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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Fox News

Illinois could lose millions in federal funding if it does not clean up its driver’s licensing system after the U.S. Department of Transportation warned Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker and the state’s top licensing official that one in five commercial licenses issued to noncitizens were issued illegally.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy issued a written ultimatum to both the Hyatt Hotels heir and Kevin Duesterhaus, the state director of driver services under Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias, and listed several cases of drivers from El Salvador to Ukraine who were in violation of the law.

“I need our state partners to understand that they work for the American people, not illegal immigrants who broke the law illegally entering our country and continue to break it by operating massive big rigs without the proper qualifications,” Duffy said in a statement obtained by Fox News Digital. […]

Duffy warned Duesterhaus and Pritzker that $128 million in federal highway funding, including Illinois’ share of the National Highway Performance Program and Surface Transportation Block Grants for FY-2027, would be held up if fixes are not made within 30 days and noncompliance continues.

Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias…

The Secretary of State’s office believes its CDL issuance policies and practices are substantially compliant with applicable FMCSA requirements and will not justify cutting federal highway funding. The office intends to conduct a review of the FMCSA findings. […]

“A strong economy depends on strong logistics,” Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias said. “If trucks don’t move, supply chains fail, prices rise, and families feel it in their pocketbooks. We can see the actions by the Trump administration taking their toll on our truckers and our farmers, both of whom are essential to Illinois’ economy.”

In January, the Illinois Agricultural Association, representing multiple agricultural-based organizations in the state, wrote to Giannoulias expressing “serious concern” regarding the pause in issuing CDLs and stating the federal agency’s “decision is having immediate and growing negative impacts on agricultural operations across the state and threatens to disrupt critical spring and early-season activities.”

“Illinois agriculture depends on timely, practical, and legally sound regulatory decisions. Continued uncertainty places employers, workers, and food production systems at unnecessary risk,” added the letter, signed by eight associations, including the Illinois Farm Bureau. “We believe a prompt resolution is both achievable and essential.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Comptroller Susana Mendoza | Put Illinois students above politics, and opt in to the federal scholarship program : Some Democrats may hesitate because this policy emerged from a Republican-controlled Congress and was signed by President Donald Trump. That fear is understandable and justified. Many Illinoisans have been strong critics of the Trump administration, me included. But especially Illinoisans who strongly oppose the Trump administration must recognize that Illinois benefits from recapturing federal tax incentives. Opting out means our Illinois children lose. Rather than funding Trump’s agenda in D.C. or sending more of our dollars to Republican-controlled states already taking advantage of Illinois taxpayers, I would much prefer that an Illinoisan be able to redirect $1,700 to support their own school community.

* Chicago Mag | How Are a Village, Town, and City Different?: In Illinois, the distinction has little to do with size and everything to do with when and how the governments were set up. Consider Schaumburg, which was incorporated as a village in 1956, when its population was 130. It is now the largest village in Illinois, with nearly 80,000 people. Villages elect six at-large trustees (four if their population is less than 5,000) and a president, who both presides over and sits on the board. Towns operate similarly but with four trustees. There are technically only 16 towns in Illinois. That’s because the establishment of new ones was eliminated by a state law passed in 1872 in favor of a more standardized system of cities and villages. Existing towns were allowed to keep the designation. Cicero, at 85,000 people, is the largest of these.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson wins veto fight over intoxicating hemp ban: There were only 26 votes to override the veto, well short of the two-thirds majority, or 34 votes, required. Johnson vetoed the ordinance on Feb. 13, saying he wanted to protect small businesses that have profited from the hemp industry, which remains under threat of a federal ban. He waited nearly a month to issue his veto, counting votes to ensure the veto would hold.

* Block Club | Fight Over Bike Lanes In Brighton Park Propels Claudia Zuno To Run For 12th Ward Alderperson: Claudia Zuno is running against incumbent Ald. Julia Ramirez (12th), saying during Monday’s announcement that she’ll represent neighbors who “are not being seen or heard.” Zuno said she’ll bring safe streets, great schools and a thriving business community to the ward, which includes most of McKinley Park and Brighton Park. “Julia Ramirez has become a guaranteed vote for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s agenda. That is not what the 12th Ward needs,” she said Monday at her campaign launch party at Tio Luis Tacos & Cafe, 3856 S. Archer Ave.

* WTTW | Cost to Defend, Resolve Lawsuits Tied to Disgraced Ex-CPD Detective Tops $159M: The Chicago City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to pay $29.2 million to four men man who spent a combined 71 years in prison after they were convicted of separate murders between 1991 and 1997, bringing the total cost of defending and settling 13 lawsuits naming disgraced former Chicago police Detective Reynaldo Guevara to $159 million, records show. The largest settlement would pay $16.6 million to Demetrius Johnson, who was 15 years old when he was convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison in connection with a 1991 murder. Johnson was released from prison in 2004 and awarded a certificate of innocence in 2020.

* Sun-Times | At City Council, Mayor Johnson pays tribute to Jesse Jackson, urges Chicago to honor him ‘with action’: Mayor Brandon Johnson said Wednesday the “power exists in all of us” to honor Rev. Jesse Jackson “with action,” and urged the City Council and all Chicagoans to do just that to honor “one of the most consequential civil rights leaders of our time.” “We can best honor Reverend Jackson by `keeping hope alive,’“ the mayor said before leading the Council in a moment of silence for Jackson and his grieving family. “We do that by organizing with our neighbors, advocating on their behalf and investing in the people of Chicago. In the loving memory of Reverend Jackson, let us go forth in building a just, equitable and thriving city and nation.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Barrington plan commission rejects condominium proposal citing density concerns: After overwhelmingly negative public comment, the Barrington Plan Commission rejected it with a 4-1 vote Tuesday. Commissioners praised the building at 20930 N. 20th St., at Taylor and 20th streets, but said it didn’t fit the neighborhood, while neighbors said the project was too dense and out of character, while raising concerns about traffic. Since the commission’s decision is advisory, the plan still has a chance with the village board. The board recently went against the commission’s wishes by approving the Claremont, a gated community with 88 custom homes.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora launches program offering expanded financial assistance to homebuyers: Specifically, a household would need to make no more than 120% of the area’s median income, which city officials previously said was about $144,000 per year for a family of four, to qualify for the program. But, the program will set aside some of its allocated funds specifically for those making at most 80% of the area’s median income, or roughly $96,000 per year for a family of four, to make sure money is always available for likely first-time homebuyers, officials have said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | League of Women Voters of Central Kane County urges early mail-in voting amid USPS changes: With the March 17 primary election a month away, leaders from the League of Women Voters of Kane County on Tuesday cautioned voters planning to use mail-in ballots to send in their ballots by March 10 — or drop them off in person at official ballot drop-off sites in the week before the election — to ensure their vote is counted. Standing outside the Batavia Post Office at 500 N. Randall Road on Tuesday, Patti Lackman, the League of Women Voters of Central Kane County co-president, described how changes within the United States Postal Service have led the group to issue updated guidance on voting by mail.

* Crain’s | Northwestern Medicine finishes $389M Lake Forest expansion, nearly doubling capacity: The nearly $389 million project was finished ahead of its anticipated April 2026 completion date. It adds 119,000 square feet of clinical space and 171,400 square feet of non-clinical space, including two new patient pavilions with 96 medical-surgical beds, 18 observation beds and all private rooms. Also included in the expansion is an updated emergency department that will increase patient volume and enhance the delivery of acute care, the health system said in a press release.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Builders put up some houses last year in Normal. There’s a longer list of empty lots: Single-family housing starts grew in Normal last year by nearly 49% — though the total number only reached 55. Construction of duplexes, or single-family attached housing, rose more — by 63%. The total number of duplexes was lower than for single-family houses, however, at 31, according to town records. The numbers compare favorably to single-family construction in Bloomington last year, but are similarly tepid in absolute terms. The slow pace of new construction also showed up in home sales. Multifamily building permits declined in Normal last year.

* WSIL | Shawnee Mass Transit District Awarded $100,000 Grant to Expand Rural Transportation Access in Southern Illinois: The grant will support the launch of Shawnee Express, a significant service expansion designed to reduce transportation barriers throughout the region. The new initiative introduces an on-demand ride option, allowing residents to request same-day transportation. In addition, service hours in Anna and Metropolis will be extended to operate until 6 p.m. on weekdays and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturdays.

*** National ***

* Tech Crunch | Microsoft says Office bug exposed customers’ confidential emails to Copilot AI: The bug, first reported by Bleeping Computer, allowed Copilot Chat to read and outline the contents of emails since January, even if customers had data loss prevention policies to prevent ingesting their sensitive information into Microsoft’s large language model. […] Microsoft said the bug, trackable by admins as CW1226324, means that draft and sent email messages “with a confidential label applied are being incorrectly processed by Microsoft 365 Copilot chat.”

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Addendum to today’s edition

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Your own reaction to the governor’s State of the State/Budget address?

  23 Comments      


State of the State/Budget address open thread, live coverage, react, etc.

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We’ll use this automatic app thingy today…

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Rate Stratton’s new TV ad

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Juliana Stratton highlights her ties to Gov. Pritkzer in her new TV ad. Press release…

Today, Illinois Future PAC announced the launch of a new broadcast and digital ad highlighting Juliana Stratton’s record of delivering real results for Illinois families and her readiness to take that fight to the U.S. Senate.

The new spot underscores Illinois’ leadership in the face of inaction in Washington. Under Gov. Pritzker and Lt. Gov. Stratton’s leadership, the state raised wages, strengthened gun safety laws, and protected abortion rights as Congress remained gridlocked. The ad draws a clear contrast between progress made in Illinois and a broken system in Washington while making the case that Juliana is the leader prepared to bring Illinois’ momentum to the U.S. Senate.

Juliana Stratton is running for U.S. Senate on a progressive agenda to raise the minimum wage to $25 an hour, expand healthcare to all, lower costs, protect fundamental rights, and take on a broken system that too often leaves working families behind.

The ad will air across broadcast, cable, digital, and streaming platforms.

The spot

Script

Illinois didn’t wait for Washington; we fought here.

Higher wages, stronger gun laws, abortion rights protected.

Juliana Stratton is endorsed by Governor Pritzker because she helped lead those fights.

Now, she’s running for Senate to stand up to Trump and cut the costs crushing Illinois families.

Because the system is broken and families are paying the price.

Juliana Stratton… Illinois is sending a fighter

  18 Comments      


HB 3799 Raises Premiums And Destabilizes A Stable Insurance Market

Wednesday, Feb 18, 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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Caption contest!

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* “This has to be the most Stratton caf thing ever,” texted the person who shared this photo with me…

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - More budget preview stuff

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Keep Insurance Affordable

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Illinois General Assembly is considering legislation (HB 3799, SA 2 &3) that could make homeowners insurance unaffordable for many Illinoisans.

The proposal would destabilize a healthy, competitive market, creating a regulatory framework that is more extreme than what exists in any other state. This will increase premiums and reduce competition.

Our robust insurance market has kept homeowners’ rates middle-of-the-pack nationally, even though Illinois has more hail damage claims than any other state except Texas.

To protect affordability and consumer choice, lawmakers should VOTE NO.

For more information, visit www.KeepInsuranceAffordable.org

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Totally uncoordinated, I’m sure

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Usually, the rule of thumb is that when a candidate goes up on TV, they don’t go dark unless they run out of money. The Evanston RoundTable published this report on Sen. Laura Fine’s very curious TV ad flight in CD9

Fine is the only other candidate in the 9th District race to have bought broadcast TV ads, though she is not doing so anymore. However, that does not mean she will disappear from TV ads. […]

FCC filings show Fine’s campaign spent over $900,000 to place TV ads on both broadcast and cable between Jan. 6 and Feb. 1. This sum represents more than 60% of the $1.44 million Fine had on hand entering 2026, the most of any candidate in the race.

But entering February, Fine stopped spending, with no new TV ad buys since the month began. This stop lines up closely with the start-up of a brand new super PAC called “Elect Chicago Women,” which as of Sunday has logged nearly $2.2 million in TV ad buys supporting both Fine and former U.S. Rep. Melissa Bean, who is running for her old seat in the 8th Congressional District. […]

The RoundTable asked Fine’s campaign why it stopped buying TV ads at the start of February, and to explain how the close timing with Elect Chicago Women’s start of ad spending might lead some to believe there was coordination.

A spokesperson responded that the campaign “cannot and does not coordinate with outside groups,”

Campaigns regularly track spending by other entities, but this looks kinda fishy to me.

* Bob Skolnik reported some explosive allegations from congressional candidate and state Rep. La Shawn Ford

A Super PAC connected with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), has involved itself in a big way in the hotly contested Democratic primary race to replace the retiring Danny Davis in the 7th Congressional District.

The United Democracy Project (UDP) has reportedly committed to spending $2.8 million in television ads supporting Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin in the March 17 Democratic primary. That commitment far surpasses the spending of any of the 13 other candidates in the race, many of whom condemn the Super PAC money. […]

State Rep. La Shawn Ford, who has been endorsed by Davis to succeed him, said he had held discussions with representatives from UDP, including an in-person meeting last month. But Ford said he was unwilling to commit to supporting unconditional aid to Israel which was, he says, the requirement to get support from UDP.

“I’ve also had meetings with the very people that’s spending this money,” Ford said. “They want you to say ‘yes’ to everything that they have requests for. There’s no gray lines as it relates to their beliefs. It’s a yes or no. …. Don’t have a conversation; that this is what we want. We want you to vote with us in Washington 100% of the time, and we want to control our member, and that’s what this is about. And I refused that type of relationship. My relationship will, and always has been, to the constituents and representing the needs of the district.”

Meanwhile, Jason Friedman, who led Chicago’s Jewish United Fund, was singled out by WBEZ for raising “nearly three times more than his closest rival among 13 Democratic candidates in the March 17 primary.” But AIPAC is going with Conyears-Ervin over the longtime Jewish advocate.

* Tracking the super PACs

* More…

* Politico | Crypto super PAC wades into Illinois House primaries: A crypto-funded super PAC is poised to shake up two Illinois Democratic House primaries with seven-figure ad buys targeting state lawmakers running for Congress who backed legislation that the industry opposes. The super PAC, Fairshake, will spend at least $1 million each against Illinois state Rep. La Shawn Ford, who is running to replace retiring Democratic Rep. Danny Davis, and state Sen. Robert Peters, who is vying to succeed Democratic Rep. Robin Kelly as she runs for U.S. Senate. … Both Ford and Peters voted for state-level crypto legislation imposing new rules on digital asset firms that became law last August. Peters — who is backed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a leading crypto critic — was a co-sponsor of the measure, which forces crypto companies to comply with a range of new consumer protection standards. … The crypto super PAC group, which operates independently from any campaign, is funded primarily by three firms: the crypto companies Coinbase and Ripple, along with the venture capital group Andreessen Horowitz.

* Jewish Insider | Longtime Chicago Jewish federation leader Jason Friedman makes a bid for open House seat: In a statement seemingly responding to the UDP ads, Friedman said that he “joined this race to fight and deliver results for everyone. The people of the 7th District deserve a representative with integrity, not career politicians with ethical baggage who sell out their constituents to the highest bidder.” Conyears-Ervin has faced several scandals in recent years, and paid tens of thousands of dollars in fines for ethics violations including misuse of city resources. Friedman added that he “won’t be bullied and I won’t back down from doing what’s right — not now, not ever.”

* Fox News | AI power players pour cash into competitive primaries as 2026 midterms heat up: The group [Leading the Future] plans to spend seven figures in the open-seat Democratic primary in Illinois’ 2nd Congressional District, in support of former Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. and in the state’s 8th Congressional District, where they’re backing former Rep. Melissa Bean.

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Big Tax-Exempt Hospitals Are Turning Patient Discounts Into Corporate Profits

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Across Illinois, large hospital systems and corporate PBMs are profiting from a program meant to help patients. The 340B program allows hospitals to buy medications at steep discounts, but those savings aren’t passed on to patients in need.

Instead, large hospitals charge patients full price for 340B-discounted drugs, keep the difference, and share the cash with for-profit chain pharmacies and PBMs.

What began as a safety-net program has become a profit stream. No transparency. No oversight. Just higher costs for working families.

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Roundup: Pritzker to pitch ‘maintenance’ budget, statewide zoning law, social media fee, two-year data center tax incentive suspension

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

One day before Gov. JB Pritzker’s scheduled budget address, Illinois’ four top legislative leaders briefed on the plan Tuesday agreed it will have to hew to the line in a tight fiscal year, with one Democratic leader saying he doesn’t expect the governor to embrace calls by some progressive lawmakers to more aggressively tax Illinois’ highest earners.

“I’m expecting another responsible, balanced budget proposal from the governor. It’s, as I understand it, likely to be very much a maintenance budget. We’re living in uncertain times, and we don’t know tomorrow morning what tweet’s going to blow another hole in our budget,” Democratic Senate President Don Harmon of Oak Park said, referring to President Donald Trump’s penchant for policymaking via social media. […]

“I just have not heard any talk about the progressive revenue proposals,” [Harmon] added. “I have not heard the governor talk about the progressive revenue proposals that are being circulated.” […]

And funding is expected to stay relatively flat for a program that provides health insurance to some noncitizen immigrants older than 65, the sources said. A similar program for middle-age adults ended last year after Pritzker proposed cutting it.

* Politico

Another notable excerpt focuses on Pritzker planning to back on pet projects. “Prudence demanded that this year’s budget proposal seeks a discretionary spending increase that is less than 0.5 percent. It levels off and in some cases reduces programs that are important to me — some of which were proposals of my own. But I believe that the imperative of responsible governance and overcoming the fiscal irresponsibility of past decades must come ahead of the interests of any one politician, program, or party,” according to the excerpt.

* Capitol News Illinois

Gov. JB Pritzker will propose a statewide zoning law in his State of the State address on Wednesday, drastically limiting the authority local governments have to control what types of housing structures can be built on land that’s zoned residential.

Pritzker’s office says the measure will call for relaxed restrictions on the development of multi-unit housing, allowing homeowners to build “granny flats” and cutting other forms of red tape that have slowed homebuilding in recent years.

He’s also asking lawmakers to approve $250 million in capital funding for infrastructure grants aimed at knocking out “below ground costs” at sites eyed for residential development, programs to build out “middle” housing and down payment assistance for first-time homebuyers. […]

Hello! We updated our story on housing. Could you replace the fourth graf you excerpted with this:

Pritzker’s office says the plan includes a tiered framework to permit multi-unit housing by right in all but the smallest lots zoned for residential use. Local zoning boards would no longer be allowed to prohibit property owners from building multi-unit housing on residential lots exceeding 2,500 square feet.  

It would be on a sliding scale, with lots smaller than 2,500 square feet limited by right to single-unit housing. Lots between 2,500 and 5,000 square feet could hold up to four units; those between 5,000 and 7,500 square feet up to six units; and lots larger than 7,500 square feet up to eight units. The plan would also bar municipalities from requiring minimum lot sizes greater than 2,500 square feet for detached single-family homes. […]

However, Pritzker will need approval from the General Assembly. And the governor’s office said specific lot-size thresholds and units allowed within them will ultimately be subject to negotiations with the state legislature. […]

Pritzker’s office says the plan will also include yet-to-be-specified statewide timelines for housing permit reviews and inspections.

If local governments do not complete an inspection or review within a certain number of days, the applicant would be able to use a qualified third-party firm to do it. All state and local requirements would still apply.

* Bloomberg

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker is proposing a new fee on social-media companies that he says would raise about $200 million a year for education, as his state confronts a sizable budget shortfall and greater uncertainty around federal funding under President Donald Trump.

The plan would require social media firms to pay a monthly, tiered fee tied to the number of monthly active Illinois users whose data they collect, with larger ones paying more. The proposal would also bar companies from passing the cost on to users. The fee could sweep in the biggest platforms — including Meta Platforms Inc.’s Facebook and Instagram and other large social networks — if they meet the state’s user thresholds.

Tiered fee structure based on monthly active Illinois users

    100,000 to 500,000: pay 10 cents per user above 100,000

    500,000 to 1 million: pay $40,000 a month plus 25 cents per user above 500,000

    1 million or more: pay $165,000 a month plus 50 cents per user above 1 million

Pritzker is pitching the levy as a way to help plug the budget gap as he rolls out his eighth budget on Wednesday. In the year starting July 1, Illinois faces a shortfall of at least $2 billion in its general funds — its main operating accounts — as costs for education, health care and other social services rise, according to preliminary estimates.

* NBC

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is expected Wednesday to call for a two-year suspension of tax incentives offered to develop data centers amid growing scrutiny over their rapid expansion and impact on communities. […]

At the center of the plan is a two-year pause, effective July 1, on Illinois’ data center tax credit program. Pritzker will instruct key state agencies to study the impact of existing data centers on the state’s energy grid and consumers and analyze the financial impact the centers have had on the economy. Specifically, the governor’s office said it is trying to make sure the centers are financially sustainable over time, protect consumers from soaring energy costs and ensure fair allocation of resources.

Illinois’ Democratic-led General Assembly must approve Pritzker’s proposal. […]

In Pritzker’s proposal, tax incentives would not be available for new data centers for two years, beginning in July. In 2024, Georgia lawmakers sent Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, a bill that would curb existing tax incentives, but Kemp vetoed it.

* Meanwhile, Crain’s

Explosive growth in data centers — fueled by artificial intelligence — is pushing up demand across the grid and driving higher electricity prices. In response, Gov. JB Pritzker is expected to sign an executive order today aimed at bringing new nuclear reactors to the state for the first time in nearly 40 years.

Lawmakers agreed last year to lift the state’s ban on building new nuclear reactors. Pritzker’s order today directs state agencies and regulators to begin evaluating potential reactor sites with a goal of getting construction underway by 2033. […]

Pritzker’s executive order will call for delivering 2 gigawatts of new nuclear capacity, either through new plants or expansions. That’s about what two traditional reactors would produce, or enough to power 2 million homes. It’s also about the same amount of power required by a new Amazon data center that’s being built in Northwest Indiana.

Pritzker’s order will task the Illinois Power Agency and Illinois Commerce Commission, along with other state agencies, to begin working immediately to evaluate potential nuclear sites. The order also involves developing a modern legal and regulatory framework. A report on the recommendations is scheduled to be completed in 150 days.

* Last year, Gov. Pritzker called for classroom cellphone restrictions in his State of the State address, but the proposal stalled. ABC Chicago reports he’s giving the cellphone ban another shot

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker announced Wednesday he will push for a ban on cellphones in schools. […]

This new version comes with some exceptions, though, including:

- When a medical professional determines it’s needed to manage the student’s health care.

-Or to fulfill an Individualized Education Plan.

-Or if students are English learners and need to access learning materials to participate in class.

-Or if a student is a caregiver of a family member and needs accessible communication.

Schools may also choose to allow additional exceptions at their discretion.

* More…

    * WAND | IL teachers union demands full school funding in Fiscal Year 2027 budget: The Illinois Federation of Teachers is calling on the governor and state lawmakers to fully fund education commitments in the next budget. Union members say K-12 schools, community colleges and public universities are currently underfunded and cuts from the Trump administration have made the situation worse. The group is pushing for a billionaires tax this year to generate more revenue for the state, as they argue the evidence-based funding model is not providing enough money for K-12 schools.

    * ABC Chicago | Gov. JB Pritzker to deliver budget address in Springfield: Rep. Kam Buckner, a top House Democrat budget negotiator from Chicago, said one of the goals of this year’s budget will be to play “defense.”"It’s hard when the biggest variable in the budget is not something that you can control,” he said, referring to federal funding. “And with this president, the volatility isn’t a possibility; it’s a given.”

  32 Comments      


U.S. Court Rules Against Pharma Efforts To Restrict 340B Discounts – Support HB 2371 To Protect 340B in Illinois

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

States across the country have passed legislation pushing back against Big Pharma’s 340B restrictions that harm patients and providers. Drugmakers, in turn, have turned to the federal court system in another attempt to preserve their profits. On Feb. 9, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld a lower court decision that sustained Louisiana’s 340B contract pharmacy law, one of the first of several state laws protecting the federal 340B program.

Louisiana’s Act 358 says drugmakers cannot withhold 340B pricing for drugs dispensed through community pharmacies when those same discounts would apply if the drugs were provided through a hospital’s in-house pharmacy. The appeals court panel unanimously rejected Pharma’s claims that Act 358 violates the U.S. Constitution. It noted that regulating pharmacies and drug distribution has long been a state responsibility, and Act 358 is well within that established authority.

Last fall, the Fifth Circuit also upheld a lower court ruling that refused a drugmaker request to halt enforcement of Mississippi’s law safeguarding 340B pricing in pharmacy contracts. The Eighth Circuit in 2024 upheld the constitutionality of Arkansas’ 340B law.

Recent high court rulings add to the growing momentum around restoring 340B. Earlier this month, nearly 1,000 people gathered to celebrate 340B for giving low-income and uninsured individuals to access affordable prescription drugs and healthcare services such as chronic disease management, behavioral health, and mammograms.

Stand with hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers: Pass House Bill 2371 SA 2 to protect 340B in Illinois—at NO cost to taxpayers and with NO budget appropriation needed. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker expected to propose ‘maintenance’ Illinois budget, legislative leader says. Tribune

    - One day before Gov. JB Pritzker’s scheduled budget address, Illinois’ four top legislative leaders briefed on the plan Tuesday agreed it will have to hew to the line in a tight fiscal year, with one Democratic leader saying he doesn’t expect the governor to embrace calls by some progressive lawmakers to more aggressively tax Illinois’ highest earners.
    - “I’m expecting another responsible, balanced budget proposal from the governor. It’s, as I understand it, likely to be very much a maintenance budget. We’re living in uncertain times, and we don’t know tomorrow morning what tweet’s going to blow another hole in our budget,” Democratic Senate President Don Harmon of Oak Park said.
    - Separately from the leaders’ meeting, sources said some $200 million in the proposal is expected to come from a tax or fee related to social media companies.

I’ll have more on the Governor’s budget proposal shortly.

************** Advertisement **************

Sponsored by PhRMA:

340B hospitals charge big medicine markups. Illinois pays the price.

340B medicine markups are big business for hospitals. Under the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Big hospital systems pocket the program profits – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The program’s lack of oversight has led to 340B becoming a profit engine for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies. It’s time for Congress to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

************************************************

* At noon, Gov. JB Pritzker will give his 2026 State of the State and FY27 budget address. Then at 3:40 pm, he’ll host a roundtable on his housing affordability agenda. Click here to watch.

* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Trump administration’s latest funding threat: $128 million withheld in highway dollars: The U.S. Department of Transportation said Tuesday that it was threatening to withhold $128 million in highway funds because a federal audit had revealed illegally issued commercial drivers licenses in Illinois. The Illinois Secretary of State’s office, however, said in a statement it “believes its CDL issuance policies and practices are substantially compliant” with federal requirements “and will not justify cutting federal highway funding.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Republican senator pushes to outlaw abortion, loses leadership spots: Senate Republican Leader John Curran said the bill is a “no” for the Republican caucus. “I don’t support his proposal, no other Republican legislator supports his proposal, House or Senate,” he said. “It’s an extreme proposal. I do not view it as a pro-life proposal, I view it as an anti-woman proposal about punishment.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release…

Planned Parenthood Illinois Action is pleased to welcome Michael Ziri into the role of Senior Director of Public Policy. Mike will lead government relations and the advocacy work for both Planned Parenthood of Illinois and Planned Parenthood Illinois Action.  

Prior to PPIL, Mike served for 11 years as Director of Public Policy at Equality Illinois, the state’s civil rights organization for LGBTQ+ people. Mike has worked with LGBTQ+ community leaders across the state to spearhead an aggressive policy and political agendas to develop and maintain civic power for LGBTQ+ people and advance LGBTQ+ affirming policy initiatives at the State Capitol and with local governments. 

* Capitol News Illinois | DuPage County Sheriff James Mendrick focuses on public safety in GOP governor’s race: Mendrick also said he favors “school choice” policies, which generally allow private schools to receive public funding and parents are given more choices in deciding where to send their children. “That’s what makes college so competitive, is that if you’re not a good college, people aren’t going to come,” he said. “And if people want to pay more and travel a little bit further to another school, I think that’s the way to do it.”

* Daily Herald | ‘It creates confusion’: Dabrowski takes aim at ‘Tad’ of a mistake on ballot: So far, Ammons is not reprinting ballots, Dabrowski said. The lawsuit asks a judge to order new ballots and require early voters be handed a notice explaining the mistake. Ammon’s office did not respond to a request for comment. However, court documents show that Champaign County State’s Attorney Julia Rietz had reached out to Dabrowski noting the clerk created a specimen ballot with the correct spelling that will be posted at early voting sites and other locations as they open.

* Tribune | More than $1.1 billion in medical debt erased in Illinois, with the help of a state program: More than 500,000 Illinois residents have so far benefited from the program, with average debt relief of about $1,200 per person, according to the governor’s office. In some cases, the program terminated tens of thousands of dollars worth of medical debt for individuals, and, for one person, more than $300,000 worth of medical debt. So far, Illinois has spent about $10 million on the program, with $5 million in state funds left for this fiscal year. For each dollar Illinois spends on the program, more than $100 of medical debt is terminated, according to the governor’s office.

*** Rev. Jesse Jackson ***

* Andy Shaw | Covering Jesse Jackson — aka ‘The Rev’ — was never dull: Jackson was also one of my favorite newsmakers, both on the campaign trail, where I watched him mesmerize voters and exceed expectations in two exciting but ultimately unsuccessful Presidential runs in the 1980’s, and on the civil rights front in Chicago, where he was always charismatic and often — truth be told — annoyingly self-important, as he preached from pulpits, led protest marches, gobbled up TV soundbite opportunities, and engaged in repartee in our many informal sideline conversations.

* Daily Herald | ‘He was a giant’: Suburban leaders mourn passing of civil rights leader Jesse Jackson: “I owe all of my activist work, all of my political insightfulness and my community outreach work to Rev. Jesse Jackson because growing up in Chicago you had a voice due to a man who you heard loud and clear,” said Brent, president and founder of Unity Partnership and co-chair of the MLK Unity Project in DuPage County. “You couldn’t rest in his presence without standing up for what was right. And even though you had little means to do it, he made you feel really powerful regardless of the outcome. He was a giant.”

* NBC Chicago | How Rev. Jesse Jackson is being remembered at a Chicago school he once visited: James said they have “conversations all the time about the life and the legacy of Rev. Jackson and how he shows up in society” at St. Sabina Academy. Students told NBC Chicago the discussions have had an impact on their motivation to work hard in school. “Rev. Jackson said we all are somebody and we all matter,” said Tayor Robinson, a seventh grader at the school. “I think about that and always try to do my best.”

* Sun-Times | Civil Rights leader also became a pop culture presence: He could be inspirational, as he was on “Sesame Street” and during a 1989 appearance on the sitcom “A Different World,” talking about the role of young people in elections. But Jackson could also be quite funny, as evidenced by the straight-faced delivery of Dr. Suess’ “Green Eggs and Ham” on Saturday Night Live in 1991.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Initiative to boost affordable homeownership on South and West sides wins Chicago Prize: Community organizations and developers from South and West sides formed Reclaiming Chicago, a coalition that plans to leverage the prize money, draw in more investment, and eventually create about 2,000 new for-sale homes throughout the Chicago Lawn, Roseland, Back of the Yards and North Lawndale neighborhoods. The coalition is convened through United Power for Action and Justice, a Chicago-based community organization. Instead of building individual homes on scattered sites, Reclaiming Chicago aims to transform whole neighborhoods at once, sometimes taking over large vacant lots and planting groups of more than 100 affordable homes.

* Block Club | How A College Student Is Shaping The Future Of His Neighborhood With Garfield Ridge 2050 Plan: Split into four aldermanic wards — including the 13th, 14th, 22nd and 23rd — Garfield Ridge is caught between conflicting political priorities, causing individual areas to “grow in very different directions,” Villalobos said. This separation has blocked policymakers from enacting a cohesive plan to transform Garfield Ridge into “the true active neighborhood that we want to see,” he said. Villalobos, 24, created Garfield Ridge 2050 on his own time and dime as a blueprint to guide the community’s growth and development over the next 25 years. The plan outlines four major goals: improving transit and walkability, reforming housing, increasing economic vitality and prioritizing parks and open spaces.

* Crain’s | If there’s a better two-mile dining stretch in Chicago, we still don’t know where it is: In 2019, we made the argument that Chicago Avenue — between Noble Street and California Avenue — is probably the best two-mile dining stretch in the city. You had mainstays like Cafe Central on the east end and Shokolad just west of Western Avenue, mingling alongside hot new restaurants like Bar Biscay and Funkenhausen. The street had a palpable energy that seemed like it would continue rising. Then the COVID-19 pandemic shut everything down and many of those restaurants closed for good. Today, that vibrancy is back as more places including Brasero, Omakase Shoji and Michelin-starred Feld have opened, drawing even more diners to this West Town stretch.

* Sun-Times | Bears will raise season ticket prices 13.5%: A jump in price was expected this year. The Bears, after all, raised ticket prices 10% last year despite coming off a 5-12 record and the first-ever in-season firing of their head coach. In 2024, Warren announced an 8% average increase in season ticket prices in the wake of a 7-10 season.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Cook County leaders say spring property tax bills, revenues will go out on time: Second installment bills were months late last year. On top if it, the revenues collected from those bills took extra weeks to hit the bank accounts of the county’s thousands of taxing bodies. That cash crunch cost schools millions in lost investments and borrowing costs, officials estimated, and damaged local leaders’ trust in Pappas and Preckwinkle. Their joint news release said “first installment” bills will be mailed out this year on March 2 and will be due April 1. Property owners will be able to start paying their bills as soon as Feb. 20 on the treasurer’s website, according to the release.

* Crain’s | Why are Cook County property taxes a mess? Assessor candidates weigh in.: In a forum hosted by the Civic Federation at the Chicago Board of Trade Building and moderated by Civic Federation CEO Joe Ferguson, the two candidates repeated many of the same arguments they’ve made publicly as both homeowners and commercial landlords gripe about the way their bills are determined and recent fallout from Chicago’s largest residential property tax bill hike in at least 30 years.

* Tribune | Contractor admits to bribing McCook mayor, acting as bag man for other extortion payments: A suburban contractor swept up in the corruption investigation of then-McCook Mayor Jeff Tobolski admitted in federal court Tuesday he paid bribes in exchange for contracts with the village and also acted as the mayor’s bag man for other illicit payments. Simo “Sam” Krneta, 68, a former La Grange Park contractor who now lives in Albany, New York, pleaded guilty to a single count of filing a false tax return in 2017. Federal guidelines call for 10 to 16 months in prison, though he’s also eligible for probation.

* Pioneer Press | Skokie launches program, rules for Airbnb-type short-term rentals: The board voted Feb. 2 to launch the pilot program, which is scheduled to begin May 1. Village officials said the program will be reviewed at six- and 12-month intervals to evaluate its effectiveness and determine whether adjustments are needed. “I believe our obligation is to get something on the books so we can start the process of registration to provide protection to the residents who are proximate to investor-owned units where there have been problems,” Mayor Ann Tennes said. “The sooner we get an ordinance on the books, the sooner staff can start working toward that May 1 registration.”

* Daily Southtown | Dolton presents plans to pay $33.5 million judgment from fatal 2016 police chase: An Illinois Appellate Court in June 2024 affirmed the verdict on behalf of John Kyles, who died following a 2016 police chase in Dolton and Duane Dunlap, who was left severely injured. The Illinois Supreme Court denied Dolton’s appeal of the appellate court decision in March 2025. The village has yet to make payments on the $33.5 million, which has accrued 6% per year through interest, or $2.1 million per year per the a lawsuit petition. As of Feb. 20, the total amount owed is $40.6 million.

* Daily Herald | Elk Grove gateway project gets $700,000 more in public funds: The money comes from a village-controlled TIF fund set up in 2022 — where property taxes above a certain level were directed away from schools and other local governments — to fuel redevelopment of the former Elk Grove Woods Plaza on the southeast corner of Arlington Heights and Higgins roads.

* Evanston Now | HCDC approves strategic housing plan: Ald. Juan Geracaris (9th) said while he wanted a way to prevent retaliatory non-renewals, he also said there needed to be ways for landlords to be able to not renew bad tenants. “No one wants housing providers to renew the lease for a bad tenant that’s violating their lease,” he said. “But I think what’s happening is a lot of you all who are coming here to talk about ‘just cause’ and how terrible it is, you guys are helping out the bad actors.”

* ABC Chicago | Chicago-area interstates ranked worst bottlenecks in the country: The interchange where I-290 crosses and merges with I-294 and I-88 has the worst congestion of any interchange in the U.S., according to the American Transportation Research Institute. The average speed was 39.5 miles per hour. Its the first time that particular interchange, located in Hillside, has topped the list. I-80 at I-94 ranked 24 for the worst bottleneck in the country.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Praise, pushback follows new Champaign Co. executive order on immigration: “This is something that’s historical. It predates Obama. It goes back to the Bush Administration,” Maria Jimenez, the executive director of Immigration Services of Champaign-Urbana, said. “So, families have been living in fear of deportation for a really long time. The difference is that now we’re seeing it on national television.” Jimenez said ICE enforcement has taken place in Champaign County, just not at the level seen in cities like Chicago or Minneapolis. And, it’s been going on longer than some might think.

* WGLT | Bloomington leaders updated on strategic plan for regional economy, Bridge shelter village: Burgess said nearly a month after opening, The Bridge was at 84% occupancy as of Tuesday. “Every single person that we have moved into The Bridge is somebody who had previously been staying outside, either at the encampment in the gravel pits, the encampment off of Adelaide [Street], or elsewhere in town,” said Burgess.

* WSIL | State leaders to host town hall in Carbondale on homelessness strategies: The Illinois Department of Human Services (IDHS) and the Office to Prevent and End Homelessness (OPEH) are partnering with the City of Carbondale to host a Town Hall and Listening Session on Wednesday, Feb. 25. The event is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church. “This Town Hall allows us to strengthen the work being done in partnership with the Carbondale community,” said IDHS Secretary Dulce M. Quintero. “I am eager to hear from the people of Southern Illinois on how we can continue the work of preventing and ending homelessness. Safe housing is a human right”.

*** National ***

* The Hill | Battle over AI regulation hits the airwaves ahead of midterms: A super PAC backed by several major AI players, which boasts a multimillion-dollar war chest, is flexing its muscles with new ad buys in several congressional races. Meanwhile, several groups backing AI safeguards have launched ad campaigns calling for regulation or boosting candidates that support checks on the technology. “The stakes are very high right now for the AI sector when it comes to public policy,” said Andrew Lokay, a senior research analyst at Beacon Policy Advisors.

* NYT | Goldman Sachs to Drop D.E.I. Criteria for Board Members: Goldman will no longer explicitly consider race, gender and sexual orientation when evaluating a potential board member at the firm, according to two people with knowledge of the bank’s decision who were unable to discuss it publicly because of the confidential nature of the move. The decision is a result of a deal that Goldman struck with the National Legal and Policy Center, a conservative nonprofit group that has been pressuring numerous companies to drop diversity, equity and inclusion mandates, the people said. The group recently announced similar deals with American Express and the equipment manufacturer Deere & Company.

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Good morning!

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From 1988

Most poor people are not lazy. They are not Black. They are not Brown. They are mostly White and female and young. But whether White, Black or Brown, a hungry baby’s belly turned inside out is the same color– color it pain, color it hurt, color it agony.

Most poor people are not on welfare. Some of them are illiterate and can’t read the want-ad sections. And when they can, they can’t find a job that matches their address.

They work hard every day. I know, I live amongst them. They catch the early bus. They work every day. They raise other people’s children. They work every day.

They clean the streets. They work every day. They drive dangerous cabs. They change the beds you slept in in these hotels last night and can’t get a union contract. They work every day.

No, no, they’re not lazy. Someone must defend them because it’s right and they cannot speak for themselves. They work in hospitals. I know they do. They wipe the bodies of those who are sick with fever and pain. They empty their bedpans. They clean out their commodes. No job is beneath them, and yet when they get sick they cannot lie in the bed they made up every day. America, that is not right. We are a better nation than that!

“They catch the early bus” is a lesson that has always stuck with me.

All respect.

* A lighter side…


He directly hit on the very essence of that piece.

* This is an official open thread. Have at it.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition and more campaign stuff

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Feb 18, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* We told you earlier today that House Speaker Chris Welch has been promoting a tax on millionaires. It’s just a bill, and in another state, but here’s Axios

The Washington state Senate passed an income tax on millionaires Monday, sending the proposal to the state House for further debate. […]

The millionaire tax bill, which cleared the Senate on a 27-22 vote, would take effect in 2028, applying a 9.9% tax to gross annual income above $1 million.

It is expected to raise more than $3.5 billion per year. Supporters estimate it would affect about 20,000 taxpayers statewide — less than 1% of Washington households.

Most of the revenue would bolster the state’s general fund, which faces a long-term shortfall.

Some would go toward tax relief, including lowering taxes on small businesses and eliminating the sales tax on hygiene products such as deodorant and shampoo.

A portion would help expand the state’s Working Families Tax Credit, which provides tax rebates for low- to moderate-income families.

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Juliana Stratton’s $25-per-hour minimum wage plan draws fire from rivals in US Senate race in Illinois: In the hourlong debate hosted by Fox WFLD-Ch. 32 Chicago on Monday night, U.S. Reps. Robin Kelly of Lynwood and Raja Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg said they supported a phased-in minimum wage increase but chided Stratton for claiming her plan was “bold” when they thought it would never pass Congress. Stratton, the two-term lieutenant governor to Gov. JB Pritzker, has voiced support for increasing the $7.25-per-hour federal minimum wage to $25 per hour while Krishnamoorthi and Kelly favor a plan backed by U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont that would increase the base federal wage to $17 an hour by 2030.

* Press release | State Senator Napoleon Harris & Thornton Township Democrats Endorse Raja Krishnamoorthi for U.S. Senate: “Congressman Raja works tirelessly for the benefit of his constituents, and I know that in the U.S. Senate, he will bring that same work ethic to the entire state of Illinois,” said State Senator Napoleon Harris, Thornton Township Supervisor and Thornton Township Democratic Committeeman. “Raja brings a deep understanding of the challenges facing Illinois families and the courage to tackle them head‑on. He listens, he does the work, and he delivers — whether it’s on jobs, public safety, or expanding opportunity for every community. I’m proud to endorse his bid to be the next U.S. Senator from Illinois, and I look forward to working closely with him to deliver results for the communities here in Thornton Township and the residents of the 15th legislative district.”

* Greg Hinz | Huge super-PAC money taking control of Chicago congressional races: According to Federal Election Commission disclosures — thanks to political consultant and analyst Frank Calabrese for compiling the data — ECW had spent $1.27 million as of Feb. 12 on behalf of 9th District candidate Laura Fine, and $1.27 million to promote former Rep. Melissa Bean, who is trying to regain the seat she once held that now is being vacated by Senate hopeful Raja Krishnmoorthi. Both districts are on the northwestern parts of the Chicago area. FEC disclosure also show ACN so far is in for $816,00 on behalf of candidate Donna Miller in the South Side and south suburban 2nd District. That comes up to $4.06 million. Those figures dwarf what almost all of the candidates have been able to raise on their own. Still, officials from AIPAC and the super-PACs, both here and in Washington, declined comment or failed to respond to requests for comment. Moreover, using a loophole in the law that Kaplan referenced, ECW and ACN so far haven’t disclosed who gave them the money they spent on the candidates. We may get some listing down the road, but meanwhile thousands of people already are voting every day via mail and early ballots.

* Vox…


*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Rev. Jesse Jackson paved the way for generations of Democrats in Chicago, top Illinois Democrats say: “His delegates wanted him to take the fight to the floor to be the vice president,” remembered Chicago political strategist Delmarie Cobb, a top adviser on Jackson’s ‘88 run. “And Jesse Jackson told them, ‘No, we’re not going to do that. We’re going to use our leverage to get some changes, and we’re going to change the rules. 
We’re going to change the platform, and we’re going to expand the party.’ And so that’s what he did.” Jackson’s electoral success in New York preceded the election of New York City’s first Black mayor, David Dinkins. Jackson, who died Tuesday at the age of 84, also won Virginia, which soon elected its first Black governor, Douglas Wilder.

* Capitol News Illinois | Bears stadium package has ‘positive momentum’ in Springfield, but not in end zone : The bill was recently kicked out of the gatekeeping House Rules committee to the House Revenue Committee, which has a hearing scheduled for Thursday morning. But it remains unclear if the bill will be called while negotiations continue.

* IPM News | Illinois Democrats and Republicans introduce competing packages to regulate data centers amid concerns over power and water usage: Democrats and environmental advocates introduced a broad regulatory framework under a bill called the POWER Act. A Senate Republican filed a competing package that would limit data center activity around the Mahomet Aquifer and, in an attempt to lower electricity costs, rein in a recent energy bill Gov. JB Pritzker signed into law in January.

* WCIA | ​Illinois bill would require service providers to give customers 2-hour notice before arrival: Sen. Christopher Belt (D-Swansea) filed SB 3066, requiring service providers to give customers a two-hour appointment window. If the company fails to arrive in the appointment window, they are then required to notify the consumer an hour before they make it to the residence.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Convenient ordering option or ‘sidewalk hog’? Food delivery robots get mixed reception in Chicago.: Josh Robertson, a Lincoln Park resident who organized NoSidewalkBots.org, has garnered more than 3,300 online petition signatures in an effort to keep the delivery robots from taking over the pedestrian pathways in Chicago. “Our sidewalks are a precious resource, but it’s so easy to take them for granted,” Robertson said. “We have reason to think that there’s a ripple effect, that the public way itself is less safe, more chaotic with the robots than without.”

* Block Club | Windy City Bird Lab Gets A Boost From Illinois Audubon Society That’ll Fund It For 3 Years: Here, all kinds of bird-related programs and projects can grow and operate under one roof. Those efforts received a big boost this month when the Illinois Audubon Society pledged $384,000 to help fund the lab for three years. That’ll help it expand its reach of bird-related programs for Chicagoans, from long-time birders to people who are merely bird-curious. “It is really about enabling people with all sorts of skills and interests to be able to contribute to conservation science, or bird science,” Garcia said.

* NBC Chicago | Bruce Springsteen announces new tour with Chicago date this spring: Springsteen, who has been an outspoken critic of President Donald Trump’s administration and of immigration enforcement actions, said that the tour is meant to inspire hope around the U.S. “We are living through dark, disturbing and dangerous times, but do not despair. The calvary is coming,” he said in a social media video. […] Springsteen and the E-Street Band will make a stop at Chicago’s United Center on April 29, according to his website.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Northbrook small business joins national campaign against tariffs: Sari Wiaz founded Baby Paper, a manufacturer and distributor of baby products, around 2009. Its goods are sold by about 700 specialty retailers in the U.S., Canada and Europe, as well as online at Walmart, Amazon and Buy Buy Baby. Wiaz felt the impact of tariffs immediately last spring. She had to pay 30% to 54% more for products, depending on when shipments arrived at U.S. ports. Wiaz has since raised prices 10% to 20% to cover higher costs. “It’s also trying to predict whether the tariffs will go up or go down and when to bring product in,” she said.

* Crain’s | Ikea to open Gurnee store, its third in Chicago area, in U.S. expansion push: The Chicago area will be getting its third Ikea retail outlet this year when the Swedish retail giant opens a new store in the Gurnee Mills mall in the region’s far northern suburb. The upcoming 66,000-square-foot store is part of the Swedish retailer’s U.S. expansion plan, which includes 10 new stores spreading from California to Washington, D.C., set to open in 2026, according to a press release today.

* Tribune | Oak Park’s Emery Lehman — in 4th and final Olympics — and Glen Ellyn’s Ethan Cepuran get silver in team pursuit: Second place was not what they anticipated after years of training together and rising to the top of their sport. It wasn’t what they expected after setting a world record in team pursuit in 2024 and then breaking it, by a little more than a second, in November in another memorable performance at the Speedskating World Cup in Salt Lake City. “I don’t think it’s really something that needs to be said,” Lehman said last month, at the U.S. Speedskating Olympic trials in Milwaukee, of the goal of winning gold in team pursuit. His coach reminded him and his teammates of the stakes often, Lehman said, “but between the three of us, it’s just something that’s understood.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Well before sunrise on Fat Tuesday, Paczki lovers pack Harner’s in North Aurora: ‘It’s like forbidden fruit’: “I came at 5 this morning to buy my usual boxes of Paczki. I come this early because there’s no traffic,” said Dave Nussle of Big Rock at Harner’s Bakery and Restaurant on Tuesday. “We ordered these about two weeks ago. They’re all for family. I’ve been coming down here from Big Rock as long as they’ve been doing it.” Harner’s at 10 W. State St. in North Aurora lured in its usual big crowd for Fat Tuesday looking to buy Paczki – the popular Polish pastry – with sales beginning more than half an hour before the bakery was expected to open at 5:30 a.m.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Normal renews contract with goal of reducing utility bills: The council also approved a measure to allow the execution of contracts with the alternative energy supplier that Stone River Group finds for the town. Most recently, the town contracted with Constellation NewEnergy for a 12-month fixed rate of 0.10899 per kilowatt hour. […] Before the new contract takes effect, all eligible customers will receive opt-out letters from the chosen electricity supplier. Customers, both residential and commercial, will be automatically enrolled in the new aggregation program if the letters are not returned.

* WCIA | Champaign Co. executive order makes new requirements for federal immigration enforcement: A new executive order in Champaign County will subject federal immigration officers to two requirements if they enter county property for enforcement. The executive order, signed by County Executive Scott Summers, requires that a judicial warrant be presented to the Executive’s security and/or reception office. It also requires officers to remove any face coverings and to ensure “continuous visibility” of their badges. Summers said in the order that concerns among county residents was one reason behind this order.

* 25News Now | Too many kids leave PPS without learning the basics, say 2 school board hopefuls: The two candidates running for Peoria Public Schools, representing the central portion of the district, believe PPS is at a turning point, facing academic struggles, leadership changes, and questions about transparency. District 2 candidates David Daye and Andres “Andy” Diaz say too many students are leaving District 150 without the critical reading, writing, or math skills.

* WSIL | Herrin Tiger Sharks Swim Team Raising $80K to Save Community Pool: Head coach Jonathan Kraus said the pool’s filter system requires $80,000 in repairs to operate this summer. If the funds are not raised by the end of February, the pool might not open in time for the swim season. The swim team serves about 100 young athletes each year, ranging from ages 5 to 18. Kraus emphasized the pool’s importance as a community hub during summer. “My earliest memories of playing outside that pool while my older siblings were swimming and then the next year I was on the team when we came back here,” Kraus said.

*** National ***

* AP | Trump is recruiting thousands of local officers to aid immigration effort. Some states are saying no: Laws banning cooperative agreements with ICE were signed earlier this month in New Mexico and took effect last month in Maine. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul also is backing legislation that would ban local law officers from being deputized by ICE. And Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger recently terminated state ICE agreements signed under her Republican predecessor, though her order didn’t cancel existing arrangements with local sheriffs.

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Heidner spokesperson says candidate will divest gaming interests if elected

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican gubernatorial candidate Rick Heidner in January

I’m in a regulated business. You know, I’ve got, we’ve got four major businesses as a family, and the biggest businesses is my Gold Rush business and and it’s regulated, by the way, you know, the governor is my regulator. So this, this is not the smartest thing I’ve ever done in my life.

From Gold Rush Gaming’s website

Gold Rush Gaming offers world class games from some of the best vendors in the industry. We offer the latest and greatest in video gaming technology to our locations. The Gold Rush team works with each partner to guide, recommend, and provide VGT machines that perform best in their specific market. Gold Rush Gaming works with Scientific Games, Bally, IGT, WMS, Spielo, Novomatic, Aristocrat, Light and Wonder, and the m3t Terminal.

* So, the obvious question here is, if, as Heidner says, the governor is his “regulator,” then what would Heidner do about that obvious conflict of interest if he is actually elected governor? Nobody else who has interviewed him asked that question, so Isabel did. From his spokesperson…

Rick is going to personally divest himself of the gaming since it would be a conflict of interest.

The devil will be in the details, of course. But at least that’s the start of an answer. And, of course, he has to make it through two campaigns first.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Campaign news

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Rev. Jesse Jackson

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Sun-Times

“I may be poor …” began the call-and-response Rev. Jesse Jackson led in various forms before rapt audiences for more than half a century. “But I am … somebody! I may be on welfare. But I am … somebody! I may be in jail. But I am … somebody! I may be uneducated, But I am … somebody. I am Black. Beautiful. Proud. I must be respected. I must be protected. I am … somebody!”

That, in essence, is the message Rev. Jackson devoted his life to championing — for Black people in general and himself in particular. From leading Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s open housing campaign in Chicago in 1964, through his close association with the great civil rights leader during the last three years of King’s life, to the tumultuous 1970s, when Jackson started what became the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, to the 1980s, when he ran the first viable presidential campaign by a Black candidate in the United States, to the 1990s, when he traveled the globe, to free hostages, advise leaders, join picket lines and lend his internationally famous name to often desperate causes. To his later years, when he settled into the role as a revered elder statesman of Black Chicago and an unceasing voice for social justice.

Rev. Jackson died at age 84 on Tuesday, his family said in a statement. He had been in declining health for a decade; in 2017 he announced he had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease two years earlier, but last April revealed that it was actually misdiagnosed progressive supranuclear palsy, a condition also affecting bodily movements. He stepped down as president of PUSH in July 2023, citing health concerns. Rev. Jackson appeared onstage at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago in August 2024, when he was presented to the crowd after a video celebrating his life, but did not speak.

If the legend of his mentor, Martin Luther King was simplified, almost beatified, by early death — a martyr at 39, an icon who had a dream — then the legacy of his eager protege was complicated by long life. Rev. Jesse Jackson was in the public eye for six decades, a tireless wielder of social pressure. He was respected and dismissed, inspiring adoration and disdain, a Chicago institution who left footprints on the world stage, an ardent advocate for civil rights whose attempts to wield political power himself were thwarted, and channeled into the power of protest, persuasion and complaint.

* Governor JB Pritzker

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

“Rev. Jackson had an impact on my life since I was a young boy, growing up a block away from PUSH headquarters. The words ‘I am somebody!’ resonated with me, giving hope of what I may one day achieve by way of service to others. As I raised my kids a block away from the PUSH headquarters, I brought them to PUSH when they were young to hear the same words. He was always a strong advocate for Haiti and challenged me to be the same. He never hesitated to call to challenge me, unapologetically, to do better in my service to others. I am a better public servant because of Rev. Jesse Jackson. Rest, Reverend; you have earned your peace.”

* Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs…

“I am deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Rev. Jesse Jackson. Rev. Jackson rose from the shackles of Jim Crow in Greenville, South Carolina, to become an international icon. He walked alongside the greatest figures of the 20th Century, including the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., but Rev. Jackson stood in the shadow of no one. He always forged his own path.

“Rev. Jackson was a gifted athlete, orator, and leader, who channeled his strengths and gifts to fight on behalf of others. He marched in Montgomery, lent his talents to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and created Operation PUSH and the National Rainbow/Push Coalition.

“From his base on Chicago’s South Side, Rev. Jackson mentored local activists and counseled national leaders. He stood tall in the face of his critics, understood his own humanity, and offered grace and humility to all who sought his comfort.

“He was a man of deep faith who understood and practiced the delicate balance of tending his flock while fighting the wolves who sought to destroy it.

“In doing so, Rev. Jackson knew the fight between the haves and the have-nots would exceed his time on earth and he worked to ensure that others would be ready to carry forward the mantle of fairness, opportunity, and respect. Rev. Jackson will not be replaced, but his legacy, vision, and courage will inspire leaders for generations to come. I wish strength and comfort to all who mourn this loss.”

* Comptroller Susana Mendoza


* Senate President Don Harmon…

“The Rev. Jackson was a hero, a champion, a rabble-rouser and a front-row participant to history. He spent his life challenging the status quo, fighting for underdogs and pushing society forward toward justice and equality. We are all indeed better because of his work and commitment. We can honor his legacy by keeping the fight alive and always seeking that better tomorrow. May he forever rest in peace.”

* House Speaker Chris Welch


* Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson…

I am devastated to lose my mentor and friend, Reverend Jesse Jackson, Sr. My heart and prayers are with his devoted family- his wife Jacqueline, their children Santita, Jesse Jr., Jonathan, Yusef and Jackie, daughter Ashley Jackson, and their dear grandchildren.

We honor him, and his hard-earned legacy as a freedom fighter, philosopher, and faithful shepherd of his family and community here in Chicago. I am personally grateful for Rev. Jackson and his family embracing me and our city with his wisdom and guidance. His friendship, counsel and prayers had a deep impact on my family.

In honor of Rev. Jackson’s service, and as our city mourns, the Chicago flag will lower to half-staff. We thank all of the Chicagoans who served as volunteers in Rev. Jackson’s organization, providing decades of mutual aid throughout Chicago.

We know his message of justice and empowerment reverberated worldwide, as the leader of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and Operation Bread Basket. Reverend Jackson’s unwavering courage extends beyond his notable civil rights leadership with Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as he lent his support to countless humanitarian efforts at home and abroad. Rev. Jackson served as the first executive director of Kenwood Oakland Community Organization (KOCO) here in Chicago and as an international human rights advocate and spiritual advisor to world leaders.

Rev. Jackson’s mission always centered the strength and liberation of our Black community, but his mission always extended to all who needed empowerment by cultivating a rainbow of power that could shine through every storm. Rev. Jackson intimately understood what was at stake in affirming the humanity of working people. He never lost sight that those fighting for justice are entitled to the most basic needs of health and nutrition, housing, education, and jobs in order to achieve their greatest potential. Rev. Jackson held strong to this truth that we all are “somebody.” He preached that the flame of hope exists in all of us and it is our power and responsibility to unify that flame amongst our neighbors to improve our present conditions and secure a future where we can all thrive.

As we lift up his life and wrap our arms around his family and all those who loved him, I ask you to anchor your hope in action to honor Rev. Jackson’s enduring contributions. He believed in you, and found hope in humanity. Do something today to keep hope alive.

* Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford…

“Today, Illinois and the world mourn the loss of one of the greatest champions for justice and human dignity this nation has ever produced. The Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson Sr. was a moral force, a prophetic voice and a living bridge between the movement that freed us and the work that still remains.

“I had the privilege of working alongside Reverend Jackson. I remember the way he looked you in the eye and made you feel as though the entire weight of the struggle was yours to carry — not as a burden, but as an honor. That encounter never left me. It shaped the kind of public servant I strive to be.

“To the entire Jackson family: the people of Illinois grieve with you. You shared him with the world, and the world is better for it.

“May we honor his memory not with monuments, but with motion — continuing the fight for voting rights, economic justice and the full dignity of every human being. Rest in power, Reverend. The work goes on.”

…Adding… Senate Republican Leader John Curran…

“I am saddened to hear of the passing of the civil rights, faith, and Illinois leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson. Rev. Jesse Jackson dedicated his life and career to fighting for justice and civil rights here in Illinois, and throughout the nation. I am praying for his family and all who knew and were inspired by him during this time of loss.”

…Adding… Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton

…Adding… CFL…

The following is a statement from Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter regarding the passing of Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr:

“With the passing of Rev. Jesse Jackson, Chicago has lost an icon. But we know the impact of his life’s work and legacy will span generations.

“Rev. Jackson was a steadfast ally to working families. A fierce advocate for economic justice who was no stranger to a picket line, he personified the fighting spirit of our city.

“The opportunity to work so closely with an icon of the Civil Rights Movement is not lost on me. Rev. Jackson was an inspirational leader from the pulpit, but also in action. A literal and figurative giant, I am honored to have called him a friend.

“Chicago’s labor movement extends our condolences and sympathy to Rev. Jackson’s family, the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, and all those across the world mourning this immense loss.”

* Rep. Kifowit…

tate Representative Stephanie Kifowit (D–Oswego), a United States Marine Corps veteran, issued the following statement on the passing of Rev. Jesse Jackson:

“The passing of Rev. Jesse Jackson is a sadness that will be felt not only across our nation, but throughout the world. His power of prayer and unwavering dedication to justice and fairness extended far beyond our borders and touched generations of Americans.

Rev. Jackson was a true champion for people and communities too often left unheard. He never backed down from the fight for justice, equality, and human dignity, and his courage and moral leadership helped shape the course of our country’s history.

My thoughts are with Rev. Jackson’s family, loved ones, and the many communities across our country who mourn this profound loss. May we honor his life not only with remembrance, but with action.”

* Former Senate President Emil Jones…

Statement from Former Illinois Senate President Emil Jones, Jr. on the Life and Legacy of Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr.

February 17, 2026 – Chicago, IL Today, we reflect on the extraordinary life and enduring legacy of Reverend Jesse Louis Jackson Sr. — a son of Chicago who became a voice for the voiceless across America and around the world.

I have known Reverend Jackson not just as a public figure, but as a fighter — a man who never backed down from the struggle for justice. From the streets of Chicago, across America and on to the global stage, Reverend Jackson carried one consistent message: that justice must be for everybody, not just for some.

In Chicago, he gave hope to neighborhoods that too often felt forgotten. He organized. He marched. He demanded opportunity where there was exclusion. Through Operation PUSH and the Rainbow Coalition, he built bridges between races and religions showing that we are strongest when we stand together.

For our state and our nation, Reverend Jackson redefined what political participation could look like. His historic presidential campaigns were not simply about winning office — they were about expanding the table of democracy. He inspired millions to believe that their voice and vote mattered.
And around the world, he stood as a moral diplomat — advocating for peace, negotiating the release of hostages, and speaking out against injustice wherever it showed its face. Few leaders from Chicago have left fingerprints on global affairs the way Jesse has.

He taught black people that civil rights without economic rights is an incomplete promise. His life’s work changed laws, opened doors, and most importantly, changed minds.

Chicago will forever claim him as one of our own. The country will remember him as a conscience for America. And the world will recognize him as a champion of human dignity.

As someone who served alongside him in the ongoing struggle for fairness and opportunity, I can say without hesitation: Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr. did not just participate in history — he helped shape it.

May we honor his legacy not just with words, but with continued action.

* DPI…

n reaction to the passing of political leader and civil rights icon Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr., Democratic Party of Illinois Chair Lisa Hernandez shared the following:

“For generations, Reverend Jackson shaped political and civic life in our state. He ran presidential campaigns that redefined the Democratic Party, stood alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and still, kept Chicago home to his life’s work. From the South Side, he built Operation PUSH and later the Rainbow PUSH Coalition into real organizing power because he believed in civic participation and in the responsibility to use your voice.

What many of us will remember him for is his love and fight for Black Americans, for children, and for anyone who was underserved and overlooked. He fought for jobs, pushed for fair access to opportunity and education, and demanded investment in Black communities. He reminded working people that they, and their quality of life, were important.

Illinois Democrats continue the work he pushed forward. Our commitment to working families, voting rights, and building our coalition across this state is part of the legacy he leaves behind.

We extend our condolences to Mrs. Jacqueline Jackson, their children and grandchildren, and the Rainbow PUSH Coalition community. Reverend Jackson’s impact is part of Illinois history and will continue in the leaders and communities he helped shape.”

* Chuy…

Congressman Jesús “Chuy” García (IL-04) issued the following statement on the passing of Reverend Jesse Jackson:
“Today, our country has lost a beacon of civil rights and a champion for equality. As a longtime friend to Reverend Jesse Jackson and his family the news of his passing is profoundly sad to me.

“Throughout his life, Reverend Jackson fearlessly advocated for the rights and dignity of working class communities, serving as a beacon of hope for millions.

“His presidential campaigns in 1984 and 1988 were transformational, not only for our brothers and sisters in the Black community, but for all Americans who believe in a more inclusive society. I was proud to be a Jackson Delegate at both Democratic conventions, representing Illinois. His speech in 1988 deeply inspired me to never surrender in our pursuit of justice.

“Reverend Jackson taught us many lessons, among them, that political participation is vital to improving community conditions.

“He inspired countless individuals, particularly in communities of color, to exercise their right to vote and dedicated his life to ensure every voice is heard and every vote is counted.

“I have no doubt that his relentless pursuit of a multiracial alliance through the Rainbow Coalition played a crucial role in the election of our friend Harold Washington in 1983 as the first Black mayor of Chicago.

“Reverend Jackson’s unwavering commitment to equality and justice has left an indelible mark not only on Chicago’s history but also our nation’s history. My thoughts are with his wife Jackie, and his children Ashley, Jesse Jr., and my dear colleague Jonathan. Rest in power, my friend.”

…Adding… Illinois Federation of Labor…

The Illinois labor movement mourns the passing of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a towering figure in Illinois and Chicago politics whose lifelong commitment to the labor and civil rights movements leaves an enduring legacy.

Throughout his life, Rev. Jackson fought tirelessly for working people in Chicago, across Illinois, and throughout the country. He walked picket lines, stood with workers at the bargaining table, and championed the inclusion of women and people of color in the protections and promise of union membership. He reminded us that the fight for good jobs, living wages, and the right to organize is inseparable from the broader struggle for justice and equality.

In his speech, “From A Tradition of Marching for Jobs and Rights,” delivered during his 1988 Presidential bid, Jackson said: “the American worker is not asking for welfare, he’s asking for a fair share—not for charity but for parity.”

Rev. Jackson’s words continue to resonate today, and we owe him our gratitude for his years of advocacy and fighting for a better world. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Jackson family, and all those who are mourning this profound loss.

Together, we can honor his life by carrying forward his work as we fight for equality, fairness, dignity, and respect in every workplace.

  24 Comments      


It’s just a bill (Updated)

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know much more. Center Square

A controversial abortion proposal from State Sen. Neil Anderson, R-Andalusia, is drawing sharp reactions across Illinois, exposing divisions among Republicans and advocacy groups over how far the state’s pro-life movement should go.

Anderson’s bill, SB3572, would treat harm to or the death of an unborn child the same as that of a born person under Illinois homicide and assault laws, applying the same criminal standards and potentially allowing murder charges, at a prosecutor’s discretion.

The Illinois Family Institute supports the bill, with executive director David Smith saying it reflects the belief that life begins at conception and deserves full legal protection. […]

Some Republicans don’t agree. Former Republican attorney general candidate Tom DeVore publicly criticized the bill, calling it extreme and warning it could damage broader pro-life efforts.

…Adding… Darren Bailey wants Anderson to pull the bill…

Former State Senator and candidate for Governor, Darren Bailey, is issuing the following statement on Senate Bill 3572.

“When women and families are facing a crisis, they need understanding, support, and real help, not the threat of jail time. Criminalizing women in these situations doesn’t solve problems, it deepens hurt and pushes people away from the alternatives and support that could help them.

We should be leading with compassion and practical solutions that strengthen families and build trust. I am pro-life, but I believe we also have to face reality: approaches like this pull people away and make it harder to move Illinois forward. I urge Senator Neil Anderson to pull this legislation.”

Another bill from Sen. Anderson, SB 3892, would reinstate the death penalty for first-degree murder and other offenses. Combined with his abortion legislation, the proposals could subject women who receive abortions, as well as those who assist or perform them, to capital punishment. Sen. Anderson is the sole sponsor of both bills. [From Rich: The same punishments would also apply to IVF procedures.]

…Adding… Sen. Seth Lewis (R-Bartlett)…

“Every legislator has the right to file legislation they believe aligns with the priorities in their districts, but as a lawmaker, I have a responsibility to evaluate bills and support the positions of my constituents. I have read the full text of Senate Bill 3572, and believe the penalties offered in this bill are too extreme. They do not provide adequate protections, guardrails, and empathy for victims and women making one of the most difficult choices of their lives.”

* CBS Chicago

Action in Springfield this week could jumpstart the seemingly stalled negotiations between the Chicago Bears and Illinois state lawmakers on a deal to build a new stadium in Arlington Heights.

Legislation that would allow the Bears — or developers of any other Illinois project costing at least $500 million — to negotiate their property taxes with local governments is set for its first public hearing on Thursday, just as competition from Indiana heats up.

The hearing on House Bill 2789, which the Bears have said is vital to their plans to build in Arlington Heights, comes three years after the team bought the 326-acre site of the former Arlington Park racetrack for $197 million.

Known as the Mega Project Assessment Freeze and Payment Law, the legislation would essentially allow the Bears to work with local governments to lock in how much the team would pay in property taxes for the site for years to come.

More from the Daily Herald

[T]alks are happening now almost daily, according to Rep. Mary Beth Canty, the Arlington Heights Democrat who is sponsor of the Bears-backed legislation.

“You are definitely seeing positive signs of movement,” said Canty, whose 54th District includes the 326-acre shuttered racecourse property. “You’re seeing people that are moving with a purpose. They are moving quickly, but still in a way that is smart and methodical.” […]

Canty said Thursday seems “soon” for a vote at the committee level, considering the still-ongoing negotiations taking place behind the scenes. But public discussion by legislators and testimony from witnesses is likely, and more committee hearings can be scheduled, she added.

Canty said she would be surprised if the Bears stadium isn’t a topic during the governor’s address Wednesday.

Rep. Canty said this morning she has not yet spoken with committee chair Rep. Curtis Tarver about calling the bill, but said they are expected to connect in person today. Rep. Tarver did not respond to a request for comment.

* WTVO

Illinois lawmakers are considering a major change to the state’s drunk driving laws, one that would make the threshold for impairment one of the strictest in the nation.

House Bill 4333 would lower the legal blood-alcohol limit for a DUI from 0.08 to 0.05, and would govern driving, boating, snowmobiling, and even workplace injury claims.

Utah is currently the only other state with a 0.05 limit.

The proposal, filed by Rep. Daniel Didech (D-59th), updates the Illinois Vehicle Code by replacing every “0.08” reference with “0.05,” effectively creating a single standard for nearly all motor-vehicle offenses.

* Sun-Times

Sweeping voting rights legislation emerged Thursday to strengthen the hands of Illinois judges to take control of disputes over redistricting and give expanded safeguards to non-English speaking voters.

The bill sponsored by state Sen. Graciela Guzman, D-Chicago, would codify much of the federal Voting Rights Act into state law as insurance in case that law is repealed by Republicans in Congress. If passed, the changes to state law would take effect July 1 ahead of November’s general election.

“The last year has made one thing remarkably clear: Democracy does not run on autopilot,” she said. “It only survives if people are willing to protect it, and at the center of that responsibility is a fundamental right to vote.”

The bill would specifically grant judges the ability to redraw racially imbalanced legislative maps and require that non-English-speaking voters receive translated ballots, access to bilingual poll workers, or over-the-phone non-English assistance, among other things.

* Sen. Kimberly Lightford…

Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford and State Representative Carol Ammons will be joined by a number of higher education leaders at a press conference Tuesday to discuss their plan to transform how Illinois funds its higher education system.

WHO: Senate Majority Leader Kimberly A. Lightford, State Senator Mike Halpin, State Representatives Carol Ammons and Norma Hernandez, as well as Southern Illinois University President Daniel Mahony, and a representative from Advance Illinois, the Partnership for College Completion Student Board, and a student from Eastern Illinois University

WHAT: Press conference to call for the passage of the Adequate and Equitable Public University Funding Formula

WHEN: Tuesday, Feb. 17 at 2:30 p.m.

WHERE: Illinois State Capitol, 2nd Floor Grand Staircase.

* Illinois Academy of Physician Assistants…

Current laws are preventing PAs (physician assistants/associates) from practicing to the full extent of their education, training, and experience – at a time when more than 3.5 million Illinois residents live in areas with significant provider shortages.

Modernized PA practice laws will help Illinois meet growing patient demands while maintaining high standards of safety and quality.

And Illinois’ patients agree: 90% believe that PAs should be allowed to provide care to the fullest extent of their education, training, and experience.

On Tuesday, February 17, Senator Cervantes, healthcare providers, students, patients, and the Illinois Academy of Physician Associates (IAPA) will host a press conference at the State Capitol to call on lawmakers to address Illinois’ healthcare shortage crisis through SB 3421, which would remove outdated PA practice barriers to improve healthcare access.

This is a unique opportunity for legislators and media to hear directly from the bill sponsor, practicing providers, future clinicians, and real patients about the importance of SB 3421, the role of PAs in improving healthcare delivery in the state, and the critical need to increase healthcare access for Illinois’ patients.

    What: Press conference urging support for legislation to modernize PA practice laws

    When: Tuesday, February 17, 2026, at 4:00 p.m.

    Where: State Capitol Blue Room, 401 S. 2nd St., Springfield, IL 62701

* More…

    * WCIA | Clean Jobs Coalition presents new legislation aimed at regulating Illinois data centers: The Clean Jobs Coalition presented new legislation this week aimed at regulating data centers in Illinois, according to Andrew Rehn, director of Climate Policy at Prairie Rivers Network in Champaign. Rehn said the goal of the POWER Act is minimizing the impact of data centers on utility costs for consumers. It will require data centers to pay for their own electrical infrastructure, according to Rehn.

    * Center Square | IL lawmaker intros bill to regulate third-party lawsuit investing: Amid a growing push nationwide for new laws to regulate the booming business of third-party lawsuit investing, a state lawmaker has introduced legislation in Springfield in a bid to bring greater transparency to the practice in Illinois, as well. State Rep. Dan Ugaste, R-Geneva, filed HB5244 in the Illinois state House of Representatives.

    * Center Square | Illinois senator offers 401(k)-style option to escape $145 billion pension crisis: An Illinois state senator is pushing a sweeping but voluntary change to the state’s pension system that would allow public employees, including teachers, to opt out of traditional pensions in favor of a market-based retirement plan similar to a 401(k). Bill sponsor state Sen. Chris Balkema, R-Channahon, described the proposal as an expansion of an option that already exists for university professors in Illinois, who currently have access to market-based retirement plans.

  34 Comments      


Showcasing the Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Tuesday, Feb 17, 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 Laura in Kings, Illinois, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Dabrowski’s suburban argument fails with DH, as Champaign County Clerk misprints his name as ‘Tad’ (Updated)

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Republican gubernatorial candidate Ted Dabrowski has said that failed 2022 Republican nominee Darren Bailey can’t possibly play in the suburbs. We don’t usually highlight newspaper endorsements here, but the top suburban newspaper in this state just endorsed the downstater Bailey over the suburbanite Dabrowski

Among the four men hoping to face Pritzker in November, we lean toward Bailey, a former state legislator who served both in the House and Senate, giving him crucial experience working with a Democratic General Assembly in Springfield. That means less of a learning curve, and more realistic expectations, should he win in November.

We also see a different, humbler side of Bailey, a Clay County farmer, in his second attempt at statewide office that suggests his decisive loss to Pritzker four years ago and personal tragedy may have given him a broader perspective. The man who once denounced Chicago as a “hellhole” says he now understands the “entirety of Illinois better.”

We hope that’s the case. We endorse Darren Bailey.

* Speaking of that “humbler” Bailey…


Tribune

Bailey, in two campaigns for governor and during his tenure as a downstate Republican state lawmaker, has not been shy about criticizing Pritzker. He has mocked the billionaire business owner and heir to the Hyatt hotels fortune as having “soft hands” and having “never worked a day in his life.” Just days before the RNC posting, Bailey posted an image of Pritzker dressed like a king, standing in a bathroom, with the tagline “Flush Pritzker.”

But Bailey has not attacked Pritzker over his weight. That has largely been a role carried out by President Donald Trump, who endorsed Bailey’s 2022 run for governor and encouraged him to run again after a family tragedy in an October helicopter accident.

* Back to Ted, or, as he’s now known in Champaign County, “Tad”

Illinois’ ruling Democratic party under Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s leadership claims to be dedicated to election integrity with their “reforms,” but two developments show how their new election rules are undermining faith in elections and pulling us toward chaos.

In the first matter, Champaign County Clerk Aaron Ammons printed and sent out defective ballots that wrongly identify Ted Dabrowski, Republican candidate for governor, as “Tad Dabrowski.” Clerk Ammons has acknowledged the error but refused to reprint the ballots. The Ted for Illinois campaign has now sued the Clerk demanding a correction. The complaint, filed Sunday, is here.

The wrong name is highly material because the Ted for Illinois campaign has made “Ted” an integral part of its messaging, signage and literature, at great expense. In any event, Ammons is ignoring the mandatory statutory obligation he has to correct wrong names, as described in the filed complaint.


…Adding…
Dabrowski sent out a fundraising email about the Champaign County mixup

It’s Ted, not Tad. That’s what I had to tell the Champaign County Clerk when I read my misspelled name on the ballot he sent out this week. What a mess.

But check out how he signs his name…

Looks like “TAD” to me.

  46 Comments      


Illinois Credit Unions: Putting People First

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois credit unions serve their members by putting people first, strengthening financial well being, and investing in the communities they call home.
As member-owned cooperatives, Illinois credit unions make decisions based on what benefits their members.

That means:

    • Better rates on loans
    • Higher returns on savings
    • Lower and more transparent fees
    • Policies driven by service—not shareholders
    • Every dollar earned is reinvested back into the members and Illinois communities.

Illinois credit unions make a meaningful difference in the lives of the members who rely on them.

Jeremy Doughty started using Area Educational Credit Union, because, he says, “they help. They serve. They’re in it for you, not someone else.”

Learn more at https://betterforillinois.org/

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Progressive revenue proponents taking a much more pragmatic approach this year

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

As I write this, Gov. JB Pritzker is preparing to give his annual budget address. It’s an unenviable task.

Earlier this month, the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget released a report showing federal tax cuts caused a $587 million reduction in state revenues this fiscal year.

The governor announced last month that he was withholding $482 million in state spending to help mitigate federal attacks on the state budget.

It’s not all horrible news. The latest monthly revenue report from the Legislature’s Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability showed January revenues from state sources were up, according to the commission.

Personal income tax receipts increased 2.1% in January compared to the previous January (which is still below inflation). Corporate income tax revenues rose by 3.5% after months of lagging. Gross sales tax revenues increased by 3%.

\Estate tax receipts are up 60%, or about $200 million, so far this fiscal year compared to last year at this time, the commission reported. The commission said asset valuation increases, including the stock market, likely contributed to the increase.

So far this fiscal year, revenues are up a bit more than $1 billion, or 3.5%, compared to the same period in fiscal year 2025.

But there is that big federal downside. According to the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability’s report, federal revenues experienced a “notable decline,” falling $169 million, or almost 36% in January, compared to the same month last year.

During the fiscal year to date, federal sources have dropped by about 8%. But January marked the third straight month for federal revenue declines, so it may be accelerating.

“To meet initial fiscal year estimates, Federal Sources will need to show meaningful improvement over the remaining five months,” the monthly report declared. The fiscal year ends June 30.

And nobody knows what tomorrow may bring. Heck, by the time you read this, something new could’ve happened. At any given moment, White House operatives could try to pull funding for whatever program they can dream up.

Last week, the Trump administration announced that it was canceling $100 million for local public health grants in Illinois.

Illinois was one of just four Democratic-led states that were targeted for the cuts.

According to the Illinois Department of Public Health, some of the cuts were for “HIV Prevention and Surveillance, which includes programs to expand HIV testing to cover more people who may not be aware they have HIV; linking newly-diagnosed patients to appropriate care; expanding access to PrEP, medication which can reduce the spread of HIV; and conducting partner notification.”

Attorney General Kwame Raoul quickly won a temporary restraining order last week, giving the state a 14-day reprieve.

Raoul has so far fought off numerous federal attempts to withhold money from the state. But there’s just no way of knowing what could happen as the litigation moves up the federal judicial food chain.

In other words, there is just no way to craft a reliable fiscal plan in this environment.

My associate Isabel Miller wrote a subscribers-only story last week for my newsletter about how more than 40 Democratic members of the Illinois House and Senate have been meeting weekly to come up with a plan to find some government efficiencies and create new revenue streams to help the state meet its obligations.

“We must lean into transforming our tax system and creating sustainable revenue to protect people and the services we all depend on,” the Affordability and Tax Justice Coalition declared in a statement.

I was told that six ideas are under discussion, and four have been introduced into bill form: A digital advertising tax — Senate Bill 3353/House Bill 4894); A billionaire wealth tax (Senate Bill 3376/House Bill 5215); Expanded tax haven reporting (House Bill 5318/Senate Bill 3486) and closing corporate loopholes (Senate Bill 3796/House Bill 5125).

As Isabel noted, House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch has also been promoting a tax on millionaires, which has heartened the progressives.

Sen. Graciela Guzmán, D-Chicago, sits on the coalition’s executive committee.

“I think right now the growing sentiment is ‘Let’s get as much revenue as possible,’” Guzmán told Isabel.

Guzmán also said the coalition is pressing revenue advocates for specifics, including projected revenues for each proposal, constitutionality and implementation.

Too often, these groups just throw together proposals and hope for the best. But Guzmán said they’re focusing on whether these ideas can pass both chambers and be signed into law.

“The roll call is something that we keep talking about every week because we know the votes that we have to get up to in any one of these proposals,” Guzmán told Isabel.

A lot is riding on those efforts.

  17 Comments      


340B Hospitals Support Transparency Requirements – Pass HB 2371 SA 2 To Support Patients

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Big Pharma doesn’t want you to know this, but House Bill 2371 SA 2 contains NEW transparency requirements that Illinois hospitals agree with. 340B is too important to let attacks from Big Pharma detract from the real issues at hand. Many patients in Illinois need 340B to survive. The hospitals need it too, as they expect to lose up to $57 billion in federal Medicaid funding over the next decade.

Reporting and audits—from patient data to charity care—are normal activities in hospitals. Ensuring 340B program integrity is no exception. Illinois hospitals consider the federal 340B program a critical resource that helps provide lifesaving medications and critical healthcare services to low-income and uninsured patients. Hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) invest savings from 340B discounted drugs into health services benefiting underserved communities.

Illinois hospitals are following the rules of the federal Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Rigorous audits are performed regularly on 340B providers, with HRSA auditors verifying program eligibility, internal controls and compliance. HRSA audits apply to drug manufacturers as well. They include determining “that the manufacturer provided 340B drugs at or below the 340B ceiling price to participating covered entities.” Drugmakers have been skirting that requirement by arbitrarily limiting hospitals and FQHCs to just one contract pharmacy. Yet, they continue to pedal false claims about hospital transparency.

HB 2371 SA 2 strengthens transparency and accountability while protecting the care communities rely on, proving that Illinois hospitals support oversight and stand firmly on the side of patients, not pharmaceutical profits.

Stand with patients, hospitals and FQHCs—Pass HB 2371 at NO cost to taxpayers and with NO needed budget appropriation. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Feb 17, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker to present 8th budget as Illinois faces federal funding uncertainty. Capitol News Illinois

    - Gov. JB Pritzker will present his eighth budget on Wednesday and outline a plan to deal with limited revenue growth and significant uncertainty over the future of federal funding for the state.
    - Rep. Kam Buckner, a top House Democrat budget negotiator from Chicago, said one of the goals of this year’s budget will be to play “defense.”
    - Pritzker and his team have already started setting expectations for a conservative budget, telling agency leaders in memos and signaling to legislators that it will be difficult for the state to fulfill funding requests this year.

* Related stories…

************** Advertisement **************

Sponsored by PhRMA:

340B hospitals charge big medicine markups. Illinois pays the price.

340B medicine markups are big business for hospitals. Under the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Big hospital systems pocket the program profits – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The program’s lack of oversight has led to 340B becoming a profit engine for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies. It’s time for Congress to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

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* BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | Rev. Jesse Jackson, a symbol of Black politics and Black America, dies at 84: Perhaps the nation’s most recognizable civil rights icon the past half century, Jackson was a symbol of Black politics and Black America. The images of him — as a young lieutenant to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on a Memphis balcony in 1968 to his exhortations of “I Am Somebody” or “Keep Hope Alive” in front of racially diverse audiences on the campaign trail in the 1980s to him weeping in Grant Park at the election of this nation’s first Black president in 2008 — are seared in our collective memories. A global presence, Jackson spoke out against apartheid, championed Palestinian rights and negotiated the release of U.S. soldiers in Syria, Iraq and Yugoslavia.

* Bond Buyer | Capital spending may increase due to rising needs: Analyst: State and local governments’ capital spending is likely to increase in coming years, supported by expanded borrowing, a Moody’s Ratings analyst said Thursday. This sort of capital spending was flat during the COVID-19 period of 2020 to 2022 but has since increased, Moody’s Ratings Vice President of Public Finance Dan Seymour said. While some analysts call the increase a blip that will soon die, others see the start of a prolonged increase. Seymour is in the latter camp Big issuers are telling Moody’s they are planning to increase their capital spending, Seymour said Thursday during The Bond Buyer’s National Outlook Conference’s seminar, “Planning for Resilient Infrastructure in a Higher-Cost Environment.”

* Tribune | Proposed cuts to housing-first programs would be ‘going back like 30 years,’ advocates warn: The looming funding cuts could force people in permanent housing programs across the state back into homelessness. Five regions in Illinois — a state with over 14,000 total permanent supportive housing units — rely on HUD funding for all of their permanent supportive housing programs. Chicago has over 9,000 permanent supportive housing units, around 60% of which are financed by HUD, according to data from the National Alliance to End Homelessness. Of the combined $120 million in HUD funding that Chicago homelessness organizations are receiving, 80%, or $96 million, goes to permanent housing programs.

*** Statewide ***

* WGLT | Ranked choice voting stalled in Illinois, waiting for clarity from the courts: Voters in Evanston, a suburb north of Chicago, passed a referendum in 2022 to implement ranked choice voting, but the Cook County Clerk — which oversees elections in Evanston — said current election laws only allow a person to vote for one candidate. The nonpartisan good government group Reform for Illinois and the City of Evanston sued, but are still waiting for the case to be heard. Two other Cook County communities that have approved ranked choice voting, Oak Park and Skokie, also may be left waiting for the court to rule or for state legislation to provide clarification. Peoria also passed a nonbinding referendum in 2024 to research ranked choice voting, but currently has no plans to implement it.

* Capitol News Illinois | Penny shortage causes headaches for retailers in the Land of Lincoln: Sen. Dave Syverson, R-Cherry Valley, wrote a note on his website in November applauding the U.S. Treasury’s decision to halt production, saying it was “more of an inconvenience than a useful part of the economy.” He said no steps were currently being taken to address the shortage at the state level and that he would await guidance from the federal level. “It’ll be something that they’ll obviously start working on addressing more and more as the pennies become less in circulation,” he told Capitol News Illinois. “It doesn’t look like people have to worry about it at all for 2026. I’m guessing that the soonest there’d be any guidance would be ’27, when they would maybe set some rules about requiring businesses to accept whatever rounding decision that gets made.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Illinois Republican governor candidate Darren Bailey rebukes national GOP for post mocking Pritzker’s weight: Bailey, the GOP’s unsuccessful 2022 nominee against Pritzker who is seeking a rematch as he runs against three rivals in the GOP primary, responded to the RNC’s post by citing his own personal struggle with weight and said that “this kind of rhetoric isn’t helpful.” “It doesn’t solve problems, it just creates more division,” Bailey said in an X post of his own. “We can and should have real debates about policy, priorities, and the future of our state. But attacking someone over their weight is unnecessary, unproductive, and has no place in our politics.”

* Daily Herald | Candidates spar over which Democrat should represent the 52nd District: Peterson points to her narrow loss to McLaughlin in 2024 — she lost by 47 votes. She also pointed out she came within 661 votes when running for the Lake County board in 2018. She also lost by 385 votes to Republican Dan McConchie in the race for Senate district 26. “It is my three races that have proven that I do the work,” she said. “I have built the relationships, and I have turned this district from a double-digit red district to purple.” Chan Ding countered, “I believe that the district should have flipped then (in November 2024). There’s going to be even more chance for us to flip it now. We just need the right Democrat to do it.”

* WGN | ‘We are ready to fight’: Summit draws hundreds as immigrant rights groups push 2026 agenda: This year’s priorities include protecting Chicago and Illinois as a welcoming city and state, pushing for increased state funding for programs that support immigrant communities, and protecting residents’ personal data from Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The coalition has also pushed to rein in ICE and Border Patrol, calling attention to the Department of Homeland Security shutdown after lawmakers failed to agree to reforms.

* Tribune | Aja Kearney, Cleopatra Cowley seek Democratic nomination in 34th House District: Kearney said she would focus on building relationships and learning how to best address issues of importance to the district. Priorities include addressing environmental issues, public safety, health care access and economic development, Kearney said. In the 6th Ward in particular, Kearney said, the lack of a nearby trauma center creates challenges when emergencies arise.

* Sun-Times | Formerly incarcerated celebrate passage of Illinois’ Clean Slate Act: Artinese Myrick, deputy director of Live Free Illinois, a faith-based community group focused on addressing social issues, explained the law has been years in the making. When Myrick was 9, her mother, father and stepfather were all incarcerated at the same time. “They were being denied jobs because of their background and the stigma itself,” Myrick said. “Because of that, I’m interested in making sure that systems can be of support for families like mine.”

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson vetoes intoxicating hemp ban: In a letter to the City Council, Johnson said the ordinance is “premature.” A federal law, set to kick in this November, would effectively ban intoxicating hemp unless the U.S. Congress changes course and instead chooses to regulate the industry. “The most responsible path forward for the city’s hemp regulation is to align with the forthcoming federal guidelines, rather than acting prematurely in a rapidly shifting regulatory landscape,” the letter said.

* Bloomberg | Chicago to sell $1B in debt from unpaid fees despite uncertain buyers: Johnson opposed the move, arguing that it would hurt taxpayers who could become victims to debt collection firms. The mayor neither signed nor vetoed the budget after aldermen passed it by a majority, expressing skepticism about their revenue projections. […] Steven Mahr, who was recently named interim chief financial officer, is working with financial advisers to develop a request for information for the debt collection, according to the Feb. 6 letter from Belsky. It will be issued this month, with investment banking firms and certain institutional investors expected to respond, the letter said.

* ABC Chicago | Mayor Johnson takes aim at corporate media, some Democrats in livestream with Hasan Piker: As he has done several times, Johnson took aim at Chicago Democratic donor Michael Sacks and former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. In addition, there was a slight dig at former President Barack Obama. “The Emanuel administration embodied the 1% of society,” Johnson said. “The Obama administration as well,” Piker said. “Oh, absolutely. This might be a good time to just insert a ‘Thank you, Obama’ if we are going to criticize him,” Johnson said.

* ABC Chicago | Environmental work at The 78 in South Loop, which will have Chicago Fire stadium, to begin this week: During this time remediation materials and impacted soil will be moved by trucks. This will kick off the groundwork for the $8 billion project in the South Loop. The project includes a $750 million privately funded stadium for the Chicago Fire. The 78 site will also have businesses, parks, more than 5,000 apartment units.

* Sun-Times | Artist Judy Chicago logs out of Google renovation project over artistic differences: Chicago said the first problems arose when Google failed to provide construction drawings needed to help the couple figure out sizing and dimensions of their proposed work. “Getting the renovation plans and accurate architectural drawings was a nightmare,” Chicago said. “Donald had to do most of that himself from his photographs that he took when we were there.” The artists said another point of difficulty was Google’s desire to lay the new terrazzo title over the existing one.

* Sun-Times | After Time Out Market’s abrupt closure, is Chicago’s food hall era over?: COVID-19 killed some food hall projects, including Politan Row and Wells Street Market. In a statement, Time Out Market CEO Michael Marlay attributed its closure last month to the pandemic and inconsistent foot traffic due to remote work, though vendors have since pointed to loss of revenue due to neglect and lack of investment, according to reporting by Eater.

* Block Club | Chase No Longer Issuing Chicago Skyline Debit Card: Chicago is the only market in the country where Chase offers a debit card featuring the local skyline, a spokesperson told Block Club. “The way we process and produce debit cards has evolved,” a spokesperson said. “That image became outdated and updating it would have required a significant investment. Rather than invest in a single card design, we’re focusing our resources on enhancing the overall customer experience for all our cardholders.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Chicago Mag | What’s Behind the Cook County Board President Attack Ads: The race for County Board President has become so bitter because it’s a proxy for the divisions in contemporary Chicago Democratic politics. Reilly, who represents the headquarters of most big local corporations on the City Council, stands for the business wing of the party. Preckwinkle, who is a product of the Kenwood/Hyde Park independent movement, stands for its progressive wing. We’ve already seen those divisions play out on the City Council. A group of alders, including Reilly, a leading member of the so-called Common Sense Caucus, voted to pass a budget that didn’t include Mayor Brandon Johnson’s pet corporate head tax, which would have been anathema in Reilly’s ward. Reilly endorsed pro-business Paul Vallas in the 2023 mayoral election.

* Press release | Illinois Speaker Chris Welch and Proviso Township Democrats Endorse Pat Hynes for Cook County Assessor: Illinois Speaker of the House Chris Welch and the Proviso Township Democrats today announced their endorsements of Pat Hynes for Cook County Assessor, citing his proven leadership, experience in government, and commitment to restoring fairness and accountability to Cook County’s property tax system. Their support adds to a growing list of elected officials, community leaders, and residents who believe Hynes is the best candidate to bring stability, transparency, and trust back to the Assessor’s Office. “Cook County families and small businesses deserve an Assessor’s Office that works for them, not one that makes a complicated system even harder to navigate,” said Speaker Chris Welch.

* Daily Southtown | Dolton Trustee Kiana Belcher challenges appointee Kisha McCaskill for 5th District Cook County Board seat: Belcher was elected a Dolton trustee in 2021. She was reelected in 2025 as part of now-Mayor Jason House’s Clean House slate in opposition to former Mayor Tiffany Henyard. “I think I may have a little bit more visibility because of the whole Dolton saga,” Belcher said. “People have seen that I don’t mind going against the grain, I don’t mind standing up for my residents, and I’ll do the same thing at the county level.”

* Aurora Beacon News | Kane County Board OKs Flock license plate reader contract renewal for Sheriff’s Office: The Flock license plate reader cameras have been controversial in some nearby communities, a few of which have recently ended their contracts with the company. In the past year, for example, both Oak Park and Evanston halted their contracts with Flock amid concern over information possibly being shared with federal immigration agencies. At a Kane County Board Judicial and Public Safety Committee meeting in January, Undersheriff Amy Johnson said that the license plate reader cameras help the Sheriff’s Office “a tremendous amount.” Asked by board member Jon Gripe at that committee meeting how many of the license plate readers the Sheriff’s Office would ideally want to have, Johnson said that they would ideally have 45-50 throughout the county, up from their current 25.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County farmhouse verified as former Underground Railroad safe house in National Park Service initiative: It’s believed that the farm — when it was occupied by Joseph Bartlett and Julia “Ann” Bartlett — helped numerous freedom seekers, Krupa said. But one particularly well-documented story from history has been a central point in the home’s claim to fame as a safe house. […] Bartlett had been affiliated with the abolitionist movement during his time attending Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, Krupa explained. He became a teacher and farmer, and eventually settled in Kane County, where he was a local township supervisor and served in other local government roles. Bartlett also helped to establish the name Campton Township, according to Krupa.

* Daily Herald | ‘We see the injustice’: Suburban students pledge walkouts will continue, no matter the consequences: In what has become a weekly ritual, student walkouts have been held in Barrington, Elgin, Hampshire, Hoffman Estates, Schaumburg, Naperville and other suburbs. Most have been peaceful, though last week three East Aurora High School students were arrested during a march, leading some residents and a state lawmaker to question police tactics.

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | ICE agents detain five men on their way to work at a Du Quoin sawmill: Alstat Wood Products is a family-owned sawmill and logging company located just off of Illinois 127 in rural Perry County, Illinois. The company has been in operation since 1988 and is one of the few remaining sawmills in southern Illinois. Alstat said he has struggled at times to fill certain labor-intensive positions with local workers, particularly during parts of the year when demand is highest. Depending on the season, the company employs about 25 to 30 people, many of them family members. The visa and immigration status of the five individuals detained in Du Quoin is unclear. Alstat said he was told that the five employees he subcontracted had six-month work visas.

* BND | As data centers eye metro-east, officials juggle jobs, taxes and utility fears: “I would love to have one down here for the jobs that are created, but we just need to make sure that what they’re consuming isn’t going to hurt the local population,” Duckworth told Granite City Mayor Mike Parkinson. Representatives from Troy were not present at the meeting. Parkinson referred to data centers as “the future industry” with potential property tax revenue that could “change the fate of Granite City.” “It’s very intoxicating,” Parkinson said, “but there’s a lot of these issues that come with it.” He specifically noted the need to prevent utility rates from going “sky-high.”

* 25News Now | City of Peoria withdraws lawsuit in casino saga as long as land-based casino remains off the table: The City of Peoria is voluntarily dismissing their lawsuit against Boyd Gaming, the Illinois Gaming Board and the City of East Peoria after Boyd Gaming unveiled a plan to keep the Par-A-Dice on the water. Boyd Gaming unveiled the plan Feb. 5 at the Illinois Gaming Board’s last meeting. The plan as presented would move the casino to a “permanently moored barge design,” located directly on the water.

* WJBD | Salem City Council to Consider New Downtown TIF Agreement: The Salem City Council Tuesday night will consider an additional downtown TIF agreement with Jered Gambill who is preparing to renovate more downtown buildings. Under the proposal, Gambill would receive $47,000 in TIF money to purchase and renovate buildings at 122 West Main and 102, 104, and 106 North Walnut Street. Gambill would receive $10,000 for property acquisition. He would be paid the rest of the reimbursement after roof repair, tuckpointing and other measures to bolster and protect the structural integrity of the building are completed.

* WCIA | Village of Arthur to consider adding license plate readers at Monday night meeting: The village Board of Trustees will debate the installation of two ALPRs during its meeting Monday night. It’s one of several agenda items listed under new business on the meeting agenda. The ALPRs would be installed for $14,500 and would be under a two-year lease contract.

*** National ***

* NYT | Tom Pritzker, citing Epstein connection, steps down as Hyatt’s executive chair: Thomas J. Pritzker, a billionaire heir to the Hyatt Hotels fortune, stepped down from his role Monday as executive chair of the Hyatt Hotels Corp., becoming the latest person felled by an association with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. Pritzker, 75, cousin to Illinois Gov. JB Prtizker, said in a letter to the Hyatt board that he was retiring, effective immediately, adding: “Good stewardship also means protecting Hyatt, particularly in the context of my association with Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell which I deeply regret.” […] Recently released files revealed that Pritzker was in regular contact with Epstein in the years following Epstein’s 2008 plea deal on sex crimes charges, with the two frequently corresponding to confirm meals and appointments, including at Epstein’s New York City town house.

* AP | A judge says she’ll rule that the US still cannot force states to provide data on SNAP recipients: San Francisco-based U.S. District Judge Maxine Chesney last year blocked the U.S. Department of Agriculture from requiring states to provide the data, including on the immigration status of people who receive benefits and applicants, after 22 states sued over the policy. […] Chesney said during a hearing Friday that she intends to issue an order that says the federal government cannot act on its letters to the states from last year.

* NYT | Kennedy Allies Target States to Overturn Vaccine Mandates for Schoolchildren: So far, bills have been introduced in at least nine states that would eliminate all or nearly all school requirements, including Democratic states like New York where there is no chance of passage, to states such as New Hampshire, Georgia, Iowa and Idaho where the proposals have gained some traction. Many vaccine proponents view the state-level push as a second stage in the dismantling of the nation’s vaccine infrastructure, building on Mr. Kennedy’s significant reduction of federally recommended vaccines.

* The Atlantic | This is how a child dies of measles: Your daughter looks so small in her hospital bed, her face fitted with an oxygen mask. Nurses collect blood and urine; you hold the cup as she shivers on the toilet, then stroke her hair as the needle spears her vein. When you’ve regained some composure a couple of hours later, a doctor comes to speak with you. This is the first time anyone has used the word measles. The doctor tells you that your daughter has pneumonia, a complication arising in roughly 6 percent of measles cases, though some researchers suspect that the actual rate may be higher. There is no cure for viral pneumonia from measles, but the hospital will provide supportive care to treat the symptoms, including her scalding fever and rash. The doctor doesn’t tell you then that pneumonia is the most common cause of death in measles patients. You will learn that later on.

* Study Finds | We’re Not Just Receiving AI’s Hallucinations, We’re Hallucinating With It: The research introduces the concept of “distributed delusions,” where false beliefs, memories, and narratives emerge through coupled human-AI interaction rather than simply being transmitted from system to user. When someone routinely relies on generative AI to help them remember events, think through problems, or form narratives about themselves, the AI becomes integrated into their cognitive processes. And when those processes go awry (whether through AI errors or human delusions that AI validates and elaborates) the hallucination isn’t happening inside the AI or inside the person. It’s happening in the space between them.

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