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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for a FY26 budget breakdown from the governor’s office.

* WCIA

The death toll of the car crash at a Chatham after-school program is up to five following the passing of an eight-year-old boy on Monday.

Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon announced in a news release that Bradley Lund of Springfield passed away after sustaining blunt force injuries in the crash at the YNOT Outdoors program on April 28. Lund had been admitted as a patient at HSHS St. John’s Hospital following the crash, and he was still receiving treatment there when he died at 5:52 a.m. on Monday. […]

The Illinois State Police concluded its investigation into the crash last week and the Sangamon County State’s Attorney’s Office began a review to decide on whether charges are warranted against the driver who crashed into YNOT Outdoors’ building.

Bradley is the son of former legislative staffer and current IFT employee Cynthia Riseman Lund.  You can donate by clicking here and make a note that your donation is for Bradley Lund.

* Sen. Sue Rezin…

A newly announced 20-year power purchase agreement between Meta and Constellation for energy from the Clinton Clean Energy Center is drawing praise from State Senator Sue Rezin (R-Morris), who says the deal highlights why Illinois must lift its remaining ban on building new, large-scale nuclear reactors.

“This long-term agreement between Constellation and Meta is proof of what we’ve been saying all along. There is a strong and growing demand for reliable, carbon-free nuclear energy in Illinois,” said Senator Rezin “These types of market-based partnerships can help support existing facilities and even fund next-generation reactors, but we can’t fully meet that demand or prepare for the future while Illinois still clings to a decades-old ban on new nuclear construction.”

The agreement secures the continued operation and expansion of the Clinton nuclear plant beyond 2027, when state subsidies under the Zero Emission Credit (ZEC) program are set to expire. Meta’s investment ensures the plant remains online for another 20 years, preserving more than 1,000 high-paying jobs and supporting local tax revenues, while adding capacity through a planned 30-megawatt uprate.

Senator Rezin, a longtime advocate for nuclear energy, led the successful bipartisan effort in 2023 to lift Illinois’ ban on small modular reactors (SMRs). She is now pushing to lift the state’s broader moratorium on new large-scale nuclear construction, which has been in place since 1987. […]

The Clinton–Meta agreement also includes a provision for exploring the development of an advanced nuclear reactor or SMR at the Clinton site, made possible by the policies championed by Senator Rezin. Still, she says Illinois must pass legislation to fully end the nuclear moratorium and help secure future nuclear projects within the state.

*** Statewide ***

* WIFR | Suspension lifted on the sale of poultry at Illinois flea markets, auctions: The Illinois Department of Agriculture lifts the temporary suspension on the exhibition or sale of poultry at swap meets, flea markets and auctions. The suspension was issued in February because of the threat of H5N1 avian flu, and was lifted June 2. Avian flu can infect poultry and wild birds, and the strains of the virus are extremely infectious and can spread quickly from flock to flock. The flu is often fatal to chickens.

*** Statehouse News ***

…Adding… The Tribune’s Jason Meisner



Click here to read the full court filing.

* Capitol News Illinois | Bill to repeal licensure requirements for hair braiders stalls in the House. Here’s why.: The bill needed one final vote of concurrence on proposed amendments to pass after it had unanimous support in the House and the Senate. House bill sponsor Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, said he decided not to bring it to a vote after meeting with members of the Illinois Association of Hair Braiders. “The bill was actually held to get it right,” Ford said. “They’re organizing, and we’re going to listen.”

* Sun-Times | 5 things Illinois lawmakers did and didn’t get done in spring session: The Health Benefits for Immigrant Adults program was among the casualties of a tough budget year amid uncertainty in federal funding under President Donald Trump. The state expects to save more than $330 million by cutting health coverage for 33,000 people in Illinois without legal status, including 22,000 in Cook County. Progressives opposed to the cuts still voted for the budget. A similar program for those over 65 was preserved at $110 million.

* Higher Ed Drive | Illinois lawmakers pass bill to establish direct admissions program: Each public university participating in the program will set GPA standards for first-time and transfer students by March 1 annually. The state will then inform students about which colleges will automatically accept them based on that criteria beginning with the 2027-28 academic year.

* Capitol News Illinois | Mascot ban stalls as Native-backed land conservation bill advances: House Bill 1237’s Senate sponsor, Sen. Suzy Glowiak Hilton, D-Western Springs, said after the bill missed a deadline earlier this session, she was still gathering a consensus from other legislators. But she said many of the concerns she heard about the measure stemmed from the costs associated with schools changing mascots. “We will continue conversations about it and see what we can do with helping them pass it,” Glowiak Hilton said when the bill missed its mid-May deadline.

* Daily Herald | GOP state lawmaker considering congressional run: Perennial Republican congressional candidate James Marter of Oswego may soon have competition for his party’s nomination in Illinois’ 14th District. State Rep. Jed Davis of Newark has filed a statement of candidacy for the congressional seat, which has been held by Democrat Lauren Underwood of Naperville since 2019. It identifies his campaign committee as Jed for Freedom DC.

*** Chicago ***

* The Chicago 312 | Nick Uniejewski Is Running a State Senate Campaign Like It’s a Dinner Party—and It’s Working.: Nick Uniejewski never planned to run for office. But after hosting over 100 community “salons”—kitchen table-style conversations on housing, transit, and the future of Illinois politics—he realized something that might sound obvious, but isn’t: if we want a government that feels different, we need different people in office. “Every fight for the next four years is going to happen at the state and local level,” Uniejewski told me over the phone, on the way to his next community event. “And my senator just wasn’t there.”

* Crain’s | Chicago-based Realtors group braces for 25% decline in membership: The Chicago-based National Association of Realtors is projecting a membership decline totaling 25% in the wake of recent shakeups both in the way home sales are done and in its reputation, the group’s CEO said at an industry meeting this week. Nykia Wright, the NAR’s CEO, said at the group’s annual legislative meetings Sunday in Washington, D.C., that membership is expected to drop to 1.2 million in 2026, down from the group’s peak at slightly over 1.6 million in October 2022, during the COVID-era housing boom.

* Block Club | Transitional Housing Program Opens In Wicker Park To Help Unhoused Chicagoans: Renaissance Social Services opened its Triage Bridge Housing Program in April at 1659 W. Division St., and the organization held a ribbon-cutting ceremony Monday. The group is using the building to provide 30 single-occupancy rooms for people who for the most part have already matched with long-term housing options but need a place to live as they finalize move-in details.

* Crain’s | Michigan law firm expands to Chicago with deal for intellectual property firm: The deal for Irwin IP LLP closed on May 1 and allows Grand Rapids, Mich.-based Miller Johnson to grow its IP litigation practice through Irwin IP’s client base, which spans startups and Fortune 500 companies. As well, Miller Johnson executives view the deal as a way to fill what they describe as an underserved market in Michigan for experienced intellectual property counsel. “We have a great match culturally and a great match in how we practice law, and with our personalities,” said David Buday, managing member at Miller Johnson. “I think that’s why this all came together.”

* WBEZ | What’s That Building? FarmZero: The farm-fresh smell of growing vegetables hits your nose moments after you get off the elevator on the 18th floor at 30 N. LaSalle St. Taking an elevator to get to a farm may seem far-fetched, but if Russ Steinberg’s business grows as much as he hopes, it could become commonplace in the Loop — and in other big cities’ downtown cores. Steinberg’s startup has been growing food on the 18th floor of this mid-70s office building since last July. It’s a small operation at 1,000 square feet, sort of a baby step into indoor farming, but it’s about to get much bigger.

* Sun-Times | A neglected Altgeld Gardens building, designed by 1933 World’s Fair architect, is slated for rebirth: The nonprofit By the Hand Club for Kids has signed an agreement to buy the privately owned former Altgeld Gardens Commercial Center — residents call it the Up Top building — at 13100 S. Ellis Ave. for $450,000, according to Andraya Yousfi, the group’s chief of partnerships and development. Helping make the acquisition easier: The Chicago Housing Authority on May 27 agreed to sell 1.24 acres of CHA land surrounding the building — mostly a parking lot that landlocks the structure — to the club for $27,600.

* Block Club | Chicago Is Sinking: Land Under Our Feet Is Retreating More Than Most Cities: Chicago is the fifth-fastest-sinking major city in the United States, according to a new study. While the city is only sinking by a few millimeters every year, experts say the shift could damage buildings and other infrastructure.

* Sun-Times | Experts looking into cause of death of 4 peregrine falcons that lived on UIC campus building: The chicks, nesting at the University of Illinois Chicago campus, died May 28. The university has hosted peregrines for more than 25 years, providing a sanctuary for the once-endangered species. Ornithologists at the Field Museum are looking into the cause of death.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Attorney general says no violations in upheaval at Cook County hospitals non-profit: A state probe into a potential conflict of interest and spending issues at the nonprofit supporting Cook County’s hospital system has closed after no violations were found, though internal strife that launched that investigation has led to roughly half the board’s members leaving over the past year. Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office said in a statement it told the Cook County Health Foundation in September it “would not be seeking further information” into allegations of “serious governance issues,” including a potential conflict of interest violation. That effectively closed the book on its investigation.

* Daily Herald | ‘Queer people are not a danger’: Elgin’s third Pride Parade to celebrate community Saturday: The third annual family-friendly parade has about 60 entrants registered and will step off at 11 a.m. downtown, starting and ending near Festival Park as it goes north on Riverside Drive and returns south on Grove Avenue. A free festival will immediately follow the parade in Festival Park, featuring local vendors offering merchandise and services, LGBTQ+ musicians and performance artists and about 15 food trucks offering various cuisines and nonalcoholic beverages.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton OKs budget for just ended fiscal year; expects budget for this year by end of July: The Dolton Village Board approved a budget Monday, although it’s for the fiscal year that just ended, and trustees are working on a new spending plan for the budget year that began May 1. “This is a catch-up budget as we go into the next year,” Mayor Jason House said. He said officials have begun preparations for the fiscal 2026 budget, which will outline spending through the end of April 2026. House said that a public hearing will be scheduled and the board would have a new budget in place by the end of July. The village needed to adopt a budget as it works to get back in the good graces of the state comptroller’s office.

* Tribune | Northbrook man charged with pointing gun at village employee in solar panel dispute, police say: A Northbrook man was charged with felony aggravated assault against a municipal employee after he pointed a handgun at a village of Northbrook code enforcement official, police say, in a dispute over a permit to install solar panels. Police later obtained a search warrant and discovered a stockpile of guns and thousands of rounds of ammunition in the resident’s home. […] According to the arrest report, Kurzynowski installed solar panels on a pole barn in his backyard. An individual not named in the police report called the village April 25 to complain about the structure and solar panels. The village requires residents who wish to install solar panels on their property to apply to the village with detailed installation plans and two rounds of inspections.

* Daily Southtown Construction continues on Oak Lawn High School’s $40 million fieldhouse: Construction began March 24 on the fieldhouse, that will centralize athletic activities on the south side of the campus. Workers are laying down the structure’s foundation in the former parking lot in front of the the school’s performing arts center, with school community members directed to park on the north side of the school where a lot was recently completed. Oak Lawn District 299 Superintendent Shahe Bagdasarian said those passing by the high school on busy 95th Street should see walls up by end of June.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Normal council OKs road projects; music festival complaints amplified: The work is expected to begin this month and be completed of Oct. 15. The bid was awarded over Rowe Construction, the company that was awarded the MFT street resurfacing contract in 2024, and which is currently working on a project at Landmark Drive and College Avenue. Rowe’s bid also was found to be acceptable, but was higher by about $50,000. Council member Karyn Smith noted a $463,000 per lane mile cost is a lower amount than in previous years.

* WCIA | ‘It’s a good slap in the face’: Employees in Hoopeston on strike: Workers in Hoopeston want their voices to be heard. On Monday, dozens of employees could be seen outside Teasdale Latin Foods holding up strike signs. Nearly 30 employees on the production side of Teasdale Latin Foods, a canning company, are upset with their contracts. Workers said they’ve been preparing to go on strike for almost a month and they’ll continue to wait it out until things get resolved.

* BND | City of Belleville’s director of economic development resigns: Cliff Cross, 52, is moving to take a similar job in a small city in central Georgia. He described it as a good opportunity that will put him in a stronger position for retirement. “I became a director when I was very young,” Cross said Monday. “I’ve been in that role for almost 25 years. At some point, I’ve got to start thinking about myself and my family and slow down a bit, too.”

* PJ Star | Washington changes decades-old rule to hire experienced new police chief: Stevens will be paid $140,000 yearly for his work taking over for former chief Mike McCoy, who retired May 5, and could receive pay raises based on performance. Stevens, who had a new nameplate with his title during the meeting, has a 25-year history in the Washington Police Department and served as acting chief multiple times. Stevens’ appointment came after the council amended a 34-year-old ordinance from 1991 that required police chiefs to reside within the city. The council voted 7-1 to approve the change, which now allows candidates for chief who have served the city for at least 15 years to live up to 25 miles outside city limits.

* WMBD | Peoria’s Michelle Taylor focuses on trauma-sensitive learning: Michelle Taylor is the Vice President of Education at the Children’s Home Association of Illinois (CHAIL) in Peoria. She oversees Kiefer School and the Academy for Autism. For two decades, she’s remained committed and dedicated to students and staff helping them to thrive in the face of adversity. “Kids have a future that is worth fighting for,” said Taylor. “I think the impact that we have is seen when kids begin to thrive after they’ve been here with us but the impact is something that will last for decades.”

* Smile Politely | Red beans, guitar strings, and the gospel according to Buddy Guy: I talked to Buddy Guy ahead of his upcoming June 24th show at Champaign’s Virginia Theatre. Yes, the Buddy Guy. I’m still pinching myself. He answered the phone with the weathered cadence of someone who’s outlasted nearly everyone who taught him how to bend a note until it bled. We talked about red beans and rice, Muddy Waters, and a shared love of Chicago — his adopted city, where the spirit of the Blues still lingers in the air outside Buddy Guy’s Legends on Wabash Avenue. On certain nights, you can still find him there, not headlining but sitting in, guitar in hand, making room for someone younger who knows just enough to listen.

*** National ***

* Business Today | ‘700 Indian engineers posed as AI’: The London startup that took Microsoft for a ride: The company marketed its platform as being driven by an AI assistant named “Natasha,” which could supposedly assemble software applications like Lego bricks. But recent reports and commentary have revealed that behind the scenes, customer requests were manually fulfilled by developers, not machines. Commenting on the unraveling, Ebern Finance founder Bernhard Engelbrecht described it in a widely circulated post on X: “Customer requests were sent to the Indian office, where 700 Indians wrote code instead of AI,” adding that the end products were often buggy, dysfunctional, and difficult to maintain. “Everything was like real artificial intelligence — except that none of it was.”

* NYT | From No Hope to a Potential Cure for a Deadly Blood Cancer: Multiple myeloma is considered incurable, but a third of patients in a Johnson & Johnson clinical trial have lived without detectable cancer for years after facing certain death.

  10 Comments      


Bears, White Sox should take note of Chicago Fire stadium plan

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Important news, if it happens. Crain’s

Chicago Fire FC owner Joe Mansueto has reached a deal to buy property in the South Loop for a $650 million, 22,000-seat soccer stadium that stands to become a new sports and entertainment hub in the heart of the city and jump-start developer Related Midwest’s megaproject known as The 78.

Forging ahead with his vision for a privately financed Major League Soccer venue in the city’s urban core, the billionaire Morningstar founder confirmed he is under contract to buy nearly 10 acres of vacant land south of Roosevelt Road between Clark Street and the Chicago River. Pending City Council approval, Mansueto aims to break ground on the stadium by early next year with the goal of the Fire beginning to play there in 2028.

Under the agreement between Mansueto and Related Midwest, the Fire would build the open-air venue while the developer moves forward with complementary buildings around it, leveraging the stadium as an anchor for a sprawling 62-acre development Related has been trying to launch since City Hall approved it in 2019.

* Lots of work to do before this becomes a reality. Sun-Times

Mansueto’s willingness to bankroll stadium construction makes him an outlier among Chicago sports moguls who in the past have routinely looked for public handouts and property tax breaks.

Still, a formidable city subsidy would be needed to cover major infrastructure costs at the long dormant site.

A new road built by the Chicago Department of Transportation, the Wells-Wentworth connector, already runs through the 62-acre site even though it has never been used.

The nine-acre stadium site also has mass transit access — the nearby Roosevelt station serves the CTA’s Red, Green and Orange lines — that could reduce the need for stadium parking. With the Chicago River just west of the site, there’s also the possibility of water taxi service for game-day crowds.

But there are railroad tracks that need to be relocated and a crumbling seawall that needs to be rebuilt. Water, sewer and power lines need to be installed, and parking garages and surface lots need to be built. So does the last leg of the Riverwalk between Lake Street and Ida B. Wells Drive that had an initial price tag of $140 million.

* Tribune

Designed by architectural firm Gensler, the proposed 22,000-seat, open-air soccer stadium would be located at the north end of the long-fallow development. It would feature a natural grass pitch, an array of seating — including club options and luxury suites — and an intimate setting for fans to cheer the Fire on match days.

The new stadium is scheduled to break ground as early as this fall, pending approval from the city, with a target completion date ahead of the 2028 MLS regular season. The Fire currently play at a rarely filled Soldier Field on a newly signed three-year lease extension.

If the Bears and White Sox can’t afford to do this stuff on their own, the owners should sell their teams to people who can.

* Meanwhile, Crain’s takes a non-clickbait approach to what happened to the Bears during the spring session

The so-called megadevelopment legislation would allow eligible developers — defined in one bill as those investing at least $500 million, with signed labor peace agreements and that stay in operation for at least 20 years — to have their property tax frozen for decades, even as the property value rises as the project takes root.

The developer would then negotiate with the local taxing bodies, including municipalities and school districts, on an annual payment in lieu of taxes, or PILOT, which would likely be significantly less than a regular bill due to the frozen property tax rate. […]

Negotiations over how many years the tax break would last, whether to make the annual payments tied to inflation, and ensuring school districts are front and center of the talks will continue in the coming months.

But no amendment aiding the team this past weekend was going to sneak by those in the Chicago delegation wary of any vote that has them opening the exit door.

  18 Comments      


Mayor Johnson on transit funding, grocery tax

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* At a press availability this morning, Mayor Brandon Johnson was asked about the General Assembly’s failure to pass transit legislation

Reporter: Are you concerned that this could lead to widespread shutdowns of the CTA bus and rail lines? And are you concerned about what this will mean to Chicagoans who rely on the CTA to get to work and school?

Johnson: This has been an effort that has been going on for some time, and our position in Chicago—the position that I’ve stated—is very clear. With ridership continuing to go up—300 million riders just last year alone, between our buses and trains. To your question, there is absolute need for reliable, affordable, expansive services to our public transportation system.

Here, the Red Line expansion is something that we’ve been working to secure for decades now. We have that extending well out 130th. Look, I know that this is a complex issue. I have expressed, with a tremendous amount of urgency, that we have to continue to make sure that all of our stakeholders are at the table.

This is obviously a statewide effort, initiative, to make sure that public transportation works for the entire state. Our region comprises of 87 percent of the overall economic infusion for the state. So what happens in this next phase—and I’m encouraged by some of the work that has gone forward—but what happens in this next phase, you have to ensure that the resources are there to give more confidence that as we continue to build a safe, affordable city, that the public way can be moved with expediency, with a properly funded transportation system.

So again, I know it got through the Senate. There’ve been some hang-ups in some particular areas, but I’m going to always remain hopeful and confident that we can get a deal done that works for the people of Chicago.

Reporter: Do you favor that deal, including a surcharge on Uber rides or deliveries? That seemed to be sort of where things fell apart this weekend.

Johnson: I think the conversation around revenue and how we pay for it is something that has to be a broader conversation outside of the one that’s being discussed. The real big issue that we have in this country, that’s happening right here in the state of Illinois as well, is that… You all know my position: the ultra-rich continue to get away with not having to put more skin in the game. So we do have to have substantive conversations around revenue streams that challenge the rich in this state to step up in a way that does not continue to place the burden on working people.

Reporter: What urgency would you like to send to CTA riders and lawmakers alike about the transit cliff? Like, do you want to reassure people the sky isn’t falling just yet? Or turn up the heat and say people need to take this more seriously?

Johnson: First of all, let me just say that there are a number of legislators that we’ve been in conversations with for several months. I do know that they take this seriously. What has happened is that you just have had a long-standing system that took too long, quite frankly, to put a more sustainable funding source in place to secure all of our public accommodations, right?

This is not something that’s exclusive to CTA. This is a conversation we can have about our Chicago Public Schools, about our public health. It’s all of the public accommodations that, quite frankly, have been coming—have been coming increasingly more relied upon across the board. And these services are critical. So obviously, urgency is still the position that I have.

And this budget was austere. There are budgetary challenges all over the country, and we’re faced with that because we do have a great deal of uncertainty—quite frankly, animosity—that’s coming from the federal government. Those are all complicated matters that have made this effort a bit more challenging. And yes, we have to get this right, and we have to do it with some expediency.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* Later, Johnson was asked again about revenue ideas for transit

Reporter: And on the budget, where do you stand on some of the ideas that were proposed but kind of failed to fund mass transit—being the surcharge on tolls coming in, the delivery tax, the ride share tax. Are you in support of all those?

Johnson: Here’s what I’m most supportive of: I know that there are more people in the state of Illinois that can do more to contribute to the overall economic growth of our state. And these are individuals that have done exceptionally well. And I know there’s been some conversations about a millionaire’s tax and other forms of progressive taxation that challenge the ultra-rich to pay their fair share.

As far as some of these other ideas that don’t get at what I want us to get at, which is to challenge the ultra-wealthy in this state to pay more, I have not taken a firm position. And I just think that it’s important that, you know, we come up with solutions that are sustainable and that they don’t overwhelm the pocketbooks of working people.

* On the grocery tax

Reporter: Where do you stand on Chicago enacting its own grocery tax when it goes away from the state?

Johnson: Well, the city of Chicago will not enact its own grocery tax. The grocery tax already exists. There is a process in which the collection of the grocery tax is now being placed in the responsibility of municipalities, right? So it was a function that the state of Illinois decided to relinquish and leave it to the cities to collect the tax.

So we’re not creating a grocery tax—we’re just creating a process by which we can collect it. There’s like 202 municipalities that are already doing it.

So, the grocery tax stays.

  12 Comments      


Constellation signs deal with Meta to expand Clinton nuclear plant

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release

Constellation and Meta have signed a 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA) for the output of the Clinton Clean Energy Center to support Meta’s clean energy goals and operations in the region with 1,121 megawatts of emissions-free nuclear energy. Beginning in June of 2027, the agreement supports the relicensing and continued operations of Constellation’s high-performing Clinton nuclear facility for another two decades after the state’s ratepayer funded zero emission credit (ZEC) program expires. This deal will expand Clinton’s clean energy output by 30 megawatts through plant uprates; preserve 1,100 high-paying local jobs; deliver $13.5 million in annual tax revenue; and add $1 million in charitable giving to local nonprofits over five years. […]

The Clinton Clean Energy Center was slated for premature closure in 2017 after years of financial losses, despite being one of the best performing nuclear plants in Illinois. Clinton’s retirement was prevented by enactment of the Future Energy Jobs Act, which established a Zero Emission Credit program that provides financial support to the plant through mid-2027. Constellation’s agreement with Meta is a market-based solution that essentially replaces the ZEC program and ensures long-term operations of the plant without ratepayer support. The PPA will enable the Clinton Clean Energy Center to continue to flow power onto the local grid, providing grid reliability and low-cost power to the region for decades to come. Meta is purchasing the plant’s clean energy attributes as part of its commitment to match 100% of its electricity use with clean and renewable energy.

The Clinton Clean Energy Center’s economic and environmental impacts are significant. The Center directly employs over 530 people, contributes approximately $13.5 million in annual taxes, and generates enough carbon-free electricity to power over 800,000 homes. An analysis by The Brattle Group found that shuttering Clinton would raise emissions by more than 34 million metric tons of carbon over 20 years, the equivalent to putting approximately 7.4 million gasoline-powered cars on the road for a year. The same report found that Illinois’ GDP would drop by $765 million annually, impacting businesses and jobs across multiple industries. Constellation’s deal with Meta prevents these impacts.

…Adding… FERC shot down the last attempt to do this

On 1 November 2024, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) rejected amendments to an interconnection agreement that would have increased the Susquehanna nuclear power plant’s capacity dedicated to serving an on-site data center. Three commissioners participated in the decision. The order, written by Republicans Mark Christie and Lindsay See, concluded that the grid operator failed to meet the high burden of proving the necessity of the amendments. Democratic Chairman Willie Phillips dissented, arguing that the co-located load configuration presented exactly the reliability and legal issues that justified the need for the amendments. The remaining two Democratic commissioners, David Rosner and Judy Chang, did not participate in the decision.

* Meanwhile, the Sun-Times took a look at why the omnibus energy bill failed to pass this spring

Sen. Bill Cunningham, a Democrat who represents the Southwest Side and surrounding suburbs, said he hopes to try again to pass a bill when the Legislature meets for the fall veto session.

“We are very close to an agreement,” Cunningham said.

Phillip Golden, chairman of Illinois Industrial Energy Consumers, suggests the state look at how Texas is funding renewable energy and battery storage with a mix of financial tools that don’t require ratepayers to foot the bill. His organization represents 20 of the state’s biggest power users, he said.

Jim Watson, a former state lawmaker who heads the Illinois branch of the American Petroleum Institute, also cited Texas as a potential model for Illinois. While his members want relief from the rising electric bills, “I think the pause was reasonable,” he said, referring to the decision to not push the bill toward a vote.

Lots more, so click here.

  12 Comments      


Musical interlude

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Mac Hoffmann performs “The Fall of the Velvet Hammer”

Lyrics and background are here.

  3 Comments      


US Supreme Court will decide standing in Bost vote by mail lawsuit

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* CBS News…

The Supreme Court said Monday that it will consider whether to revive a Republican congressman’s challenge to an Illinois law that allows mail-in ballots to be received and counted up to 14 days after Election Day.

The dispute involving GOP Rep. Michael Bost will be heard by the Supreme Court in its next term, which begins in October, with a decision expected by the end of June 2026. The question in the case is a procedural one: Whether Bost and two Republican presidential electors have the legal right to challenge state regulations concerning the time, place and manner of federal elections.

* From the US Supreme Court on Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections

Federal law sets the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November as the federal Election Day. Several states, including Illinois, have enacted state laws that allow ballots to be received and counted after Election Day. Petitioners contend these state laws are preempted under the Elections and Electors Clauses. Petitioners sued to enjoin Illinois’ law allowing ballots to be received up to fourteen days after Election Day.

The sole question presented here is whether Petitioners, as federal candidates, have pleaded sufficient factual allegations to show Article III standing to challenge state time, place, and manner regulations concerning their federal elections.

* A conflict exists on standing between two circuits. From Election Law Blog

The Seventh Circuit found no standing. It’s in contrast to the Fifth Circuit, which had found standing on a related issue. Of course, the underlying issue of receiving absentee ballots is a merits question that the Court will assiduously avoid, but one that could tee up the dispute later.

* Tribune

In the Illinois case, both the U.S. District Court and the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago ruled Bost and two presidential electors lacked legal standing when they challenged the law in May 2022. The courts did not decide on the merits of the case regarding the legality of post-Election Day ballot counting.

But in dismissing the lawsuit in July 2023, U.S. District Judge John Kness also wrote that he thought Illinois’ 2015 law complied with the U.S. Constitution as well as federal election law and does “not conflict with the federal mandate that Election Day be held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November.”

“By counting only mail-in ballots postmarked on or before Election Day, the statute does not extend the day for casting votes in a federal election,” Kness, a Trump appointee, wrote.

In a 2-1 decision in August of last year, a three-judge panel of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the lower court’s dismissal due to lack of standing.

* From the district court judge’s ruling

As explained more fully below, because Plaintiffs fail to plead sufficiently concrete, particularized, and imminent injuries sufficient to meet the requirement of standing under Article III of the United States Constitution, the Court lacks the power to hear this case. And even if standing existed, the Eleventh Amendment serves as an independent bar to this suit. In any event, Plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that the Ballot Receipt Deadline Statute conflicts with federal law. As a result, and on the motion of Defendants, the case is dismissed without prejudice.

  31 Comments      


Today’s must-read

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Talia Soglin and Jeremy Gorner at the Chicago Tribune

For months, Chicagoland’s transit agencies have sounded an alarm: If lawmakers don’t plug a looming $771 million budget gap, they warned, residents will experience drastic service cuts on the CTA, Metra and Pace next year.

Over the weekend, Illinois lawmakers adjourned their spring legislative session without passing legislation that would avert the fiscal cliff.

The Regional Transportation Authority, which oversees CTA, Metra and Pace, has warned that it will have to start planning for dramatic cuts to transit service. […]

Here’s what Chicagoans need to know about the future of transit service in the metro area.

What follows is a sober, calm, fact-based story about what’s about to happen. It’s most definitely worth a full read.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Joan Jett & The Blackhearts

What’s happening by you?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to yesterday’s edition

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois Budget Doubles Child Tax Credit in Major Win for Working Families. Economic Security Project

Economic Security Illinois (ESIL) applauds the Illinois General Assembly for passing a state budget that includes a historic doubling of the Illinois Child Tax Credit, delivering meaningful relief to working families amidst an affordability crisis. Eligible families with children under 12 will now receive $600 per child on top of their federal credits.

“In a challenging fiscal climate, this budget includes victories that will make a real difference for Illinois families,” said Sarah Saheb, Director of Economic Security Illinois. “Doubling the Child Tax Credit means hundreds more dollars back in parents’ pockets to cover everyday costs like groceries, rent, and childcare.”

Following a robust, multi-year advocacy campaign from ESIL and its partners, the state’s first-ever Child Tax Credit was created in last year’s state budget. This year’s budget doubles the credit to 40% of the state Earned Income Tax Credit, meaning eligible families will now receive $600 per child. Families at or below median income with at least one child under 12 are eligible for the program. As working families continue to struggle with rising costs, the CTC will put even more money back in their pockets.

* At 11:30 am Governor Pritzker will deliver brief remarks at the Chicago Chamber of Commerce annual meeting.

* Chicago City Council Black Caucus members Ald. Lamont Robinson (4), Ald. Demon Yancy (5), Ald. Matt Martin (47), Illinois House Black Caucus member State Rep. Maurice West, Illinois Senate Black Caucus members State Sen. Adriane Johnson, State Sen. Christopher Belt, State Sen. Doris Turner, and former State Sen. Donne Trotter and Pastor Dr. Byron Brazier endorsed Sen. Robert Peters for Congress in Illinois’ 2nd District on Tuesday.

* Another contender emerges for the 8th Congressional District…

Junaid Ahmed is joining the race to replace Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi in the 8th Congressional District. He’s entering the race as the likely frontrunner thanks to his built-in name ID in the district. Ahmed ran against Krishnamoorthi in 2022 and garnered nearly 30% of the vote, a notable achievement against the well-known incumbent. Ahmed’s campaign demonstrated significant grassroots support and the ability to organize to turn out the vote. He’s looking forward to building on that progress as he talks to voters across the district and outlines his plans to stand up to Donald Trump.

Progressive community leader and small-business owner Junaid Ahmed will formally launch his campaign for the Democratic nomination in Illinois’ 8th Congressional District during a kickoff event where he will outline his platform and priorities for the working families of the 8th district.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | Lawmakers OK new perks for manufacturers that stick with Illinois: After adding incentives aimed at attracting new manufacturers in recent years, state legislators approved new tax credits to help existing companies. Legislation passed over the weekend allows the Illinois Department of Commerce & Economic Opportunity to offer a tax credit of 3% to 7% for manufacturers who invest at least $10 million in upgrading or expanding their facilities.

* Tribune | Illinois legislators left Springfield without funding public transit (for now). Here’s what that means for CTA, Metra, Pace: Still, service cuts are not slated to start until COVID-19 relief funding runs out in January, or even later into next year. That means there is still time for lawmakers to go back to Springfield to take another stab at passing legislation that would plug the budget gap. However, any legislation passed after May 31 that would take effect before June 2026 requires — per the state’s constitution — a three-fifths majority in both chambers rather than a simple majority. That makes lawmakers’ task harder.

* Sun-Times | Illinois bill to push renewable energy dies after businesses balk: Lawmakers spent months crafting legislation that they hoped would spur development of new wind and solar power as well as large batteries to store the energy. The state is facing a potential shortage of power in the future as big data centers being built are expected to use enormous amounts of electricity. ComEd customers are paying higher rates because of power demand nationwide. The average customer with a $100 electric bill is going to see a jump of almost 11% when July bills arrive.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Amid challenge from banks, Illinois legislators move to delay ban on certain credit card fees: A measure passed by legislators and signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker last year would prevent banks and credit card companies from charging retailers a small fee on sales taxes and tips. Pritzker still has to sign off on the legislature’s move to extend the deadline to July 1, 2026. Pritzker on Sunday said that while the delay wasn’t his initiative, he anticipated the interchange fee issue “will probably get resolved over the next year” as it is currently with the courts.

* Hm

* WAND | Pharmacies get lifeline vs PBMs: PBMs are the middlemen between insurance companies and pharmacies. Pharmacies have claimed PBMs are keeping prescription drug prices high while driving smaller pharmacies out of business. “There have been independent pharmacies hanging on by a thread for the last couple of years,” Lauren Young of Dale’s Southlake Pharmacy in Decatur told WAND News. “Over 80 pharmacies closed across the state of Illinois last year alone, including one of our pharmacies.”

* WICS | Democrats celebrate passage of new state budget while Republicans slam budget process: While Democrats are celebrating the approval of a new state budget plan before May 31st’s midnight deadline, Republicans say a lack of transparency over the budget process is doing a disservice to all Illinois residents. The $55.2 billion spending plan is the largest in state history and relies on a revenue omnibus bill to fund.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | ICE detains two in Pilsen without warrants, Ald. Sigcho-Lopez says: In a social media post Monday afternoon, the 25th Ward office said one person was detained inside a business and another inside a home in the 1800 block of South Carpenter Street about 8:30 a.m. “With the footage submitted to our office, it was apparent no warrant was provided for either of the arrests,” the statement said. “We are calling for a full investigation that brings great concern to our community with these trends happening across the country.”

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s photographer fired after allegedly bringing gun on city property: Terence Crayton was found to have violated City Hall policy by bringing a gun “on to City of Chicago property and in a City of Chicago vehicle” in April, according to a copy of his personnel records obtained via a public records request. He was terminated April 24, the same day his co-workers reported him. Crayton’s boss, communications director Erin Connelly, wrote in an April 29 memo that two of her staffers alerted her about the firearm and after that, a third employee reported that Crayton had mentioned carrying a firearm to previous mayoral events “at his own personal discretion.” That employee said they reported Crayton to his former boss, Ronnie Reese, but Reese “did not report the incident or issue any report or disciplinary action,” per Connelly’s note.

* NBC Chicago | ‘Doomsday’ scenario possible, experts warn, as Illinois transit reform stalls: “The doomsday is very real,” said transportation expert Joe Schwieterman with DePaul University. “The numbers speak for themselves. Without that funding, we are looking at 30-40% cuts”

* Tribune | Chicago Fire plan to build $650M soccer stadium at The 78 in South Loop: After nearly a decade of big swings and misses, including a recent failed bid to build a new White Sox ballpark, The 78 and developer Related Midwest may have finally found an anchor tenant to kick-start the proposed mixed-use megadevelopment in the South Loop. The Chicago Fire announced plans Tuesday for a privately financed $650 million soccer stadium at the mostly vacant 62-acre site along the Chicago River at Roosevelt Road, giving the team a “world-class home,” and potentially turning the former rail yard into a bustling South Side Wrigleyville.

* Block Club | CTA Launches Annual ‘Pride Train’ To Run On Red Line Through June: With “Ride with pride!” emblazoned on its side, the train features a design with vertical splashes of color along the entire length of the eight-car train. Its design not only features the colors of the classic pride flag, but also includes black and brown and the trio of colors found on the transgender pride flag. The black and brown stripes traditionally represent queer people of color, and the black stripe also represents those who died during the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* NBC Chicago | Construction begins on pipeline to bring Lake Michigan water to SW suburbs: The GPWC formed after the Illinois State Water Survey determined the suburbs’ current water source, a nearly century-old aquifer, is quickly depleting and by 2030, will no longer be able to meet demand. “Initially, this will serve about 250,000 residents, and it can expand up to about half a million,” said Clarence DeBold, the chairman of the GPWC and the mayor of Shorewood.

* Daily Herald | A new data center off I-88? Naperville officials leery of potential development: The developer of a potential data center in Naperville will reimburse the city for the costs of a study about its electricity demands. Naperville’s electric utility has decided to contract with ICF Resources to conduct a “network interconnection study” related to the possibility of a data center being built along the I-88 corridor. All costs associated with the study will be billed to the developer. Mayor Scott Wehrli made the future of the I-88 corridor a focal point of his State of the City address last month, calling it “the largest and most significant redevelopment opportunity in our city’s history.”

* Daily Herald | What’s next for Bears after legislature punts on stadium assistance?: [Sen. Mark Walker] said the parties are “fairly close conceptually on what a deal could be,” but no bill will pass without buy-in from the General Assembly’s Chicago delegation. Suggestions in the past have included a stadium ticket tax to pay off Chicago’s debt from the 2002 renovation of Soldier Field. “That’s always been part of the assumption that if there was a deal in Arlington Heights, there would have to be some kind of agreement with Chicago to get the votes,” Walker said

* Daily Herald | After decades of complaints, Mount Prospect is looking at ways to slow drivers in popular cut-through route: Mount Prospect is wrapping up a three-week trial of traffic-calming measures designed to address nearly three decades of resident complaints along a popular cut-through route. The complaints range from drivers ignoring “no through-traffic” signs to motorists flouting the 25 mph speed limit.

* Daily Herald | Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias visits West Northfield middle school: Approximately 340 students in sixth to eighth grade gathered for a special assembly with Giannoulias, who shared insights about his role in state government, his personal journey, and the importance of leadership at all stages of life. During his visit, Giannoulias spoke about the responsibilities of the Secretary of State’s Office and emphasized the values of gratitude, civic engagement, and giving back to one’s community. The assembly concluded with a lively Q&A session, where students asked thoughtful and wide-ranging questions, demonstrating their curiosity and enthusiasm for public service.

*** Downstate ***

* NYT | A Peach and Apple Farmer’s Uphill Quest to Feed Poor Families, and His Own: On a chilly morning in April, Austin Flamm strode through grassy lanes fringed with delicate peach and apple blossoms. Mr. Flamm, 29, and his cousin Parker, 28, are the sixth generation of their family to produce fruit and vegetables on an Illinois farm that in 2024 gave them the best profits they have had since they joined the operation. The gains were largely because Flamm Orchards had joined a program, IL-EATS, funded by the Biden-era Agriculture Department, that bought and distributed local produce to the poor. Mr. Flamm’s skepticism of government programs made him wary of IL-EATS at first. But he changed his mind when he saw the prices he was offered for his cauliflower, broccoli and other vegetables.

* WGLT | Homeless encampment residents in Normal continue to relocate after planned deadline: A tent encampment near AutoZone in Normal was set to disperse Sunday due to a coming construction project, but a few residents still remain. Some of the encampment residents have been placed into housing, with most relocating to other encampments in town, according to Kim Massey with God’s Mission Ministry.

* Pantagraph | Illinois to raze and redevelop some state-owned properties, including in Lincoln and Dwight: In total, $300 million in capital funds have been set aside toward remediation efforts and ultimately razing dilapidated structures at five state-owned sites, including the former Lincoln Developmental Center and the former Dwight Correctional Center.

* Smile Politely | Rep. Carol Ammons discusses protecting the Mahomet Aquifer from carbon capture: The bill to protect the Mahomet Aquifer, though steadfast in its protections of the aquifer itself, has undergone changes that some, including Rep. Ammons, has expressed disappointment with. These revisions, made to appeal to those in opposition to the bill (including energy labor unions), include the removal of recharge zones under its protection. However, according to Senator Faraci, this is also due in part to lack of clarity as to exactly where these recharge zones are. Furthermore, the bill now calls for a five-year study led by the Prairie Research Institute to assess the risks of carbon storage within the footprint of the aquifer as well as the boundaries of its recharge zones.

* WAND | Ameren price hikes means 20% increase in power bills: “Ameren’s electricity price went up by 50% … that’s going to cost customers about 18 to 22% in higher electric bills this summer,” said Jim Chilsen, spokesperson for CUB. “Ameren has estimated that that would cost a typical residential customer about $38 to $46 per month during the four month summer season, which is June through September, so that’s about 150 to $180 total over the summer.”

*** National ***

* WaPo | Red states tell colleges: Race and gender classes are out, civics in: Lawmakers in conservative states are taking more control over what is taught and required at public colleges and universities, an effort that some faculty say threatens the foundation of higher education and academic freedom. New laws in Ohio, Utah and Florida are reshaping general education, the core classes college students take to meet graduation requirements. The laws mandate that students take civics courses focused on Western civilization and bar classes centered on race or gender from counting toward core requirements.

* NYT | F.T.C. Investigates Ad Groups and Watchdogs, Alleging Boycott Collusion: The Federal Trade Commission is investigating whether roughly a dozen prominent advertising and advocacy groups violated antitrust law by coordinating boycotts among advertisers that did not want their brands to appear alongside hateful online content, four people familiar with the inquiries said. The inquiries include the agency’s previously reported investigation of Media Matters, a liberal advocacy organization that has published research on hateful and antisemitic content on X, the social media company owned by Elon Musk.

* Huffpost | Republicans Big Mad At Elon Musk For Telling The Truth About The Big Beautiful Bill: Rep. Darin LaHood (R-Ill.) said Monday that Musk, who complained the bill increases the budget deficit, doesn’t know what he’s talking about. “I would disagree with Elon in the sense that he doesn’t understand how the tax bill works,” LaHood said on CNBC. “This is going to be rocket fuel for the economy.”

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jun 3, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Jun 3, 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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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Bears, White Sox should take note of Chicago Fire stadium plan
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* Today's must-read
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* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to yesterday’s edition
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