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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

The treasurers of eight US states have written an open letter to Tesla Inc.’s board of directors questioning the direction of the company and the level of attention Elon Musk is paying to its mounting challenges.

The overseers of funds and investments for Illinois, California and half a dozen other states cite Tesla’s sagging stock, disappointing first-quarter deliveries and surge of trade-ins by vehicle owners as being among their causes for concern.

“Meanwhile, CEO Elon Musk continues to divide his attention across multiple companies and a high-profile advisory role within the federal government,” the treasurers wrote. “These external commitments raise serious questions about whether Tesla’s leadership is fully engaged in addressing the company’s core challenges.”

The letter — pulled together in coordination with the advocacy group Americans for Responsible Growth — heaps more pressure on Tesla and Musk ahead of the company releasing first-quarter earnings results after the close Tuesday.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Tribune | Jury sends out questions during deliberations in state Sen. Emil Jones III bribery trial: Jurors resumed deliberations in the federal corruption trial of state Sen. Emil Jones III, and early Tuesday afternoon sent questions to the judge during their talks. Included in them was whether Jones needed to agree to accept something worth $5,000 or anything of value, and whether a decision to do so needed to remain in place without Jones changing his mind. The panel also asked about the difference between federal and state laws against bribery. The judge gave lawyers in the case an hour to come up with proposed answers to the jury’s notes.

* Capitol News Illinois | Pritzker balances messaging as some Dems encourage party to avoid LGBTQ issues: Pritzker was confronted with polling data on LGBTQ issues during his first FOX News interview as governor earlier this month. The March FOX News poll showed 68% of respondents favor President Donald Trump’s executive order attempting to ban transgender women from women’s sports, and 54% support federal policy that recognizes only two genders. Pritzker brushed aside the poll. “You can go issue by issue and you can ask a question whether people support this issue or that,” he told the FOX News host. “Here’s what people really care about: They care about their health care, they care about their affordability, they care about the kitchen table issues that really matter every day.”

* Chicago Mag | With ridership lagging and a fiscal reckoning looming, the L is in trouble. Here’s why our train is worth saving: Even acknowledging that the CTA is underfunded, it’s fair to wonder whether the agency could be doing more with the resources it has. Stephen Schlickman, the head of the RTA from 2005 to 2010, recalls that in 2007 his agency faced a $400 million shortfall, so he requested that the Illinois auditor general conduct a review to ensure that the problem wasn’t mismanagement. He questions why the CTA doesn’t undertake a similar probe. (The CTA says it conducts its own audit annually and is subject to triennial audits from both the Federal Transit Administration and Illinois Department of Transportation.) And he can’t make sense of how the CTA spent its COVID relief money: “I’m sorry, they got billions of dollars from the federal government, and why the service, crime, filthiness of the CTA became so bad is beyond me.”

* American’s Work force | Reviving the Springfield and Central Illinois Trades and Labor Council: Yelverton began by sharing his journey from Las Vegas to Illinois, where he said he found a home in the labor movement. He has spent the past 19 years with the Illinois Federation of Teachers. In 2020, after being named Interim President, Yelverton was elected President of the Springfield and Central Illinois Trades and Labor Council. Under his leadership, the council has been rebuilt from the ground up, as he was the first President elected after the Council came out of Trusteeship. Now, the council has grown within the community through engagement and supporting young people with scholarship programs, Yelverton said.

*** Statewide ***

* WAND | Multiple university presidents in Illinois sign letter criticizing federal ‘government overreach’: The letter cites the importance of higher education to American prosperity and common good. And while the presidents are “open to constructive reform and do not oppose legitimate government oversight, they dispute “undue government intrusion in the lives of those who learn, live, and work on our campuses.”

*** Downstate ***

* WMBD | 1% grocery tax approved by Washington City Council: It’s become a hot topic across Illinois after Gov. JB Pritzker and the General Assembly eliminated the statewide 1% tax on groceries beginning Jan. 1, 2026. Since then, municipalities from Pekin to East Peoria and across the state have adopted similar ordinances in an effort to maintain the sales tax revenue that would be lost if they go along with the state’s repeal.

* Daily Egyptian | SIU admin, faculty seek clarity as ‘multiple’ international students affected by visa crackdown: At an SIU Faculty Senate meeting on Tuesday, April 15, Provost Sheryl Tucker told concerned faculty members that “multiple” students had been affected – though she declined to give an exact number, citing federal privacy laws under FERPA. […] This marks the first acknowledgment from SIU that more than one international student has been caught in the federal dragnet. Previously, the university had only confirmed a single case – a student whose visa was revoked and who has since left the country.

* WGLT | Bloomington council weighs housing incentive options, hears annual report from police chief: The housing shortage is on the minds of many in Bloomington, including the city council. During a meeting Monday, Deputy City Manager Billy Tyus presented an update on the issue. Tyus discussed changes the council could make to incentivize developers to build in Bloomington. In a time of economic uncertainty, he emphasized the value of putting forth a clear “standardized incentives” plan. Knowing what help they can expect to receive in advance, Tyus said, would help dispel developers’ reluctance.

* WCIA | Classes cancelled at Tri-Point schools due to threat: Tri-Point Superintendent Jay Bennett said in a letter to the school community that administration received notice early Tuesday morning of an anonymous threat. He cancelled school on all three campuses in the district on Tuesday as student and staff safety is their top priority.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Yusef Jackson invests in company that’s reaped big profits from state of Illinois program: Yusef Jackson — a son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. and brother of U.S. Rep. Jonathan Jackson, D-Ill. — invested in a company that has profited for more than a decade from a controversial, lucrative arrangement with the state of Illinois, records show. The financial interest of Yusef Jackson surfaced recently in court records in a federal civil case involving Vendor Assistance Program LLC. The clout-heavy, Chicago-based VAP has pocketed hundreds of millions of dollars through a state program that allows it to buy up government debt to vendors and later collect the late-payment penalties from the state. VAP started to work on the state program in 2011, amid a huge backlog of payments to vendors; politically connected lawyer Brian Hynes co-founded the company and was a main investor for many years, according to public records.

* Chicago Mag | A History of Violence: In Chicago, as in so many American cities, it’s hard to imagine a more intractable public policy problem than gun violence. But University of Chicago Professor Jens Ludwig, 56, cofounder and director of the school’s Crime Lab, delivers some hope in his groundbreaking new book, Unforgiving Places: The Unexpected Origins of American Gun Violence. Based on a wealth of scientific data on decision making by violent criminals and his own fieldwork in Chicago, he offers social policy strategies for transforming neighborhoods into safer spaces.

* Borderless | Chicago’s Venezuelan Community In Limbo Amid Trump’s Push To End Deportation Protections: The Venezuelan community in Chicago is grappling with fear and uncertainty after President Donald Trump’s attempt to terminate Biden-era deportation protections. Although a federal judge recently blocked the effort to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS), many immigrants say the damage is done, reigniting anxieties that they may be forced to return to a country they fled amid violence, political persecution and economic collapse.

* Sun-Times | Sex, drag and Whitney Houston: ‘Wake of a Dead Drag Queen’ returns with a flamboyant punch: To Guest, who is a queer Black man, “At the Wake of a Dead Drag Queen” is personal, connecting him through the art form to his uncle and to Southern drag culture. This is the play that sparked his career, winning him awards and helping to pull himself out of despair when his acting career stalled.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Prime Healthcare, new owner of Joliet hospital, shutters its pediatric services: Prime Healthcare, the new, for-profit owner of St. Joseph Medical Center in Joliet, is suspending pediatric care at the former Ascension hospital that its owned since March 1. The hospital will continue to provide pediatric emergency care as a certified Emergency Department Approved for Pediatrics, but will offer alternative roles at St. Joseph or one of its seven other Chicago-area hospitals to eight pediatric care staff members, a spokeswoman for the health system said in a statement last night. Its two pediatricians have been offered positions with Prime’s affiliated medical group.

* Sun-Times | ‘Long and rather wrenching’ sentencing expected for Highland Park parade shooter on Wednesday: Robert Crimo III will likely get life in prison for killing seven people and wounding four dozen on July 4, 2022. But it is unclear whether he will show up in court since much of the hearing could take up hours of survivors’ victim-impact statements. Prosecutors have not said how many victims are set to talk in court. If enough do, the hearing could stretch into a second day.

* Illinois Answers Project | Cook County Jail Restrained People In Chairs 874 Times — And Never Reported It To The State: Cook County Jail used restraint chairs nearly 900 times from 2019 to 2023 and failed to report the incidents to the state unit that monitors jails, as required by state regulations, Illinois Answers found. “They’ve admitted somewhat of a … failure and misunderstanding,” said Illinois Rep. La Shawn Ford, who represents part of Cook County. State standards require jails to report use of a restraint chair as an “extraordinary or unusual occurrence” to the Jail and Detention Standards Unit (JDSU) within the Illinois Department of Corrections within three days of the incident. But Cook County Jail never did that.

* Daily Herald | Illinois PGA again trying something new: The Illinois PGA Open Series tees off on Monday at White Eagle in Naperville. That’ll be the first of six one-day tournaments open to IPGA professionals (members and associates), amateurs with a handicap index under 10.0 and other professionals at least 18 years old. Players under 18 may be accepted but must submit a playing resume first. […] “We have been talking internally, and branching out to more of our staff,” said Andy Mickelson, the IPGA tournament chairman, director of golf at Mistwood in Romeoville and the section vice president. “We went to the CDGA (Chicago District Golf Association) to get their blessing. It’ll be good for tournament golf in Illinois. We think it’ll be a big hit.”

*** National ***

* TNND | Tariffs will stifle US and global economic growth, slow progress on inflation: IMF: President Donald Trump’s far-reaching tariffs and the chain reaction of countermeasures they’ve triggered, if sustained, are likely to curb economic growth in the United States and the rest of the world this year, the International Monetary Fund said Tuesday. Economic growth in the U.S. is forecast to slow to 1.8% in 2025, ninety basis points lower than the IMF’s prediction from January. In 2024, America’s economy grew at a pace of 2.8%.

* Reuters | US FDA suspends milk quality tests amid workforce cuts: The Food and Drug Administration is suspending a quality control program for testing of fluid milk and other dairy products due to reduced capacity in its food safety and nutrition division, according to an internal email seen by Reuters. The suspension is another disruption to the nation’s food safety programs after the termination and departure of 20,000 employees of the Department of Health and Human Services, which includes the FDA, as part of President Donald Trump’s effort to shrink the federal workforce.

* LA Times | DOGE layoffs of federal mediators leave grocery chain talks, other labor disputes in limbo: In fiscal 2024, the agency, which has a budget of $54 million, employed about 143 full-time mediators who conducted more than 5,400 mediated negotiations and provided some 10,000 arbitration panels. And recent estimates show that the mediators’ services save the economy more than $500 million annually, according to the lawsuit. The lawsuit cites data from the agency’s website that have been scrubbed in recent weeks. Just five mediators and a few support staff workers remain at the agency after the cuts, according to the lawsuit.

  11 Comments      


It’s just a bill

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

Lawmakers could pass a plan in the final weeks of session to protect the state’s power grid from surging energy demand from data centers. While Illinois has made significant investments in clean energy since Gov. JB Pritzker took office, the power grid is struggling to keep pace with demand.

This legislation could force data centers to produce 100% of the power required for their technology. […]

The proposal could also add batteries to the grid to store excess power from solar and wind energy when the sun is down and the wind is slow. Energy experts said Illinois must prioritize advance planning for data center demand. […]

The Senate version of this bill has a third reading extension until May 9. That means senators still believe they have enough support to move the plan out of both chambers before session ends May 31.

* ABC Chicago

A bill to crack down on squatting is one step closer to becoming law.

The proposed law would make it easier for police officers to remove squatters from someone’s home, bypassing the months-long eviction process. It was passed in the Illinois Senate and is heading to the House for review. […]

Illinois State Senator Lakesia Collins of the 5th District is the author of the bill. She believes it’ll give property owners in Illinois the protection they need and deserve. […]

[Rep. La Shawn Ford] and Collins strongly believe the bill will pass. In the meantime, they’re putting together a squatter task force, bringing landlords tenants and real estate professionals together to discuss squatting cases, come up with solutions and educate the public on how to protect their property.

* Rep. Dagmara Avelar…

Pushing back on an alarming new trend that can affect a young person’s future ability to obtain housing, state Rep. Dagmara “Dee” Avelar, D-Bolingbrook, recently advanced legislation out of the House chamber that bars landlords from suing children along with their parents or guardians in eviction cases.

“This bill is a commonsense step toward protecting the future of our children and ensuring that a single eviction doesn’t become a lifelong barrier to stable housing for minors being wrapped up in eviction cases,” said Avelar. “I’m hopeful the Senate will move swiftly to pass this measure and help us stop a damaging trend that drags innocent children into the courtroom over matters they’re not responsible for.”

Avelar passed House Bill 3566 out of the House chamber, ensuring that an eviction complaint can be dismissed if a minor is named as a defendant, or if the person was a minor when the complaint was filed. Because evictions remain on tenant screening reports, public records, and background checks even if the minor was never responsible for the lease, this bill mitigates the likeliness of future housing instability, negative credit reporting and potential homelessness when the minor becomes an adult.

* Riverside-Brookfield Landmark

While baseline 10% tariffs on all imports to the United States and higher tariffs on specific countries — up to 125%, in China’s case — are affecting the experienced costs of goods for consumers, they’re also affecting small businesses in multiple, sometimes conflicting, ways.

“I just got a notice today from my glass distributor … they used to have a U.S. factory, but they closed that. They’re located in India. They will be affected by tariffs,” said Derrick Mancini, the owner of Quincy Street Distillery, 39 E. Quincy St., in Riverside. “Some of my raw material, particularly some of the malt I purchase, comes from Canada. That will be affected by tariffs.” […]

However, a bill in the Illinois General Assembly could alleviate some of these issues. Senate Bill 1618 would amend the Liquor Control Act of 1934, established after the end of Prohibition, allowing distilleries to ship product directly to consumers and self-distribute while maintaining on-site bars. Mancini said the Quincy Street Distillery self-distributes a small amount of product already due to its specific state license.

“I would argue, probably, that self-distribution is the only way we think, currently, we can survive because we’re growing that self-distribution as we’re seeing the amount of product move through our distributor has been dropping,” he said. “For us, we think it’s critical.”

SB1618 and its companion bill in the House missed deadlines to make it out of committee.

* Rep. Mike Kelly…

Illinois’ firefighters may soon be safer while protecting their communities because of a bill passed by state Rep. Mike Kelly, D-Chicago, that phases out the use of chemical substances in firefighters’ protective gear that has recently been linked to long-term health problems in many firefighters.

“Our firefighters risk everything to keep their communities safe and to save lives and property, but recent studies show that they’ve been risking—and too often sacrificing—even more than we knew,” Kelly said. “PFAS chemicals are present in a wide range of firefighting equipment and the impacts on the health and wellness of our firefighters is unacceptable. That’s why I’m taking action.”

PFAS—also known as per-and-polyflouroalkyl substances or “forever chemicals”—are long-lasting, man-made substances currently used in a wide variety of industrial and home applications. More recent science has revealed that these chemicals remain in the environment, including inside the bodies of living things, indefinitely. Additionally, this research links PFAS to cancer and other health conditions.

Kelly’s House Bill 2409 phases out the legal sale or distribution of firefighting equipment that contains PFAS by January 1, 2030. The delay is necessary because PFAS are contained in such a wide range of firefighting equipment that an immediate ban would risk making it difficult for fire departments to obtain sufficient amounts of critical equipment.

The bill is named after Deputy Chief Pete Bendinelli, a veteran firefighter who passed away due to health conditions related to PFAS exposure.

Kelly advanced the bill through the Illinois House of Representatives and it now awaits further consideration in the Senate.

* Center Square

The Illinois House is set to debate legislation that the state Senate already approved. Senate Bill 1797 provides that the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation regulate digital asset business activity.

State Sen. Mark Walker, D-Arlington Heights, said his approach is to use IDFPR’s capabilities in the area of financial institutions. […]

State Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, said the bill framework mirrors current laws applied to banks and credit unions.

“It’s counterintuitive, as the cryptocurrency industry was specifically set up to provide consumers with alternative financial options that aren’t as regulated or as centralized,” Rezin said. “There are already numerous regulations at the federal and state level which protect consumers participating in the cryptocurrency market.” […]

The chief House sponsor of the bill is state Rep. Edgar González, Jr., D-Chicago. The measure is now in the House Financial Institutions and Licensing Committee.

  1 Comment      


Former Marie Newman campaign manager, city worker announces against Sen. Feigenholtz

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Nick Uniejewski announced a bid for Sen. Sara Feigenholtz’s seat in the 6th District. From his campaign’s Facebook page

Today, I’m announcing my campaign for Illinois State Senate in the 6th District. I’ve spent my career as an organizer, community leader, and policy analyst—working at the federal, state, and city levels. I’ve seen our government up close and I know we can do better.

People are ready to fight and get things done. The incumbent has spent 30 years in office and is not the fighter we need for the future. In the last year, I’ve hosted 80 listening sessions—called salons—focused on important topics like housing and transit. The response has been tremendous. We need a new generation of leadership to help renters and homebuyers, modernize our transit systems, and build a future focused on equity, justice, and caring for our neighbors.

Right now, we have a president who pits people against each other and encourages hate and division and an incumbent Senator who has faced numerous calls for her resignation because of her frequent racist and Islamophobic remarks. We deserve better. We, as Democrats, can not expect to escape the mess our party is in by electing people who seek to divide rather than unite.

I’m running for the State Senate to bring people together and help build people up—no matter where they live, who they love, or where they were born. We need new energetic leadership so we can get back to making this a fabulous place to live, work, and play for everyone. I believe we can have a better future if we elect leaders who aren’t afraid to fight for that future.

It looks like, at least in part, this primary is a result of ‘Islamophobic’ tweets made by Sen. Feigenholtz. Background is here and here if you need it.

Sen. Feigenholtz (D-Chicago) has been in the General Assembly since 1995 after she knocked out fellow Democrat Rep. Ellis Levin. As far as I can tell she hasn’t faced a primary since. But she hasn’t announced if she’s planning to run for a third term in the Senate.

According to its last D-2, Sen. Feigenholtz’s committee is sitting on a million dollars in available funds. Uniejewski’s committee hasn’t reported any contributions yet.

* More on Uniejewski from a campaign press release

Uniejewski is a seasoned advocate, having worked as an organizer for NARAL Pro-Choice America (now Reproductive Freedom for All) and Indivisible. He served as Outreach Manager for former Rep. Marie Newman’s 2020 campaign, when she ousted an anti-choice and anti-LGBTQ+ Democrat, and managed her 2022 campaign. Currently, Uniejewski works as a policy analyst for the City of Chicago’s Department of Family and Support Services.

Newman lost her 2022 primary campaign to Sean Casten (63-33).

Uniejewski’s annual city salary is $95,952.

* Politico

A spokesman for Feigenholtz defended her record saying she is “a powerful voice” in protecting constituents “against Trump’s attacks on reproductive rights, LGBTQ+ rights and the gutting that we see underway of our federal government.”

  40 Comments      


Report: Rep. Thaddeus Jones’ legal bills top $200K during reported ongoing federal investigation

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Olivia Olander

State Rep. Thaddeus Jones, who’s also mayor of Calumet City, paid tens of thousands of dollars in the first quarter of this year to a law firm that specializes in criminal defense, records show, amid a multiyear federal investigation into tax issues involving his campaign funds that sources said is ongoing.

The U.S. attorney’s office more than three years ago issued a grand jury subpoena to the Illinois State Board of Elections pursuant to an “official criminal investigation” for records on three campaign funds controlled by Jones. No charges have been filed against Jones, but two people with knowledge of the issue said recently the investigation was still active. […]

State records covering the first quarter of 2025 show one of Jones’ campaign committees reported spending $35,000 on legal fees to Cheronis & Parente, which describes itself online as a criminal defense firm. Records show the Jones’ campaign has paid the law firm nearly $200,000 since February 2024. […]

His campaign fund additionally paid nearly $10,000 to Mullen Law Offices. The firm did not immediately return a request for comment.

Rep. Jones chairs the House Insurance Committee.

  7 Comments      


Wilhour: Commie money for my guy, but no jobs for thee

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Ope

Full story is here.

* 2023 press release

The IL Freedom Caucus today held a press conference to demand answers to some of the concerns Manteno residents have with a Chinese company building a battery plant in their community.

The Chinese company Gotion High-Tech Co. is in line for $ 7.5 billion in federal tax credits over five years, while the State of Illinois is kicking in an additional $536 million in subsidies to build the plant. The cost to build the plant is $2 billion and the subsidies add up to an astounding $3 million per job. […]

“We need to put our money where our mouth is on human rights, and we need to lead by example when it comes to China,” said State Representative Blaine Wilhour (R-Beecher City). “JB Pritzker signed a law divesting Illinois from Russia because of the war in Ukraine. If we are condemning Russia – how can we not have the same policies in regard to the CCP? We say we are for human rights but not only are we blindly doing business with a company whose corporate papers pledge loyalty to the CCP, but we are handing over millions in subsidies. And instead of a substantive thoughtful response from JB Pritzker – all we get is insults and hyperbole. Illinois deserves better. Manteno deserves better. We need to put the brakes on this project and return sanity to our state.”

* I reached out to the Illinois Freedom Caucus, and their response was provided by Rep. Blaine Wilhour himself…

Let me know when Donald Trump sends half a billion taxpayer dollars to a company that pledges allegiance to the Chinese communist party-like JB Pritzker did-then we will be concerned.  I’m glad you’ve finally taken some interest in this important issue. 

Dude, I’ve been writing about Gotion since the get-go, thank you very much. And, as far as I can tell, the allegation of CCP subservience has not been proved.

Also, it’s OK for the president to take a contribution from an alleged “company that pledges allegiance to the Chinese communist party” but it’s not OK for the state to help that company create jobs after it invests $1.9 billion into the plant? Please.

To be clear, I don’t care if Gotion gave money to the president’s inauguration committee. It’s fine by me. But I’m not in the club complaining about Gotion for months on end.

* By the way, Gotion is represented by the Mercury lobbying outfit. President Trump’s former campaign manager and current chief of staff Susie Wiles was until recently the co-chair of the Mercury lobbying group. Mercury lobbies for Gotion in both DC and Illinois.

I sent follow-up questions to Rep. Wilhour about whether President Trump should return the contribution to the alleged commie company and what his reaction was to Mercury’s relationship with Gotion, but for some odd reason I never heard back.

Huh.

Blaine, if you’re gonna run for governor, you gotta up your game. You can’t hide for the next 18 months.

  23 Comments      


Repeal IFPA Now

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Casey Martin, CEO of Midwest Coalition of Labor CU:
IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities.
“My members are going to come to me to explain something I don’t understand.”
Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Union Members!

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Keep putting the pressure on

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Local governments banning hemp shops might be the only thing that will bring the intoxicating hemp lobby to the table to negotiate in good faith. It’s happening in the suburbs and in Chicago. Press release…

Chicago Aldermen’s Hemp Bans Threaten Small Businesses, Veterans, and Consumers
ILHAA Calls for Reasonable Regulation, Not Prohibition

CHICAGO, IL — Several Chicago Aldermen have recently introduced sweeping bans on the sale of federally legal hemp products in their wards, a move that Illinois Healthy Alternatives (ILHAA) and community members say is both short-sighted and harmful. These bans are being enacted without community input, despite the far-reaching impacts on consumers, veterans, seniors, and small business owners.

In what appears to be an attempt to prevent underage access to hemp-derived products like CBD and Delta-8 THC, Aldermen are pursuing outright bans rather than implementing responsible regulations such as age restrictions, independent product testing, and clear labeling standards.

“These bans are throwing the baby out with the bath water,” said Justin Ward, ILHAA President]. “If the goal is to protect children, there are proven, reasonable approaches available. Banning all hemp products punishes responsible retailers and hurts the very people these products are helping.”

Hemp-derived products are widely used for wellness purposes, including pain and stress relief, anxiety management, and sleep support. Veterans, seniors, and even pet owners rely on these legal products, which were made federally compliant under the 2018 Farm Bill. Hemp seeds also offer valuable nutritional benefits. Hemp is being used increasingly for sustainable building materials, fuels, and even clothing.

The hemp industry has created thousands of jobs and provided economic opportunities for independent farmers and small businesses nationwide. These local actions undermine federal law and set a dangerous precedent for policymaking without public participation.

“In Chicago, if a community wants to remove a liquor establishment, it requires a local vote,” added Everett Berry, owner of Mia’s Heart. “Yet Aldermen are unilaterally banning hemp without any public process. This is not how democracy is supposed to work.”

ILHAA is calling on the City Council to pursue thoughtful regulation rather than heavy-handed prohibition. Reasonable policies can protect young people while allowing lawful businesses to continue serving their communities. If the bans are enforced, consumers can move to online purchases with no city regulation or taxation.

Nothing is really going to happen until the Illinois House Democratic leadership finally realizes that its outlier position against intoxicating hemp regulations could ultimately backfire on that industry. Some quality hemp establishments exist, but there are way too many janky places which openly sell who knows what to underage kids. I doubt that any members of House leadership want their children buying questionable products from these places. Why, then, do they continue to protect them?

Other than the inherent criminal justice reform that came with cannabis legalization (and using some of the tax proceeds to help communities harmed by the so-called War on Drugs), the greatest benefit was transparency for consumers. They now know what they’re buying because the product’s production, distribution and retail processes are regulated. Intoxicating hemp consumers currently have zero quality guarantees.

  7 Comments      


Roundup: Jury deliberating in trial of Sen. Emil Jones III

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

As prosecutors gave their closing arguments Monday in the trial of state Sen. Emil Jones III, they cast doubt on Jones’ testimony last week that red-light camera entrepreneur Omar Maani made him “uncomfortable” when he hinted at a bribe in the summer of 2019, asking the jury why — if that was true — did he keep meeting Maani for dinner and answering his calls and texts?

Maani, who’d been acting as an FBI cooperating witness for 1 ½ years by the time he and Jones kicked off what would eventually be a series of three dinners that summer, “littered” their meetings with words that should’ve been “screaming red flags,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Tiffany Ardam said.

She pointed to the times when Maani told Jones he wanted to get “creative” in how he’d pay a potential campaign contribution or otherwise “conceal” it from public reporting requirements — lest it look “goofy” or “funky” to either the media or other leaders inside his company, SafeSpeed.

“These words are giant red flags. These words should’ve had the defendant running for the hills,” Ardam said. “Instead, the defendant does the opposite.”

* Tribune

His defense attorney, Victor Henderson, made a bid to dodge that label by pitching the case as a David versus Goliath battle between the government and one man, arguing that federal investigators deployed the executive to try to entrap Jones into taking a bribe.

Jones, Henderson said, never took a bribe and instead aimed to get a contribution of food for a legitimate campaign event.

“He doesn’t go to Omar. They send Omar to him,” Henderson said of the FBI. […]

Henderson, Jones’ lawyer, told the jury his client only met with Maani to try to overcome a roadblock in his long-stalled legislation for a statewide study on red-light cameras, seeking to balance a complex array of viewpoints and motivations in the state capital surrounding efforts to study the effectiveness of the technology.

* More from Capitol News Illinois

But prosecutors argue it doesn’t matter that Maani never paid Jones, nor does it matter that the senator never amended his legislation in the way that Maani asked for.

“He doesn’t need to do it,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Prashant Kolluri told jurors during the government’s rebuttal arguments Monday afternoon. “The agreement is the crime.”

Henderson, though, reminded the jury that the only reason Jones was invited to multiple dinners with Maani was because the FBI directed it, accusing Maani of trying to “set him (Jones) up.” Since he began cooperating with the government in January 2018, Maani had secretly recorded “dozens and dozens and dozens” of others caught up in the feds’ public corruption probe. […]

* Tribune Criminal Justice reporter Caroline Kubzansky




* Sun-Times

[Henderson] argued that the longtime senator had been set up. He questioned why the FBI never sent Maani with an envelope full of cash to offer Jones.

And on the whole, he accused prosecutors of the “Dirksen Two Step.”

“They knew he wasn’t dirty,” Henderson insisted. “They knew he wouldn’t take it.”

The jury deliberated for about two hours Monday before heading home for the night without reaching a verdict. The panel is expected to resume deliberations Tuesday morning.

Click here to follow the trial.

  5 Comments      


Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Several bills proposed this legislative session seek to ban certain factors that insurance companies use to set fair and accurate insurance pricing for customers. The bills would ban the use of credit-based insurance scores, zip codes, age, and gender in insurance pricing.

An op-ed published recently in the Chicago Tribune explains why such bans could cause insurance rates to rise for the majority of consumers.

Case in point: When the use of credit was banned in Washington in 2021, more than 60 percent of Washington drivers saw an increase in their insurance premiums. Should similar legislation pass in Illinois, the majority of Illinoisans with better-than-average credit could see premium increases.

With stubbornly high inflation and high property taxes, now is not the time to pass bills that could end up hiking insurance premiums for most Illinoisans.

Click here to learn more.

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Open thread

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I’m betting the legislature’s only Vietnam War veteran Sen. Mark Walker will love this one. More importantly, Joe Cocker, Leon Russell, Bobby Keys and a cast of dozens of Mad Dogs and Englishmen just totally rock it out

I don’t care how much I gotta spend

So much joy. Love it.

Please keep your discussion Illinois-centric. Thanks.

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Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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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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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. ICYMI: Citing growing list of duties, Illinois’ Raoul seeks a $15M increase in AG budget. Capitol News Illinois

    - AG Kwame Raoul is asking state lawmakers for a $15 million increase in his General Revenue Fund budget for the upcoming year, saying his office needs a more “stable” system of funding as it takes on greater responsibilities.
    - Raoul’s proposed increase would bring next year’s general revenue fund budget to more than $120 million.
    - Since Trump was sworn into office for a second term on Jan. 20, Raoul has joined in filing 11 federal lawsuits challenging administration actions and has filed another 14 amicus briefs in support of other legal challenges.

* At 2:30 pm, Gov. Pritzker will announce grant awards to support downtown revitalization efforts across the state in Jacksonville. Click here to watch.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Crain’s | Counties sue Illinois over delinquent tax sales that Supreme Court calls unconstitutional: Officials in seven counties are suing Illinois, claiming the state’s property tax code requires them to run sales of delinquent property taxes in a way that the U.S. Supreme Court has deemed unconstitutional. It’s a tangly issue, but one that has considerable implications for the protection of Illinoisans’ property rights under the U.S. Constitution.

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois scrambles to boost locally produced farm products after Trump’s funding freeze: Illinois was approved for $43 million in federal reimbursement funds for two food programs designed to strengthen statewide food systems, but when the Trump administration took office it informed the stated, without explanation, that the remaining $17.8 million in federal agriculture reimbursements still owed to Illinois would cease after Jan. 19, 2025. Farmers like Ryder have asked the state to consider new models for subsidizing, planning and regulating agriculture to help them keep Illinoisans fed. Illinois lawmakers are trying to help by pushing two bills through the legislature.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCPT | Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton talks administration’s successes, standing up to Trump: As lawmakers prepare to vote on the fiscal year 2026 budget before the legislative session ends May 31, the lieutenant governor emphasized the importance of fiscal responsibility for the state of Illinois, pointing to the six consecutive balanced budgets Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D) has signed into law. “It becomes more challenging as we’re seeing chaos coming out of Washington,” Stratton said. “So our goal is to provide that steady leadership to make sure that we can keep taking care of the work of the state of Illinois, and keep caring for the people of our state who need it, and I think that’s my top priority right now.”

* Center Square | Illinois officials share concerns tariffs will impact state’s agricultural sector: Illinois soybean farmers sell much of their harvest to China. Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs said the Trump administration’s tariffs could be harmful to the state’s farming industry in general, but especially to soybean farmers. “Illinois farmers have seen how this played out before,” said Frerichs. “During Trump’s first term, his tariffs drove China to start buying soybeans from Brazil.”

*** Statewide ***

* Uptown People’s Law Center | Class Action Lawsuit Alleges Systematic Abuse of People with Mental Illness in Illinois Prisons: The lawsuit, Hilliard et al., v. Hughes, builds on legal violations previously raised in the 2007 Rasho v. Walker litigation (later renamed Daniels v. Jeffreys), which ended judicial oversight in 2022. IDOC abandoned all reform efforts made under that case after court supervision ended. Approximately 44% of all individuals in IDOC custody (approximately 12,817 people) are on the mental health caseload, with approximately one-third designated as having serious mental illness. Yet IDOC has stopped staffing mental health providers at shocking levels. As of Dec 2024, only 67 full time mental health positions filled out of 175 budgeted positions for nearly 13,000 people.

* NBC Chicago | Illinois anti-distracted driving program features new requirement for students: Under provisions of the “One Road, One Focus” campaign, student drivers in Illinois will be required to watch a video that state officials say “details the consequences of dangerous driving behaviors.” The new video requirement, along with other elements of the “One Road, One Focus” campaign, will be unveiled at a Tuesday press event in Chicago, the Illinois Secretary of State’s Office said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Federal prosecutor alleges Glenview medical journal is politically biased: The letter, signed by acting U.S. Attorney Edward Martin Jr. for the District of Columbia, was sent to Chest Journal on April 14. Martin, a Republican, echoes President Donald Trump’s baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen and defends the work of Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency. “It has been brought to my attention that more and more journals and publications, like Chest Journal are conceding that they are partisans in various scientific debates,” Martin wrote in the letter.

* Sun-Times | PPP fraud, perjury charges filed against Dolton cop: William Frederick Reed of Hazel Crest was charged Monday with providing false statements to the federal Small Business Administration, bankruptcy fraud, concealment or destruction of bankruptcy records, failure to file a tax return and perjury on tax returns. […] Prosecutors said Reed fraudulently applied for three PPP loans by falsifying the monthly payroll of his Off Duty Security private security business. They said he received $5,862 in June 2020, $5,862 in March 2021 and $5,860 in May 2021.

* Oak Park Journal | Finally official, Gertz wins 4th seat on OPRF school board: It’s been a rough month of April for Josh Gertz – waiting and wondering. Did he have enough votes to win a seat on the Oak Park and River Forest High School District 200 board of education? Turns out, he did. […] Schaafsma’s campaign netted 4,603 votes, according to unofficial results finally posted by the Cook County Clerk. While that was by far the most votes of any write- in candidate in suburban Cook County, is left Schaafsma well behind Gertz, who finished with 5,522 votes. The new board is expected to be installed May 1, according to current President Tom Cofsky.

* Daily Herald | Arlington Heights retains firm to vet Bears’ economic impact study: The contract approved unanimously by the village board is with Hunden Strategic Partners, a Chicago-based firm that’s formed a niche in advising the public and private sectors on destination real estate development projects, including mixed-use districts anchored by major league sports stadiums. The $200,000 lump sum fee — initially charged to the village — will be reimbursed by the Bears through an escrow account. That fund has $150,000 in it from the team’s initial deposit.

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Hearing set for Lorenz campaign complaint; local GOP omits $28K from new disclosure report: A new disclosure filed by the McLean County Republican Party failed to report the transfer of $28,000 to former Normal mayoral candidate Kathleen Lorenz – the same money that sparked a complaint against her with the State Board of Elections. […] McLean County GOP chair Dennis Grundler called it a “straightforward clerical error” that was “due to a brand-new volunteer treasurer using the online system for the first time.”

* WSPY | Conservative Group looks to form Kane DOGE: Deputy State Director Brian Costin of Americans for Prosperity‑Illinois will headline the program, outlining what organizers call a road map for creating a Department of Governmental Oversight and Ethics (DOGE) in Kane County and across the state. Costin, who oversees AFP‑Illinois policy initiatives such as the Prairie State Promise and its Watchdog Club, has earned awards for government‐transparency advocacy. THEA says his presentation will focus on “restoring integrity, transparency and accountability” and “eradicating corruption” in Illinois.

* WAND | Pre-existing grocery tax could help bring more money back into Decatur: “This is not a tax increase. It is just simply transferring who collects the tax,” said Councilwoman Lisa Gregory. […] If this ordinance does not take effect, the City of Decatur could lose $2.7 million in tax revenue. After further discussions and a vote, six members of the council were in favor of the ordinance, while one member opposed it.

* Advantage News | Former Macoupin S.A. employee accused of stealing from office: She is charged with one count of theft of government property less than $10,000, a Class 2 felony punishable by up to seven years in prison; as well as five counts of wire fraud and six counts of official misconduct, all Class 3 felonies punishable by up to five years in prison. Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office alleges Walker was employed by the Macoupin County State’s Attorney’s office when she transferred a total of $7,000 from the office’s drug asset forfeiture account between November 2023 and May 2024.

* Farm Progress | How U of I plans to boost large-animal vet numbers: Starting this spring, sophomores at the U of I with a demonstrated interest in food-animal care could apply for early acceptance into the Food Animal Veterinarian Early Acceptance Program. According to Anna Dilger, animal sciences professor, the veterinary medicine program will hold five of 160 class spots annually for these students.

*** Chicago ***

* Fox Chicago | Chicago Public Schools failed to protect student with disability from sexual assault: lawsuit: Casper emphasized that the student had an individual education plan because of his disability, which required that an adult be with him at all times. The victim is “virtually” non-verbal, so his ability to defend himself “is sadly non-existent,” Casper said. He has ADHD, Autism and requires full-time teacher assistant supervision, according to the lawsuit. The attorney alleged that the school failed to abide by that requirement of the student’s education plan.

* Crain’s | Baker Tilly merging with Moss Adams to create sixth-biggest U.S. accounting firm: Baker Tilly, one of Chicago’s largest accounting and consulting firms, has agreed to merge with Seattle-based Moss Adams in a deal creating the sixth-largest U.S. CPA firm. Private-equity firms Hellman & Friedman and Valeas Capital, which took stakes in Baker Tilly in February 2024, will boost their investments as part of the deal. The merger is expected to close in early June, the companies said in a statement. The combined firm will use the Baker Tilly name.

* AP | Four White Sox pitchers - all from Massachusetts - made their Fenway mound debuts within 24 hours: And within a 24-hour span, Sean Burke, Mike Vasil, Jared Shuster and Shane Smith each pitched off Fenway’s mound as major leaguers for the first time. “It’s awesome,’’ said Burke, a 25-year-old right-hander from Sutton who started Sunday in Chicago’s 8-4 victory. “These are three guys I knew even before the White Sox, too,” he said. “To kind of all meet here to be able to do it in the same weekend is really cool.”

* Chicago Reader | The Lager Beer Riot of 1855: The name blames the beer, but the uprising that rocked Chicago 170 years ago was born from a nativist, anti-Catholic movement that swept the U.S. in the 1850s. It was the culmination of years of clashes between an increasingly militant working class desperate to assert its autonomy under a new system of industrial capitalism and an increasingly terrified business class that sought new ways to exert its control.

*** National ***

* Post-Tribune | ‘Sin tax’ looms over Indiana budget as legislators face shortfall of more than $2 billion: “Everything is on the table right now. All topics have to be discussed at this point, and we’ll kind of see how it shakes out in the next 48 hours,” [budget architect Jeffery Thompson] said. Raising cigarette taxes by $2 a pack would result in an additional $800 million over the 2-year budget, Qaddoura said. Increasing alcohol and gaming taxes would raise $250 million over the biennium, he said.

* NBC | New images could change cancer diagnostics, but ICE detained the Harvard scientist who analyzes them: Dr. Leon Peshkin, a principal research scientist at Harvard’s Department of Systems Biology and Petrova’s manager and mentor, received a call from Customs and Border Protection on Feb. 16 after agents detained Petrova at Logan International Airport in Boston for failing to declare samples of frog embryos to be used in scientific research. […] [Petrova’s Lawyer, Gregory Romanovsky,] said that CBP typically imposes two penalties for such customs violations: the forfeiture of the items and a fine, usually around $500, and that “for a first-time violation, the fine is typically reduced to $50.” Instead, officials canceled Petrova’s J-1 scholar visa.

* AP | Harvard sues Trump administration to stop the freeze of more than $2 billion in grants: For the Trump administration, Harvard presents the first major hurdle in its attempt to force change at universities that Republicans say have become hotbeds of liberalism and antisemitism. A part of that is targeting research funding which has fueled scientific breakthroughs but has become an easy source of leverage for the Trump administration. In its letter earlier this month, the administration told Harvard to impose tougher discipline on protesters and to screen international students for those who are “hostile to the American values.”

* Nieman Lab | National Science Foundation cancels research grants related to misinformation and disinformation: Elon Musk’s DOGE — the questionably constitutional initiative that shares a name with a meme coin — celebrated that the NSF had cancelled at least 402 grants as part of the cuts. The cuts were made to awards “that are not aligned with NSF’s priorities,” according to an announcement on the NSF site, “including but not limited to those on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and misinformation/disinformation.”

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

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Apr 22, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Tuesday, Apr 22, 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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« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Progressive groups unveil menu of tax proposals
* Securing The Future: How Ironworkers Power Energy Storage With Precision And Skill
* Feds accuse Madigan of lying during testimony, ask judge to deny new trial
* Illinois Head Start Association, others sue Trump administration
* It’s just a bill
* Repeal IFPA Now
* Open thread
* Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Yesterday's stories

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