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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Gov. Pritzker responds to reports that Maryland Gov. Wes Moore was uninvited from a bipartisan White House dinner…
* Crain’s | Even though marijuana is legal in Illinois, clearing old criminal records still a challenge: Statewide data, however, suggest that most people don’t follow through. According to the Paper Prisons Initiative, a legal research group, an estimated 2.2 million people in Illinois were eligible for expungement or record sealing in 2021, but only about 10% had filed petitions. Legal experts refer to this disparity as the “second chance gap,” and they attribute it to a combination of factors, including a lack of awareness, fear of the legal system, filing costs and long wait times. However, they say this gap may narrow as Illinois prepares to implement the Clean Slate Act, signed into law earlier this year, which will automatically seal nonviolent criminal records for over 1.7 million adults beginning in 2029. * Crain’s | House subpoenas Blue Cross Illinois parent in ACA fraud probe: The House Judiciary Committee has issued subpoenas to eight health insurance exchange carriers, including the parent of Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Illinois, as part of an ongoing fraud investigation. The panel is demanding information and documentation from Chicago-based Health Care Service Corp. as well as Aetna parent company CVS Health, Elevance Health, Centene, Kaiser Foundation Health Plan parent company Kaiser Permanente, Florida Blue parent company Guidewell, Ascendiun subsidiary Blue Shield of California and Oscar Health. The committee announced the subpoenas in a news release Tuesday. * Governor JB Pritzker | The State of Illinois is Being Loud for America: Illinois and Minnesota are standing up to the bullying. Other patriotic Americans are too. But it’s going to take more of us to emerge victorious. Next week I will deliver my 2026 State of the State address. It’s still coming together, but I know one thing I’ll want to make known: Illinoisans love this nation too much to let MAGA tear down our constitutional republic. We’re standing up, speaking out, and showing up, and I could not be more proud. * WGLT | Illinois lawmakers not sure there’s more higher ed money in a ‘tricky’ budget: State Rep. Sharon Chung, a Democrat from Bloomington, said she does not think there will be an increase in higher education funding because of what she called a “tricky” budget. “When it comes to funding for fiscal year 2027, I’m not quite sure what that’s going to look like. We have so many needs throughout the state, especially with a lot of the federal funding cuts,” Chung said, adding she would support a funding increase for higher ed if it can be supported by this year’s budget. Chung said she supports evidence-based funding for higher education, but it would require more funding. * Capitol News Illinois | ‘More listening and less talking’: Darren Bailey insists results will be different in 2nd run for governor: Should Bailey find his way to the governor’s office, he will almost certainly have to work with a supermajority of Democrats in the legislature. He argued he can find success in that environment because of relationships he had during his four years in the General Assembly. “My door’s always open … that table in the governor’s office will be available,” Bailey said. “There will be seats.” * Tribune | Parents push back on school closures after archdiocese says time to mobilize has passed: ‘We were blindsided’: But according to the archdiocese, the window to save their schools has passed — and its decision to close the schools is final. That leaves parents at St. Jerome and another school, Sts. Bruno and Richard School in Archer Heights, insisting they were blindsided. At St. Jerome, some parents say they weren’t told the school closure was on the horizon, before the archdiocese’s Jan. 22 announcement. “Parents were never given the opportunity to get these efforts put into play,” Ferro told the Tribune. “Now, you’re just here scrambling — trying to figure out what you’re going to do with your kids. They basically tied your hands.” * ABC Chicago | Election officials show off new Chicago voting supersite ahead of Illinois Primary: “As you can see, we still got the new car smell around here,” Max Bever, director of public information at the Chicago Board of Elections, said. “It’s an absolute new facility built out just for this purpose.”Slightly larger than the original Supersite at Clark & Lake, the brand new facility holds 80 voting machines, a few more than its predecessor. The reason for the move, Max Bever with the Chicago Board of Elections says their lease simply ended with the Secretary of State and they were looking more space for the public. * Crain’s | Head of Morgan Lewis’ Chicago office decamps for King & Spalding: King & Spalding, which has 57 lawyers working out of its Chicago office, said Tinos Diamantatos will be a partner in its business litigation practice group. […] “The group here, they are great trial lawyers,” Diamantatos said. “It was just incredibly enticing to come to a firm (where) one of the cornerstones of what they do is trying cases.” * Block Club | Grant Park 20-Year Plan Calls For Public Bathrooms, Better Lake Access And More: Some of the major projects outlined in the plan include new pedestrian walkways over DuSable Lake Shore Drive, expanded landscaping and seating, permanent public restrooms, lakefront “park rooms” designed for recreation and art and changes to surrounding streets to better prioritize people who are walking and biking. * Tribune | Catching, starting pitching and center field are 3 spots to watch as Chicago White Sox spring training begins: “We feel really good about the direction we’re headed,” Getz said Monday at Camelback Ranch. “And to get everyone in this building right now, working towards what we want to accomplish here in the future, is really valuable, and rewarding, and exciting for the next steps for the Chicago White Sox.” Getz said manager Will Venable is focused on starting from zero as the buildup begins toward opening day. * Sun-Times | The Art Institute of Chicago just hung its first Norman Rockwell, and it depicts the Cubs: The historic piece is a gift to the Downtown museum from former Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner and his wife, Diana. According to an online listing from the auction house Christie’s, “The Dugout” last sold in 2009 for $662,500. The company estimates its present-day value between $700,000 and $1 million. Other Rockwell works have fetched as much as $46 million. * WIRED | ICE Is Expanding Across the US at Breakneck Speed. Here’s Where It’s Going Next: And in Oakbrook, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, ICE is moving into the Oakbrook Gateway, an office building located near both a Bright Horizons daycare center and a hospice center. * Daily Southtown | Harvey still lacks acting mayor; aldermen approve road improvements, FOIA settlement: The selection of an acting clerk and a resolution to update the city’s bank signatories have been deferred until an acting mayor is selected. “I understand that there’s no timeline,” resident Amanda Askew told aldermen Monday. “But I do believe that the sense of urgency needs to happen, like, yesterday, so those people can lock in and do their job properly.” Drewenski said the mayoral vacancy will be addressed at the City Council meeting at 7 p.m. on Feb. 23. Since not everyone who wanted to attend the last meeting was able to fit in the council chambers, Drewenski said, the aldermen are seeking a venue that will accommodate more people. * The Daily Northwestern | Late Northwestern professor maintained long-term relationship with Epstein, released government files show: Late McCormick Prof. Roger Schank maintained close contact with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and was offered access to “a girl,” according to newly released files from the Department of Justice. Throughout his life, Schank issued public statements in support of Epstein, who was convicted by a Florida state court of soliciting a minor for prostitution and of soliciting a prostitute in 2008. Epstein was later arrested on federal sex trafficking charges in 2019 before dying in jail. Schank’s name appears over 1,500 times in the newest batch of files related to Epstein, released by the DOJ on Jan. 30. * Daily Herald | District 15 picks new superintendent: Palatine Township Elementary District 15 school board members chose a candidate with extensive superintendent experience to succeed Superintendent Laurie Heinz. They voted Monday to name Flossmoor School District 161 Superintendent Dana Smith to the post. He will start work July 1 under a three-year contract at an annual salary of $283,000. * Naperville Sun | District 5 Dem candidates for the DuPage board discuss county’s biggest issue: Incumbent Sadia Covert is facing challengers Ian Holzhauer, a Naperville City Council member, and Marylee Leu, president of the DuPage County Regional Office of Education Board of School Trustees. The winner will face Republican nominee Chris Jacks, a Naperville Park Board member, in the Nov. 3 general election to fill a single four-year board seat. Democratic incumbent board member Dawn DeSart and Republican challenger Daniel Lomeli will face off in the general election for a two-year District 5 seat. * WJBD | Centralia approves new collective bargaining agreements with police unions: There are other changes in the union agreements, such as safety time, an additional day off awarded to officers who avoid on-the-job accidents for a full calendar year. Holiday pay rate was changed to only apply to the “family five-pack” of New Years’ Day, Christmas Day, Thanksgiving Day, Independence Day, and Memorial Day. The new agreements also offer a $1500 annual payout to officers who decline health insurance coverage from the city for which they are eligible. Per the agreements, starting base pay for a patrolman is now $63,508 per year. Starting pay for a dispatcher is $50,589. * WGLT | Illinois awards more grant money toward McLean County’s Route 66 celebrations and landmarks: The Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity gave Bloomington-Normal’s tourism organization $513,378 to enhance attractions and visitor experiences in McLean County. VisitBN cited its regional partners in helping shape a proposal for the award. Those include the Town of Normal, McLean County Museum of History, Friends of the Constitution Trail, City of Chenoa, City of Lexington, Village of Towanda and CORE McLean. “This grant is a powerful example of what can happen when a community works together toward a shared vision,” said Beth Whisman, the chair of the VisitBN board of directors. * WAND | Bailey Zimmerman coming to perform at Illinois State Fair: Illinois native Bailey Zimmerman is coming to perform at the Illinois State Fair this summer. Zimmerman is a country singer best known for his singles like, “Fall in Love” and “Rock in a Hard Place.” He is a multi-platinum, chart-topping artist. * WaPo | Republicans are pushing to drastically change the way you cast ballots: As President Donald Trump calls for sweeping changes to election law — including saying that Republicans should “take over the voting” — Republicans in Congress are planning to vote this week on the SAVE America Act, which would make massive changes to how Americans vote ahead of November’s midterms. They want to require all Americans to prove they are citizens when registering to vote, and to show an ID when voting in person or by mail, as well as make mail voting more difficult. * NYT | Georgia Ballot Inquiry Originated From Election Denier in Trump White House: “The FBI criminal investigation originated from a referral sent by Kurt Olsen, Presidentially appointed Director of Election Security and Integrity,” the affidavit said. Mr. Olsen played a central role in Mr. Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election, including speaking to the president multiple times on Jan. 6, 2021. He has continued to push false claims about elections, and was recently appointed to a key role in the Trump administration. Many of the claims in the affidavit refer to long-held — and consistently debunked — conspiracy theories about elections in Georgia, including arguments about fraudulent and duplicate absent ballots, election machine tabulator tapes and missing ballot images. * Politico | How ICE defies judges’ orders to release detainees, step by step: Sometimes, ICE has raced detainees across state lines in ways judges say are designed to thwart legal proceedings. Other times, they’re detaining people for days or weeks after judges have ordered them released. ICE officials have at times ignored other arms of the federal government trying to ensure compliance with court orders. And sometimes the administration has given judges bad or incomplete information. […] “There has been an undeniable move by the Government in the past month to defy court orders or at least to stretch the legal process to the breaking point in an attempt to deny noncitizens their due process rights,” U.S. District Judge Michael Davis, a Clinton appointee from Minnesota, said in a recent order. * The Guardian | ‘They always gave us the heaviest work’: how Maga billionaires relied on Mexican labor: Now, for the first time, a former Uline employee named Christian Valenzuela, 42, has come forward to share his experience in the shuttle program, including stints in Allentown, where Vance spoke in December. Uline travel itineraries, which Valenzuela shared with the Guardian, show he made at least five trips to the US beginning in early 2022, and worked in the company’s facilities in Pennsylvania, Florida and Wisconsin. “They told us we had to go to the United States because there were not many people who were working at that time. It was around the time of the pandemic,” he said in an interview. Uline did pay the Mexican workers a bonus and gas money, and paid for accommodations, but they were paid their usual Mexican wage, Valenzuela said. The Guardian has previously reported this was a fraction of what their American counterparts earned.
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Catching up with the federal candidates
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Politico…
Click here for some background on the United Democracy Project. 7th CD candidate Anthony Driver Jr…
Another Democratic opponent Reed Showalter…
Anabel Mendoza…
* Moving on to the 8th Congressional District, Junaid Ahmed is out with his first TV ad. Press release…
* US Rep. Eric Sorensen has endorsed US Senate candidate Juliana Stratton…
* More… * Press release | Latino Leadership Council Endorses Raja Krishnamoorthi for U.S. Senate: “I am proud to have earned the support of the Latino Leadership Council,” said Raja. “Their leadership in expanding opportunities and increasing economic mobility for Latino communities strengthens our entire state. In the U.S. Senate, I will carry that fight forward — making life more affordable, creating real pathways to prosperity, and holding government accountable to the people it serves. Together, we will create an Illinois where every family can realize their full American Dream.” * Jewish Insider | AIPAC super PAC launches ads supporting Chicago Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin’s House campaign: Friedman, who is Jewish, has a record of support for and engagement with Israel through the JUF, including leading numerous JUF delegations to the Jewish state. He’s seen by some as an unconventional candidate for the historically Black-dominated district. A pair of recently created super PACs began running ads last week backing moderate pro-Israel women in several other Chicago-area districts. Those groups are rumored to be supported by UDP or other pro-Israel backers, but the 7th District is the only one in which UDP is directly and publicly involved.
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Reports: Trump administration moves to claw back hundreds of millions from Illinois
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * The New York Post…
* The New York Times…
* A Pritzker spokesperson said they have not received any notice of the cuts…
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Keep Insurance Affordable
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] The Illinois General Assembly is considering legislation (HB 3799, SA 2 &3) that could make homeowners insurance unaffordable for many Illinoisans. The proposal would destabilize a healthy, competitive market, creating a regulatory framework that is more extreme than what exists in any other state. This will increase premiums and reduce competition. Our robust insurance market has kept homeowners’ rates middle-of-the-pack nationally, even though Illinois has more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas. To protect affordability and consumer choice, lawmakers should VOTE NO. For more information, visit www.KeepInsuranceAffordable.org
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sen. Graciela Guzmán and Rep. Will Davis…
More from the Sun-Times…
And a bit more from Chalkbeat Chicago…
* Sen. Don DeWitte…
* The National Federation of Independent Business…
* Chicago Bars…
Unlike past efforts, Rep. Dan Didech’s bill hinges on Missouri and Iowa. If they act, Illinois would drop daylight saving time immediately. * Fox 2 Now…
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Big Tax-Exempt Hospitals Are Turning Patient Discounts Into Corporate Profits
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Across Illinois, large hospital systems and corporate PBMs are profiting from a program meant to help patients. The 340B program allows hospitals to buy medications at steep discounts, but those savings aren’t passed on to patients in need. Instead, large hospitals charge patients full price for 340B-discounted drugs, keep the difference, and share the cash with for-profit chain pharmacies and PBMs.
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Pritzker says if data centers are ‘in any way’ driving up electricity prices, ‘they should pay for that increase, not the consumers’ (Updated)
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Background is here if you need it. Gov. Pritzker was asked about data center regulations yesterday at an unrelated press conference. I’ve highlighted the most relevant parts of his response…
…Adding… Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition…
* More…
* BND | Granite City residents pack forum to press officials about data center proposal: “Everybody here wants the same thing,” [Chris Hankins, business manager and financial secretary for International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 309 in Collinsville] said. “We want to see Granite City prosper again.” Hankins said data centers will be built in the United States regardless, and Granite City should reap benefits in the form of property tax revenue and other community contributions that could be negotiated. Resident Taylor Wyatt disagrees. She said data centers are not retail or manufacturing facilities that bring many permanent jobs, do not increase tourism or foot traffic, rarely create secondary businesses and often raise water and electric bills. “What economic value will this bring to Granite City?” she asked. * Tribune | Amid chaotic data center debates, industry warns Illinois will miss out unless privacy law weakened: It’s the only state law in the U.S. that allows people to sue and recover damages for the misuse of their biometric profile, which is unique to each individual and cannot be changed. As they try to defend it, Illinois trial lawyers will first have to win over the state’s fractious Democratic Party, said Hugh O’Hara, executive director of the Will County Governmental League. “It’s going to be a weird, weird fight between labor, the environmentalists and trial lawyers on this one,” O’Hara said. AI data centers gather biometric information at the same time they’re collecting vast arrays of other information on people’s location, buying habits and political sympathies to micro-target them with advertising and other services. They’re also working with governments and banks to one day use biometric data as a replacement for driver’s licenses, passports and credit cards. * WEEK TV | Firefighters prepare for unique challenges should data centers locate in places like Pekin: “Data systems themselves, they cannot have water applied to them, so it takes clean extinguishing agent systems, which are usually fixed into the facility,” said firefighter and union member Matt Hill. “It makes a whole bunch of different challenges to just even know that those systems are there, let alone know that they are going to operate when they’re supposed to, who is in charge of operating them, and the facility specialist and subject matter experts to be able to tell us how we’re going to work with them,” Hill said. He said the length of time required to extinguish a data center can also differ significantly, sometimes taking days to get rid of the fire. * WAND TV | Champaign County moves forward with moratorium on ‘big data centers’: The Champaign County Environment and Land Use Committee voted to put a year-long moratorium on “big data centers” Thursday night. This will only apply to projects that are 10,000 square feet or larger. There are already four data centers in Champaign County, including the National Petascale Computing Facility at the University of Illinois and Colocation Plus, a.k.a “The Fortress” in Rantoul. “None of them were more than 2000ft² in area. So we’re anticipating a new hyperscale data center could be easily, 50,000ft² of processing area,” said John Hall, planning and zoning director for Champaign County.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news (Updated)
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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340B Unites Patients, Providers And Community Leaders
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Illinois hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers are united behind 340B. This was clear at a Feb. 1 rally in Chicago that brought together nearly 1,000 Illinois patients, healthcare providers, community leaders and lawmakers to celebrate this vital federal program. Why is the 340B Drug Pricing Program so important? Because it helps health centers and hospitals provide affordable medications and essential services to vulnerable patients, improving individual health, the health of communities, and our state’s overall healthcare system. 340B does this by allowing healthcare providers serving large numbers of low-income and uninsured patients to invest drug cost savings into chronic disease management, behavioral health, and more. Yet drugmakers are unilaterally imposing restrictions that serve to boost their bottom lines while low-income Illinoisans lose healthcare access. The Illinois Health and Hospital Association, Illinois Primary Health Care Association, and Association of Safety Net Community Hospitals are fighting for 340B. We agree with the lead House sponsor of HB 2371, State Rep. Anna Moeller, who said at the rally that drugmaker “restrictions hurt the very people this program was designed to help.” “During a time when the federal government is cutting funding for healthcare for families across the state, we should be doing everything we can to bring vital resources to support patients and their healthcare providers—resources like 340B that cost nothing to taxpayers or the state of Illinois,” Rep. Moeller said. Stand with patients, hospitals and FQHCs for 340B. Learn more.
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Rate the new Don Tracy digital ad
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Press release…
* Here you go… * Script…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois appeal for summer storm disaster relief denied by Trump administration. Sun-Times…
- Pritzker on Monday called the denial “a politically motivated decision that punishes thousands of Illinois families in a critical moment of need.” - The White House has defended its decision, saying the president responds to federal aid requests “with great care and consideration, ensuring American tax dollars are used appropriately and efficiently by the states to supplement — not substitute, their obligation to respond to and recover from disasters.” * Related stories… * At 9 am Gov. JB Pritzker will give remarks at the Choose Chicago annual meeting. Click here to watch. * Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker talked Bears with NFL commissioner, says progress is being made to keep team in Illinois: * Sun-Times | Cook County prosecutors drop charges against 19 arrested during clergy-led protest at Broadview ICE facility: As the demonstrators moved closer to the facility, in the hopes that those inside would hear their prayers, scuffles broke out with local law enforcement, and 21 people were arrested. The Cook County sheriff’s office said the group left the “designated protest area,” and was “unlawfully assembling in the roadway.” The Cook County state’s attorney’s office has now dropped charges in 19 of those cases. […] Of the two people arrested that day whose cases were not dropped, one is charged with mob action and the other is charged with resisting a police officer. * Crain’s | Moody’s sees Illinois slipping: Fewer jobs, fewer people: Jobs will fall statewide this year and next, registering an annual decline for the first time since the pandemic hit the economy in 2020, according to a forecast prepared by Moody’s for the Commission on Government Forecasting & Accountability, which provides budget information to legislators. * Daily Herald | Illinois House hopefuls Peterson, Chan Ding spar over ethics: Maria Peterson criticized opponent Erin Chan Ding over campaign activities that brought her a reprimand from Barrington Area Unit District 220 school board, on which Chan Ding has served since 2021. […] “I’ve been absolutely transparent about that from the very beginning,” she said in response to Peterson’s remarks. “I’ve owned it. I’ve apologized for it.” Chan Ding, of South Barrington, later criticized Peterson for attacking her rather than “standing up to MAGA.” * WAND | Illinois expands STAR bond eligibility for municipalities across the state: Pritzker told reporters Monday that current STAR bonds are expected to generate $1 billion in sales and more than 5,000 new jobs. The number of projects available for each area is based on the population within economic development regions. North central Illinois is eligible for three different projects, while sections of the state with fewer than 600,000 people could apply for one STAR bond project. * Sun-Times | Mayoral aides explain Chicago’s cash flow crunch that triggered partial pension payment: Craig Slack, chief investment officer for the city treasurer’s office, said the city has been promised the rest of that money by April 1, though he expressed wariness — since several previous deadlines have come and gone. “The fact that the money is coming in large chunk amounts tells me the system is still broken. There’s not a fix in sight,” Slack told the City Council’s Finance Committee. * Sun-Times | Despite business community concerns, Council committee backs parking enforcement by citizens: In the first phase of implementation, the Department of Finance would create a “Street Operations Task Force” made up of parking enforcement aides “primarily focused on issuing violations for parking in crosswalks, bike and bus lanes “ outside of the current Smart Streets footprint, he said. In the second phase, City Hall would work to develop a “dispatch system that will allow for 311 complaints about parking violations to be immediately dispatched to active parking enforcement aides, who will be able to arrive immediately and issue a violation,” he said. * ABC Chicago | Leadership exodus continues at Chicago’s US Attorney’s Office: After at least eight top prosecutors left their positions in the Northern District of Illinois, the I-Team has learned at least two more are leaving. […] The I-Team has learned, since new U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros took over, seven section chiefs have left with one reassigned, including a prosecutor who resigned after serving as the chief of the criminal division, along with a top national security prosecutor. * Sun-Times | Tracking every known federal prosecution in Chicago tied to Trump’s immigration blitz: Federal prosecutors in Chicago have accused 32 known defendants of nonimmigration crimes tied to Operation Midway Blitz. Many were accused of assaulting or resisting federal agents or officers. Fifteen of those defendants have already been cleared. Grand jurors refused to indict at least three of the 15. And another member of that group was found not guilty at trial. * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora to host open house on data centers amid moratorium: The Data Center Open House is planned to take place from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12, at the city’s Public Works building, 2185 Liberty St. Not only will Aurora residents and businesses have the chance to ask questions and provide feedback, but they will also get to learn about some of the considerations going into the development of potential requirements on future data center development in the city. * Lake County News-Sun | Lake County homeless count revised due to funding questions: ‘A period of federal uncertainty’: While Lake County’s PIT counts have included the unsheltered portion every year, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which mandates the annual PIT count, only requires it every other year. Lake County successfully conducted an unsheltered count in 2025. This year, the release said the Lake County Continuum of Care team and homeless management information system administrator collected the required data for people experiencing homelessness staying in emergency shelters, transitional housing and permanent housing programs. That data will be released in the spring. * Pioneer Press | Lake Forest City Council members mull water and sewer rate increases to cover rising costs: The council unanimously approved the first reading of an across-the-board 6.75 % increase in water and sewer rates at its Feb. 2 meeting. “Average residential homeowners should expect to see an annual increase ranging from $34 to $110 per year, or $8.50 to $27.50 per quarterly bill, depending on the volume of water consumption,” Finance Director Katie Skibbe explained in an e-mail. City officials estimate the increase will generate just over $620,000 in additional revenue in fiscal year 2027. * Daily Herald | Early voting to begin Tuesday in DuPage County after delay: The county clerk’s office will also send out its first batch of mail-in ballots by the end of the week to residents who requested to vote by mail. The county is expected to send ballots to about 70,000 residents in its first mailing, said Adam Johnson, chief deputy clerk for the DuPage County Clerk’s office. * Daily Herald | Hanover Park reports another record-low year for major crimes: The 175 “Part 1” crimes — an FBI benchmark that includes murders, sexual assaults, robberies, aggravated assaults, thefts and arson — represent a 10% decline from 2024’s previous historic low of 194. It’s the fewest since at least 1974, when the department began keeping a record of those offenses, and reflect a continuous decline of major crimes over the past decade. * WMBD | Pekin residents oppose city council’s data center proposal: Despite no item on the agenda mentioning the data center, Monday’s meeting continued the protest, with locals taking turns speaking out against a data center they said will negatively impact their health, increase noise pollution, use their water and raise utility bills. Most of them were aligned with one single message. “We don’t want this.” * WGLT | Bloomington OKs swapping police department guns after amendment fails: * WCIA | Champaign Co. school getting back on track after half of school out sick: Viruses kept more than half of one Central Illinois school at home last week. However, after hours scrubbing the building down, they’re getting back on track. Only 22% of students were absent on Monday at Heritage Elementary and Junior High School — and that’s an improvement. * WCIA | Champaign School District selects new superintendent: In a news release, the school district said Monday it had selected Dr. Geovanny Ponce as its new superintendent, succeeding Dr. Shelia Boozer. Ponce was selected after the district received input from the community before starting a nationwide search. 31 people applied for the position, followed by a review of all of them and interviews with the top applicants. * AP | Trump’s immigration chiefs are set to testify in Congress following protester deaths: Todd Lyons, the acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Rodney Scott, who heads U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and Joseph Edlow, who is the director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, will speak in front of the House Committee on Homeland Security. […] Lyons is likely to face questioning over a memo he signed last year telling ICE officers that they didn’t need a judge’s warrant to forcibly enter a house to arrest a deportee, a memo that went against years of ICE practice and Fourth Amendment protections against illegal searches. * NYT | When Trump Officials’ Claims About Shootings Unravel in Court: In four of the shootings where prosecutors brought assault or other charges, including against Mr. Brown, the cases fizzled after evidence emerged that contradicted the administration’s initial description of events. The charges were either dismissed or prosecutors dropped the case. Charges against six other people who were shot at by immigration agents are pending. Five of the defendants have denied aspects of the D.H.S. accusations or presented differing accounts in court. Two cases are going to trial in April.
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Good morning!
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Tuesday, Feb 10, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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