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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NBC Chicago

Viral social media posts have claimed Illinois could “soon” impose a mileage tax of 30 cents per mile driven, but is that actually looming for motorists?

The short answer to that question is no. The measure that included a per-mile tax stalled out in the General Assembly during the spring session, and was never brought up for a vote before the Senate’s transportation committee.

What’s more, the “30 cents per mile” claim is not found within the text of the legislation, with the actual number likely being significantly lower.

As I told you yesterday, this bill stalled during the session. It never moved out of committee. Yet the myth lives on. From Facebook

And it didn’t come out of thin air. Forbes may have actually started this misinformation campaign. They’ve since updated their story to reflect reality. Click here to read an excerpt of the original version.

*** Statewide ***

* AJ Wilhelmi | Medicaid cuts in Senate bill threaten care, access and jobs in Illinois: For Illinois, the impact would be severe and far-reaching. The Commonwealth Fund estimates our state could lose at least $2 billion in Medicaid funding each year. Just one element of the proposal — a 10-percentage-point reduction in the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage (FMAP) — would alone cost Illinois more than $800 million annually. The American Hospital Association estimates that each $1 billion in Medicaid cuts over 10 years would cost Illinois $2 billion in lost economic activity and more than $71 million in lost tax revenue. Multiply that by the projected $2 billion in annual cuts over 10 years, and the consequences become even more alarming.

* Illinois Business Journal | Illinois Farm Bureau, Illinois Press Foundation award grants to 26 high school journalism programs: More than $35,000 total in grants will be distributed to the schools in the fall to pay for laptops, cameras, broadcasting equipment, newspaper printing costs, website hosting fees and more. The Illinois Press Foundation Board of Directors’ Education Committee approved the grant recipients.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WAND | Gluten free food handling proposal arrives on Pritzker’s desk, awaits signature: The legislation requires all hospitality workers to receive training about what celiac disease is and how to stop gluten contamination with gluten-free food. Sen. Sally Turner (R-Lincoln) said this is a great way for Illinois to support people with celiac disease. “It’s interesting when you go to a restaurant and some don’t have a menu for celiac disease,” Turner said. “Sometimes the servers don’t even know what it is, so I think this awareness is a really good thing so we can fully understand it, ourselves and also people working in the industries.”

* WAND | Bill requiring seat belts on school buses arrives on Pritzker’s desk: This bill could mandate that any school buses manufactured in Illinois have three-point seat belts starting in 2031. Sponsors said this change is solely about student safety, as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle want children to come and go from school safely.

* Center Square | IL legislator continues quest to eliminate property taxes for 30-year homeowners: Proposed by Anderson earlier this year, Senate Bill 1862 seeks to end property taxes for state residents who have lived in and paid on residential properties for at least three decades. “I think it’s just a fundamental idea that at some point you have to own your own stuff,” Anderson told The Center Square. “Right now, in America, and I don’t care what state it is, you can pay your house off, pay property taxes for 40, 50 years and then you fall on hard times, can’t pay your property taxes and now the government can take it. At some point, you have to own your stuff. It has to be yours and you don’t owe anybody anything.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Bucking policy trend, public access to video of CPD Officer Krystal Rivera’s fatal shooting is delayed: A judge has barred the release of video and other materials related to the investigation into the friendly fire shooting death of Chicago police Officer Krystal Rivera, a move that came after the Cook County state’s attorney’s office asked that the information be shielded from public records requests. Rivera, 36, a four-year veteran of the department, was mistakenly shot and killed by a fellow officer on June 5 after a confrontation with an armed suspect.

* Edward Keegan | Chicago Fire stadium plans cry out for a bit of quirkiness: As shown, the new stadium is simple, unimposing and not unattractive. The developers explain that Gensler has designed in the “‘Chicago School’ of architecture,” but it’s more of a generalized warehouse aesthetic that you might find at a contemporary shopping mall anywhere in America. It cries out for a bit of quirkiness that would make the structure more distinctive and genuinely grounded in Chicago’s unique architectural culture. An exposed steel canopy over the stadium’s seating will provide welcome shade during the summer and some protection from precipitation, but its most important function is helping to define the stadium’s interior as a more intimate space than a 22,000-seat venue might otherwise feel. It’s also where a more contemporary take on Miesian structural expression might create a more memorable building.

* Block Club | South Side Community Gardens Need Water Access From The City — But Getting It Is A Struggle: Gladly’s farm isn’t the only one that’s had to get creative while tending to crops. Dulce Margarita Morales, co-founder and lead educator at Cedillo’s Fresh Produce, runs a farm and a neighborhood garden in Englewood. The farm has water access, but the garden has been without it since 2020, she told Block Club. “Before that, we were able to utilize it. But then all of a sudden, somebody came Memorial Day weekend [that year] and left the hydrant open for three days. Then the city came and put a cap on it,” said Morales, who has worked with the garden for nine years.

* Sun-Times | White Sox, MLB ban spectator who taunted Diamondbacks’ Ketel Marte: “Baseball is family,” the Rate Field video board declared from left field as Arizona’s second baseman walked to the plate Wednesday afternoon. “The White Sox community supports Ketel Marte.” Sox fans backed up that sentiment with an ovation for the All-Star infielder, but it sure didn’t feel like it a night earlier for Marte, who broke down in tears Tuesday after a fan hurled an insult about his late mother. The unidentified 22-year-old spectator’s vitriol earned him an indefinite ban from all MLB ballparks — and it forced fans, players and coaches to once again reckon with the verbal abuse that all too often rains down from the stands at the old ballgame.

* Block Club | The Barrel That Launched A Sour Beer Movement Is Now At Chicago’s Off Color Brewing: Last month, Laffler received a surprise visit from a longtime friend and industry peer from St. Louis who brought with him a freshly emptied French oak barrel. It was stamped with three characters synonymous with the brewing method that has captured so much of Laffler’s imagination: pH1. First used as a wine barrel more than 30 years ago, pH1 has taken on an almost mythological aura in the craft brewing industry. It’s been described as “beer famous,” and the batches it produces, a fraction of most breweries’ typical yields, have led beer enthusiasts to scour message boards with faint hopes of finding a bottle available for trade.

* Sun-Times | Ferris Bueller vest sells for $279,400 at auction: A vest worn by Matthew Broderick as the titular character in the Chicago-based cult classic, “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” sold for $279,400 after it was auctioned off by Sotheby’s New York. The vest, worn by Ferris as he played hooky and frolicked through some of the city’s most iconic spots — including Wrigley Field and the Art Institute — was put up for auction June 5.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Toni Preckwinkle picks new Cook County Forest Preserves boss: After a year and a half without a permanent leader, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has nominated a new head for the county’s Forest Preserves. On Wednesday, she named Adam Bianchi as her pick to become the district’s new superintendent. Her choice will face a vote from the Forest Preserves board — which has the same members as the Cook County board — next week.

* Naperville Sun | DuPage to establish community land bank, trust to incentivize more affordable housing: “People that work in DuPage and contribute to our economic stability (being) able to afford to live and raise their families here seems like it should be a fundamental right, but it’s something that we’re struggling with,” DuPage County Board Chair Deb Conroy said. “We want to fix it.” The average median household income in DuPage County as of 2023 was $106,961, according to census data. Meanwhile, as of last month, the median sale price of a home in DuPage was $425,000, per data from Redfin, a national real estate brokerage.

* Daily Southtown | Air Force veteran’s Park Forest home gets thousands in repairs through Cook County program: Launched in 2023, the Veterans Home Repair Program tapped $1.25 million in federal American Rescue Plan Act funds. Along with Kellogg’s home, the county program repaired the homes of veterans in Chicago, Blue Island, Calumet City, Dolton, Homewood, Lansing, Matteson and Richton Park. Interior and exterior work was done on all of the homes, with costs ranging from $15,000 to $45,000, according to the county.

* Daily Southtown | Defeated Markham Park Board member appointed to Bremen District 228 Board: Bremen High School District 228 recently welcomed a new board member, filling an almost three-month vacancy after the previous member ran for a village board. School Board members chose Laurence Patterson II to fill the vacancy. Patterson, who was a Markham Park Board member from 2019 to 2023, when he lost a reelection bid, said he is excited for the opportunity to continue his long-term goal of “breaking down generational barriers” and helping local youth engage with their community.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Champaign considers changes to parking requirements to boost affordable housing development: The city is considering eliminating the minimum parking space rules for new apartments and houses. The council hopes that this ordinance change will encourage the development of more affordable housing options, such as duplexes and townhomes. A formal vote on the proposed change is expected in the coming weeks.

* IPM | Champaign County workers threaten to strike over stalled contract negotiations: More than 100 workers rallied Monday afternoon outside the Champaign County Courthouse in Urbana. The group, represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, claims administrators are not offering fair wages or affordable insurance. “In this economy, everybody’s losing ground,” said local AFSCME president Cece Phillips. “We deserve to not worry about how to put food on the table. We work for the freaking county.” Phillips said the county has offered a 2% raise — which she said isn’t enough, especially for employees earning $16 an hour.

* BND | Controversial solar farm at Belleville cemetery to bring less income than expected: The original lease would have required Belleville Solar LLC to pay an initial lump sum of $500,000 and annual rent payments of $69,375. An amended lease will reduce the lump sum to $250,000 and annual rent payments to $50,252 for the first 25 years and $55,311 for the last 10, according to Mayor Jenny Gain Meyer.

* WGLT | Carle expands transitional outpatient mental health program to Normal: Carle BroMenn Medical Center developed its intensive outpatient program [IOP] called “Journey” in Normal based on a similar initiative at Carle Health Methodist Hospital in Peoria. “Having an IOP option allows us to offer patients a way to more easily transition back to their daily lives before they found themselves in crisis,” said Heather Hintz, executive director of Carle Behavioral Health, in a statement. “They receive more intensive and frequent treatment while also having some level of independence and return to their daily routine.”

*** National ***

* The Guardian | Harvard hired a researcher to uncover its ties to slavery. He says the results cost him his job: ‘We found too many slaves’: The initiative received its first public blow last spring, when two university professors on the committee to create a memorial stepped down, saying in a letter obtained by the student newspaper that the university had attempted to “dilute and delay” their efforts to reach out to descendants. The committee was formed in 2023, based on one of the recommendations of the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery report to “honor enslaved people through memorialization”. In a statement made to the student newspaper, a spokesperson for the university said it “take[s] seriously the co-chairs’ concerns about the importance of community involvement and of taking steps that will enable Harvard to deeply engage with descendant communities”.

* Reuters | Judge blocks feds from withholding EV charger funds: The U.S. Transportation Department in February suspended the EV charging program, which was part of former President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act, and rescinded prior approval of states’ spending plans. Lin’s ruling did not apply to District of Columbia, Minnesota and Vermont, which also sued over the funding rescission but did not provide evidence that they would suffer immediate harm as a result of the Transportation Department decision.

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Update: Lawmakers, advocates call for special summer session - Dems respond to several suburban mayors’ complaints about mass transit package

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Seems a bit late. From the Suburban Mayors Coalition for Fair Transit via the Illinois Municipal League

Honorable Members of the Illinois General Assembly:

Over the past 18 months, members of both chambers have dedicated considerable time to evaluating our region’s transit system and exploring ways to improve service for the more than one million daily riders who rely on Metra, Pace, and the CTA. Many of these riders are among our most vulnerable residents, who have no alternative means of transportation. We appreciate your commitment to addressing the looming fiscal cliff facing public transit. However, the legislative proposals introduced thus far raise significant concerns for municipalities and the residents we represent.

We respectfully share the following concerns:

Real Estate Transfer Tax

The proposed $3 per $1,000 real estate transfer tax would apply to transactions in suburban Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will Counties while excluding the City of Chicago. This new tax would add to the growing barriers to affordable housing in our communities. Furthermore, it would derail parallel legislative efforts that aspire to improve housing access across the state.

Retail Delivery Fee

A statewide $1.50 delivery fee on all motor vehicle deliveries of goods subject to sales tax would affect every household, regardless of income or proximity to transit. This fee is regressive, disproportionately burdens low to moderate income families, and lacks a clear connection between those paying and those benefiting from the transit system.

Development Authority

The proposed authority for the new regional transit entity to acquire, develop, or redevelop property within a ½-mile of transit stations or ⅛-mile of bus stops raises serious concerns about local control and private property rights. Even with the inclusion of local zoning requirements, granting such powers to an unelected regional board would allow development across broad swaths of suburban communities potentially overriding local planning efforts. This also includes concerns about the regional board exerting authority over local parking requirements. These decisions should remain under municipal governments.

Board Composition and Voting

The proposed structure of the NITA Board lacks the necessary safeguards to ensure balanced regional representation. We urge you to consider models like the CMAP Board, which requires a 4/5 majority vote to pass all major decisions. Without similar protections, there is a real risk of disenfranchising any one subregion and discouraging collaboration.

Board Membership

The restrictions on who may be Directors on the NITA Board and service boards preclude local elected officials who may be the most knowledgeable people on transportation needs of their constituents. Local elected officials have been some of the most reliable and knowledgeable members of our region’s boards for decades. There is a reason so many members of boards like CMAP, the service boards, and ISTHA have been elected officials or former elected officials, they know the regional challenges of funding and operating complex systems.

Service Standards and Funding Distribution

The proposed performance metrics and service propensity measures may disadvantage Metra and Pace in favor of CTA, potentially skewing future funding and service priorities. Considering the legislation proposes only fifteen votes of the NITA Board to approve these criteria, the suburbs and collar counties could face significant hurdles in receiving sufficient funding to providing transit to their residents. Greater clarity and assurances regarding service equity and long-term funding parity are essential before finalizing this legislation.

We are asking you, our legislators, to stand up for our hometowns and your constituents in northeastern Illinois and across the state. We urge you to pass legislation that would provide for a more efficient and regionally balanced approach to public transit. We further hope this new legislation will align new revenue sources with access to transit service, ensures meaningful representation for all subregions, and preserves local authority over land use, parking and development.

Transit reform should focus on improving service, expanding access and financial sustainability, not on development powers at the expense of municipal autonomy or creating new burdens on residents with little connection to the transit system.

We respectfully ask to be included in ongoing discussions to better collaborate on a path forward that supports fair, reliable, and equitable public transit for all northeastern Illinois.

Thank you for your service and for your attention to this critical issue.

Sincerely,
The undersigned Mayors and Village Presidents:

    Rodney Craig, Village of Hanover Park
    Leon Rockingham, Jr., City of North Chicago
    John Noak, Village of Romeoville
    Nancy Rotering, City of Highland Park
    William McLeod, Village of Hoffman Estates
    Frank Saverino, Village of Carol Stream
    Craig Johnson, Village of Elk Grove Village
    Jeffery Schielke, City of Batavia
    Tom Dailly, Village of Schaumburg
    Philip Suess, City of Wheaton
    Gary Grasso, Village of Burr Ridge
    Frank Trilla, Village of Willowbrook
    Paul Hoefert, Village of Mount Prospect
    Eleanor Sweet McDonnell, Village of North Barrington
    Donna Johnson, Village of Libertyville
    Tom Hundley, Village of Addison
    David Kaptain, City of Elgin
    Rick Reinbold, Village of Richton Park
    Mark Kownick, Village of Cary Larry Herman, Village of Oak Brook
    Rick Mack, Village of Ringwood
    David Pileski, Village of Roselle
    Joseph Marchese, City of Darien
    Sam Cunningham, City of Waukegan

* From a spokesperson for Reps. Eva-Dina Delgado and Kam Buckner…

Years of discussions and more than a year of formal negotiation have generated valuable feedback, and that has brought us to the point where we are close to a better path forward for our transit agencies. While some discussions continue, those discussions need to be focused on constructive feedback and solutions.

* From Senate President Don Harmon’s spokesperson John Patterson…

We welcome the feedback and look forward to their input and ideas on how to resolve this looming crisis.

Your translation of the responses?

* Meanwhile, Sen. Ram Villivalam talked to Governing Magazine about the immediate future

Governing: Are there sticking points in the reform conversation. If so, what are they?

Villivalam: The reforms that have been presented in House Bill 3438 are largely agreed to by all of the stakeholders and I think represent what our residents and taxpayers want to see in terms of having a safe, reliable, accessible and integrated public transit system. The Senate has passed a package of reforms and funding with a transformational investment of $1.5 billion. We believe the package of reforms has really achieved a consensus of stakeholders and residents that have been involved in this process.

Governing: You’re waiting for the House to vote on that.

Villivalam: If there’s a better funding plan that achieves $1.5 billion in investment, we’re happy to work with folks on that. Our position, though, is that we passed a bill, and short of there being a better funding plan, we’d like to see our bill passed and sent to the governor.

In other words, the governance and related reforms are basically locked down. Some revenues are still up in the air.

…Adding… Press release…

Labor, Environmental, and Transit Advocates call on legislators to return to Springfield, address $770 million transit fiscal cliff

With pink slips scheduled for September and planned cuts to transit service, advocates and workers rally, urge state lawmakers to prevent a catastrophe

WHAT: The Illinois General Assembly adjourned on May 31 without addressing the state’s $770 million transit fiscal cliff. With pink slips scheduled for September and the RTA’s instruction for the CTA, Metra, and Pace to plan for service cuts, transit riders and workers are urging the General Assembly to avert a catastrophe by returning to Springfield for a special summer session.

After months of negotiations, legislation passed the Senate on May 31, but was not available to be called in the House. The bill included long-awaited reform measures agreed upon by labor, environment, and transit advocates and a new, dedicated revenue stream for transit.

As a result of Springfield’s inaction, the RTA estimates that nearly 3,000 transit workers could lose their jobs, including 2,000 CTA workers. The service boards have indicated that staffing cuts will result in a 40% reduction to service, leaving Chicago with a transit network smaller than Madison, WI.

By law, the 2026 CTA, Metra, and Pace budgets must only include the funding they will receive for the next year when the budgeting process begins in July 2025. As such, even though the General Assembly is scheduled to return in October for a fall veto session, the agencies must still plan as if they are not receiving the funding to address the fiscal cliff. All four agencies have indicated that, even if a revenue solution were proposed, the collected revenue from October through December would not be enough to plug the budget hole.

WHO:

State Senator Ram Villivalam
State Senator Graciela Guzmán
Tiffany Rebb, CTA Bus Operator
Orlando Rojas, Metra Conductor
Ann Marie Moore, Flight Attendant, Transit Rider
Evan Urchell, The People’s Lobby, Transit Rider
Jose Manuel Almanaza, Equiticity, Transit Advocate

WHEN: Thursday, June 26, 2025

12:00 PM

WHERE: 238 S. Riverside Plaza, Chicago, IL (Between Union Station & Chicago River under the overhang)

  10 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - This just in (Updated)

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker’s 2026 campaign slogan? (Snark is not discouraged).

  52 Comments      


An unintentional peek behind the scenes

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a Rep. Sue Scherer (D-Decatur) fundraising email…

I’m thinking her consultant might be a bit peeved that Rep. Scherer shared the secret sauce, but also that she didn’t follow the consultant’s advice.

Discuss.

  24 Comments      


Why Are Tax-Exempt Hospitals Getting Rich?

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, big hospital systems and PBMs are abusing the 340B drug discount program – making massive profits while patients drown in medical bills. One whistleblower called it “laundering money.”

Here’s how the scam works: big hospitals buy discounted 340B drugs, bill patients full price, then split the difference with for-profit pharmacies and PBMs.

340B was meant to help Illinois communities in need. But there are no rules requiring hospitals and PBMs to pass savings on to patients. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families, small businesses, and taxpayers.

Meanwhile, tax-exempt hospitals cash in – and PBMs get a cut too.

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Open thread

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Recent 4 Non Blondes

And so I cry sometimes when I’m lying in bed
Just to get it all out what’s in my head

Keep your comments Illinois-centric please. Thanks.

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jun 25, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Ex-Ald. Ed Burke about to become ex-con Burke. NBC Chicago

    - The NBC 5 Investigates Team has learned that less than one year after former Alderman Ed Burke was sent to prison, he is preparing to be sent home.
    - Burke’s two-year sentence behind bars is set to end after serving less than ten months.
    - Several sources with direct knowledge of his case tell NBC Chicago that Burke will be released from the Thomson federal prison in northwestern Illinois to a halfway house or, more likely, home confinement.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | Chicago indie filmmakers say the Illinois Film Office is causing them headaches: Prairie State Production Alliance — a group of 61 independent filmmakers and production companies — sent a letter to Pritzker last month in which it said the Film Production Tax Credit program is unfairly forcing indie filmmakers to go through bureaucratic obstacles and interpret rules that aren’t clear. They say the roadblocks have pushed some to decrease their film budgets, leading to fewer jobs, that others have canceled projects, and some are considering moving productions to other states and that these are all issues the tax-credit program was supposed to guard against.

* NBC Chicago | 3 Chicago-area hospitals with broken air conditioning as heat, humidity continues: Even prior to a heat wave that swept over the Chicago area beginning on Saturday, patients at Weiss Hospital in Uptown were affected by issues the building had with air conditioning, leading to the relocation of some patients to West Suburban Hospital in Oak Park. However, when temperatures soared this past weekend, patients began to suffer at West Suburban as well, with some rooms becoming extremely hot and requiring the relocation of patients.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | On Dobbs anniversary, Illinois is more crucial than ever for abortion access: Last year, Illinois had around 35,000 out-of-state abortions. However, it is becoming increasingly more difficult for women to get timely abortion access, with two-to-three week wait times that can leave women in dangerous positions. Reset checks in with advocates about the current state of access – and demand – in Illinois.

* WTVO | Vaping is about to get more expensive in Illinois on July 1st: The tax on vaping products, cigars, chewing tobacco, and synthetic nicotine will increase from the current 15% to 45% of the wholesale price. The extra taxes are expected to bring in $50 million in revenue for the state.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WGEM | Tracy to run for re-election to the Illinois Senate in the 50th District: Tracy, who serves as the Senate Republican Whip, said she is seeking another term to continue fighting Gov. JB Pritzker’s tax-and-spend fiscal policies and to stand up for Illinois families against government overreach and burdensome mandates.

* Chicagoland Journal | Pritzker Administration Announces 2025 Affordable Housing Tax Credit Developments: The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) Board approved awards totaling $24 million in federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) and an additional $39 million in federal and state subordinate resources that will finance the creation and preservation of 16 affordable housing developments in 11 counties throughout Illinois. The LIHTC awards are expected to generate an estimated $180 million in private capital to support the development of 850 affordable homes for low- to moderate-income families, seniors, and veterans.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | After Objections, CPD Agrees Officers Will Not Search Vehicles Based on Smell of Raw Cannabis: Reform Groups: The coalition, led by the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, “applauds” CPD for amending the policy in late May, calling the latest version “an improvement” that reflects an agreement reached in August 2023 that prohibits officers from “conducting an investigatory stop or search of an individual based solely on an officer smelling cannabis/marijuana without any other specific and articulable facts of criminal activity,” in a court filing made Monday.

* Crain’s | Push for mandatory security cameras puts City Hall at odds with biz and the ACLU: A measure introduced last week at the City Council requiring businesses in Chicago to maintain security cameras has drawn pushback from business groups and civil liberty advocates. The opponents of the measure say it’s overly broad, imposes burdensome costs on businesses, and gives the Chicago Police Department expanded subpoena authority. Introduced by West Side Ald. Emma Mitts, 37th, with 24 cosponsors, the ordinance requires all companies with a business license from the city to install security cameras focused on all entrances and exits, the public sidewalk near doors and their parking lots.

* Nadig Newspapers | Sale of ‘any cannabinoid hemp’ product to be banned in 41st, 45th wards on Chicago’s NW Side: The ban is primarily intended to help prevent minors from using products that include Delta-8 or Delta 9 THC, which contains compounds found in cannabis plants. These compounds can be found naturally from cannabis plants or produced synthetically. THC is an active ingredient of cannabis. However, under the ordinance the sale of these products will be banned to both children and adults. The ordinance doesn’t make it clear if there are exceptions, such as infused liquor products and other beverages that are sold only to those age 21 and over. Hemp beverages are becoming increasingly popular at retail shops and bars.

* WGN | TSA breaks record for busiest day ever at O’Hare: The Transportation Security Administration released a statement Tuesday that said Sunday, June 22 broke the record for most people screened on a single day at O’Hare. The stat was reflected around the country as TSA reports the day was also the busiest day nationwide. “Officers screened nearly 3.1 million individuals,” the statement said.

* Sun-Times | Hundreds attend visitation for slain CPD Officer Krystal Rivera: For Ariana Vilcins, to know Chicago Police Officer Krystal Rivera was a “privilege.” Vilcins, who taught Rivera’s daughter, described Rivera as a devoted and kind mother — qualities she sees reflected in 11-year-old Bella. “Krystal was 100% devoted to her child and wanted her daughter to have the best education, the best life and the most love that she could possibly have,” Vilcins said. “Bella is a cheerful, loving little girl, and it’s a result of the way she brought up her daughter.”

* Sun-Times | Griffin MSI’s new online collection lets visitors experience the 1893 World’s Fair — and more: The free searchable database will feature 7,000 pieces from the museum’s 35,000-item collection and about 1,000 images have been uploaded so far.

* Crain’s | New York’s famous Katz’s Deli is doing a pop-up in Chicago: The event is meant to promote Windy City Smokeout, the annual barbecue and country music festival held outside the United Center. The festival is planned for July 10-13 this year. Tickets to the pop-up event cost $45, which includes the price of the sandwich and sides.

* WGN | 12th annual Chicago Food Truck Festival returning to South Loop this weekend: The Chicago Food Truck Festival is returning to the South Loop on June 28-29, celebrating its 12th season with a nod to one of the city’s most iconic bites: the Chicago-style hotdog. The festival, held at 2300 South Indiana Avenue, will feature classic comfort food and innovative dishes from over 40 food trucks and local vendors.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Fox Chicago | Juneteenth flag dispute in Aurora sparks backlash against new mayor: Aurora residents questioned why the Juneteenth flag wasn’t officially raised, while a Pride flag ceremony earlier in the month was held as planned under the previous administration. Mayor John Laesch said he’s scaling back city-run flag raisings to be more fiscally responsible, instead encouraging community-led celebrations. The issue was addressed at Tuesday’s city council meeting, where residents spoke out; the mayor’s office says groups can still request flag raisings.

* Legal News | Man stays in jail indefinitely until pays ex-wife $10M: Appeals court: A 60-year-old man who has been held in the Cook County Jail for nearly three years despite facing no criminal charges will need to remain there, a state appeals court has ruled, because he can’t prove to the courts that he doesn’t actually have $10 million to pay his ex-wife, as a Cook County judge ordered him to do. On June 24, a three-justice panel of the Illinois First District Appellate Court backed the decision of Cook County Judge Michael Forti to keep that man, Steve Fanady, in custody under a civil contempt order.

* Shaw Local | Ex-Joliet Township trustee loses bid to dismiss pandemic relief fraud case: A former Joliet Township trustee must still face 16 felony charges accusing him of pandemic relief fraud and other financial crimes after a judge denied a pretrial motion that alleged prosecutorial misconduct.

* Shaw Local | Out-of-town shoppers pay more grocery taxes than St. Charles residents, finance director says: St. Charles and Geneva are two of the last Kane County municipalities yet still undecided, after Batavia voted in May to impose the tax, joining Algonquin, Burlington, Montgomery, North Aurora, South Elgin and Sugar Grove. The St. Charles City Council is expected to put the tax to a final vote at its July 7 meeting. City staff, in favor taxing groceries, have presented a local tax as maintaining the “status quo,” not enacting an additional, new tax on residents. City finance director Bill Hannah presented that view for the first time to officials during a recent Government Services Committee meeting. The committee supported the tax unanimously, though a Council vote still is needed.

* Daily Southtown | Mokena joins other towns in replacing state’s 1% grocery tax: The village of Mokena has joined numerous other municipalities in continuing the 1% grocery tax the state of Illinois will end Jan. 1. The Mokena Village Board voted 6-0 Monday to continue the tax that brings in about $850,000 a year, funding general services, “anything affecting public safety, streets, administration, those types of things,” Village Manager John Tomasoski said.

* Daily Herald | After 18 months of debate, Prospect Heights adopts rules for backyard chickens: The move still had its critics, but the crowd of about a dozen people who attended the city council meeting Monday was much smaller than those attending previous hearings on the issue. “People finally realized the council wasn’t saying no to chickens,” Mayor Patrick Ludvigsen said. Advocates of the rules said the practice could no longer exist in the city without some restrictions. Building and Development Director Dan Peterson said resident complaints that surfaced in October 2023 couldn’t be ignored, leading city staff and the council to take action.

* Crain’s | Three suburban Mariano’s set to close: “This closure is part of a larger company-wide decision to run more efficiently and ensure the long-term health of our business,” Amanda Puck, vice president of communications and brand development for Kroger’s Mariano’s and Roundy’s divisions, said in a statement. Cincinnati-based Kroger acquired Mariano’s former parent company, Milwaukee-based Roundy’s, in 2015. Roundy’s is now a subsidiary of Kroger.

*** Downstate ***

* News-Gazette | Tolono board OKs ordinance holding parents responsible for kids’ unlawful acts: Village President Terrence Stuber said the board is frustrated by antics of a few scofflaws and want to take a proactive approach in hopefully remedying the situation. “There has been a lot of juvenile mischief and vandalism throughout our community, and some board members were fed up with it,” Stuber said. “They were fed up with the vandalism at the park; they were fed up with the attempts to break into people’s cars, all of the disturbing of the peace that has been going on by (minors).”

* WGLT | With location secured, shelter village in Bloomington is on track to open for winter: “We will get construction started as soon as humanly possible,” Burgess said. Burgess said he has already begun speaking with the general contractor and has submitted permits to the City of Bloomington. Even with the lot purchased and a behavioral health grant secured, funds are still needed to build The Bridge. Burgess said in the coming weeks HSHM will launch a “Build The Bridge” campaign, asking the community for donations.

* WGN | First human West Nile Virus case confirmed in Illinois: Illinois had its first confirmed human case of the West Nile Virus of the year Tuesday, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The confirmed case is an individual from southern Illinois who was hospitalized due to complications of the infection.

* WSIL | SIH breaks ground on new $19.9 million Mulberry Center in Harrisburg: The project will increase inpatient capacity from 30 to 42 beds, including 12 private rooms. It will also feature modern healing spaces with renovated Adult and Geriatric Psychiatry wings, updated communal areas, and a refreshed outdoor courtyard. The facility will also provide specialized medical-psychiatric care for patients with both medical and psychiatric needs. Enhanced care programs will include expanded group therapy, therapeutic activities, crisis care, and improved follow-up care after discharge.

* BND | More than 3,000 lost power in Fairview Heights area at height of afternoon heat: Brian Bretsch, public relations manager for Ameren, a power line pole malfunctioned and fell on top of another power line, causing the outage. The utility has reroute power to all but 111 customers by 4 p.m., Bretsch said. Power was restored to all customers by 5:35 p.m., he said.

* WGLT | Airbnb owner: Normal’s coming ban is an ‘overcorrection,’ and there are better options: The Normal Town Council banned new short-term rentals [STRs], such as Airbnb and Vrbo, and will require owners of existing STRs to convert them to long-term rentals within five years. That’s aimed in part at addressing noise, parking and other complaints that may result from allowing what’s essentially a business in a single-family neighborhood. “As it stands today, I think it’s an overcorrection,” said Marie Poundstone, who manages four STRs in the area under the name Bloomington Retreats, including one in Normal. “I am hoping they’re going to look through data and try to figure out a better option.”

* WTVO | ‘I could be dead,’ Rockford teenager reflects on traumatic experience after hit-and-run: “I could just see this car coming towards me, and I didn’t have enough time to react, and it just hit me.” Hunt said she flew into the air before landing on nearby grass. She said her bruises are fresh, but she is grateful to still be here today. “It was very hard riding in the back of the ambulance,” Hunt said. “So many thoughts were racing through my mind. I’m just glad to be alive, because if I was a second later, I could be dead.”

* WICS | Lincoln enlists former Pontiac mayor to boost Route 66 tourism efforts: As Central Illinois gears up for the Route 66 Centennial, the city of Lincoln is turning to a former mayor to spearhead its tourism efforts. Scott McCoy, who previously served as mayor of Pontiac, has been appointed as Lincoln’s new director of tourism. McCoy is credited with elevating Pontiac to one of the top three Route 66 tourist destinations in Illinois, a success Lincoln officials hope to replicate. “We can only hope to be as successful as Pontiac, but they’ve been at it for a lot longer, so we have to start somewhere,” said Lincoln Mayor Tracy Welch.

* WSIL | Judge closes Williamson Co. hunting club for 2 years; two ordered to pay fines: Hugh Thomas Burns Jr., 67 of Carbondale, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the Lacey Act. The attorney’s office said, as the owner of Burns Hunting Club, LLC, Burns was involved in the sale of wildlife in violation of federal law. […] Court documents stated the hunting club sold memberships and provided paid guiding services on its property to migratory bird hunters. Burns and co-defendant Michael McKinney, 52 of Benton, were both accused of providing guided services over illegal baited hunting fields.

* WCIA | New childcare facility filling a void in Christian Co.: Monday morning, they celebrated their ribbon cutting ceremony for the new Assumption community childcare center. “And it’s been really exciting because it’s been such a buildup and our communities, both communities, and all the surrounding ones really have really needed this,” said Aimee Younker, childcare teacher. “And so, it’s been such an excitement to watch it grow.” Fundraising efforts include more than $300,000 raised to open their doors. Younker has four children of her own and she said she remembers when it was hard to find childcare herself.

* WGLT | Chicago teen charged in shooting at ISU’s Bone Student Center: Thomas is accused of shooting another person April 27 outside a sorority event being held at the Bone Student Center. The victim, who was not a student, was injured but survived. ISU Police said Thomas has “no affiliation with Illinois State University” other than being at the Bone that night. Police released security-camera photos of someone they subbed a “person of interest” within a day of the shooting. It’s unclear how long Thomas has been the suspect but remained at large.

*** National ***

* USA Today | ‘Killer bees’ keep spreading (and killing) across the US: In the last three months alone, a man mowing his property died after a bee attack, three people were taken to the hospital after tree trimmers disturbed a colony, hikers ran a mile to get away from an agitated hive and a woman and bees spooked by a lawn mower swarmed three horses. The horses later died from “thousands” of stings, their owner said. Scientists say the bees’ temperament is a defense mechanism to ward off predators – and note that because honey bees die after stinging, they are sacrificing themselves to protect their colony. But to unsuspecting humans, killer bees sure seem aggressive, spiteful and terrifying.

* WTTW | Advocates Say ‘Really Vulnerable Lives’ at Stake as Trump Administration Moves to Shutter LGBTQ+ Suicide Prevention Line: According to the latest data from SAMHSA, more than 14.5 million people have called, texted or sent chats to the 988 Lifeline and have been transferred to a crisis contact center since July 2022. Nearly 1.3 million of those were routed to the LGBTQ+ specialized service. “We know LGBTQ youth are four times more likely to commit suicide than their youth counterparts,” said Precious Brady-Davis, a commissioner for the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago. “Youth deserve people who understand what it’s like to come out. It’s support services, it’s resources, it’s comfort, it’s someone telling them it’s OK to be who you are.”

* Cannabis Business Times | US House Committee Approves Bill to Close THCA ‘Loophole,’ Ban Intoxicating Hemp Products: The House Appropriations Committee voted along party lines, 35-27, on June 23 to approve the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill. The 138-page spending bill includes more than $25 billion in discretionary allocations to address myriad issues facing U.S. farmers, ranchers and rural communities. In addition to focusing on America’s food and drug supply, this year’s bill also includes language to rewrite the rules around hemp-derived cannabinoid products. The provision aims to address what elected officials and law enforcement groups nationwide have increasingly viewed as a public health and safety concern in the aftermath of the 2018 Farm Bill’s federal legalization of industrial hemp cultivation. The 2018 Farm Bill regulates hemp as an agricultural commodity but not finished goods containing the plant’s derivatives.

* Sports Illustrated | California’s Anti-Sweepstakes Bill Could Shake Up Online Gaming And Fantasy Sports: California is moving in lockstep with states like New York and Louisiana, proposing legislation that would make it illegal to support, facilitate, or promote sweepstakes-style online casinos. That means no wiggle room for payment processors, game suppliers, platforms, or even high-profile influencers who back them. If passed, California would join Connecticut and Montana in formally banning these operations.

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