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Tribune editorial board uses memory of crime victim to make a faulty both-sides argument

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for the background. WCIA in May

During Kristi Noem’s visit to Springfield on Wednesday, she spoke in front of the former residence of Emma Shafer.

Shafer, 24, was found stabbed to death in her apartment in 2023. Her ex-boyfriend, Gabriel Calixto-Pichardo, is accused of killing her. Police are still looking for him.

Shafer’s death rocked the city. She was a pillar of the activist community, and had organized for several different causes, including immigrant rights.

On Wednesday, Noem speculated about Shafer’s case and used her death as a political talking point, and not only without her family’s consent, but while Shafer’s mother was actively protesting Noem’s trip to Springfield.

Shafer’s family members released this statement after Noem’s speech…

My daughter Emma radiated love and light everywhere she went and for all people. Even as a child, she was a friend to everyone and someone who spoke up for the less fortunate. She dedicated her life – her career and her free time – to causes of social justice and equity. That was just who she was.

To see her used by Secretary Noem and others to advance a cruel and heartless political agenda is not just deeply painful to us – it is an insult to her memory. Noem’s words are in direct conflict with who Emma was as a person. Emma built up community and stood with all members, including immigrants.

No parent should have to experience the loss of a child. But every time her name is brought into these conversations – conversations she would have wanted nothing to do with – we have to relive the pain of her death.

Secretary Noem, as a mother still grieving the loss of a child, I beg you to stop. This is not who she was. This is not helping us. Her memory should live in all the people she touched and the causes that she fought for. And I ask all of you to remember Emma as she was. And to live your life as she did: with courageous empathy and love for all.

The Sangamon County State’s Attorney’s Office, Springfield Police Department and the U.S. Marshal’s Service jointly announced late last month that Calixto was apprehended in Mexico.

* Today, the Tribune Editorial Board used Emma Shafer’s memory to take a weird swipe at the governor

For Pritzker, who is eyeing a White House run, Noem’s charged narrative gave him an opportunity to present himself as an antidote to the Trump administration’s excesses.

Yet Pritzker, too, has gone way too far. His recent rhetoric personally insulting the president does not serve the state’s interests. And his comments about how Chicago and Illinois don’t need federal help to fight crime were always ill-advised, as this page warned. Pritzker’s comments ran into a hail of bullets over Labor Day, with nine killed and 52 wounded in the city’s most violent weekend of the summer.

Contrary to Pritzker’s wishful thinking, Chicago and Illinois most certainly do need robust cooperation between local, state and federal authorities to stop violent crime — and bring dangerous criminals such as Shafer’s killer to justice. The fact that state and local authorities worked together with federal marshals to make progress in the Shafer case is an example of the good results that can happen when law enforcement professionals tune out hotheaded pols and do their jobs.

* Here is the governor during a press conference last week

Pritzker: I refuse to play a reality game show with Donald Trump again. What I want are the federal dollars that have been promised to Illinois and Chicago for violence prevention programs that have proven to work. That is money that Illinois taxpayers send to the federal government, and it’s an insult to any and every citizen to suggest that any governor should have to beg the president of any political party for resources owed their people. I’d like to ask a question of my own, and it’s one the press should be asking as well. When did we become a country where it’s okay for a US president to insist on national television that a state should call him to beg for anything, especially something we don’t want.

* Pritzker met with members from community violence intervention organizations last week. Press release

Studies indicate that CVI programs are remarkably effective in preventing violent crime and making neighborhoods safer. President Trump froze $158 million for violence prevention programs and rescinded more than $800 million in anti-violence and crime reduction grants nationwide.

Illinois has a number of CVI programs and partners with a clear track record of success. The Peacekeepers program sends trained community members out to de-escalate and mitigate conflicts in the most violent hotspots in the city. Those interventions were found to have decreased shootings 41% in program areas, with a 31% decrease in the surrounding community. ​

Since taking office, Governor Pritzker has worked to address the root causes of violence through evidence-based policy. The Reimagine Public Safety Act (RPSA) has invested $250 million in trauma-informed, evidence-based programs to reduce gun violence. He has also invested historic amounts in law enforcement – Illinois ranks 6th in the nation and 1st in the Midwest for per-capita police spending, well above the national average. ​ ​

Those strategies have proved effective, as crime in Chicago has dropped significantly – despite President Trump’s false claims to the contrary. Murders are down more than 30% in the past year and cut in half since 2021. Robberies are down 33% from 2024 and 37% since 2023. Shootings, burglaries, and motor vehicle thefts are all similarly down in the last year.

* August 29

Pritzker: I also want to be clear that if [the federal government] would talk to me, they would hear that the business people in the city of Chicago for example, and maybe President Trump would listen to that. What they want is for us to interrupt violence. They want us to use violence interruption tactics. And organizations that are very effective, like Chicago CRED for example, the work they do in the communities has brought down crime by 73 percent in the toughest neighborhoods across the city of Chicago.

That’s what works. And you know what President Trump did in the face of that? He cut funding for those programs from the federal government. That doesn’t help us fight crime. He’s defunding police. He’s defunding our efforts to fight crime at so that he can send troops into the city of Chicago. For one reason, I want everybody to pay attention. What the reason is? It’s about the elections in 2026 and about interrupting our ability to have a fair and free election in 2026 we’re not the only targeted city. He’s talked about lots of other cities. We’re just the first one outside of Washington DC where he has federal control. We’re the first one that he wants to invade, and it’s for that purpose. And not about fighting crime.

* August 28

Pritzker: I’ve done that as governor, but we should absolutely be promoting more police hiring in cities like Chicago and all across the state. He ought not be taking money away from violence prevention programs that the federal government had been funding, but now they’re taking that money away. And by the way, why are they doing that? Why is he defunding the police? Because he wants to give major tax breaks to the wealthiest people in this country. It’s not right. He needs to be called out on it. I’m doing that. I hope more people will as well.

* August 27

Pritzker: I want to point out the state of Illinois is 19th best among the 50 states in terms of violent crime. In other words, we’re in the best half of all the states in terms of violent crime. We’ve been working very hard to make that happen, and the city of Chicago isn’t even in the top 25 major cities with high crime rates, because we’ve worked to bring it down, we got more work to do. Every death is a tragedy. Every crime that’s committed is a tragedy, and we need to protect our families and help the victims of violent crime, but Donald Trump has defunded the programs that would help us most to make sure that we’re interrupting violence and also providing the kind of coordination between federal law enforcement and state law enforcement the resources that are necessary for doing that. That’s a real shame, and it’s Donald Trump that is defunding the police. It is not the state of Illinois. It’s not the city of Chicago. It’s Donald Trump doing that.

* August 23


  17 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Rockford’s WTVO

A new, temporary security fence erected around the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois on Friday has drawn attention amid reports that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents are deploying soon to the Chicago area. […]

In a statement to Eyewitness News, a spokesperson for the U.S. District Court Northern District of Illinois said that temporary fencing has been installed near the Stanley J. Roszkowski Courthouse to help those who need to access the courthouse to do so safely.

“The Courthouse remains open and accessible. The District Court Clerk’s Office will be open during normal business hours, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, and in-person proceedings will continue as scheduled by the assigned judge. In Rockford, the designated Freedom of Speech and Expression area is the public space located at the corner of South Church and Cedar Streets. The General Services Administration maintains this area and may require special permitting.

  7 Comments      


Two takes on Wheaton

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Daily Herald

At least 250 people protesting on the streets of Wheaton Saturday made one message clear — they don’t want immigration agents arresting people in their hometown.

Standing along sidewalks in front of a Jewel-Osco store at Main Street and Geneva Road, they held signs, rang bells, drummed and chanted.

“ICE out of Wheaton! We are all Wheaton,” cried Cristobal Cavazos of Casa DuPage Workers Center, rallying the crowd of mostly white, middle-aged and older people, which was the point. “He (President Donald Trump) did not take into account his base of older, white Americans would fight back.” […]

Organizers of the Wheaton protest chose the Jewel-Osco site because an immigrant man was arrested in the store’s parking lot Aug. 1.

* Illinois Republican State Central Committeeperson Jeanne Ives, who lives in Wheaton…

THESE PEOPLE HAVE LOST THEIR MINDS!

First, Wheaton is not a hotspot for illegals to reside. Even though we are the home of World Relief, that organization brings in bona fide refugees who have been vetted. Yes, Wheaton has several progressive Christian organizations that have bought into the “No one is Illegal” mantra, but there is not a lot of low-income housing or jobs available in the city.

Second, Wheaton is one of the safest cities in Illinois precisely because our laws are enforced. These ingrates don’t appreciate that they are literally demanding that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement not enforce our national laws. It’s either that, or they think ICE is wrongly enforcing the laws. Which is it, organizers?

And what exactly does “Harm to One is Harm to All” mean? Maybe the organizers should ask if the harm – murder of Katie Abraham and her friend Chloe Polzin – by an illegal alien in Champaign means harm to all. Why aren’t they focused on that? Or the harm illegals do by just simply flaunting our laws and expecting us to pick up the tab for everything.

This particular rally in Wheaton, though, is just trying to get the Democrats riled up in the suburbs for political gain. They are looking to piggyback on all the attention Chicago is receiving about the threat of heightened ICE enforcement and possibly the National Guard coming to patrol the streets of the City.

Ms. Ives is widely rumored to be on the short-list of potential running mates for Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski.

  33 Comments      


Two more Republican-filed Enrolled Bill Doctrine lawsuits fail

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

I’m coming a bit late to this (national current events having overtaken everything), but a lawsuit filed by House and Senate Republicans was recently tossed out by Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge Jack Davis, II. The suit sought to strike down a new law — Senate Bill 328 — backed by trial lawyers. The Republicans say they will appeal.

The Republican lawsuit claimed that the majority Democrats had violated the Illinois Constitution’s “three readings rule.”

The titles of bills are required to be read aloud on three separate session days in each chamber. In the state’s early days, the entire bills had to be read aloud apparently because so many legislators were illiterate.

Often, though, bills that have already passed one chamber are gutted and replaced with amendments by different legislation, usually after the bills have been moved in the second chamber to third reading. The final bills can then be passed by both chambers in a single day without committee hearings because their titles had already been read three times in each body. And as long as both legislative leaders certify that the bills complied with procedural requirements, known as the “Enrolled Bill Doctrine,” the legislation is considered constitutionally passed.

“This special interest proposal was passed by the Democratic majority using a shady process that clearly violates the substance and spirit of the Illinois Constitution,” said Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran when he and others filed the suit in June.

The Republicans noted in their lawsuit that even though the Illinois Supreme Court had shot down other lawsuits attempting to kill legislation based on alleged violations of the Enrolled Bill Doctrine, justices on the state’s top court had sternly warned the legislature in 1992 that their judicial patience was wearing thin: “(T)he General Assembly has shown remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself,” the court said at the time. “Indeed, both parties agree that ignoring the three-readings requirement has become a procedural regularity.”

But Davis countered that the Supreme Court has since addressed three readings challenges “on several occasions and has, without exception, followed the enrolled bill rule.” All appellate courts have also done the same, he wrote. Davis said he was therefore bound by precedent.

The judge also ruled that the plaintiffs lacked standing to sue because the legislation, allowing out of state businesses to now be sued for “exposure to a substance defined as toxic,” can “never affect plaintiffs.”

Earlier last month, Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge Adam Giganti used the exact same enrolled bill doctrine history cited by Davis to throw out a lawsuit filed by several members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus against the new state budget.

Giganti also ruled that because people involved in actually implementing the budget were not included as defendants in the lawsuit — including the governor, the comptroller, the treasurer and the Illinois Department of Revenue director — then that required dismissal as well under Section 2-615 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

Aside from the obvious press pops that the lawsuits have already attracted and will continue to receive, the object here is to eventually get these lawsuits in front of the Illinois Supreme Court to see if they can convince the justices to finally follow through on their 33-year-old warning.

A 2003 Supreme Court ruling referenced its own 1992 “remarkably poor self-discipline in policing itself” comment in a new case involving a similar constitutional challenge. However, the top court noted that the record of alleged violations had not been “sufficiently developed to support or contradict this claim” of a violation.

“Nevertheless,” the opinion continued, “because this court is ever mindful of its duty to enforce the constitution of this state, we take the opportunity to urge the legislature to follow the three-readings rule. While separation of powers concerns militate in favor of the enrolled-bill doctrine, our responsibility to ensure obedience to the constitution remains an equally important concern.”

So, as I told my blog readers when the Republican lawsuit was filed, “the Republicans are likely hoping that if they keep bringing these cases to the court’s attention, the Supremes will eventually decide that the record has been ‘sufficiently developed’ to support their claim.”

But it’s highly doubtful, to say the least, that the 5-2 Democratic majority will accede to the Republicans’ wishes even then.

  5 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study are clear: the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Retailers like Alejandro Urzagaste in Wilmette enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: States move to protect vaccines in the face of attempts to remove mandates. AP

    - Now that Florida is taking steps to be the first state to get rid of school vaccine mandates, some states are looking at following its lead while others are promising to protect vaccines for children and adults.
    - The [Illinois] state health department said it plans to issue specific guidance by the end of September that will help health care providers and residents make informed decisions about vaccinations. The health director said the department will consult with medical experts.
    - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said roughly 4 million deaths are prevented annually worldwide by childhood vaccinations.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Daily Herald | ‘A very large gap for us to fill’: Pantries struggle to meet surging demand amid federal cuts to food banks: As its member pantries face persistently high demand, the Northern Illinois Food Bank is raising funds through an emergency initiative to help offset federal cuts. The Geneva-based food bank has seen a 30% decrease in federal support — in the form of food and funding — translating to a $3 million to $4 million gap. In the fiscal year that ended in June, the food bank received 4.4 million meals through federal programs that have either been discontinued or cut by the USDA.

* Daily Herald | Antioch mayor mulling GOP run for governor: Antioch Mayor Scott Gartner announced Sunday he is considering running for Illinois governor as a Republican in 2026, adding that he expects a final decision by the end of the month. “If I can gather 10,000 signatures and raise $500,000 by then, I’m all in,” Gartner wrote in a Facebook post addressed “To my Antioch family.” “I’m not a millionaire or billionaire — but maybe that’s exactly what we need: someone who understands the struggles of everyday people and isn’t beholden to special interests,” he added.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Illinois will ban fraudulent restaurant reservations Jan. 1: The bipartisan plan will ban third-party reservation companies from listing, advertising, promoting, or selling reservations without written agreements with restaurants. Any person who violates the ban could face a civil penalty of up to $1,000 for each violation. Customers will also have the ability to sue companies for listing fraudulent reservations online.

* Sun-Times | State Sen. Napoleon Harris reimburses his campaign fund more than $23k over questionable expenses: State Sen. Napoleon Harris recently cut his main campaign fund a check for $23,459.30, reimbursing the political account for what appeared to be a series of personal expenses that stretched, if not breached, the bounds of what’s allowable under election law. […] That total cited by Odelson in the email amounted to just over $20,000, and he declined to explain the difference between that amount and what ended up being reimbursed on or about Aug. 27.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s new speed cameras see big early revenue as aldermen tout safety impact: Drivers ticketed for speeding there on June 1 — the first day the camera went online — have so far paid the city more than $60,000, in increments of $35 and $100. It’s a drop in the municipal bucket for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s citywide camera expansion meant to help him balance this year’s budget. But if early returns are any indication, speeding tickets from the new cameras are quickly hurtling toward the $11.4 million benchmark Johnson counted on for 2025. As the first batch of new cameras went live in June, the city issued more tickets than it has in any other month in nearly three years, a Tribune analysis showed.

* WBEZ | CPS says no to virtual learning as ICE immigration enforcement ramps up: “In-person instruction continues to provide the strongest foundation for learning,” school district officials said in a statement. However, they added that they are monitoring the situation and will reassess if necessary.

* Tribune | Chicago deploys salt trucks as safety precaution at protest and Taste of Chicago: President Donald Trump has signaled that he may authorize the use of military assets, specifically the National Guard, as part of a stepped-up operation by federal agencies under the Department of Homeland Security, including Immigration and Customs Enforcement, anticipated to begin as soon as this weekend. But as of Sunday afternoon, there was no evidence of widespread ICE activity. The spokesperson said the trucks were present at an anti-Trump protest that drew thousands downtown and the three-day food festival in Grant Park.

* Sun-Times | No, Chicago salt trucks are not being used to interfere with ICE: The department “deployed salt trucks to support public safety efforts related to a planned protest and the Taste of Chicago. This is a routine practice,” a spokesperson said. Videos of the salt trucks lining Grant Park popped up on social media over the weekend. Several claimed that Mayor Brandon Johnson deployed the trucks to form a roadblock and interfere with ICE operations. The posts also erroneously say the trucks were slowly moving on I-294, I-94 and the Edens Expressway and occupying all lanes into the city.

* Hyper Allergic | A Chicago Artist-Run Gallery’s Last Hurrah Before Forced Closure: The property housed 30 apartments full of tenants, many on social security, plenty of whom had lived there for over a decade. Downstairs were three beloved, creative, intergenerational community spaces: Archie’s Café, Edge Art, and Roman Susan. A protest was held by residents, neighbors, supporters, and elected officials, including Illinois state senator Mike Simmons and 49th Ward alderwoman Maria Hadden. Roman Susan, with the longest lease, advocated for its neighbors to be able to stay at least until they themselves were forced to clear out. The university cannot even develop the site anytime soon, due to future renovations of the adjacent Red Line El station.

* Sun-Times | As Sundays on State returns, businesses say street festivals are a welcome boost: “The goals of Sundays on State is to accelerate the Loop economy, but also unite the community and provide opportunities to businesses that may not typically have this chance,” Gibson said. More than 90% of street activations will be operated by underrepresented businesses, including 74% women-owned ventures, 31% minority-owned companies and 11% that are LGBTQ+-owned.

* WBEZ | Yoko Ono, Theaster Gates, Bob Faust and more dominate Chicago’s busy must-see art calendar for fall: Myriad facets of this cultural dynamo will be open for exploration in “Yoko Ono: Music of the Mind,” a touring exhibition on view Oct. 18–Feb. 22, 2026, at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 220 E. Chicago Ave. The MCA is the show’s only U.S. venue. This large-scale retrospective — organized by the Tate Modern in London, where it drew record crowds — features more than 200 objects, including a cross-section of Ono’s installations and physical artworks. And while “Music of the Mind” is sure to dominate the Chicago art world’s attention this fall, there are plenty of other notable exhibitions worth visiting. Here are 10 others.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | As other NFL teams build new stadiums, the Bears will soon release plans for a new dome in Arlington Heights: Bears President Kevin Warren and other officials are meeting regularly to refine their plan with Arlington Heights village officials. Sometime in September, October or November, the team will make a public presentation and answer questions about the 326-acre site, according to Arlington Heights Mayor Jim Tinaglia. Then the village planning, design and housing commissions will review the proposal before it goes to a Village Board vote. The whole process could take a few months.

* Tribune | Records show the VA failed to treat a Plainfield father’s common infection. Now he’s paying the price.: And now they’re left to wonder: How could something like this have happened? How could personnel they trusted at the VA miss something so obvious? The weeks that changed everything are detailed in their lawsuit, and supported by medical records and documentation they shared with the Tribune. It all began on July 21, 2023, when Walker was admitted to Hines after suffering from fatigue, a cough and a swollen leg. Records show a blood test detected the presence of Streptococcus mutans, a common bacterial infection, and the next day the lab reported the discovery to Walker’s doctor. The diagnosis, though, never made it to Walker or his wife.

* Tribune | Study finds Kaegi has improved fairness in Cook County property assessments: Berry, director of the U. of C.’s Mansueto Institute for Urban Innovation, acknowledged taxpayers might be skeptical of the findings. “How can Kaegi be making assessments more fair, when my tax bill is going up?” Berry said in an interview with the Tribune. Homeowners were unlikely to feel the difference because property tax levies set by local governments each year have continued to rise, he noted. The city of Chicago’s levy has gone up by 19% since 2018. The Chicago Public Schools levy has gone up by 24%. Even so, “the important thing is the assessments don’t determine whether tax bills are going up or down on average, just how it’s spread amongst properties,” Berry said.

* Daily Herald | Geneva group’s plan to host Jan. 6 organizer draws pickets, protests: The conservative Three Headed Eagle Alliance’s Sept. 23 gathering at Eagle Brook Country Club was scheduled to feature Rhodes, who was convicted of seditious conspiracy in connection with Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and sentenced to 18 years in prison, as its guest speaker. However, the Three Headed Eagle’s website now states the venue for Rhodes’ appearance has been changed and will be announced closer to the date. Rhodes was released from prison in January after President Donald Trump commuted his sentence, amid a flurry of pardons and clemencies granted to those convicted in the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora looks to recreate downtown organization: The former organization, known as Aurora Downtown, used to manage funds generated by a special tax applied to property within the downtown area, or more specifically within Special Service Area Number One. Using those funds, the organization worked to support property owners and businesses, plus develop new businesses, within downtown through things like marketing, improvements, events and more. Last year, that organization’s board voted to combine with three others — the Aurora Regional Chamber of Commerce, Invest Aurora and the Quad County African American Chamber of Commerce — to become the Aurora Regional Economic Alliance. The idea was to bring these separate economic organizations under one umbrella to combine their efforts and cut out repeat functions.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville to extend food and textile recycling programs following success: “These programs are really a response to what our residents are asking for,” said Ben Mjolsness, Naperville’s sustainability manager. “We’ve heard, ‘What can I do with clothing? What can I do with sheets? What can I do with towels? I don’t want to throw them away and have them be buried forever.’” With the textile program, residents stay in their vehicle while staff unload items, per the city’s website. Since launching in late spring, it’s seen an average of 12 to 15 cars a day drop off unwanted items, “resulting in more than 26,800 pounds of material diverted from landfills,” according to the memo submitted to the city manager’s office.

* Daily Herald | Billions for a Route 120 bypass in Lake County? Some residents warn it’s a pricey ‘pie in the sky’: “It’s over $2 billion and no one is going to finance it,” said Bill Morris, a former Grayslake mayor and state senator, who warns the “pie in the sky” bypass could take years to build. The Illinois Department of Transportation Route 120 Planning and Environmental Linkages study extends from Almond Road near Grayslake to Route 60 in Volo. That stretch of 120 includes busy rail crossings that tie up traffic and configurations that shift between two and four lanes, causing bottlenecks.

*** Downstate ***

* News-Gazette | New Champaign County Board District 10 rep resigns over residency error: Democrat Jason Votava, who filled the spot vacated by Chris Stohr, said he was preparing materials for the November 2026 ballot when he “discovered a slight difference in the maps” and realized that he actually lives in District 9. “I want the people of District 10 to have the representation they deserve, and my only recourse was to resign,” he told The News-Gazette. “I am currently collecting signatures to represent District 9 and hope to return to the board next year.”

* WGLT | Police departments in McLean County say camera data not shared with immigration officers: Officer Brad Park with the Normal Police Department said the department does not share its data with any agency outside of Illinois. “We only share that information with agencies that are approved by the chief, and currently we are only sharing those with about 39 approved agencies within the state of Illinois,” he said, adding Normal police regularly audit officers’ use of the cameras to ensure the images are only being used in criminal investigations

* WCIA | Urbana Business: Mayor talks weekend ‘Philo Road Ahead’ event, potential plans for former ‘Dart’ factory: After several businesses have closed their doors along Urbana’s Philo Road, Mayor DeShawn Williams is taking the next steps to turn the southeast side of the city around. He believes one step to fixing the problem and moving things forward starts this Sunday, Sept. 7, at the Sunnycrest parking lot. The city is hosting ‘Philo Road Ahead‘ from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. as a way to bring the community together and ‘reimagine’ what this part of Urbana could look like.

* WIFR | DeKalb Co. deputy circuit clerk accused of theft of government funds, fraud: In the spring of 2021, investigators say Walker got two PPP loans totaling $41,250, claiming she was the sole owner of a remodeling company. A police report filed in court claims Walker filed false tax returns in order to get the loans. Detectives report that during an interview, Walker admitted the home remodeling company did not exist.

* WGEM | Number of school resource officers in Adams County continues to grow: In the last two years, the Adams County Sheriff’s Office has added three School Resource Offices (SRO). Before, they had only one. Adams County Sheriff Anthony Grootens said every school district in Adams County has an SRO, but they don’t plan on stopping there. Eventually, he said he wants to hire an SRO for each school. Until then, he said the number they have has already made it easier for them to keep schools and students safe.

* Press Release | Sen. Tracy to bring Mobile DMV service to Carrollton: tate Senator Jil Tracy (R-Quincy) has partnered with the Illinois Secretary of State’s Office to host a Mobile DMV event in Carrollton. “Making government services more accessible is a priority of mine, and I’m proud to help bring the Secretary of State’s office directly to Carrollton,” said Senator Tracy in a press release. “Events like this save people time and travel while ensuring they can take care of important needs right here at home.”

*** National ***

* WaPo | Military-related work absences at a 19-year high amid deployments: Between January and August, workers reported 90,000 instances of people missing at least a week of work because of military deployments, jury duty or other civil service, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That is more than double the number of similar absences in the same eight-month period last year, and the highest level since 2006, when President George W. Bush deployed the National Guard to Iraq, Afghanistan and the Southwest U.S. border in large numbers.

* CNN | A property tax revolt is spreading — with help from key conservatives: For decades, property taxes have underwritten the basic functions of local government — schools, parks, roads, police and fire departments, trash collection. But as home values have surged, tax bills have ballooned in tandem, fueling what David Schleicher, a Yale professor of local government, described as a “property tax revolt” shaking cities and states alike. “This is a really big trend that is below the radar because it doesn’t involve President Trump,” Schleicher said. “But it doesn’t need fireworks to announce itself. It’s already changing our relationship with government and how schools work and property markets.”

* The Atlantic | Just How Bad Would an AI Bubble Be?: The dot-com crash was bad, but it did not trigger a crisis. An AI-bubble crash could be different. AI-related investments have already surpassed the level that telecom hit at the peak of the dot-com boom as a share of the economy. In the first half of this year, business spending on AI added more to GDP growth than all consumer spending combined. Many experts believe that a major reason the U.S. economy has been able to weather tariffs and mass deportations without a recession is because all of this AI spending is acting, in the words of one economist, as a “massive private sector stimulus program.” An AI crash could lead broadly to less spending, fewer jobs, and slower growth, potentially dragging the economy into a recession. The economist Noah Smith argues that it could even lead to a financial crisis if the unregulated “private credit” loans funding much of the industry’s expansion all go bust at once.

* Bloomberg | S&P Warns of Reinsurer Protections as Catastrophe Risks Escalate: As natural catastrophes become more frequent and destructive, a key backstop intended to help cover losses has gotten harder to access. The reinsurance industry, which exists to help primary insurers cope with losses when disaster hits, has taken significant steps to shield itself against the financial fallout of storms, floods and other severe weather events, according to S&P Global Ratings.

* SCOTUS Blog | Group of small businesses calls on Supreme Court to decide tariffs case : A group of small businesses challenging the tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump in a series of executive orders urged the Supreme Court to provide a definitive ruling on the legality of those tariffs. In a five-page brief filed on Friday afternoon, the challengers encouraged the justices to act quickly, telling them that the tariffs are “inflicting profound harms on” their companies, which are “suffering severe economic hardships as a result of the price increases and supply chain interruptions caused by the tariffs.” “[T]hese impacts,” the challengers stressed, “are ‘not survivable.’”

  7 Comments      


Good morning!

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* For Kyle , Caryn, Blake and the entire Hillman family and all their many, many friends

Come on home
Come on home
No you don’t have to be alone
Come on home
Come on home
No you don’t have to be alone
Just come on home

More here. Big hugs to everyone.

What’s up by you?

  8 Comments      


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

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Monday, Sep 8, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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