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Pritzker asked about Medical Aid in Dying bill: ‘I could have gone either way on this’

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Background, including what’s in the bill, is here if you need it. The governor was asked about his recent signing of the Medical Aid in Dying bill

First, it’s a very difficult issue. Frankly, I heard from a lot of people on both sides of this.

I will say I think the vast majority of people have seemed to have favored giving people who are in the end of their life a choice, and that is what this bill is about. It’s about giving people their individual choice.

But I also understand that for some people, it’s part of a religious moral issue around their faith. And I listen to that because I know how important that is. In the end, I particularly heard from people who are in the last six months of their lives, who are suffering, and I also heard from people who have had their relative or friend to go through it, and that they’ve gone through it with them.

And I think again, I could have gone either way on this, just on the issue of compassion, about thinking about what the right thing to do is.

It’s very difficult, but in the end, I felt like giving people a choice in these very limited circumstances. We don’t want to broaden this and make this something that’s, you know, broad based, available to people who just decide on their own.

This is something, deciding when you’re in pain and at the end of your life, I just felt in the end that the stories that I heard, the introspection that I did about what I would think for myself or for my family members, that you know, that helped to guide me to the to the conclusion.

* Did he discuss the bill during his recent meeting with the Pope?

We didn’t. We really didn’t. I mean, somebody asked me about, we didn’t discuss it.

It was literally mentioned in a list of things, as we were speaking at the beginning of … literally in a list of things that they we were both dismissing, things that we could imagine that we might disagree about being from two different religions, or, you know, having different different upbringings. Literally a dismissal of issues that we wouldn’t be talking about those things. And instead, we ended up talking a large to a large degree about humanitarian issues, like what’s happening in immigration across the world, but especially here in the United States.

  1 Comment      


No More Pain: Protect Illinois From Federal & State Cuts

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois’ disability service system has come too far to go backward.

In 2026, Illinois will face deep federal Medicaid cuts coming from Washington under the Trump administration — reductions that will threaten critical health and disability supports used by thousands of families across our state.

That storm may be unavoidable.

But creating a second storm at home is not.

The state’s planned January 1 cuts to Direct Support Professional (DSP) service hours would immediately reduce care for more than 10,000 people with intellectual and developmental disabilities living in 24-hour residential homes. These individuals rely on DSPs for medication support, personal care, health monitoring, and access to their communities.

When you cut hours, you cut access.
You cut independence.
You cut safety.

Illinois has spent years rebuilding a more stable, person-centered system that allows people with disabilities to live with dignity in their communities — not institutions. Stacking state cuts on top of looming federal reductions would undo that progress and cause real harm.

There is a better path forward: delay the January 1 cuts.

Allow Illinois to transition to the “Zero Hour” staffing model — a long-term improvement everyone supports — without punishing the people the system exists to protect.

No more pain.
No unnecessary cuts.
No double disasters.

Delay the cuts. Protect the workforce. Keep Illinois moving forward.

Paid for by the Illinois Association of Rehabilitation Facilities (IARF)

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Pritzker has no plans yet to endorse comptroller candidate, reacts to Trump remarks about the Reiner murders

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was asked today if he plans to endorse in the Democratic primary race for comptroller

I don’t have any plans right now. I know all of the candidates that are running. One of them happens to have worked for me, and I know her work probably better than anybody else, but I don’t have anybody in mind right now. But there’s a lot of time between now and March.

Five Democratic candidates have filed petitions to run in the primary. Rep. Margaret Croke (D-Chicago) is the candidate who worked for Pritzker’s administration.

* The governor was also asked today about this

Pritzker

Today is yet another example of the well, the terrible nature of our president when he’s attacking Rob Reiner and Michelle Reiner. I was with them four days ago, and these are some terrific people. They care deeply about people. They have political views, but they also are just, they’ve been philanthropic. They care about their community. They have done so much for early childhood development, early childhood education. If you’re unaware, you should go look at it. Probably the most important work, maybe in the nation, was done by them. And to have the President of the United States attacking them. And really, I just, I don’t understand, I don’t understand. I don’t understand why the President has to do things like this. What is wrong with him that he has to attack people? Especially when their families are suffering. And that’s just one example, but yeah, there are a lot of examples of things that I wish Democrats and Republicans would stand up and speak out about, and that today is yet another example of that.

More in a bit from today’s presser.

  12 Comments      


Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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

We Are Retail and IRMA are dedicated to sharing the stories of retailers like the Millers on Chicago’s North Shore, who serve their communities with dedication and pride.

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Campaign updates

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Riverbender

Republican Don Tracy is running for the U.S. Senate seat in Illinois, and he recently shared more about his platform, his major concerns, and his plan if he takes office. […]

As Tracy has traveled up and down the state as a candidate and as chairman of the Illinois Republican Party, he has gained a better understanding of constituents’ concerns. Tracy pointed to cost of living as a major issue. He acknowledged that most people in the state, regardless of party or location, can agree that cost of living is high. […]

As Tracy prepares for the primary on March 17, he encourages people to vote. He said Republicans are “complacent” while Democrats are “mad as a hornet.” He believes Democrats are “upset” because “minors can’t get gender surgery all over the place” and Republicans are “backing law enforcement,” monitoring the borders, fighting against “extreme environmentalism” and “want to bring common sense solutions to the healthcare problems.”

“They’re mad as hornets. They’re radicals, and they have time because a lot of them don’t have jobs. So they’re out there and they’re going to vote in numbers and get other people to vote,” Tracy said. “Everyday Americans, everyday Illinoisans, working people, it’s important to support your families. It’s important to raise your kids. It’s important to do your jobs. It’s important to help your employers. It’s important to help your communities. But you’ve got to take care of the foundation that supports all this. You’ve got to vote.”

* Press release…

Today, the Illinois Pipe Trades Association (IPTA) endorsed State Representative Margaret Croke in her campaign for Illinois State Comptroller. Representing tens of thousands of skilled pipefitters, plumbers, sprinkler fitters, welders, and HVACR technicians across Illinois, the IPTA is a statewide leader in training, safety, and high-quality workforce development in the building trades.

Throughout her tenure in the General Assembly, Rep. Croke has been a steadfast advocate for organized labor. She has supported investments in Illinois’ infrastructure, championed policies that expand apprenticeship and training programs, voted to protect fair wages, and advanced measures to help working families.

“The 21 local unions and 30,000 members of the Illinois Pipe Trades Association are proud to endorse Representative Margaret Croke for Illinois Comptroller,” said IPTA Executive Director Billy Allison. “Representative Croke has a long record of standing up for workers in Illinois and we are confident she will make protecting working families a top priority in her role as Comptroller.”

A member of the General Assembly since January 2021, Croke chairs the Financial Institutions & Licensing Committee and is a member of the Revenue and Finance Committee, chairing its Income Tax Subcommittee. She has centered her legislative priorities around making Illinois a hub for innovation and entrepreneurship, supporting small businesses and incentivizing investment, while advocating for balanced budgets that reflect Illinois’ values. Croke has led efforts to expand access to affordable childcare and passed legislation to address cyberbullying in our public and private schools.

* Politico

— State Senate race: State Sen. Sara Feigenholtz is being endorsed by Ald. Brian Hopkins in her reelection bid.

— Board of Review race: Commissioner George Cardenas has withstood a challenge to his signatures. The hearing officer recommended that Cardenas has sufficient signatures and that his name can appear on the ballot, according to Cardenas’ team.

* Moving on to the congressionals. Evanston Now

Kat Abughazaleh took some heat from her own supporters this week over double-booking herself last Friday, bailing on a Democratic Socialists of America candidate forum at the last minute for a dinner with Palestinian community members at a restaurant on the southwest side of Chicago.

In her campaign Discord server, an online open-to-the-public forum for streaming and group chatting, several of her own supporters called the lack of communication about missing the DSA forum a “really bad move.”

“How do you schedule something months in advance, remind people that it’s happening less than 2 weeks before it, then ‘accidentally’ schedule something else and not say a word about it?” one post read.

The campaign pointed to a scheduling conflict, and a DSA spokesperson told Evanston Now that the campaign “owned the decision for prioritizing the other event” and apologized for double-booking.
State Rep.Hoan Huynh was also a no-show at the forum after being slated to appear, citing a family emergency, according to event organizers.

State Sen. Mike Simmons and Skokie School Board member Bushra Amiwala were the other two candidates who appeared, speaking to a crowd of over 100 at Sketchbook in Skokie.

* Chicago Painters District Council 14 have endorsed Daniel Biss in the 9th CD

* Two Tammy’s have now endorsed Juliana Stratton for Senate. Press release…

Today, United States Senator Tammy Baldwin (WI) announced her endorsement of Juliana Stratton for U.S. Senate. Senator Baldwin joins Senator Tammy Duckworth as the second sitting senator to endorse Juliana, in addition to Governor JB Pritzker, Ambassador Carol Moseley Braun, Congressman Danny Davis, Congressman Bobby Rush, Secretary Jesse White, Speaker Chris Welch and more.

“Juliana is the kind of leader who doesn’t just talk about our values – she lives them. She’s a fighter, and she’s also someone who listens, brings people in, and builds the kind of coalitions it takes to get things done. Juliana has spent her life serving her community and delivering for Illinois families,” said Senator Tammy Baldwin. “She’s defended the LGBTQ+ community, protected reproductive freedom, strengthened access to affordable health care, and fought for the middle class. I know she’ll be a strong partner for me and Senator Tammy Duckworth as we work to protect our shared values.”

* More…

    * RiverBender | Holly Kim Hosts Voter Meet and Greet in Alton: Holly Kim, Lake County Treasurer and candidate for Illinois Comptroller, will host a Meet and Greet from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Dec. 15, 2025, at the Alton Sports Tap, 3812 College Avenue. The event will include free light bites and offers an opportunity for voters to engage directly with Kim. Kim currently manages Lake County’s finances and performs duties akin to those of a comptroller, including issuing checks and overseeing fiscal accountability. She is running to become Illinois’ next State Comptroller, aiming to continue the legacy of Susana Mendoza by bringing “strong, independent leadership” to the office.

    * Press release | Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim Announces over $3 Million in Interest Revenue for TY24 Payable in 25: The Lake County Treasurer’s Office is pleased to announce that for Tax Year 2024, through strong negotiation and prudent management of public funds, the County Collector earned 3,222,519.71 in interest revenue. This additional interest income has been distributed among Lake County’s 278 local taxing bodies — including school districts, municipalities, libraries, fire protection districts, and others — providing each with revenue beyond their levied property taxes. Distribution amounts are determined by each district’s levy relative to the total levies countywide.

    * IPM News | Petition objection derails campaign for Rep. Eric Sorensen’s primary opponent: Democrat Montez Soliz of Rockford posted on social media that he has been removed from the ballot in the Illinois’ 17th Congressional District race following an objection to his petitions. That district includes parts of Bloomington-Normal, Greater Peoria, the Quad Cities and Rockford. “Being taken off the ballot is a setback, not a verdict on our vision. It says more about how our system treats new voices than it does about the power of this movement,” Soliz said in the post. Illinois State Board of Elections spokesperson Matt Dietrich said no official action will be taken on the objection until the board meets Jan. 8. He said a hearing officer typically will discuss the case with the candidate and share their findings and recommendation. The board’s general counsel will also provide a recommendation, but those do not become public until the Board of Elections agenda appears online.

    * Daily Herald | 33rd state Senate candidate removed from ballot: The Illinois State Board of Elections ruled that he did not have enough valid signatures on his petition. It said that after signatures were checked, Holt fell 120 signatures short. Former St. Charles alderman Rita Payleitner and Patrick Carroll of St. Charles had filed the objection, questioning 225 of the 1,047 signatures Holt submitted. The board agreed that 167 were invalid for various reasons. … Danielle Penman of St. Charles and Jessica Breugelmans of unincorporated Geneva remain on the Republican primary ballot. The winner will face Democrat Michele Clark in the fall. The current senator, Don DeWitte of St. Charles, did not seek re-election.

  7 Comments      


Today’s quotables

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the Washington Post

“There’s very few people who can afford to spend even a fraction of the money that Pritzker spent on his campaigns,” said Alisa Kaplan, executive director of Reform for Illinois, a group that advocates for greater transparency and public financing in elections. “You really want a system where that’s your pool of talent for your representatives?”

“I think it’s dangerous,” she said, “because even if you have this exception of the — quote, unquote — ‘good billionaire,’ it’s not a good basis for a political system.”

* And

Teri Ricci, a 65-year-old retired university employee from Carbondale, Illinois, said she initially had no interest in backing “just another gazillionaire,” but ended up volunteering for Pritzker’s gubernatorial campaigns.

“He’s not in it for the money. He’s already got the money,” Ricci said in an interview at a Pritzker campaign event this summer as he launched his reelection bid. The first time Ricci heard him speak, Pritzker told the crowd that the good thing about having a lot of money was that he was not beholden to anyone.

“That’s what sold me,” she said.

Discuss.

  20 Comments      


Question of the day: 2025 Golden Horseshoe Awards

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Today’s categories…

    Best Contract Lobbyist

    Best In-House Lobbyist

Liz Brown and Litesa Wallace won best contract lobbyist last year, so they’re not eligible this year. Frances Orenic won best in-house lobbyist last year.

As usual, please explain your nominations or they won’t count, and please do your best to nominate in both categories.

* And when you’ve finished nominating, please click here and help us buy Christmas gifts for foster kids. Thanks!

  22 Comments      


Maybe jump into Missouri’s map fight

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

The two most intense state legislative pressure campaigns I’ve witnessed both ended in failure.

Back in 2017, Gov. Bruce Rauner tried everything he could think of to stop legislative Republicans from voting to increase the income tax to about where it was right before he took office for his one and only term.

Both political and personal threats were made against a large number of Republicans. They’d be primaried out of office if they crossed Rauner, they were warned. At least one was told that some details about their after-hours behavior might somehow find its way back to their district.

The political atmosphere was ginned up against the Republicans to the point where one Republican House member revealed that someone had come to his home’s front door to leave a threatening written message.

They mostly stuck to their guns and Rauner lost. But quite a few of those “traitors” decided not to run again. Rauner ended up losing his reelection in a landslide.

A few years later, Rauner’s former nemesis House Speaker Michael Madigan turned his allies loose on a group of 19 Democratic House members who refused to vote for his reelection.

Members were threatened in all sorts of ways. Some felt physically intimidated. Many were promised nasty and well-funded primary races if they didn’t reverse course.

That didn’t work either and Madigan had to step aside after 50 years in the House, 36 years as House speaker and 23 years as the state Democratic Party chair. He’s now in prison.

But as crazy as those two fights were, they didn’t come close to what just happened in the Indiana state Senate.

As you likely know by now, a majority of the Senate’s Republican super-majority sided with Democrats and overwhelmingly voted down a bill that would have redrawn the state’s congressional maps to give the Republicans every U.S. House seat in the state.

The bill had been pushed hard by President Donald Trump and the White House. The idea is their way of protecting against what’s expected to be a very good electoral year for Democrats in 2026.

Trump threatened to field primary opponents against any Republican who dared cross him. Several members received anonymous threats of violence. And the remap bill’s sponsor and the state’s Republican lieutenant governor both said that the president had threatened to pull all federal funding from Indiana if he didn’t get his way.

An elderly senator claimed her grandson and his basketball team each received negative text messages about her.

Yeah, things got weirdly creepy. Illinois has nothing on that.

Gov. JB Pritzker had vowed that if Indiana passed a redistricting bill, Illinois would follow suit and redraw its own maps to give the Democrats at least one more seat. It was unclear whether he could gather the votes for such a ploy, but it was pretty good political rhetoric. And, who knows, it might’ve worked. But the point is now moot.

But I’ve been saying for a long time that I didn’t think a mid-decade congressional remap bill could pass here. The Black Caucus didn’t want it, and their members have enough votes to stop it.

And even though Pritzker refused to take the idea off the table after the Indiana vote, I still don’t see it happening here.

The Indiana Republicans’ arguments against the bill were sound, not only because they were under so much pressure from D.C., but because it just wasn’t the right thing to do.

Indiana’s map is already quite gerrymandered, and some complained a new map would’ve expanded the influence of wealthy Indianapolis over rural counties.

Illinois’ current congressional map is even more heavily gerrymandered than Indiana’s, and a new map would further expand the influence of urban and suburban areas over rural areas. Plus, there’s also that fairness thing. When is enough enough?

I seriously doubt Pritzker will be calling a reluctant legislature into special session if another “red” state steps up because he has bigger fish to fry in the coming spring. And no way will he ever risk alienating legislative Democrats anywhere close to the way Indiana Gov. Mike Braun has declared open war on his own Republican Senators.

Maybe Pritzker should just use some of his vast wealth to contribute heavily to the under-funded grassroots Missouri campaign to place a measure on their ballot that would reverse its Republican remap, which could, under Missouri law, pause the new map until the public votes. More than enough petitions were already submitted, but they’ll need help with legal fees to counter the coming pushback.

Discuss.

  13 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Records reveal husband who shot and killed Berwyn assistant principal had his firearm license revoked by Illinois State Police. Tribune

    - Per state police data going back to 2009 through Dec. 4, there are 107,342 Illinois residents who have lost their right to own guns but a backlog of about 74,733 of those revoked cardholders, or nearly 70%, have yet to tell the state they aren’t in possession of any firearms.
    - By 5:15 p.m., Nerissa, Joycelyn and Steven had all been pronounced dead, Cook County medical examiner records show. Nerissa and Joycelyn died of multiple gunshot wounds in a homicide, the medical examiner’s office determined through an autopsy. Steven died of a shot in the head in a suicide, the office said. State police sent a sixth, and final, noncompliance notification that day.
    - Earlier this year, Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation that requires law enforcement agencies to promptly remove guns and FOID cards from those subject to orders of protection. Known as Karina’s Law, But there are times — in Nerissa’s case, for example — that people do not secure orders of protection before tensions escalate, leaving them in a liminal space where stopgaps allotted by Karina’s Law don’t yet kick in.

Click here and go read the rest.

* At noon, the Governor will make an announcement on new funding toward addressing homelessness in Springfield. At 4 pm, the governor will join community members in lighting the Menorah at the Governor’s Mansion. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago Housing Authority subject of HUD audit citing immigration and criminal activity, records show: The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s Office of Inspector General is conducting an audit of the Chicago Housing Authority to scrutinize its procedures around verifying residents’ immigration status and criminal backgrounds, according to documents obtained by the Sun-Times. “The objective of our audit is to (1) determine whether the Authority complied with HUD’s and its own requirements for verifying eligibility of individuals for HUD assisted housing based on criminal activity, citizenship, and immigration status, and (2) assess the Authority’s practices for preventing and addressing criminal activity,” the audit notice said.

* Tribune | 2 Illinois election board Democrats who blocked Senate President Don Harmon fines have ties to his donors: Even if the two had recused themselves, the sanction would still not have met the five-vote threshold for approval. But Terven and Genovese’s votes underscore that there is no formal conflict-of-interest policy for board members, although some members have recused themselves from matters if they had a relationship to an individual or organization with ties to a case

* WAND | A century of laughter and movie magic: Danville’s Dick Van Dyke celebrates 100th birthday: This week, there’s a spark in the air — the kind of magic only one man could leave behind. Danville’s favorite son, Dick Van Dyke turns 100 years old on Dec. 13. Inside Danville High School, theater students are honoring Van Dyke. They are rehearsing dance numbers across the same stage where a young Dick Van Dyke once performed back in the 1940s. Long before he tap-danced across London rooftops in Mary Poppins, or soared the countryside in “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang,” Van Dyke was a teenager discovering his love for performing right here at home.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Alton Telegraph | Illinois’ 2026 laws add AI hiring limits, repeal grocery tax and ban CFL bulbs: In a related law, Illinois has expanded leave of up to 10 days for part-time employees donating organs. Previously, only full-time employees were guaranteed the ability to take 10 days off to donate organs. I was surprised to learn that, in addition to donating blood, bone marrow, and one of your kidneys, you could also donate a lobe of your liver or a portion of a lung, pancreas, or intestine and live to tell about it.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois ag director says Trump trade policies are ‘crushing’ farmers: The Trump administration announced this week that it would make $12 billion available in the form of one-time payments to U.S. farmers to help weather what it calls “temporary trade market disruptions” in the wake of ongoing tariff disputes with America’s trading partners. But Jerry Costello II, director of the Illinois Department of Agriculture, said this week the latest aid package is less than half the size of the one offered in response to trade disputes during Trump’s first administration. He said the money being offered now is not nearly enough to make up for the losses farmers are suffering. “Tariffs are crushing farmers again,” Costello said in a statement. “Financial losses are worse this time around, yet the aid package is 50% smaller. We’re seeing repeated devastation with greater losses than Trump 1. It defies logic.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s organizer roots at fore as he courts progressives in budget fight: The mayor is far from the only one firing shots. Those groups opposed to his budget have spent tens of thousands of dollars on ads blasting his spending plan, and specifically the controversial head tax at its center. “Chicagoans deserve honesty and transparency and real solutions that make our neighborhood safer,” one ad from a dark money group opposed to the head tax says. “Not a slush fund that puts politics over people.” Aldermen in the opposition have harried the mayor with daily news conferences and jabs.

* Crain’s | Can the City Council muscle through a budget without the mayor?: The mayor’s office has made calls to aldermen casting doubt on the revenue projections and legality of parts of the plan, hoping to prevent the Council revolt and pick up votes for Johnson’s $16.6 billion plan.To succeed, the Council coalition will need to hold together through a series of follow-up votes, including potential spending cuts that affect city worker benefits, and could falter if unions push back.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago City Council meets Monday as budget deadline looms: The Chicago City Council will begin a series of meetings Monday with the hope of passing their alternative budget. Mayor Brandon Johnson said he will veto any plan with increased fees.

* Tribune | Number of unresolved CPD discipline cases crawls toward 500 during court fight: The process for meting out discipline in the most serious cases of misconduct by Chicago police officers has been largely at a standstill for more than two years. During that stretch, a backlog of unresolved cases has grown as a legal fight between the city and the largest CPD officers’ union has worked its way to the Illinois Supreme Court. In 2025, cases in that category swelled to near 500. As of mid-December, police Superintendent Larry Snelling still must decide whether or not to bring administrative charges in 490 cases in which the Civilian Office of Police Accountability sustained allegations of misconduct, city records show.

* Sun-Times | Brinshore Development and CHA had bumpy relationship before developer put 20 Chicago properties on sale: The Chicago-based national affordable housing provider is selling 20 properties across the city, or 2,435 units that include 695 units subsidized by the CHA, according to listing details. The properties are under “severe stress” due to defaults as a result of the CHA missing payments to Brinshore and deferred maintenance, Brinshore cofounder Richard Sciortino wrote in an August email to then-Chicago Housing Authority interim CEO Angela Hurlock.

* Chicago Reader | Waiting for weatherization: Though homeowners seek help from local organizations, CEDA and state and local government officials told the Chicago Reader that federal regulations governing the program have prevented many low-income homeowners from accessing its services. Applicants living in predominantly Black and Latine zip codes have been denied for the program at higher rates than those from the majority of Chicago’s white neighborhoods, according to a Reader analysis of applicant data. Meanwhile, thousands of homeowners elsewhere in the state linger on the program’s waiting list, a copy of the list shows.

* Crain’s | A massive new Wacker Drive office tenant is getting even bigger: Sweetening one of the biggest deals for the city’s office market since the pandemic, the Chicago-based energy engineering firm has leased three more floors in the 51-story tower at 77 W. Wacker Drive, a spokeswoman for the company confirmed. The expansion adds roughly 66,000 square feet to the massive anchor tenant lease the firm signed a year ago, bringing its new total footprint to nearly 448,000 square feet — roughly 60% more space than it is leaving behind at its longtime 55 E. Monroe St. office.

* Tribune | Southeast Side residents push for benefits as Chicago quantum campus moves forward: On Monday, community activists noted their first victory when the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency conditionally approved the developer’s remediation plan. “We were certainly right all along about the toxins in the soil,” said Holcomb, who for decades has seen previous potential developers ignore the problem. “It certainly is a win for us because we’ve been saying that for a while.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Cook County property tax incentives need a refresh: study: In a report that could lay the groundwork for big changes to Cook County’s incentive programs, researchers from the University of Illinois Chicago and the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning recommended 30 steps county officials could take over the next two years to improve the efficacy of its property tax incentive system. More than 90 municipalities countywide use the incentive classifications to reduce businesses’ property tax bills, one of the most common lures for real estate developers and companies to invest in a particular area.

* Daily Herald | ‘Something’s got to give’: Sticker shock hits suburban Affordable Care Act enrollees: Zafar described a client who is diabetic and suffered two strokes. “He had an $80 a month plan … it went up to $400. He kept it because he has to have his ongoing care,” she said. Two forces are causing the crisis — the first is the expiration of pandemic-era enhanced tax credits on ACA premiums, which help low- and medium-income households offset insurance costs. Unless Congress extends the subsidies, they’ll end at midnight Dec. 31.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora’s proposed campaign ethics reform measures moving forward with changes: Under the current proposal, Aurora would cap at $1,500 per year donations made to candidates running for city office from those doing business with the city. It would also expand economic interest disclosures required of candidates and elected officials. Recent changes to the proposal upped the donation limit from the originally-proposed $500 cap, removed further limits on cash donations and removed guidelines on how city property could be used for political purposes.

* Naperville Sun | Voters to decide in March on $120M bond sale for new Naperville activity center with indoor pools: Naperville Park Board members voted unanimously Thursday night to pursue the modified referendum after evaluating resident feedback, including the responses to a survey mailed to more than 53,000 households and texted to more than 60,000 people in the fall that received more than 8,000 responses. “To have over 8,000 responses to the survey, a 15% response rate for a community of our size, that’s a tremendous response,” Executive Director Brad Wilson said.

* Daily Herald | Palos Park prepares to use updated laser technology for speed enforcement: Palos Park police Sgt. Ross Chibe said he recently discovered when listening to a podcast that experts are using lidar technology to discover lost cities in the Amazon Rain Forest, the same technology that is now coming to the Palos Park Police Department, but to enforce safe driving. The department received a grant from the Illinois Department of Transportation, along with several other grants, to purchase a lidar device, which uses a laser to specifically measure the speed of individual vehicles.

* Daily Herald | Hersey High School wrestling coaches placed on leave amid internal investigation: Wrestling coaches at John Hersey High School in Arlington Heights have been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal review, Northwest Suburban High School District 214 officials confirmed Saturday. […] Mogge didn’t disclose what prompted the administrative leave and investigation.

* Daily Herald | ‘Quiet powerhouse’: McHenry County public defender retiring after almost 40 years on the job: After almost 40 years as McHenry County‘s public defender, Mark Cook, described as “a quiet powerhouse,” is retiring. Cook, among the longest-serving public defenders in the state, was appointed in 1986 and has led a “distinguished career” spanning “decades of dedicated public service,” McHenry County Trial Court Administrator Dan Wallis said.

* Daily Herald | ‘We will not cower’: Suburban Jewish community mark Hanukkah in wake of Australia attack: However, host Howard Kleinstein, the village’s director of digital communications, said the victims in Australia were on participants’ minds. “This is a happy celebration, but life takes precedence over death in the Jewish religion, and so while we think about it, we carry on,” he said. “And that’s the story of Hanukkah, carrying on.”

*** Downstate ***

* Capitol News Illinois | A once dying mall in Southern Illinois is getting a mighty makeover, thanks to $112M bond deal — created by the state and backed by local tax money — but the project has hit a speed bump: So far, nearly half of the $112 million in bond proceeds has been spent on the project. Cabaness declined to provide letters of intent from any major retailer committed to opening in the district to Illinois Answers Project and Capitol News Illinois, citing nondisclosure agreements. But Marion city officials said they are not concerned and said the project is proceeding as planned. Marion Mayor Mike Absher said in an interview the project aims to lure tourists to visit and stay in southern Illinois, with the initial phase including construction of a fieldhouse with an interactive golf driving range, a family entertainment center inside of the mall with bowling, go karts and laser tag, and a Hampton Inn hotel, all slated to open next summer.

* BND | Lawmakers press EPA for more research on metro-east pollution, health impacts: The CDC completed an air pollution investigation in Sauget on May 1, focusing on emissions from the hazardous waste incinerator Veolia North America-Trade Waste Incineration. In its final report, the public health agency stated that while it could provide some answers about community health impacts, inadequate data from the EPA prevented it from reaching other conclusions about the risks metro-east residents face today. The CDC suggested the EPA consider returning to Sauget to conduct additional research, including long-term air monitoring and soil testing.

* 25News Now | ‘Saddened’ OSF, Tylka to disallow medical aid in dying as governor makes it legal: OSF, Central Illinois’ largest healthcare provider, said it will not participate in any physician-assisted suicide after Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker signed into law the Medical Aid in Dying Bill (Senate Bill 1950). Carle Health, another of this area’s largest healthcare providers, has not determined whether it will offer terminally ill patients the option of seeking medication to end their lives.

* WCIA | City of Champaign activates sidewalk snow removal ordinance: In a news release, the Public Works Department said records indicate at least two inches of snow fell on the city. Residents will need to shovel their sidewalks and maintain a path the width of the sidewalk or 48 inches — whichever is less. If a property is located at a corner, the ramps must also be cleared. Sidewalks that are not cleared in time could be cleared at the expense of the property owner.

*** National ***

* CBS | Map shows more than 1,900 measles cases across U.S. as outbreaks grow: The largest outbreak so far this year has been in West Texas, with over 760 confirmed infections before the state declared the outbreak officially over in August. A growing number of cases have also been reported in other states around the country. In South Carolina, for example, dozens of students were quarantined in October due to an outbreak.

* 404 Media | How a US Citizen Was Scanned With ICE’s Facial Recognition Tech: Gutiérrez is a U.S. citizen. He told the officials this. He didn’t have any identification on him, but, panicking, he tried to find a copy on his phone. The agents put him into the car, where another two agents were waiting, and handcuffed him. Just sit there and be quiet, they said. Without Gutiérrez’s ID, the agents resorted to another approach. They took a photo of his face. A short while later, the agents got their answer: “Oh yeah, he’s right. He’s saying the right thing. He does got papers,” Gutiérrez recalled the agents saying.

* NYT | Trump’s Cuts to U.S. Labor Board Leave Festering Disputes and a Power Struggle: The agency, the National Labor Relations Board, has for months had merely a single member on its five-seat board, two short of the required number to hear cases. Even if the vacancies are filled — the Senate could vote to confirm two nominees from President Trump as soon as this week — the board could fundamentally change if the Supreme Court rules in coming months that the president has wide powers to fire appointed officials at federal agencies. “The inability of the board to function for the last year has highlighted, for people who care about labor relations in this country, how broken the system is,” said Lauren McFerran, a Democrat and former chairwoman of the N.L.R.B. “Anyone could have seen this coming, but a year of nonfunctional labor law is a crisis point.”

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Monday, Dec 15, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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