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Reader comments closed for the weekend

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Fontine

I won’t find my way back to you

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WTTW

Government attorneys say Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents are in compliance with nearly every requirement of a sweeping order mandating improvements at the suburban Broadview processing facility.

But attorneys representing detainees who claimed they were subjected to “inhumane” conditions remain doubtful of those claims and are asking for permission to inspect the facility to see for themselves.

In a status report filed Friday, attorneys for the government said ICE is in compliance, or taking significant steps toward getting in compliance, with items in a temporary restraining order issued by U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman this week that demanded improvements to “unacceptable” living conditions at the suburban processing facility. […]

Attorneys representing those detainees said they’ve thus far seen no proof of any changes at the facility.

* US Rep. Chuy García explains decision not to seek reelection


*** Statewide ***

* WCIA | Big changes in the state led to Illinois being ranked near the top for human trafficking survivor laws: The state is ranked number two and has improved from an “F” rating to an “A,” because of work from all levels across the state. A lot changed this past August. The Trauma-Informed Response to Human Trafficking Act was passed, and Illinois State Police started a new task force.

* Fox 2 Now | 11 sickened by raw milk outbreak in Illinois: The Illinois Department of Public Health reports an outbreak involving at least 11 people in the state who recently became ill after consuming raw milk. The IDPH has so far identified an outbreak of eleven cases of Campylobacter infection that appear to be linked to consumption of raw milk from a common source. The producer, according to IDPH, is taking steps to notify customers and is cooperating with the investigation. … Campylobacter, the suspected source of the outbreak, is a bacteria that can cause bloody and non-bloody diarrhea, fever, and stomach cramps. In more severe cases, the infection can lead to irritable bowel syndrome, arthritis, and Guillain-Barré syndrome.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Federal shutdown, budget cuts challenge state policymakers: “Over the past several years, here in Illinois, we’ve passed balanced budgets that include rainy-day funds and contingency funds to help us get through emergencies,” State Rep. Anna Moeller told Capitol News Illinois during a podcast interview this week. “But certainly, we don’t have the resources at the state level — no state has the resources — to fully make up for the lack of federal participation in these programs.” Moeller, D-Elgin, chairs the House budget committee that oversees funding for health and human services. That panel held an informational hearing during the recent fall veto session to update members on changes happening in the federal government and how they affect state agencies and policymakers in Illinois.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Ald. Villegas to introduce $1.25 delivery fee ordinance in Chicago: Hoping to replace some of the new taxes included in Mayor Brandon Johnson’s $16.6 billion 2026 budget proposal, a Northwest Side alderman wants to charge a $1.25 fee on packaged deliveries, with exemptions for groceries, medicine and restaurant deliveries. Ald. Gilbert Villegas, 36th, will introduce the ordinance at the Nov. 14 City Council meeting and hopes it will be included in the ongoing budget negotiations. Chicagoans have an easy option to not pay the fee: limit their online shopping, Villegas told Crain’s.

* Sun-Times | CPS school board signs NDAs, faces criticism about transparency in CEO search: The board also formed a community panel composed of students, parents and teachers, as well as a central office administrator and an elementary and high school principal, to interview finalists and provide input. The board is also requiring that group to sign NDAs. But officials at other large school districts have not only chosen to publicly identify their top choices — some have held interviews open to the public.

* Tribune | Gregory Bovino claims agents operate ‘legally, ethically and morally’ same day injunction issued in federal court: The agents piled back into their convoy as neighbors screamed at them and spent much of the rest of the afternoon driving haphazardly around Chicago’s Southwest Side and south suburban Summit. Driving away from the gas station down Western Avenue, one group of agents fired a round of pepper balls at a black sedan that pulled up alongside their vehicle.

* Block Club | Arrest Of Daycare Worker At Preschool Violated Consent Decree, Attorneys Say: Last month, a federal judge concluded dozens of recent warrantless immigration arrests were made in violation of a consent decree banning warrantless arrests unless agents have probable cause to believe someone is in the United States unlawfully and is a flight risk. Attorneys representing Santillana Galeano said her arrest violates the consent decree. Her attorneys wrote that detaining Santillana Galeano “without a bond redetermination hearing to determine whether [she] is a flight risk or danger to others violates [her] right to due process.”

* WTTW | Pay $17M to Man Who Spent 27 Years in Prison After Being Beaten Into Confessing to Murder by Disgraced Ex-Detective, City Lawyers Recommend: Chicago taxpayers should pay $17 million to a man who spent 27 years in prison after he was beaten and coerced by a disgraced former Chicago police detective into confessing that he killed two brothers in 1990, city lawyers recommended. Jose Maysonet Jr. was convicted and sentenced to life in prison after being investigated by Reynaldo Guevara, a former Chicago police detective accused of routinely framing suspects.

* The Triibe | Kevin Jackson was falsely convicted, and now his innocence certificate is being opposed by a prosecutor whose past includes prosecutorial misconduct: That prosecutor is Fabio Valentini, a 30-plus-year law practitioner, former Cook County prosecutor and former head of the Cook County Sheriff’s Office. He is a staunch opponent of the state’s torture inquiry panel. He was also named in a $31 million settlement paid out to four Black Chicago men who were exonerated in 2011 after being falsely imprisoned for a crime in 1995.

* Tribune | CPD sergeant sues city over discipline delays in internal affairs cases: The lawsuit in Chicago’s federal court was filed by CPD Sgt. Carrie Costanzo, who joined the department in 2015. “Costanzo’s story is but one example of the significant harm that the City’s unlawful policy imposes on its brave police officers who dare exercise their rights,” the lawsuit states. “Costanzo and the class she seeks to represent bring this action to reform the policy to ensure that what happened to (Costanzo) does not happen to other sworn female officers.”

* Sun-Times | O’Hare leads nation in flight cancellations amid FAA cuts: O’Hare International Airport was leading the country with the most flight cancellations of any U.S. airport Friday, hours into the the Federal Aviation Administration’s unprecedented flight cuts amid a prolonged government shutdown and shortage of air traffic controllers. But flight operations at O’Hare appeared smooth, despite 80 canceled flights and being listed as having the most cancellations in the country by the website FlightAware. The vast majority of travelers told a Sun-Times reporter that their flights were unaffected.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County property tax bills will be mailed out on Nov. 14: After months of uncertainty and delay, Cook County officials announced Friday that property tax bills will be mailed on Nov. 14 and due by Dec. 15. Homeowners will thus be able to include those tax payments on their annual income tax filings, while ensuring taxing bodies will see much-needed revenue before the end of the year, though they might be less stoked to make massive payments to the county right around the holidays.

* Evanston Roundtalbe | FBI investigating recent incident involving feds in Evanston, tries to block city from releasing records: In the incident in question, a federal vehicle driven by U.S. Border Patrol agents was reportedly driving “erratically” while being followed by residents, and witnesses said the agent driving ran a red light while turning from Oakton onto Asbury before coming to a sudden stop behind a car in front of them. This led to a female driver behind them, who was not believed to be part of the group following the agents, rear-ending the federal vehicle, after which the agents got out and forcibly detained both the driver and two resident bystanders.

* Sun-Times | Fourteen suburban moms arrested in sit-in protest outside Broadview ICE facility: Fourteen mothers jumped over the barricades and sat in a circle on Beach Street to “demand an end” to the immigration raids that have swept through the Chicago area since the Trump administration launched “Operation Midway Blitz.” Less than a minute later, the women were arrested by Cook County Sheriff’s deputies. The sheriff’s office confirmed the arrests and said charges were pending.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville teens grow community service project into successful nonprofit Kits4Kids: When it all began about two years ago, Raya Ajmere and Abby May wanted to do a service project through which they would bring care packages to children spending substantial time in the hospital. The gift bags included small toys, activity books and stuffed animals to bring comfort during challenging times, they said. The girls reached out to family and friends for donations, raised $1,000 and bought supplies online.

*** Downstate ***

* WJBD | ICC approves improvements to Gessell Road railroad crossing: ICC Commissioner Michael T. Carrigan says Illinois’ Grade Crossing Protection Fund makes it possible to install modernized safety infrastructure at rail crossings in all parts of the state. He says the project in Marion County is a perfect example of how the agency is putting GCPF dollars to work. The total estimated cost of the signal design and construction is $446,502. The Grade Crossing Protection Fund will be used to pay 95 percent of the signal costs. Union Pacific Railroad will pay the remaining 5 percent and any future maintenance costs related to the signals and circuitry.

* WCIA | ‘We’ve done a lot of work’: Danville parks get major improvements: Dozens joined Danville Mayor Rickey Williams Jr. for the “Mini-Park Tour,” showcasing the improvements the city has made to the playgrounds. The tour kicked off at Elmwood Park, where Mayor Williams said he is not just working to have a better park, but also a better neighborhood. “In Elmwood, in particular, we’ve done a lot of work to improve the roads. The main road and the main thoroughfare that connect all those have been completely overhauled. The folks have new sidewalks. They are not walking in the streets anymore,” Williams said.

* WICS | University of Illinois SNAP-Ed launches holiday food drive in Champaign County: Community members are encouraged to contribute non-perishable food items from Monday, November 10, through Wednesday, November 26. Donations can be made at 801 North Country Fair Drive, Champaign, from Monday to Friday, between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m.

*** National ***

* The American Prospect | OpenAI Is Maneuvering for a Government Bailout: In 2024, it lost about $5 billion; in the first half of 2025, it lost a reported $13.5 billion; and in the last quarter alone, it lost another $12 billion. For artificial intelligence to ever pencil out, some truly enormous revenue streams will be required—$2 trillion by 2030, according to Bain & Company. As the company at the center of the AI boom (along with Nvidia), OpenAI would represent a sizable chunk of that money.

* Market Watch | Anxiety over government shutdown pushes consumer sentiment down to near-record low: The University of Michigan’s consumer-sentiment index fell to 50.3 in a preliminary November reading, down from 53.6 in the prior month. That’s the lowest level since June 2022, which was the lowest level on record. Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had expected sentiment would slip to 53.0 from 53.6 in October.

* Reuters | Meta is earning a fortune on a deluge of fraudulent ads, documents show: A cache of previously unreported documents reviewed by Reuters also shows that the social-media giant for at least three years failed to identify and stop an avalanche of ads that exposed Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp’s billions of users to fraudulent e-commerce and investment schemes, illegal online casinos, and the sale of banned medical products.

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A taste of things to come

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Thursday…


* Also yesterday…


In the video, Mendoza refers to Pritzker as “Governor Suicide.” Pritzker has said he hasn’t made up his mind about whether to sign the bill. Partial transcript

To really just reiterate the context, we have a robust system that’s covered by insurance of palliative care and hospice care, it exists. So what is different here is that it’s coercing the medical, you know, institutions and the medical culture, to basically say, Well, you know, I, a person wants the freedom for a doctor or a physician assistant or nurse practitioner to write a prescription so they can just decide when they want to do it at home. Well, that is a line that is not crossed by ethical medicine. And if Pritzker signs it, it’s just being Governor Suicide.

And just a few last things I want to say within this context is that a lot of this euphemistic language in here… echoes the transgender for under 18, child transgender issues, where, if you don’t do this, they are going to commit suicide. You need to do this to reduce suffering. And it’s this euphemistic gender affirming care, which we, we know is not true. So it’s falling into the same buckets of just, you know, really terrible, you know, health care, trying to co-opt health care for these reasons.

And then lastly, given that Governor Pritzker signed the bill related to mandatory mental health screenings for kids, right? It’s just absolutely frightening. Because, first of all, we know that [does] not belong in school. But if you cannot see the pipeline and the way that this all works out, you know you’re not paying attention. I mean, in Canada, they are letting young people commit suicide, physician assisted suicide because they’re depressed. And I know, in the bill, it says, in this bill, it says depression is not, you know, a category that’s allowed, but, but we all know how this works, right? There’s a terminal illness, and you’re depressed, you’re it’s depression plus. And then you’ve crossed a line that just should not be allowed.

And you know when, when Ted and I are, are governing this, this just would would not be allowed. It would be vetoed. We would be a strong moral voice against this.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* Wednesday…

Ted Dabrowski and Carrie Mendoza blast Pritzker’s position on NYC’s Mamdani

Wilmette — New York City yesterday elected a militant socialist and anti-Semite, Zohran Mamdani, as mayor.

In an interview last week, when asked directly whether he endorsed Mamdani, Gov. J.B. Pritzker ducked the question but went on to defend Mamdani and deny that his party is on the far left.

“Tuesday was a frightening day for America,” said Illinois Republican candidate Ted Dabrowski.

“A dangerous and radical anti-Semite was elected mayor of our most important city with the explicit or tacit endorsement of leading Democrats, including Gov. Pritzker.”

“Mamdani routinely glorifies militants and demonizes the police of the very city he will now govern,” Dabrowski said. “He has defended using the phrase ‘globalize the intifada.’ Rather than be endorsed by any politician, he should be explicitly condemned.”

Dabrowski called out Pritzker, who claimed Democrats are not on the far left when asked about Mamdani last week.

“Mamdani’s preference for socialism is now the norm among Democrats, of whom a majority now say they prefer socialism over our free enterprise system. I know socialism does not work. I helped Poland recover from the destruction socialism wrought on its country and people,” Dabrowski said. “The Democrats’ embrace of socialism is a historic turning point and a tragedy for both America and the Democratic Party.”

Pritzker’s strategy to win the presidency is to label himself as the most vitriolic voice of the far left, as evidenced by his own words, Dabrowski argued. “Illinois is the most progressive state in the nation and damn proud of it,” Pritzker has said.

“That may be what Pritzker has delivered but it isn’t what Illinoisans want. Pritzker is among the most guilty of his party’s conversion to radicalism,” says Dabrowski.

Dabrowski’s running mate, Dr. Carrie Mendoza, ripped Pritzker’s refusal to give a straight yes or no answer as to whether he endorsed Mamdani, as well as his failure to denounce Jay Jones of Virginia as unfit to serve because of his violent missives against opponents.

“This is not just political cowardice, it’s moral cowardice at its worst,” said Mendoza. “If Pritzker, as a Jewish governor, can’t condemn Mamdani outright as a dangerous, anti-Semitic politician, then he must be voted out.”

* Tuesday…

Ted Dabrowski slams Pritzker’s gutter language

Gov. J.B. Pritzker continues to coarsen political discourse in this country. As recently reported, he said in a speech last month to the Illinois Federation of Teachers that “Trump and his cronies can F*$% all the way off.” Such language debases the office of the governor of Illinois.

I am also disappointed that the audience of teachers gave Pritzker’s comments a standing ovation.

The governor’s language comes on the heels of his inflammatory rhetoric comparing his political opponents to Nazis, and his words that have fomented violence against federal law enforcement officers.

You will hear no such language from me when I am governor. I will restore common decency to the office, and that will include language I use to address even my most staunch opponents. I will defeat Pritzker and succeed as governor using the same tools I have always used – plain facts, common sense and persuasive language. That is the enduring power of integrity which Gov. Pritzker has spurned, all in the vain belief that abandoning such principles can propel him into the presidency.

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Musical interlude

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* The late, great Illinoisan John Prine

But I’ll hang around as long as you will let me
I never minded standing in the rain

  8 Comments      


Report: Illinois domestic violence deaths increased in 2024

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

Each year, the Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence (ICADV) analyzes domestic violence statistics throughout the state.

In 2024, 137 people died from domestic violence incidents. That is a 14% increase from 2023 and a 140% increase since 2022.

This jump is a big concern for ICADV and other organizations fighting to reduce the impact of domestic violence statewide.

“At any point about one in four women will experience domestic violence in her lifetime and we actually think it’s higher than that because a lot of people don’t report,” said ICADV CEO Carrie Boyd.

* From the report

Out of the 137 total deaths resulting from domestic violence in Illinois in 2024, 114 were victims of homicide and 23 were perpetrators of domestic violence who died by suicide. Domestic violence homicide-suicides are a common occurrence. On average, more than once per day in the U.S., a tragedy occurs where a perpetrator kills an intimate partner and then dies by suicide. Of these incidents, 93% involved a gun, and 95% included women who were killed by their male partners.

Guns were used in the majority of deaths resulting from domestic violence in Illinois in 2024. Firearms were the means of death in 63% or 72 out of 114 domestic violence homicides. Moreover, firearms accounted for 68% or 94 out of 137 total deaths (including suicide) resulting from domestic violence in 2024.

We know that access to firearms greatly increases the risk of lethality in domestic violence situations. National data on the prevalence of intimate partner violence with a firearm is devastating. More than two-thirds of all intimate partner homicides in the U.S. are committed with a firearm, and 77% of these intimate partner homicide victims are female. Further, every month, an average of more than 70 women in the U.S. are shot and killed by an intimate partner.

Unfortunately, incidents of domestic violence homicides with firearms are on the rise. Nationally, from 2014 to 2023, there was a 22% increase in intimate partner homicides of women. This was driven by homicides with guns, which increased by 36%.

Illinois has experienced an increase in domestic violence homicides where a firearm was used. From 2021 to 2024 in Illinois, the percentage of the total domestic violence deaths where a firearm was used increased from 45% to 68%.

* ICADV is hoping Karina’s Law, which took effect on May 11, will cut down on domestic violence deaths involving firearms. The report

Since the data in this report was collected, Illinois passed legislation strengthening the firearm legal remedies available for survivors under Karina’s Law, which went into effect on May 11, 2025. Karina’s Law was named in honor of Karina Gonzalez and her daughter Daniela Alvarez who were killed in Chicago as a result of domestic violence in 2023. This important legislation clarifies the firearm removal remedy available in orders of protection under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act (IDVA).

Under Karina’s Law, survivors may ask the judge to grant the firearm remedy in an order of protection case by checking box 14.5 on their petition for the order of protection. Then, survivors may ask the judge for a surrender order, where the abuser is required to surrender their firearms to law enforcement at the time of service of the emergency order of protection. Survivors may alternatively ask the judge to issue a search warrant, where law enforcement can enter a property to search for and seize a firearm. Karina’s Law also closes a loophole that existed in previous law by only allowing transfer of firearms after the firearms have been removed or surrendered to law enforcement or under certain conditions.

ICADV will closely follow how the firearm legal remedies available under Karina’s Law may impact domestic violence homicides in Illinois moving forward.

* Related…

    * WGLT | Contacts to statewide domestic violence hotline rose 26% last year — with sharpest increase in Central Illinois: A new report says contacts to the Illinois Domestic Violence Hotline rose 26% compared to 2023, with the greatest change registered in Central Illinois. According to data compiled by the statewide domestic violence advocacy group The Network, the hotline received 16 contacts [via phone, text or chat] from Logan County, up 81% from 2023. Livingston County contacts increased from 23 to 30 [77%]. And there were two contacts from Piatt County, compared with none the previous year.

    * ProPublica | Amid Increasing Domestic Violence, Illinois Struggles to Review Fatalities: The first reviews began only late last year, and key deadlines have been missed. An initial report of statewide policy recommendations based on reviews by the panels was expected to be delivered to lawmakers in April 2024. But that has yet to happen. The most glaring absence from the program is Cook County, which is home to Chicago and accounts for nearly 40% of the state’s population. Discussions between organizers of the initiative and agencies that could take charge of a local review panel in the county have failed to yield a commitment.

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Abe Lincoln’s devotion to Black man highlighted in job-seeking letter recently donated to ALPLM

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ALPLM press release…

The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum has obtained a letter written by Lincoln in the early days of his presidency, one that hints at the role that race and class played in White House operations and shows the limitations of presidential power at the time.

In the letter, the new president asks Navy Secretary Gideon Welles to find a job for a man who worked for the Lincoln family in Springfield and came with them to Washington. Lincoln says he would have given the man, an African American named William Johnson, a job at the White House but the other staff objected. “The difference of color between him and the other servants is the cause of our separation,” Lincoln wrote on March 16, 1861, just 12 days after taking the oath of office.

Some White House servants at the time were white immigrants, but most were African American. They tended to be lighter skinned, and many had worked at the White House for years, developing firm ideas about the level of sophistication they felt was appropriate for the job. Apparently, they objected so strongly to the dark-skinned man from backwoods Illinois that they would not work with him.

Rather than insist they accept Johnson, Lincoln tried to find him work elsewhere. But that proved surprisingly difficult, even in an era without major civil service rules on hiring. He wrote a note of recommendation that Johnson could use when applying for jobs, but that didn’t work. Then Lincoln contacted Welles, who had nothing for Johnson at the Department of the Navy. While seeking a permanent job for Johnson, Lincoln assigned him to work in the White House furnace room. It wasn’t until November that Lincoln found him a position as a messenger at the Treasury Department.

“This fascinating letter contains layer upon layer of information about the beginning of Lincoln’s presidency. We see him trying to help a friend. We see that even the new president cannot casually hand out jobs. We see issues of class and color within the White House,” said Christina Shutt, executive director of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. “This is an incredible addition to the presidential library’s collection.”

The letter was donated to the ALPLM by Peter Tuite, a private collector. He considered giving it to several institutions but ultimately decided the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum was the best home for the letter, which is now on display in the museum’s Treasures Gallery.

“William Johnson is a fascinating figure within the Lincoln story. He and Lincoln form a working friendship in Springfield that predated the presidency. Prior to his death in 1864, Johnson likely served as a conduit for President Lincoln to understand the obstacles that working class African Americans faced in the nation’s capital during the Civil War,” said Dr. Ian Hunt, the ALPLM’s chief of acquisitions. “We thank Peter Tuite for his incredible donation in memory of his loving wife Claudette and daughter Christine.”

Almost nothing is known about Johnson’s life before he began working for the Lincolns in 1859 or 1860 as a valet and driver. When Lincoln traveled to Washington to be sworn in as president, Johnson traveled with him. But that personal relationship with Lincoln didn’t help Johnson at the White House.

Historian John E. Washington, who grew up amid the Black middle class of Washington, DC, in the generation after the Civil War, wrote in 1942: “Whenever a new President occupied the White House the old help, fearful that they would lose their jobs, instantly began to make trouble for any newcomer. Johnson was no exception. In his case there was almost an open rebellion, not only for the regular reasons, but also because of a social distinction. Johnson’s color was very dark and White House servants were always light. He was mistreated in such a way that it became necessary for the President to look elsewhere for employment for him.”

Notably, the places where Lincoln sought jobs for Johnson, the Navy Department and the Treasury Department, were the agencies nearest the White House, which would have made it easier for Johnson to assist Lincoln on short notice. Even when Johnson was not officially a White House servant, he continued to work for Lincoln as a valet in the mornings. He probably helped care for Lincoln’s son Tad after another Lincoln child, Willie, died in 1862 and left Mary Lincoln incapacitated with grief.

Johnson himself died early in 1864 of smallpox. When Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address in November 1863, Johnson traveled with him to Pennsylvania. Lincoln had a mild form of smallpox, called varioloid, at the time, so it’s possible Johnson acquired it from the president. It’s also possible he picked it up during one of several smallpox outbreaks in Washington around that time.

When Johnson was sick, Lincoln personally collected his pay and saw that it got to Johnson. Lincoln also paid for Johnson’s coffin and tried to pay off a $150 loan Johnson had taken out. The bank would let Lincoln pay only half and insisted on forgiving the other $75 in debt.

The letter…

  13 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood is home to Mestiza, a shop that delivers memories of culture, family pride, and traditions in the heart of Chicago’s Latino community. With a commitment to their Pilsen neighborhood and a passion for women-owned business, Mestiza owners Lorena and Sugieri provide a Mexican American shopping experience visitors are sure to remember.

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

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Lorena and Sugieri are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Nov 7, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Partial SNAP benefits expected to reach Illinois residents starting Friday. Sun-Times

    - Partial benefits for those who were supposed to receive them Nov. 1 through 6 will be sent out starting Friday, the Illinois Department of Human Services said.
    - However, it warned some customers’ benefits will be reduced to nothing by President Donald Trump’s administration even with the updated payment schedule.
    - At most, recipients are expected to receive 65% of what they typically receive for the month, but some households will receive less or nothing at all, according to IDHS.

* Related stories…

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | O’Hare, Midway impacted by FAA flight reductions: The FAA plans to reduce the volume of flights at these airports by 4% beginning Nov. 7, gradually increasing to 10% by next week. U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has been warning of potential staffing and fatigue problems since the beginning of the federal government shutdown on Oct. 1. Air traffic controllers are considered essential staff who are working but not getting paid.

* Crain’s | Trump’s HHS orders state Medicaid programs to help find undocumented immigrants: Advocates say the push burdens states with duplicative verification checks and could lead people to lose coverage just for missing paperwork deadlines. But the administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Mehmet Oz, said in a post on the social platform X on Oct. 31 that more than $1 billion “of federal taxpayer dollars were being spent on funding Medicaid for illegal immigrants” in five states and Washington, D.C. […] Illinois Medicaid officials blasted Oz’s comments. “Once again, the Trump administration is spreading misinformation about standard uses of Medicaid dollars,” said Illinois Medicaid spokesperson Melissa Kula. “This is not a reality show, and there is no conspiracy to circumvent federal law and provide ineligible individuals with Medicaid coverage. Dr. Oz should stop pushing conspiracy theories and focus on improving health care for the American people.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Rejecting corporate PAC money earns Juliana Stratton endorsement in Senate race from End Citizens United: End Citizens United, a decade-old group taking its name from the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that opened the floodgates to unlimited campaign spending from corporations, labor unions and other outside groups, announced its support for Stratton on Thursday in her bid to replace retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin. Running with the backing of Gov. JB Pritzker, a billionaire Hyatt Hotels heir and her two-time running mate, Stratton vowed in July that her campaign would not accept money from corporate PACs, the conduit through which corporate interests can contribute directly to candidates’ political funds.

* WGLT | State Rep. Sharon Chung wants Gov. JB Pritzker to back off State Farm: Chung noted the community’s long history with two of the area’s top employers, State Farm and Country Financial, in opposing price controls. “We have a really rich history here with State Farm, and I wanted to make sure that whatever we did wasn’t going to regulate it in a way that would make it not friendly for State Farm to be viable here in Illinois,” Chung said in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas.

* Muddy River News | Former lobbyist Michael McClain is still waiting for facility assignment to serve sentence: “The Bureau of Prisons has not provided information about what facility he is to report to,” McClain’s attorney, Patrick Cotter, told Muddy River News Thursday. “Over a week ago, we informed the court, and the court agreed to extend his report date until next Thursday, which is November 13th.” Cotter said the bureau did not give a reason as to why it had not provided a location yet.

* Press release | Make America Affordable Now PAC Endorses Nick Uniejewski for Illinois State Senate: he Make America Affordable Now PAC today announced its endorsement of Nick Uniejewski, Democratic candidate for Illinois State Senate in the 6th District. The PAC—aligned with the mission of One Fair Wage to address the affordability crisis facing working families—has named Uniejewski its first endorsement in Illinois. “Nick Uniejewski isn’t running to manage the system as it is—he’s running to change it,” said Richard Rodriguez, Treasurer of Make America Affordable Now PAC. “Working people in Illinois are tired of politicians who talk about affordability while wages stagnate, sub-minimum wages persist, and costs skyrocket. Nick has lived the struggle, and he has the spine to fight for real solutions. He knows true economic dignity comes from raising wages, eliminating the sub-minimum wage, expanding affordable housing, and respecting labor. That is the leadership Illinois needs right now.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago police withhold Border Patrol shooting videos, citing probe of chief accused of calling off cops: Police officials are citing that one complaint to block the public release of videos tied to the shooting, which drew international headlines and stoked the political divide surrounding the Trump administration’s immigration blitz of the Chicago area. The police department says releasing the body camera and drone footage would hinder the ongoing investigation of the complaint against Hein. A spokesperson won’t comment.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s budget includes money for ShotSpotter replacement: Officials identified a $5 million line item in the mayor’s 2026 spending plan as money for a “gunshot detection system” when pressed by aldermen during budget hearings. The item’s written description only said the money was for “software maintenance and licensing.” But despite the revelation, the plan to spend on a replacement for the controversial acoustic gunshot detection technology that sparked a long, heated clash between Johnson and the City Council is likely no surprise for aldermen. Johnson announced his administration was seeking proposals for “gun violence detection technology” in February.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Mayor Johnson stands firm on proposed city budget, corporate head tax plan: Despite the opposition from at least half of the council, Governor JB Pritzker, civic and business groups, Mayor Brandon Johnson refuses to budge. “It is deeply disturbing right now that we have leaders in this state that are prepared to defend millionaires and billionaires and not the people in Austin and not the people in Roseland, what is wrong with us?” Johnson said.

* Sun-Times | Former Ald. Walter Burnett unlikely to lead CHA, as agency considers 5 other CEO candidates: The candidates include Gregg Fortner, of the Anniston Housing Authority in Alabama; Jillian Baldwin, of the Housing Authority of the city of Bridgeport in Connecticut; Keith Pettigrew, of the District of Columbia Housing Authority; and Eugene Jones Jr., currently at the Virgin Islands Housing Finance Authority and who was the CHA’s CEO until 2019. Jones was first reported as a candidate by the Chicago Tribune in June.

* Crain’s | World Business Chicago reboots economic development strategy: World Business Chicago has refreshed its economic-development strategy with a mix of new and old ideas. The top-line goal of Chicago 2050 is to grow the region’s economy to $1.4 trillion in annual output and 5.05 million jobs by 2034 from $924 billion and 4.8 million today, primarily through attracting more outside capital for both developments and companies.

* Block Club | Chicago Laundromats Targeted By Immigration Agents Struggle With Low Sales, Fearful Employees: At least four laundromats in the city have been targeted by federal immigration agents in recent weeks. Some laundromat owners and workers said they’ve seen fewer customers, while others have had employees call out due to concerns about federal agents. “Local businesses are now suffering — [agents] are messing with people’s livelihoods,” said a worker at Su Primera Lavanderia at 3100 S. Pulaski Road, a laundromat that was targeted by federal agents last month. “People depend on those incomes. People have families.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Lemont residents allege Citgo facility is harming air quality: Lemont officials said they have reached out to representatives of Citgo following resident complaints alleging the company released high amounts of harmful chemicals in the air without notifying the public, and hope to get more answers at a Nov. 20 meeting. The complaints are a part of an decades-long dispute between the Environmental Protection Agency and Citgo facility near Lemont over alleged violations to the Clean Air Act, including an almost $2 million civil penalty in 2016, and a more than $700,000 fine for alleged Clean Air Act violations in 2013 following a failed compressor incident and dating back to an EPA citation in 2001.

* Daily Herald | Elgin resolution bans federal immigration agents from staging, gathering on city-owned property: Council member Tish Powell said the move was necessary because of “unprecedented” circumstances with numerous documented instances of masked immigration agents operating in the city. “We wouldn’t tolerate our local officers behaving the way federal officers are behaving in this town,” Powell said. “The abuse, the disrespect, the aggression, the violence, the total disregard for people’s civil rights, we would not tolerate that. And it floors me that our federal government thinks that this is OK. It’s not OK.”

* Evanston Now | Housing plan won’t make December deadline: Community Development Director Sarah Flax told the Housing and Community Development Committee Thursday that the city won’t make its December deadline for finishing Evanston’s strategic housing plan, which is already nearly a year behind schedule. Flax said staff had an “aggressive goal” of getting it done by the end of the year, but after the past several weeks of engagement with various community boards and stakeholders, the HCDC agreed there was a bit more work to do before it’s ready for the City Council.

* Daily Southtown | Forest Preserve District of Will County’s 500-acre purchase is second largest land buy in its history: The Forest Preserve District of Will County has acquired nearly 500 acres in eastern Will County that expands the Goodenow Grove Nature Preserve to 1,386 acres, making it the district’s second largest preserve. The district recently bought 495.27 acres of land north of Illinois 394 and adjacent to the Goodenow Grove preserve in Crete Township for $4.3 million. “It’s not too frequently a forest preserve or conservation foundation has the opportunity to acquire that much acreage,” said Dave Robson, the district’s natural resource management supervisor. “That’s a pretty unusual occurrence. We make acquisitions all the time, but not at this scale. This is a huge win.”

* Daily Herald | Cook County unveils plans for Quentin Road revamp at public hearing in Palatine: Cook County officials unveiled planned improvements to Quentin Road between Dundee Road and Lake-Cook Road Thursday night at the Cotillion Banquets in Palatine. The centerpiece of the public hearing was the unveiling of what officials called the preferred alternative. It calls for Quentin Road to have one 11-foot-wide travel lane in each direction with the addition of a 10-foot center turn lane that will safeguard left turns and provide a dedicated lane for emergency vehicles.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Trade and regulatory impacts mixed and volatile for Rivian: In the third quarter, Rivian produced 10,720 vehicles and delivered 13,201 from the plant in Normal. That’s likely to be the highest quarter for the year even with a plant shutdown for retooling for R2. The company full-year projection remains at a maximum of 43,500 units. Automotive gross profit was negative $130 million, also affected by the plant shutdown. “Despite this headwind, we saw strong progress in our unit economics with one of the best quarters even in automotive cost of goods sold per unit delivered driven by improved material costs,” said McDonough.

* WCIA | U of I reorganizes leadership, says it will lead to ‘stronger foundation’: The Chancellor of the University of Illinois announced plans to make several changes to the university’s leadership structure, including blending departments, restructuring and renaming the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and more. Chancellor Charles Lee Isbell Jr. made the announcement via Massmail on Nov. 6. He said that as higher education changes, there’s a need to position the U of I in a way to “seize opportunities” and “strategically address challenges.”

* BND | New $1.2 million MetroBikeLink trail opens in Fairview Heights: The trail spans three-quarters of a mile and cost $1.2 million. Construction was managed by Stutz Excavating after an impact and feasibility survey from TWM Inc. A major consideration in expanding the trail, said Ken Sharkey, managing director of the St. Clair County Transit District, is safety. The trail is fully paved for accessibility, with five cameras installed along its length and multiple wayfinding stations to help travelers orient themselves if they get lost. “We’re committed to improving our multi-modal forms of transportation in St. Clair County,” Sharkey said at the opening on Thursday. “We look forward to moving forward with this project in the future and working with other agencies to improve access in our communities.”

* WSIL | Veterans Day memorial unveiling at Southern Illinois airport: Next Tuesday, the airport will unveil a veterans memorial sculpture on the flagpole island in front of the airline terminal. The event will start at 11 a.m. in the terminal lobby with coffee, donuts, and a short presentation. Following the presentation, attendees will move outside for the unveiling of the sculpture.

*** National ***

* WIRED | Google, Microsoft, and Meta Have Stopped Publishing Workforce Diversity Data: The broad loss in transparency, which has not been previously reported, could obscure the impact of President Donald Trump’s anti-DEI policies on the tech workforce. It could also raise barriers for workers and civil rights groups seeking to reshape tech companies to better reflect the makeup of the countries in which they operate. The decision of these three companies, which collectively employ hundreds of thousands of people globally, also stands in contrast to industry peers. Apple, Amazon, and Nvidia all released new diversity data this year.

* AP | Supreme Court weighs longshot appeal to overturn decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide: The justices could say as early as Monday what they’ll do. In urging the court to take up her case, Davis’ lawyers repeatedly invoked the words of Justice Clarence Thomas, who alone among the nine justices has called for erasing the same-sex marriage ruling.

* NYT | Hundreds of U.S. Flights Are Canceled as Shutdown Hits Air Travel: A wave of flight cancellations hit the United States on Friday, bringing home the effects of the government shutdown to many more Americans, though major airports appeared to be working largely as normal in the morning. The cuts were announced by Federal Aviation Administration this week to limit air traffic as the shutdown, now the longest in U.S. history, leaves air traffic controllers working without pay. Major airlines said that most customers would not be affected and that travelers who wanted to change or cancel a flight for a refund could do so. International flights were unlikely to be affected.

* NPR | 50 years ago, the Edmund Fitzgerald, a ‘rock star’ ship, sank in Lake Superior: No one was more surprised than Gordon Lightfoot when his ballad “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald” became one of the biggest hits of 1976, less than a year after the disaster it commemorates. The Canadian musician had agonized over writing the song in the first place. “He feared being inaccurate, corny or worse, appearing to exploit a tragedy for profit,” writes John U. Bacon in his new bestseller, The Gales of November: The Untold Story of the Edmund Fitzgerald. “But more than that, as a fellow sailor and a child of the Great Lakes … this song — whatever it was — was deeply personal.”

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