Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar » Illinois
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here. To inquire about advertising on CapitolFax.com, click here.
Bears bill update (Updated x2)

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Subscribers have been briefed on this and other topics all day. From Crain’s: “Illinois lawmakers push Bears stadium plan tied to tax overhaul”

Illinois House leaders are hoping to move three consequential bills this week in a coordinated effort to advance legislation that could help the Chicago Bears move to Arlington Heights while asking voters if they’d like to impose an extra tax on millionaires. […]

The heart of the megaproject bill would authorize large developers, like the Bears in Arlington Heights, to negotiate a lower property tax payment with local taxing bodies known as a payment in lieu of taxes, or PILOT. The Bears have sought the legislation for years, framing the significant reduction in taxes as “property tax certainty.” […]

The amendment filed by Rep. Kam Buckner, who has led negotiations for the House, would now take 50% of that payment and set it aside for property tax relief. That set-aside would be split, with relief aimed at locals receiving 60% and state efforts netting the other 40%. […]

State Rep. Will Guzzardi, who represents a progressive stronghold on Chicago’s Northwest Side, said he will not view the millionaire tax and megaproject bill in tandem.

Guzzardi chairs the Progressive Caucus.

The Speaker wants to tie the education funding aspect of the constitutional amendment with the megaprojects deal since it would take half of the money from PILOT payments for property tax rebates.

The House Democrats are caucusing as I write this.

*** UPDATE 1 *** Rep. Kam Buckner talked to reporters after the caucus meeting

Buckner: There were a lot of folks satisfied with some of the changes to be made, some things that we gotta tighten up. But I think all in all, those are very positive fights.

Q: What’s next, as far as today goes and this week.

Buckner: So my plan, and my hope is to be able to get to some language that is fine tuned, that we’re able to call in committee tomorrow. Got some more work to do to get there, but that’s the plan.

Q: What are some specific changes that are going to be incorporated into the amendment based on the conversation [in caucus]?

Buckner: One big one is that we heard from our members that they don’t want this to be used for data centers. So data centers are excluded from this. There’s some more accountability measures that the developer and the municipality every five years have to give a report to the General Assembly about what’s working, what’s not working, the entire snapshot. There are other things, like no double dipping when it comes to TIF, I changed some of the duration, the freeze duration numbers. Initially I wanted to start a 15 years for the lowest tier, but it’s been moved to 25 years. Because if these tools are competing with TIF, I want this to be the thing that’s more attractive, because this is a much better program than TIF. There are other things, like the definition of a local Review Board, making sure the local Review Board has some real teeth, not just to approve the deal, but to actually negotiate the deal. These were things that I talked about with the Illinois Federation of Teachers. And in all, in all, I think there are a lot more guardrails to make this more palatable for for the folks who just left out that way. [From Rich: This was all in the draft bill he presented. So, he wasn’t talking about changes that have to be made as a result of today’s meeting.]

Isabel: How does this impact the Arlington Heights school district’s agreements with the Bears already?

Buckner: So we’ve been in lockstep with the Bears and the other folks who are looking to use this development tool. I don’t see this, and to this point, they have not told us, if this blows up, what they’re trying to do. Once again, we’re still working through the specifics, and when the amendment is filed, it will speak to whatever conversations I have when I leave here.

Q: Do you think adding that property tax relief, that taking 50% of that could potentially push the total payment up? You know, Arlington Heights and those districts might say we’re only receiving 50% of x now, so x needs to be higher, and are the Bears concerned?

Buckner: There’s a possibility that this will change the complexion of those negotiations. But once again, I think my caucus has made it very clear that there has to be something in this for people, right? And so I think those are conversations that people are willing to have to figure out how we move forward. The focus is on building Arlington Heights. But I think if you look at the companies and the developers around the state who will be willing to use this having a very stable flow of resources, back to the people. I think will be important to the local review boards, to mayors, to managers, to school districts, to mosquito abatement boards to police and buyer districts, all of those things that are part of our public services. […]

Q: Any discussions with the Senate? Senate President Harmon was pretty skeptical of the bill as it was introduced.

Buckner: Yeah, the bill as introduced a couple months ago was skeptical for me as well, and I had to present it right. But I think I got some marching orders from my caucus to put together an amendment that it looked more like what was important to us. I’ve been in lockstep with both Deputy Governor Manar and Senator leader Cunningham on this. And so obviously they have not had a chance to caucus on this, yet they will when they get back. But I think our job right now is to try to move this forward, and if there are more conversations that need to be had, of course we’ll have them.

Q: …do you expect this has enough support to pass the House?

Buckner: I think it will. And so obviously, there’s some things I got to go back and look at based on comments we heard today. Some more conversations need to happen. But the intent and the hope is that we can get to a position where we can move something tomorrow.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Rep. Buckner said he’d been in “lockstep” with the governor’s office, so I reached out to the governor’s office for comment…

The Governor’s Office is currently reviewing the draft amendment provided by Capitol Fax and does not have comment at this time.

  22 Comments      


House Republicans slam Democrats’ proposed redistricting amendment

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’ve been telling subscribers about this constitutional amendment push the past couple of days. There are other issues not brought up by the Republicans as well…

Illinois House Republicans allege Democrats aim to cheat with new Redistricting Amendment to Illinois’ Constitution

Springfield – Deputy Minority Leader Ryan Spain, Representative Dan Ugaste, and Representative Amy Elik on Tuesday blasted a proposed constitutional amendment from Illinois Democrats, arguing it would further weaken standards for fair legislative maps and make partisan gerrymandering even easier.

“In furtherance of their endless appetite for absolute power, Speaker Chris Welch and Illinois Democrats aim to enshrine what they once claimed was defect into future design,” said State Representative Ryan Spain (R-Peoria). Spain was criticizing a constitutional amendment filed by Democrats that would change the long-standing fairness standard in the Illinois Constitution used to judge legislative maps.

“Democrats are working to standardize what was once described as anomaly, and, in doing so, aim to make permanent in our State Constitution not best practice, but rather the worst practice in the country,” continued Representative Dan Ugaste (R-Geneva), referring to Illinois’ “F” grade for gerrymandered maps by the Princeton Gerrymandering Project.

“Closed door deals. Partisan district lines. Communities split apart for political gain. Politicians hand picking their voters. And now, an attempt to change our State Constitution to make it even easier,” said Rep. Amy Elik (R-Alton). “The leadership at the top of the Democratic machine has proven time and again, they will protect themselves first and the people of Illinois last.”

House Republicans say the amendment, House Joint Resolution Constitutional Amendment 28, was filed just this week by Speaker Chris Welch in response to concerns over a case currently before the U.S. Supreme Court, Louisiana v. Callais. The proposal would rewrite Illinois’ constitutional standard for drawing legislative maps.

Under the current standard, maps must be “compact, contiguous and substantially equal in population.” Welch’s proposal would instead create a ranked list of five criteria.

The Amendment to amend the Legislature Article of the Illinois Constitution on decennial redistricting to require Legislative and Representative Districts to be drawn, in order of priority: (1) to be substantially equal in population; (2) to ensure that no citizen is denied an equal opportunity to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of his or her choice on account of race; (3) to create, where practical, racial coalition or influence Districts; (4) to be contiguous; and (5) to the extent practicable, to be compact. The current requirements are compact, contiguous, and substantially equal in population.

Compactness is moved to the bottom of the list and qualified by the phrase “to the extent practicable.” House Republicans argue that change would significantly weaken the compactness requirement. They point to a lawsuit filed last year, Schrage v. State Board of Elections, which alleges maps passed by Democrats violate Illinois’ compactness standard in 52 of the state’s 118 House districts.

“Instead of accountability, we’ve gotten excuses. Illinoisans can see the results for themselves. Districts that twist and turn, communities divided, and a system that was set up to protect politicians, not represent people,” Elik continued.

House Republicans say they are concerned the amendment could move in the Illinois House this week. They are urging residents to contact their state representative and state senator and ask them to vote NO.

  16 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday signed an executive order barring state employees from using insider information to bet on prediction market apps, joining six other states that have moved to either restrict or regulate the burgeoning betting field.

Users on apps like Kalshi and Polymarket are betting on everything from the results of elections to economic decisions or war outcomes — even what words President Donald Trump will say in speeches. The governor said he’s concerned about the lack of oversight, including bets on events in which state employees can influence the outcome.

“This opens the door to insider trading and abuse of confidential information,” the governor said in a statement provided to the Sun-Times. “While the Trump Administration continues to be riddled with stories of appointees looking to make a profit, Illinois is stepping up to ensure those who are serving the public, not their own personal financial gain.” […]

Under the order, any Illinois state employee, officer, appointee or board member of any state agency is prohibited from using nonpublic information to bet on prediction markets or event-based contracts. They also can’t share or use nonpublic information to help any other person in participating, regardless of relationship, affiliation or whether that person profits.

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

Sponsored by Phrma

Illinois is paying the price for 340B medicine markups.

Through the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Those markups have become big business for large hospital systems, driving higher costs for Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers.

And the problem is getting worse. The program’s lack of oversight has allowed 340B to become a revenue stream for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies — with no requirement that the money be used to help patients afford medicines. It’s time for Washington to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

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

* Sun-Times

Cook County’s top prosecutor declined to criticize the Trump administration in the weeks leading up to Operation Midway Blitz because she wanted to keep her “excellent working relationships” with federal law enforcement, newly filed court records show.

It’s evidence that Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke has a conflict that justifies the installation of a special prosecutor who could investigate the federal agents behind last fall’s deportation campaign, a coalition of elected officials and community members argued.

“The State’s Attorney has an alliance with federal law enforcement that prevents her from taking action against the federal agents alleged to have committed crimes during Operation Midway Blitz,” its lawyers wrote in a 30-page court filing Friday.

But O’Neill Burke’s staff insisted Tuesday she’s “horrified by the thuggish and inappropriate conduct of [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement] agents in Chicago and elsewhere.” Her office also said they’ve “repeatedly and consistently denounced the Trump administration’s abuse of the law and public trust, including filing an amicus brief to prevent the deployment of the National Guard to Chicago.”

*** Statewide ***

* NPR Illinois | Why Illinois needs more prescribed burns — and what’s blocking them: Sanchez said organizations across Illinois are struggling to obtain affordable, reliable insurance coverage for prescribed burns. Some policies are “prohibitively expensive,” while others limit how many burns can be conducted each year or fail to clearly state whether prescribed fire is covered at all. As she put it, this uncertainty has become “a huge barrier in getting more prescribed fire on the ground,” even though it’s a critical land‑management tool.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois Democrats still weighing budget options as strong revenue mixes with uncertain outlook: “Right now, it’s all about information gathering, and (April 15) was Tax Day,” House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, told reporters after a recent event in Springfield. “The reason a lot of things don’t happen until later is because we need to know the tax receipts. That’s going to be the final way to let you develop a number.” While top leaders are entering May with caution, other rank-and-file Democrats are urging legislative leaders to aggressively raise taxes on high-income earners and businesses.

* WGLT | Lawmakers Chung, Koehler look to keep Illinois a beacon of LGBTQ+ support: But Sen. Dave Koehler of Peoria and Rep. Sharon Chung of Bloomington say Illinois’ Democratic supermajority is working to keep the state a beacon of LGBTQ+ support. In fact, much of the legislation they discussed Monday night at an annual legislative town hall hosted by the Prairie Pride Coalition and Equality Illinois is aimed at keeping in place support that’s being scuttled by the Trump administration. “We’re just kind of protecting vulnerable populations against some of the possible attacks that might be coming from the federal government,” said Chung.

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | New CEO Takes Over Chicago Housing Agency Despite Mayor’s Objections: For the first time in a year and a half, the Chicago Housing Authority has a permanent leader, as Keith Pettigrew took over the third largest public housing agency in the nation on Monday, a spokesperson for the agency said. However, the agency that provides more than 65,000 low-income households with public housing, rental vouchers and homeownership programs remains mired in uncertainty and at odds with Mayor Brandon Johnson. Pettigrew, the former head of Washington, D.C.’s Housing Authority, made no mention of the controversy in a statement celebrating his new position.

* Tribune | Judge questions special prosecutor appointment in 2 cases involving former Chicago police detective: The matter is among a number of special prosecutor appointments that have come under scrutiny as defense attorneys raise concerns about the potentially lucrative arrangements, including in a case that was reviewed by the Illinois Supreme Court last year. These appointments are made by judges when the state’s attorney has a conflict of interest or appearance of impropriety. Will County Judge Jessica Colon-Sayre is hearing some cases involving former CPD Detective Kriston Kato in lieu of the Cook County judiciary because Kato is married to a sitting Cook County judge, Mary Margaret Brosnahan. Former State’s Attorney Kim Foxx previously followed suit and recused her office, citing an appearance of impropriety because her prosecutors appeared before Brosnahan every day.

* Crain’s | Loop office tower owner hit with $223 million foreclosure lawsuit: A Bermuda-based SinOceanic entity that took control of the Madison Street tower in 2023 recently endured a big blow to the property’s bottom line when anchor tenant Northern Trust cut its footprint by 44% to about 225,000 square feet, according to loan data compiled by real estate information company CoStar Group. The debt — which was taken out on the building in late 2019 — was sold to commercial mortgage-backed securities investors, making much of the property’s financial performance data publicly available. With Northern Trust’s space reduction and free rent provided to the Chicago-based bank as part of a lease extension, SinOceanic projected the property would lose money in 2026, and the missed loan payment prompted the foreclosure complaint. The loan has an outstanding balance of more than $223 million and is slated to mature at the end of this year.

* Block Club | New Plan For West Loop Development Swaps Community Center For Park Bathrooms, Storage: The community center and field house would have been fully funded, maintained and staffed by Fern Hill. It would have occupied the building’s first three floors, with an open-air field house on the fourth floor. Together, the four floors would have provided 30,000 square feet of “programmable space” for the community, developers previously said.

* Tribune | Fewer young Americans are pursuing sewing careers. These Chicago tailors think they know why.: “It’s a problem in that you don’t have the pool that you used to be able to pull from,” she said. “I can’t just post on Indeed anymore. I’ve tried to do that and you just don’t get anything.” A recent analysis of U.S. census data by the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan Washington think tank, revealed that 41% of all tailors, dressmakers and sewers working in the U.S. were not born here.

* NBC Chicago | Billy Donovan ‘stepping away’ as Chicago Bulls head coach, team announces: Donovan marks the latest to leave the team after a front office shakeup earlier this month that saw executive vice president of basketball operations Artūras Karnišovas and general manager Marc Eversley both fired. “I want our fans to know that I hear you and understand the frustration,” Bulls CEO and president Michael Reinsdorf wrote after the earlier firings.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Brothers plead guilty to paying off Oakbrook Terrace mayor in red-light camera scheme: The guilty pleas mark the latest — and perhaps the last — convictions stemming from a sweeping federal investigation into bribes and kickbacks involving red-light cameras installed by SafeSpeed LLC, which generates millions of dollars in fines from motorists each year in nearly two dozen Chicago suburbs. They also scuttled a potentially fascinating trial that had been scheduled for later this year and would have featured the testimony of former Oakbrook Terrace Mayor Tony Ragucci, who admitted to starting the kickback scheme with the Colucci brothers’ stepfather, Dennis Colucci, a onetime associate of notorious Outfit hit man Harry Aleman.

* Patch | Data Center Moratorium Imposed In Plainfield After Unanimous Village Board Vote: Trustees passed an ordinance placing a 180-day pause on the receipt of applications, the processing and approval, and the issuance of any permit for data centers and warehouses primarily used for storing computing infrastructure. “To go into this mad rush of seeing dollar signs by approving data centers and tearing up valuable farmland … we don’t want to dive into this,” Mayor John Argoudelis told Patch. “It’s a very jarring thing to our community, and we are not interested in going down that route.”

* NBC Chicago | A new, ‘faster’ DMV is now open in Des Plaines: The new DMV, Giannoulias said, will be “full service,” which means customers can make appointments for drivers licenses, state IDs, real IDs, behind-the-wheel road tests, vehicle registrations, renewals and more. Unlike most other DMVs, the new location will handle multiple transactions at one counter, Giannoulias said. “No more bouncing from line to line,” Giannoulias said. “It’s faster, simpler and more efficient.”

* ABC Chicago | Long Grove bridge hit again, has been struck at least 70 times over past several years: Village Manager Chris Sparkman said the truck collided with the town’s trademark bridge about noon Monday, according to ABC7 Chicago news partner the Daily Herald. Sparkman said the 11-foot-tall vehicle managed to wedge itself in a little farther than many of its predecessors, because the driver kept driving after initial contact. It took more than an hour to remove the vehicle, he added. The bridge suffered no apparent damage, but Sparkman said engineers will be conducting a structural assessment.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | Champaign County Board to vote Thursday on data center moratorium: It will be held Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Shields-Carter Meeting Room in the Bennett Administrative Center, 102 East Main St. in Downtown Urbana. The original duration for the proposed moratorium was for 12 months. That was amended to 9 months at the April 9 Environmental Land Use Committee meeting. It can be restored to 12 months by the full board.

* Daily Egyptian | ‘Profit is their goal’; SIU faculty question university’s partnership with Risepoint, citing allegations of predatory tactics: According to the contract, obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests, SIU’s agreement with Risepoint — formerly known as Academic Partnerships — is set to go until 2030. Risepoint, now the largest OPM in the country, was purchased in 2019 by Vistria, a Chicago-based private investment firm. The for-profit company is responsible for recruiting online students to SIU’s degree programs that partner with Risepoint. “Because their profit is their goal, they tend to try to extract as much tuition as they can from students, to pay instructors as little as they can get away with, and the quality of the educational experiences suffers, as do retention rates and graduation rates,” David M. Johnson, the chair to the Faculty Senate budget committee, said in an interview with the Daily Egyptian.

* NPR Illinois | It’s been 20 years since the NCAA banned Chief Illiniwek from championship games. Some students want U of I to move on: Gone and half a dozen other Native students at U of I believed they could educate the higher-ups on campus and get the Board of Trustees to eliminate the mascot. “Many of the people we talked to privately acknowledged that those rationales and arguments made sense to them, but they were powerless to do anything,” he said.

* SJ-R | Springfield cannabis grower lands $750,000 state equity loan: Lincoln Labs LLC was the only Springfield applicant approved in the latest round of funding, which distributed nearly $32 million statewide to support equity-eligible cannabis businesses. Statewide, 95 loans totaling $31,793,206 were approved across four license categories. Craft growers received the largest share, with 25 businesses awarded $18.74 million, including Lincoln Labs. Adult-use dispensaries were approved for $9.07 million across 37 loans, while infusers received $2.94 million through 12 loans, and transporters received $1.05 million across 21 approvals.

*** National ***

* Reuters | Amazon’s collusion drove up consumer prices, California says, citing new evidence: In its filing in San Francisco Superior Court, California described dozens of cases of alleged price-fixing that boosted prices for goods such as khaki pants, fertilizer, eye drops and dog treats. Bonta has said the alleged collusion leads merchants and rivals to ‌raise prices ⁠or make products temporarily unavailable so Amazon wouldn’t have to price match.

* The Guardian | Palantir manifesto described as ‘ramblings of a supervillain’ amid UK contract fears: “Some cultures have produced vital advances; others remain dysfunctional and regressive,” wrote Palantir in a 22-point post on X over the weekend, which also called for an end to the “postwar neutering” of Germany and Japan. […] It also predicted a future dominated by autonomous weapons: “The question is not whether A.I. weapons will be built; it is who will build them and for what purpose. Our adversaries will not pause to indulge in theatrical debates about the merits of developing technologies with critical military and national security applications. They will proceed.”

  6 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Session update (Updated)

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


A look at the proposed millionaire’s tax proposals

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Crain’s

Illinois lawmakers are considering a new “millionaire’s tax” that could generate billions in new revenue. But the measure, which would have to go before voters on this November’s ballot, faces a tight deadline and political hurdles that sank the “fair tax” proposal in 2020.

On the table in the state legislature are a pair of competing measures that would both place a new referendum on the statewide ballot to establish an additional 3% income tax on any resident who pulls in at least $1 million per year. […]

The two proposals — one from Rep. La Shawn Ford, D-Chicago, and another from Rep. Natalie Manley, D-Joliet — only really differ in how they plan to spend the new revenue. Ford’s bill would dedicate the new funds to property tax relief, likely in the form of $1,500 rebates for Illinois homeowners, while Manley’s would divide revenue between property tax relief and funding for schools.

* Synopsis of HJRCA26

Proposes to amend the Revenue Article of the Illinois Constitution. Provides that an additional income tax shall be imposed on individuals in an amount equal to 3% of the portion of the individual’s income that is greater than $1,000,000 for the taxable year. Provides that the revenue collected from the tax shall be used to provide property tax relief. Effective upon being declared adopted.

* HJRCA21

Proposes to amend the Revenue Article of the Illinois Constitution. Provides that an additional income tax shall be imposed on individuals in an amount equal to 3% of the portion of the individual’s net income that is greater than $1,000,000 for the taxable year. Provides that, of the revenue collected pursuant to those provisions, 50% shall be used to provide property tax relief and 50% shall be distributed to school districts solely on a per pupil basis. Effective upon being declared adopted.

I’m told that 21 is the one on the table.

The catch is that “shall be distributed to school districts solely on a per pupil basis” means the dollars would not be distributed based on need. That means school districts which are adequately funded would receive the same amount of money per pupil as schools which aren’t. And that could very well mean the state will then have to come up with more funding for its Evidence-Based Funding law to “reverse the added inequity,” as one administration official explained.

Discuss.

  39 Comments      


It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is already mapping Chicago’s unique streets and traffic patterns to lay the groundwork for operations.

Never tired or distracted, Waymo provides hundreds of thousands of fully autonomous rides every week across ten major U.S. cities, from Los Angeles to Atlanta — from multi-lane expressways to dense city streets, including the demands of winter weather. The data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in thirteen times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 3/20/26, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois.

Ready to ride? Help bring Waymo to Illinois.

  Comments Off      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Press release…

Who: State Representatives Ryan Spain (Peoria), Dan Ugaste (Geneva), and Amy Elik (Alton)

What: After Speaker Welch filed HJRCA 28 on redistricting, House Republicans will highlight Illinois Democrats’ record of gerrymandering and discuss the consequences of their latest proposal.

When: Tuesday, April 21, 2026 at 1:30 PM

Where: Capitol Blueroom

* Capitol News Illinois

Plastic pellets are tiny, white, round objects — about the size of a grain of rice — fabricated at plastic factories. They are the building blocks of plastics manufacturing, but if they make it into waterways, they pose a danger. Kowalski said the pellets can look like food to birds, turtles and fish, and that if they ingest too many of them, they can become ill, starve or be poisoned by the accumulation of toxins from the pellets.

As the hazards they pose become increasingly known, state legislators are seeking to give the Illinois EPA more leeway to attack the problem, which often is traced to spills from factories. Spills are not intentional. But given how light the pellets are, they can easily end up in the state’s waterways, blown by the wind or carried by stormwater.

House Bill 4418 grants the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency emergency rulemaking powers to create “stormwater pollution prevention plan” that specifically addresses plastic pellet spills. The bill directs the IEPA to, within one year of its passing, devise best practices for facilities that produce the pellets.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Joyce Mason, D-Gurnee, recently passed the House 69-33 and awaits action in the Senate.

* Rep. Mary Beth Canty…

With some states increasingly hostile toward bodily autonomy, state Rep. Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington Heights, is fighting to keep personal health information private with the Reproductive Health Records Privacy Act, which limits abortion-related medical information from crossing state lines.

On Thursday, this legislation passed the House and will soon be heard in the Senate. […]

To help keep abortion records safe, the Reproductive Health Records Privacy Act requires entities that facilitate the electronic exchange of health information, or health information exchanges, to:

    · Limit user access to systems containing abortion-related medical information,
    · Refrain from sharing this information across state lines,
    · Technically segregate information related to abortion services from the rest of a patient’s record, and
    · Create the means to automatically disable access to segregated information for out-of-state entities.

The bill also empowers the Attorney General to enforce these requirements with civil penalties, and for private causes of action to be taken by patients who have had their right to privacy violated.

* Rep. Dagmara Avelar…

State Rep. Dagmara “Dee” Avelar, D-Romeoville, is cleaning up abandoned gas tanks that can leak chemicals into our drinking water and hold back neighborhood development by passing legislation to promote the removal of abandoned, underground storage tanks containing fuel or hazardous chemicals. […]

Avelar’s House Bill 5317 gives cities and towns the ability to step in, clean up these abandoned tanks, and get reimbursed for the cost. The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will fund up to five cleanups a year, helping communities tackle sites that would otherwise sit polluted for decades to comply with the requirements of the Leaking Underground Storage Tank Program.

Orphan tanks are underground storage tanks that do not have owners or operators and are considered abandoned.

“Across Illinois, old gas stations and abandoned properties still have underground tanks with no owner responsible for cleaning them up, leaving communities stuck with pollution risks and stalled development,” said Avelar. “When tanks leak fuel and waste into our soil and groundwater, they contaminate local ecosystems, water supplies, and ultimately our drinking water. This legislation will help create cleaner neighborhoods, safer water, and transform abandoned properties into spaces that generate jobs and opportunity. It’s a meaningful step toward protecting our communities and future generations.”

This bill has passed out of the House unanimously and goes to the Senate for further consideration.

* Rep. Lisa Davis…

State Representative Lisa Davis, D-Chicago, is highlighting a step toward improving Illinois’ criminal justice system after legislation creating the Emerging Adult Criminal Justice Task Force passed the House. […]

House Bill 5434 creates the Emerging Adult Criminal Justice Task Force within the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority. The task force will hold public meetings in different regions across the state while reviewing laws and practices that affect young adults, including pretrial processes, sentencing, corrections, supervision, and reentry. Based on its findings, the group will develop recommendations to improve state laws, policies, and programs, and will submit an initial report by January 31, 2027.

“This task force allows us to hear from communities, review the data, and make informed improvements,” Davis said. “By understanding what’s effective and what isn’t, we can create a system that holds people accountable while also encouraging rehabilitation and making our communities safer.”

The legislation now advances to the Senate for further consideration.

* 25News Now

Students from K-12 are getting the chance to help choose the state’s official colors, an idea that germinated in Central Illinois.

Elizabeth Austin of Pekin came up with the idea for the Illinois State Colors Project two years ago, and it’s gaining momentum, with help from State Rep. Travis Weaver (R-Edwards).

Public, private, and homeschooled kids are all invited to fill out a survey. […]

“Our hope is that when we get thousands of surveys completed by students, we can go back to the General Assembly, file the legislation and then get a bill passed that reflects the will of the students,” said Weaver.

* More…

    * 25News Now | Illinois House passes bill to create abortion access fund: The Illinois House has passed legislation that would create a state-run abortion access fund, shifting oversight of existing insurance-based funds from health insurance companies to the state. HB5408, sponsored by State Rep. Anna Moeller (D-Elgin), would require the Department of Public Health to establish an Abortion Access Fund to award grants providing abortion care services for patients who are underinsured or have no insurance.

    * Repairer Drive News | Illinois House passes bill that regulates auto glass claims: The Independent Glass Association (IGA) opposes the bill and warns that it could harm consumers, reduce choice, and further consolidate the auto glass market. “HB 4373 is not about consumer protection, it is about control,” said Gary Hart, IGA executive director, in a press release issued when the bill was introduced. “This bill follows the same NCOIL template that is being promoted nationwide by the Safelite Group and their insurance partners to tighten their grip on the auto glass claims process. It is being sold to lawmakers under the false premise of widespread auto glass fraud, a problem that simply does not exist.” HB4373 requires glass repair shops to notify the insured if their vehicle is ADAS-equipped, whether calibration is necessary, and whether the shop will calibrate to OEM specifications or, instead, send it to a qualified specialist capable of performing the calibration.

    * Press release | Mason Passes Bill Establishing Emergency Training Standards at Child Care Centers: House Bill 2190 requires every child care institution to have a minimum of two non-administrative staff members on site that are first aid certified, CPR certified, and Heimlich maneuver certified. Accidents can happen very quickly, especially with young, small children. This bill adds protections for the children and ensures adequate supervision and response times by staff members directly involved with child care. House Bill 2190 is also referred to as “Calum’s Law,” in memory of Calum, a toddler who lost his life in a tragic accident at his child care center. His mother, Felicia Walters, bravely championed this legislation and testified about her family’s loss in Mason’s Child Care Accessibility & Early Childhood Education committee. It is because of her, and her late son Calum, that this bill was brought forth and unanimously passed the House.

  9 Comments      


Built For Illinois. Built With Transparency.

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Public safety technology only works when communities trust it. That’s why Flock Safety built privacy and transparency into every layer of our system from the beginning of the design cycle — not as an afterthought. In Illinois, that means:

    • Your data belongs to you. 100% community-owned, never sold to third parties.
    • Only local law enforcement decides who can access data. Flock never shares without explicit permission.
    • Compliant with Illinois law. Sharing data with out of state agencies is regulated.
    • Automatic deletion. All LPR data is permanently deleted in accordance with an agency’s retention schedule.
    • No backdoors. Private customers cannot access law enforcement data.
    • No facial recognition.
    • Flock Safety is trusted by hundreds of Illinois law enforcement agencies — from Crystal Lake to Champaign — because we believe safety and privacy have to coexist. Not someday. Now.

See how we’re building trust in Illinois.

  Comments Off      


Rate the messaging

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m referring to Bailey’s succinct messaging, not Del Mar’s comments, which are not all accurate…


A Republican running against data centers. Dude knows how to read a poll, at least.

  23 Comments      


Higher Drug Costs Are Harming Hospitals And Patients: Pass HB 2371 SA 2 To Protect 340B

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Higher drug prices are a significant factor in many Illinois hospitals struggling to survive. An April 17 Crain’s article, “Drug and supply costs eat into Illinois hospital margins,” showed median year-to-date operating margins were negative 2% for Illinois hospitals in February, a decline from their January median year-to-date margins of negative 0.5%. Illinois hospitals’ gross operating revenue decreased 4.5% in February, while year-over-year expenses rose 5.3%, driven by a 10.5% increase in supply and drug costs.

Earlier this year, drugmakers planned to raise the U.S. prices of at least 350 branded medications, about 100 more than in 2025. In the article, Chicago-based healthcare data company Strata noted that operating margin pressure due to rising drug and supply costs is making hospital prospects for success “murky at best.”

Hospitals, like all Illinoisans, are feeling the effects of higher prices. Communities rely on their local hospitals for needed healthcare services 24/7. Likewise, hospitals serving many low-income and uninsured patients rely on the federal 340B program requiring drugmakers discount outpatient drugs sold to 340B providers.

Legislation to protect 340B from arbitrary drugmaker restrictions, House Bill 2371 SA 2, must pass this legislative session. Illinois’ 340B hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers are counting on House members to show up for them like they show up for their patients every day. Learn more.

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Lawmakers sweeten pot to keep Bears in Illinois, with stadium bill linked to statewide property tax relief. Sun-Times

    - Illinois hopes to take the lead over Indiana in the Chicago Bears stadium battle with a new proposal that would give the NFL team property tax certainty while also providing a statewide property tax relief sweetener.
    - State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, plans to brief Illinois House Democrats on the new amendment today. The PILOT measure, shorthand for payment in lieu of taxes, would allow the Bears to renegotiate their property taxes with Arlington Heights.
    - “It’ll do something that the state has not done, that other states have not done in megaprojects legislation. It’ll actually consider how these things should be able to help regular taxpayers as well,” Buckner said. “I’m finding a way to bake [in] some property tax relief for homeowners across the state.”

* Related stories…

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


Sponsored by The Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

No Cuts. No Closures. Fund Safety-Net Hospitals.

For decades, Illinois has underfunded safety-net hospitals, the lifelines for Black and Brown communities. Now, the “Safety-Net Moonshot” and the Medicaid-defunding legislation it has spawned, threatens deeper cuts to these critical health providers. Any reduction inspired by the “Moonshot” would be a killshot to the care our most vulnerable residents rely on.

Weakening safety-net hospitals won’t improve care. It will slash essential services, eliminate jobs, and push entire communities into healthcare deserts and economic instability.

The state cannot balance its budget on the backs of Black and Brown community hospitals. These institutions are not line items to cut, they are the foundation of care for families who have nowhere else to turn. Disinvestment will deepen inequities and worsen outcomes.

When safety-net hospitals are funded, communities are healthier, workforces are stronger, and economies are more resilient.

Illinois must fully fund safety-net hospitals. For the communities they serve, it is life or death.

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

* Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | Illinois ‘millionaire’s tax’ proposal faces political barriers and a tight deadline: Illinois lawmakers are considering a new “millionaire’s tax” that could generate billions in new revenue. But the measure, which would have to go before voters in this November’s ballot, faces a tight deadline and political hurdles that sank the “fair tax” proposal in 2020. On the table in the state legislature at the moment are a pair of competing measures that would both place a new referendum on the statewide ballot to establish an additional 3% income tax on any resident who pulls in at least $1 million per year. House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch recently told the Chicago Sun-Times he’s in favor of such a new tax, and earlier this year, Gov. JB Pritzker said he’s also supportive in concept.

* Capitol News Illinois | Hernandez reelected chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois: “We built it, but the work is not over,” Hernandez said. “The work to continue expanding our voter base is really very important to us, especially in this year… it’s not just winning in November, it’s really knocking that out of the ballpark and utilizing the kind of resources to engage folks into the political process.” With an unpopular Republican president in the White House and a large resource advantage over the Illinois GOP, the state party has the wind at its back in 2026. But Hernandez said the party isn’t taking anything for granted. As it did in 2022 and 2024, it will helm a coordinated campaign meant to support candidates up and down the ticket with get-out-the-vote efforts, data, messaging and other resources.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | Bailey campaign unfazed by $14 million funding gap with Pritzker: “If there’s someone in Pennsylvania who really likes (Gov.) Josh Shapiro and wants to increase his chance of winning in the (Democratic presidential) primary and wants to hurt JB Pritzker in Illinois, we’re happy to take a check,” Del Mar said. “So what we’re doing right now is 100% nationalizing this gubernatorial race,” he added.

* WAND | Quinn hopes IL lawmakers approve millionaire tax constitutional amendment question by May 3: Quinn frequently tells legislators and reporters that millionaires should pay a 3% surcharge on their income taxes to help lower property taxes for families and businesses. Recent data show that Illinois has over 77,000 millionaires, who make up 1.2% of the state’s income taxpayers. “Illinois has an unfair tax code, one of the worst in the whole country,” Quinn said Monday. “It’s an upside-down tax code that gives tax breaks to millionaires and higher property taxes to everyday people who are trying to stay in their home or get a home.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Judge dismisses National Guard mobilization suit after Trump’s loss at Supreme Court: U.S. District Judge April Perry, whose Oct. 9 temporary restraining order restricted any true deployment of the guardsmen to the streets of Chicago, declined to grant the state of Illinois’ and city of Chicago’s joint motion to keep the case alive in order to protect against any future National Guard mobilization orders from the administration. “The court can no longer provide ongoing protection against hypothetical unlawful acts committed by the federal government,” the judge said Monday, delivering her opinion from the bench after hearing lawyers’ brief oral arguments.

* Capitol City Now | Madigan author plans a second book: The author of a book about former House Speaker Mike Madigan, who was indicted after The House That Madigan Built was finished, says there won’t be a new chapter or two – there will be a new book taking in Madigan’s indictment, trial, conviction, and more. “Right now, the cases are still rolling along,” said retired Chicago Tribune reporter Ray Long. “There still could be things that are overturned. We just saw that Mike McClain and Anne Pramaggiore, two of the people in the Com Ed Four, had their cases reversed. They could be going to trial again. The prosecution may decide not to do anything. Madigan, meanwhile, has just turned 84. He is in a (federal) prison in West Virginia, and he has a case on appeal, too.”

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | CTA ends unarmed guard contract, redirects money to officers ‘better equipped’ to keep riders safe: It was a surprise to the company, which says the CTA had signed a one-year renewal to its contract three weeks earlier. But CTA claimed, under the contract, it had the authority to cancel the agreement because it wasn’t funded, according to a letter the CTA sent to Monterrey Security on Friday. A spokesperson for Service Employees International Union Local 1 said it represents 159 of Monterrey guards who lost work. The rest worked for subcontractors Kates Detective & Security Agency and Rush Solutions, according to Monterrey Security spokesperson Steve Patterson.

* ABC Chicago | Organizers of Chicago Cinco de Mayo Parade to speak out on cancellation over immigration fears: This is the second year in a row that organizers have canceled the parade due to immigration policies under the Trump administration. The historic event celebrates Mexican culture and brings paradegoers to Little Village the first week of May. The parade has a history of disruptions. It wasn’t held from 2018 to 2022 partially due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as a series of disagreements between organizers and city officials. Two years ago, the parade was forced to reroute due to what police called gang violence, resulting in multiple arrests.

* WTTW | CPS Employee Accused of Double-Dipping Through Dual Employment Scheme Now Works for CTA, Records Show: Although it’s likely impossible to determine exactly how many of Coleman’s reported hours were fraudulent, interviews with an RL Canning vice president, a CPS supervisor and Coleman suggested that she worked 20 to 80 hours per month while also employed with CPS, according to the investigation. “Ultimately, the OIG found that Coleman’s time fraud constituted theft under the Illinois Criminal Code and violated her fiduciary duty to CPS under the district’s Code of Ethics,” according to the investigation.

* WTTW | Suspend CPD Officer for 89 Days for Using His Radio to Strike Man in Head 3 Times: Top Cop: Officer Michael Donnelly, who was a member of the Near North (18th) Police District tactical team until he was stripped of his police powers last fall, used excessive force against a Black man he and several other officers were trying to detain near Cambridge Avenue and Chestnut Street in Cabrini-Green, a complex operated by the Chicago Housing Authority that sits just west of the Gold Coast. Five former members of that tactical team have been stripped of their police powers.

* Block Club | Southwest Side’s Aloha Motel To Become Homeless Shelter With 55 Private Rooms: BEDS Plus broke ground Friday on its $14 million project to convert the former Aloha Motel, 8515 S. Cicero Ave., into a transitional housing facility. Once completed, the facility will feature 55 private rooms, each with a private bathroom, microwave, refrigerator, personal storage and at least one bed, officials said at the groundbreaking. The shelter will serve individuals, couples and families experiencing homelessness or having trouble finding stable, permanent housing, officials said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Probe of DuPage clerk’s bidding practices ends without charges: In a statement released Monday, a spokeswoman for the state’s top lawyer put to rest any questions about the status of the nearly yearlong investigation. “The intention of the bidding statute is to ensure a transparent and competitive process, and violating the statute is a Class 3 felony,” Annie Thompson, a spokeswoman for the Illinois attorney general’s office, wrote in an email Monday afternoon. “We carefully reviewed the serious allegations related to no-bid contracts, and while the conduct certainly violated the spirit of the bidding statutes, our office determined that the facts did not meet the standard necessary to support a criminal prosecution.” In a written statement, DuPage County Clerk Jean Kaczmarek said she has had no contact with the Illinois attorney general’s office since they were appointed to investigate. She added that she was not asked to turn over any documents for the investigation.

* Daily Southtown | High School District 218 votes to support Palos Heights’ 12-year TIF extension: Palos Heights is one step closer to extending its Gateway Redevelopment Project tax increment financing district by 12 years after a vote of support Wednesday by the High School District 218 board. The Palos Heights City Council approved the TIF district in April 2005 with an expiration date of December 2027. Palos Heights Mayor Robert Straz said the 12-year extension is standard, but the village will likely seek to close the TIF district sooner, once two areas along Harlem Avenue are developed.

* Daily Herald | During intense flooding, Levee 37 proving effective at keeping the waters at bay: “With the river has high as it is, and the amount of water that we’ve gotten this month, we definitely would have been out there sandbagging and pumping out of the river all last week,” Mount Prospect Public Works Director Sean Dorsey said. Prospect Heights City Administrator Peter Falcone said neighborhoods once routinely flooded near Milwaukee Avenue and Chicago Executive Airport no longer experience problems. Built in 2015, the $36 million project involved local, state and federal agencies.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Third Eye Blind, Six One Five Collective to perform at RiverEdge Park in Aurora: Third Eye Blind will play RiverEdge Park on Sunday, Aug. 23, according to a press release from RiverEdge. Doors will open at 6 p.m. with the concert at 8 p.m., officials said. Tickets are $71. Three-time Grammy-nominated Six One Five Collective will bring its country sound to RiverEdge Park on Saturday, July 25, according to the release. Doors will open at 6 p.m. with the concert at 8 p.m. Tickets are $22, officials said.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | ‘The hazards are real’: U of I’s USDA labs facing possible relocation: “If it were done, the hazards are real. For instance, it’s certainly going to delay hybrid development. It’s going to delay, for six or eight to 10 years. And the possibility of losing genetic material is very, very real,” Don Ort, plant biology and crop sciences professor, said. Ort said he’s heard the reasons to move them have been centered around cost. But, he said in his professional opinion, this wouldn’t result in savings. The decision of whether it will stay or go will likely be made at the end of the month.

* WCIA | U of I researchers develop camera to detect cancer in lymph nodes: Engineering professor Viktor Gruev said the process has been six years in the making, and he created the cameras with dozens of students in the university’s Biosensor lab. He said it has been a collaborative effort with the university, the Carle Illinois College of Medicine, Carle Foundation Hospital and The Cancer Center at Illinois. The cameras were 97% effective at identifying cancerous lymph nodes in a recent clinical study which used the cameras during more than 30 cancer patients’ surgeries, according to Gruev. They were 89% effective at identifying non-cancerous lymph nodes.

* WAND | Decatur City Council approves firefighter raises, $4M lead line replacement: Firefighters will get a 4% raise, back-dated to January, and 4% raises at the beginning of each year through 2028. The union moved to arbitration after nine months of negotiations without a deal. Health insurance and sick leave were also updated in the contract. The city council also approved almost $4 million for a lead line replacement project.

*** National ***

* Axios | Dems kick off 5-city fight to host 2028 convention: Already, whisper campaigns are pointing out the potential flaws of each finalist: Atlanta doesn’t have enough union hotels, Chicago hosted the convention in 2024, Boston signals “liberal elite,” Denver isn’t in a swing state — and Philadelphia, the 2016 host, is a reminder of the year Hillary Clinton lost the election.

* Futurism | In Article About Horrific Shooting That Killed Eight Children, Forbes Lets Readers Place Bets About Gun Control: Underneath a chunk of text describing the Shreveport gunman, a 31-year-old named Shamar Elkins, a ForbesPredict box appears. It implores readers to “make your prediction” on “gun policy,” asking whether they believe “Congress WILL pass new gun safety legislation before 31st December 2026.” […] “Wager coins (never real money) on what happens next,” reads the box. “Double down when you’re confident. Flip your call when the story changes.”

  12 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* One of the better Beatles covers

Keepin’ an eye on the world going by my window

This is an Illinois open thread. Have at it.

  8 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


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

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  1 Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, Apr 21, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comment      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Tribune

A Homer Glen man who was charged last year with threatening Illinois state Rep. Nicole La Ha pleaded guilty Monday to disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor.

Will County Judge Vincent Cornelius accepted the plea agreement for Steven Brady, 41, who had submitted messages through La Ha’s public website threatening to harm her and her family.

Brady, who apologized in court for his actions, was sentenced to 12 months court supervision, $800 in court costs and fines and ordered to have no contact with La Ha, her family, home or place of employment. He was also given 30 days in jail, which he has already served. […]

La Ha said she is glad Brady will be held accountable and hopes he gets the help he needs.

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

Sponsored by Phrma

Illinois is paying the price for 340B medicine markups.

Through the federal 340B program, nonprofit hospitals can buy medicines for pennies, then charge huge markups – even on life-saving medicines. Those markups have become big business for large hospital systems, driving higher costs for Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers.

And the problem is getting worse. The program’s lack of oversight has allowed 340B to become a revenue stream for hospitals, PBMs, private equity firms and big chain pharmacies — with no requirement that the money be used to help patients afford medicines. It’s time for Washington to hold hospitals accountable and fix 340B. Read more.

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

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul and a coalition of 22 states secured a federal court order blocking an unlawful attempt by the Trump administration to threaten health care providers who treat youth with gender dysphoria. A federal district court issued a written opinion and judgment, granting the plaintiff states’ summary judgment motion.

“This is another sharp reminder to the Trump administration that Illinois and our partner states will not stop fighting back against the unlawful and cruel targeting of transgender youth and their medical providers,” Raoul said. “The court agreed that Secretary Kennedy lacks power to cast aside medical standards of care recognized by state health care regulators; nor can he limit doctors’ participation in Medicaid and Medicare by proclamation. I will continue to stand with transgender youth and their medical providers and pledge to take all necessary action to stop this administration’s attacks on essential health care for all Illinoisians.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* IPM News | Higher education funding reform stalls in Illinois House: Though the deadline has passed for lawmakers to approve the bill this spring session, supporters and advocates are hoping to revive the proposal during the fall veto session or the 2027 session of the General Assembly. Senate Bill 13 and House Bill 1581 would establish a funding model tied to student and institutional needs while creating new accountability measures for how funds are spent.

* Daily Herald | Citizens Utility Board urges state authority to reject merger of 2 water suppliers: A proposed merger between the parent companies of the state’s two biggest private water utilities — Illinois American Water and Aqua Illinois — would not serve the public interest, according to experts at the Citizens Utility Board. The consumer watchdog group recently filed testimony urging the Illinois Commerce Commission to reject such a union over concerns about market consolidation, aggressive acquisitions of municipal systems and shoddy service quality. […] CUB said the companies have a poor track record in Illinois and challenged claims by corporate officials that the deal will allow them “to continue providing superior customer service at affordable rates.”

*** Chicago ***

* The Triibe | New details emerge surrounding 2025 incident that led to a Black man being ‘choked’ by the feds in Chicago: After relaying information to Chicago police, federal agents walked the man over to a CPD vehicle and released him, according to the stop report. (Documents don’t indicate how many agents were involved.) The identity of the officer who filed the report is unknown. Their name and star number were also redacted; however, the officer who wrote the report is part of the 11th District — Harrison. The unidentified beat officer conducted a field interview with the man, who said he was crossing the intersection at Congress and California when he was almost hit by the two vehicles involved in the traffic crash. “He didn’t know that the people jumping out of their vehicles were federal agents, and he started running, at which time he was detained by federal agents,” the stop report reads.

* Crain’s | Fulton Market project lands $102M construction loan, among Chicago’s largest in years: Weldon’s plan for a large two-tower apartment complex between North Ogden Avenue and North Elizabeth Street first emerged as a pivot from an earlier proposal for a 16-story life sciences lab building on the site. Weldon acquired the land from its former owner, developer Mark Goodman, in April 2024, according to Cook County property records. Plans submitted to the City Council indicate the development will include two buildings containing 383 and 341 apartments, respectively. Of the 724 units, 146, or about 20%, will be marketed at affordable rates to comply with the city’s Affordable Requirements Ordinance, according to Weldon’s website.

* Bloomberg | WGN parent’s merger plans on hold until final court ruling, judge says: In a 52-page ruling, the judge said that allowing WGN-TV’s parent Nexstar to move ahead with its integration of Tegna would hurt DirecTV and the state plaintiffs, reduce competition and result in newsroom layoffs and shutdowns. Nunley said the merger is likely to increase retransmission rates, referring to the fees local broadcasters charge for content from cable companies, which can lead to higher bills for consumers. Nexstar and Tegna closed their $3.5 billion deal March 19 after receiving approval from the US Justice Department and the Federal Communications Commission. In the same week, a group of states, including Illinois, and satellite television company DirecTV filed separate suits, alleging the merger will hurt competition for broadcast television in dozens of markets around the country.

* Block Club | How 2 Siblings Are Bringing Chicago’s Koreatown Back To Life: Their father, Johnny Lim — a graphic designer who made logos for businesses, many of which were Korean-owned — built a website in 2004 to highlight those local shops and restaurants. For awhile, that website sat idle. But now, more than two decades later, Dean and Tarah Lim’s efforts to update the site have “grown into something much bigger,” said Dean Lim, who was born in Albany Park before his family moved to the suburbs. The neighborhood was once known as Chicago’s Koreatown, with a stretch of Lawrence Avenue dubbed Seoul Drive.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Brace for backups: What to expect from 2026 road work and where the worst gridlock lurks:
“We’re very excited about this year,” tollway Chief Engineer Manar Nashif said. “We’ve accomplished a lot, but we’re building on the momentum of the last several years. The tollway’s been on quite a run, delivering benefits to our customers. It’s a huge year for construction.” When it’s not spreading asphalt, the tollway will be erecting SmartRoad overhead digital message signs with alerts and travel times on I-294 between Wolf Road and North Avenue.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Mayor John Laesch shares vision for the future at State of the City address: He linked that vision to his focus on energy, particularly energy-efficiency, which he said was important because of global warming and “an unprecedented, rapid demand for new energy” largely due to data centers. Aurora has the chance to lead by building both energy-efficient housing and a renewable energy grid, according to Laesch. His long-term goal is to make Aurora the green building capital of Illinois and the Midwest. “I believe that we can put Aurora’s people to work with living-wage jobs rebuilding our city with energy-efficient housing and renewable energy,” Laesch said. “We can’t continue to settle for poverty wage jobs. If we want a strong local economy, then we need to make sure that our people can earn a living wage.”

* Sun-Times | How the war in Iran is affecting Chicago colleges, from canceled research to uncertain post-grad plans: In recent weeks, some colleges have evacuated students or staff from the Middle East. Northwestern University, for example, relocated “a small number” of graduate students doing research in the area, a spokesperson said. Northwestern also increased safety measures at its Qatar campus after Iran launched a retaliatory strike on a U.S. air base 16 miles away. That has included shelter-in-place orders, remote work and evacuations, according to the school’s student newspaper, The Daily Northwestern.

* Daily Herald | ‘Very important to this town’: Naperville weighs funding options for India Day: After the group did not receive any funding this year through the Naperville Special Events and Community Arts, or SECA, grant program, Chakka and others urged the city council to reconsider. On Tuesday, council members will discuss potential funding options for India Day, an event that over the years has featured a vibrant parade, food vendors, fireworks and even Bollywood performers.

* Fox 5 Atlanta | Fulton board approves Tiffany Henyard for commissioner race: The Fulton County Registration and Elections Board voted Monday to accept Tiffany Henyard as a candidate for the District 5 commissioner seat. Henyard is running as the only Republican in an area that typically favors Democratic candidates. The challenge centered on a lease Henyard provided for a home in the Chatterton Springs subdivision in South Fulton, which was dated May 1, 2025. Board Chair Sherri Allen noted that Henyard was still serving as a mayor and township supervisor in Illinois during that period, with her term there officially ending May 5, 2025.

*** Downstate ***

* Cook County Record | Downstate sheriff can’t be sued over mishandled child porn: Appeals court: The plaintiffs, whose identities are not disclosed, said the issue dates to 2019 when the Stark County Sheriff’s Office learned of “Blue Breeze,” a Dropbox file containing sexually explicit images of local girls. According to their allegations, Sheriff Steven Sloan assigned the investigation to Gary Bent, a deputy sheriff and Toulon Police Chief. They say Bent then sought help identifying victims from Jason Musselman, an auxiliary Toulon officer who served on the department’s information technology staff and had been the county’s Emergency Services Disaster Agency director. […] Although Musselman was an untrained auxiliary officer, the panel said, finding for the plaintiffs would require recognizing a new right suitable for due process protection and doing so without a showing of a suitable historical inquiry.

* WCIA | Coles Co. Sheriff says mental health services expanded after suicide attempts at jail: Sheriff Kent Martin previously told WCIA that jail staff responded to a series of incidents involving four separate suicide attempts by people housed within the county jail. None of the attempts resulted in a loss of life, Martin said. Now, the sheriff’s office is providing more context and information on the ongoing mental health challenges within the facility. […] Martin said mental health services are available for those in custody. Now, however, access to these services has been expanded, and those impacted by the recent incidents — including the witnesses — have been offered mental health support.

* WAND | Giannoulias, Frerichs call on ISU to settle with striking workers: Giannoulias said trash is piling up and student dining options are limited. “As a statewide elected official representing voters in communities throughout Illinois, I have watched the work stoppage at Illinois State University carefully and with concern. And as an employer myself, I know from experience that - while it may not always be easy - it is always possible to reach an agreement with employees that benefits everyone,” Giannoulias said. “I commend the workers, who deserve justice and their union, which has been seeking compromise. I am troubled by the refusal of ISU administration to negotiate when given another chance. This strike has gone on too long already.”

* Illinois Times | New leadership for Sangamon County Democrats: Diana Carlile, 64, a former Illinois Bell operator and AT&T engineering department employee who retired in 2011, was unanimously elected April 15 in a weighted vote of the local Democratic Party’s precinct committeepersons. Carlile, a former member of the Communications Workers of America and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, will take over the volunteer role from [Bill Houlihan], 72, a Springfield resident.

* Illinois Times | Sangamon Auditorium to reopen in October with major upgrades: The UIS Performing Arts Center has been closed since June 2025 to make way for a major plumbing replacement throughout the building. It’s not the most glamorous upgrade, but it was essential. Every water and wastewater pipe serving restrooms, sinks, fountains and dressing room showers has been replaced as part of a state-funded project. With most of that work now complete, the finish line is in sight.

* Illinois Times | A welcoming place: Gay rabbi and his family relocate to Springfield: Then came a new presidential administration, and the warm breezes of Charleston turned politically chilly when it came to LGBTQ rights. “Southern politicians, it seemed like, were trying to outdo each other to curry favor with the president, at the expense of me and my family,” Kanter said. “And so, we wanted to come to a part of the country where we didn’t have to worry about that stuff.” Springfield became that place. For about 18 months now, Rabbi Kanter has led Temple B’rith Sholom on Fourth Street, a Reform Jewish congregation since 1858. Kanter said Springfield has made him and his family feel welcome, although he still does a lot of explaining to people who meet him for the first time.

  1 Comment      


Buckner says he’s had talks with SDG about opposition to Bears stadium bill (Updated)

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hmm

Meanwhile, Buckner says he has it covered…


More here.

…Adding… Mayor Brandon Johnson on Fox 32

The Bears belong in the city of Chicago. I believe what’s being banted about right now in Springfield is centered around providing some property tax incentive for corporations at a time in which everyday working people are not receiving property tax benefit or relief. To offer that up to corporations. Those are literally public dollars benefiting corporations. That is what I’ve heard Springfield did not want to do, right? So I think it’s actually counterintuitive

Mayor Johnon’s basic belief here is that if the Bears don’t stay in the city, then he’d rather let them go to Indiana.

  24 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Judge dismisses Illinois lawsuit over National Guard deployment after orders rescinded (Updated)

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Tribune

Six months after federal troops were preparing to deploy to Chicago during Operation Midway Blitz, a federal judge on Monday granted a motion to dismiss the state’s lawsuit over the mobilization amid assurances that the presidential orders have been rescinded.

In making her ruling, U.S. District Judge April Perry said that even though President Donald Trump had threatened on social media to “come back” to Chicago with troops eventually, she cannot issue “advisory opinions” about orders that are no longer in effect.

The judge also noted that the “facts on the ground have changed substanitially” since last fall, when hundreds of federalized troops were poised to help protect federal agents as they carried out deportation operations in the Chicago area.

“Things in Chicago are calm,” Perry said. “They have been calm for many many months, and while that certainly could change in the future, there is no threat of that happening anytime soon.”

* Sun-Times federal court reporter Jon Seidel

* Attorney General Kwame Raoul…

“In October, the District Court for the Northern District took action to stop the unlawful deployment of National Guard troops in Illinois because the administration could provide no lawful explanation for its deployment. That is because none existed. This matter went all the way to U.S. Supreme Court, which denied the administration’s attempt to stay that lower court’s order. Now, several months later, the federal government has conceded that the orders for deployment are not operational.

“The American people, regardless of the city or state in which they reside, should not live under threat of military occupation simply because they live in a jurisdiction that has fallen out of a president’s political favor. I am pleased that today, the court has declared the Trump administration’s unlawful orders defunct and said it is absolutely clear that the administration cannot use the Illinois orders to federalize or deploy National Guard troops in Illinois. I am proud of the attorneys from my office who diligently fought to uphold the rule of law, because in Illinois, we recognize that the Constitution is not merely a suggestion.”

…Adding… Gov. JB Pritzker…

“Today’s order concluding Illinois v. Trump confirms what has been clear to the people of Illinois from the beginning — Donald Trump’s deployment of the National Guard to occupy our streets was a reckless and illegal abuse of power. I’m grateful to the court for siding with our communities and slowing the erosion of our democratic norms.

“I want to applaud Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul for securing this win in the courts as he has consistently stood up to defend the rights of our people and stop federal overreach. I also want to thank him and his staff for working around the clock to check Trump’s march toward authoritarianism at every turn.

“Communities should not have to live in fear of masked federal troops occupying their neighborhoods, and our brave National Guard members should not be used as political props. These are foundational principles of any healthy democracy, and the result in this case validates that belief.

“While this is an important result, we know that the Trump Administration will continue to test the limits of its power no matter the cost to our communities. Illinois will keep standing up and fighting for the rights of our people.”

* More…

    * WTTW | Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging National Guard Deployment in Illinois Months After Troops Removed: Because of that threat, attorneys for Illinois and Chicago denied that their lawsuit is moot. “Even now, Defendants could rescind their orders and offer declarations to this Court renouncing their threats to ‘come back’ uninvited,” they wrote in a March court filing. “Because they haven’t and won’t, the case continues.” The Trump administration previously claimed the deployment is necessary as federal agents in Illinois have been met “with prolonged, coordinated, violent resistance that threatens their lives and safety,” telling the Supreme Court this has become part of a “disturbing and recurring pattern.”

  1 Comment      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Evanston RoundTable

The Illinois House of Representatives passed a bill Thursday that would require all internet-connected devices and platforms in the state to ask for and verify users’ ages, a measure intended to restrict minors from accessing “addictive feeds” and other harmful aspects of social media. […]

As currently drafted, HB 5511 would require that by 2028, every “internet-enabled device,” operating system and application store must prompt users to “indicate the birth date, age, or both, of the primary user of that device” during initial account setup. Devices would use this information to tell websites, apps and other platforms what “age bracket” the user is in, defined as under 13, between 13 and 15, between 16 and 17, or 18 and older.

The bill does not specify which methods devices should or should not use to request age information, which range from simply asking the user to attest their age to scanning government-issued IDs, like some states now require to access pornographic content. Additionally, all websites, online services and apps would be required to request every user’s age bracket, regardless of whether their content would actually be age-restricted. […]

[Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz] did not respond to a request for comment about how the age verification will work and why all websites would have to check users’ age brackets. […]

[Christopher Whitaker, a former digital service expert for the federal government,] said the bill’s amended version filed April 10 fixes many of the group’s concerns from the first version, including by tightening restrictions on how age data can be used and specifically protecting access to information on sexuality, reproductive health and other topics. But he said a stronger approach to the issue is to focus on data protections, like those provided in the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation.

* Rep. Mary Beth Canty…

Five pieces of legislation sponsored by State Rep. Mary Beth Canty (54th District-Arlington Heights) have passed the Illinois House of Representatives ahead of last week’s third reading deadline. These bills strengthen protections for survivors of gender-based violence, shield sensitive health records related to abortion, expand end-of-life options, and more. […]

    HB5425 - Legalizes natural organic reduction, giving Illinoisans the ability to choose an environmentally sustainable alternative to traditional burial and cremation. The legislation creates regulations and safety procedures for licensed operators to provide natural organic reduction as an end-of-life option. Passed the Illinois House 64-36-0.

    HB3169 - Protect families from medically-based wrongful allegations of child abuse from child abuse pediatricians. The bill ensures parents know who is evaluating their child, have information about the investigative process, have access to the child abuse pediatrician’s forensic opinion, and are notified of the right to obtain and submit an independent second opinion. Passed the Illinois House 110-0-0.

    HB5295 - Creates the Reproductive Health Records Privacy Act to protect sensitive medical records related to abortion care from being inappropriately shared, including with out-of-state entities. Passed the Illinois House 73-34-0.

    HB5078 - Protects survivors of gender-based violence from retaliation by creating an early dismissal process for civil actions filed against survivors so they can seek justice and support without fear of lawsuits designed to intimidate and silence them. It allows courts to award prevailing survivors their attorney’s fees and costs, injunctive relief, and punitive damages, which should also discourage retaliatory lawsuits. Passed the Illinois House 78-30-0.

    HB4990 - Updates the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act to address sexual harassment and new technology, ensure confidentiality, add anti-retaliation protections, clarify supportive measures, and create an enforcement option. Passed the Illinois House 72-27-0.

Each piece of legislation must now pass the Illinois Senate and then be signed by Gov. JB Pritzker before becoming law.

* Tri States Public Radio

The Illinois House has passed a bill requiring high schools to provide the opportunity to register eligible students to vote.

The bill, which would take effect in the 2026-27 school year, is in honor of the Rev. Jesse Jackson who died in February. To offset some of the potential cost, non-profits are allowed to support schools when registering students to vote. The bill sets no penalties if a school does not follow the law. […]

Republican state Rep. Bill Hauter, representing an area between Peoria, Bloomington-Normal and Decatur, opposed the bill. He said parents need to be involved in the process, and it is an unfunded mandate. […]

Republican state Rep. Jason Bunting, representing a rural area stretching from McLean County to the suburbs of Chicago, supported the bill, saying it’s a non-partisan issue and that every student should have the opportunity to register to vote.

Bunting said when he was in high school, his school helped him register to vote and was surprised to learn his daughter did not get that same opportunity.

* AAA director of public affairs Nick Jarmusz, Mothers Against Drunk Driving regional executive director Erin Doherty and Families for Safe Streets president Amy Cohen…

[Traffic deaths] are predictable and preventable, driven largely by reckless behavior such as excessive speeding and impaired driving. Two key pieces of pending legislation, House Bill 4333 and House Bill 4948, would help get Illinois back on track.

House Bill 4333 would address impaired driving by lowering the state’s alcohol concentration threshold from 0.08 to 0.05. Research shows impairment begins well before 0.08, and crash risk rises as blood‑alcohol concentration increases. A 0.05 standard would set clearer expectations for drivers, saving lives and preventing millions of dollars in economic losses each year.

House Bill 4948 [, which passed through the House last week,] would create an Intelligent Speed Assistance Program focused on the small number of high‑risk drivers whose repeated or excessive speeding endangers everyone. The technology limits a vehicle’s speed to stop this dangerous behavior before it causes a tragedy. The program creates an alternative to license suspension for this small population of high-risk drivers.

These bills target two leading causes of deadly crashes and would help our state go from a lagging outlier to a leader in preventing roadway deaths. We urge the public to ask their legislators to advance these bills.

* WCIA

On April 16, it was announced that State Senator Paul Faraci advanced an initiative that would honor the legacy and impact of the late State Senator Scott Bennett by renaming the railroad trestle bridge on the Kickapoo Rail Trail.

“Scott Bennett was not only a mentor to me, he was also a dear friend whose dedication to his communities has inspired much of my work in the Senate to date,” Faraci (D-Champaign) said. “Renaming the bridge on Kickapoo Rail Trail in honor of his life and work is common sense. He made tangible, necessary and valuable change for our communities with our residents’ best interest always at the forefront, and nothing deserves recognition more than that.”

This proposal would honor Bennett’s memory in Vermilion County by designating the bridge on the trail as the “Senator Scott Bennett Memorial Bridge.” The measure would also allow the Illinois Department of Natural Resources to put up plaques in recognition of the designation, pending the agency’s funding availability.

In his time as state senator of the 52nd District, Bennett served communities in East Central Illinois from 2015 until his death in 2022. Senator Faraci said Bennett worked tirelessly to promote the environment, and that as a Central Illinois native, he was a longtime supporter of the Kickapoo Rail Trail and fought for funding to expand regional connectivity through the trail.

* Sen. Laura Ellman…

According to Saint Augustine’s University, investing in water infrastructure delivers compelling returns: every $1 spent on water and sanitation generates $4 in benefits, with improved health, education and labor productivity. With this in mind, State Senator Laura Ellman advanced a new measure through the Senate to make water infrastructure projects more efficient and cost-effective across Illinois.

“This bill puts Illinois’ water infrastructure on a path toward 21st-century excellence,” said Ellman (D-Naperville). “It’s about giving our local governments the flexibility they need to plan, build, and deliver clean water more effectively.”

Under Senate Bill 3381, water commissions, such as the DuPage Water Commission, would be able to utilize design-build contracts, in which design and construction professionals collaborate under a single contract to streamline project delivery.

Additionally, they may utilize construction-manager-at-risk contracts, which allow a dedicated construction manager to oversee project design and execution from start to finish while providing cost guarantees.

The measure also would remove outdated compensation restrictions affecting water commissioners who serve on multiple local boards, ensuring fair treatment across all water commissions statewide. […]

Senate Bill 3381 passed the Senate on Thursday.

* WCIA

State Rep. Barbra Hernandez (D-Aurora) bill would give couples more power in deciding who keeps their furry companions.

HB 4540 would give the court system authority to assign sole or joint ownership of a pet, particularly in cases such as divorce.

Judges will consider the well-being of pets when determining custody in certain legal disputes.

Other states have passed similar laws in the past including New York and California.

* More…

    * Capitol News Illinois | 150,000 Illinois households may lose federal food assistance beginning May 1: “Not feeding people is a choice,” Guzmán said at the rally. “This is not about waste. This is not about fraud, and this is not about responsibility. This is about cruelty. This is about power.” Guzmán is a sponsor on Senate Bills 3277, 3276 and 3167, the three bills that Save our SNAP is championing. The House versions have all missed the committee deadline, although that doesn’t mean they won’t come back later. The Senate bills are still being considered in committee. The measures call for funding but don’t provide funding sources, meaning lawmakers would have to separately allocate money in the budget process.

    * Press release | Belt’s measure to ban AI for teacher evaluations passes Senate: Senate Bill 2909 would prevent school administrators from using AI to write teacher evaluations. A teacher evaluation is a formal process used to measure an educator’s effectiveness, instructional skills and classroom performance. The use of AI while writing these evaluations brings up many transparency and privacy concerns for teachers. The measure recognizes that AI might become an integral part of the teacher evaluation process one day, but the technology is not there yet. The measure would not stop evaluators from using AI for administrative tasks. If the evaluator chooses to use AI assisted tools, they must name and specify the purpose of the tool used in the evaluation and share that information with the teacher being evaluated.

    * WAND | Home for Good: IL House passes bill expanding housing, support services for people returning from prison: State representatives passed a bill Friday to create safer and stronger communities by improving housing and support services for people returning home from prison. Roughly 15,000 people leave Illinois prisons annually, but the vast majority of those Illinoisans are unable to find stable housing. Sponsors said that is due to inequities in the housing market and gaps in human services. […] House Bill 624 passed out of the House on a 63-34 vote. It now heads to the Senate for further consideration.

    * Center Square | Reentry housing bill draws support from advocates; debate centers on cost, public safety: Critics argue public housing assistance should have stricter eligibility rules based on criminal history, especially for violent offenses, to balance rehabilitation with public safety. Vollen-Katz disagreed, saying conviction history alone doesn’t reliably predict future behavior and that many people do not reoffend due to rehabilitation and aging out of crime. “Too often we exclude people based on their history without looking at who they are now,” she said, emphasizing the role of reentry programming and skill development in reducing risk after release.

    * Press release | Rep. Morgan Passes Bill in House Establishing New Illinois Department of Disability Advocacy and Guardianship: In a landmark step to strengthen protections for Illinoisans with disabilities, chief bill sponsor State Representative Bob Morgan passed House Bill 862 in the Illinois House of Representatives. Pending Senate passage, this bill establishes the Illinois Department of Disability Advocacy and Guardianship (DAG), transforming the existing Guardianship and Advocacy Commission from a quasi-independent body into a Cabinet-level state agency. HB 862 creates a new department which will be led by a Governor-appointed Director and confirmed by the Senate, bringing greater transparency and accountability to agency leadership. The legislation also creates an 11-member Advisory Council (also appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate) to provide guidance on guardianship services, legal representation, and disability rights.

    * Press release | Mason Passes Bill Protecting Against Stormwater Pollution: House Bill 4418 expands the Environmental Protection Act to require the development of a Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan. This plan directly targets small lentil-sized plastic pellets, also known as nurdles, that are often found in the plastic product manufacturing process. These small bits of plastic are melted and molded into everyday products, but have often found their way outside of the production process. Because of their small size, these pellets are regularly spilled during transport to manufacturing facilities, easily swept into drains or are thrown away when they fall on the manufacturing floor and become contaminated. When not properly disposed of, these pellets can pollute stormwater, which typically runs into larger bodies of water, causing an environmental threat to marine life and human health.

  16 Comments      


SB 1486 Raises Premiums And Reduces Consumer Choice

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois is home to one of the most competitive insurance markets in the nation. Hundreds of insurers fight for consumers, leaving families better protected than those in other states.

SB 1486, described by the Daily Herald as “controversial legislation,” could eliminate that system and, in its place, leave Illinois with the most extreme regulatory framework in the nation.

This legislation could:

    • Increase premiums by 20% on average
    • Cause insurers to scale back coverage
    • Result in companies leaving the marketplace entirely

These policies have been tried in other states, leading to skyrocketing costs for consumers and limited options for coverage. Don’t bring California style overregulation to Illinois.

Protect consumer choice and affordability.
Vote NO on SB 1486.

Click here to learn more.

  Comments Off      


Caption contest!

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From last night

Computer, zoom in…

  43 Comments      


Credit & Debit Cards May Not Work For Tips, Starting July 1

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The IFPA—the Credit Card Chaos law—could hurt Illinois’ tipped workers. Servers, stylists, rideshare drivers and other gig workers who rely on tips could see their income drop if customers can’t tip on cards and are limited to the cash they carry.
Why should tipped workers pay the price for Springfield’s bad policy?

Before chaos hits on July 1, lawmakers should reverse course and repeal the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act.

Learn more at: guardyourcard.com/Illinois

  Comments Off      


Poll: Illinoisans overwhelmingly want to impose strict rules on data centers

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background is here if you need it. My weekly syndicated newspaper column

In a mid-March poll, 68% of likely Illinois voters said they would support legislation to “regulate data centers to minimize their impact on our utility bills, climate, and water while still allowing them to be built.”

But while 21% opposed the legislation, more than half of those opponents (56%) said they did so because they “oppose allowing data centers to be built at all.” That means 80% either want guardrails or oppose any new construction.

So, yeah, it’s not looking great for anyone who might want to fend off regulation. As you’ll see below, this is an 80-plus percent issue pretty much across the board.

Global Strategy Group conducted the survey of 800 likely voters March 16-19 on behalf of the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition, which is pushing the Protecting Our Water, Energy, and Ratepayers, or POWER, Act, legislation (Senate Bill 4016/House Bill 5513). The survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5%.

The proposal was initially supported by large bipartisan majorities, the poll found, as well as in all regions of the state. Democrats and independents supported it the most (71%), while Republicans support was strong, but not by as much at 61%.

And 56% of Republicans who said they opposed the bill told the pollster they did so because they didn’t want any data centers built, period. The same was said by 64% of likely downstate voters. Keep in mind that the margin of error for voter subsets is substantially higher.

Organized labor has asked the governor to not pursue his proposed two-year moratorium on state data center construction tax breaks. The governor stood by his proposal, but did offer the possibility of a compromise.

Whether the environmentalists’ bill is the answer remains to be seen. But it seems clear from the poll that Illinoisans want some real regulation of this industry.

For example, 96% said they agreed that the state should “ensure data centers pay their fair share of water infrastructure costs,” with 85% strongly agreeing. Ninety-three percent say data centers should be required to “use efficient cooling systems to reduce water consumption,” with 75% strongly agreeing. You almost never see poll numbers like that on anything.

Ninety-one percent said they want to “prohibit data centers from shifting their energy costs to consumer bills,” and 91% also said they want to “require data centers to provide their own clean energy and storage to power their operations.” The only difference was intensity. Eighty-four percent strongly agreed that cost-shifting should be outlawed, while 70% strongly support requiring the centers to provide their own clean energy and storage.

It goes on from there. “Require an analysis that a data center won’t increase harmful health, water, and environmental impacts on vulnerable communities before a project moves forward,” received 92% support with 79% strong support. Another 86% agreed that rules should be tightened which allow backup diesel generators for data centers to limit their use during “true emergencies.”

And a whopping 97% said data centers should be required to report their water sourcing and usage. That’s about as close as you can possibly get to unanimous in a poll.

New technologies and the companies behind them are quite unpopular, but not as much as you might expect after seeing those numbers above.

Thirty-nine percent of respondents said they had a favorable view of artificial intelligence (25% “very favorable”), while 51% had an unfavorable view (25% “very unfavorable”).

Thirty-five percent rated “big tech companies” favorably, while 55% rated them unfavorably.

And just 30% rated data centers favorably, while 51% rated them unfavorably (32% “very unfavorably,” which was the highest of all three).

The House held a hearing on the chamber’s version of the POWER Act earlier this month. The Senate held a marathon hearing over two days the same week on a large number of bills dealing with artificial intelligence (which uses lots of data centers), social media, etc.

Many of these bills appear to come from a desire to address the all too obvious anger of the electorate. Some lobbyists are hoping that the usual legislative “wait and see” inertia sets in. And, if the poll is accurate, voters have not made this a huge priority when it comes to their own state legislators.

According to the poll, just 37% said they’d view their legislators more favorably if their members supported the bill, while 17% said they’d view them less favorably. Almost half, 48%, said it made no difference either way.

Click here for the toplines.

Discuss.

  16 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

At Fit Foundation in Crest Hill, founder and owner Angie Aegerter is redefining grab-and-go with healthy, homemade meals designed for busy lives. Built from her background as a personal trainer, Angie created Fit Foundation to give customers convenient, nutritious options without sacrificing quality or flavor. Come check out the four-time “Best Lunch Restaurant in Will County” and wellness community favorite.

Findings of a recent economic study are clear: the retail sector is a cornerstone of the state’s economy and crucial to our everyday lives. Retail in Illinois directly contributes more than $112 billion in economic investment annually – more than 10 percent of the state’s total Gross Domestic Product.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Angie in Crest Hill are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work. Please visit https://WeAreRetail.IRMA.org/.

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

*** Remembering Barbara Flynn Currie ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Barbara Flynn Currie, 40-year veteran of Illinois House, trailblazer for women in Springfield, dies: State Rep. Curtis Tarver, D-Chicago, who was elected in 2018 to replace Currie after she announced she wouldn’t seek a 21st term, was emotional as he summarized her legacy as a “trailblazer” in a speech on the House floor in Springfield. He said she “raised her children first, finished her degree later, in what she described as ‘doing it on the motherhood plan.’” “That mattered,” Tarver said. “It shaped how she saw people, how she approached policy and how she understood their real lives behind the decisions we make in this chamber.”

* Hyde Park Herald | Barbara Flynn Currie, Hyde Park’s state legislator for four decades, dies at 85: The legislative record of Currie’s majority leader years is sweeping. In 2011, she co-sponsored the bill abolishing capital punishment in Illinois. In 2013, she co-sponsored the bill legalizing same-sex marriage. She led the charge on school funding equity — in 2016 chairing a bipartisan task force that added $350 million to address the inequalities created by Illinois’ reliance on property taxes to fund schools. She worked for decades on criminal justice reform, extended voting hours, free mammograms for low-income women and protections for nursing home residents.

* Sun-Times | Barbara Flynn Currie, ‘trailblazer who opened doors for generations of women’ dies: With women making up a record 32% of state legislatures across the country, it might be difficult to remember the male world that Currie entered. When she was elected in 1978, fewer than 11% of Springfield lawmakers were women. When she announced her retirement in 2017, that figure was more than a third, and in 2025 the Illinois Legislature was 42% female. […] ”Republican women gave me flowers,” Currie later recalled. “Secretaries and staff in the Capitol were thrilled. One of my girlfriends nearly ran her car off the road. The depth of excitement was really quite thrilling.”

* Tribune | Barbara Flynn Currie, Illinois’ first female House majority leader and a progressive champion, dies at 85: “At first, when I met her, she seemed a little intimidating because she was so brilliant,” said state Sen. Sara Feigenholtz, a Chicago Democrat who previously served in the House for many years with Currie. “One of the strongest characteristics of Barbara Flynn Currie was how she mentored people, and she would very gently give you ideas and thoughts about how to do things better.”

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


Sponsored by The Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

No Cuts. No Closures. Fund Safety-Net Hospitals.

For decades, Illinois has underfunded safety-net hospitals, the lifelines for Black and Brown communities. Now, the “Safety-Net Moonshot” and the Medicaid-defunding legislation it has spawned, threatens deeper cuts to these critical health providers. Any reduction inspired by the “Moonshot” would be a killshot to the care our most vulnerable residents rely on.

Weakening safety-net hospitals won’t improve care. It will slash essential services, eliminate jobs, and push entire communities into healthcare deserts and economic instability.

The state cannot balance its budget on the backs of Black and Brown community hospitals. These institutions are not line items to cut, they are the foundation of care for families who have nowhere else to turn. Disinvestment will deepen inequities and worsen outcomes.

When safety-net hospitals are funded, communities are healthier, workforces are stronger, and economies are more resilient.

Illinois must fully fund safety-net hospitals. For the communities they serve, it is life or death.

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

* Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Names of dead people on juror list raises legal challenge to Illinois jury pool process: Mertes, a criminal defense attorney, was alarmed by the glut of dead people whose names turned up on a recent list of potential jurors in rural Whiteside County. Now, he and county prosecutors are wondering whether Illinois has sufficient safeguards to purge the deceased from its jury pools. The issue could potentially affect other criminal trial cases — making the case the “canary in a coal mine” for the statewide jury system, Mertes said. “It’s extremely difficult to believe this problem doesn’t exist in other counties,” Mertes said. “Our system of justice is predicated on the idea that a jury represents a fair cross section of the community, so you get different perspectives. Then you can have faith in the integrity of that verdict.”

* CBS Chicago | Devastation in Lena, Illinois, after tornado last week: Preliminary reports from the National Weather Service indicate that an EF-2 tornado affected Lena, about 48 miles west of Rockford, and destroyed businesses and homes. The tornado had peak winds of around 130 mph, the NWS said. […] “The magnitude of the disaster was so huge, and so we have people from all over, as you know,” she said. “I’m in Dakota. [Illinois]. We didn’t know some of these folks. Most of them, we didn’t know until we showed up, but they just need so many help.

* Sun-Times | ICE says 81% arrested in Operation Midway Blitz had no convictions, falsely asserts no citizens arrested: In the letter, Lyons claims that no U.S. citizens were arrested by federal immigration officers during Operation Midway Blitz — despite documented reports of citizens being arrested. According to ProPublica, at least 170 citizens were detained in the first nine months of the Trump administration, and as of mid-October, about two dozen U.S. citizens had been held for more than a day without being able to contact anyone. Durbin’s staff has also documented the reported detention of at least 40 citizens in Illinois between late August and early November 2025.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois lawmakers claim progress on Bears stadium legislation: A change that’s been floated, according to sources involved in negotiations, is eliminating two investment tiers aimed at smaller megaprojects ($250 million and the creation of 50 jobs or $100 million and the creation of 100 jobs). This would make the minimum investment to qualify $500 million. Some lawmakers believe the smaller investments simply don’t meet the definition of a “megaproject,” but Pritzker has pushed for tiers so the tool can be used across the state.

* Sun-Times | Bears bosses and Hammond mayor meet on proposed stadium site: The meeting, which included other Bears and Hammond officials, took place at Lost Marsh Golf Club near Wolf Lake, where the Bears would build if they decide to move to Indiana. A statement issued by a team spokesperson said the Bears “continue to work together with Indiana leaders on our commitment to finish the necessary due diligence work for the Hammond site.”

* Tribune | Illinois Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey seeks distance from Trump, but MAGA shadow looms: Bailey told the Tribune: “Well, they’ve got seven months to learn it.” He has rented a South Loop Chicago apartment to spend the next several months “to simply earn the trust and, ultimately, the vote of the people there.” “I’m ready to stop some of the political rhetoric that I’ve been a part of in the past. I admit it, understand it and I want to turn away from that,” he said in Springfield after a gun-owners’ rights rally.

* NBC Chicago | GOP governor candidate Darren Bailey tries to walk back calling Chicago a ‘hellhole’: Illinois Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey tried on Sunday to walk back his past negative comments about Chicago, a city he has repeatedly called a “hellhole.” Bailey addressed the “hellhole” comments directly in a video shared to social media on Sunday that he filmed alongside Aaron Del Mar, his running mate. […] “Aaron, listen, I said something dumb and I am certainly not too proud to admit when I’m wrong, so, I love Chicago, I love everything this city has to offer and I can’t wait to experience it,” Bailey said at the end of the video.

* Daily Herald | ‘Don’t give up’: On visit to suburbs, Bailey opens up about crash that killed son, grandchildren: Wednesday will mark six months since Republican gubernatorial nominee Darren’s Bailey’s son, daughter-in-law and their two young children died in a Montana helicopter crash. “You live life and you just think … that there’s going to be a tomorrow,” Bailey told the congregation of Lakewood Chapel in Arlington Heights Sunday.

* Sun-Times | Juliana Stratton talks about the fight she’s bringing to Washington at Power Rising Summit: Stratton also took aim at President Trump, vowing to push the Democratic Party to be more “courageous.” “There’s a need to use my voice in the bully pulpit that I will be given, but there’s also a need to push our party — and I’m a Democrat — to be more courageous in this moment, because this is not a normal president, he’s not a normal person,” Stratton said. “So you don’t go about business as usual with somebody who is not normal.”

* Daily Herald | Fight over Illinois’ swipe fee law heats up as implementation deadline nears: Arlington Heights Democratic state Sen. Mark Walker and Chicago Democratic state Rep. Margaret Croke have both filed bills seeking to repeal the law. Neither has made it out of committee so far. There’s also an ongoing lawsuit filed by financial institutions aimed at stopping the 2024 law from going into effect. The initial court battle delayed implementation by a year, but a federal judge ultimately sided with the state and set up a process for compliance ahead of implementation.

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | More than $550,000 has poured into historic Chicago school board races: More than six months ahead of Chicago’s historic school board races, candidates are starting to ramp up fundraising — and political action committees are gearing up to spend big. About 40 active school board candidate committees have already raised roughly $555,000 as of March 31 since last October, according to data Chalkbeat analyzed after a deadline this week to file campaign cash disclosures for the first quarter of 2026 with the Illinois State Board of Elections.

* Sun-Times | As Chicago’s indie venues struggle, local musicians face their own financial burdens: In the meantime, Chicago venues are still struggling, and local artists are feeling the financial burden. In addition to working multiple jobs, they are seeking out alternative spaces and advocating for systemic change. ”It makes me sad because that’s my favorite way to experience music,” Brennan said of going to shows at indie spots. “I go to smaller, mid-sized venues where I might even know the owner or the booker, and just feel super comfortable in a space where independent artists are empowered.”

* Tribune | In Chicago, robots are serving up food deliveries, as well as some mishaps: A review of recent robot safety incident reports shows the March crashes were not the first time the robots had run-ins with the city’s mass transit infrastructure. Earlier this year, a Serve robot named Veruca was cruising down the sidewalk near the CTA’s Chicago Blue Line stop when it approached the station’s entrance and tumbled down the subway stairs, according to an incident report the company submitted to the city.

* Sun-Times | White Sox rookie Noah Schultz shines in second start, Murakami homers again in win: There was Japanese phenom Munetaka Murakami admiring his towering home run for a third consecutive game. There were Colson Montgomery and Miguel Vargas tagging their own impressive blasts, plus Chase Meidroth scratching out two hits. Never mind a few late bullpen hiccups, because most importantly, there was left-hander Noah Schultz dealing through five strong innings in the second start of his career — and letting his 97-mph sinker answer any lingering questions about his shaky Chicago debut last week.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Des Plaines River cresting, but flooding along Fox expected to worsen: Forecasters predict the Fox River to continue rising in coming days, cresting just below 12 feet — considered major flood stage — Thursday in Algonquin. According to a flood warning issued Sunday, at 12 feet structures would be threatened along River Street, Johnson Street and Maiden Lane in East Dundee; North Harrison Street in Algonquin; and Washington Street in Carpentersville. Bayview Road and low-lying areas of Festival Park in Elgin also would be at risk, according to the alert.

* WGN | Former Hinsdale Central lacrosse coach charged after allegations of improper conduct with student from another district: Buetikofer was a freshman lacrosse coach at Hinsdale Central but was fired from the position after the allegations came to light, Hinsdale Township High School District 86 Superintendent Dr. Michael Lach confirmed to an inquiry from WGN News. In a letter sent to district staff and families, Lach said the allegations of improper conduct against Buetikofer were related to his employment as a teacher in a separate school district that’s not affiliated with District 86 and that District 86 “ceased all association” with Buetikofer last month when it learned of the allegations.

* Crain’s | Helmut Jahn-designed Naperville office building sold for half of 2015 price: Real Capital, meanwhile, is among the real estate firms wagering on a comeback for well-located office buildings with amenities that companies crave. The MetroWest acquisition comes a few months after it paid $132.5 million for the 35-story office building at 401 N. Michigan Ave., the priciest downtown office transaction since 2022. The Naperville property “is exactly the type of opportunity we’re focused on,” Real Capital Chief Acquisitions Officer Adam Abeln said in the statement. “It’s a well-located asset that’s been repriced due to capital market pressures. We’re acquiring it at a basis that allows us to create value through execution.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Strong storm damages Rivian plant and B-N homes and businesses; thousands still without power: One of the buildings at the Rivian auto plant in west Normal sustained damage that appeared to be a partially collapse wall and roof. The building is on the far southeast part of the sprawling complex, just north of College Avenue, where many new buildings were constructed to support production of the new R2 model. The damaged section appears to be a receiving area with a row of semitrailer truck stalls. The EV company said no one was injured. “We are currently evaluating the extent of the damage,” the company said.

* ICYMI: ”sewer explosion” in downtown Springfield

* WGLT | UIS faculty strike ends: Marathon bargaining sessions over the weekend resulted in a tentative three-year agreement with the school. Details have not been released, and the agreement must still be ratified. “During the 17-day strike forced upon us by Chancellor Gooch, we were supported by many students, staff, faculty, alumni, retirees, former employees, faculty colleagues at other Illinois public colleges and universities and community members. We are grateful for their support!” the UIS United Faculty posted on social media early Monday.

* WGLT | George Wendt remembered as conservative ’stalwart’ of McLean County government: Republican county board member Geoff Tompkins served with Wendt on the board and knew each other as GOP precinct committeepersons. Tompkins said Wendt will be a remembered as a “stalwart advocate” of conservative principles. “George Wendt has left an indelible mark of service to McLean County and all that have worked with him,” Tompkins said. “George’s insights and institutional knowledge, particularly in the area of property taxes, will be fondly remembered and greatly missed.”

* Fox2 Now | Massive hole forms on I-64 bridge in East St. Louis: FOX 2 took a peek at the hole Saturday afternoon from Trendley Avenue. It appears a board has been placed over the hole, providing a temporary way for drivers to navigate a busy stretch of the highway. Traffic appeared to be moving much slower in Woods’ video Friday out of caution, but conditions seemed closer to normal by Saturday afternoon. Repairing the bridge, both in the short and long term, would fall under the responsibility of the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT).

*** National ***

* WaPo | In red states, anti-immigrant bills are failing as businesses push back: In Utah, Republican state Rep. Cheryl Acton called a bill that would have denied public services to undocumented immigrants a “violation, really, of the Sermon on the Mount.” The measure never got a sponsor in the state Senate, after being introduced by Republican state Rep. Trevor Lee, who told The Post that the White House was “very supportive” of the bill. When asked if the White House pressured him to introduce the bill, Lee demurred “I wouldn’t call it pressure, more just what can we do to help you guys now that we have the border sealed,” Lee said about the White House’s role advocating for the bill. “What can we do as a state [to help the White House]”?

* LA Times | How gangs connected to India are terrorizing a California immigrant community: More than 250,000 Sikhs live in California, the largest population in the U.S. Like other members of the diaspora, they retain strong ties to India, with many regularly traveling to visit their families or ancestral homes. California law enforcement agencies say the combination of wealth, tight relationships and cross-border movement has made them attractive targets for criminal networks with roots in India’s northern and western states — Punjab, Haryana, New Delhi and Rajasthan. […] Bishnoi gang leader Lawrence Bishnoi is incarcerated in an Indian prison, but federal investigators in recent criminal indictments say he has continued to direct his global network of extortion and target killings by using encrypted messaging applications, cross-border coordination and a cadre of U.S.-based associates to extort victims in both countries.

* Crain’s | American Airlines pours cold water on United merger talk: “American Airlines is not engaged with or interested in any discussions regarding a merger with United Airlines,” the Fort Worth-based airline said in a written statement released this afternoon. “While changes in the broader airline marketplace may be necessary, a combination with United would be negative for competition and for consumers, and therefore inconsistent with our understanding of the administration’s philosophy toward the industry and principles of antitrust law.”

* The Guardian | As e-bike crashes send an increasing number of people to the hospital, cities search for solutions: “When we think about e-bike crashes and deaths related to e-bikes, the vast majority are cars and trucks killing people on e-bikes as opposed to people on e-bikes injuring somebody else,” said Alexa Sledge, director of communications for Transportation Alternatives, an organization dedicated to making New York’s streets safer.

  7 Comments      


Good morning!

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* All rise for Leader Currie

Today
It starts with you

This is an Illinois open thread.

  4 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


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

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Monday, Apr 20, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* It’s almost a law
* Crypto boss: 'Pack up your bags and leave'
* The Bears saga
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
June 2026
May 2026
April 2026
March 2026
February 2026
January 2026
December 2025
November 2025
October 2025
September 2025
August 2025
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS | SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax | Advertise Here | Mobile Version | Contact Rich Miller