it before session ends this week.

* Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…

Recording artists could soon have more protections from artificial intelligence (AI) replicating their voice or work under legislation from State Senator Mary Edly-Allen and State Representative Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz.

As an emerging technological platform, there were no restrictions on AI models replicating a music artist’s voice before the passage of the Digital Voice and Likeness Protection Act last year. Without regulations, some organizations and even music studios have sought to establish a monopoly of control over their artists’ voices and melodies for AI projects.

To give artists more agency of how their voice or melody may be replicated by AI, Illinois’ Digital Voice and Likeness Protection Act requires artists to have legal representation or support from a collective bargaining agreement when negotiating an AI project involving their art, and how they will be compensated for the AI replica. This prevents music studios from profiting off an artist’s likeness or voice by using AI to replicate them without the consent of the artist or without fair compensation.

House Bill 3178 updates the Digital Voice and Likeness Protection Act by clarifying terms of acceptable use and when digital replica agreements are unenforceable. This bill also would limit the act’s impact to only digital replica provisions. […]

House Bill 3178 passed the Senate on Thursday.

* Sen. Adriane Johnson

Seeking to ensure greater fairness and dignity in access to life insurance, State Senator Adriane Johnson is championing legislation that would prohibit insurers from denying final expense life insurance coverage solely because an applicant has a past felony conviction. […]

House Bill 2425 would prevent companies offering life insurance final expense policies from refusing to insure, limiting coverage or charging higher premiums based solely on a person’s felony record. The measure includes a clear exception for individuals who are currently incarcerated.

Final expense life insurance policies, also known as burial or funeral insurance, are typically small, affordable whole-life policies intended to help families cover the costs of funeral services, medical bills and other end-of-life expenses.

Under current Illinois law, insurance companies are already prohibited from discriminating on the basis of disability, blindness, veteran status or travel history when determining eligibility or premiums. House Bill 2425 aims to build on that framework by ensuring individuals with felony convictions—many of whom face significant barriers to financial stability—are not unfairly excluded from these essential policies. […]

House Bill 2425 passed the Senate Insurance Committee Tuesday.

* WRMJ

Teachers could soon see mental health resources on their school IDs under a measure passed in the Illinois Senate.

House Bill 3000, sponsored by local State Rep. Norine Hammond (R-Macomb), will require all school districts serving students in grades 6-12 to have the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, the Crisis Text Line, and the Safe2Help Illinois helpline on all employee IDs.

Currently, that information is required in student handbooks or planners and on student IDs if schools issue them.

The bill will now be sent to the governor’s desk.

* Sen. Javier Cervantes…

State Senator Javier Loera Cervantes’ latest initiative would give smaller dental practices more time to transition to electronic payments.

“Patients and administrators want dental practices to modernize for efficiency, but if we set a deadline to go fully digital too soon, it will only cause them more frustration and inconvenience,” said Cervantes (D-Chicago). “This measure will extend the deadline to 2027 so smaller practices will have more time to develop their electronic portals and better serve their patients once the deadline comes.”

Previous legislation requires dental providers and insurance companies to begin sharing all information electronically by 2026. While this measure intends to help modernize these practices and make patient payments more efficient, many dental care providers throughout the state have requested more time to make the necessary technological advancements.

House Bill 1864 would extend the deadline to make electronic payments the standard for dental care by 2027. This extension gives smaller practices more time to complete a smooth transition, and to ensure all dental care providers can provide correct and accurate information on their online platforms. […]

House Bill 1864 passed the Senate on Wednesday, May 21.

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Stop Credit Card Chaos In Illinois

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

A last-minute provision called the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act (IFPA) was snuck into the budget process last May and will create chaos for small businesses and consumers across Illinois if it takes effect on July 1, 2025.

The IFPA gives corporate mega-stores like Walmart and Home Depot — who pushed for this backroom deal — millions more in profits, while small business owners get new expenses and accounting headaches. What’s more, consumers could be forced to pay for parts of their transactions in cash if this law moves forward.

A recent court ruling in the litigation challenging the law suggests IFPA is likely pre-empted by federal law for national banks and will only apply to credit unions and local Illinois banks, putting local banks at a disadvantage against their national competitors.

Illinois lawmakers should repeal the IFPA and focus on protecting small businesses and consumers across the state — not lining the pockets of corporate mega-stores.

Stop the countdown to chaos by supporting a repeal of this misguided and flawed policy. Learn more at https://guardyourcard.com/illinois/

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Question of the day

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* FarmWeek

While some fairgoers may be counting down the days until they can enjoy a corn dog and a lemonade shake-up, the Greene County Fair and the Martinsville Ag Fair are set to launch the county fair season this week.

“It’s promotion of agriculture. It’s bringing people in that are not familiar with agriculture to see what people in agriculture do,” said Greene County Fair Board Secretary Mark Walker about county fairs.

The Greene County Fair, May 27-31, is one of the oldest county fairs in Illinois, dating back to 1854. Harness racing, tractor pulls, a demolition derby and livestock shows remain fan favorites and will return this year.

“We have a lot of the people from the county and surrounding counties as well come in and see what we have to offer,” Walker told RFD Radio Network’s Jim Taylor. “They continue to come, which is why we have a legacy going back to 1854.”

Now in its 79th year, the Martinsville Ag Fair began May 25 and will run through June 1.

* The Question: With apologies to our Cook County friends, what are your favorite county fair memories?

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See What Real Shoppers Have To Say About The IFPA

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The IFPA would create chaos for local businesses and shoppers – potentially requiring Illinoisans to pay CASH for sales tax. What do real shoppers think about this untested mandate from Springfield? We found out.

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Open thread

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ZZ Top


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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Former Portage Mayor James Snyder seeks dismissal of bribery charge ahead of sentencing on IRS charge. Post-Tribune

    - Former Portage Mayor James Snyder is asking a federal court to dismiss his bribery charge with prejudice and bar prosecutors from using bribery evidence at sentencing for his separate IRS obstruction conviction.
    - Snyder’s legal team argues that the bribery conviction was overturned after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled his $13,000 payment was a gratuity, not a bribe.
    - The Supreme Court’s ruling in Snyder’s case has had broad implications, with ripple effects reaching high-profile Illinois cases, including the trial of former House Speaker Michael Madigan and the “ComEd Four.”

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


Sponsored by the Illinois Health and Hospital Association

What’s at Stake with 340B: Hospitals and FQHCs Want to Provide More Services, Big Pharma Wants to Benefit Shareholders

Why do hospitals and FQHCs want to protect the 340B drug discount program? Because it helps them care for patients. The 1992 program, created by Congress, has allowed hospitals and FQHCs serving many uninsured and low-income patients to “stretch scarce federal resources as far as possible, reaching more eligible patients and providing more comprehensive services.”

Pharmaceutical manufacturers agreed with expanding 340B to include more hospitals in 2010, but in 2020 began imposing restrictions on 340B providers to protect their bottom line and hundreds of billions in annual revenue. Big Pharma has a significant financial interest in preventing legislation—SB 2385 and HB 3350—that would ensure the 340B program fully benefits patients and providers.

Big Pharma is looking out for their shareholders. Illinois hospitals and FQHCs are looking out for their patients.

Big Pharma claims patients aren’t benefiting from 340B. Here’s the truth:

    • Hospitals and FQHCs put 340B savings toward addressing critical community health needs.
    • Those savings provide access to low-cost medications and financial assistance to low-income patients.
    • Hospitals and FQHCs can also offer essential services, such as obstetrics, oncology and inpatient psychiatric care.

The Illinois Patient Access to 340B Pharmacy Protection Act (SB 2385/HB 3350) is modeled after legislation passed in 14 states. It reinforces 340B through the State’s authority to regulate the distribution of drugs and protect access to healthcare.

Vote YES on SB 2385/HB 3350 to restore 340B and help the most vulnerable communities. Get the TRUTH about 340B and learn why it matters to patients.

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

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

* Governor Pritzker will join Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias and other state officials at 2:30 pm to dedicate a new reading room at the Illinois State Library in honor of Illinois’ 38th Governor Jim Edgar. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Subscribers were given a preview yesterday. Mark Batinick | Illinois is paying top dollar to fail its college-age young adults : We’re told Illinois universities are expensive because they’re underfunded. That seems to be the narrative every time tuition increases make headlines. But it doesn’t speak to the larger problem. While the Urbana-Champaign campus continues to see record attendance, the state’s regional universities are struggling to define their roles and demonstrate unique value. Enrollment across the 12 public universities fell from around 368,000 in 2009 to 278,000 in 2023 — a 25% drop — but the money keeps flowing.

* Sun-Times | Sen. Tammy Duckworth heads to Taiwan, Singapore in bid to ‘close the deal’ for quantum campus: “Foxconn has been in Illinois. They’ve met with the governor’s office. They’ve met with Intersect Illinois. And I’m hoping to go in and try to help close the deal,” Duckworth told the Sun-Times. “They’ve toured Argonne and Fermilab [national laboratories]. So this is really to push our quantum microelectronics and to get investments in quantum technology.”

* Press Release | AG Raoul urges American Medical Association to ensure abortion and gender-affirming care providers can get board certified without unnecessary risk: In testimony submitted to the AMA, Raoul and the coalition argue that mandating in-person board certification testing in states that have aggressively criminalized or penalized reproductive and gender-affirming health care endangers providers and threatens access to essential care nationwide. In particular, the attorneys general highlight the American Board of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ABOG), which requires OB/GYNs seeking board certification to travel to Texas for in-person testing. Texas has imposed some of the most severe restrictions on abortion and gender-affirming care in the country.

*** Statewide ***

* Daily Herald | Giannoulias: Don’t click on fake texts from Illinois DMV with threats about traffic tickets: It’s a scam, Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias warned Tuesday. The texts purport to be from the nonexistent “Illinois State Department of Motor Vehicles” and falsely threaten suspension of vehicle registration and privileges. “Do not respond to it or click on any links,” Giannoulias said. “These phony texts are designed to trick you into giving up personal or financial information which can lead to identify theft and fraud. The secretary of state does not send text messages regarding vehicle registrations and driver’s licenses.”

* WAND | Mental health professionals stress importance as ‘Mental Health Awareness Month’ winds down: Still, many continue to suffer in silence because of the stigmas around mental health or not knowing where or who to turn to. “Unfortunately, the stigma has characterized people as not being strong,” Garrison said. “You know, ‘You [have to] get through this, you can do it.’ We all have vulnerabilities and there’s nothing wrong with asking for help.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois lawmaker proposes a Pope Leo XIV statue and license plate: To mark the historical milestone of the former south suburban Dolton resident’s ascendancy to the highest position in the Holy See, state Rep. Martin McLaughlin, R-Lake Barrington, proposed building a statue on the grounds of the state capitol. To afford the construction, a special fund would be formed, accepting public and private donations, according to a measure McLaughlin recently introduced.

* WAND | Advocates continue push for hemp regulation despite legislative inaction: The Cannabis Business Association of Illinois told WAND News Illinois is one of just a handful of states that has failed to take action on hemp. The group said hemp and cannabis come from the same plant, and both products can get users high. “Individual municipalities across the state are putting in place their own rules, creating a confusing patchwork of regulations,” said CBAI Executive Director Tiffany Chappell Ingram. “It’s time lawmakers regulate intoxicating hemp in a manner similar to cannabis.”

* WGN | Illinois budget battle: What Chicago needs from Springfield: “There is some urgency to respond to the financial needs that exist today,” Johnson said. “We’re going to have a fully funded well-supported transit system, safe, affordable and reliable.” In exchange for a bailout, lawmakers are demanding reform, pushing to consolidate the transportation agencies, but their proposals have been met by resistance from labor groups. The legislature is also looking to beef up security on buses and trains with some floating the idea of a single police force for Chicago area systems.

* FYI


*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Fitch downgrades Chicago’s financial outlook to ‘negative’: Fitch Ratings has revised its financial outlook for the city of Chicago to “negative,” citing a lack of meaningful progress in closing a $1.12 billion structural budget gap. The move, first reported by the Chicago Sun-Times, signals the city could face a future downgrade if it fails to stabilize its finances. The negative outlook accompanies an A- rating on a planned $600 million borrowing package for infrastructure, housing and economic development. But by revising the outlook to “negative,” the agency is signaling the possibility of a future bond rating downgrade.

* Sun-Times | Chicago sees least violent Memorial Day weekend in at least 16 years: A tally shows four men killed and at least 21 wounded in shootings across the city. Mayor Brandon Johnson credits the hiring of 200 detectives and increased clearance rates in homicides and shootings as key factors for the dip in Memorial Day weekend violence.

* Daily Herald | Congressional candidate says she’s hiring security because of comments, vandalism: Abughazaleh, who lives in Chicago and is Palestinian American, said a Republican candidate called her office in the Rogers Park neighborhood “the home of Hezbollah,” a reference to the Lebanese Islamist political party and terrorist group. While Abughazaleh didn’t name the candidate, Republican Rocio Cleveland of Island Lake used that phrase in a pair of May 9 Facebook posts about her Democratic counterpart. One of Cleveland’s posts included an image of Abughazaleh’s online call for volunteers to paint the office and multiple anti-Islamic images.

* Crain’s | As Trump targets foreign enrollment, this Chicago university could be hardest hit: More than half — 51% — of Illinois Tech’s 6,571 students are international, according to an analysis by The New York Times, the highest percentage of such students in the country. Just behind Illinois Tech is Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, with 44% of its more than 14,000 students being international, and Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J., whose international students make up 42% of the 7,461 total student body.

* Sun-Times | Driver says he did not see cyclist in fatal Loop crash — Chicago’s first bicyclist death of 2025: Aleck, owner of Aleck Plumbing Inc. of Homewood, said he was driving to the gym in the predawn light of Memorial Day in the moments before the crash. He said he was the only car stopped at the light just before the intersection where the crash happened. He was going south on Michigan Avenue, approaching the top of Millennium Park. “They must have thought there was no one coming. I must have been halfway through the intersection. I thought it was a car,” Aleck, 65, told the Sun-Times.

* WTTW | Unexploded Device From US Military Exercise Washes Up on Montrose Beach, And There Are 3 More Missing Flares Out There: The devices were deployed earlier in May during a joint military exercise conducted off the shore of Milwaukee by the Coast Guard and U.S. Air Force. Four of what the Coast Guard describes as “phosphorus pyrotechnics” failed to activate when they hit the water and are considered “armed.”

* Tribune | Chicago Housing Authority selling more land for private development near Chicago Fire training facility: The Chicago Housing Authority board approved a land sale on Tuesday to a private developer to construct 23 town homes, at least four of which will be considered affordable, despite opposition from many housing and community advocates. The 23 lots on the Near West Side will be sold to Related Midwest for an estimated $460,000, a number that is based on current land valuations minus expected environmental remediation costs, CHA development officials said in an interview. That number could change with future appraisals. The officials said that CHA will receive a portion of the profits from the home sales as well.

* NBC Chicago | Pope Leo XIV to address young Chicagoans via video at Rate Field event: According to the Archdiocese of Chicago, the pope will address “the young people of the world” via a video message that will be broadcast for the first time at a massive event being held at the ballpark on Saturday, June 14. The event, called “Chicago Celebrates Pope Leo XIV,” will feature a Catholic mass and other programming, according to officials.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Two charged with hate crime in beating of woman at Carpentersville McDonald’s: Two people are now charged with committing a hate crime in connection with the beating of a woman in Carpentersville two weeks ago because of her sexual identity. A Kane County grand jury indicted John Z. Kammrad, 19, of the 900 block of Hillcrest Road, Elgin, and a 16-year-old male with hate crime stemming from the May 13 attack. The Kane County state’s attorney’s office announced the indictment Tuesday afternoon. It did not say when the grand jury handed up the indictment.

* Tribune | Ex-assessor’s office employee gets 3 years’ probation in bribery case: A former Cook County assessor’s office employee was sentenced Tuesday to three years’ probation for conspiring to accept golf outings at country clubs from two businessmen in exchange for helping reduce assessments on their properties and save thousands in taxes. Basilio Clausen, 53, pleaded guilty in 2023 to a count of bribery conspiracy and testified at the trial last year of one of the businessmen, Robert Mitziga, who was ultimately acquitted of all charges by a federal jury.

* Grist | Illinois must protect the Great Lakes from invasive carp. A toxic mess stands in the way.: It is there, on a sliver of land where a coal-fired power plant once stood, that the state plans a last stand against the invasive Asian carp. It wants to build a $1.1 billion barricade, called the Brandon Road Interbasin Project, to keep the particularly voracious predator from muscling past the channel that connects the Mississippi River Basin with the Great Lakes. But to keep the fish from breaching the divide, the state needs more land. It has a couple of acres in mind, but there’s a catch: The ground is contaminated by coal ash, the carcinogenic byproduct of burning that fossil fuel to generate electricity.

* Tribune | A long way to go: Chicago Bears proposed move to Arlington Heights would require complicated approval by local taxing bodies: The Chicago Bears have submitted required traffic and financial impact studies to Arlington Heights, marking the next step in their quest to build a new football stadium there. The studies are considered preliminary drafts that will be worked on further with a village consultant, so Village Manager Randall Recklaus declined to release them publicly for now. But a Bears move to Arlington Heights will require much more than those plans. It will also require an extensive review by local school districts, a park district, and even, potentially, the Northwest Mosquito Abatement District.

* Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows hires consultants to prepare for potential Bears stadium next door: The city council approved a series of resolutions to hire a lobbyist, traffic engineer and noise expert in anticipation of the team’s possible relocation to the sprawling Arlington Park site, which is bordered by Rolling Meadows to the south, west and a small side street to the north. The Bears have a team of consultants and lobbyists, as does the village of Arlington Heights, which recently brought on traffic and financial experts to peer review the work submitted by the Bears.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County setting up land bank as part of affordable housing push: DuPage County Board members passed a resolution Tuesday authorizing the creation of a land bank as part of a push to expand affordable housing. The county has a “de facto” land bank through its “clean and lien” neighborhood revitalization program. “We have inventoried land that we’ve received through our ‘clean and lien’ program, either through foreclosures or through gifts from property owners who simply don’t want to take care of their property anymore. They give it over to us,” said Paul Hoss, the county’s planning and zoning administration coordinator.

* Daily Herald | ‘A window to our past’: 1846 document signed by President James Polk tells story of DuPage County: DuPage County History Museum Director Michelle Podkowa was especially excited by the find. Land patent documents are increasingly rare — the museum has just three of them — and often were signed by a lower level federal official, she said. “During this time (the 1840s), the rules and laws regarding land was ever-changing,” she said. The logistics of communicating with federal authorities in Chicago and Washington, D.C., meant it could take years to straighten out land ownership.

* NYT | Is This Chicago Suburb for You?: Since the pandemic, the city of Elmhurst, Ill., west of Chicago, has experienced an uptick in families moving in for more space and an easier commute. Although 20 miles from the city, Elmhurst residents can soak in the Chicago skyline when looking east on St. Charles Road, and the Metra express train can transport them to downtown Chicago in about 30 minutes.

*** Downstate ***

* The Illinois Democratic Party has launched an online ad campaign running through June 3 targeting U.S. Reps. Mike Bost, Mary Miller, and Darin LaHood, saying their “supportive votes for the House GOP budget could destroy [constituents’] access to health care.” Click here to view some of the ads.

* PJ Star | Electric bills set to jump for Ameren customers in Illinois this summer. Here’s how much: CUB said that the supply charge for customers could increase to 12 cents per kilowatt hour on June 1, a 50% increase from the current rate. Ameren said that the specific supply charge, also known as the “price to compare,” will be made public the week of May 26.

* WQAD | Ex-Rock Island County employee pleads not guilty in $900K embezzlement case: During the May 16 hearing, Assistant State’s Attorney Steven Cichon said Streeter used forged documents, including a falsified W-9, and created a bank account in the name “Rock Island County VIP” to redirect payments meant for a county Victims’ Impact Program. The funds were allegedly used to pay for travel, credit cards and personal expenses. Two bank accounts tied to the case have been frozen with about $20,000 in funds, and investigators traced assets including a camper, a Ford F-250 truck and a Subaru, valued at roughly $120,000. Hundreds of thousands of dollars remain unaccounted for.

* WTVO | Winnebago Co. Chairman’s restored power to boost efficiency of government: Between 2017 and 2019, the county board voted to strip powers from then-chairman Frank Haney that impacted staff management and administration. Those powers were never restored when Chiarelli was elected in 2020. “When I receive a citizen complaint to my office on the fifth floor, they’re expecting myself to be able to respond to that issue and to try to solve that issue,” Chiarelli explained. “But [then] I had to take that issue, that problem, and give it to someone else to manage that problem, because I had no authority to manage that problem. It’s fragmente

* WCIA | Ordinance regulating public camping recommended for approval in Danville: During the Public Services Committee meeting, the committee voted to recommend the camping regulations to the full city council. If the city council approves it at the next meeting, public camping will be declared a “nuisance” within the city. This means that people would be prohibited from sleeping on public sidewalks, streets, alleys, lanes, other public right-of-way, parks, benches, or any other publicly-owned property.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. union members take steps to potentially authorize strike: About 150 Champaign County employees represented by AFSCME Local 900 are taking steps to potentially authorize a strike. Dozens rallied for wage increases and affordable health insurance at the beginning of May, but workers are still looking for changes and improvements. Cecelia Phillips, the Local 900 President and a circuit clerk employee, said progress between union members has been “great” over the last few weeks. But, she doesn’t necessarily feel that sense of teamwork has helped much at the bargaining table, which has left some feeling frustrated.

* WIFR | Rockford City Council members reject ComEd’s $9M electric line burials: By a unanimous voice vote, Rockford City Council members unplugged the hopes of buried electric lines along 11th Street. In April 2024, the Council approved a “high-level estimate” of $4,460,362 for moving ComEd’s electric lines underground. Before a Tuesday night vote, city engineer Tim Hinkens explained the priority as aligning with Rockford’s “11th Street Corridor Study” and “2040 Comprehensive Plan.”

* WGLT | Airport director says CIRA is strong, stable amid uncertainty elsewhere: Technical troubles at major airports can have trickle down effects in smaller facilities like the Central Illinois Regional Airport in Bloomington. Airport director Carl Olson said, for instance, cutting the number of flights at Newark because of limited staff capacity can increase ticket prices and suppress demand for travel down the chain. “If somebody decides I’m not going to pay that price to go to Newark, or I’m going to drive three hours to another airport to do it, we lose the revenue because they’re not in the restaurants. They’re not in the gift shop. They’re not renting cars. It does reach us,” said Olson.

* WGLT | IDOT awards Bloomington $800,000 for Constitution Trail expansion: The Illinois Transportation Enhancement Program [ITEP] received 213 applicants for $139.2 million in funding for the current cycle. The City of Bloomington was one of 67 winners, according to the IDOT website. The city estimates the total cost of the project at $1.2 million. The remaining funding will come from the city’s capital improvement fund in a future year budget, according to a city spokesperson.

* WIFR | Verizon’s ‘secret’ switch centers power cell service in Northern Illinois: A team from the telecommunications company provides me a tour of the “secret” facility. Due to physical and digital safety concerns, its location remains publicly unavailable. Since 2012, Lovero’s made a career at Verizon operating or overseeing part of the cell network. He leads the stroll through the “fortress” defending service.

* WCIA | 300 people attend funeral of Springfield veteran with no known family: Robert Neff died at the age of 79 with no known family. The public was invited to his funeral on Friday, and Central Illinois showed up in force. As Neff was laid to rest, hundreds of people attended the funeral service, including active duty servicemembers, veterans, Honor Guard members, Patriot Guard riders and civilians. “This morning, when I got up, I would’ve been happy with 15 or 20 people,” said Jerry Curry of Curry Funeral Home. “But the community just came out in droves, and it was a very humbling experience.”

* WAND | One year later, central Illinois still impacted by cicadas: Last fall, Okaw Valley Orchard struggled to produce enough apples to stay open. This year, they are still seeing the impacts of the insect infestation. “Where the cicadas damaged the trees last year, they are still a little bit weakened and healing over,” said Mike Mitchell, owner of Okaw Valley Orchard. “So there’s a little bit of a concern that they aren’t strong enough to hold apples, but for the most part I think they will be okay.”

* WCIA | 60 new U.S. citizens to be naturalized in special ceremony at Old State Capitol: “USCIS often conducts naturalization ceremonies at museums, schools, libraries and other notable locations to celebrate the conclusion of an immigrant’s journey to citizenship and honor the commitment they have shown along the way,” said Kate Carroll of the U.S. Clerk’s Office. “Special venues not only make these events meaningful for those who have voluntarily chosen to participate in American democracy and dedicated themselves to the country’s future, but they also reflect the strength and spirit of the United States.”

*** National ***

* AP | COVID-19 vaccinations no longer recommended for healthy children, pregnant women: The decision was blasted by the Illinois-based American Academy of Pediatrics. “This decision bypasses a long-established, evidence-based process used to ensure vaccine safety and ignores the expertise of independent medical experts, including members of CDC committees who are examining the evidence regarding the vaccine to make recommendations for the fall,” Dr. Sean O’Leary, chair of the AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases, said in a statement.

* Politico | RFK Jr. threatens to bar government scientists from publishing in leading medical journals: Speaking on the “Ultimate Human” podcast, Kennedy said the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of the American Medical Association and The Lancet, three of the most influential medical journals in the world, were “corrupt” and publish studies funded and approved by pharmaceutical companies. […] Kennedy’s stance, however, conflicts with that of his NIH director, Jay Bhattacharya, who recently told a reporter with POLITICO sister publication WELT he supports academic freedom, which “means I can send my paper out even if my bosses disagree with me.”

* NYT | Driverless Semi Trucks Are Here, With Little Regulation and Big Promises: Byron Bloch, an auto safety expert in Maryland, said that federal oversight of the new robotrucks was “totally inadequate” and that the technology was being rushed into use with “alarming” speed. “My initial thought is: It’s scary,” said Angela Griffin, a veteran truck driver from outside Hagerstown, Md. She said misting rain had caused A.I.-powered scanners on her semi truck to malfunction, and she worried that unpredictable traffic patterns in congested areas or challenging weather conditions could lead to catastrophic errors by unmanned trucks.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, May 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were briefed this morning. Tribune

In the final days of the spring session, lawmakers are working on a legislative package aimed at addressing the state’s growing energy needs and rising costs without derailing the ambitious goals championed by Gov. JB Pritzker to make the state carbon-free by midcentury.

“What we’re trying to do is find ways to ensure those capacity spikes don’t continue for years into the future, and there’s really only two ways of doing that, and that’s by either decreasing demand for electricity or increasing supply,” said state Sen. Bill Cunningham, a Chicago Democrat who’s leading energy legislation efforts in the Senate. “I think that’s really the underlying impetus for energy bills this session.” […]

The legislative draft also would create an ambitious new goal for large-scale energy storage through large batteries that would absorb excess wind and solar power for later use, along with goals to deliver clean, low-cost energy, while also promoting several efficiency measures supporting virtual power plants.

Cunningham said that if the larger legislative package does not come together, proposals within the measure could still be pushed as individual bills.

* Chalkbeat

Illinois lawmakers have passed a bill that will help school districts expand dual language programs, in which students are taught in English and another language throughout the school day.

House Bill 3026 passed the Democratic-controlled Senate along party lines with a 43-12 vote on Thursday. The proposal now heads to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office for final approval.

The bill requires the Illinois State Board of Education to create guidance for school districts interested in establishing new dual language programs or expanding existing programs. The guidance must be completed by Dec. 15, 2026 and would be required to cover topics such as curriculum, instruction, assessment and accountability, and professional development for staff.

* Tribune

This past Memorial Day weekend saw an overall decrease in gun violence compared to last year, according to Chicago police data.

According to preliminary data from 6 p.m. on Friday to Monday at 11:59 p.m., there were 21 shooting incidents over the holiday weekend, with 24 victims involved. Police also said that there were three homicides over the weekend.

Tribune reporting from last year said there were at least 31 shooting incidents during Memorial Day weekend of 2024.

Gun violence citywide has also decreased in recent years. As of last week, Chicago police said that the city has seen a 22% decline in fatal shootings and a 32% decline in shootings compared with 2024.

*** Statewide ***

* Farm Week | County fair season begins across Illinois: While some fairgoers may be counting down the days until they can enjoy a corn dog and a lemonade shake-up, the Greene County Fair and the Martinsville Ag Fair are set to launch the county fair season this week. “It’s promotion of agriculture. It’s bringing people in that are not familiar with agriculture to see what people in agriculture do,” said Greene County Fair Board Secretary Mark Walker about county fairs.

*** Downstate ***

* Muddy River News | DCFS report: Denman Elementary physical education teachers gave ‘birthday spankings’, taped students mouths shut: While the investigation revealed no lasting physical marks from these actions, it was determined that such behavior was “wildly inappropriate, but not criminal” since there were no sexual connotations. Multiple parents with students at Denman, as well as Denman teachers, verified the incidents with Muddy River News. They said their children had begged them not bring treats or attempt to have their respective classes recognize their birthdays at school for fear of getting the “birthday spankings.” The names of the students, families and teachers asked for their names to be withheld for fear of repercussions from within the Quincy School District.

* SJ-R | Here’s why a Springfield attorney was suspended for 2 years: The Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission, which operates under the state’s Supreme Court, last week ruled on the case of Salena Rachelle Young after a complaint was submitted in 2024. Young “knowingly” submitted timesheets to the Illinois Attorney General’s office showing she worked full days while she also worked part-time as a Sangamon County assistant public defender and operated a solo law practice.

* WJBD | Unemployment drops across South Central Illinois: The Illinois Department of Employment Security reported unemployment dropped nine-tenths of a percent in April to 3.5-percent. That’s nine-tenths of a percent lower than in March and a full percent lower than a year ago. The data translates into 560 on the unemployment rolls in Marion County, down 150 from March. The county’s work force also grew 190 people to 16,204.

* BND | Millstadt-area resident finds black bear in her yard. What to do if you see one: The bear stuck around Seavey’s home, and she spotted him again the morning of May 20, curled up in a ball underneath one of the trees in her backyard. He then got up, stretched, yawned and walked down her driveway headed across her front yard. “I was like, ‘Oh, you have got to be kidding me,’” Seavey said.

* WSIL | Thrillville Thrillbillies season opener begins today: First pitch is set at 7 p.m. at Mountain Dew Park. Officials say the first 1,000 fans will receive a magnet schedule. New for this season is the “All You Can Eat Seat”. Thrillbillies officials say every seat is an all-you-can-eat seat. As a way to encourage more fan turnout, the $20 tickets could feed a family of four for $80.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | How the South Works quantum transformation is unfolding: If the Silicon Valley-based company is successful, it will help turn what has so far been a lab experiment into the next big thing in technology. By using a radically different approach to computing, quantum technology could result in unbreakable cybersecurity, new treatments for disease or creation of composite materials in a fraction of the time, and modeling of weather patterns more accurately and over longer periods than what is possible now. It’s a moonshot with no guarantee of success, one that nonetheless has proven irresistible to startups, big tech companies and academic researchers.

* Crain’s | Across from proposed quantum campus, residents weigh risks and expectations: hey’re asking: Will the project bring jobs? Will gentrification displace us? And top of almost everyone’s mind: What are the possible health and environmental effects of extensive construction on a site they suspect is still contaminated with toxic chemicals and heavy metals? Anne Holcomb owns a multi-unit South Shore building. She gets calls “from real estate speculators at least once a week. She tells them, “You don’t want to buy over here until the whole thing is built, because during construction, everyone over here will be poisoned by breathing toxic construction dust from that brownfield. I’m sure you wouldn’t want that liability.”

* WTTW | 3 People Killed, 24 Shot Across Chicago Over Memorial Day Weekend, Well Below Other Recent Years: Police: According to Chicago Police Department figures, 24 people were shot in 21 separate shootings between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Monday. That marks a steep decline from the same weekend in 2024, when at least 41 people were shot, nine fatally. In 2023, more than 50 people were shot over the Memorial Day weekend, including 11 who were killed. The previous year, 47 people were shot, nine fatally.

* Tribune | After years on the front lines of violence prevention, Englewood group faces layoffs as DOJ shifts priorities: His team of workers does round-the-clock work to tackle the root causes of community violence, leading peer-to-peer support and group therapy sessions. They help kids apply for college and jobs, and host programming for kids. They are often the first to crime scenes, even before police. In late April, due to the end of a federal grant that supported many of those efforts, Perkins had to lay off five of the outreach staff at his violence intervention nonprofit, Think Outside Da Block. His organization isn’t the only one that received cuts, and he said there will be half the number of people this summer out in the community mediating conflicts.

* WBEZ | 16 new Chicago speed cameras to start ticketing drivers just days from now: The new cameras, mostly placed on the North Side, are about to finish a 30-day warning period and a two-week blackout period so notices could be delivered. […] One of the new cameras at 4716 N. Ashland Ave. is painted black, and has a smaller profile than older, gray speed cameras drivers are familiar with. The camera, attached to a light pole across from Chase Park, has been flashing in recent weeks as drivers sped past.

* Crain’s | Advocate Trinity’s South Works investment aims to address health equity: When completed, at a budget of about $300 million, the new hospital will have state-of-the-art technology and an emergency department designed to address the urgent needs of its patients, but with far fewer in-patient beds than the current structure. The present 205-bed facility is being replaced by a 53-bed hospital, as Advocate says its current patient volume is about 72 in-patients per day and new sites of care are meant to absorb lower-acuity patients.

* Block Club | Meet Chicago Public Schools’ Only Competitive Bass Fishing Team: Taft hosted the Skokie Lagoons tournament for the first time since starting its bass fishing team in 2009. It is still the only Chicago public school with such a team, and the Norwood Park High School team’s roster has grown from four members to 15. “A lot of the kids who are on this team are very squirrelly, but they calm down when they fish,” said Scott Plencner, a Taft history teacher who coaches the team. “It gives them something to focus on; it’s kind of meditative.”

* Block Club | As Pet Surrenders Surge, Chicago’s Overcrowded Animal Shelter Sounds The Alarm: Chicago Animal Care and Control has taken in an average of 56 pets per day so far in May at its Pilsen shelter, said Armando Tejeda, the agency’s public information officer. That’s up significantly since 2013-2017, when the shelter took in an average of 34 animals per day, Tejeda said. “We’re doing the best we can as far as managing transfers and adoption, but just to be on this track and trying to sustain this intake volume, it’s increasingly hard,” Tejeda said.

* Chicago Mag | Requiem for the Montrose Beavers: “No animal has been more important to the natural and social history of this region than the beaver,” Joel Greenberg wrote in his 2002 book, A Natural History of the Chicago Region. Indeed, these engineers of the animal kingdom transformed the land, building dams that created ponds and wetlands. And their dense, water-repelling fur was highly desired by humans, who turned those pelts into fancy hats. But trapping — and destruction of wetland habitats — decimated the species. By the time Chicago became a town in 1833, the wood-chomping rodents were getting scarce here, and by the end of the 19th century they were entirely gone.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | New Aurora Mayor John Laesch chooses his leadership team at City Hall: Soon after taking office, Laesch hired three new people from his transition team to work in the Mayor’s Office and recently appointed four others, with approval from the Aurora City Council, to other upper city management positions. Shannon Cameron, who led Laesch’s transition team, was hired to be his chief of staff — a position that seems to functionally replace the chief management officer position formerly held by Alex Alexandrou. The job of the chief of staff position, Laesch told The Beacon-News, will be to run the city when he is not around, even though he plans to be hands-on with city staff. The goal is to have him and Cameron be “interchangeable,” he said.

* Tribune | New Homer Township leadership pledges to reduce highway commissioner salary, review civic center costs: It’s been about three months since the Homer Township Reset slate won the February Republican primary, ousting the incumbent administration, and the group is ready to get to work, Homer Township Supervisor Susanna Steilen said. Because the Reset party ran unopposed in the April 1 election and state law states most township officials assume their duties the third Monday of May, it’s been a long wait, Steilen said. The Reset slate, which also includes Highway Commissioner John Robinson, Clerk Tami O’Brien, Collector Sara Palermo and Trustees Ken Marcin, Chris Sievers, Don Melody and Keith Gray, were sworn in May 19.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville-based Alive Center for Teens to start franchising: The nonprofit is ready to start franchising, the center has announced. With locations in Naperville, Aurora and Hanover Park, the organization has launched a social franchise model and is hoping to “significantly expand its proven teen support system statewide,” the release said. “That’s really the message we’re (giving) out, that we’re here,” said Kandice Henning, CEO of The Alive Center. “That we have a solution that is proven and works and we are willing to share it. We really want to help more kids and impact more kids in a positive way. (We want to) help more families and more communities ultimately.”

* Daily Southtown | Tinley Park, Park District pair up after spat on Fourth of July fireworks: There has been friction between the village and Park District over control of the former Tinley Park Mental Health Center, which the Park District bought from the state last year for $1 and has plans to redevelop for recreational uses. The village had also sought to acquire the 280-acre property, northwest of Harlem Avenue and 183rd Street, with plans to develop it for property and sale tax generating entertainment uses.

*** National ***

* NYT | Trump Allies Look to Benefit From Pro Bono Promises by Elite Law Firms: Earlier this year, the Trump administration agreed to spare Skadden and eight other large law firms from executive orders that could have crippled their businesses in exchange for commitments from those firms to collectively provide nearly $1 billion in pro bono legal work and represent clients from all political points of view. Now individuals and organizations allied with Mr. Trump are starting to request that the firms make good on the free legal work they committed to perform, according to 11 people briefed on the outreach, including some who requested anonymity to discuss internal law firm business.

* WIRED | There’s a Very Simple Pattern to Elon Musk’s Broken Promises: WIRED examined the history of Musk’s pledges on everything from Full Self Driving, Hyperloop, Robotaxis, and, yes, robot armies, with a view to reminding ourselves, his fans, and investors how reality in Elon’s world rarely matches up to the rhetoric. Tellingly, Musk’s fallback forecast of “next year” turns up repeatedly, only to be consistently proven wrong.

* NYT | The C.D.C. Now Says Healthy Kids Don’t Need Covid Shots. Is That True?: It’s true that for many children, a case of Covid will be inconsequential. They might have a runny nose, a cough or other mild symptoms, if any at all, and bounce back within a few days. But some children do become seriously ill and, in rare cases, die from their infections. And data shows that over one million U.S. children have developed long Covid.

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Unions call on Pritzker to support their Tier 2 pension overhaul

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were told about this earlier today. Today, the union coalition We are One Illinois sent this letter to Governor JB Pritzker

As you know, the We Are One Illinois coalition has been working steadfastly to fix the broken Tier 2 pension system. Since this effort ramped up last year, our participating unions have been in constant communication with legislators and your office about proposed changes.

Throughout this process, you and your office have repeatedly emphasized the importance of ensuring that any legislative changes to Tier 2 strengthen the financial standing of both our pension systems and the state as a whole. To that end, we have worked diligently toward a proposal that we believe will not add to the state’s unfunded pension liability, nor negatively impact the state’s credit ratings, nor require significant additional funding from the state budget this year or in the near future.

The legislation we have developed also acknowledges your recent proposals to address the shortcomings in the state’s pension funding ramp and resolve the so-called “Safe Harbor” issue that has existed in Tier 2 since its inception.

After many months of discussions with key lawmakers, we believe we have arrived at a proposal that satisfies these principles, makes real progress to ensure public employees on Tier 2 can receive a more fair and decent pension, and strengthens the state’s finances for the long term.

We discussed this legislative proposal with your GOMB director last week and have introduced it into the legislature as an amendment to SB 1937. We ask that you stand with us in supporting this important legislation as we work with legislators to pass it through the General Assembly before the scheduled end of session on May 31.

This amended proposal addresses the four core areas where Tier 2 benefits have fallen short for public employees, including:

    • Improving the final average salary calculation
    • Lowering the retirement age
    • Improving the cost of living adjustment
    • Increasing the Social Security Wage base to address the so-called “Safe Harbor” problem

None of these changes represent full equity with Tier 1 pension provisions, but rather provide an indicator to our members-public service employees of every kind-that there is greater hope for security and dignity in retirement.

This newest proposal also reforms and modernizes the way we pay down the unfunded pension liability to put us on a path to 90% funding by 2045 and 100% funding by 2049.

Based on our initial analysis, we believe this proposal will be at least credit neutral, will not add significantly to the pension liability, and will not require considerable additional state funding. In short, this proposal can put us on a path to improve the inadequate and insufficient Tier 2 pensions for public employees while also addressing our state’s decades-long pension funding problems - and without damaging our current budgetary situation.

We recognize the uncertainty coming from the federal government and share your concerns about potential cuts to critical services. However, we cannot ignore the teachers, firefighters, nurses, or other public employees who provide these services every day across our state. These workers deserve a retirement that allows them to live with dignity and pay their bills after a lifetime of service.

There have been dozens of hearings, conversations, and discussions about this topic as lawmakers and organized labor have worked to find a solution to this pressing problem. We have a unique opportunity in these final days of the legislative session to make significant progress on a problem that has plagued Illinois for years.

We hope that you will join us in this critical endeavor, and together we can make real strides to fix Tier 2.

The amendment is here. They want to use some of the money freed up after two pension obligation bonds are paid off.

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The fight over working hours for Direct Support Professionals (Updated)

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Senate Republicans last week…

Members of the Illinois Senate Republican Caucus are calling on Governor JB Pritzker to protect critical funding that provides care for adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) in Illinois. In a letter sent today Republican Senators urged him to fully restore a proposed $32 million cut to Direct Support Professional (DSP) service hours in Community Integrated Living Arrangements (CILAs), where nearly 10,000 Illinois residents with IDD receive care.

“There will be lean years and there will be tight years, but every year – the state budget is a list of priorities. It is our duty as legislators to represent not just our constituents but all vulnerable Illinoisans who need our state’s help and protection,” the letter reads. “The IDD community has been pushed aside for far too long. This year you have the chance to prioritize them and make promised investments that help bring dignity and quality of life to these valued and vulnerable citizens.”

While the Governor’s proposed budget includes a 50-cent wage increase for DSPs, the Senate Republicans point out that the impact is undercut by the planned reduction of 900,000 service hours—the impact of which could eliminate an estimated 430 positions and result in a net loss of $32 million to the community-based care system.

The letter also highlights that thousands of Illinois residents remain on the state’s PUNS waiting list for services, and many more are living with aging caregivers who fear for their loved ones’ futures. Additionally, they argue that the proposed cuts would disproportionately impact downstate and rural areas, which already struggle to meet staffing needs and lack nearby facilities.

Senate Republicans say the proposed rollback threatens the state’s progress toward meeting federal requirements under the Ligas Decree and increases the risk of institutionalization for individuals with disabilities—a path many families have worked for decades to avoid.

The Senate Republican Caucus is urging the Governor to restore the full $32 million in service hours and recommit to building a fair, inclusive, and compassionate system of care for individuals with disabilities and their families.

* Pritzker’s spokesperson responded last week…

Governor Pritzker has made unprecedented investments and policy changes to support people with intellectual and developmental disabilities in Illinois — over $1 billion new dollars compared to FY ‘19. The Governor continues his prioritization of this population with a more than $100 million increase in the DHS DD division to support community services, including further wage increases for Direct Support Professionals (DSPs).

Rather than ever acknowledging Governor Pritzker’s historic improvements, Senate Republicans are proving past is prologue and refusing to stand up against a leader of their own party who has one goal: to make life worse for people who aren’t rich. If these members meant a single word they said in this letter, they would be hauling their sorry selves to Washington DC right now to urge the Senate to not cut healthcare, food benefits and countless other critical services Illinoisans rely on. They might have uttered one syllable of disagreement when Bruce Rauner was dismantling the human services infrastructure of Illinois.

This is yet another disappointing, albeit unsurprising, stunt from individuals who have not once put the people they represent above cheap, partisan nonsense.

* Shore Community Services took both parties to task in a press release. Excerpt…

At the state level, Governor Pritzker’s proposed budget includes modest increases to caregiver wages and reimbursement rates. However, this progress is negated by a simultaneous proposed cut to hours for direct support professionals (DSPs).

“Medicaid is the backbone of our disability service system in Illinois, and DSPs are the backbone of our organizations. Without these caring and professional individuals, people with IDD will lose critical support that enables them to live full and independent lives in the community,” said Erin Ryan, CEO of Shore Community Services.

Under the Governor’s proposed budget, there is a reduction of 1 million DSP service hours ($32 million), affecting more than 10,000 people who reside in Community Integrated Living Arrangements (CILAs). These cuts equal a direct loss of daily support for individuals to assist with transportation, daily living activities, and access to community resources.

At the federal level, House Republicans released a budget reconciliation bill plan which includes approximately $715 billion in cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. These cuts could lead to up to 13.7 million Americans losing health insurance, according to estimates from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO).

From Early Intervention for young children (ages birth to 3) to personal care services and community-based programming such as group homes and day programs, Medicaid is often the only payer of disability services, especially for the majority of disabled people who are very low-income. This foundational program has enabled millions to access therapies, equipment, housing, school-based health services, and more.

“Cuts to Medicaid and waiver-funded services will threaten health, independence, and quality of life for people with IDD,” Ryan said. “Every year we fight for more resources, and each victory underlines the commitment Illinois has made to end the segregation of people with IDD and invest in truly integrated community-based supports. We are concerned about what cuts could mean for our communities.”

* Capitol News Illinois last month

Rep. Nabeela Syed, D-Palatine, asked IDHS whether DSP providers were consulted when deciding to reduce service hours in favor of higher wages. [IDHS Secretary Dulce Quintero] replied that providers were consulted during the Guidehouse study and that it “has been a very transparent process.”

However, providers in the They Deserve More coalition told Capitol News Illinois that they did not feel included in the decision-making process.

“I’ve been in every meeting, there’s not one that I missed,” Carmody said. “There was no consultation.”

A reduction in DSP service hours was first proposed in late 2023, but Carmody maintained there was an agreement that the current 28.5 million DSP hours would remain in place. She says the proposed budget cut amounting to 895,000 state-funded service hours came as a surprise.

“Why on earth would we have fought for over a year to stave off these cuts only to agree that it would only be a temporary measure? It’s preposterous. It’s counterintuitive,” said Carmody. “That was not the understanding. The understanding was that the community system would retain 28.5 million hours of DSP services.”

Carmody said some impacts on funding for DSPs were expected in future fiscal years, but not this year or to this extent. She also acknowledged the budgetary challenges of this fiscal year and said the current administration “hands-down” has done more than past administrations.

…Adding… From Senate Republican Leader John Curran’s Press Secretary Whitney Barnes…

Instead of engaging on the important issue of how to better serve vulnerable Illinoisans, Gov. Pritzker’s Administration responded (yet again) with hyper-partisan talking points and personal insults designed to mask the severity of the cuts the Governor has proposed to the developmentally disabled community in Illinois.

I can simplify the Senate Republicans’ request:

Will Governor Pritzker be moving forward with cutting over 900,000 hours for DSPs supporting Illinois citizens with intellectual and developmental disabilities, or will he consider the Senate Republicans’ request and fully reinstate the $32 million in his proposed wage cuts to help bring more dignity, care, and quality of life to these vulnerable and valued Illinoisans?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Updated context to today’s subscriber edition

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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As Budget Is Finalized–Remember That Senior Care Can’t Wait

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The push to prioritize home care for seniors has overwhelming and growing support in the IL GA, with 30 Senators and 59 Representatives signed on.

The voices of seniors and workers are breaking through, as in this new radio ad that started hitting Chicago stations on Saturday, and in the video below, making the case that Illinois needs to put seniors before big corporations and the ultra-wealthy:


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Mayor Johnson says ’some room’ to delay transit funding after May 31, but ‘not very much’

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson held a press availability this morning

Reporter: On the transit bill. It seems it’s possible that they try to tackle the structure and governance part and not revenue. Do you think that’s acceptable to do one without the other at this time, or does the revenue need to come in May?

Johnson: Let me just say that I’m grateful for the productive work that is being done in Springfield. As I’ve said before, our equitable distribution and fair share of resources for Chicago in the region, that’s my number one priority, particularly at a time in which we’re already seeing the benefits of our investments right where wholesale occupancy is up, tourism is up. The ridership is up. 300 million riders last year alone. So we know that there is a growing need for reliable and affordable public transportation. As far as the parsing out of action, that is typical of Springfield. My position is we have to do both, right and, our team has worked hard to ensure that the governing structure is situated properly for the future. And the resources, that’s where we really have to roll up our sleeves and dig in a little bit more to ensure that that equitable distribution comes to fruition. But all in all, sometimes it it’s more manageable to parse elements of something of this magnitude apart. And I don’t necessarily have any grudge towards that effort.

Reporter: The agencies themselves have said they need the revenue to avoid cuts. They would have to schedule, I guess, a series of meetings that they’re required to schedule to talk about cuts before they actually implement them. Is there time to bring in that revenue on their timeline if they don’t do it this week?

Johnson: There is some urgency to respond to the financial needs that exist today. As far as the timing is concerned, look, as I said, there’s clearly a growing appreciation and confidence in our public transit system. There’s more work to be done, but as ridership continues to go up, as well as tourism continue to improve. We were talking about $20 billion of infusion as a result of tourism. We’re going to have to have a fully funded, well supported transit system, safe, affordable and reliable. And again, there’s no secret that we have to move with some expediency to ensure that the funding is there. Again, the timing of it all, probably some room there, not very much though.

It’s a big lift to do both this week. We’ll see.

* Other topics

Reporter: Continuing the Springfield theme, when you went down there, you talked about kind of four lower level asks, your priorities asking out of Springfield. I’m wondering, have you gotten any assurances from your team down there, or lawmakers? You know that things like the mandated categories for schools, the 911 surcharge, telecommunication tax, you know better than I do. Are you getting any, you know, confirmation that what you need is going to come through in this budget with only a couple days left in the session?

Johnson: Well, there’s still work to be done, right? What I will say is, as we take nothing for granted, as you know, and as you’ve covered over the years, these last few days become, you know, paramount. Our team is working hard to make sure that, as you mentioned the categoricals, for instance, for special education, for transportation, bilingual education, that those reimbursements don’t drop below what we’ve had in the past. We actually believe that there should be some increase there. There’s nothing that’s guaranteed, and our work continues there to ensure that they ask that we have for the people of Chicago that those tasks become realized. Now, there’s always room to negotiate, and there’s different forms in which these asks can be delivered, but we’ll continue to work through that process to ensure that those investments reach Chicago.

Reporter: I’m hearing from one of the lawmakers who’s key, involved with the budgeting, who describes your team’s presence down presence down there as virtually being absent. Now, can you respond to that?

Johnson: We’re there. We’re there.

* Bears

Reporter: Let’s shift to the Bears, your favorite topic. So we’re kind of closing time in Springfield. We know that they’ve been in active talks about getting some kind of funding for a new stadium with lawmakers there. Is the city engaged in any conversation with lawmakers during this last week to try to maintain, keep them here in Chicago?

Johnson: The door is still open for the Bears to remain in the city of Chicago. I’ve expressed my commitment and our team has put forth terms that we believe are fair and are attractive. Obviously at this point, I’ve done everything that I possibly could do to ensure my commitment to the Bears in our city. And they need support from Springfield. I mean, that’s really what it comes down to. Those conversations have always been led by the Bears. Because just like the Bears had to come to me about how the city could wrap itself around an agreement, and we were able to respond to the organization, the Bears also have the responsibility to speak to the leadership in Springfield in order to secure a stadium. Look, that is out of my control at this point, if the Bears do not receive support from Springfield, then they’ll have to make decisions that are best for their organization. As far as I’m concerned. You know the door is still open.

I’m not sure that the Bears are engaged in “active talks” about state funding with anyone.

Many thanks to Isabel for cleaning up the recorded transcript. However, just in case, please pardon any transcription errors.

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Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Learn more at www.soogreen.com.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Grist

Two years ago this week, the Supreme Court’s decision in Sackett v. the Environmental Protection Agency significantly limited the agency’s ability to use the 1972 Clean Water Act to safeguard the nation’s wetlands from pollution and destruction. The decision determined that wetlands — waterlogged habitats that help filter water and sequester carbon — must be indistinguishable from larger bodies of water to be eligible for protection under the law. […]

Illinois appears to be well positioned to protect its wetlands. It’s a blue state with Democratic supermajorites in both state legislative chambers and a governor friendly to climate policy. But last year, a wetlands protection bill never made it to the General Assembly for a vote. And Illinois State Senator Laura Ellman, the primary sponsor of the bill, is pessimistic about pushing the same bill through the legislature this year.

One major opponent stands in the way: the Illinois Farm Bureau. “If the Farm Bureau is against it, a lot of legislators from downstate will be against it,” Ellman told Grist. “I think a lot of planets would have to align before we could get this bill passed this session.” […]

Ellman’s bill is “definitely in a precarious situation this year,” said Jennifer Walling, who runs the Illinois Environmental Council, an organization that advances environmental policy statewide. “This is something that makes so much sense. It should be bipartisan support, and yet it’s getting a lot of challenges.”

* The Pantagraph

Virginia-based Revolutionary Racing wants to develop a 200-acre parcel of vacant land on Decatur’s western edge into a one-mile harness race track that would include a casino with 900 gaming positions. […]

But in order to do that, they first need Illinois lawmakers to authorize an additional horse racing license. Sen. Patrick Joyce, D-Essex, has a bill that would do that, but whether it moves before the legislature wraps up next week is anyone’s bet. […]

Joyce filed an amendment earlier this week that removed the opposition of Accel Entertainment, which owns FanDuel Sportsbook and Horse Racing — previously known as Fairmount Park — in Collinsville, by adding a provision increasing the amount of off-track betting locations they are permitted to have from nine to 18.

That removes a big hurdle. But others remain. The owners of the Golden Nugget Danville and the Par-A-Dice Hotel and Casino in East Peoria remain opposed.

* Tribune

Also up in the air are elements of Pritzker’s legislative agenda, a menu that includes legislation involving consumer protection, education, local governance and abortion rights, one of the governor’s signature issues.

One measure passed by the Senate and awaiting approval from the House would provide more protections under Illinois’ 2023 shield law, which prevents health care workers from facing disciplinary action by the state if, for instance, they provide abortion care to someone from another state that has more stringent abortion restrictions. […]

The governor is also pushing legislation that would regulate pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, companies that act as intermediaries among drugmakers, insurance corporations and pharmacies.

The legislation, among other things, would prevent PBMs from sending patients to pharmacies where they have a financial interest and it would also include prohibiting PBMs from pocketing certain savings on medications.

A bill that is expected to include language for a Pritzker-led measure that would allow some community colleges to offer four-year degrees advanced through the House Executive Committee Friday. But Democratic Rep. Curtis Tarver of Chicago at that hearing said, “The Black Caucus has some concerns about the concept and the bill in general.”

* Rev. Dr. K. Edward Copeland, pastor and former public defender

Last month, the state of Illinois took the first step in over 70 years to fix an under-funded and resource-starved public defense system when the Illinois House of Representatives passed the Funded Advocacy & Independent Representation (FAIR) Act.

While other states are facing sweeping lawsuits or releasing accused people from jail due to a failure to provide public defenders to poor people who can’t afford an attorney, Illinois is moving in the other direction by working to establish a robust public defender system statewide. Thanks to the leadership and sponsorship of Rep. Dave Vella, a former public defender in Winnebago County who saw firsthand how broken the system is, the FAIR Act is now being considered by the Illinois Senate.

As a former assistant public defender in Kankakee County, I applaud the House for recognizing and addressing what has been painfully obvious to many for too long: for decades, public defenders in Illinois have worked too many cases at once with inadequate budgets and little-to-no support staff or administrative support. Individuals’ Sixth Amendment rights are at risk because of it. […]

The FAIR Act, HB3363, promises meaningful reform. It creates a statewide public defender office to collect data, establish caseload standards, and provide resources to smaller jurisdictions that struggle with attorney recruitment and retention. […]

But there is another way. The FAIR Act establishes a state commission to facilitate appointment of public defenders across this state. This approach is endorsed by national legal professional organizations because it makes plain sense: The branch of government that administers trials and hands down punishment to those who are convicted should not be in the business of appointing or removing people responsible for one side in a legal fight. The system cannot afford even the suggestion that judges and attorneys for the accused are operating in concert.

* WAND

Illinois has made significant investments in mental and behavioral healthcare since the COVID-19 pandemic. A bill heading to Gov. JB Pritzker’s desk could make Illinois one of the first states to provide universal mental health screenings for young children and teens.

Early detection can be critical to help youth receive the best mental health services. Senate Bill 1560 could require public schools to offer age appropriate, confidential mental health screenings to identify mental health concerns and link students to support. Students in grades 3 through 12 would participate in the screenings once per school year. […]

Senate Bill 1560 passed out of the House on a 72-36 vote last week. It previously gained unanimous support in the Senate.

The legislation would take effect at the start of the 2027-28 school year if Pritzker signs the bill into law.

* Chicago State University President Zaldwaynaka Scott and President of the Chicago Urban League Karen Freeman-Wilson

Our state’s economy, equity and educational future are all intertwined, and depend on us closing the funding gap for our public universities.

That’s why we strongly support Senate Bill 13 and House Bill 1581, the Adequate and Equitable Public University Funding Act, sponsored by Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford and state Rep. Carol Ammons,D-Urbana. These visionary lawmakers have laid out a bold, data-driven blueprint to address a decades-long pattern of disinvestment in our institutions. […]

Between 2013 and 2019, the number of Black students attending Illinois public universities dropped by 34%. This is a crisis. The proposed legislation meets this moment by ensuring all of our public universities receive the resources needed to adequately serve our students.

SB13/ HB1581 start by calculating each public university’s unique “adequacy target” (what it costs to deliver a quality education). It then compares that target to the university’s current resources and fills in the gap, prioritizing funding for institutions that have historically been furthest from full funding. Every public university stands to benefit, but those with the greatest need will finally see more meaningful, sustained investment.

* WAND

State representatives passed legislation Friday to allow anyone charged with their first weapon-related offense to apply for a FOID card while they participate in a pretrial detention program.

Current state law allows nonviolent offenders charged with their first offense to participate in divergence programs such as the First Time Weapons Offense Program in Chicago. Upon completion, the state’s attorney dismisses the charges, but the individual cannot apply for a FOID card until after charges are dismissed. […]

All of the current requirements for legal gun ownership in Illinois would remain the same. Sponsors explained the Illinois State Police would also have the ability to deny someone’s application for a FOID card if they are ineligible. […]

Senate Bill 1899 passed out of the House on a 97-11 vote. The measure now moves back to the Senate on concurrence due to an amendment. It previously gained unanimous support in the Senate.

* Capitol News Illinois

House Bill 2688, sponsored by Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin, would allow certified nurse midwives to enter a written agreement with a physician to provide or assist with home births. In designated maternity care deserts, they can enter into such an agreement even if the local physicians don’t provide home births.

The bill only applies to certified nurse midwives, who must be a licensed advanced practice registered nurse, or APRN, and have at least a graduate degree in midwifery. It does not give the same privileges to certified midwives, who are required to have a graduate degree in midwifery.

In recent years, the number of home births across the nation has been steadily rising. The CDC reported that 51,642 home births took place across the country in 2021. That number was a 12% increase from the number of home births in 2020, which the CDC said was the largest increase since at least 1990.

The rise in home births in Illinois is often attributed to the rise in the state’s maternity care deserts, which are counties without a single hospital, birth center, or licensed health care professional who offers obstetric care.

HB 2688 has passed both chambers, it only needs approval from the governor to become law.

* Advantage News

A bill that looks at reducing school gun violence without impeding Second Amendment rights had passed out of the Illinois House and Senate. HB1316 is a result of an incident in Murrayville Republican State Representative CD Davidsmeyer’s district tin which a student threatened to commit an act of gun violence against another student after they were released from school on an “early out” day.

The victim told school administrators who did not notify the principal immediately since it was just a threat. The victim’s parents got involved after hearing that nothing was done immediately to the student who made the threat.

[Rep. Davidsmeyer] says gun violence is something he takes “extremely serious.” The bill was approved unanimously in the House and Senate. The bill now heads to the governor’s desk for consideration.

  10 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

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

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What the proposed Medicaid and SNAP cuts mean for Illinois

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee released its recommendations for budget reconciliation early last week. A preliminary review by the Congressional Budget Office projected that, if implemented, at least 8.6 million Americans would lose their Medicaid coverage during the coming decade.

That translates to well over 300,000 Illinoisans.

In addition, the CBO projected that 5.1 million more people would lose their health insurance because of the federal Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ new rules regarding Affordable Care Act tax credits and restrictions on obtaining and retaining eligibility, including work requirements.

That would be about 190,000 more Illinoisans, for a total of about half a million people losing coverage here.

Another part of the U.S. House’s budget reconciliation proposal would reduce the federal Medicaid expansion match under the Affordable Care Act from 90% down to 80% for any state that used its Medicaid “infrastructure” to provide health insurance to undocumented residents.

Illinois’ All Kids program and its health insurance for undocumented older adults, as well as the adult insurance programs that Gov. JB Pritzker wants to cut off, all use the state’s Medicaid infrastructure to provide state funding for undocumented residents.

If that ultimately passes, the reduction to 80% would trigger a state law which halts all state funding for Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act if the federal match falls below 90%.

So, either the state would have to give up funding health care for undocumented residents or continue to fund them with state dollars and then pay perhaps a billion dollars a year to make up for the 10-point reduction in the federal match.

No way the state could afford to step in and spend billions upon billions to cover all those folks.

The CBO also released cost estimates last week for the House Republican budget reconciliation plan, and it included even more eye-popping numbers about state Medicaid cuts and increased state costs.

The estimates cover the federal budget years of 2026 up to and including 2034 (apparently nine fiscal years). According to the nonpartisan budget office estimates, changes to the Medicaid program would result in “$698 billion less in federal subsidies.”

A back of the envelope calculation shows that would work out to about $24.4 billion in federal Medicaid cuts for Illinois, or about $2.7 billion a year on average, although the cuts are backloaded. A Kaiser Family Foundation report earlier this month showed Illinois received $21.1 billion in annual federal Medicaid funding out of $606.3 billion in total federal Medicaid funding, or 3.5%.

The CBO also estimates “$78 billion in additional state spending, on net, accounting for changes in state contributions to SNAP and Medicaid and for state tax and spending policies necessary to finance additional spending,” during the same time period.

That would be about $2.73 billion in additional expenses for Illinois, or about $303 million per year on average.

Later in the week, congressional Republican honchos proposed a “manager’s amendment” to their massive reconciliation bill.

One new item would prohibit private insurance companies in the Affordable Care Act exchange to pay for abortions unless “necessary to save the life of the mother or if the pregnancy is a result of an act of rape or incest.”

Illinois requires companies in the ACA health insurance marketplace to cover abortion if they offer pregnancy-related benefits, according to the Department of Insurance.

So, if the congressional provision is enacted, Illinois would have to decide whether to pick up the tab itself or find another workaround.

The same could happen with the amendment’s language banning Medicaid coverage of gender-affirming care for adults. The proposed ban earlier applied only to children.

The amendment would also move up Medicaid work requirements from the original 2029 start date to 2026, which will undoubtedly result in more Illinoisans being kicked off, if Arkansas’ disastrous experience is repeated here.

The budget office claimed that household resources for those in the bottom 10% of earners would “decrease by an amount equal to about 2 percent of income” in 2027 and 4% in future years, due to Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program cuts.

Household resources for those in the top 10% would “increase by an amount equal to 4 percent for households in the highest [ten percent] in 2027 and 2 percent in 2033, mainly because of reductions in the taxes they owe,” the CBO reported.

We’ll just have to wait and see what the U.S. Senate does now that the ball is in its court.

* Meanwhile, from the Sun-Times

About 70% of all the days a person spends in a nursing facility in Illinois are covered by Medicaid, and in fiscal year 2024 that amounted to $3.8 billion in federal dollars for long-term care facilities, according to the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services.

“Federal cuts to Medicaid will leave state and local governments with vast budget shortfalls that cannot be made up, and the direct result would not only mean an economic impact for communities but also one directly felt by Medicaid customers currently residing in nursing facilities – and those served throughout the Medicaid program,” the department said in a statement.

The bill will place a moratorium on an effort to increase staffing levels at nursing homes, said Gelila Selassie, an attorney with Justice in Aging. Staffing levels at nursing homes are important because they prevent deaths at facilities, she said. The rule would have required an around-the-clock registered nurse and a minimum of 3.48 total nurse staffing hours per resident per day, according to a KFF analysis. […]

Another provision in the bill limits retroactive coverage from three months to one month, said Selassie. Applying for Medicaid requires a lot of paperwork and Selassie said now families will have a shorter window of time to gather the necessary documents. […]

People with disabilities who do not live in facilities will also be affected. Less Medicaid funding for things like personal attendants, wheelchairs and home modifications will mean they won’t be able to live at home, said Bridget Hayman, director of communications for Access Living.

  25 Comments      


Repeal The Interchange Fee Prohibition Act Now

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

“In the short remainder of this spring’s legislative session, lawmakers have the opportunity to prevent the upending of a financial system that provides Illinoisians with affordable credit and enables small businesses to thrive…. Hurting local financial institutions and small businesses isn’t the way to grow our economy.

“For the sake of our communities and the members we serve, we call on General Assembly members to repeal this flawed legislation.”

Read more

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Open thread

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* What’s going on?…

  5 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, May 27, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Big issues for Illinois legislative session’s final week include public transit, pension reform.Tribune

    - Illinois lawmakers enter the final days of session aiming to close a major budget gap, support struggling transit systems, and address pension inequities.
    - Democrats control the General Assembly, but the $55.2B budget could divide moderates and progressives—especially over the lack of funding for health insurance for noncitizen immigrants under 65.
    - State revenues are $471M below projections according to COGFA, complicating efforts to fund transit reforms as Chicago faces a looming fiscal cliff with federal COVID funds expiring early next year.
    -Leaders warn lawmakers may need to return after the May 31 adjournment due to uncertainty over federal funding under the Trump administration.

* Related stories…

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Sponsored by the Illinois Pharmaceutical Reform Alliance

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

* Governor Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Illinois coal plants get Trump exemptions from Biden-era rule limiting mercury, other toxic air pollution: In November, the company said it would keep Baldwin running until 2027. Then last month, in an attempt to revive the nation’s dwindling coal industry, President Donald Trump threw a lifeline to Vistra and a few dozen other energy companies, encouraging them to apply for exemptions from the latest federal limits on soot, mercury and other toxic air pollution. Vistra took Trump up on his offer, getting at least a two-year break from tougher regulations at Baldwin and six of its other coal plants: Kincaid south of Springfield, Newton in Jasper County, three in Texas and one in Ohio.

* Daily Herald | Cuts to school mental health grants could trickle down to local districts: Murray Bessette of the U.S. Department of Education’s office of planning, evaluation and policy development stated the grants violate federal civil rights law and conflict with the department’s commitment to “merit, fairness and excellence in education.” One of the grants, the School-Based Mental Health Services Grant Program, provided ISBE initially with $2.97 million in fiscal year 2022 to increase the number of credentialed mental health service providers for students, according to the U.S. Department of Education. That was extended to the end of 2025 and the total obligations were increased to $6.2 million, according to HigherGov.

* Tribune | Illinois finalizes deal for land near Joliet needed for stalled invasive carp prevention project: “This is something that we’ve been waiting for for over a decade,” Marc Smith, policy director for the National Wildlife Federation, said. “It’s very good progress.” The state earlier this year postponed construction on the Joliet-area project, with state officials saying they didn’t want to move forward because they anticipated a federal funding shortfall. Then, two weeks ago, the Trump administration announced it supported the project and that funding was available, though Pritzker and Trump still managed to snipe at each other at the time.

*** Statewide ***

* Sun-Times | IHSA looks for compromise on Right To Play issue: IHSA executive director Craig Anderson said the association decided to get in front of the issue after hearing feedback from member schools. A bylaw proposal allowing athletes to compete in non-school activities is expected to be on the annual ballot this fall. The consensus, Anderson said, is “if we’re going to change the bylaws, it’s best to let the membership do that rather than if we’re forced to change.”

* Crain’s | Cash-strapped Illinois weed businesses ‘bet the farm’ on a risky tax strategy to save millions: Nobody likes paying taxes, least of all cash-strapped businesses struggling for their lives. That’s why a new business strategy has taken off over the past year in the legal cannabis trade: claiming exemption from a burdensome federal tax provision that has — until now — been effectively taxing much of the industry to death. Since early 2024, state-licensed cannabis companies in Illinois and across the country have been changing up their approach to filing and paying federal taxes — specifically to claim exemption to a little-known 1982 provision in the Internal Revenue Code called Section 280E — in a move that is saving many of them eight or nine figures apiece.

* Sun-TImes | What Trump’s cuts to Medicaid will mean for nursing homes, long-term care facilities in Illinois: Across Illinois, about 70% of days spent in nursing home care are covered by Medicaid, making it the largest insurance payer for this type of coverage, according to state officials. Advocates worry the proposed cuts will reduce the type of care low-income seniors and those living with disabilities will receive at these facilities.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Political Roundabout: Mayors in Crespo’s corner, Schneider gets primaried, and is a service tax on tap?: “Fred Crespo is a friend to our Northwest suburbs, but, more than that, he is concerned for this entire state. He is honest to a fault,” Hanover Park Mayor Rod Craig, Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly and Hoffman Estates Mayor Bill McLeod told the Daily Herald in a letter. The trio “felt compelled to set the record straight,” after Welch removed Crespo as chair of the House Appropriations Committee for General Services and from the Democratic caucus earlier this month.

* Tribune | Illinois lawmakers’ latest perk — continuing education credits for going to work: The new benefit came about from a little-noticed change in Supreme Court rules, a move encouraged and endorsed by multiple lawmakers. It took effect Jan. 1, just in time for the ongoing spring legislative session. At least 29 lawmakers were notified that they could qualify for up to 12 of the 30 educational credits they need to collect over two years. The lawmaker-lawyers can chalk up three hours of credit by simply attending one day of a legislative session, a committee meeting or a subcommittee hearing, according to the new rule. One catch is that they can collect only three credits throughout a legislative session, such as a spring session that lasts several months or a fall veto session that lasts a few weeks, court officials said.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Jenner & Block wins ruling blocking Trump’s executive order: Judge John Bates of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia said in his five-page order the actions detailed in Trump’s executive order, which included revoking security clearances for Jenner employees and limiting the firm’s access to federal buildings, were null and void.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Public Schools lays off hundreds of tutors before CPS school year ends: Hiring hundreds of tutors was one of CPS’ key strategies to shore up learning as students returned to in-person classes after the COVID-19 pandemic. When elementary school reading scores rebounded, CPS credited the tutors in part for the improvements. But CPS officials said Friday that the school system is “refining and refocusing the program in response to key lessons learned and in alignment with current district resources.” This year, more than 200 schools had literacy and math tutors. Next year, though, only 55 will get math tutors for middle school students, according to CPS, which is facing a budget deficit of at least $529 million.

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s ‘missing middle’ housing program adds more neighborhoods, extends developer deadline: Launched in fall 2024, the Missing Middle Infill Housing program began with 40 vacant lots in North Lawndale, which will now be developed into more than 100 housing units. The expansion of the program in April opens up 54 lots across the three South Side neighborhoods. With $75 million allocated to the program, the city expects to create up to 750 residential units. The term “missing middle” refers to the hole in the center of a housing supply that often includes more low- and high-density properties, like single-family homes and high-rise apartments.

* Sun-Times | Family wants city action after woman, 88, is killed in Garfield Ridge: ‘There’s no speed bumps around here’: Fernando Ochoa, another of Maria Ochoa’s sons, said the area has a reputation for reckless driving and he often hears cars racing up and down the street. He wants more speed cameras and speed bumps in the area and stiffer penalties for those flouting the laws. “Every night I hear this going on down Archer Avenue, down 55th, cars drag racing, there’s no speed bumps around here,” Fernando Ochoa said. “We’ve been asking for this stuff for a while and nothing happened. We have no speed cameras here at all.”

* WBEZ | Gerald Reed is suing over alleged torture by Chicago cops: In May 2024, Cook County Judge Steven Watkins found Reed not guilty on all counts, following a four-day trial. His attorney will now seek a certificate of innocence, which would make Reed eligible for nearly $200,000 from the state for his time spent in prison. The lawsuit filed earlier this month in federal court also seeks damages, naming the city and dozens of current and former Chicago police officers as defendants, including Burge.

* Tribune | Soaring Chicago police lawsuit payouts hit record amount — and more are on the way: Through May alone, the City Council has already approved at least $145.3 million in taxpayer payments to settle lawsuits involving the Chicago Police Department, a record number that dwarfs sums from past years, according to a Tribune analysis. That amount — far above the $82.6 million Mayor Brandon Johnson and aldermen budgeted for settlements, verdicts and legal fees involving the department — does not include many smaller payments that face less aldermanic scrutiny.

* WGN | Chicago sees smooth travel as millions hit the road for Memorial Day: AAA predicted 45.1 million people across the country will travel at least 50 miles from home this weekend. The holiday’s previous domestic travel record of 44 million was set 20 years ago. Of that, 87.4% were expected to travel by car, which equals over 39 million people, and an increase of about 3% from last year.

* Sun-Times | 86-year-old owner of Old Fashioned Donuts goes viral thanks to granddaughter’s TikTok: Since 1972, shop owner Burritt Bulloch, 86, has shown up nearly every day to make doughnuts, and he has not only become a fixture in his community, but an inspiration to his family. “My grandfather is the heart of the business,” said Edwards, 23. “He’s said before, ‘If I stop, then that’s it for me.’ This is what keeps him going, and it warms my heart that he has this drive. He was just a young guy with a dream when he moved to Chicago and he’s accomplished so much. I’m grateful for his legacy.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Press Release | Congressman Sean Casten Announces Endorsement of Daniel Biss for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District: Today, Congressman Sean Casten (IL-06) announced his endorsement of Daniel Biss for Congress in Illinois’ 9th Congressional District. Casten’s endorsement comes just days after a slate of state elected officials endorsed Biss, adding to the growing momentum in his campaign. “Congressman Casten is a dedicated, hardworking public servant who brings much-needed expertise and commitment on climate action to Washington. I’m truly grateful to have earned his support,” said Daniel Biss. “Illinois needs a Congressional delegation that won’t back down when Donald Trump and his MAGA followers threaten the services our people rely on or the rights we hold dear. Sean Casten has stood up time and again for the people of Illinois, and I hope to earn the opportunity to fight and win alongside him in Congress.”

* Daily Herald | Few suburban Congressional candidates met financial disclosure deadline: Only three of the more than two dozen candidates for congressional seats serving the North, West or Northwest suburbs turned in federal financial disclosure reports by a May 15 deadline, a Daily Herald analysis revealed. One, 9th District Democratic hopeful and internet personality Kat Abughazaleh, is a political newcomer whose campaign has received national media attention. The other two — Republicans Niki Conforti of the 6th District and Jim Marter of the 14th — are campaign veterans who lost previous bids for federal office.

* NBC Chicago | Suburban couple fights for fair Cook County property taxes after massive increase: “It [the property tax] was affordable until last August when they did a reassessment and the property in the back went from a market value of $107,000 to $752,000 in tax dollars,” Sandra Kucala said. “That’s a 602% increase. Their other two parcels saw double digit increases, too. “It [the tax bill] went from $3,000 a year in taxes to $17,000,” she said. “We can’t even sell it [the property] with the taxes being that high.”

* Daily Herald | Schaumburg aims to slash police hiring time during officer staffing crisis: Desperate to resolve a problematic 13 vacancies among its 119 officer positions, Schaumburg will follow the lead of most other area police departments to bring its six-month hiring process down to the regional norm of two months. Though Schaumburg is in crisis mode, other departments are facing hiring issues as well. “Being short officers as we are can lead to burnout, or officers being tired,” Schaumburg Mayor Tom Dailly said. “We don’t want our officers out there in that condition.”

* Daily Southtown | Former Gov. Pat Quinn shares Memorial Day message in Blue Island: On Monday, Quinn echoed some of the thoughts of Blue Island American Legion Post 50 Cmdr. Joe Serbantez, who said Memorial Day was about more than cookouts and mattress sales. “Yes, we have ballgames and we have picnics and all kinds of celebrations and that’s good,” Quinn said. “We were given a gift by God to be here in the United States as citizens in 2025. That’s all important. But we cannot forget the significance of today, which is to honor all of those who came and served our country. We cannot forget them.”

* WTTW | There’s a Shortage of Native Seeds, So Cook County Preserves Is Growing Its Own Supply: A 2023 report sounded the alarm about the scarcity of native seed: The native segment of the commercial seed production industry is comparatively small and highly specialized, and there isn’t enough species diversity in the offerings that do exist. Too often, key species are unavailable or buyers have to make do with substitutions, and that can affect the success of a restoration project. Pat Hayes, long-time volunteer site steward at Cook County’s 1,000-acre Orland Grassland preserve, didn’t need data to tell her what she’s been experiencing firsthand.

* Sun-Times | McDonald’s is closing its CosMc’s restaurants, including Bolingbrook site: McDonald’s said Friday that it’s closing down CosMc’s, a new restaurant format it began piloting in the U.S. last year. But the company said beverages inspired by CosMc’s will soon be tested at U.S. McDonald’s locations. Among the drinks on CosMc’s current menu: matcha iced latte, turmeric spiced latte, prickly pear-flavored slushy with popping candy on top and a frozen sour cherry energy drink.

* Daily Herald | ‘Peace is not free’: Honoring those who made the ultimate sacrifice: Streamwood Village President Billie Roth noted the suburb was founded in 1957 as the U.S. and the world continued to move beyond World War II. “Our town was established during a time when the world was recovering from the hardships of war, and we are here today because of the immense sacrifices made by those who fought to secure the freedoms we all enjoy,” she said.

*** Downstate ***

* WEEK 25 | Ameren Illinois customers warned of price spike on summer electricity bills: “These results highlight the ongoing energy challenge in downstate Illinois and the need for a more robust resource planning process on the state level,” an Ameren Illinois spokesperson said in a statement. “Balanced solutions, including transmission, energy storage, renewables, natural gas, nuclear, energy efficiency, and demand response, are needed to provide residents and businesses with affordable and reliable energy,” the company said.

* WAND | Urbana residents face changes in electric supply as municipal aggregation contract expires: The City plans to pursue aggregated pricing again in the spring. Residents have several options: they can remain on Basic Generation Service, subscribe to community solar, or choose their own retail electric supplier. If residents stay on Basic Generation Service for two billing cycles, they will be locked in for another 10 months. Additionally, those who enter a retail contract in the spring will not be automatically enrolled in future aggregation attempts.

* WICS | Springfield city council approves new 13-million-dollar solar energy agreement: Sangamon Solar is building a new 750-acre solar farm south of Chatham. The project is set to cost the city 13 million dollars. That 13-million dollars is from taxpayer money, but it’s not an extra 13 million. It’s money already budgeted, but instead of being spent on electricity, it will be spent on solar energy

* WGLT | A $35 million price tag to dredge Lake Bloomington: A study done for the City of Bloomington estimates the cost to dredge Lake Bloomington at more than $35 million. “And that doesn’t include the drying beds. We would need to acquire land to lay out that silt and whatnot to dry so we can dispose of it,” said Deputy City Manager Sue McLaughlin.

* WGLT | U of I Extension’s Master Gardeners program marks 50 years of research-based advice: Brittnay Haag is the horticulture educator for Illinois Extension serving McLean, Livingston and Woodford counties. She said one of the biggest advances the program has made has been giving more scientific solutions to gardeners, as opposed to internet tips and family secrets. “They really learn proper care and proper techniques that have been researched, that they may not have always done. A lot of them are like, ‘Oh, I learned this from my grandma 50 years ago,’ and that may not be the proper researched-based technique nowadays,” she said.

* WTTW | Black Bears Looking to Relocate Too? Southern Illinois Has a Furry Visitor, Wildlife Officials Confirm: The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) said it is monitoring a bear that’s been spotted hanging out all week in St. Clair County in the southwestern part of the state, just east of St. Louis. The bear has had no interaction with humans but has damaged some bee hives on private property, IDNR said.

* IPM News | This Memorial Day, a U of I professor will honor the life of his relative who went missing during WWII: “A few hours of internet searching suddenly led to an understanding that there was information about my relative who died in the B-24 bomber that the family never knew,” Althaus said. “And very quickly this became what would eventually become a five-year research project to try to find the final resting place of my relative, Second Lt. Thomas V. Kelly, Jr.”

*** National ***

* Auto Blog | Tesla’s Odometer Lawsuit Could Be EV Industry’s Dieselgate Moment: A California class-action lawsuit alleges the company uses predictive software to inflate odometer readings by up to 117%, voiding warranties prematurely and forcing owners into $10,000 repair bills. And if the Courts find it to be systematic? Global? Based on the lawsuit data, the total estimated annual financial benefit to Tesla is about $3.99 billion. Nyree Hinton’s 2020 Model Y odometer logged 72 miles/day despite a 20-mile commute, burning through his 50,000-mile warranty in 18 months.

* The Lever | Get Ready To Pay In ZuckBucks: Amid a flood of industry lobbying in Washington, D.C., and Democrats’ capitulation, the Senate is set to pass the GENIUS Act, a sweeping cryptocurrency law that could spread fraud-ridden, destabilizing digital currencies across the banking system. But lawmakers and consumer protection experts warn that the bill has an even more serious problem: It would allow Elon Musk and other Big Tech tycoons to issue their own private currencies. That means we could soon live in a world where all online transactions will require us to pay for goods in billionaires’ own made-up monopoly money, for which tech giants will be able to charge exorbitant transaction fees.

* Slate | Crypto Is About to Cause the Next Great American Financial Crisis: So imagine this scenario: It’s a year from now, maybe two. Crypto-friendly legislation is now law, opening the floodgates for all manner of bank exposure to crypto. Next, the economic recession people have been forecasting for years actually happens. Trump’s erratic economic policies and his embrace of tariffs have boosted the chances of one to as high as 70 percent on prediction markets just last month, although they’ve since come down. Historically speaking, though, recessions are unavoidable. News of a downturn then leads to a sizable drop in the markets. As investors rush to shed themselves of risky assets, crypto, perhaps the riskiest “asset” imaginable, is dumped with ferocity. Soon, there’s a run on the banks, except it’s not like in 2023, it’s far bigger. Instead of only a handful of banks, dozens or maybe even hundreds are affected, including some of the largest in the country. And quelle surprise, we are all obligated to bail the banks out (again) or face global financial armageddon.

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* Campaign news: Big Raja money; Benton over-shares; Rashid's large cash pile; Jeffries to speak at IDCCA brunch
* Rep. Hoan Huynh jumps into packed race for Schakowsky’s seat (Updated)
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