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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Crain’s

Planned Parenthood and other reproductive health providers are welcoming the end of a year-long cutoff of federal Medicaid funds, though they anticipate more fights over cash inflows are still to come. […]

Illinois kept state Medicaid dollars flowing with an additional $4 million last year, but defunding still had an impact as Planned Parenthood organizations from surrounding states did see losses, said [Parenthood of Illinois’ president and CEO Adrienne White-Faines].

“Many of our affiliates were thrown into crisis, so it impact us as others were not able to provide care,” she said. […]

Case in point, Indiana’s Planned Parenthood affiliate remains cut off from state Medicaid funding as that state’s officials try to get federal court approval to enforce a 2011 state law that prohibits any state funding to abortion-providing organizations.

*** Statewide ***

* CBS Chicago | Illinois health department reports “higher-than-average” number of cyclosporiasis cases: As of Tuesday morning, the IDPH reported 141 cases of cyclosporiasis, including 59 acquired domestically and 62 reported after travel outside the U.S. Twenty cases are pending investigation in Illinois.

*** Statehouse News ***

* WCIA | Long-term care residents now have expanded electronic monitoring options with new Illinois law: Governor JB Pritzker signed a bill that will expand authorized electronic monitoring of residents in assisted living and shared housing establishments. Beginning in 2016, nursing home residents have been allowed to install electronic monitoring devices in their room — at their own expense — as long as their roommate consents to having the device in the room. The newly signed House Bill 4517 extends this protection to residents of assisted living and shared housing communities.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s new transit board picks include CTA board’s current chairman: The mayor’s nominees for the reconstituted CTA board include the board’s current chairman, Lester Barclay, an attorney who was originally appointed to the board by former Mayor Lori Lightfoot. If approved by aldermen, Barclay would serve on both the CTA and NITA boards. Barclay has previously criticized aspects of the new transit legislation — namely the increased oversight authority it gives to NITA.

* WTTW | Chicago Police Department Overspent Its 2025 Budget by $162.5M: City Analysis: Nearly three-quarters of the overspending, or $120.3 million, was attributed to the department’s personnel budget, even though CPD has more than 1,000 vacant positions, records show. In all, CPD spent $285.8 million to pay officers to work extra hours in 2025, $185.8 million more than it had budgeted, according to a database maintained by the Office of the Inspector General. In addition, CPD overspent its budget to defend and resolve police misconduct lawsuits by $48.5 million, according to the city’s annual financial report. Even though the City Council set aside $82.5 million to defend and resolve lawsuits against the police department, CPD spent a total of $131 million, according to the report.

* Tribune | Chicago weighs ban on Kalshi and Polymarket bets for insider city staff: “The work that we do within City Hall and within all of our offices is innately sensitive and often confidential,” Knudsen said. “We just need to be sure that people aren’t using any of that information for profit or for playing games.” Aldermen advanced Knudsen’s measure in a unanimous voice vote Tuesday during a City Council Ethics Committee meeting. It will likely face a final vote next week.

* The Tribune’s Alice Yin


* ABC Chicago | Postal trucks parked illegally in Lincoln Park drawing renewed safety concerns, alderman says: Postal trucks were seen illegally parked in paid parking spaces, in front of fire hydrants, at bus stops and in other restricted areas. Ald. Timmy Knudsen said the renewed violations are disappointing after assurances from the Postal Service that the situation would be fixed. “The uptick is frustrating to us because we took USPS at their word that they’d be solving this process for good,” Knudsen said. “So every time we get a vehicle out there, you know, we call 911, we reach out to USPS, and we send our warning that, you know, you need to obey the rules of the road, you’re creating a safety hazard.”

* Block Club Chicago | Bud & Rita’s Opens Loop’s First Weed Shop As City Eases Restrictions For Downtown Dispensaries: Opening a dispensary in the Loop was more complicated than just finding an empty storefront. Under former Mayor Lori Lightfoot, the city banned dispensaries in the Loop and much of River North in an effort from Lightfoot to keep the area “family friendly.” When the Downtown exclusionary zone was significantly reduced in 2021 to parts of Michigan Avenue and Grand Avenue near Navy Pier, dense high-rises, office buildings, schools and restricted zoning areas often overlapped, creating challenges.

* ABC Chicago | New stormwater storage tanks almost complete in effort to reduce West Side flooding: City officials said the project in the 5500-block of Le Moyne Street creates two auxiliary tanks that will increase stormwater storage by 1.7 million gallons. The projects are just part of what the city says will be a more than $500 million project to address flooding, while also upgrading the city’s aging sewer system.

* Block Club | Uptown Theatre Owner Says City Funding Needed For Renovations — But City Says He’s Asking For Too Much: There is some hope the Uptown will return to its former glory, though that depends on some $200 million in funding, said building owner Jerry Mickelson. Most of that money would need to come from the city, he said. […] The Department of Planning and Development said Mickelson’s latest bid for TIF assistance was not up to snuff. Mickelson’s October 2024 application for a community development grant featured a “significant funding gap” and “seeks a level of TIF assistance that substantially exceeds program guidance of approximately 30 percent of total project costs and what’s reasonably available within the Lawrence/Broadway TIF district,” Strazzabosco said in an email to Block Club.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | Family sues state-licensed Rolling Meadows group home for wrongful death, alleging ‘fatal choking event’: Family members are also calling on the state to improve its supervision of community-integrated living arrangements, or CILAs, the small group homes in which many people with intellectual and developmental disabilities reside, according to a statement. Emily Kasanga, a resident of a Clearbrook group home in Rolling Meadows, died in April, according to a lawsuit filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court. […] Staff at her home knew or should have known she was at risk for choking and that she required 24-hour care and support, according to the lawsuit. On the day she died, the home failed to appropriately prepare and cut up her food or supervise her, the suit alleges.

* Northwestern Local News initiative | The Daily Herald Deal: Second, Tribune already printed and delivered the Daily Herald, and the newspaper’s publication and delivery contracts with Tribune would expire in four years. Paddock expressed concern that in a potential re-negotiation, the company would have less leverage than the current agreement that came following Paddock’s sale of its printing plant in northwest suburban Schaumburg to the Tribune. That could lead to skyrocketing printing and delivery costs or even an inability to print and deliver the paper.

* Pioneer Press | In Northbrook, people with disabilities get affordable housing option as Poupard Place opens: Poupard Place, located at 1593 Shermer Road, was developed by the Housing Opportunity Development Corporation, a not-for-profit affordable housing developer based in Skokie, through a partnership with the Village of Northbrook. The building serves individuals living with a disability or who have at least one person in their household living with a disability, and earn up to 60% of the Area Median Income. […] Koenig said demand has been high for the 48-unit building, with the organization receiving 600 applications for a mix of one-bedroom, two-bedroom and three-bedroom apartments.

* Naperville Sun | Heavy holiday rain floods Naperville Riverwalk, shuts down river use: As a result of the storms, the Illinois Department of Natural Resources announced on social media Sunday that the East and West branches of the DuPage River were closed indefinitely to boaters because of swift currents, floating debris, submerged structures and high-water levels. The conditions pose a threat to boaters navigating the waters and emergency responders who may need to perform a rescue, the agency said.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | Y Block in Springfield could be given to the state: An ordinance authorizing the city of Springfield to donate the Y Block to the Illinois Department of Natural Resources is on first reading July 7. The ordinance would be up for discussion at the July 14 committee of the whole meeting when alderpersons would assign it to the debate or consent agenda for a final vote before the full city council July 21. […] “I am working through that process,” Mayor Misty Buscher told The State Journal-Register in a May 18 interview. “Unfortunately, it was a mess left for me (when I became mayor in 2023). I didn’t create that mess. I’m just trying to fix it.” The state’s FY25 budget included $4 million to design and construct a park on the 2.25-acre site.

* 25News Now | Pekin’s Powerton Generating Station now set to retire a year later than planned: In an agreement with the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, the NRG Powerton Generating Station will remain open until December 31, 2029. Regional grid operator PJM had requested Midwest Generation’s cooperation to help the Powerton station remain in operation beyond what was the previous U.S. EPA’s Effluent Limitations Guidelines (ELG) compliance shutdown date at the end of 2028. Midwest Generation is the electricity generation company in Illinois that partners with NRG, which owns and operate the plant at Powerton.

* WGLT | Normal Town Council approves construction projects, strategic plan: Also Monday, the council approved the 2026 strategic plan with the highest-priority goals focusing on economic issues, public safety, modernizing infrastructure and creating transparency. The strategic plan helps guide staff on priorities and initiatives in day-to-day operations and long-term considerations. It concerns plans from 2026-2029, building off the 2023 version of the strategic plan.

* WCIA | Urbana getting state tax credit toward creating affordable housing: The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IDHA) announced on Tuesday the approval of $37 million in federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC). They also approved an additional $39 million in federal and state subordinate resources to go toward the development projects. […] The 22 approved developments include 20 new projects and the rehabilitation of two existing developments. The project approved in Urbana is the Dr. Grant G. Henry Village, which officials said will include safe and stable housing for youths aging out of the foster care system.

* WGLT | Bloomington woman pleads guilty to trying to vote twice in 2024 election: In a hearing before Judge William Yoder, Sud admitted to knowingly trying to vote at a Bloomington polling place after having submitted a mail-in ballot in Wisconsin, where she has another residence. The Bloomington Election Commission flagged the second ballot with the state’s attorney’s office, whose investigation led to Sud’s arrest in September 2025. In pleading guilty to the Class A misdemeanor of attempting to vote twice, Sud agreed to serve 24 months probation and pay a $500 fine, plus additional court fees. In exchange, the court dismissed three felony charges alleged in the same incident.

* STLPR | Collinsville has half the money needed to renovate water plant for ‘forever chemicals’: The City of Collinsville has accounted for roughly $5.7 million of the $11.5 million needed to renovate its water treatment facility after tests last summer confirmed the tap water contained so-called forever chemicals. Testing found PFAS, short for perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl, at levels higher than the federal Environmental Protection Agency allows. These chemicals take a long time to deteriorate, and some can cause health problems when people are repeatedly exposed.

*** National ***

* Futurism | Meta’s AI Data Center Caught Infecting Town Water Supply With Deadly Bacteria: That decision came after one bad actor, the Meta-affiliated data center company Goat Systems LLC, flooded local waste water pipes with fill-and-flush swill containing a rare and deadly bacterium known as Cupriavidus gilardii. Per Cowboy State, Goat Systems was found to be in “significant noncompliance” with Cheyenne’s industrial waste regulations after a months-long investigation traced the bacteria to Meta’s discharge. […] “This isn’t something we normally test for,” Frank Strong, Cheyenne Board of Public Utilities engineering and water resource division manager told the Wyoming Tribune Eagle of the investigation. Strong noted that the bacterium was first spotted during routine testing for fecal contamination, adding that it’s a bizarre pathogen to find in any wastewater, even that coming from a data center.

* NYT | Trump Administration Guts Efforts to Prevent Gun Violence, Suppressing Reports: The Trump administration has gutted federal gun violence prevention efforts since returning to office, slashing funding for programs and research and even suppressing taxpayer-funded reports aimed at reducing gun injuries and deaths. The cutbacks, which span agencies throughout the federal government, represent a shift in philosophy about how to address gun violence, away from a public-health-oriented approach focused on prevention, to a law-and-order approach focused on beefing up police departments and seizing illegal weapons while also systematically rolling back firearms regulations. The move away from prevention and regulation aimed at saving lives is playing out in other areas of public health too, including illegal drugs and smoking.

  1 Comment      


Pritzker touts some data center benefits, but says: ‘We don’t want them if they’re going to take advantage of us’

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker sat down for a wide-ranging interview with WVIK’s Robin Johnson. Here are his comments about data centers

We can’t continue to have data centers coming here using our water, using our power and increasing people’s utility rates. So, my solution to that is they should pay for it. They should bring their own power. They should have closed loop recycled water systems, and we should require that for new data centers. Now, the legislature didn’t get to pass what’s called the Power Act, where that would take place

And so just after the end of the legislative session, I suspended any tax credits that would otherwise go to a data center, because we’ve got to take a pause here and make sure the legislature is going to pass something that’s going to deal with the problems, water, power, and noise, you know, that’s been a problem in some areas too.

Now I will say that if we could figure those things out - I’m not saying that they have figured it out and that we’re done with it - but if we could figure it out, and I think we could, the result is kind of two positive things that can occur.

One is lowering people’s property taxes, because those data centers, even though they don’t employ a whole lot of people every day and every year, they do, by the way, allow lots of construction jobs that take place, but that’s only while you’re building the facility. But they pay a lot of the property taxes, and we’ve seen counties where property taxes have gone down as a result of these data centers moving in. Again, I’m not saying that we should do it without all the other regulations we just talked about, but, that’s one thing.

The other is that these data centers should be contributors to the community. These are big companies, these are wealthy companies, and they should be contributors to the well-being of the people that they’re neighbors to. And I don’t think they understand that yet, and we’ve got to make that clear to them.

So, those are a couple examples, anyway, of what we ought to be doing with data centers. But we just can’t have them coming here. We have water, we have power in this state. They want to come here. I know that, they want to come here, but we don’t want them if they’re going to take advantage of us.

Please pardon any transcription errors. Thanks.

* Related…

    * CNI | Here are the Illinois data centers on track for more than $650M in tax credits: Illinois committed an estimated $666.6 million in tax credits to data center projects through 2025, according to an annual Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity report. The agreement, which spans periods up to 20 years, were inked before Gov. JB Pritzker directed the department to pause processing new data center incentives beginning Wednesday.

    * Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | Invenergy cancels wind leases for Wisconsin gas plants: As part of a deal with the Trump administration, a national energy developer will end offshore wind projects and redirect some of the money to its natural gas portfolio, which includes two new plants in Wisconsin to power hyperscale data centers. The U.S. Department of the Interior announced on June 16 it will refund $765 million to Chicago-based developer Invenergy in exchange for “voluntarily” terminating four offshore wind leases. Invenergy agreed to redirect the money toward the development of natural gas plants in Wisconsin, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri, as well as geothermal projects in the western U.S.

  6 Comments      


Today’s quotable

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From the South Africa-born trillionaire…


  40 Comments      


US Attorney Boutros appears to threaten Chicago reporters: ‘We’re going to address that at the appropriate time’

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WGN

A WGN Investigates interview with Cook County’s top judge has caught the attention of the top federal prosecutor in Chicago.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office has long been known for its reserved demeanor, but new boss Andrew Boutros has taken a different tact, adopting the tone of the Trump administration.

During a press conference on Thursday announcing 179 arrests in a crackdown on violence, he appeared to threaten reporters with lawsuits in one moment. In another, he offered praise, but also somewhat mischaracterized one of our recent interviews.

“There has been reckless reporting in this room and it’s deeply disappointing and we’ve taken notice,” Boutros said. […]

“Well I asked you to stay on topic, but there has been an incredible amount of reckless reporting in this room…some of it, I don’t want to say it, but it almost rises to the level of violating New York Times vs. Sullivan with the falsity of some of the things that have been presented in the press.”

That’s a reference to a Supreme Court case that said public officials can sue journalists if they intentionally or recklessly publish false information. It seemed to be a threat to prosecute reporters for their coverage of Operation Midway Blitz.

“I will say again: There has been a lot of reckless reporting – including reporting that I think rises to the level of violating NYT vs. Sullivan. I think people in this room know what I mean when I say that, and we’re going to address that at the appropriate time,” Boutros said.

  30 Comments      


Governor Pritzker, Fight For Us.

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Working families face rising costs and medical debt, while hospital systems continue to profit by exploiting the 340B program - making billions, while patients are paying the price.

Leaders in Kentucky, Virginia and California recognize that a program meant to help vulnerable patients shouldn’t become a profit stream for billion-dollar hospital systems and their business partners.

Governor JB Pritzker has the opportunity to lead the way. Illinois deserves better — veto 340B Profit-Grab (HB 2371).

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Dems won’t put state money where their mouths are

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* My weekly syndicated newspaper column

About a week after the state budget passed both chambers in the dark of night, Attorney General Kwame Raoul spoke to the City Club of Chicago to complain that his budget was cut by $10 million.

“For every dollar of General Revenue Fund spending on the attorney general’s office, we return $21. Anybody who has that in their portfolio is rich, but we can’t do this type of work without adequate investment and, unfortunately, at approximately 3 a.m. in the morning a week ago Monday, we were shorted about $10 million from what our overall appropriation was for fiscal year ’26, and I can’t imagine why what came about at 3 a.m. in the morning.”

During Gov. JB Pritzker’s press conference in June to sign a package of bills supported by Raoul to ban hidden junk fees and prohibiting ticket resellers from offering tickets they don’t actually have, the governor heavily praised Raoul for his work on not only consumer protection, but also for defending Illinoisans against constant attempts by President Donald Trump’s administration to take away various rights and funding from people in this state.

So, my colleague Isabel Miller decided to ask Raoul about his budget cut. “Have you talked to the governor about restoring that $10 million in budget cuts from your office?” she asked.

After an awkward pause, Raoul said he’d had “several conversations with members of the legislature, and I’ve spoken to the governor just today.”

“I understand from serving 14 years in the Legislature that come the end of May, there are competing interests, and under this governor’s leadership and this Legislature we’ve been passing balanced budgets consistently, which was not a common thing in the past. That means that come the end of May, there’s some difficult decisions to make.”

But Raoul went on to say, “Our office is burdened, and you know we need to be at least funding to flat level, and I think we’ll work our way through it through these conversations.”

Isabel then asked the governor, “You’ve said at multiple press conferences, ‘AG Raoul is our defense, he’s doing such a great job.’ Are you committed to getting that flat level of funding restored?”

After praising Raoul yet again for attempting to keep the Trump administration in check, and thanking Raoul for recognizing the state’s current budget challenges under this federal administration, the governor said, “We’re not going to let it happen that he can’t go to court or that he can’t do the things that are necessary to protect the people of the state of Illinois, but we’re all tightening our belts.”

Three amendments were introduced to the bill the Legislature used to pass the budget. The governor’s office says it controlled the second amendment, and that amendment prevented a Raoul budget cut.

The third amendment became the actual budget. That amendment, controlled by the Senate, is the one that cut $10 million from Raoul’s spending plan. I haven’t been able to find a satisfactory answer as to why Raoul’s funding was cut, but some have said that Raoul may have upset some senators with the way his office lobbied those very bills mentioned above.

Whatever the case, amendment three was a mess. The governor issued an almost unheard-of 37-item veto reduction to correct mistakes. And some other passages were so poorly drafted that a follow-up supplemental appropriation bill could be needed to fix its many other problems.

This botched amendment is a metaphor for the entire spring session. Everything was deliberately back-loaded to the final week, and the two chambers were kept apart until May so members couldn’t work on fixing problems and, in the end, nobody had enough bandwidth to get everything right.

And if the budget is supposed to be the most important bill passed every year, then everybody clearly dropped the ball.

I do not see why they didn’t just adjourn at midnight on May 31 and call everybody back the following morning. Staff would have had more time to rest and work on the budget.

Instead, both chambers chose to remain in session until nearly dawn during a massive late-night final evening cram session like they were all a bunch of panicky sophomores.

The Democrats are constantly complaining about Trump’s assault on Illinois and other “blue” states. They’ve passed a few bills here in an attempt to rein in some of the excesses, but the only institution truly standing between Illinois and Trump is the attorney general’s office.

If Democrats are truly serious, then they should use the budget to back up their rhetoric.

  16 Comments      


RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Khara and Megan in Jacksonville are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work. Please visit https://WeAreRetail.IRMA.org/.

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Gov. JB Pritzker signs first-in-nation Illinois law requiring third-party safety audits for AI giants. Tribune

    - The legislation that Pritzker signed will require large AI developers — those with more than $500 million in annual gross revenue — to publish explanations of how their products could pose a “catastrophic risk” and how those risks would be addressed. The requirements take effect Jan. 1, 2028.
    - Developers will be required to retain a third party each year to conduct an independent compliance audit; auditors would need to demonstrate technical expertise in the safety of so-called frontier AI models.
    -Some AI companies embraced the legislation, which drew broad support from both sides of the aisle, during the spring legislative session. AI developer Anthropic, which created the Claude chatbot and supported the bill.

* Related stories…

* Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Subscribers know more. ABC Chicago | South suburban Democrats move to replace former Rep. Harry Benton after undisclosed ethics findings: Democratic leaders in Will and Kendall counties will choose Benton’s replacement for the 97th House District, one of the state’s more politically competitive areas. The weighted vote gives Will County Democratic Party Chairman Billy Morgan the ability to make the selection on his own. “We need someone who will be pragmatic and effective in Springfield,” Morgan said. “They need to be somebody who understands how to get things done, and someone who’s a real fighter for the 97th district.”

* Tribune | What’s in the Illinois Tollway’s $26.5 billion construction program?: The 2026 “project list doesn’t have a great deal of ‘wow factor,’ but most items are critically needed,” DePaul University Professor and transportation expert Joseph Schwieterman said. “Anyone doubting that serious bottlenecks exist should hop on the tollway system during peak hours during summer.” Rate hikes averaging 45 cents a toll for I-Pass customers in passenger vehicles would help fund construction as well as inflation-based increases every other year starting in 2029, pending board approval. One blockbuster item on the roster is $3.1 billion for interchange improvements at I-88 and I-355.

* Sun-Times | Illinois prison healthcare still poor as state goes 1 year without long-term medical provider: Centurion Health, one of the nation’s largest correctional medicine companies, has been the medical provider for the Illinois Department of Corrections since last July. And a year into Centurion’s short tenure, people inside Illinois prisons say their medical needs are severely neglected. In nearly a dozen emails and letters like Natalie’s, incarcerated people and their loved ones shared with the Sun-Times and WBEZ’s Prisoncast! how their health has deteriorated as they wait for doctor’s appointments, testing and medications. The transition to Centurion has also complicated people’s health care and left at least one subcontractor for IDOC’s previous provider unpaid.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release | Illinois Housing Development Authority Announces Creation of 1,000 Units of Affordable Rental Housing: The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) Board approved awards totaling $37 million in federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) and an additional $39 million in federal and state subordinate resources that will finance the creation and preservation of 22 affordable housing developments in 15 counties throughout Illinois. The LIHTC awards are expected to generate an estimated $303 million in private capital to support the development of 969 affordable homes for low- to moderate-income families, seniors, and veterans. The 22 approved developments include 20 new construction projects and the rehabilitation of two existing developments. New construction developments will bring much-needed housing for seniors in Fox Lake, Rock Island, and Highland. Additional efforts include safe and stable housing for youths aging out of the foster care system in Urbana to a new development offering housing and supportive services for women experiencing chronic homelessness in Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood.

* Michael Frerichs and Jeannie Tarkenton | Student loan changes at the federal level call for Illinois leadership: That is why we partnered through Illinois’ Student Empowerment Fund to launch the Illinois No-Cosigner Loan. The program was designed to help students who have exhausted grants, scholarships, work-study opportunities and federal loans, but still face a final funding gap that threatens their ability to complete their degree. Borrowing should never be the first option. Students and families should first maximize grants, scholarships and federal aid. But when those resources fall short, too many capable students are shut out because traditional lending relies on family wealth, a co-signer or an established credit history rather than a student’s own record of achievement and future earning potential.

* Ghana Web | From Slavery to Reunion: DNA reconnects Illinois lawmaker with family in Ghana: Her journey was made possible through modern DNA genealogy under, the African Kinship Reunion (TAKiR) Project, a collaborative initiative involving the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Ghanaian partners, including the University of Cape Coast, which traced her ancestry directly to the Nania community in Paga. […] The moment also marked a symbolic honour. Representative Ammons was enskinned as the Peace and Development Queen Mother of the area, a gesture signifying her formal integration into the community and her commitment to supporting development initiatives.

* Tribune | Illinois bill awaiting Pritzker OK would add oversight on private equity firms buying disability group homes: The bill, which passed the General Assembly this spring with broad bipartisan support, requires facilities for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities to report to the state when they are purchased by an asset management company — such as a private equity fund, hedge fund or venture capital firm. After a community integrated living arrangement — commonly known as a group home or CILA — or other licensed facility for people with disabilities is purchased by such a firm, it would have to regularly report financial activity, including assets, liabilities and staffing levels, to the state Health Facilities and Services Review Board.

* Tribune | Law adds big cats, bears and primates to Illinois ban on traveling animal acts: On June 26, Gov. JB Pritzker signed the expansion of the state’s Traveling Animals Act into law. The act already banned elephants in traveling shows and circuses — now the ban applies to big cats, bears and primates as well. “In signing this bill, Governor Pritzker advanced the dignified and compassionate care of our wild animals,” said a spokesperson for the governor’s office. The law took effect Wednesday.

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘Underdog’ Tracy says he’s ‘answering a call of duty’ by running for Durbin’s seat: “I believe Illinois is a center-right state, and that the right Republican can win again statewide, and I do believe I’m the right Republican,” Tracy told me. “A two-party state is a healthier state, and by winning this seat, then I think we can bring a little more bipartisanship to Illinois. I also think that that will give us a strong senatorial voice in Washington, regardless of who’s in charge.”

*** Data Center News ***

* Tribune | Data center developer reverses course in Hoffman Estates, days before vote on controversial plan: Residents packed a Hoffman Estates village planning meeting in early June, giving hours of testimony against the project. They protested, filed public records requests and signed petitions to deny the rezoning. A new data center campus at the 186-acre Plum Farms, they feared, would use too much power and water, cause noise pollution and possibly raise utility costs. When Karis Critical, the data center developer leading the project, withdrew its petition for rezoning on Wednesday, five days before a Village Board vote that was set to take place tonight, some in the community breathed a sigh of relief.

* WICS | New grassroots coalition says data center fight isn’t over: Illinois Open Field Coalition Forward is a grassroots organization formed by Tara Bergschneider. Bergschneider said counties all across our area are faced with questions and concerns as the rise of data center proposals continues. “We want to inform people how they can be a part of the effort in stopping this. I have a presentation that I’ll go through that’ll just give a very high level overview of what’s going on across the counties, specifically Sangamon and Christian and Logan,” Bergschneider said.

* Brownfield Ag | Report highlights rural worries over data center development: Mark White, clinical associate professor in the department of ag and consumer economics, says electricity costs were the leading concern among survey respondents. He tells Brownfield many rural residents were also worried about farmland being used for data centers. “The challenge with some of the data centers is that when you build them, they are not things that can easily be removed,” he said. “You can’t just easily return the land to agricultural land when they have maybe outlived their lifespan.” The researchers said the survey was conducted online in February and reached approximately 1,000 U.S. adults who were representative of the country by region, income, age and gender.

* Reuters | Big Tech data centers are driving up power bills at America’s Rust Belt factories: The 141-year-old brick manufacturer, whose products can be found in iconic buildings including the Texas Alamo and Notre Dame ​University, is seeing power bills rise mainly from a monthly capacity charge, which recently jumped from $1,600 a month to $12,000. […] Such fees have soared in the 13-state region covered ​by grid operator PJM Interconnection due to stagnant supply and demand from data centers, where one server warehouse can use as much electricity as a mid-sized town.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | The port strike, the longshoremen and the mayor: Two unions are fighting over who should represent the dozens of stevedores who work for QSL America, a private company that operates at the publicly owned port. For more than a year, some QSL workers have been on strike with the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150. But others are still at work, laboring under a new collective bargaining agreement with another labor organization, the International Longshoremen’s Association. QSL agreed to recognize the ILA as the dockworkers’ union representative last year, after the Operating Engineers’ strike began, setting off a battle between the labor groups that is under review by federal regulators at the National Labor Relations Board.

* Tribune | Cardiologist and whistleblower Dr. Lisa Nee to run for Chicago mayor: “I think they want a city where you don’t need connections to get very basic things done, and I think they want a leader that’s honest,” she told the Tribune. “I’m inside the community, I’m just outside the political machine.” The 59-year-old said she is focused on Chicago’s fiscal health, everyday affordability and safety. But she shared few details on the policy plans she would turn to on day one in office to tackle the city’s challenges. Instead, she argued her background — including no experience in the political arena — means she isn’t bogged down by the thorny loyalties that prevent veteran politicians from making hard decisions.

* Sun-Times | Deep Tunnel has never reached its limit. After weekend’s heavy rains, it’s almost full: For the first time in history, Deep Tunnel, Chicago’s massive system of underground tunnels and reservoirs designed to hold flood water, is almost completely full after a weekend of heavy rain. Built over more than a half-century, Deep Tunnel sends floodwaters from Chicago and nearby suburbs through more than 100 miles of tunnels into three reservoirs located just outside of the city. It was designed to help protect area rivers as well as Lake Michigan.

* Block Club | Chicago National Archives Closure Will Be Loss For Historians, Researchers, Even Deep-Sea Divers: The National Archives and Records Administration plans to close its Chicago facility, a sprawling building on the Southwest Side that houses transcripts from the Trial of the Chicago 7, maritime records for the Great Lakes region and documents on tribal nations. In a June 23 email to staff, the agency — which functions as the nation’s record keeper — informed its employees that “over the next few years” it would close the National Archives at Chicago, 7358 S. Pulaski Road, and its San Francisco/San Bruno facility, as well as move all temporary records from the Seattle Records Center. Many of the records in Chicago have not been digitized and are only available in person.

* Tribune | Emmett Till would’ve been 85 this year. A Bronzeville exhibit reflects on his legacy: Raymond Thomas, creative director of The Emmett Till and Mamie Till-Mobley Institute, curated the exhibit “From Memory to Movement: Emmett at 85” at Bronzeville’s Blanc Gallery, bringing together 11 Black Chicago-based contemporary artists to produce works that speak to the humanity of Emmett Till and the social construct of the times we’re living in. “It was like putting a band together… thinking how artists’ work talks to each other, and how my work aligns with theirs to have this jam session,” Thomas, a multidisciplinary artist, said. “We all have a connection to this legacy… everyone took their own personal journeys to find where they wanted to be with it.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* ABC Chicago | Attorneys drop out of West Suburban hospital legal fight citing ‘fundamental disagreements’: But on Monday, according to court records, attorneys representing Resilience Healthcare asked to withdraw from the case, writing, “Circumstances have developed that have created fundamental disagreements between undersigned counsel and the Client regarding the representation and the Client’s objectives in this matter.” […] Attorneys for both sides have been meeting behind closed doors weekly with Judge Stanton to negotiate a settlement which could include the hospital reopening under new ownership.

* Evanston Roundtable | Business attorney and political newcomer starts mayoral campaign committee: Jade Carpenter registered a candidate committee for Evanston mayor with the Illinois State Board of Elections on Wednesday, July 1, allowing her to begin raising and spending money on a campaign. She is the second person to publicly indicate her bid to succeed incumbent Mayor Daniel Biss, who is resigning Oct. 18 to focus on his congressional campaign and will be replaced through a special election in early 2027.

* Pioneer Press | The $25,000 question: Who can afford to be a suburban mayor in Evanston or elsewhere?: Voters may be surprised to learn that in Evanston, the position to oversee a $400 million-plus municipal government and a city of about 76,000 people comes with an annual salary of a little over $25,000. That salary falls well below what would be considered a livable income in Evanston, where median rent for all property types (apartments, condos, houses) exceeds $2,000 a month, according to recent housing projections.

* Toni Preckwinkle | Cook County sticks with road map to reduce gun violence as federal funds dry up: The influx of federal funds from the American Rescue Plan Act allowed us to invest in communities at historic levels. Across the state, county and city, more than $350 million was directed toward community-based violence intervention and prevention efforts, including $110 million from Cook County alone. These funds supported youth development programs, outreach workers and survivor services. […] As the American Rescue Plan Act resources phase out, we face a critical question: whether we will sustain what is working. At Cook County, the answer is yes. We continue to invest $30 million annually for CVI and services for survivors of gun violence, even as federal support for these efforts has declined.

* Daily Herald | Lurie seeks state’s OK to build children’s hospital in Downers Grove: The hospital filed a request for a certificate of need with the Illinois Health Facilities and Services Review Board on June 6. The hospital will have to prove the project is needed and financially and economically feasible. Oct. 16 is the deadline for submitting written comments about the proposal. The HFSRB is scheduled to consider the application on Nov. 5.

* Daily Herald | Despite stadium uncertainty, Bears get OK to keep billboard in Arlington Heights: The digital sign atop a 95-foot pole was installed at the former horse racing venue in 2017 by then-owner Churchill Downs Inc., which sought an additional revenue source amid a precipitous decline in wagering. The approval came with the caveat that the sign come down were the racetrack to cease operations. But board members have granted multiple yearly extensions since the Bears took ownership and knocked down the old grandstand in 2023, and during the NFL club’s ensuing on-again, off-again interest in redeveloping the prime Northwest suburban real estate.

* Lake County News-Sun | D112 approves contract with Quest food vendor despite protest: ‘The committee made an informed decision’: This year, OrganicLife again submitted a protest to disqualify Quest, but was seemingly unsuccessful. In this year’s protest, it argued Quest should have been disqualified on several grounds, alleging it had sent a letter to the district’s evaluation committee past the deadline, accusing the district of altering evaluation scores to put Quest ahead, and alleging issues with Quest’s references.

* Tribune | Will County Board of Review members serve 2 to 3 years beyond set terms: The longest serving board member, Susan McMillin, has served since 2009. Her term ended June 1, 2024. The terms for Ann Crickman, who been on the board since 2022, and Sue Smith, first appointed in 2019, ended June 1, 2023, according to Michael Theodore, director of communications for the Will County executive’s office. […] All three Board of Review members will be considered for reappointment during the a Will County Executive Committee meeting on July 9, Theodore said. The appointments were scheduled to come to a vote June 11, but were removed from the agenda at the last minute, without any reason given, he said. Will County Board Speaker Joe VanDuyne, a Wilmington Democrat, creates the meeting agendas, and said he pulled the appointments after an “outside individual” voiced concerns about one of the members.

* Daily Southtown | Cannabis tax funds to enhance security measures at Will County schools: More than 30 Will County schools will receive funds to enhance security thanks to $129,777 in grants awarded by the county from the state’s cannabis sales tax revenue. The security improvements will take place in 18 Will County school districts, including Beecher School District 200U, Frankfort School District 157-C, Lockport School District 91, Manhattan School District 114, New Lenox School District 122 and Summit Hill School District 161.

* Pioneer Press | Woman in six-month coma following Jan. 5 encounter with Evanston police has died, family says: According to a federal civil rights lawsuit filed June 1 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois by Williams’ mother Jacqueline Hoffman, Williams’ family alleges Evanston police used “excessive force” while attempting to restrain her and failed to intervene when Williams demonstrated signs of trouble breathing. […] She remained in a coma until the time of her death, her family said.

*** Downstate ***

* NPR Illinois | Massey Commission members launch new effort to advance goals: “Rather than allowing organizations and institutions to continue working in isolation, MCAN seeks to eliminate the silos that have too often prevented lasting systemic change. The organization will convene all accountable parties, educate the public, advocate for policy change, organize communities, pursue funding opportunities, and monitor progress toward implementation, bringing residents, public agencies, nonprofit organizations, and community partners together to turn recommendations into measurable results.”

* Illinois Times | Former Sangamon County deputy Sean Grayson seeks medical release: Sean Grayson, 32, filed for release under the Joe Coleman Act last month. Under the act, a person in custody who is terminally ill or is medically incapacitated could be considered eligible. Medically incapacitated is defined as having a medical condition that prevents them from completing daily living activity behind bars without assistance and will likely not improve in the future. Doctors diagnosed Grayson with Stage 3 colon cancer in 2023, his attorney Mark Wykoff told the judge at his sentencing in January but added that the cancer had progressed to Stage 4 and spread to his liver and lungs.

* NPR Illinois | Springfield expansion of EV charging stations nears completion: pringfield’s City Water, Light and Power said 40 charge ports have been added at nine locations near shopping, tourism and business districts. The project was made possible through a $629,000 Illinois Community Charging Program Grant awarded to CWLP. The program supports the installation of Level 2 charging stations across Springfield.

* WCIA | Fisher unearths time capsule, seeking public’s help finding owners of heirlooms: The village took to social media Monday morning, hoping someone knew the owner of a Paxton High School class of 1963 ring. The village treasurer said through the power of social media, and the help of the Paxton historical society, they found the owners’ children and the ring is in the mail headed to them right now.

* WGLT | Video: How Bloomington-Normal’s first drone show took flight: Viewers watched 300 LED-lit drones perform a series of complex, preprogrammed movements during the 15-minute show. The drones created animations geared toward the Fourth of July (like an American flag and a Declaration of Independence scroll), while also showing off logos for event sponsors and partners like State Farm, OSF HealthCare, City of Bloomington, and more. “It’s kind of like marching band in the sky, so each drone knows their dot and their placement as to where they need to go. Our pilot just makes sure each drone knows where they’re going and makes sure everything runs smoothly. They’re pre-programmed,” said Amanda Violassi from Firefly Drone Shows, a Michigan company hired to run the show.

*** National ***

* AP | Obamacare rolls shrank dramatically in many states over the past year, new federal data shows: The data, posted in late June by the Trump administration and first reported on by The Associated Press, reveals how changes in each state’s insured population led to around 2.6 million fewer Americans having Obamacare plans in February compared with the same time last year. It captures not only how many people signed up for or were automatically reenrolled in plans in 2026, but how many paid their first monthly premiums to keep coverage, according to Cynthia Cox, a vice president and director of the ACA program at the healthcare research nonprofit KFF, who reviewed the dataset. She said it accounts for people who were retroactively removed from coverage after a nonpayment grace period ended.

* WaPo | Conservatives seek blue-state bans on trans athletes in wake of Supreme Court win’: The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that states may ban trans athletes from girls and women’s teams, affirming policies in 27 states. But it said nothing about the Democratic states that allow transgender students to compete. Now the Trump administration and conservative advocacy groups are pressing forward in pursuit of a coast-to-coast ban as the fight shifts to another set of court cases. The Alliance Defending Freedom, which won Tuesday’s case, is backing three pending cases, while three cases filed by the Justice Department are also making their way through lower courts.

* Public Notice | How Kalshi infects the news: Some of CNBC’s reporting about Kalshi includes the disclosure, “CNBC and Kalshi have a commercial relationship that includes customer acquisition and a minority investment.” This means CNBC is paid every time it can convert a viewer to a Kalshi user. As an investor, the network also benefits if Kalshi’s overall valuation increases. CNBC is also paid directly by Kalshi for using its data, according to The Wrap. In at least 22 cases, however, CNBC has written about Kalshi and not disclosed its financial conflict. […] On air, where CNBC promotes Kalshi nearly every day, disclosure is also spotty.

* Bloomberg | Rivian offers 75 million shares to meet U.S. energy loan terms: Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is leading the share sale, according to a filing Monday with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. At the closing price of $20.14 per share, the offering would raise about $1.5 billion. Rivian intends to use the proceeds for purposes including making contributions under the amended loan agreement with the Department of Energy, the filing shows. The vehicle maker has a $4.5 billion loan after renegotiating with the Department, and expects to start drawing from it in early 2027.

  8 Comments      


Good morning!

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* If you haven’t seen the new documentary on Earth, Wind & Fire, then you should soon rectify that omission. Shining Star

No matter who you are

This is an Illinois open thread.

  9 Comments      


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

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, Jul 7, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Rep. Benton resigns (Updated x2)

Friday, Jul 3, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here for some background. We told subscribers to stay tuned for news this morning…

Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch released the following statement Friday:

“The House is in receipt of Representative Harry Benton’s letter of resignation, effective today at 4:59 p.m.

“I am grateful to those who came forward and trusted our office to listen, support them, and ensure their concerns were handled appropriately.”

* Rep. Benton’s letter of resignation

Speaker Welch and Esteemed Colleagues:

Please accept this letter as my formal resignation as State Representative for the 97th House District, effective at 4:59 p.m. on Friday, July 3, 2026. I also intend to withdraw my name as the Democratic nominee for the 97th House District and will take the necessary steps to remove my name from the November general election ballot.

This matter has placed tremendous strain on my family since it began in late February. As we move forward into the next chapter of our lives, I respectfully ask that our privacy be honored

Serving the people of the 97th House District since January 2023 has been one of the greatest privileges of my life. I am grateful to my colleagues for the opportunity to work alongside them on behalf of the people of Illinois, and I wish each of you continued success as you carry forward the important work of this General Assembly.

Finally, I extend my sincere thanks to the constituents of the 97th House District for placing their trust in me and electing me to serve as their representative. I am deeply grateful for that confidence and respectfully ask for your understanding and privacy as I leave the General Assembly.

…Adding… 97th HD Republican candidate Gabby Shanahan…

Following the news that Representative Harry Benton has resigned from office, Gabby Shanahan, candidate for State Representative in the 97th District, released the following statement:

“The need for honesty, integrity, and transparency did not begin with Harry Benton, and it does not end with his resignation. For too long, too many politicians have put themselves ahead of the people. That is why so many people have lost trust in government.

“For 126 days, families here were left without the representation they deserved. Questions went unanswered. Transparency was missing. And the political class stayed silent.

“At the same time, families struggle with high property taxes, rising costs, and the same failed politics that have made life harder.

“Our district deserved a representative fully able to serve them. They did not get it.

“Too many people in power acted like it didn’t matter. I know it does.

“Accountability is not just a press release. It is not months of silence followed by a Friday afternoon announcement before a holiday weekend. Accountability is a promise you make to the people you serve every single day.

”That is my promise. I will always be honest. I will always show up. And I will always put the people I represent ahead of myself, so together, we can bring positive change to state government.”

…Adding… Wheatland Township Democrats…

As the Chair of the Wheatland Township Democrats and the former Chair of the Will County Board, I believe deeply in public service and the high ethical standards we must demand from those who represent us. It is with a clear sense of that duty, that I am publicly calling on Harry Benton to resign from his elected office as Wheatland Township Highway Commissioner.

When the Speaker of the House reviewed the Inspector General’s findings and explicitly stated that if Benton did not step down, he would actively seek his expulsion from the General Assembly, it sends an undeniable signal. That level of action by leadership indicates that the charges are both incredibly serious and well-founded.

To be clear, I do not know the specifics of the accusations against Representative Benton. Furthermore, we have no evidence of malfeasance or wrongdoing regarding his position at the township. However, this is not a court of law, and this is not a legal case. Elected officials can, and should, be held to a higher ethical standard.

Wheatland Township deserves representation free from the cloud of ethical misconduct. Harry Benton needs to step down.

Sincerely,

Mimi Cowan

Chair, Wheatland Township Democrats

* Sen. Cappel…

State Senator Meg Loughran Cappel (D-Shorewood) released the following statement regarding the resignation of State Representative Harry Benton:

“Representative Benton’s decision to resign is the right one for the district and the constituents he was elected to serve. Public service requires trust, integrity and accountability, and this is an important step toward allowing the community to move forward.

I look forward to reviewing the findings of the investigation when they become available so that those impacted can get the answers, support and peace they deserve. I commend those who came forward, and I remain committed to ensuring every person feels heard, respected and safe.”

  2 Comments      


Governor Pritzker, Fight For Us.

Friday, Jul 3, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Working families face rising costs and medical debt, while hospital systems continue to profit by exploiting the 340B program - making billions, while patients are paying the price.

Leaders in Kentucky, Virginia and California recognize that a program meant to help vulnerable patients shouldn’t become a profit stream for billion-dollar hospital systems and their business partners.

Governor JB Pritzker has the opportunity to lead the way. Illinois deserves better — veto 340B Profit-Grab (HB 2371).

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

Friday, Jul 3, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Pritzker touts some data center benefits, but says: 'We don't want them if they're going to take advantage of us'
* Today's quotable
* US Attorney Boutros appears to threaten Chicago reporters: 'We’re going to address that at the appropriate time'
* Governor Pritzker, Fight For Us.
* Dems won't put state money where their mouths are
* RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
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