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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The cost to attend state universities has been rising, and some institutions have said they’ll have to continue pushing the brunt of state budget shortfalls onto students and families if there isn’t a change.

Data from the Illinois Board of Higher Education, which oversees public universities, shows university income has had to make up for the steady loss of funding from the state since around fiscal year 2009 as compared to inflation.

Since that point, state investment hasn’t kept up with inflation, and tuition and fees have risen steadily despite the fact that Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration has regularly increased higher education funding. The fiscal year 2026 proposed budget includes a 3% increase for higher education in the general fund for operating costs – which is about the same as the rate of inflation.

The cost of tuition and fees for statewide undergraduates on average has risen 10% higher since FY09 than if it had simply kept pace with inflation. For graduate students, that discrepancy is 16%.

* WAND

A donation from an anonymous donor is keeping the Soybean Innovation Lab at the U of I operational after the USAID closure.

In February, the USAID-funded Feed the Future Soybean Innovation Lab at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign was told to stop working.

This, after 12 years of work towards developing a global soybean value chain supporting Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Australia.

SIL director Pete Goldsmith was able to find funding from the university to keep the lab operating until April 15, which was to be the last day.

“We will use the gift to restart our efforts with our partners and clients bringing soybean to the Lower Shire Valley of southern Malawi — diversifying the Lower Shire economy and leveraging recent World Bank irrigation investments,” said Goldsmith.

* Chalkbeat Chicago

Amy Blythe stays up at night thinking about what will happen to kids and families if federal funding is cut for Head Start, an early childhood education program serving low-income families.

Blythe is the assistant vice president of Early Learning Services at Easterseals, which serves 1,500 kids throughout Chicagoland and Rockford. Some of those children receive Head Start services through community-based programs her organization partners with.

Head Start providers such as hers are able to support families with formula, diapers, and food throughout the day and in cases of an emergency, such as a house fire or when a family can’t find transportation to get to work, Blythe said. But since President Donald Trump took office in January, there have been disruptions to child care services for families and kids. […]

Blythe and other Head Start providers in Illinois are concerned about the future of the 60- year-old federal program that serves children from birth to 5. Almost $500 million flowed from the federal government directly to Illinois Head Start providers during fiscal year 2024, according to the Illinois Head Start Association.

*** Statewide ***

* Center Square | Illinois officials advocate for workplace safety during workers memorial: Members of trade and labor unions used the anniversary of the creation of the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Act, also known as OSHA, for the memorial. Nick Yelverton is president of the Springfield and Central Illinois Trades and Labor Council. “On this Workers Memorial Day, we honor and remember those who lost their lives on the job and affirm every worker’s basic right to a safe and healthy workplace,” he said during the ceremony. Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea also honored fallen workers, and the creation of OSHA.

* WICS | Illinois to host virtual event on high-speed rail feasibility study in April 2025: The High-Speed Railway Commission, in collaboration with the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), is set to host its inaugural virtual public event in April 2025. The event aims to introduce the concept of high-speed passenger rail service, present study findings, and gather public feedback on the Illinois High-Speed Rail Feasibility Study. The study examines the potential for establishing a high-speed rail network within Illinois, focusing on a corridor from Chicago to St. Louis. It also considers connections to existing Amtrak, Metra, and MetroLink services, as well as additional key cities across the state, including Rockford, Moline, Peoria, and Decatur.

* WAND | Capparelli to seek Republican Senate nomination: Businessman and educator R. Cary Capparelli is seeking the Republican nomination for the United States Senate from Illinois. Capparelli is the son of the late Ralph C. Capparelli who served in the Illinois House of Representatives as a moderate Democrat for 17 terms.

* WBEZ | With Head Start preschool on Trump’s chopping block, parents warn of impact on kids: President Donald Trump’s administration seeks to kill Head Start next year as part of a large reduction in federal government programs and services. Any hint that the child care program for low-income families may be in danger brings Bahena to tears. “I feel, oh, man, I’m gonna, I’m getting kind of emotional,” said the 28-year-old mom. “Eliminating Head Start would keep families poor. It would keep them uneducated and hungry … hungry for opportunities for quality of life.”

*** Chicago ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago Public Schools floats hundreds of layoffs as it looks to close $529 million budget gap: Between 1,600 and 1,700 positions based inside schools could be cut, according to a presentation used to brief board members obtained by Chalkbeat. However, it’s not clear if the number represents a net reduction in the overall number of CPS employees. The district currently employs more than 41,000 people.

* Tribune | Bally’s Chicago files amended IPO eliminating minority investor requirement: Casino executives say they are confident the IPO, which was challenged by two federal lawsuits over alleged discrimination against white men, will pass muster with regulators and still meet a 25% minority investment requirement for Bally’s Chicago with the city. “Thousands of qualified minorities have already applied,” said Chris Jewett, Bally’s senior vice president of corporate development. “We’re going to meet the goal.”

* Crain’s | Judge probes whether Trump retaliated against Jenner & Block: A federal judge hearing Jenner & Block’s motion to shut down an executive order from President Donald Trump targeting the firm’s operations questioned the government’s motivations behind its actions. The government said in court today the actions detailed in the order, which include revoking security clearances for Jenner employees and limiting the firm’s access to federal buildings, are well within the president’s power, particularly since those moves are related to national security and government secrets.

* WTTW | After Objections, CPD Agrees to Rule Revision That Would Ban Stops and Searches Based on Race: Reform Groups: The coalition of police reform groups behind the consent decree — the federal court order requiring the CPD to change the way it trains, supervises and disciplines officers — told U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer that CPD had revised proposed new rules designed to limit when Chicago police officers can stop and search Chicagoans after they objected in February. Had CPD failed to agree to revise the policy by Saturday, the coalition indicated it would ask Pallmeyer to intervene and force changes to the policy, which they said violated the U.S. Constitution and the consent decree as originally proposed.

* Sun-Times | City Council members negotiating response to ‘teen takeovers’: Participants said they were given a map of the beach and broke off into groups to discuss what they would do to try to keep the gatherings from getting out of hand. Responses ran the gamut. “On one extreme, you had people talking about cutting off the parking lots, shutting down buses,” recalled participant Kofi Ademola, with GoodKids MadCity. “Completely trying to prevent young people from even getting access to the beach.

* Crain’s | What American Airlines says about its battle with United at O’Hare: “First, if United is gaining share in Chicago, they’re gaining it from somebody other than us. So, let’s start there,” Steve Johnson, American’s vice chairman, told analysts on April 24 when the Fort Worth-based carrier reported earnings. He said the carrier isn’t giving up on Chicago: “I mean, it’s a huge market. It’s a huge business market. It’s our third-largest hub. It’s a really key part of our network. It has been profitable in the past, even as a shared hub.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | Cyber incident causes outages at DuPage County sheriff’s office, courthouse: “The county was made aware of a cyber incident occurring around 2:30 a.m. that is impacting the sheriff’s office, the 18th Judicial Circuit Court and the Circuit Court Clerk’s Office,” DuPage County Chief Judge Bonnie Wheaton, Circuit Court Clerk Candace Adams and Sheriff Jim Mendrick said in a joint emailed statement. In-person court operations have been minimally impacted and are expected to continue as scheduled, the statement said. There has been no impact on jail operations or on public safety, officials said.

* NBC Chicago | New shopping, entertainment districts coming to Niles as part of major ‘renaissance’: After more than 45 years, suburban Niles is seeing a redevelopment “renaissance,” with new buildings, apartments, and at least two brand-new shopping, dining and entertainment districts set to revitalize once-booming parts of the village. “We’ve got a lot going on here in the village right now,” Niles Mayor George D. Alpogianis said Monday. “We’re in what we’ve deemed a sort of ‘Renaissance Era’ — a lot of building going on, more building that’s been done over the last two and a half decades plus.”

* Daily Herald | Long Story Short Pub writing new chapter in Barrington history: It is a joint venture of Long & Co. Jewelers owner Brian Long, who owns the building, and Bryan McGonigal, who owned the cherished McGonigal’s Pub, which closed at the end of 2023. Boloney’s, which closed in 2017, once occupied space next to another Barrington icon, The Catlow Theater, which Long and his family are reviving. Now Boloney’s is coming back to life at Long Story Short as Boloney’s East. […] The pub will operate with a “cold kitchen” concept, avoiding the need for fryers, stoves, or ventilation hoods that would trigger costly building code upgrades.

*** Downstate ***

* USA Today | NWS forecasts chance of showers, dusty winds in Illinois this week. Here’s the forecast: Southern winds between 20-45 mph may combine with dry soils on Monday, leading to blowing dust and poor visibility in rural areas. This could cause travel difficulties for high-profile vehicles. The NWS recommends using caution while driving and slowing down and pulling off the road if you encounter dust.

* WGLT | Some ISU students left feeling uneasy after 2nd shooting near campus during this school year : Aniyah Weddington, a junior psychology major, was at the Bone when Sunday’s shooting happened outside a student group’s event. Weddington was there for the event – a new-member presentation for an ISU sorority in the Bone’s Brown Ballroom. One of her sisters said she heard gunshots, then people started to evacuate. “Chairs were trampled over. People were trampled over. People got hurt. Scratched, scraped,” said Weddington. “There were parents, grandparents, children there. It was honestly very scary.”

* WICS | Two New Deputies Sworn in for Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office: Sheriff Paula Crouch led the ceremony, highlighting the importance of public service and the responsibility that comes with wearing the badge. She noted that bringing new deputies onto the team helps strengthen the department’s mission of providing professional, community-focused law enforcement. Nicholas Sunley of Pleasant Plains, and Evan Chastain of Rochester told us, “We are excited to begin this journey of serving Sangamon County and engaging with the community.”

*** National ***

* Poynter | Access to public records and officials is worsening, investigative reporters warn in survey: Nearly 70% of investigative journalists in the U.S. reported “limited access to records or sources” as their greatest barrier in doing accountability journalism, according to a survey from the University of Florida released Wednesday. The survey, released in conjunction with UF’s awarding of the Collier Prize for State and Government Accountability, found that many investigative journalists face issues obtaining public records and interviews with government officials. Compounding their difficulties are financial, political and public pressures. Fifty-one journalists working at state or regional news organizations responded to the survey in March.

  5 Comments      


Healing Communities: Illinois Hospitals Are Bringing Care To Communities

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

When it comes to stroke care, getting patients to the hospital within the “golden hour” increases their chances for survival and reduces their risk of long-term brain damage, when treated with a clot-busting drug called TPA. What if that hour could be cut in half by bringing the “hospital” to the patient? Northwestern Medicine Central DuPage Hospital is doing just that with its Mobile Stroke Unit. This specialized ambulance serves DuPage County’s half a million residents over 150 square miles.

The Mobile Stroke Unit is also a prime example of how Illinois hospitals are making needed healthcare accessible to communities, in this case reaching patients within a critical time frame and administering TPA in the ambulance for optimal health outcomes.

Other hospitals across the state are similarly meeting the need for accessible care through such initiatives as a women’s wellness center, a mobile van providing mammograms, community health screenings, programs to address youth mental health and more.

While most known for the services provided within their facilities, hospitals know healthcare shouldn’t stop there. For healthy communities, care must also be offered in the community. Learn more about how Illinois hospitals are healing communities.

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More on Stratton’s Duckworth endorsement

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel briefly mentioned this earlier today, but let’s take a closer look, starting with Capitol News Illinois

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth endorsed Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton on Monday in the 2026 Democratic primary for Illinois’ open seat to replace longtime Sen. Dick Durbin.

Duckworth’s endorsement comes after Gov. JB Pritzker endorsed Stratton on Friday, one day after she entered the Senate contest. With no other Democratic candidates announcing campaigns for the 2026 primary by Monday morning, Stratton secured the endorsement of two of the state’s top Democrats before fielding any competition. […]

U.S. Reps. Lauren Underwood, of Naperville, Raja Krishnamoorthi, of Schaumburg, Robin Kelly, of Matteson, and state Treasurer Mike Frerichs, of Chicago, all have said they are considering entering the race.

* Press release, which was issued at about 5 this morning…

Statement from Tammy Duckworth:

“Juliana has not only proven to be an experienced and effective Lieutenant Governor—she’s demonstrated time and again that she truly understands and cares for working people. Their struggles are her struggles. Their wins are her wins. Her many years spent in public service, along with her experience as a mom to four daughters and a caregiver to her own mother, have given her the tenacity, grit and perspective to be a true advocate on behalf of working families. I’d be honored to have her by my side in the Senate as we work to deliver real results for Illinoisans, and I’m proud to endorse her campaign for the United States Senate.”

Statement from Juliana Stratton:

“Tammy is a true leader for Illinois who doesn’t back down from a challenge. She exemplifies the kind of leadership working families deserve and spends every day looking for new opportunities to help communities across our states flourish. I’m so honored to have her support and I will work tirelessly to bring her spirit of resilience to this campaign.”

* Video

* Politico

Congresswoman Robin Kelly said she will make an announcement this week “about my plans moving forward to ensure all Illinoisans have a proven fighter, someone grounded in service and compassion, in Washington,” according to a statement.

If Kelly does win the race, she’d be almost 77 at the end of her first term. Stratton would be 67.

  60 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Chalkbeat Chicago

With just over a month left in the spring legislative session, Illinois lawmakers are advancing a number of education-related bills, including ones that would restrict the use of cellphones in classrooms, no longer require student test scores to be a part of teacher evaluations, and protect federal rights for students with disabilities in the mediation process with districts. […]

Bills moving quickly through the legislature […]

Limiting school districts from asking families of students with disabilities to waive their rights: When disputes arise regarding a child’s Individualized Education Programs, Illinois school districts will often ask parents to sign waivers during mediation. For example, a parent could waive their child’s right to transportation in exchange for a placement at a private therapeutic day school. Recently, special education advocates who support parents during mediations with districts say they have seen districts slip in language requiring parents to waive their right to bring complaints against a school district for 10 years in exchange for additional support. To fix this issue, House Bill 2337 would require school districts to use waivers that are limited to the child involved in the mediation process, only related to claims raised in the complaint that initiated the process, and limited to a reasonable amount of time. The bill is currently in the Senate.

Unlinking teacher evaluations and student test scores: Under the Obama administration, states were incentivized to use student test scores in teacher performance evaluations. More than a decade later, many states and lawmakers have changed their minds. In Illinois, Senate Bill 28 would undo a requirement passed in 2010 and now allow school districts to decide whether students’ test scores should be a part of teacher evaluations. The bill passed an education committee in the House on Wednesday.

Ensuring teacher professional development matches literacy standards: The Illinois State Board of Education created the state’s comprehensive literacy plan in 2024 after education advocates pushed for legislation to help change how reading is taught in schools. Now, lawmakers are considering House Bill 1368, which would require companies that provide professional development to teachers related to literacy be aligned with the state’s literacy plan. It’s currently in the Senate’s education committee.

* Quad City Times

Students, staff, and administrators at Western Illinois University Quad-Cities are asking Illinois lawmakers for $7.2 million in operational funding to develop WIU-QC’s Innovation Campus vision.

Sponsored by Sen. Mike Halpin (D-Rock Island), Senate Bill 1308 would appropriate $7.2 million toward WIU-QC operations — funding the campus has gone without since its construction — as the university seeks to reimagine its purpose and programming in the Quad-Cities region. The bill includes a provision to evaluate annual funding appropriations.

“This wonderful facility here (WIU-QC) was funded by the state to build,” said Everett Hamner, a WIU English professor and SB 1308 petitioner. “But it never received any operational funding.” […]

If SB 1308 passes, proposed operational funds would be available for WIU-QC to use immediately. This funding could help with a range of future Innovation Campus costs, such as:

    - Providing facilities for the Quad Cities Manufacturing Institute (QCMI), a partnership between the University of Illinois, Iowa State University and the INN.
    - Expanding WIU’s Small Business Development Center to include international trade and outreach, an “APEX Accelerator” procurement site for the Rock Island Arsenal and other collaborations, as well as providing space and training in those/related areas.
    - Developing new programs aligned with WIU’s strategic plan, the Thrive Illinois report and the IBHE Thrive Quad-Cities report.
    - Build on existing education, mental health, economic development and engineering programs.

* Illinois Policy lead for Advanced Energy United Samarth Medakkar and Climate Control Group’s Senior marketing sustainability manager Joe Parsons

Energy bills are rising throughout the country, and consumers are looking for tech solutions that can help reduce their monthly electric and gas costs. To help consumers, Illinois legislators have proposed several bills that would increase adoption of geothermal heat pumps. […]

Despite the proven benefits and early interest in geothermal heat pumps and thermal energy networks, Illinois has a lot more work to do to realize the benefits of geothermal technologies across the state. Two bills currently pending in the state Legislature would help consumers access geothermal heating and cooling.

The first, HB 3399, or the Geothermal Homes & Business Act, would create a geothermal renewable energy credit program, allowing geothermal projects in Illinois to generate revenue because these systems reduce peak demand and improve grid resilience, benefiting everyone paying into the utility system. If enacted, the program would make it quicker to recoup the upfront investment from installing geothermal heat pumps, leading to more installations and more job opportunities for drillers, HVAC contractors and electricians.

Similarly, HB 3609, or the Thermal Energy Network & Jobs Act, would increase adoption of geothermal technologies in highly efficient multi-building systems, and spur economic development and driller and pipe fitter job growth, as the bill would require every public utility to propose one to three thermal energy network pilot projects. Pilot programs are critical to understanding the costs and scalability of different applications of thermal energy networks.

* Daily Southtown

Local keepers of the history of the Underground Railroad in the Chicago area and south suburbs are applauding progress of state legislation to create a statewide commission devoted to the subject.

They say creation of the Illinois Freedom Trails Commission could increase educational opportunities into an important segment of American history largely unknown to many people, and perhaps boost tourism centered on the journeys of “freedom seekers” through Illinois. […]

Legislation creating the commission recently passed through the state Senate and could be taken up soon by the House, according to state Rep. Debbie Meyers-Martin, D-Matteson, chief co-sponsor in the House. […]

The commission would have a chair and 10 members appointed by the governor, with the commission’s goals including furthering research into the trail taken by freedom seekers, establishing an online database and biographical information about key persons identified with the Underground Railroad, according to the legislation.

* National Federation of Independent Businesses

The Illinois Senate extended its committee and third-reading deadlines to May 9 for a bill that would impose a job tax on Illinois employers and employees.

SB 2413 (Villivalam) would impose a payroll (or job) tax on Illinois workers and employers to fund a state-run paid-leave program.

The proposal is currently in the Paid Leave Subcommittee of the Senate Executive Committee.

The legislation calls for a beginning payroll tax of 1.12% on wages to go into effect on January 1, 2027.

Initially the employee would pay 40% of the payroll tax and employers with 25 or more employees would pay the remaining 60%.

Beginning January 1, 2029, all employers would be required to pay 60% of the payroll tax.

The payroll tax percentage could fluctuate based upon the program’s spending but, in the proposal, it is capped at 1.25% of wages.

Minnesota passed a similar proposal in 2023 and—even before the program has fully gone into effect—the state has already increased the payroll tax it initially imposed on Minnesota jobs.

Under the proposal, employees would be eligible for up to 18 weeks of paid family and medical leave per year. In addition to the 18 weeks, employees would be eligible to take an additional 9 weeks of paid leave for pregnancy-related issues.

Authorized reasons for leave include:

    - Personal-health issues
    - Physical or psychological care of a family member
    - Birth, adoption, or placement of a child
    - Pregnancy-related issues
    - Personal or family member’s experience of - domestic or sexual violence

* Lore Baker, the CEO and President of the Aurora-based Association for Individual Development

Every day, the Association for Individual Development (AID) witnesses the growing demand for affordable homes. Individuals facing developmental, intellectual, physical and mental health challenges as well as those who are chronically unhoused are struggling to find homes they can afford, putting their stability and well-being at risk.

We know how to meet this need — by building more affordable housing — but we need the right tools to make it happen. The Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit is one of those tools. This proposed state legislation will help shovel-ready developments cross the finish line and bring urgently needed homes to vulnerable communities across the state. […]

We secured highly competitive federal tax credits for the development but found it necessary to leverage other financing to move the development towards construction. If the Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit were in place now, we would be able to create more afford able homes for residents in need. […]

The Build Illinois Homes Tax Credit (HB 1147/SB 62) is a proven, bipartisan solution to this crisis. This proposal has already been adopted in more than 25 other states, and it would create a stable and predictable funding source for affordable housing development. The state does not spend a dime until developments are completed. This minimizes taxpayer risk while maximizing public benefit and ensures that private investment flows into Illinois communities, helping to build high-quality housing without requiring state funds upfront.

  9 Comments      


Do better

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

As you likely know by now, a federal jury deadlocked last week on all three corruption charges against Sen. Emil Jones III, D-Chicago. U.S. District Judge Andrea Wood declared a mistrial after polling individual jurors and arriving at the conclusion that they could not possibly reach a verdict.

When you think of the Chicago U.S. attorney’s legendary Public Corruption and Organized Crime Unit, the thing that immediately comes to mind is its hugely successful conviction rate — mid-to-high 90 percentile.

But the unit has run into some serious trouble lately.

In the last seven months, the U.S. attorney’s office has prosecuted 37 public corruption charges against four defendants — former AT&T President Paul La Schiazza, accused of bribing former House Speaker Michael Madigan; Madigan himself; Madigan’s top adviser Mike McClain and Jones.

The juries in those trials voted to acquit on seven charges (all Madigan) and deadlocked on another 20 charges.

Just 10 of those 37 charges have so far resulted in guilty verdicts (all Madigan), for a paltry 27% initial conviction rate — or 25% if you’re only counting the number of defendants.

Some of these charges could be prosecuted again, of course, and La Schiazza is scheduled for a retrial in early June. But an initial 27% conviction rate demands some serious introspection from the FBI and the U.S. attorney’s office. They obviously need to build better cases and then more competently prosecute them.

Like the La Schiazza case, the charges against Jones seemed to be too much of a stretch. The federal government’s mole, red-light camera company SafeSpeed’s co-founder Omar Maani, pushed Jones to come up with a dollar amount to contribute ahead of the senator’s campaign fundraiser. After Jones finally told Maani, “you can raise me five grand” and then asked for a job for his former intern, the mole turned the conversation to Jones’ legislative proposal.

A month later, Jones tried telling Maani that he didn’t necessarily have to cover $5,000 worth of expenses for a job fair — the workaround the FBI’s mole had asked the senator to come up with — but Maani cut him off before Jones could finish his sentence.

More importantly, the money never changed hands, and Jones never amended the bill that Maani was so concerned with. I could easily see why the jury would be divided.

The whole thing has also felt sloppy and slipshod ever since the trial began.

Sometimes, the errors were small. One of the federal prosecutors didn’t seem to understand how Jones arrived in the Senate. The prosecutor, for example, believed Jones was appointed to replace his father, former Senate President Emil Jones, but the senator was actually named to the ballot when his dad dropped out of the race.

The prosecution’s star witness, its mole Maani, bragged to the jury that he had been bribing politicians since his 20s, and told the jury that he gave $23,000 cash to a suburban mayor via one of the most influential Democratic attorneys in Cook County (neither of them have ever been charged). The alleged cash giveaway was intended to show Maani’s “appreciation.”

Maani was probably not the best witness, to say the least, particularly since prosecutors had no other real evidence indicating a pattern of corruption by Jones. The feds have never said why they chose to target Jones.

The overtly familiar, late-night phone texting evidence the feds introduced between Jones and his former male intern appeared, in my opinion, to try to out the senator as gay and seemed like a tactic from a dark, bygone era.

Even so, as Wood rightly reminded Jones at the end of the proceedings last week, he was not acquitted. His bond terms are still in place. The feds could come at him again in a new trial.

But before the U.S. attorney’s office makes its decision about whether to retry Jones or not, the top brass needs to figure out why they have had such a miserably low initial conviction rate lately.

I want as many public corruption convictions as possible. Lock them up if they truly deserve it. But confidence is undermined when the conviction rate falls so low.

Do better, please.

  18 Comments      


Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

What if Illinois could expand its energy grid, attract AI and emerging tech companies to the state, and provide over 60,000 new jobs with no impact on communities or the environment?

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The SOO Green Advantage:

    • Accelerates Illinois’ Clean Energy & Jobs Act goals
    • 60,000+ new jobs
    • Lower energy costs for families and businesses
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With SOO Green all ratepayers will enjoy a more reliable grid, protection from rising energy costs, and a stronger economy for Illinois.

Learn more at www.soogreen.com.

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Roundup: Pritzker calls out ‘do-nothing’ Democrats in New Hampshire (Updated)

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers were briefed this morning. The Associated Press

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker sharply criticized fellow Democrats on Sunday for not doing enough to oppose President Donald Trump, drawing a clear divide between himself and other high-profile Democrats seen as future presidential contenders.

Pritzker delivered the keynote address at the New Hampshire Democratic Party’s McIntyre-Shaheen 100 Club Dinner, the latest and most high-profile in a series of speeches this year.

While Pritzker continued to attack Trump, he also focused on what he says are shortcomings in his own party, assailing Democrats for listening to “a bunch of know-nothing political types” instead of everyday Americans. Without naming names, he called out Democrats “flocking to podcasts and cable news shows to admonish fellow Democrats for not caring enough about the struggles of working families.”

“Those same do-nothing Democrats want to blame our losses on our defense of Black people, of trans kids, of immigrants, instead of their own lack of guts and gumption,” Pritzker said.

* The Washington Post

The billionaire Democratic governor repeatedly brought the crowd to its feet with acidic attacks on the morals and ethics of the president, adviser and top donor Elon Musk, as well as members of the president’s Cabinet. He slammed their efforts to dismantle government programs that the most vulnerable Americans rely on and said the Democratic Party must “abandon the culture of incrementalism that has led us to swallow their cruelty.” It is time for his party, he said, to “knock the rust off poll-tested language” that has obscured “our better instincts.”

Pritzker was most searing in his condemnation of what he cast as the Trump administration’s infringement on the rights enshrined in the Constitution, stating that it should be easy for Democrats to say “it’s wrong to snatch a person off the street and ship them to a foreign gulag with no chance to defend themselves in a court of law.”

“Never before in my life have I called for mass protests, for mobilization, for disruption. But I am now,” Pritzker said to a standing ovation accompanied by whistles and cheers from the audience. “These Republicans cannot know a moment of peace. They must understand that we will fight their cruelty with every megaphone and microphone that we have. We must castigate them on the soap box and then punish them at the ballot box.” […]

One of Pritzker’s advantages among the potential White House aspirants is his ability to swing at Trump from a solidly blue state where the legislature is controlled by Democrats. From the outset, he took a more combative approach than other potential rivals such as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, Democrats who represent narrowly divided states and initially emphasized their interest in bipartisan collaboration with Trump.

Pritzker also has not faced the same kind of constraints as other top contenders such as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who was one of Trump’s top antagonists in 2024 but now needs Trump’s cooperation to help him secure the nearly $40 billion in federal disaster aid that he has requested to rebuild Pacific Palisades and Altadena after the devastating fires in January.

* New York Times

Mr. Pritzker, of course, rebuffed any suggestion that his appearance on Sunday night in Manchester, N.H., represented the opening bell of the 2028 Democratic primary race. He said he was focused on backing the party’s efforts in next year’s midterm elections. […]

“I’m one of the people leading the fight, and that is my role,” he said in an interview before his speech. “We’ve done an awful lot in Illinois, and we can be doing those things in other states.” […]

“The main divide within the Democratic Party is not between left and right — it’s whether you think this is a constitutional crisis or this is politics as usual,” said Ezra Levin, a co-founder of the progressive activist group Indivisible. “Pritzker is really demonstrating what it looks like to lead an opposition party against the overreaching authority of the federal government.”

In recent months, Mr. Pritzker has preached a gospel of staunch resistance to some of the most engaged Democratic activists across the country, delivering the keynote speech at party fund-raisers in Illinois and Austin, Texas, and at an annual gala for the Human Rights Campaign in Los Angeles. Next month, he is set to speak at a fund-raising dinner in Detroit for the Michigan Democratic Party.

* WMUR New Hampshire

In a one-on-one interview with WMUR Political Director Adam Sexton, Pritzker said he is fully focused on helping Democrats in the 2026 midterms.

“It is wrong to snatch people off the street with no chance to defend themselves in a court of law,” he said. […]

Pritzker brushed off any talk of a 2028 presidential run. News 9 asked if he thinks Democrats should restore New Hampshire to the top of their primary calendar.

“I don’t know what the DNC is going to do. I don’t have any control over that. I’m not on the DNC. But New Hampshire is very important because it’s an example of a place where you can come, you don’t have to spend a lot of money, you can meet people, and they’ll be the judge,” he said.

* More…

Thoughts?

…Adding… ILGOP…

Pritzker Calls For Violence Toward Republicans

While world leaders meet at the Vatican for the Pope’s funeral to discuss the goal of peace, Governor Pritzker calls on us to do the opposite: “Republicans cannot know a moment of peace.”

CHICAGO — Last night, JB Pritzker’s attempt to woo New Hampshire Democrats as he barrels towards the 2028 Democrat primary was full of divisive and inflammatory rhetoric. Pritzker’s obsession, to insult and to chastise President Trump, showed forcefully as he stoked the crowd in calling for political violence against Republicans.

“JB Pritzker’s ego-driven obsession with becoming President is putting Illinois, and Republicans across the country, at risk,” said ILGOP Chairman Kathy Salvi. “His inflammatory and dangerous speech is focused on further dividing our country and I hope to see Illinois Democrats condemn his call for violence.”

“Last night, Pritzker showed us that instead of helping hardworking families, he would rather raise their taxes, defend MS-13 gang members and watch businesses flee Illinois,” Salvi continued. “It’s become clear that Pritzker’s only priority is what’s best for him and his presidential bid. This weekend’s trip to New Hampshire is further proof that he’s already left Illinois behind.”

Don’t forget that Pritzker is an old pro at this shtick, considering how he’s attempted to become the leader of the Democrat party for the last three years. See for yourself:

FIRST: Pritzker traveled to New Hampshire in 2022 to raise his profile and set up a future presidential run.

THEN: Pritzker refused to quash rumors that he would leave Illinois to run for president when Democrats launched their soft coup against Joe Biden.

THEN: When Kamala Harris was announced as the Democrats’ preferred choice, Pritzker launched a full-court press campaign to become her vice president.

THEN: After failing to earn the nod as the vice-presidential nominee, Pritzker immediately pivoted and is working to become the Democrats’ choice for president in 2028.

NOW: Pritzker is in New Hampshire, wooing Democrat donors and soft launching a presidential campaign focused on lies, division and insults.

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Public Pressure Mounts For Nursing Home Accountability On Care And Safe Staffing

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

In recent weeks, advocates for quality senior care have been joined by concerned lawmakers in an escalating and increasingly public call to ensure public funding is used to address the longstanding short staffing crisis in Illinois nursing homes.

In a March 12th S-T op-ed, SEIU Healthcare Executive VP Erica Bland noted that the COVID-19 crisis “revealed the true extent and human cost of the understaffing crisis.” The crisis, she said, has not improved.

Then, on April 8th, SEIU released a new report on the state of long-term care in Illinois and was joined by lawmakers, Alzheimer’s Association and AARP for a Blue Room press conference. The report detailed the failure of the industry to address longstanding short staffing: despite $15 billion in public funding over the past five years—including hundreds of millions intended to support staffing—1 in 5 nursing homes still fail to meet the legal minimum staffing standards.

The report caught the attention of the media, with coverage by Crain’s, FOX, NBC, CBS in Chicago, Springfield’s WICS, and other outlets. A follow up press conference on April 17th provided an example of the impact of short staffing at an individual facility, Southpoint Nursing Home, and gained additional coverage in Chicago on FOX and NBC—and a lengthy WVON interview.

The growing public concern about short staffing sends a clear message. It’s time to pass HB2507 to ensure public funding goes to care and not to profit.

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Open thread

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I saw this band in 1978 when they opened for Styx. My best friend and I went to that show specifically to see Thin Lizzy

Don’t believe a word
Words are only spoken

What’s happening in your local world?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The world could use more men like Matt Jones, may he rest in peace

Matthew Patrick Jones, age 59, of Edwards, Illinois, passed away peacefully on Saturday, April 26, 2025, in the garden of the Richard L. Owens Hospice Home in Peoria, following a valiant four-plus-year battle with glioblastoma multiforme. A courageous fighter in the courtroom and in life, Matt was born on September 30, 1965, in Pekin, Illinois.

Matt was a beloved husband, father, son, brother, and dedicated attorney whose career in public service will be remembered for his strength as a prosecutor, his trusted expertise in criminal policy, and his popularity as a law school professor. He will be forever remembered for his kindness, wit, generosity, and his exceptional ability to cultivate meaningful, bipartisan criminal justice reform. Matt believed deeply in the importance of ethics, collaboration, and compromise in state government.

He earned a sterling reputation in Springfield and on Capitol Hill for bridging political divides on critical issues, including juvenile justice reform, pretrial fairness, and violence against women and children. Matt developed and led trainings for new attorneys, mentored trial advocacy skills among Illinois prosecutors, advocated zealously on behalf of state’s attorneys, and championed justice for survivors of violent crime and domestic violence. A brilliant legal mind, Matt was respected and relied upon by members of the Illinois General Assembly, Congress, judges, peers across the country, and former clients alike. […]

While Matt made an impact in state and national politics as a criminal policy expert, he also aspired to run for elected office someday. Whether he would have served as state’s attorney, judge, or senator ultimately doesn’t matter; Matt Jones achieved something far greater: he prioritized doing what was right over personal ambition, he treasured his family and friendships, he lifted his community, and he championed justice throughout Illinois. He made a lasting impact on so many and lived his life to the fullest. For that alone, he is deeply mourned.

Memorial contributions may be made to the W.D. Boyce Council, Scouting America, in support of the ‘Be Brave Initiative,‘ a new scholarship fund created in Matt’s memory.

* At 2:30, Governor Pritzker will join a rally supporting students as a continuation of his “Standing Up for Illinois” tour. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Casino crime logs show thefts, fights, patrons passing counterfeit bills: Rivers — the state’s busiest and most profitable casino, located in the shadows of O’Hare Airport — had the most reported crime of the eight casinos in Chicago and the suburbs, with more than 1,500 crimes logged from 2020 to early this year out of roughly 3,800 reported at those casinos by the Illinois Gaming Board, according to records from the government agency. Those cases are a tiny fraction of the 31.3 million trips through casino turnstiles during that time, including about 13 million visits to Rivers.

* ProPublica | The untold story of how Missourian Ed Martin ghostwrote online attacks against a Metro East judge: The attacks on Judge John Barberis in the fall of 2016 appeared on his personal Facebook page. They impugned his ethics, criticized a recent ruling and branded him as a “politician” with the “LOWEST rating for a judge in Illinois.” […] After Barberis dealt Martin a major setback in the case in October 2016, the attacks began. The Facebook user who posted them, Priscilla Gray, had worked in several roles for Schlafly but was not a party to the case, and her comments read like those of an aggrieved outsider. Almost two years later, the truth emerged as Cori’s lawyers gathered evidence for her lawsuit: Behind the posts about the judge was none other than Martin.

* Daily Herald | ‘This is your LAST WARNING’: Tollway texting you about unpaid fees? Don’t believe it: The Illinois tollway is alerting I-PASS customers of a phishing scam using texts with dire but fake warnings intended to trick people into divulging personal information. “Toll text scams are occurring nationwide. The Illinois tollway is advising customers to disregard these phishing texts. These messages are not associated with the Illinois tollway or our customer data,” agency leaders said Friday.

*** Statehouse News ***

* US Senator Tammy Duckworth endorses Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton for Durbin’s Senate seat.

* Sun-Times | Feds no longer seeking $3.1 million from Michael Madigan: The feds notified U.S. District Judge John Blakey of their position in a two-page status update filed Friday. It said prosecutors continue “to stand on the legal arguments” made March 28, when they first argued Madigan should forfeit the $3.1 million. However, it said, “the government has decided to no longer seek a forfeiture judgment” in Madigan’s case. “This decision is independent from any other issue or briefing in this matter,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Streicker wrote. “The government’s position in this filing relates solely to forfeiture and not to any other issue in the case.”

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Facing Trump’s trade war, Illinois soybean farmers say they’ve seen this before: “Last time, we lost about 20% market share,” said Todd Main, director of market development for the Illinois Soybean Association. “The federal government put some financing programs to help cover the revenue stream for that first year that farmers lost. But that lasted one year, and the 20% market share never came back.” “I think it’s going to be a disaster for Illinois soybean growers,” said William Ridley, an agricultural economist at the University of Illinois.

* Sun-Times | Taking advantage of Illinois’ new turkey gun regulations: Richard Music used a .410 shotgun, now allowed under new Illinois regulations, to bag a big turkey on opening day of Illinois’ spring turkey season in the north zone.

*** Chicago ***

* Daily Herald | The parking meter was paid, but minutes later, a $70 ticket from Chicago: “There should be no discrepancy,” Chicago Alderman Scott Waguespack said. But it’s a familiar complaint. “Over the years, I’ve got people calling from all over the city asking for help” with undeserved tickets. Concerns range from mistakes about the time frame to inadequate signage supposed to alert drivers if parking isn’t allowed, he explained.

* Sun-Times | University of Chicago Crime Lab boss: Most conventional wisdom about what causes shootings is wrong:
America has a fundamental misunderstanding of what drives violence, and that’s gotten in the way of doing more to prevent shootings. That’s the premise of the new book “Unforgiving Places” by University of Chicago Crime Lab director Jens Ludwig. Ludwig, an economist, talked about that in an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times that has been edited for length and clarity.

* Block Club | Lincoln Square Car-Free Zone Extended To May As Neighbors Make The Most Of Street Closure: The car-free zone was originally slated to end Sunday. But a decades-old brick electrical vault at the intersection is damaged and needs emergency repairs before the rest of construction can move forward, said Josh Mark, Ald. Matt Martin’s (47th) chief of staff. The work means the closure will stretch into May.

* Crain’s | In legal fight over disputed artwork, Art Institute dealt a big blow: In her ruling, New York Supreme Court Judge Althea Drysdale agreed with New York officials that the work had been stolen from Grünbaum by the Nazis, adding that the museum’s own provenance inquiries of the artwork “fell short of their self-imposed standard.” The museum filed an appeal notice to the ruling yesterday. In an email, a spokesperson for the Art Institute said it is “disappointed” in the court’s decision and “will look at all available options for appeal.”

* Tribune | Diagnosed with colorectal cancer at age 44, WGN’s Mike Lowe shared his battle with viewers. Now, he’s at a turning point.: It was a message from his doctor — the results of his latest colonoscopy, a test meant to show whether six weeks of radiation and four months of chemotherapy had worked. The results were exactly what he had hoped to see: The cancer was no longer detectable. “Getting those results, it was just the most amazing feeling,” Lowe said. “I think back to one year ago, when I went to the initial doctor’s appointment … .In some ways it feels like forever and in some ways it feels like the blink of an eye — but what a year.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Federal cuts threaten program that allows suburban libraries to share books: President Donald Trump last month ordered the gutting of the Institute of Museum and Library Services, a federal agency that serves as a key source of funding for museums, libraries and educational institutions across the country. The cuts, which are still being rolled out, could prove devastating to the interlibrary loan program throughout the region. RAILS and the Illinois Heartland Library System, the state’s other major library delivery service that reaches southern and central parts of Illinois, receive about $2.5 million annually for delivery services, about one-third of their budgets, through IMLS funding. Though the state was told to expect this year’s award around April 20, the program officer who oversees Illinois funding has been terminated and the money has not yet arrived, according to a spokesman for Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias.

* Tribune | Cook County Circuit Court clerk reports progress on transparency promises: New Cook County Circuit Court Clerk Mariyana Spyropoulos released a progress report Monday claiming her team is already digging out from a backlog of reports, unfiled civil court documents and “serious financial management issues.” Spyropoulos campaigned on running a tighter ship than her predecessors, promising better transparency around court operations and stricter ethics enforcement. She used the milestone of her first 100 business days in office to make the case she is fixing things.

* Sun-Times | Former Jan. 6 defendant set to stand trial for Skokie woman’s murder: ‘Don’t do this!’: Now Shane Jason Woods, a 47-year-old Taylorville man once sentenced to 4 ½ years in prison for assaulting two people at the U.S. Capitol, faces trial for the first-degree murder of 35-year-old Lauren Wegner of Skokie in that crash detailed in police and court records. The trial is set to begin Monday in Springfield.

* Shaw Local | Underwood talks immigration, education concerns at DeKalb town hall: When asked if she’s considering running for Dick Durbin’s Senate seat in 2026, Underwood downplayed the idea. Durbin, 80, the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, announced this week that he does not plan to seek reelection to a sixth term. “It has truly been a great honor to serve as your congresswoman and I certainly am reflecting on ways to continue my service,” Underwood said.

* Daily Herald | Illinois lawmakers stop in Buffalo Grove to protest federal funding cuts: Democratic state lawmakers gathered Sunday in Buffalo Grove as part of a four-stop bus tour of Chicago and the suburbs to speak out against cuts in federal funding. “We have a federal government that is attacking everything that we hold dear,” state Rep. Daniel Didech of Buffalo Grove said during the “For The People” bus tour stop at the Mike Rylko Community Park amphitheater.

* Crain’s | Spotlight back on Northwestern’s president amid Trump administration jabs: Federal officials continue to circle Northwestern, having already frozen $790 million in federal funds as part of a larger battle with elite universities the administration views as out of step with its policies. Meanwhile, NU faculty are pushing for President Michael Schill to take the fight to Trump and congressional leaders, a move that could stoke more attacks and further imperil the school and its president. “The university president is walking a very fine line right now,” said Ron Culp, a veteran public relations consultant who teaches at DePaul University. “It’s a delicate balancing act to pull off.”

* Daily Southtown | Flossmoor in film: Board approves production regulations after influx of interest: “When we saw that you had to register your dog in Flossmoor but … there was no regulations for film, we were like, ‘oh OK, um, maybe we should reach out,’” Troy said. They worked with the village manager’s office to draft an ordinance the Village Board passed last week. It aims to address residents’ complaints and ensure the community benefits as Flossmoor, a town of 9,700 people, draws more attention from production companies.

* Daily Herald | What you need to know about the local grocery tax most suburbs are adopting: Illinois will eliminate its 1% grocery tax on Jan. 1, joining the majority of states without one. Basically, the state collects the tax and distributes it back to the municipalities where it was collected. In recent years, the tax has generated an estimated $360 million for Illinois’ 1,294 cities, towns and villages. Statements by Gov. JB Pritzker during the early months of 2024 led municipal leaders to anticipate the elimination of the tax. A compromise struck in late spring allowed towns to replace the state tax with ones of their own.

* Shaw Local | Veterans rally in McHenry against ‘goal’ to cut tens of thousands of VA jobs: Over 200 people gathered outside the McHenry Veterans Affairs Clinic with signs and flags Sunday afternoon to protest against potential nationwide staff cuts to the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs. The rally, sponsored by Illinois Veterans for Change, included speakers like former McHenry County Board member Lou Ness and Kat Abughazaleh, a political newcomer who’s running for Congress in Illinois’ 9th District long held by Democrat Rep. Jan Schakowsky.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | One person shot, injured during student group’s event at ISU’s Bone Student Center: One person was injured in a shooting Sunday night during a student organization’s event at the Bone Student Center at Illinois State University, authorities said. Police are still looking for the suspect. The shooting happened around 7:40 p.m. during what ISU called a “registered student organization event” at the Bone. An ISU spokesperson would not identify the student group. There were at least two events happening in the Bone on Sunday night, including a sorority event, witnesses told WGLT.

* Tribune | Health officials urge caution after dead rabbit and squirrel found with rare bacterial disease: The rabbit infected with tularemia was found in Tuscola, a small community south of Champaign, following weeks of reports of ill and dead squirrels in nearby Urbana. One of the rodents had also tested positive for the disease, which is rare but serious and can affect animals and humans. “The presence of infected wildlife may indicate an increased risk of exposure in the area,” the Douglas County Health Department said in a Thursday statement, echoing an announcement made by the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District three days earlier about local squirrel deaths.

* PJ Star | Peoria airport sets new monthly record for passengers: The Peoria airport announced 71,988 departed and arrived in March, breaking the all-time monthly record of 68,447 set in July 2019. “We knew that March,” airport director Gene Olson said, “was going to put up some impressive numbers based on the activity in our parking lots, and we suspected we might set a record. But we didn’t anticipate breaking the all-time monthly record, and we didn’t foresee setting the record by that large of a margin.”

* WGLT | ‘A place to call home’: Habitat for Humanity of McLean County breaks ground on 200th house: Conely said the wait for their very own house was “a long time coming.” She and her three children, 20-year-old daughter Jasharar and 18-year-old and 9-year-old sons Jakalib and Jashawn, have moved repeatedly from different areas of low-income housing or shelters. “I used to stay a long time in the mission, then after the mission and I was there for a couple years, then I move into a two-bedroom, then I had Section 8 for a little bit,” Conely said. “Where I’m at now is not a good neighborhood … [we’re] just holding on until we get our house built.”

*** National ***

* Semafor | The group chats that changed America: This constellation of rolling elite political conversations revolve primarily around the venture capitalist Marc Andreessen and a circle of Silicon Valley figures. None of their participants was surprised to see Trump administration officials firing off secrets and emojis on the platform last month. I did not have the good fortune to be accidentally added to one of the chats, which can be set to make messages disappear after just 30 seconds. But their influence flows through X, Substack, and podcasts, and constitutes a kind of dark matter of American politics and media. The group chats aren’t always primarily a political space, but they are the single most important place in which a stunning realignment toward Donald Trump was shaped and negotiated, and an alliance between Silicon Valley and the new right formed. The group chats are “the memetic upstream of mainstream opinion,” wrote one of their key organizers, Sriram Krishnan, a former partner in the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (typically styled a16z) who is now the White House senior policy adviser for AI.

* WaPo | U.S. attorney for D.C. accuses Wikipedia of ‘propaganda,’ threatens nonprofit status: In the letter dated Thursday, Ed Martin said he sought to determine whether the Wikimedia Foundation’s behavior is in violation of its Section 501(c)(3) status. Martin asked the foundation to provide detailed information about its editorial process, its trust and safety measures, and how it protects its information from foreign actors. “Wikipedia is permitting information manipulation on its platform, including the rewriting of key, historical events and biographical information of current and previous American leaders, as well as other matters implicating the national security and the interests of the United States,” Martin wrote. “Masking propaganda that influences public opinion under the guise of providing informational material is antithetical to Wikimedia’s ‘educational’ mission.”

* WSJ | Elite Universities Form Private Collective to Resist Trump Administration: The informal group currently includes about 10 schools, including Ivies and leading private research universities, mostly in blue states. Strategy discussions gained momentum after the administration’s recent list of demands for sweeping cultural change at Harvard, viewed by many universities as an assault on independence.

  6 Comments      


When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Findings of a recent economic study were 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.

Retailers like Armando in Champaign enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.

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

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Monday, Apr 28, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
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* Roundup: Pritzker calls out ‘do-nothing’ Democrats in New Hampshire (Updated)
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