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Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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It’s just a bill

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

On Friday, [Jen Walling’s, the executive director of the Illinois Environmental Council,] legislative allies introduced what they’re calling the Power Act to improve environmental controls on data centers.

The bill calls for higher electricity rates for large data center users “to make sure they pay their fair share,” Walling said. The bill also creates incentives for data centers to build their own renewable energy sources rather than forcing other ratepayers to pay for the increased generating capacity they’ll need.

The environmental bill would also limit water use by data centers, restrict how long they can run their backup generators and keep them out of Black and brown neighborhoods already overburdened by pollution.

Taken as a whole, according to [Brad Tietz, the state policy director for the Data Center Coalition,] the environmental bill would make Illinois “not just an outlier but a significant outlier” among states competing for data center investment.

* Press release…

Lawmakers and frontline providers are calling for passage of Senate Bill 2797, legislation that would modernize Illinois’ All Kids School-Based Dental Program by creating one uniform, statewide framework that encourages more dentists to serve children in schools—especially in underserved communities.

Illinois currently operates two different school-based dental systems: a statewide model and a separate, city-run structure in Chicago. That split has created confusion, duplicative oversight, and heavy administrative burdens for providers. The result has been a steady decline in participation, particularly in Chicago, where the number of dentists serving schools has fallen by roughly half over the past decade.

“For many children, a visit from a school dentist is the only dental care they receive all year,” said State Sen. Julie Morrison, sponsor of SB 2797. “But our current system is pushing dentists away. SB 2797 fixes that by creating fair, uniform rules statewide—so more providers can step forward and more kids can get the care they need.”

School-based dental programs remove barriers like transportation, time off work, and insurance navigation. They are often the only point of access for low-income families. Yet under current law, dentists who serve Chicago schools face layers of contracting, billing risk, and overlapping oversight that do not exist elsewhere in Illinois. […]

SB 2797 restores a single statewide framework under the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services (HFS). The bill:

    - Applies uniform standards across Illinois based on the Dental Office Reference Manual.
    - Clarifies billing so Medicaid remains the payer of last resort and providers can obtain insurance information in advance.
    - Ensures that clinical reviews are conducted by licensed dentists.
    - Removes duplicative, city-specific mandates that have driven providers away.
    - Establishes transparent, fair rules for assigning schools and expanding capacity.

More from CBS Chicago

But Chicago Public Schools and the Chicago Department of Public Health said it’s not so simple. They’re against Morrison’s proposal, Senate Bill 2797.

“The bill does not reflect or recognize the working partnership between CPS and CDPH Chicago which manages the School-based Oral Health Program,” CPS and CDPH officials said in a joint statement. “To date, more than 1.3 million students have received oral health services. Chicago Public Schools values this partnership and does not want to see students lose access to high-quality dental care provided at no cost to families or to CPS.”

CDPH officials claimed the proposed legislation would hinder progress already made in the school-based dental services program at CPS.

“The bill would remove CDPH’s oversight of the program … making changes that both increase costs for the state and lower the standards for provider participation and quality assurance, putting public health at risk,” CDPH said.

* HB5539 from Rep. Ryan Spain

Amends the Illinois Identification Card Act. Changes references from “electronic credential” to “mobile identification card”. Provides that no relying party, including law enforcement, may take physical possession of a mobile identification card holder’s mobile device for purposes of verifying the mobile identification card holder’s identity. Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Inserts conforming provisions concerning requirements for mobile driver’s licenses. Makes other changes.

* Sen. Rachel Ventura…

State Senator Rachel Ventura introduced a package of legislation aimed at addressing the growing role of private equity firms in Illinois’ housing market, which has driven up home prices, reduced housing availability and turned residential properties into high-profit investment assets while many Illinois families struggle to find affordable places to live. […]

As institutional investors continue expanding their footprint in the housing market, residents are increasingly facing rising rents, hidden fees and displacement from properties purchased by large corporate landlords. Ventura’s legislation seeks to restore balance by increasing transparency, strengthening tenant protections and discouraging speculative purchases of existing housing stock.

Senate Bill 3363 would require landlords to include all mandatory service fees in a property’s listed base rent, preventing renters from being surprised by additional charges after signing a lease. The measure ensures tenants have clear and transparent information about the true cost of housing before entering into rental agreements and bans predatory insurance requirements.

Senate Bill 3674 would give tenants the right of first refusal when a property is put up for sale, allowing residents to purchase their building before it can be sold to outside investors, including private equity firms. The legislation would also allow tenants in multi-unit buildings to coordinate joint purchase offers, expanding opportunities for community ownership and long-term housing stability.

Another initiative, Senate Bill 3501, known as Restock the Block, would establish a fee on private equity firms purchasing existing residential properties. Revenue generated from the fee would be directed toward grants for public and affordable housing development, helping rebuild housing supply and reinvest in communities impacted by corporate consolidation of housing. […]

SB 3363, SB 3674 and SB 3501 currently await committee assignment.

* The Illinois Coalition on Legal Reform…

The Illinois Coalition on Legal Reform today applauded the introduction of legislation (HB 5244) sponsored by State Rep. Dan Ugaste (R–Geneva) to address commercial lawsuit lending, also known as third-party litigation funding (TPLF), in Illinois.

Commercial TPLF allows outside investors — including hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, and other financiers with no stake in the underlying dispute — to fund lawsuits in exchange for a share of any settlement or judgment. While these arrangements are often marketed as harmless “financing,” they can allow unknown third parties to profit from and sometimes control lawsuits while driving up litigation costs for businesses, consumers, and communities. […]

Commercial third-party litigation funding remains largely undisclosed and unregulated in Illinois. There are currently no meaningful disclosure requirements and limited safeguards — allowing funders to quietly influence litigation, drive up costs, and encourage meritless claims.

Just as importantly, a lack of transparency has created vulnerabilities in the civil justice system, including the potential for foreign-backed investors to use Illinois courts as a financial tool.

The measure introduced by Rep. Ugaste addresses several major concerns with commercial lawsuit lending in Illinois, including:

- Banning foreign funding, to deter sovereign wealth funds and foreign principals from investing in our legal system for financial leverage and to obtain an inside view of confidential information exchanged during a litigation to benefit the foreign entity
- Limiting funder recoveries, ensuring that plaintiffs — not outside financiers — receive a meaningful portion of any recovery
- Regulating commercial TPLF, closing gaps not covered by Illinois’ existing consumer protections

* WTVO

House Bill 4764 would rename the state’s Garden Act as the Vegetable Garden and Backyard Chicken Protection Act and establish a statewide right to keep backyard chickens on residential property.

Under HB4764, any Illinois resident would have the legal right to keep female chickens (hens only) for personal, noncommercial use. The bill’s definition of “backyard chickens” excludes roosters.

Local municipalities would still be allowed to set “reasonable regulations”, including limits on the number of hens, setbacks, sanitation requirements, nuisance rules, and enclosure standards, but those local rules cannot ban chickens outright.

HB4764 also prohibits any ordinance that requires neighbor consent, including signatures, approval letters, or any process allowing neighbors to veto a resident’s ability to keep hens.

The bill does not override the authority of homeowners’ associations, condominium boards, or restrictive covenants, which would retain the ability to ban or regulate backyard chickens.

* WTVO

Legislators in Illinois have introduced a broad package of artificial intelligence bills that would create one of the most comprehensive AI regulatory frameworks in the country. […]

One bill, SB3492, directs the Illinois State Board of Education to create statewide guidance for teaching artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and other fast‑growing technologies in K‑12 schools. The measure calls for a workforce‑focused curriculum that prepares students for future jobs.

A separate measure, HB5113, would create a statewide Artificial‑Intelligence Use in Education Commission. The group would study how AI tools and smartphones affect student learning, mental health and classroom behavior. It must hold 10 public meetings across Illinois and release reports twice a year through 2030. […]

Under SB3601, licensed professionals, including financial advisers, real‑estate agents, cosmetologists, and dozens of other state‑regulated occupations, would be required to clearly disclose when a person is interacting with AI rather than a human.

* HB5478 from Rep. Mary Beth Canty

Amends the State Finance Act. Provides that the State Comptroller, in coordination with the State Board of Education, shall establish and administer a program under which eligible school districts located in Cook County may receive interest-free loans from the State Treasury to address cash flow shortages caused by the delayed issuance of property tax bills by the Cook County Treasurer. Provides that a school district shall be eligible for a loan if the Cook County Treasurer fails to issue property tax bills by the statutory deadline under the Property Tax Code, the failure results in a delay in the receipt of property tax revenues, and the State Board of Education certifies that the district has experienced or will immediately experience a cash flow deficit as a result of the delay. Provides that the loans shall be limited to the amount necessary to maintain essential operations and shall bear no interest to the borrowing district. Provides that the term for a loan shall not exceed 12 months, and that the loan shall repaid in full upon receipt of delayed property tax revenues. Provides that the Cook County shall reimburse the State Treasury for the full amount of interest income lost by the State on any loan. Effective immediately.

* Rep. Anne Stava…

State Rep. Anne Stava, D-Downers Grove, filed three bills on Thursday each addressing a different aspect of family court practices affecting vulnerable parents and children. The bills focus on definitions of common terms, allocation of costs and ensuring that family court orders align with a child’s specific medical needs. […]

Stava filed House Bills 5176, 5177 and 5178:

HB 5176—The Family Law Definitions Act: Would create binding legal definitions of the terms “safe parent,” “high-conflict” and “parental alienation,” while requiring family courts to use these definitions and prohibiting the use of other terms that have the purpose or effect of evading these definitions.

HB 5177—Aligning Recommendations with Children’s Actual Clinical and Emergency Needs and Determinations (ARC-ACEND): Would make the recommendations of guardians ad litem or other court appointed authorities, when they concern a child with a diagnosed medical condition, provisional until they are certified as medically appropriate by a qualified physician.

HB 5178—Supervised Parenting Safety and Fairness Act: Would require a court to verify the reasonable availability of qualified supervisors before ordering supervised parenting time and, when it has deemed supervised time to be warranted, to refrain from allowing unsupervised parenting time simply because no supervisor is available.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Retail provides one out of every five Illinois jobs, generates the second largest amount of tax revenue for the state, and is the largest source of revenue for local governments. But retail is also so much more, with retailers serving as the trusted contributors to life’s moments, big and small.

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Roseann in Tinley Park who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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The state budget needs to go on a ‘war footing’

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I told subscribers about this development starting last Tuesday

Gov. JB Pritzker announced a plan last week to “manage Illinois pension commitments through a set of proposals designed to build on the state’s recent fiscal progress and further reduce long-term risk for taxpayers and retirees.”

The price tag, however, is already giving one legislative leader pause. And “fiscal progress” is not the reality when factoring in federal funds.

The governor wants to use “unexpected surplus revenues” to pay down pension debt. That, in turn, will help the state reach 100% pension funding by 2048 (instead of the current goal of 90% by 2045) and make sure that some pension benefits meet the Social Security law’s minimum benefit standards.

“The Governor is proposing to redirect excess amounts not needed for state income tax refunds to pay down Illinois’ pension commitments by transferring surplus funds above a $150 million balance to the state’s retirement systems at the end of the year,” his press release claimed.

So, I asked how much the governor’s plan would cost. The price tag would vary from year to year, I was told.

In fiscal year 2024, the new pension idea would’ve cost a whopping $405 million, a governor’s office spokesperson said. In fiscal year 2025, the amount would’ve been $103 million. And this fiscal year, when the state budget is under siege by federal government budget cuts, the amount would’ve been $550 million.

“I don’t know if this is the year to do it, because I don’t think we do that in isolation,” Senate President Don Harmon said of the governor’s idea during an event sponsored by Politico. “I think the price tag right now may be too much to pay, when tomorrow morning, we could be another billion dollars in the hole because of a tweet,” Harmon said of President Donald Trump, according to the publication.

The next morning, the Pritzker administration released a report about the impact of other federal actions on the state’s budget.

According to the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget report, the hit to the state budget from congressional tax changes alone will be “$587 million for the current fiscal year.” Legislation was passed during the veto session to reduce the original $830 million hit. And more legislative actions are expected later this spring to address some of the rest. Plus, this year’s amount will decrease over the coming years.

But you can clearly see the point I’m trying to make here. An additional $550 million pension payment this fiscal year to help the state pay off the pension debt earlier would’ve greatly harmed the state’s ability to deal with the federal tax changes.

To be clear, there are definite advantages to the governor’s pension proposal, including long-term savings. Illinois has too often focused on the short term instead of thinking about long-term policy.

But, man, I just do not see how Democratic legislators are gonna agree to take away any cash buffers while the state budget is under constant federal siege, with more likely on the way.

The Legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability reported last week that January’s federal revenue sources plummeted 36% compared to the previous January. The fiscal year-to-date numbers had dropped 8% by the end of January, but last month was the third consecutive month of declining federal revenues.

The federal tax changes and revenue hits are, of course, just the tip of the spear.

The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget report noted that preparing for new eligibility rules for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, and Medicaid will cost the state $100 million during the next two fiscal years. Increases to state SNAP administrative costs will increase by $80 million a year beginning next fiscal year. If the state’s SNAP “error rate” isn’t reduced, the state’s taxpayers will have to pony up $705 million a year. Federal Medicaid payments are scheduled to be reduced by $4.5 billion over the next five years, and $3.8 billion a year beginning in seven years.

At least for the time being, the state really needs to move to a fiscal “war footing” — for lack of a better term. Illinois has to make sure it can provide an adequate social safety net and provide basic services. All new spending ideas really should be put on hold.

In other words, please save your press release bills until after this immediate crisis passes.

There’s plenty of talk about new “progressive” revenues. But even if the state goes that route, it still has to stop with the new spending ideas and focus on protecting and building on what exists now, at least for the foreseeable future.

* Also, when I wrote “All new spending ideas really should be put on hold,” I meant new stuff, not increasing spending on existing programs.

The hard truth is, Illinois does everything half-way, if that. The state has lots of programs, but can’t even begin to match the funding of those programs with the actual need. The government should focus itself on protecting its budget, but also making sure the promises it makes don’t ring hollow.

For example, here’s WAND TV

Saturday marked National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, and the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus is advocating for more funding to address the disease. Many community wellness groups feel the state has fallen short in promises for equitable healthcare funding.

Now, 39% of new HIV diagnoses in Illinois are Black people, yet Black people only make up 14% of the state’s population. The Black Leadership Advocacy Coalition for Healthcare Equity in Illinois said it’s time the state budget includes significant investments to tackle the disease in Black communities.

“The Illinois Department of Public Health has an HIV/AIDS division, and annually, less than 3% of their funding was going to Black-led organizations,” said BLACHE Board Chair Creola Hampton.

Lawmakers and advocates are demanding that the Fiscal Year 2027 budget include $15 million for Black HIV/AIDS groups across the state. They told reporters in Springfield that Black healthcare matters, and the state needs to put its money where its mouth is.

If legislators weren’t constantly inventing new ways to spend money, then maybe programs like that one could be adequately funded.

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HB 3799 Raises Premiums And Destabilizes A Stable Insurance Market

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois’ competitive system protects consumers and keeps carriers investing here—let’s not break what works. Independent research shows slow, uncertain rate reviews push insurers out and costs up. HB 3799 was already defeated in Veto Session—keep it that way. Vote NO.

Protect affordability. Vote NO on HB 3799.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois attorney general reaches agreement to protect $1.4 billion in education funding. Sun-Times

    - Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Friday that he helped secure an agreement with the Trump administration that will protect nearly $1.4 billion in annual federal education funding for the state.

    - The agreement resolves a lawsuit filed by a group of states after the U.S. Department of Education in April 2025 threatened to withhold federal funds from schools that refused to certify compliance with new restrictions on DEI programs.

    - “The Trump administration attempted to illegally stop the allocation of congressionally mandated funds to push a vague, anti-diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility agenda at the expense of some of the most vulnerable children in Illinois and across the country,” Raoul said in a press release Friday.

* Gov. JB Pritzker will be in Belleville at 11 am to celebrate the expansion of the Sales Tax and Revenue (STAR) program. He’ll then head to Granite City at 2 pm for an event marking the centennial of Route 66. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago Tribune owner Alden wants to acquire publisher of northwest suburban Daily Herald: Alden Global Capital, aggressive as a buyer and cost-cutter at American newspapers, declared its desire for the Daily Herald via a full-page ad in Sunday’s Tribune. The Herald, long a dominant source of northwest suburban news, has shared the misfortune of traditional media outlets struggling to keep an audience and advertisers in the digital age.

* Sun-Times | Teams of lawyers put drivers back on the road by reinstating suspended licenses: Without a valid license, Caldwell says she has been spending nearly $80 a day on Uber rides to get herself and her children to work and school. “I’m crying tears of joy because I’ve waited years to get my license back,” Caldwell said. “I’m racking up more debt than I’m able to pay working one job.” The driver’s license reinstatement expo provides Cook County residents with free legal assistance to help restore suspended or revoked Illinois driver’s licenses. Saturday’s event was hosted by the Pilsen Neighbors Community Council at Malcolm X College.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Former legislator and lobbyist Jack Kubik has passed away. His obituary is available here.

* Tribune | Two challengers attempt to unseat Sen. Emil Jones III in Democratic primary for 14th Senate District: Karrar, the son of Sudanese immigrants, is an attorney and an advocate for community development. He received his law degree from Loyola University Chicago’s School of Law, and a master’s degree in public policy from Northwestern University. “In the past six years I’ve worked in the social impact space, helping companies invest in struggling neighborhoods throughout the Midwest and using research and community engagement to connect large institutions to folks on the ground,” Karrar said.

* Tribune | Rep. Bob Rita testifies in trial over alleged obscene text messages, harassment by Tinley Park political operative: Timothy Pawula, a former political ally of Tinley Park Mayor Michael Glotz, was charged in October 2024 with two counts of both electronic harassment and transmitting obscene messages. Both charges are misdemeanors and carry a maximum sentence of 180 days in jail and an up to $1,500 fine, according to Cook County Associate Judge Mohammad Abedelal Ahmad.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Ald. Beale says Johnson team is working behind the scenes to repeal video gambling: Johnson has yet to provide the official notification to the state needed to trigger the licensing process. Ald. Anthony Beale (9th), who’s leading the charge for video gambling, thinks he knows why. “They’re behind the scenes secretly trying to repeal this. Why? I don’t know. The mayor has an obligation to execute the budget that we passed. That is his responsibility as mayor. Not to pick and choose what you want to enforce and what you don’t want to enforce,” Beale told the Sun-Times.

* WBEZ | Chicago-area Asians were arrested in Midway Blitz. They kept quiet about it, for a while.: Amin’s father is one of more than 140 Asians in Illinois arrested during the second Trump administration, according to a WBEZ analysis of data obtained by the Deportation Data Project through a public records request. That makes up about 4% of all immigration-related arrests in Illinois. The majority of Asians arrested were from three countries: India, China and Kyrgyzstan. The numbers only include arrests through Oct. 15, 2025, before the peak of Operation Midway Blitz.

* WTTW | A Tunnel Under DuSable LSD and Parkland Over Rail Tracks Among the Ideas in Updated Vision for Grant Park: The new framework, presented to the public via Zoom on Wednesday evening, has been three years in the making and will guide development in Chicago’s “front yard” for the next two decades, building on a 2002 plan that delivered additions including Maggie Daley Park. Several of the plan’s biggest swings tackle Grant Park’s wonky layout: 300-plus acres bisected by streets and railroad tracks. To create cohesion and a friendlier environment for pedestrians, one audacious proposal would send a portion of DuSable Lake Shore Drive underground in order to connect Buckingham Fountain with the lakefront.

* Tribune | Convenient ordering option or ‘sidewalk hog’? Food delivery robots get mixed reception in Chicago: Anthony Jonas, 33, said he was trying to catch the bus when he tripped over the robot , making contact with its visibility flag as he fell. The Lincoln Park resident said he needed stitches and a tetanus shot. “My eye was swollen for about two weeks,” he said. He retains a scar near his left eye. Jonas, a speech language pathologist, said that separately from his own case, he had concerns about the impact robots have on his neighbors who use wheelchairs or strollers. Serve has downplayed the severity of the collision.

* Sun-Times | One of the most expensive paintings by a living artist hung unnoticed in a Downtown hotel lobby: It was “Domplatz, Mailand (Cathedral Square, Milan)” by Gerhard Richter, who is still alive. In fact, Monday, Feb. 9 is his 94th birthday. Richter is having a banner year, with a big show in Paris, and since my going is out of the question, the second best thing is to tell how one of his major works ended up next to the front desk at the Park Hyatt Chicago on Michigan Avenue, and why it is now gone. […] The painting hung in the lobby for 15 years, except during 2002, when the hotel lent it to the Museum of Modern Art for a traveling retrospective of 40 years of Richter’s work that included the Art Institute of Chicago.

* Sun-Times | Chicago Auto Show’s Chi-Town Alley celebrates best of the city’s ‘hidden’ car culture: A new attraction this year, Chi-Town Alley also features a variety of vehicles owned by local enthusiasts, including a sleek, 1975 Datsun and an eye-catching 1995 Porsche 911 RWB Sandstorm. Also on display is a row of gleaming Mustangs and tricked-out lowriders from car clubs in the region. The exhibit was created to encourage community-building and celebrate Chicago’s car scene, which participants say is full of talent but not widely recognized.

* Sun-Times | Joy fills Humboldt Park during ‘Benito Bowl’ halftime show watch party: ‘It’s a good day to be Puerto Rican’: In Humboldt Park, Chicago’s largest Puerto Rican neighborhood, organizers of the annual Fiestas Puertorriqueñas hosted a watch party at their VIP Residencia pop-up space at 2701 W. Division St. The event drew dozens who cheered for the singer and sang along to his top reggaeton hits throughout the 13-minute performance. Instead of wearing their favorite team’s jersey, partygoers wore Puerto Rican flags, Bad Bunny T-shirts and pavas, traditional Puerto Rican straw hats. Organizer Melissa Gomez said she wanted to create an event that would bring the community together, and Bad Bunny’s performance provided the perfect occasion to do just that.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | County’s top prosecutor calls Mayor Brandon Johnson’s ICE executive order ‘wholly inappropriate’: In an email to employees obtained by the Sun-Times, O’Neill Burke said Yvette Loizon, the chief assistant state’s attorney for policy and external affairs, sent a memo to the mayor’s office calling the executive order “not only wholly inappropriate, it also jeopardizes our ability to effectively prosecute and secure convictions when federal law enforcement agents have committed a crime.”

* Tribune | Toni Preckwinkle didn’t seek Chicago Teachers Union’s endorsement. Why not?: “I didn’t seek their endorsement,” Preckwinkle told reporters Thursday, before rattling off a list of unions like the Chicago Federation of Labor and other left-leaning groups who are backing her campaign. “And I’m proud of those endorsements,” she said. “I’ve also been endorsed by the governor of the state, JB Pritzker, the speaker of the House and the president of the Senate.” Preckwinkle didn’t elaborate on her reason. Nor did she mention Mayor Brandon Johnson, who has not endorsed her reelection bid so far.

* Tribune | Late Cook County property tax distributions spell trouble for libraries: Village library leaders have added their voices to the chorus of complaints about delayed and sporadic distributions of Cook County property tax revenues, saying the situation has drained their reserves, making it harder to hire or buy new books. And in the latest complication in Cook County’s ongoing property tax woes, about $175 million in excess money was sent to taxing bodies that weren’t expecting it.

* CBS Chicago | Trusted Chicago judge takes Tuskegee Airman’s cash, then flips it into bitcoin for herself: Patricia Martin, a lawyer turned judge who spent 24 years on the bench, rising to become the top judge in Cook County’s Juvenile Court, seemed to have the credentials to be trusted handling the finances of Oscar Lawton Wilkerson as he reached his mid-90s. She had been related to the former Tuskegee Airman and agreed to help. Instead of helping Wilkerson, court records show Martin instead helped herself to his cash, moving money from his accounts and buying bitcoin.

* Crain’s | Bankrupt First Brands cutting nearly 400 jobs in McHenry: First Brands is cutting 389 Illinois jobs as it shutters its Brake Parts facility in McHenry as part of its bankruptcy proceedings, according to a filing the bankrupt company made with the state. […] The company told the state in a letter it sent earlier this week that 332 employees would be laid off Feb. 3. The remaining 57 will be let go by April 10. The layoffs include 206 order fillers and 113 forklift operators, according to the letter.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Granite City residents pack forum to press officials about data center proposal: Opinions were plentiful and divided. Trade union leaders spoke in favor of the facility, touting it as a job creator and economic development tool. Other residents expressed concerns about utility costs, environmental impacts and transparency. Several speakers questioned whether the project was a “done deal,” noting that city officials appeared to have been laying groundwork without public input. One suggested placing a referendum on the ballot.

* BND | EPA dismisses resident concerns over Cahokia Heights sewer repair timeline: “I feel like the city is waiting for us to die before they do anything,” resident Michael Hayes, 80, wrote in his comments on the plan before court approval Jan. 20. “I have had to seriously consider moving out of this area, and I should not have to.” Cahokia Heights Mayor Curtis McCall Sr. and the city’s attorneys did not respond to requests for comment. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also did not respond to multiple requests since Jan. 23. In court filings, the agency largely dismissed residents’ concerns and suggested changes to the plan.

* Leland Grove Police Chief on leave after ISP investigation:WICS |The Chief of Police for Leland Grove has been placed on administrative leave, following his arrest on charges of DUI and Domestic Battery. It seems from an incident that happened in 1000 block of Elliot in Springfield, early Thursday morning. The Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office was at the scene at 12:15 AM, when they called for assistance from the Illinois State Police. After ISP investigated, they arrested Daniel Ryan for Driving Under the Influence and Domestic Battery. Ryan is currently the Police Chief for Leland Grove.

* PJ Star | East Peoria threatens to sue Peoria as clash grows between cities: East Peoria, according to multiple Peoria city officials, has been threatening to sue Peoria on a claim that a 1991 intergovernmental signed between the cities about revenue sharing from riverboat gambling also applies to revenue brought in from video gaming terminals.

* ABC Chicago | Sheriff’s deputy released from hospital after traffic stop shooting in Peoria County: As Peoria County Sheriff’s deputies approached the vehicle, a passenger got out and fled the scene on foot, police said. The suspect fired multiple shots at a deputy, striking him twice. Deputy Jack Evans underwent surgery for multiple gunshot wounds. One week after the shooting, Evans was released from the hospital.

* WCIA | Attendance in Homer schools falls to 50% as illness circulates: After attendance at the elementary and junior high school dropped to around 50%, one Champaign County school district is implementing “enhanced cleaning protocols” and encouraging students showing signs of illness to stay home. Dr. Kimberly Norton, superintendent at Heritage CUSD #8 in Homer, said during the past two school days, about half of the students at Heritage Elementary and Junior High School were absent. Norton added that there has been a viral illness circulating in the community. Symptoms include fever, headache, fatigue, and a cough.

* NBC Chicago | The maker of Hot Wheels and Barbie is planning huge new indoor waterpark in Illinois: One of the confirmed park locations will be in Orlando, Florida, Mattel said. Bradley, in Kankakee County, appeared to be another, with local reports saying the Village in December voted to approve the park. “Local excitement continues to grow around Mattel Wonder Indoor Waterpark coming to the Village of Bradley, with plans to become one of Illinois’ premier indoor waterparks,” a statement from Michael Watson, Village of Bradley Mayor read. “We view this venture as the perfect opportunity to showcase our great town alongside Mattel’s iconic brands.”

* WCIA | Decatur soup kitchen receives $240K+ from community to continue service: This soup kitchen feeds around 200 people each day, seven days a week. The executive director said in less than two months, they have received more than $240,000. She said most of that money was from community members. “It’s definitely shifted my narrative and my thought process of, ‘no, the community sees how much we do every day,’” said executive director Tanya Melendez. “They see how much it is needed; they see the benefit that it provides. And so, it is so incredibly heartwarming.”

*** National ***

* The Atlantic | ‘The Trust Has Been Absolutely Destroyed’: “The trust,” Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows told us, “has been absolutely destroyed.” The sentiment is not confined to Democrats. Some state-level Republican election officials, who, like others interviewed for this story, requested anonymity to speak freely, said that federal officials’ activities involving elections have become so unusual that they are starting to question the federal officials’ competency and motives. These state officials wonder whether the feds are trying to do what Trump has accused others of doing: rig an election.

* WaPo | Trump plans to keep Democratic governors out of traditionally bipartisan meeting: According to the governors’ offices, the president also revoked invitations sent to Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D), the NGA’s vice chair; and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) to attend a second White House event scheduled to occur around the summit: a dinner for governors. “This week, I learned that I was uninvited to this year’s National Governors Association dinner — a decades-long annual tradition meant to bring governors from both parties together to build bonds and celebrate a shared service to our citizens with the President of the United States,” Moore said in a statement Sunday. “… It’s hard not to see this decision as another example of blatant disrespect and a snub to the spirit of bipartisan federal-state partnership.”

* WaPo | The AI boom is so huge it’s causing shortages everywhere else: Electricians are getting harder to find, and some construction projects are on hold. Smartphones are expected to get pricier for potentially years to come. And promising innovations are being starved of investment funding. Those are just some of the domino effects from the technology industry’s insatiable spending on artificial intelligence, which is diverting resources and attention from other sectors of the economy.

* WaPo | Can these Super Bowl ads make Americans love AI?: Americans are using artificial intelligence apps more but surveys show they doubt the technology is good for them or the world. A growing number of their elected officials are moving to restrict the industry. Companies are trying to exorcise the bad vibes and spent more than $1.7 billion on AI-related advertising last year — an ongoing marketing blitz that will be inescapable during Sunday’s Super Bowl. […] The Washington Post asked experts in marketing and political campaign messaging to analyze four AI TV commercials set to air during this year’s Super Bowl or that appeared in recent months to see how the messages are trying to win over an AI-skeptical public. The campaigns tout how AI might improve a young man’s love life, help a mother and son decorate their new home or preserve jobs in small-town America.

* AP | Health costs are fueling voter stress and powering Democratic campaigns: Republicans last year cut about $1 trillion over a decade from Medicaid and declined to extend COVID-era subsidies that had lowered the cost of health plans under the Affordable Care Act. Democrats are filming campaign spots outside struggling hospitals, spotlighting Americans facing spiking insurance premiums and sharing their own personal health care stories.

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Good morning!

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* AP

Kenneth Walker III is running into free agency with a Super Bowl MVP.

Walker capped a prolific postseason with another big performance on the ground to help the Seattle Seahawks beat the New England Patriots 29-13 on Sunday night for a championship.

While the defense carried Seattle for much of the postseason, Walker was once again the engine of the offense by rushing for 135 yards and adding 26 receiving for his third straight 100-yard game from scrimmage in the postseason. He became the first running back since Terrell Davis 28 years ago to win Super Bowl MVP.

Richard Dent won the XX Super Bowl MVP (during a season when he was paid just $90,000 base salary by the cheap ownership).

* So, OK, this ain’t the greatest rap song ever, but it’s about the greatest running back ever who, in my opinion, should’ve been given a shot at the MVP award by Coach Ditka.

This is not a gimmick

How was your weekend?

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and some other stuff

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Feb 9, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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