DCEO deputy director ousted after massive conflicts of interest alleged
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Illinois Executive Inspector General…
Lots more here.
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * WBEZ…
* It’s just a bill. The Pantagraph…
* CBS Chicago | Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias awards $1.3 million to school libraries: The grants, which are awarded each spring, support school library services for students from kindergarten through 12th grade, and include library books, e-books, audiobooks, periodicals, technology, programs and multilingual materials. Districts receive 88 cents per student through a state-determined formula based on enrollment at each school that has a qualified library. Chicago Public schools received more than $78,000 for libraries through his year’ grant. Other major recipients include Elgin School District U-46 which received more than $26,000; Rockford Public School District 205 which received over $21,000; Plainfield CCSD 202 which received just over $20,000. * Keith Whyte | Illinois could set a new gold standard for responsible gambling: As Illinois legislators debate legalizing iGaming, problem gambling concerns remain at the forefront. Opponents of online gambling, often traditional gambling companies motivated by competitive concerns, raise some understandable fears about potential increases in problem gambling. However, they should also acknowledge that account-based online wagering is driving a revolution in responsible gambling. […] With over 20 years of experience tackling gambling addiction and advising policymakers, I know a legal, regulated market is far safer than offshore platforms. Illinois should embrace the potential for setting a new gold standard in consumer protection and responsible gaming through a regulated, taxed market. * WSIL | Illinois State Police operations recover 243 stolen cars, arrests dozens across the state: The ISP received a $10 million grant for the first fiscal year and an additional $677,000 grant in June 2024 from the Illinois Secretary of State Illinois Vehicle Hijacking and Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention and Insurance Verification Council. From January to March 2025, ISP operations led to the recovery of 243 stolen or hijacked vehicles, 16 stolen vehicle arrests, and 18 hijacked vehicle arrests. They used a K9 officer 16 times and there were 39 air operations which targeted stolen or hijacked vehicles. They also seized seven firearms during these operations as well. * Daily Herald | The Tri-State, Route 53, the Kennedy, oh my — What to expect on this year’s road construction menu: As the Illinois Department of Transportation wraps up a seismic, three-year Kennedy redo, the agency is pivoting to an ambitious Route 53 fix. “This year, in addition to our smaller maintenance and improvement projects in the northwest suburbs, we are rehabilitating 9 miles along Illinois 53 from I-90 to Lake Cook Road,” IDOT District 1 Bureau Chief of Construction Jonathan Schumacher said. * Daily Herald | Niece of man killed by Carol Stream police gets pretrial diversion for threat: Dajanae Barnes, 23, of Carol Stream admitted April 17 to one count of threatening a public official, according to DuPage County court records. Under the terms of her plea deal, Barnes will enter a pretrial diversion program. If she completes it successfully by April 16, 2026, she will be allowed to withdraw her plea and prosecutors will dismiss the charge. […] During a detention hearing after her arrest, prosecutors told a judge Barnes said “I’ll blow this building up, watch when I get out. So take me to jail for saying that too.” * Evanston Now | NU to fund research paused by feds: In a statement, administrators wrote that the university has still not received a formal notice of the reported funding pause totaling $790 million, including “a significant portion of our federal research funding.” But on Thursday, administrators wrote that the university, “after consultation with the Board of Trustees, will fund research that is subject to stop-work orders or the federal funding freeze.” * Tribune | Construction of new Chicago Sky training facility in Bedford Park delayed into 2026 to accommodate expansion: The $38 million facility originally was expected to be completed in October 2025. The building is being constructed in partnership with the village of Bedford Park as part of the second phase of development at the Wintrust Sports Complex, which also will add two turf fields, a hotel, a gas station and two restaurants this year. After altering the original construction plans to expand the facility, the Sky and the village now anticipate that completion will be delayed several months. Despite the additions, the Sky told the Tribune they expect the facility to be available for training camp in April 2026. * Tribune | Niles Township High School District 219 cuts seven administrators in restructuring plan: Niles Township High School District 219’s Board of Education voted 4-1 at its April 7 meeting to cut seven administrator positions and create four assistant principal positions. The move followed Superintendent Tom Moore’s earlier announcement that the district has a greater percentage of administrators per student than surrounding districts, and a desire to be more efficient with taxpayer dollars. * Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson cracks the door open to city layoffs, service cuts: With a $1.12 billion budget shortfall and $3 billion more in federal funds on the chopping block, Mayor Brandon Johnson on Monday cracked the door open to the prospect of layoffs and service cuts that he has previously ruled out. “We will have to deal with the realities of the billions of dollars that are being threatened by the federal government. That’s a different scenario than we were under before,” Johnson said as he signed an executive order establishing a working group to advise him on ways to confront the city’s fiscal challenges. * Crain’s | Johnson creates budget working group to search for efficiencies and revenue: Hoping to get ahead of what’s anticipated to be an arduous 2026 budget cycle, Mayor Brandon Johnson is creating a working group to put forward plans to cut spending and raise revenue that have thus far not had political support during his nearly two years in office. It’s unlikely the group will identify solutions that are not already known or haven’t been put forward previously, but a set of policy ideas supported by a broad coalition, if they materialize, could lead to better buy-in from a City Council that has made life difficult for the first term mayor. * Crain’s | Congress calls on DePaul president to testify in antisemitism probe: Manuel will be joined by leaders from California Polytechnic State University (San Luis Obispo) and Haverford College as part of the the Republican-led committee’s probe of allegations of antisemitism on college campuses. In a letter sent to the Chicago college today, committee chairman Tim Walberg, a Republican congressman from Michigan, wrote: “Tragically, Committee oversight shows that antisemitism persists on college campuses, specifically at DePaul University.” * WTTW | Tonight You Can Look for the Lyrids, the Year’s First Meteor Shower. Here’s How to View in Chicago: The Lyrids will be active through Friday, but tonight is peak viewing, starting around midnight. Under dark skies, the best time to catch the meteors would be 3 a.m. to 4 a.m., but the moon will be rising and obscuring the dimmer Lyrids. So experts recommend either finding an object — such as a tree — to block the moon, keep the moon at your back, or head out while the moon is low on the horizon. * BND | Environmental group and metro-east coal plant agree to dismiss federal lawsuit : A lawsuit that alleged a metro-east coal plant operated without proper state documentation has been dismissed after the company and the environmental group reached an agreement this week. […] The Sierra Club staff said that no coal plant is above the law. “We are looking forward to now participating in that process to make sure the permit reflects the most stringent requirements to protect Illinois and Missouri citizens from pollution from this plant,” said Megan Wachspress, a staff attorney with the Illinois Sierra Club. * WSIU | SIU pioneers mental health response program for emergency calls: Thanks to a new grant-funded program, responders with specialized skills in mental health are available to assist when needed in emergency calls at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, de-escalating situations, improving outcomes and helping students stay in school, officials said. SIU’s Department of Public Safety, Counseling and Psychological Services and others have developed a collaborative response team, funded by an Illinois Board of Higher Education Mental Health Early Action on Campus Competitive Grant of $290,000. * WGLT | Central Illinois mental health providers say there are lots of barriers still for ketamine therapy despite positive results: Mental health providers in Central Illinois offering ketamine say it has changed patients’ lives, like Marie’s, for the better. Still, only a handful of clinics offer the service, and additional barriers — time commitment, cost, insurance — can prevent access for people who need the treatment most. * NPR Illinois | Springfield’s mayor announces a series of community meetings: Springfield Mayor Misty Buscher and her administration have announced a series of what are being called “departmental open houses” where residents can speak with City staff and ask questions. “This initiative is part of a broader push to increase transparency, provide consistent access to resources, and gain a deeper understanding of agency operations while learning about the community’s needs,” an announcement said. “These events will not only create direct, face-to-face communication but will also serve as a foundation for an ongoing community needs assessment to help guide future policies, services, and investments.” * WTTW | Walgreens Agrees to Pay $300M to Settle Opioid Lawsuit Claims: As part of a settlement with the U.S. government, Walgreens, one of the largest pharmacy chains in the country, has agreed to pay at least $300 million to settle claims it illegally filled millions of invalid opioid prescriptions. […] According to the feds, the settlement amount will jump another $50 million in the event Walgreens is sold, merged or transferred prior to 2032. * AP | 60,000 Americans to lose their rental assistance and risk eviction unless Congress acts: But the program, Emergency Housing Vouchers, is running out of money — and quickly. Funding is expected to be used up by the end of next year, according to a letter from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and obtained by The Associated Press. That would leave tens of thousands across the country scrambling to pay their rent. * The Atlantic | The scramble to save rural health care from DOGE: The reason wasn’t only because so many patients relied on Medicaid, which was currently being targeted by the Trump administration for $880 billion in cuts. Cahaba’s clinics also depended upon an array of more obscure federal grants of the sort that President Donald Trump’s adviser Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency had been summarily deleting before fully understanding the lives that would be upended in the real world. In the gray language of the federal bureaucracy, the funding that mattered most was from the Teaching Health Centers Graduate Medical Education Program—THCGME—and it was the reason the clinic in Perry County and others in some of the poorest corners of rural America had any doctors at all.
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Today’ number: 3
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the letter. WGN…
* HGOP Leader Tony McCombie…
I asked over the weekend what particular federal statute the state law is contradicting. Still waiting. * Fox News…
* Alton Telegraph…
* You’d never know it to look at the breathless coverage, but the numbers are infinitesimally small…
Just three people and yet Wilhour wants all public schools in the state to lose their federal funding.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Update to today’s edition
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Closing arguments underway in Sen. Emil Jones III bribery trial
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers were briefed on the trial this morning. Last week, Sen. Emil Jones III testified in his own defense. The Tribune…
* WGN…
* Sun-Times…
* More on Jones’ testimony from Capitol News Illinois’ Hannah Meisel…
* Closing arguments are underway at the Dirksen US Courthouse. Tribune…
* Assistant U.S. Attorney Tiffany Ardam is up first. Sun-Times Federal Courts reporter Jon Seidel is in the courtroom… * More on Jones’ testimony from last Thursday. Tribune…
* Jones denied he told the feds he made a deal with Maani. The Tribune’s Jason Meisner… * Back to today… * Tribune…
* More from Seidel…
Click here to follow the trial.
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Disappearing the lede
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s…
* From the actual press release…
Ouch.
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Today’s quotable
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Click here for the study. Tribune…
More here.
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Nursing Home Workers Call For Accountability Outside Facility With History Of Chronic Understaffing
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller [The following is a paid advertisement.] Last Thursday, nursing home workers lifted up the findings in a new report first released in the blue room on April 8th, in a press conference outside of Landmark at 95th, a facility with a well-documented track record of understaffing. Formerly Southpoint Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, the newly renamed facility is a case in point illustrating the ongoing short staffing crisis in Illinois nursing homes. Landmark’s numerous inspection reports demonstrate the impact of its record of providing only 60% of the care hours that residents need. In the last three years, Landmark accrued an astounding $745,000 in fines for failing to provide adequate care. State Representative Justin Slaughter, co-sponsor of HB2507, spoke outside the facility on the need for public dollars to be properly invested in improving resident care. “It’s important that we protect our nursing home workers. That’s why I’m on the front lines pushing and advocating for a bill that protects our staffing levels as well as the quality of care.” Landmark CNA Sharletta Jeffrey described the challenges of working short staffed. “I work in the dementia unit…some of our residents will get up and just wander off…I can’t always watch them closely. It’s just not possible when you’re taking care of so many people.” It’s past time to end chronic understaffing for nursing home patients. Support HB2507 to ensure public funding goes to care and not to profit because Care Can’t Wait.
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It’s just a bill
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Tribune…
* Subscribers were already in the know. Daily Southtown…
* Tribune…
* WIFR…
Both bills have failed to advance in committee. However, SB1527’s deadline has been extended to May 9. * Sen. Rachel Ventura…
* Rep. Patrick Sheehan…
* WAND…
* WCIA…
* WTVO…
* Daily Herald…
* Rep. Lisa Davis…
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IMA’s Denzler on how state can improve its business climate
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * I asked Mark Denzler with the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association to send me his thoughts on what he thinks the state needs to do on the economic development front…
Thoughts?
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Powering The Future: Ironworkers’ Critical Role In Energy Storage Construction
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Ironworkers are essential to Illinois’ clean energy future, bringing unmatched skill and precision to energy storage construction. With major investments in renewable energy from Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly, expertly trained union ironworkers are driving progress—one weld and rebar tie at a time. On battery storage sites across the state, ironworkers are responsible for installing the structural backbone of these critical facilities. They lay and tie rebar with the highest level of craftsmanship to reinforce foundations capable of supporting massive battery systems. Their precise welding ensures the strength and stability of steel frameworks that protect and support advanced energy storage infrastructure. These aren’t just construction tasks—they’re high-skill, high-impact jobs performed by union professionals trained to meet the demands of cutting-edge energy projects. As Illinois expands its energy storage capacity to meet the goals of the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), ironworkers are not only building physical structures—they’re laying the groundwork for a more sustainable and resilient energy grid. By prioritizing union labor in renewable energy projects, Illinois is investing in both quality and equity. Our clean energy future is stronger, safer, and more secure thanks to the expert work of union ironworkers who are building it from the ground up.
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ARDC hearing board recommends 60-day law license suspension for Tom DeVore
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Heh… * Tribune…
* ARDC…
More on that bankruptcy issue is here.
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When RETAIL Succeeds, Illinois Succeeds
Monday, Apr 21, 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 the Boyer family in Quincy enrich our economy and strengthen our communities. We Are Retail and IRMA showcase the retailers who make Illinois work.
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Open thread
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * We’re back from break! What’s been going on in your part of Illinois?…
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Illinois could see cuts to services for disabled residents. Our Quad Cities…
- While the state says the change is about efficiency and includes a 50-cent hourly pay increase, advocates argue that the reduction in hours would have a more significant negative impact. - The Illinois Department of Human Services says a system exists to fairly distribute the remaining hours. * Related stories…
∙ Journal Courier: Intellectual and developmental disability services brace for potential Medicaid cuts * WTTW | Segregation, Restraints and Mace: Lawsuit Alleges Mental Illness Met With Punishment in Illinois Prisons: After making an attempt on his life while incarcerated, Irving Madden alleges that an officer transporting him to the hospital joked that he “didn’t do it right.” […] Madden’s allegations are part of a class action lawsuit filed Wednesday claiming the Illinois Department of Corrections has systematically failed to provide adequate mental health treatment to those incarcerated. Uptown People’s Law Center and Equip for Equality filed suit against IDOC Director Latoya Hughes on behalf of the nearly 13,000 people with mental illness in the state’s prisons — approximately 44% of the population. * Sun-Times | Nearly 1 in 4 out-of-state abortion patients come to Illinois, new report finds: Illinois provided 23% of all abortions for people traveling across state lines for care in 2024, more than anywhere else in the U.S., according to the report from the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization that supports abortion rights. […] Last year, 35,000 abortions were provided to out-of-state residents in Illinois, representing 39% of all abortions performed in the state. * Capitol News Illinois | Jones testifies that FBI asked him to wear a wire on hospital CEO, other lawmakers: The senator took the witness stand for a third day Thursday in his trial over alleged bribes he agreed to take from a red-light camera entrepreneur-turned-FBI witness in exchange for limiting legislation he had proposed that worried the red-light camera industry — and lying to agents about it. Not too long into questioning from his own attorney, Jones’ testimony was halted for more than an hour after he named Tim Egan, the CEO of Chicago’s Roseland Hospital in Jones’ South Side District, as someone the feds wanted him to help investigate. * Subscribers know more. Crain’s | Transit agencies launch ad blitz asking riders for backup in Springfield: The Regional Transportation Authority rolled out its Save Transit Now campaign yesterday with ads on radio, television and social media platforms, as well as billboards and signs on trains, buses and transit shelters. Metra, the Chicago Transit Authority, and Pace — which provide rail and bus service in the city and suburbs — face a funding shortfall or “transit cliff” of $771 million a year when federal pandemic-relief funding dries up next year. * AG Kwame Raoul | Law firms’ capitulation to Trump harms Illinoisans: The capitulation to these unlawful threats inflicts harm on Illinoisans, our judicial system and the rule of law. A just and well-functioning judicial system depends on the willingness of lawyers to take on difficult cases or unpopular clients without retribution by their government. Without that representation, courts will be denied a full presentation of all arguments necessary to resolve a case in an informed and independent manner. * WBEZ | New medical license pathway for international doctors could alleviate Illinois shortage: Before moving to Chicago from Russia, Dr. Filipp Prikolab had a thriving medical practice. […] He is one of thousands of Illinoisans with an international medical degree. And despite receiving similar training as students at American medical schools and residency programs, the pathway to becoming a licensed doctor for Prikolab and his peers is difficult and can take years. But that’s all changing thanks to a law that went into effect this year in Illinois to make it easier for people like Prikolab to get their state medical license. * Jim Dey | Ammons on the injured but functional list: Two area Illinois House members — Democrats Carol Ammons of Urbana and Sue Scherer of Decatur — are on the disabled list. Ammons, an Urbana Democrat, is using a wheelchair and crutches to get around because she suffered a torn meniscus, according to office spokesman Grant Chassy. Medical experts say that, like many knee injuries, a meniscus tear is a painful, debilitating and common injury often associated with athletics. The meniscus is described as “a piece of cartilage in your knee that cushions and stabilizes the joint, acting as a shock absorber to protect the bones from wear and tear.” * NPR Illinois | Former Illinois Ag Director Chuck Hartke has died: A longtime lawmaker and former Illinois Department of Agriculture Director has died. Charles “Chuck” Hartke died Sunday at St. John’s Hospital in Springfield. He was 80. A farmer, Hartke was the Agriculture Director from 2003 to 2008. The Department issued a statement Monday that said “his leadership, vision, and commitment to the ag community left a lasting mark on our state.” While at the helm of the agency, Illinois created a statewide veterinary emergency response team to identify and contain animal disease outbreaks. He was also able to increase corporate sponsorship at the Illinois State Fair. * IDES | Illinois Payroll Jobs Climb to Record High: The Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) announced today that nonfarm payrolls increased +14,800 (+0.2%) over-the-month to a record high of 6,172,300 in March. The previous record was set in December 2024, with 6,161,000 jobs. Additionally, the February monthly change in payrolls was revised from the preliminary report of -6,500 to +900. The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.8 percent in March, while the revised unemployment rate was 4.8 percent, unchanged from the preliminary February unemployment rate. The March payroll jobs estimate and unemployment rate reflect activity for the week including the 12th. * PJ Star | Film and TV productions have spent over $650M in Illinois over the past year. Here’s why: Film and TV producers have spent over $650 million in Illinois over the past year, thanks to a tax credit shepherded by a Peoria-based state representative. Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth, D-Peoria, who serves as the assistant majority leader in the Illinois House, said in a news release Friday that the recently expanded Film Production Tax Credit helped provide $653 million in film production expenditures and $351 million in estimated wages to the state last year. Gordon-Booth praised the work done by House Democrats in preserving the tax credit and providing front-facing jobs and money to Illinois. * Chalkbeat Chicago | Glitch with ACT prevented 11,000 Illinois students from finishing the test: The students who could not finish the test on April 8, the first day of testing, have to retake the exam within the testing window, which ends May 2. The testing window between April 8 and May 2 is to ensure students fulfill the state’s graduation and accountability requirements. The hiccup made for a rocky start to the state’s shift back to the ACT as the test required to graduate from high school. Illinois used the ACT for 15 years before switching to the College Board’s SAT in 2016. The problem delayed the start of the exam for thousands of other students. But state education officials and the company that administers the ACT said there have been no issues with testing since April 8. * Capitol News Illinois | Social Security rescinding its plan to end phone-based filing called a win for Illinois seniors: In Illinois, about 2.3 million people receive some form of Social Security benefits. More than 40% of Illinois residents age 65 or older rely on Social Security for at least half of their income, while around 20% rely on it for at least 90% of their income, according to AARP. The SSA was planning to end phone-based claims as an anti-fraud measure, saying the move would strengthen fraud prevention by forcing individuals to go online or visit local field offices to prove their identities and file for benefits. * Frank Manzo IV | Project Labor Agreements deliver on policymakers’ promises to taxpayers and workers: With tariffs, market volatility, and mass government layoffs dominating headlines lately, much of our national economic discourse has centered around whether public policies and investments are maximizing value for taxpayers and opportunities for American workers. Here in Illinois, tens of billions of dollars have been invested over recent years to repair and modernize the roads, bridges, buildings, parks, and critical infrastructure that we rely on. These investments offer a great opportunity to assess whether specific policies are delivering. * Eye On Illinois | How was voter turnout in your local elections?: Perhaps races in your community weren’t decided by fewer people than attend high school football games. Maybe a margin of 122 makes you think “my one vote still wouldn’t have mattered.” But trust these officials understand very well how few citizens actually participate. They’ve conducted public meetings without a single interested spectator or speaker. They know the likely low turnout percentages. As such, they realize they’re directly accountable to the people who do show up, initiate communication and reliably vote. They know those few active citizens can mobilize others to action. Think not in terms of threat or intimidation, but influence and electoral consequence. * The Triibe | Pritzker, Johnson applaud Peacekeepers violence prevention program as crime drops in Chicago: On Thursday, Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson applauded a new Northwestern University study that found the Peacekeepers Program led to a 41% reduction in victimizations within violence “hotspots” in 2023 to 2024 compared to the previous two-year period. Peacekeeper community areas saw a 31% decrease in shooting victimizations from 2023 to 2024 compared to the previous two-year period, according to the study. Additionally, the study also found that 68% of the conflict mediations conducted by Peacekeepers were “successfully resolved.” * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson reports bigger fundraising numbers, but so do potential opponents: Mayor Brandon Johnson reported raising nearly $300,000 in the first three months of the year, a sizable chunk of which came from gambling interests that want Chicago to legalize sweepstakes machines, as well as some longtime friends and political allies. The mayor’s political haul means he has about $1.16 million in the bank at the near-halfway point of his first term in office, which is about how much ex-Mayor Lori Lightfoot had at the same juncture, state campaign records show. While Johnson’s fundraising appeared relatively healthy, so too were the efforts of other Chicago politicians, including some potentially eyeing a bid to take on Johnson for mayor in 2027. * WBEZ | Chicago’s robbery surge is over: From September 2021 to June 2024, almost every month saw a year-over-year robbery increase, a WBEZ analysis of city data has found. Robberies peaked at 1,213 in August 2023. In July of last year, however, the numbers started to plummet. Every month since then has had a double-digit drop in robberies from the previous year. The first three months of 2025 had the fewest robberies of any quarter in decades. * Block Club Chicago | Bowen HS Science Program Gets $10K From PsiQuantum, A South Works Campus Tenant: The $10,000 donation will purchase virtual reality equipment, robotics, rockets, drones and other technology to “enable hands-on learning” in Bowen’s engineering, math and science classes, PsiQuantum executive Mo Green said. […] PsiQuantum’s donation is about four times the average annual budget for Bowen’s science department, allowing teachers to “go outside the parameters of the budgets they’re normally used to [and] plan something phenomenal for the kids,” principal Priscilla Horton said. * Block Club | City Sues Englewood Junkyard Property Owner, Mechanic Living On Lots: City officials are “seeking maximum penalties and an injunction” against Paul Cawley, Achadboy Properties, Jerry Bell and Melvin Woods for the vacant lots harboring cars at 7150-52 S. Normal Blvd., a spokesperson for the city’s Law Department said in an email Monday. […] The city’s lawsuit comes days after Block Club Chicago published an investigation on the illegal junkyard in Englewood, highlighting the city’s failure to clear the lots of cars, bikes and boats after nearly a decade of neighbors complaining and Cawley blowing off city fines. * WBEZ | Chicago street festivals sound alarm on rising costs, including security: The coalition called “Save Our Street Fests,” which went public with its concerns Friday, also includes nonprofit street festivals such as Wicker Park Fest, Northalsted Market Days, Lincoln Square Ravenswood Apple Fest and several others. The group says that the cost of producing a street festival in Chicago has “skyrocketed,” from fees for security, entertainment, staffing and insurance to expenses for portable restrooms. At the same time, donations from the public at festival gates have dropped dramatically. Pamela Maass, executive director of the Wicker Park Bucktown Chamber of Commerce, said there’s often confusion over how the events are funded and why street festivals ask for a donation at the entrance, while downtown city-run events, like Blues Fest, do not. * WTTW | Chicago Park District CEO Carlos Ramirez-Rosa on Riot Fest, Homeless Encampments and Top Priorities: On Riot Fest: “For the first time ever, we’re going to do a pre-event walk-through with community advocates. The Park District always does a walk-through with the festival organizers. We’re going to invite the community along so we can have greater accountability, so we can make sure that the event is keeping the park up to the same level that they found it at. The Park District previously created a 10% give-back policy where 10% of the money generated from an event would go back into the local park.” * Sun-Times | WGN interested in airing Chicago Sports Network broadcasts, confident a deal can work: The sides would have to sort out a lot of details, such as how many games would be included and who would sell advertising for them. Though WGN isn’t positioned to pay a substantial rights fee — the teams would have to treat it as a marketing expense — it could deliver the teams their largest TV audience since they launched CHSN in October. * Tribune | With Cook County Jail’s population again on the rise, officials weigh the reasons: In an internal report obtained by the Tribune via a public records request, the Cook County sheriff’s office found that the average daily jail population has risen by about 12% in recent months, reaching its highest level in eight months at the end of March. The report also found sharp increases in detention for some charge types for which State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke has implemented policy changes. […] Sheriff Tom Dart, in an interview with the Tribune, made clear that he supports policies that keep high-risk defendants incarcerated, but said he is concerned about how long inmates remain in jail as court cases move sluggishly through the system. * Tribune | Bankruptcies at suburban senior homes collectively cost residents millions of dollars in entrance fees: A recent bankruptcy filing by a network of senior living facilities in Illinois and Indiana highlights the financial risk posed to residents who pay large entry fees to continuing care retirement communities, but get limited government protections, senior advocates say. In February, a Lutheran not-for-profit that operates several long-term care facilities — including Lutheran Home in Arlington Heights — filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, seeking to continue operations while shedding debt. The latest bankruptcy follows a Chapter 11 filing in 2023 by Schaumburg’s Friendship Village, now called Encore Village. The Oaks at Bartlett also filed for bankruptcy in 2011 and 2019, went into receivership in 2024 and was sold. * NBC Chicago | Longtime Skokie mayor who fought antisemitism retires, cites Trump worries: After more than 40 years of public service, Skokie Mayor George Van Dusen is packing up his office and embarking on a new adventure: retirement. In an interview with NBC Chicago, he shared the highs and lows of his career, including his work to combat antisemitism and promote tolerance. […] Another tense time came the following year when the Klu Klux Klan came to Skokie. Nowadays, a big challenge has been combating the surge in antisemitism following the Hamas attack on Oct. 7, 2023. “It’s hard to describe the pain that Jewish people feel. I think for many of us, it was very unexpected,” Van Dusen said. * Sun-Times | Senate contenders share face time with Cook County Democrats ahead of Durbin decision: Krishnamoorthi spent about 45 minutes shaking hands during a lunchtime break. After a bit of scurrying from reporters, the congressman chose his words carefully. Both Krishnamoorthi and Stratton are widely seen as potential Senate candidates should Durbin decide to retire. But with that decision still not public, the two tried to pay respect to the veteran senator while making sure to schmooze with high-profile Democrats. * Daily Herald | Lisle trustee candidates separated by single vote, while Queen Bee school board race ends in a tie: The race for the fourth and final available school board seat in Queen Bee Elementary District 16 has ended in a tie, according to results that are technically still unofficial. Merima Biacan and William Staunton each received 895 votes. Marjorie Fierro, the top-vote getter, finished with 1,044. “For most of the people, the race was done on the first or the second of April. For me, it’s still not done,” Biacan said, adding that “it was kind of nerve-wracking to live through this.” * Daily Herald | Should Cook County dissolve its four suburban mosquito abatement districts?: Some Cook County Board members are requesting closer scrutiny of the mosquito districts following an investigation by the county’s inspector general that resulted in calls for members of the appointed oversight board at one district to resign. “It would seem best to me to consolidate them,” said 12th District County Board Commissioner Bridget Degnen. “I think it’s more a patchwork now and having it consolidated under the county would provide a streamlined approach with consistent services throughout all of Cook County.” * Tribune | Will County Board approves solar projects near Monee, Peotone: The Will County Board voted Thursday to approve two new solar projects for the south suburbs. The board voted 13 to 9 to approve TurningPoint Energy’s request to build a 3.4-megawatt commercial solar energy facility on about 35 vacant acres near the northeast corner of La Grange Road and West Monee-Manhattan Road in Monee. TurningPoint has been granted special use permits for eight projects in Will County near Crete, Monee, Peotone and Joliet, county documents said. * Sun-Times | Former Glenwood cemetery worker charged with stealing $100K in funeral fees: Latrecia Marshall-Parris, 48, handled funeral plans and assisted with headstone payments, which often were made in cash, at Mount Glenwood Memory Gardens in south suburban Glenwood, the Cook County sheriff’s office and court documents said. She took cash from families but deposited lesser amounts into the cemetery’s accounts and pocketed the difference, the sheriff’s office alleges. Marshall-Parris is accused of stealing more than $114,200 from 49 payments made between April 2022 and August 2023. * Sun-Times | Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library launched in Lake County to inspire young readers: The Imagination Library isn’t a brick-and-mortar project but a collaborative. Each month, a high-quality, age-appropriate book is mailed to children’s homes at no cost to participating families. The books are meant to foster early learning skills, help close literacy gaps and promote educational equity, supporters say. * BND | As he prepares for final meeting, O’Fallon mayor reflects on decades of service: As he looks back on what the city has achieved in eight years, he thanked the city staff and council for working together on growth and concern for tax dollars. “Our staff is second to none. Our council may disagree, but they come together, by and large, to get things done for the residents,” he said. * WGLT | 2 public forums scheduled on shelter village plan in Bloomington: The City of Bloomington has announced two forums have been scheduled to collect public input on a proposed cabin village to serve the unhoused. An official with Bloomington-based Home Sweet Home Ministries said in February the agency wants to build a 50-bed non-congregant village near Main Street and Oakland Avenue south of downtown to help address the overflow of unhoused residents who are unable to stay in either of Bloomington’s homeless shelters. * WGLT | McLean County working to become fully ADA compliant online: The McLean County Board heard an update on the effort during its meeting on Thursday, led by Craig Nelson, the county’s chief information officer, and digital media director Dan Leary. The ADA does not specifically address online accessibility, but the Department of Justice published a rule in 2024 setting technical requirements for accessibility on state and local government websites and social media. Earlier this year, the DOJ published a resource document with more information to explain how to maintain compliance that can help avoid lawsuits. * CBS Chicago | 4 killed when small plane hits powerlines and crashes in central Illinois: The crash occurred at around 10:15 a.m. local time on County Line Road in Trilla, Illinois, about three miles south of Mattoon in Coles County, according to Illinois State Police and the Coles County Sheriff’s Office. Trilla is about 200 miles south of Chicago. The National Transportation Safety Board said a Cessna 180 single-engine plane struck powerlines and crashed into a field. * PJ Star | How a robot does the heavy lifting marking athletic fields across the Peoria area: There is an artist named Tank whose canvas is a growing number of athletic fields in the Peoria area, painting with machine-like precision. That’s fitting, because it’s a robot. Turf Tank is a programmable robot on four wheels that looks like a tiny tank. Loaded with a reservoir of paint, and guided by computer, it works unsupervised, painting the lines on soccer, football, baseball, lacrosse and other athletic fields. * AP | Pope Francis, first Latin American pontiff who ministered with a charming, humble style, dies at 88: Bells tolled in church towers across Rome after the announcement, which was read out by Cardinal Kevin Farrell from the chapel of the Domus Santa Marta, where Francis lived. “At 7:35 this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the home of the Father. His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and of his Church,” said Farrell, the Vatican camerlengo, who takes charge after a pontiff’s death. * CNN | DHL to suspend global shipments of over $800 to US consumers: DHL blamed the halt on new US customs rules which require formal entry processing on all shipments worth over $800. The minimum had been $2,500 until a change on April 5. DHL said business-to-business shipments would not be suspended but could face delays. Shipments under $800 to either businesses or consumers were not affected by the changes. * Bloomberg | How Did This Suburb Figure Out Mass Transit?: Brampton, Ontario, is a large industrial suburb of Toronto, indistinguishable from many across North America. Six-lane-wide arterial roads lined with strip malls course through residential developments full of detached single-family homes with garages. The city is also home to many factories and distribution centers — massive warehouses with blank walls surrounded by parking lots. Yet, with a population of about 700,000, Brampton has 226,500 bus riders on an average weekday. Compare that to Orange County, California, with 3.2 million people and 112,000 daily bus riders. Orange County has a similar suburban built form, and its population density in core areas like Santa Ana is higher than that of Brampton. Comparison with other areas is just as stark: Columbus, Ohio, with about 900,000 residents, has only 34,100 bus riders per day; the Pace bus network, serving 5.7 million residents of suburban Chicago, averages 56,900 riders per day.
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Monday, Apr 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Monday, Apr 21, 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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Reader comments closed for spring break
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * The road goes on forever, and the party never ends… She’s runnin’ right behind him, reaching for his hand
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The DC ‘chaos’ vs. the state budget
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * We’re taking next week off, so here’s my weekly syndicated newspaper column in advance…
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* WBEZ…
* Tribune | Illinois House Democrats fail to garner votes for convicted youth resentencing bill: n a surprising loss for criminal justice reform advocates, Democrats on Thursday were unable to pass legislation providing more resentencing options for people in prison convicted of committing crimes when they were under 21. The bill not only was a setback for advocates but also underscored a political divide between progressives and moderates within the Democratic Party, which has a supermajority in the House. The measure sponsored by Chicago Democratic state Rep. Theresa Mah was defeated late Thursday 51-49 — 11 votes short of passage as several Democrats, including from the suburbs and downstate, either voted against the bill or did not vote at all. * Sun-Times | ‘I want to hang out with u’: Sen. Emil Jones III swapped texts with ex-intern headed to strip club: The intern, Christopher Katz, took the witness stand Friday morning in Jones’ trial. Though Katz initially downplayed his relationship with Jones, jurors saw text messages between the two that went late into that night. […] Prosecutors say Jones agreed to protect Maani in the Illinois Senate in exchange for $5,000 and a job for Katz. Jones had filed a bill in February 2019 that could have prompted a statewide study of red-light cameras, and Maani saw it as bad for business. * WTVO | Illinois may raise the minimum age a minor can be arrested: * WTVO | Illinois may ban police from using raw cannabis odor as cause for car searches: In September 2024, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that the smell of burnt cannabis was not cause enough for law enforcement to search a person’s vehicle, but another ruling said the smell of raw cannabis was. “A recent state Supreme Court ruling gave a conflicting directive between raw and burnt cannabis, shifting a huge burden to law enforcement to know the difference,” said Sen. Rachel Ventura (D-Joliet). “This bill aims to bring clarity by directing law enforcement to consider all factors — not just odor — in deciding if the law has been broken.” * WAND | Illinois House passes proposal requiring Arab American history for elementary, high school students: The plan requires school districts to include a unit of Arab American history curriculum in their social studies classes starting with the 2026-2027 school year. This proposal calls for instruction about the history of Arab Americans in Illinois and the Midwest as well as the contributions of Arab Americans from the 19th century onward. * WAND | House passes Ammons bill allowing people leaving prison to receive financial aid for college: Rep. Carol Ammons (D-Urbana) said recent Prison Policy data show nearly 70% of incarcerated people have interest in getting a college degree, but only 3% have post-high school education. Her proposal would allow these prospective college students to receive MAP grant funding as they leave the Illinois Department of Corrections. * WGLT | State Rep. Regan Deering thinks USDA should move to Central Illinois: U.S. Department of Agriculture [USDA] offices would move from Washington, D.C. to Central Illinois under a long shot proposal from a lawmaker who represents parts of Bloomington-Normal. Republican state Rep. Regan Deering of Decatur said the move would provide a big economic boost to the region and improve coordination between farmers and agribusiness leaders. * The Atlantic | The Problem With Abe Lincoln’s Face: Looking at a picture of Abraham Lincoln in October 1860, the 11-year-old Grace Bedell claimed to have solved the problem of Lincoln’s face and wrote him a letter to tell him about it. The presidential candidate was well aware of the problem. As he came into public view in 1860, jokes about Lincoln’s appearance abounded. A popular anti-Lincoln song imagined his supporters begging not to have his picture shown. Bedell, of Westfield, New York, offered a solution: Lincoln should grow a beard. “If you will let your whiskers grow,” she wrote, “you would look a great deal better for your face is so thin.” * Crain’s | Kirkland & Ellis among latest batch of firms to strike deals with Trump: A cluster of large law firms — including three with ties to Chicago — have struck deals with the White House that would prevent restrictions on their business by promising to do roughly $600 million of pro bono work approved by the Trump administration. The agreements announced today with Kirkland & Ellis, Latham & Watkins, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, and A&O Shearman contemplate about $125 million worth of pro bono legal services for each firm. * Tribune | City Council blocks $1.25 million settlement for Dexter Reed’s family: Aldermen voted down a $1.25 million settlement Friday for the family of Dexter Reed, the man shot and killed by police in a Humboldt Park gunfight last year. The deal for the family of the man who shot at police first and wounded an officer during a botched traffic stop sparked fierce debate before aldermen blocked it in a 12-to-15 Finance Committee vote. Proponents of the settlement argued it was sure to save the city millions by avoiding expensive legal costs, but opponents asserted it would send a dangerous message. * WTTW | Pay Man Who Lost Both Legs After Being Struck by Driver Being Chased by Police $32M, City Lawyers Recommend: Taxpayers should pay $32 million to the family of a St. Louis man who was struck by a driver being chased by Chicago police and lost both legs, city lawyers recommended, the latest massive settlement prompted by a police pursuit that violated department policy. The City Council’s Finance Committee on Friday is set to consider the proposed settlement, which calls for taxpayers to pay $20 million and the city’s insurance company to pay $12 million. A final vote of the City Council could come April 16. * Sun-Times | Ald. Pat Dowell agrees to pay fines for federal election law violations tied to failed 2022 Congress bid: Dowell’s congressional campaign failed to report in-kind political contributions, didn’t properly disclose campaign spending and illegally received and spent money from her previously abandoned Illinois secretary of state campaign committee, the bipartisan FEC’s four commissioners unanimously ruled. Dowell (3rd) agreed to pay a $7,000 fine and acknowledged that her congressional committee violated several portions of the Federal Election Campaign Act, FEC documents show. She also agreed to “cease and desist from violating” the law in the future. * Sun-Times | Cabrini-Green investor departures force CHA to regroup on Near North development site: El Paso, Texas-based Hunt controlled the partnership and withdrew from the deal last August, the agency said in a February filing in federal court. “The developer could not get sufficient funds,” said Ald. Walter Burnett Jr., whose 27th ward includes the former Cabrini region. “I just hope we can start getting this thing going soon.” * Block Club Chicago | Demolition Underway To Make Room For Red Line Extension, Officials Say: The $5.7 billion, 5.6-mile Red Line Extension project would move the south end of the Red Line from 95th Street to 130th Street. The CTA plans to build stations at 103rd and 111th streets near Eggleston Avenue, at Michigan Avenue near 116th Street and at 130th Street near the Altgeld Gardens public housing project. Officials with the CTA and contractor Walsh-VINCI Transit Community Partners updated neighbors on the project Thursday during a Meet the Contractor session at St. John Missionary Baptist Church, 211 E. 115th St. in Roseland. * WBEZ | Congressional committee investigating Northwestern withdraws demand for records: A Congressional committee that was investigating Northwestern University’s legal clinics for their alleged “progressive-left political advocacy” is backing down from an information demand that included lists of funders, budgets and personnel files. Last month the Committee on Education and the Workforce sent a letter to Northwestern saying it was investigating the law school’s use of its “taxpayer-supported institutional resources” and giving the school until 11 a.m. Thursday to comply with its information requests. Two clinic leaders sued to prevent Northwestern from turning over the records. * Tribune | New Oak Park library director eyes ‘healing work’ amid DEI dustup: A little more than a year after their controversial firing of their previous executive director the Oak Park Library Board has found a replacement. […] One issue he will have to face is whether to reestablish a director of diversity, equity and inclusion position. Dixon’s cuts in that area generated fierce opposition from some library staff and some in the community. Three of the four newly elected library board members made DEI a cornerstone of their campaign. * Crain’s | TreeHouse laying off 129 workers at South Beloit facility: TreeHouse Foods is laying off 129 workers at its South Beloit facility as part of a company-wide effort to cut costs. The Oak Brook-based company filed a WARN notice on March 28 disclosing the staff reduction at the northwest Illinois warehouse. The company also announced yesterday it will lay off off 150 workers in a reorganization of its corporate functions, according to a news release. TreeHouse did not clarify if the South Beloit layoffs are included in the larger cuts. * Daily Southtown | Harvey church, resident file federal lawsuit accusing city of overcharging for water use: A Harvey church, its pastor and a resident filed a federal class action lawsuit accusing the city of fraudulently overcharging property owners for water by sending out inflated bills without reading meters. The suit, filed March 27, claims the city of Harvey and top officials — including Mayor Christopher Clark, Public Works Superintendent Richard Seput and City Administrator Corean Davis — knowingly billed residents and businesses for estimated water use, often far above actual consumption. * Crain’s | Empty former Aon campus sold at 96% discount: A Texas real estate firm has picked up a vacant 31-acre former Aon office property in north suburban Lincolnshire for a staggering 96% less than it traded for in 2012. In one of the most extreme examples of value decimation across the vacancy-plagued suburban office market, a venture of Fort Worth, Texas-based Woodcrest Capital earlier this month paid about $6.2 million for the 818,686-square-foot complex at 4 Overlook Point, according to Lake County property records. The property in the heart of the 330-acre Lincolnshire Corporate Center campus was the longtime home of insurance giant Aon, whose lease for the entire complex expired at the end of last year. * Sun-Times | Highwood murals help bring healing after Highland Park parade shooting: Walking Highwood streets earlier this month, Reich blinked back tears as she admired the walls. The festival had such a profound impact on her that she and her fiance, Chris “KOZ” Kozloff, are looking to move back. Kozloff is co-owner of Silvertuna Studios production company. “I know how much everyone has gone through there,” Reich says. “Our artists painted their hearts out for us, and their work shows how public art heals by bringing us together.” * BND | Closed Illinois nursing home was cited for deaths, sewage backup, mice: A local nursing home has closed after losing public funding because of substandard care and the conditions inside its building. Before the closure this month, regulators cited Well Care Home of Maryville for a preventable resident death and other injuries, a sewage backup, rodent infestation and more issues uncovered during inspections between November 2024 and March 2025. * WTVO | Former deputy chief launches campaign for Winnebago County Sheriff: Former Winnebago County Deputy Chief Dom Barcellona has announced that he is running to be the next Winnebago County Sheriff on Thursday. Barcelona has over 27 years of law enforcement experience with the Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office. He retired as deputy chief in 2023. The former deputy said he hopes to be more transparent with the public, among other changes. * PJ Star | ICC board ‘very concerned’ about closure of on-campus housing, lack of communication: Several members of the Illinois Central College Board of Trustees on Thursday expressed frustration with a perceived lack of communication about the upcoming closure of the school’s on-campus housing complex. The board discussed the closure of WoodView Commons during a special meeting. Trustees said the lines of communication were lacking between itself, school administrators and ICC’s Educational Foundation. The Educational Foundation Student Residence LLC manages the property. * WICA | Restaurants in Champaign-Urbana say ‘friendly fraud’ isn’t so friendly: One Champaign bakery was so frustrated about being scammed by customers ordering online that they went to social media to vent. It turned out they weren’t the only ones having the issue. WCIA spoke with staff from the Sun Singer and Suzu’s Bakery. They said customers would order online and then dispute the charge as fraud with the card company. The money was taken away from the restaurants plus a fee on top, hanging these businesses out to dry. * AP | US measles cases surpass 700 with outbreaks in six states. Here’s what to know: Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed in a televised Cabinet meeting Thursday that measles cases were plateauing nationally, but the virus continues to spread mostly in people who are unvaccinated and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention redeployed a team this week to the epicenter of West Texas’ monthslong outbreak. The U.S. has more than double the number of measles cases it saw in all of 2024, and Texas is reporting the majority of them with 541. * NPR | How DOGE may have improperly used Social Security data to push voter fraud narratives: One of Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency lieutenants working in the Social Security Administration has been pushing dubious claims about noncitizens voting, apparently using access to data that court records suggest DOGE isn’t supposed to have. The staffer, Antonio Gracias, made the claims as part of larger misleading statements about the SSA’s enumeration-beyond-entry, or EBE program, which streamlines the process for granting Social Security cards to certain categories of eligible immigrants. * Foreign Affairs | Trade Wars Are Easy to Lose: But this logic is wrong: it is China that has escalation dominance in this trade war. The United States gets vital goods from China that cannot be replaced any time soon or made at home at anything less than prohibitive cost. Reducing such dependence on China may be a reason for action, but fighting the current war before doing so is a recipe for almost certain defeat, at enormous cost. Or to put it in Bessent’s terms: Washington, not Beijing, is betting all in on a losing hand.
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Michigan Republicans attack Pritzker over Asian Carp project
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Press release…
The letter is here. * I asked the governor’s office for a response…
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Sen. Emil Jones III trial roundup
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* The Tribune’s Jason Meisner… ![]() * Sun-Times…
* The Tribune uploaded the undercover video from that night… * More from the Sun-Times…
* Sun-Times Federal Court Reporter Jon Seidel…
* The trial continues today with Jones’ former intern Christopher Katz on the stand… You can follow live updates by clicking here.
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Securing The Future: How Ironworkers Power Energy Storage With Precision And Skill
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] As Illinois accelerates toward a clean energy future, ironworkers are doing more than just supporting the transition—they’re making it possible with safe, skilled, and reliable rigging and equipment setting on some of the state’s most critical energy storage projects. Thanks to bold investments by Governor Pritzker and the Illinois General Assembly, energy storage—especially battery systems—has become a centerpiece of the state’s green infrastructure. Behind the scenes, union ironworkers are the ones rigging and setting massive battery units and essential equipment with unmatched precision. These are not just construction tasks—they’re mission-critical operations that demand expertise, coordination, and an unwavering commitment to safety. From anchoring battery enclosures to securing large-scale energy storage units in place, ironworkers are central to ensuring these projects meet performance and safety standards. Their contribution is foundational to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), which is reshaping how Illinois stores and delivers clean power. Including highly trained union labor on these complex jobs not only protects workers and communities—it guarantees the success of each installation. When you see a battery system supporting solar or wind energy in Illinois, know that ironworkers had a hand in setting it safely, skillfully, and reliably. In every bolt tightened and every rig lifted, ironworkers are powering a greener tomorrow.
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It’s just a bill
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Tribune…
* WCIA…
* The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association…
The Gun Violence Prevention PAC of Illinois…
One Aim Illinois…
* WTVO…
* Sen. Mark Walker…
* WCIA…
* WTVO…
* Sen. Dave Koehler…
* WAND…
* Sen. Laura Fine…
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Misguided Insurance Regulation Proposals Could Increase Premiums For The Majority Of Illinoisans
Friday, Apr 11, 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
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Wilco’s 1995 debut album “A.M.” was dominated by a collection of cool, beyond competent alt country songs that could’ve been on any Uncle Tupelo record. But, to me, the final track signaled to the world where Jeff Tweedy’s newly formed breakaway band was headed next. And that direction was greatness. Despite the album title implying a low-fi experience, two decent speakers and a subwoofer (or good headphones) are musts to fully appreciate the almost psychedelic mix. What you’ll hear is nearly a perfect song, and for some reason I have been playing the absolute heck out of it for weeks… You couldn’t believe I was feeling fine What’s happening by you?
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Gov. Pritzker ‘evaluating’ whether to testify before House Committee on sanctuary status. Sun-Times…
* Related stories…
∙ ABC Chicago: Pritzker called to testify in DC as Trump threatens to withhold funding from sanctuary cities ∙ WTTW: Pritzker ‘Evaluating’ Request to Testify Before Congress About Illinois Protections for Undocumented Immigrants * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * BGA | New Revenues for Chicago, Mentioned in Budget Hearings, Not On Mayor’s Springfield Agenda: The city isn’t short on ideas. A new subcommittee on revenue considered a list of possibilities in June 0f 2024 (thus far the subcommittee’s only meeting, apart from a joint hearing on hemp regulation with the health committee), and more were discussed during budget hearings, with proposals from both alderpersons and city staff aired in the back-and-forth between council members and the mayor’s budget team. Some of those proposals would require legislative changes at the state level. BGA Policy compiled a list of state-dependent revenue policies that were proposed at City Council in 2024, either during the 2025 budget hearings or in the revenue subcommittee. Some would make Chicago an outlier among the country’s five largest cities, while others would bring the city more in line with its peers. * Herald-Review | State Rep. Sue Scherer recovering after car crash near Decatur: Scherer, a Democrat from Decatur, was driving on westbound Park Avenue when she entered the intersection and was struck by a vehicle traveling south on Wyckles Road, the sheriff’s office said. […] Scherer suffered a rib fracture and three small vertebrae fractures in her back. A doctor treating Scherer said the injuries “would heal with time and did not require surgery,” according to the crash report. The other driver suffered an ankle fracture and rib fractures that required a custom-fitted brace. * Mark Batinick | Illinois Republicans must embrace vote by mail or be left behind: Four years ago, the Illinois General Assembly passed Permanent Vote by Mail, or VBM. I cringed — not because of fears over fraud, ballot harvesting or cheating, but because I knew Republicans had been conditioned to reject voting by mail. That might not matter much in a presidential election, when most motivated voters show up, no matter what. But in lower-turnout contests — such as midterms and especially consolidated local elections — Democrats have a massive advantage because they’ve built a reliable VBM voter base. * Bloomberg | $15 Million Fund Bets Leadership Training Can Improve Chicago Policing: The academy, which would be the first in the nation for a major police department, would focus on giving targeted training to officers when they’re promoted into leadership roles within the department, making sure they know how to make data-informed decisions, collaborate with the local community and maintain officer morale and accountability. * NBC Chicago | Vacant lot once eyed for migrants will cost taxpayers $1.8 million: The City of Chicago will pay the owners of a vacant lot in Brighton Park more than $816,000 to settle a lawsuit that alleged the city failed to make monthly lease payments for the use of the land – that was once eyed as a place to house up to 2,000 migrants in winterized tents. That failed plan was scrapped in December 2023, however, after the Illinois EPA stepped in amid the release of an 800-page environmental report that found levels of mercury and other toxic metals were present in the soil and air surrounding the lot. * Sun-Times | Man guilty of threatening former Mayor Lori Lightfoot: ‘I have a bullet with your name on it’: Prosecutors argued that Kohles, “intended for that threat to be real” and that they did not have to prove whether he was capable of actually carrying it out. Lightfoot had testified that no other threat she received during her time in public office ever rose to that level, according to prosecutors. * Tribune | ‘I’ve been nothing but transparent’: Former UIC student speaks out after his visa was revoked: It was a typical Thursday night for the financial analyst, who was watching “Lord of the Rings” when he got the email with the subject line “visa revoked.” At first, the University of Illinois Chicago grad from India thought it was a joke — just a scam email from some Indian website trying to mess with him. But then he received a second email after he tried logging into his Student and Exchange Visitor Program portal. “Your OPT authorization period has ended,” the email read. * Crain’s | Your next DoorDash order may be delivered by a robot: Coco and DoorDash, through the delivery giant’s international arm, piloted the program in Finland. Chicago and Los Angeles are the first two U.S. cities to get a taste of the DoorDash-Coco program, which has now launched. DoorDash touts the robots as being emission-free. The robots also eliminate the expectation for customers to tip. On the other hand, the robots could reduce orders — and therefore earnings — for DoorDash’s human drivers. A DoorDash spokesperson argued it is not a zero-sum game and human drivers will continue to be central to the business. * WBEZ | Field Museum curator downplays ‘dire wolf’ breakthrough claim: ‘It’s a little overhyped’: But, as scientists at the Field Museum explain, don’t believe the hype. “I hate to be overly critical but I think it’s a little overhyped,” admits Ken Angielczyk, fossil mammals curator for the museum. “They’ve said they have done some modifications to I think about 14 genes in the grey wolf genome to bring back some features that we think were similar to dire wolves … but there’s probably about 20,000 to 25,000 actual genes in the wolf genome. … So what they’ve done is a very trivial tweaking in a way.” * Tribune | Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle acknowledges troubled tech overhaul: “When I took this job in 2010, county operations were on a mainframe system, which put us maybe in the bottom quarter of counties in the country in terms of our technology,” Preckwinkle said after a county board meeting. “And we have been working very hard over the last 15 years to upgrade our technology, and have made some substantial improvements in those upgrades,” she said. “We’re about at the point where we’re going to get off the mainframe, which was my goal when I walked in the door.” * Sun-Times | Deerfield school board meeting draws hundreds voicing support for trans student: A small group with Moms for Liberty Lake County — a local chapter of the national organization that has been designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center — voiced opposition. A line stretched outside and wrapped around one side of the building more than half an hour after the meeting began. The crowd inside and outside held signs in support of trans rights and pride flags, with cheers from outside audible in the quieter moments after speakers finished. * Daily Herald | Wheeling police officers call for chief, deputy chief to be removed: The letter accused Dunne of undermining department readiness by cutting training, improperly changing the department’s field training program, misusing funds, discouraging officers from taking overtime pay and other unfavorable actions. Wheeling officials investigated every allegation and found them baseless, Village Manager Jon Sfondilis has said. He reiterated that conclusion in an email Thursday. * CBS Chicago | Fox Lake, Illinois agrees to settlement for wife of disgraced police officer Joe Gliniewicz: But authorities later learned Lt. Gliniewicz’s death was a carefully staged suicide, as investigators were closing in on him for embezzling from the village and the Police Explorers youth group. In January 2016, Melodie Gliniewicz was charged with embezzling between $10,000 and $100,000 from the Explorers program from 2008 to 2014. […] Following extensive negotiations that go back to spring 2023, the Fox Lake Village Board and village attorney — in coordination with the Fox Lake Police Pension Board — agreed to settle Melodie Gliniewicz’s fight over her husband’s pension. * Daily Herald | With elections behind and budgets ahead, suburbs start enacting grocery taxes: Elk Grove Village and Wheaton officials approved ordinances this week, while Des Plaines aldermen took a preliminary first reading vote. Lombard trustees are set to vote later this month, along with scheduled discussions of boards in Buffalo Grove and Rolling Meadows. Palatine, Bannockburn and Burlington were among the early adopters late last year. * WGLT | With voters approving $38M facility upgrades in Prairie Central, Chenoa’s last school will close: Earlier this month, voters in Prairie Central approved a referendum allowing the school district to borrow $38 million for necessary facility upgrades, including the new elementary school. In Chenoa’s two precincts, 85% of voters voted against the measure. But they were outnumbered by those in favor elsewhere in the district, primarily in Livingston County. It passed with 57.7% of the overall vote, or around 559 votes. The same measure failed in November when residents in Chenoa — about 20 miles northeast of Bloomington-Normal, in McLean County — also voted heavily against it. Both times, sentiment in Chenoa was that passing the tax would mean closing the school that currently enrolls pre-K through first graders. * PJ Star | Return of federal funding lifts ‘huge weight’ at WTVP-TV after financial scandal: A “big wind in the sails” for WTVP-TV has returned as the once-embattled public station learned this week its full funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting has been restored. WTVP CEO Jenn Gordon told the Journal Star a “huge weight” has been lifted now that the CPB has restored all of its funding for fiscal years 2024 and 2025 following an audit in the wake of an embezzlement scandal that rocked the station. * Rockford Register Star | Retired deputy wants to be the next Winnebago County sheriff. Here’s what you should know.: Saying he would bring decades of professional law enforcement experience to the Winnebago County Sheriff’s Department, a retired deputy chief on Thursday announced his plan to challenge Sheriff Gary Caruana. Dominick Barcellona, 51, formally announced he is running for sheriff as an independent candidate during an event at Top Dog Pizza and Pub in Machesney Park. “Gary and his supporters believe he has built an efficient law enforcement agency,” Barcellona said. “However, the reality is that his lack of law enforcement experience has had a detrimental impact on the community.” * WSIL | JALC receives new truck to help with auto program courses: John A. Logan has introduced their new 2025 F-150 Lightning truck to help with training in their auto programs. The new truck was purchased through a Rev Up EV grant which will help students in the JALC Automotive Services and Auto Collision Technology programs. Students will be able to use the truck to prepare for careers in the automotive field. * WIRED | Labor Leaders Fear Elon Musk and DOGE Could Gain Access to Whistleblower Files: In a memo shared exclusively with WIRED, the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), which is currently suing the Trump administration over DOGE’s access to records at the Department of Labor, says they believe that the news reports and OSHA cases in its memo allegedly illustrate “gross mistreatment and even abuse of workers” at Musk companies in five different states. In the memo, the union federation alleges that as Musk attempts to exert “unilateral control” over the federal government through DOGE, “his record as a boss should be of concern to every worker in America.”
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Friday, Apr 11, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Friday, Apr 11, 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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