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It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Tribune

A bill that passed the House 107-0 on Wednesday would prohibit municipal police departments across the state from evaluating officers based on “any quantifiable contact” they have with individuals during their shifts, including traffic stops, arrests and written warnings. The legislation now heads to the Senate.

Current state law signed in 2014 by then-Gov. Pat Quinn bans police departments from assigning citation quotas or evaluating officers by how many tickets they write. Chicago was exempt until 2019. But sponsors of the new bill say the existing law contains a significant loophole: It does nothing to prevent police supervisors from using broader “points of contact” — stops, arrests, warnings and similar interactions that stop short of citations — as performance metrics. Critics say the result is a de facto quota system operating under a different name. […]

[ACLU of Illinois’ Alexandra Block] noted the bill contains no explicit prohibition on using points of contact as an evaluation metric for officers, and that different types of police departments, such as those under the state’s purview, are not covered by its language.

[Rep. Patrick Sheehan (R-Lockport] said his bill is geared toward municipal police departments because they have a higher level of engagement with the community than other law enforcement agencies. But he said he’d consider tightening the bill’s language if there are concerns that the prohibition in the measure isn’t sufficiently explicit.

* Tribune

Illinois faces a shortage of about 142,000 housing units and would need to build 227,000 units over five years to keep pace with demand, according to a joint study published last year by the Illinois Economic Policy Institute and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. […]

The proposed fix [Gov. JB Pritzker] is pushing includes a package of bills that would widely allow accessory dwelling units and four- to eight-unit developments in residential areas, depending on lot size, along with a suite of other changes that could affect everything from bureaucratic red tape to parking. […]

Emily Bloom-Carlin, director of housing and community development at the Metropolitan Planning Council, said the proposals take on some of the zoning issues that MPC’s research has shown drive inequitable outcomes.

“These reforms are slow to come into effect, but lead to a modest but positive growth in homes,” Bloom-Carlin said. Some elements of the package, such as allowing third-party review, would save time and money on all kinds of developments, including more traditional affordable housing, she added. […]

South Barrington Mayor Paula McCombie said her residents chose to live in the village for “the way it looks and feels.”

“On those vacant properties, if somebody were to say, ‘OK, we’re going to put two houses on that’ — oh my gosh, people would have a heart attack, because they put all their hard-earned money into their homes,” she said.

* Illinois Housing News

A renewed push is underway in Springfield to extend and expand one of Illinois’ most established affordable housing tools, as lawmakers and housing advocates warn that soaring construction costs are making it increasingly difficult to deliver new housing without stronger state support.

Backed by a broad coalition of housing, business, and community groups, House Bill 4413 and Senate Bill 3738 would extend the Illinois Affordable Housing Tax Credit (IAHTC) for another 10 years while increasing its annual growth rate. Supporters say the proposal reflects a changing economic reality: simply maintaining the program at current levels will not keep pace with rising development costs — and risks leaving significant housing investment on the table. […]

The proposed legislation would increase the program’s annual growth rate to 10 percent, a change supporters describe as modest but necessary. Over time, that adjustment could help generate nearly 10,000 new affordable homes over the next five years.

Equally important is the 10-year extension, which would provide certainty for developers and investors navigating complex, multi-year financing structures. Without action, the program is set to expire at the end of 2026, creating uncertainty that could stall projects already in development.

* Reuters

State lawmakers in two of the largest legal markets in the United States are moving to erect ethical firewalls between law firms and outside capital, as investors and lawyers increasingly explore back-office partnerships and other deals.

Lawmakers in Illinois’ House of Representatives on Thursday approved legislation that would prohibit any entity involved in a law firm’s legal practice ​but not fully owned by lawyers from charging the firm any fees, controlling its hiring or interfering with its lawyers’ professional judgment. The bill, which was approved by a 70-36 vote, would also limit lawyers’ ability to share fees with out-of-state “alternative business structures.”

“At its ‌core, this bill is about protecting the independence of the legal profession,” Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz, a Democrat who authored the legislation, said during the House debate. […]

Investors and other non-lawyers are broadly prohibited from owning direct stakes in U.S. law firms. The bills in California and Illinois are responding in part to Arizona’s embrace of alternative business structures (ABS) that allow non-lawyers to hold a stake in legal providers, and to rising interest in law firm partnerships with management services organizations, or MSOs.

* Save Our Snap Coalition…

The Save Our SNAP coalition, a statewide network of roughly 85 organizations, will publicly launch their food security campaign at the Illinois State Capitol bringing together hundreds of advocates for a rally and march to protect Illinois families facing the loss of SNAP benefits under the federal “Big Beautiful Bill.”

Nearly 2 million Illinoisans rely on SNAP, and up to 250,000 are at risk of losing their benefits this year — with a majority set to lose them on May 1. Cuts of this magnitude would not only bring immense hardship to families, but would cause major ripple effects through local grocery stores and economies that depend on SNAP purchases — and overwhelm charitable food systems.

Advocates will call on Illinois lawmakers to pass three key pieces of legislation that protect food access and soften the blow of the first round of federal cuts. While these steps provide important relief, coalition leaders note that broader challenges remain for food security across the state that will require ongoing conversation and partnership. In October of 2027, Illinois may need to begin paying up to $800 million per year to keep SNAP intact, or risk losing the program entirely.This event is the official kickoff of those efforts, signaling a united statewide effort to feed Illinois families.

WHEN:
Tuesday, April 14
Noon

WHERE:
Capitol Complex Visitors Center
425 S College St, Springfield, IL 62704

BILL BREAKDOWN:
FRESH Program (SB3277/HB4730): Creates an emergency assistance fund providing a one-time $600 payment — roughly three months of the average SNAP benefit — to the up to 250,000 Illinoisans at risk of losing benefits due to new federal work requirements.

Food Assistance for Lawfully Present Immigrants (SB3167/HB4831): Expands eligibility for Illinois’ existing VTTC food program – which provides nutrition benefits to immigrants and other victims of trafficking, torture and other serious crimes – who will lose SNAP access under new federal eligibility restrictions, affecting an estimated 16,000 Illinoisans.

SNAP Response Working Group (SB3276/HB5062): Establishes a time-bound working group within the Illinois Commission to End Hunger to track federal SNAP changes, assess their impact on Illinois residents and the state budget, and develop recommendations to mitigate harm.

* Center Square

An Illinois proposal to require insurance coverage for infant allergy prevention is raising questions about potential costs, even as supporters argue it could reduce long-term health spending.

State Sen. Darby Hills is backing Illinois Senate Bill 4182, which would require most insurance plans to cover a six-month supply of egg and peanut allergen supplements for infants when prescribed by a health care provider. […]

But the proposal comes without a clear estimate of how much the new mandate would cost insurers, or how those costs might ultimately affect premiums for consumers. […]

The overall fiscal impact of the proposal remains unclear, but insurers would likely pay the market price for the supplements, estimated at roughly $200 to $400 depending on the brand.

* WAND

A bill heading to the Illinois Senate could address growing frustration with digital coupons for grocery stores. […]

Their updated plan will require retailers to honor digital promotions through several redemption methods. Those include automatic or point-of-sale discounts, barcodes, or quick response codes.

“The discount is available to all consumers who meet the requirements for that coupon,” said Rep. Janet Yang Rohr (D-Naperville). “So for example if it is a loyalty reward, if you meet the requirements for that loyalty reward, you can have it.” […]

House Bill 45 passed unanimously out of the House Thursday.

* More…

    * WGLT | McLean County Farm Bureau continues push to raise estate tax exemption for family farms: Though the budget itself may not look optimistic, Davis and the farm bureau have the support of Chung and Koehler, and he thinks there are enough legislators to get behind the effort. “And I think Gov. [JB] Pritzker has come out with a few comments that he’s willing to look at it and he thinks it’s a good idea,” he said. “If they can craft it right and move money around, I think there’s a lot of support.”

    * CBS Chicago | Proposed Illinois law would expand access to solar power to people who can’t install rooftop panels: Vote Solar is currently working directly with state legislators on the new law. The bill would allow renters and currently unqualified home owners to use panels designed to be connected to an electrical system through an existing outlet, placed on a balcony, patio, yard or porch, primarily intended to offset energy consumption and certified by a nationally recognized testing laboratory. “These panels, at the lower end, can save people about $10 to $15 a month, which can shave off two to two-and-a-half months a year of your entire utility bill,” Chintam said.

    * Press release | DeLaRosa Bill Regulating Low-Speed Electric Bicycles Passes House: State Rep. Margaret DeLaRosa, D-Lombard, filed, carried and passed a bill allowing state entities to prohibit the use of low-speed electronic bicycles on any path within state jurisdiction, prioritizing the pedestrian safety, as well as the safety of manual cyclists. […] House Bill 4768 allows the state to regulate the use of low-speed e-bikes on paths within the state’s jurisdiction. Under the current law, e-bike regulations are decided by local authorities and municipalities. This bill expands that control to include the state, so that they may be able to respond accordingly to low-speed e-bike related pedestrian safety concerns—or in serious cases, e-bike related accidents or injuries. Specifically, state entities are given the right to prohibit the use of e-bikes on walking and biking paths for the protection of those on a walk or riding a manual bicycle.

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Built For Illinois. Built With Transparency.

Monday, Apr 13, 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:

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    • 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.
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    • 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.

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State revenues continue rising, but President Trump’s threats loom large

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

State government revenues were up $1.571 billion at the end of the third quarter, according to the most recent report from the legislature’s bipartisan, bicameral Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability.

The almost $1.6 billion in new revenues is an increase of 4.2% The state budget was crafted last year with an expectation that revenues would rise just 2.3% for the full fiscal year, so that’s pretty darned good news.

The commission revised its projected revenue estimates upward last month by $684 million, or 1.2%, above the original budget forecast last May. The continued revenue increases in March “further reinforced” last month’s upward revision, the commission claimed in its latest revenue report issued at the beginning of April.

So why is the newly revised annual revenue estimate less than half of the increase so far this fiscal year?

Well, as the commission notes, April can be a volatile month. It’s tough to accurately predict what will happen when people make their tax payments.

Also, the state has a history of not accurately estimating how personal and corporate income taxes as well as the Personal Property Replacement Tax will break out during the tax year. A “true-up” has to be done, and this year’s state budget expected that state coffers would take the short end of the stick and local governments would benefit via the Personal Property Replacement Tax, but that hasn’t yet happened. So, the commission is wary.

Also, without further changes to state corporate tax laws to decouple from last summer’s massive federal tax cuts, the huge slide in corporate tax receipts will continue. Many of our state corporate taxes are tied to federal laws.

As of now, those corporate receipts are down 6.2% for the year, but they were projected to increase by 10.8% when the state budget was passed before Congress slashed so many corporate taxes.

Only mentioned briefly in the latest monthly report is the potential economic fallout from the attack on Iran and the subsequent closure of a key petroleum shipping lane. It’s such a volatile situation that nobody really knows what to expect in the fiscal year’s final three months.

And that brings us to President Donald Trump’s recently proposed budget for Fiscal Year 2027, which starts Oct. 1.

The proposal would slash funds for infrastructure projects by $15.2 billion, reduce public school funding by $8.5 billion, eliminate the program to help low-income households with utility bills, cut higher education funding by $2.7 billion, reduce law enforcement and public safety programs by $1.7 billion, cut homelessness grants by $393 million, eliminate the school meals program, etc.

That’s on top of the gargantuan cuts to Medicaid and nutrition assistance programs included in last summer’s reconciliation budget.

Some or even most of this proposed budget appears to be performative. The president tried to get rid of the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program last year, for example. But Trump is convinced that social programs are riddled with corruption, and he said before unveiling his budget proposal that childcare, Medicaid and even the federal Medicare program should all be state funded.

“The United States can’t take care of day care,” the president said at a private event.

“That has to be up to a state. We can’t take care of day care. We’re a big country. We have 50 states. We have all these other people we’re fighting wars with. We can’t take care of daycare. You’ve got to let a state take care of daycare. And they should pay for it, too. They should pay. They have to raise their taxes, but they should pay for it. … Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things. They can do it on a state basis. You can’t do it on a federal. We have to take care of one thing, military protection. We have to guard the country. But all these little things, all these little scams that have taken place, you have to let states take care of them.”

Trump also mentioned that education funding should be a state funding issue.

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Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

If you’re looking for the best classic deli favorites in Chicagoland, head to family owned Once Upon a Bagel in Highland Park. The flagship of the Once Upon Family of Restaurants has been a staple of the North Shore for decades. Whether it’s your first visit or a weekly ritual, co-owners Adam Dlatt and Ira Fenton make customers feel right at home.

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

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like Adam and Ira from Highland Park who serve their communities with dedication and pride. Please visit https://WeAreRetail.IRMA.org/.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Illinois’ new ACA marketplace moved 78,000 to cheaper plans, slashing average premium hike. Crain’s

    - Overall enrollment in 2026 Affordable Care Act plans fell 3% from 2025’s record high enrollment, the state program reported last month.
    - The state predicted a 78% average premium increase for residents getting plans through its new state-run marketplace last October, in the face of ever-rising plan costs and congressional inaction on expiring enhanced premium tax credits, but by using tax credits of eligible customers, Get Covered Illinois said it was able to move enrollees into less-expensive plans and an average premium hike of 26%.
    - The 2026 average monthly premium for Illinois households, after active plan selections, came out to $328, The 2025 average was $260.

***************** 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.

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

* At 11:30 am, Gov. Pritzker will deliver remarks at the ribbon cutting for the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council Service Center. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* AP | Already under financial pressure, Midwest soybean farmers are squeezed further by tariffs, Iran war: “Facilities have been hit, like liquid natural gas plants,” Goldstein added. “You are also looking at a big supply crunch in commodity chemicals, which are the inputs for crop chemicals.” “We burn a lot of diesel fuel,” said Chris Gould, a corn and soybean farmer in Maple Park, Illinois. “It’s hard to say if I’m gonna come out ahead or behind on this whole deal. But I suspect I’m going to come out behind.”

* Tribune | More than 16,000 immigrants in Illinois may lose food assistance in the coming months: “I mean, fundamentally, this means that people are gonna go hungry,” said Nolan Downey, senior director of policy at the Greater Chicago Food Depository, calling the recent budget bill’s changes to SNAP eligibility for immigrants a “dramatic departure from long-standing policy in this country.” Immigrants who will remain eligible for SNAP are certain green-card holders, Cuban and Haitian entrants and those residing under the Compact of Free Association, among other categories of lawfully permanent residents. Immigrants without legal status have never received SNAP benefits.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Politico | Pritzker threads the needle on wages: It’s an argument he began rolling out last week and one he’s likely to keep emphasizing as he runs for reelection — while also continuing to build a national profile that could fuel a presidential bid. “The Democratic Party has failed on the subject of raising people’s wages. It should have been in 2024 and 2025 and now in 2026 that there should be a human cry from the Democratic Party, from every Democrat, about raising the minimum wage nationally,” Pritzker told your Playbook host when asked where Democrats have been out of step.

* Fox Chicago | Illinois millionaire tax could help curb property taxes, boost education funding, study says: The millionaire surtax could generate billions of dollars in new revenue each year, according to the study conducted by researchers at the Illinois Economic Policy Institute (ILEPI) and the Project for Middle Class Renewal at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, which was released this month. Such an idea appears to have popular support in the state. In a 2024 advisory referendum, 61% of voters said they would approve of a 3% tax on millionaires specifically to provide property tax relief.

* Center Square | Pritzker, GOP candidate say they support a free press, differ on tax credits: Pritzker spoke at the Illinois Local News Summit in Chicago on Friday and said Illinois was the first state in the nation to launch a tax-incentive program for local news. “And in 2025, over $4 million in state tax credits supported 58 Illinois local news entities, benefiting more than 600 journalists that work there,” Pritzker said. GOP candidate for lieutenant governor Aaron Del Mar said it’s important to support the Constitution and a free press, but taxpayer dollars should not support outlets like some in Chicago that only show one side of issues.

* Center Square | Committee’s ‘tone’ criticized for trying to price the poor out of gun ownership: Advocates for the bill, like Dr. Anthony Douglas, said there’d be minimal added cost. “I think poor people don’t benefit from owning firearms,” Douglas said during a House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force subject matter hearing of the bill Wednesday. “I think more people benefit from access to education, access to resources.” State Rep. Patrick Windhorst, R-Harrisburg, said that’s an elitist opinion and people of lesser means want to be able to protect themselves.

* Jim Dey | Sued for rights violation, Illinois justices say they answer to nobody: In the meantime, one of the most peculiar lawsuits filed in a while remains pending. It features a claim by former Cook County Circuit Judge James Brown that the state’s high court violated his right to freedom of speech as well as its own disciplinary rules by revoking his re-assignment to traffic court because of a commentary he wrote as a private citizen. How’s that for confusing, both in terms of facts and law in our sometimes-politicized state courts?

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Housing advocates sue to undo CHA leadership pick: The lawsuit was filed 11 days before Pettigrew’s start date and further clouds the agency’s future. Brewer has maintained Johnson doesn’t have the power to remove him as operating chair and that he’ll continue in the role until April 20, when Pettigrew takes over. “The mayor and his allies are using the court to attempt to override a democratic vote so that he can install his chosen candidate as CEO,” Brewer said in a written statement to Crain’s. “This lawsuit is without merit, and we expect our process, which was fully compliant with all applicable laws, will be upheld.”

* Tribune | No passport. No flights. No easy way home for Venezuelans who want to leave Chicago.: Beth Brown, who launched the Faith Community Initiative in 2023 to help support Venezuelan immigrants, said she is seeing more families wanting to self-deport in the last year partly because their family members were getting detained and deported. But not everyone has been successful in using the app, she said. “The federal government is making it sound like it’s so easy to self-deport and anyone who wants to can, and it’s absolutely not the truth,” said Brown. “If they want them to leave, why can’t they figure out a way to allow people to leave?”

* Tribune | Archdiocese accuses CPS of ending disability support funding in Catholic schools: But a CPS spokesperson disputed the archdiocese’s account, calling its claims “patently false.” District officials said they had repeatedly warned Catholic school administrators that their spending was outpacing their allotted funds. […] According to CPS, it was the archdiocese’s decision to wind down academic intervention services due to funding constraints. Catholic school administrators “exercised (their) independent authority” and chose to stop using contracted instructional support services, the district said.

* AP | From Early Nirvana To Phish, A Chicago Fan’s Secret Recordings Of 10,000 Shows Are Now Online: The growing Aadam Jacobs Collection is an internet treasure trove for music lovers, especially for fans of indie and punk rock during the 1980s through the early 2000s, when the scene blossomed and became mainstream. The collection features early-in-their-career performances from alternative and experimental artists like R.E.M., The Cure, The Pixies, The Replacements, Depeche Mode, Stereolab, Sonic Youth and Björk.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | New Cook County forest preserve boss expands conservation efforts amid federal retreat: As budget cuts have hit local, state and federal agencies “all over the place” in recent years, Cook County residents have demonstrated support for the district’s work, he said. Volunteers logged more than 78,000 hours of donated time — worth $2.9 million in work — over 2025 while outside groups helped run the paid Conservation Corps programs that train youth and adults in restoration work. While he wasn’t a victim of so-called Department of Government Efficiency cuts, some employees and programs Bianchi oversaw were. “I’ll be the first to admit that there’s always opportunities and ways to get more efficient in anything that we do,” he told the Tribune during a tour of the preserves’ Sand Ridge Nature Center in South Holland. “Sometimes I just think that there was more of a hatchet approach versus a scalpel.”

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora alderman accuses mayor of not coordinating on major project: In mid-February, Laesch and Franco sent a joint letter to residents about the sound wall that did not mention using a special service area. Franco told The Beacon-News that, because of the letter, he believed the city was planning to move forward without one. “To now have elected officials and city staff going door-to-door suggesting otherwise is deeply misleading, unnecessarily confusing and completely inappropriate,” Franco said in his Facebook post. “Frankly, this raises serious concerns about the misuse of public resources and whether taxpayer-funded time and personnel are being used for political posturing rather than public service.”

* Daily Southtown | Licenses revoked for long-operating recovery home in East Hazel Crest: The Department of Human Services did not provide details as to why the licenses were revoked. The South Suburban Council did not respond to requests for comment, and a phone number listed on its website appeared to have been disconnected. […] The building’s water bill has gone unpaid for months, [East Hazel Crest Mayor Thomas Brown] said, and there are liens against the property. “They were doing some remodeling and rehab in there, and apparently didn’t pay the contractor its money, so that may be one of the reasons why they closed down,” Brown said. “No one’s ever explained it to us.”

* Daily Herald | Principal’s resignation is latest administrative shake-up at Hersey High School: McFaul’s resignation follows the demotion of three other administrators. Athletic Director Julia Barthel and two deans of students, Jennifer Korakakis and Matthew Norris, were reassigned from administrative to teaching positions, under personnel actions taken by the school board in February. In January, five wrestling coaches were dismissed after an internal investigation uncovered concerns over student residency, recruiting practices, and in-season training activities outside of school, district officials said.

* Sun-Times | Evanston pastor resigns amid accusations he used ‘substantial’ parish funds for personal finances: In a letter Friday to the St. John Henry Newman Parish parish community — which includes St. Athanasius Church and St. Joan of Arc Church — Cardinal Blase J. Cupich said an Archdiocese’s review found pastor Kenneth Anderson had “violated a number of core Archdiocesan policies” regarding his stewardship of the parish’s finances.

* Block Club | Skokie Woman’s Claim Of ICE Detention Was A Hoax, Wisconsin Sheriff Says In Defamation Lawsuit: Dodge County Sheriff Dale Schmidt announced Friday he has filed a defamation lawsuit against Naqvi, with the sheriff sharing additional evidence of text messages, surveillance video, hotel documents and jail logs that he said proves a hoax on the part of Naqvi. “There is no record of booking, there is no record of detention, no record of release, no contact with the individual, no transfer from federal agency,” he said. “At no point was Sundas Naqvi in the custody of the Dodge County Sheriff’s Office.”

* Daily Herald | ‘This group made it happen’: Firefighting training center 25 years in the making opens at Harper College: “This has been a dream in this area for 25-plus years. I’ve been on the department 26 years, and this was talked about way back then. But this group made it happen,” said Mackeben, now Palatine’s chief, speaking to a cadre of fire department brass from across the Northwest suburbs last week at Harper’s new $9.3 million, 9,040-square-foot Emergency Services Training Center.

* Naperville Sun | Elgin Youth Symphony Orchestra set to celebrate its 50th Anniversary with a concert on April 18: Ollayos feels that the keys to the EYSO’s growth and continued success come from the support it gets from the community, having ECC’s arts facilities to call home, and the excellence of its teaching and organization. “With the EYSO, for its students, it’s not just about playing an instrument, but exploring what the music means,” Ollayos said. EYSO’s approach has led to about a third of its students going on to pursue music-related college degrees, Sheppard said. He’s also thrilled to hear from former students who have careers in other professions who tell him what they learned with the EYSO has helped them in their careers as lawyers, architects and in other fields.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | UIS strike: Faculty members say offers are ‘insulting’ as talks continue: “The offers that the administration is bringing to the table, when they do bring something, are frankly insulting,” Hedge said. University officials said their offers are facing a $19 million budget deficit this fiscal year, and said the offers have been created around the finical constraints. “The university’s position is guided by its responsibility as a public institution to maintain fiscal stability while supporting its academic mission,” UIS officials said in a statement. As of Friday, the university has proposed a 1% salary increase, along with a $4,308 boost to the minimum salary for entry-level professors.

* WCIA | Former PBL teacher charged with indecent solicitation of a child denied pretrial release: 72-year-old Paul Meuser of Buckley had a detention hearing on Thursday, April 9. Court records show that Judge Mary Koll of Livingston County granted the state’s request for Meuser to be detained. Koll was recently assigned to the case after the defense requested that Judge Matthew Fitton be removed. A preliminary hearing has been scheduled for April 22 at 9:45 a.m.

* WGLT | McLean County jail population shows signs of leveling off: Sheriff Matt Lane previously told WGLT those awaiting transfers to prison or a mental health facility were adding to elevated numbers in the jail. But in his most recent report to the County Board’s Justice Committee Wednesday, Lane said numbers in both populations have leveled off. The jail currently has seven people awaiting transfer to the Illinois Department of Corrections [DOC]. Lane said four of the seven are people who are returning to prison for parole violations. “We’ve really been able to keep up with unloading inmates to DOC lately,” he said. “So, that’s a good sign.”

* Smile Politely | Drones over C-U: Urbana should pass police surveillance ordinance: At a recent Friday Forum at the University YMCA, Urbana Mayor DeShawn Williams responded to a question from the audience about police surveillance by stating that an ordinance could be passed by the end of March. It is now April and there is still no clear timeline for passage of the surveillance ordinance. Urbana’s surveillance ordinance is one small step in requiring greater transparency from police who now have access to increasingly complex technology like license plate readers, phone hacking software, and drones, which are now being flown over Champaign-Urbana. It’s adding to the tool belt police have to enforce the widening racial and other disparities in our humble midwestern college town.

*** National ***

* WIRED | Your Push Notifications Aren’t Safe From the FBI: The FBI recently got its hands on copies of encrypted Signal messages being sent to a defendant’s iPhone because the contents of those messages were included in push notifications, 404 Media reports. Even though Signal had been removed from the phone prior to it being seized by the FBI, the notifications still lived on in the phone’s internal memory. The issue affects all apps that send push notifications, not just Signal, but users of that app can adjust their settings to not show the content of a message or the name of the sender in push notifications.

* Study Finds | Summer Is 30 Days Longer Than The 1960s, And Still Growing: Across the midlatitudes, a belt that includes most of North America, Europe, and large parts of Asia, summers have gained five to seven extra days per decade since 1990. That adds up to roughly 30 more days of summer-like conditions now than in the 1960s. More alarming is how fast the heat is accumulating: the total warmth building above summer temperature thresholds is growing more than three times faster than it was during the 1961–1990 baseline period.

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Good morning!

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the video’s comments: “This song could be released tomorrow and still be ahead of its time”

I read the news today, oh boy

This is an Illinois open thread.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Apr 13, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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

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* It’s just a bill
* Built For Illinois. Built With Transparency.
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