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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
* Rep. Kevin Olickal and Senate candidate Patrick Hanley joined Daniel Biss and Kat Abughazaleh to promote Niles Township’s People’s Prairie…
* Center Square | Illinois second in local fines and forfeitures: The report titled “Taxation by Citation” found that Illinois generates the second-largest share of local general revenue from fines and forfeitures of all 50 states. Illinois is also second in the nation in per-capita fines and forfeitures collected by local governments, at $53.76 per resident, more than double the national weighted average of $24.77. […] “Taxation by Citation” reviewed 8,054 cities. Nastasi said the Franklin County city of Orient collects $22 per capita in fines. * Aurora Beacon-News | Fourth of July travel has already begun in Illinois: In a recent press release, officials with AAA predicted that 4.2 million Illinois residents will travel at least 50 miles during the Fourth of July travel period, which has already begun and will end Sunday, July 5. The release adds that about 3.8 million Illinois residents will travel by car during the holiday period, and that “while this year’s increase is modest compared to recent gains, it still sets a record for Fourth of July travel in Illinois, as strong consumer demand continues to offset higher travel costs.” * Patch | Saharan Dust Plume Moves Across Illinois Tuesday: The Weather Channel said the Saharan Air Layer typically ramps up in mid-June, and peaks in late June into mid-August. “And at certain times, the dust can cover an area as large as the entirety of the lower 48 states,” The Weather Channel said. So, look out for hazy skies on Tuesday, and you might see a beautiful sunset this week from the dust. * Center Square | Pritzker signs 62 new laws, many not in effect until 2027: House Bill 4461 will prevent hospitals from being allowed to file a lien on a patient’s primary residence because they have past-due medical debt, taking effect on Jan. 1. House Bill 4702 requires all diapers sold or distributed in the state to be labeled with a list of ingredients used to produce the product. While the law is effective on Jan. 1, it has a grace period for companies to come into compliance, ending on June 1, 2028. * Daily Herald | Opponents cite documents as proof Hoffman Estates plans data center on Plum Farms site: Barrington Hills resident Amanda Pollard filed the request Monday, asking that any finding of a violation be used to challenge the village board’s possible rezoning of the northwest corner of Higgins Road and Route 72 to manufacturing use at Monday’s board meeting. She cited documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act as proof plans for a data center are more specific than the landowner or village officials have said aloud. * Business Insider | Cargo thieves have set their sights on data center supplies: Investigators with the Cook County Sheriff’s office in Illinois said last week they recovered a pair of trailers with $1.3 million worth of data center supplies at a Chicago-area truck yard. Officials said the organized retail crime unit was tipped off about a trailer containing about $300,000 worth of copper wire spools, which had been reported stolen from Pine Hill, Alabama. Copper wiring is a key supply for building and connecting data centers. * Business Insider | An AI data center suing for Colorado River water highlights a bigger question: Who should get the West’s water?: The developer behind what would be California’s largest AI data center is suing for access to Colorado River water, the threatened source of freshwater for 40 million people and the subject of countless disputes over water use in the West. The lawsuit, filed this month by Imperial Valley Computer Manufacturing, says the company needs access to 287 million gallons of water for the 330-megawatt data center. If the proposed project in Southern California’s Imperial Valley is built, it would be the largest AI data center in the state. * Block Club Chicago | Who Were The Midway Blitz Border Patrol Agents? Most Were Veteran Immigration Officers: They averaged more than a decade on the job, and about two-thirds of them had some form of special training. More than 100 had “Mobile Field Force” training, which includes deescalating civil unrest and crowd control. Still, Block Club found that in at least 52 separate incidents across the Chicago area, agents used force against individuals and crowds by deploying tear gas, pepper spray or tasers, tackling or physically assaulting them, or chasing or ramming them with their cars. * Crain’s | Johnson tees up fight with landlords over new renters’ rights ordinance: Mayor Brandon Johnson formally introduced legislation to overhaul the city’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance on Monday, with provisions that could force landlords to pay thousands in relocation assistance for choosing not to renew certain tenant leases. Housing advocates argue the legislation, called the Protecting Renters Ordinance, is urgently needed to ensure fairness and transparency for tenants who are being pushed out of their homes by rent increases in gentrifying neighborhoods. Building owners, meanwhile, say the regulations would increase the cost of providing housing, causing them to pass the burden on to their tenants and pushing smaller landlords out of the market. * Crain’s | Chicago housing market defies national downdrafts as prices hit another high: For the third month in a row, home prices in Chicago reached record highs in May, while the broader national market has seen prices barely lifting above year-ago levels. It’s the latest chapter in a now long-running story of the Chicago-area housing market doing its own thing. That’s rarely been more clear than it is in this month’s roundup of housing market data, which shows Chicago tightening where other major cities are getting looser (inventory) and rising where many of them are falling (prices.) * Block Club | O’Hare’s Expansion Forced Chicago To Invest In Wetlands 20 Years Ago. Conservationists Are Seeing Results: The city of Chicago had to make up for the more than 280 acres of wetlands lost in the $8 billion expansion of O’Hare International Airport. In 2005, the city gave the nonprofit Openlands $26 million to restore five sites within the Des Plaines River watershed. Nearly 20 years and 530 acres of restored wetlands later, Openlands celebrated the completion of the O’Hare Modernization Wetlands Mitigation Project last fall. Now, the sites are still being maintained by local site stewards and volunteers. Samantha Chavez, the director of restoration at Openlands, said the project should be used as a model for similar restoration across the country. * Sun-Times | Chicago advocates, immigrant families feel ‘relieved’ as Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship: “While we’re relieved that the [Supreme] Court upheld birthright citizenship, we can’t overlook all the other decisions written by MAGA aligned justices that have chipped away at our rights and freedoms,” said Brandon Lee, spokesperson for the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. Danae Kovac, executive director of the HANA Center, an immigrant justice organization, said the Supreme Court’s ruling drew “mixed feelings.” * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights Road project wrapping up after frustrating delays: Utility conflicts, need for bridge rehabilitation, more unsuitable soil than expected and a delay in the paving contractor opening its asphalt plant added months to the project. According to Carr, several underground utilities were found in different places than available records and resolving the conflicts required redesign and coordination with utility owners adding several months of work. * Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows hikes ambulance fees to pay for six new firefighters: In making the staffing request to the city council, Fire Chief Pete Sutter pointed to statistics showing 4,200 calls for service logged in 2025 — a marked increase from 2,715 in 1990. Hiring another two firefighters per shift was the recommendation of a 2012 Illinois Fire Chiefs Association Consulting Services report, which was the impetus for a then-controversial plan to relocate the city’s two fire stations to improve response times and reduce fire risk throughout town. * Pioneer Press | The time is near for the Chicago Bears training camp open practices in Lake Forest: Fans looking to get a glimpse of the 2026 Chicago Bears will have 10 opportunities to do so this summer as the team has announced its training camp schedule in Lake Forest. The Bears are scheduled to hold 10 open practices this summer at Halas Hall beginning Friday, July 31, according to a team statement. * STLPR | With judge’s ruling, East St. Louis schools lose federal grant funding: James Avant and Annette Harris Officer Elementary Schools are each set to lose $500,000 in funding. The funds provide in-school tutoring for reading and math as well as before and after care programs. It also has funded the district’s current summer programming. Executive Director of ACT Now Illinois Susan Stanton said the impact will be felt immediately by 16 school districts. * Illinois Times | LifeStar Ambulance seeks to drop lawsuit against Memorial: LifeStar Ambulance Service. Inc. wants to temporarily drop its lawsuit against Springfield Memorial Hospital to gather proof of what LifeStar considers the hospital’s bias against the company. “We’re still trying to find more evidence,” LifeStar Chief Executive Officer John Wright told Illinois Times. “We need more for a lawsuit.” If Associate Circuit Judge Christopher Perrin grants LifeStar’s request, the company will have up to a year to refile the suit, Wright said. Perrin is scheduled to preside in a hearing in the case June 30. * WJBD | Marion County Democrats Open Salem Campaign Headquarters: The recently elected chair of the party, Gina Reynolds, says the party is making a comeback in the county. “More candidates win some seats, more involvement, and make sure that people know that we are out here, and we’re working for everyone in Marion County, not just the Marion county Democratic Party. We want everyone to have a better chance at life, more affordability, and we are worried about Medicaid cuts coming to hospitals. Last time I checked the hospital in Centralia, about 40% of their inpatient patients are on Medicaid, and if we have Medicaid cuts, that hospital will be really damaged.” * KSDK | ‘Unghosting’ history: America’s first Black incorporated town officially restored to Route 66 map: On Friday, Brooklyn officially joined America’s most famous highway as community leaders unveiled a new Route 66 marker on Madison Street. For the village, it represents the first step toward a long-awaited comeback for America’s first Black-incorporated town. “Every good thing needs a foundation, so the Route 66, the unveiling, the unghosting, that’s the foundation that we’ve been waiting for here on Madison Street,” says Mayor Trenton Atkins. * WAND | ISP: Part of I-72 in Springfield buckling from heat: Illinois State Police issued a traffic advisory saying the right lane of I-72 west at milepost 96.5, just before the Scheels exit, is buckling. The Illinois Department of Transportation is at the scene. * WSIL | Carbondale to Bury 100-Year Time Capsule at SIMMS on July 2: The time capsule contains contributions from city staff, community organizations, local businesses, public schools, and Southern Illinois University, all designed to capture what life in Carbondale was like in 2026 for future generations. * AP | As wildfires worsen, Trump administration revives discredited policy to stomp out all fires quickly: And the administration’s focus on “full suppression” of new fires marks a sharp reversal from a decades-long trend toward embracing flames as a tool — to burn off old vegetation and growth that acts like fuel and lessen the risk of catastrophic blazes being stoked by a warming planet. The changes benefit private fire aviation companies that are key to hitting blazes fast.
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CTU-friendly school board candidates, others catch a big break
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * This is big news. State law generally forbids circulating for different parties and independents in the same election cycle (for good reason), but the Chicago Electoral Board has ruled that it doesn’t apply to non-partisan school board races…
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Bailey campaign embraces AI slop
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Capitol News Illinois…
An example: “Taxes for you. Offshore trusts for JB Pritzker.”… * Back to the story…
I dunno about that. Some of it is pretty standard. The first image is photoshopped from the Rauner campaign. The second is from Bailey’s campaign…
* But using AI comes with hazards. Check out the location of Peoria in this image… They don’t call it slop for nothing. * CNI…
Yeah, no malice here… Or here… * One more time with CNI…
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Supreme Court to hear challenge to Cook County assault weapons ban
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Reuters…
* The Sun-Times…
* Crain’s…
* More…
* Reuters | US Supreme Court turns away cases testing firearm age restrictions: The justices turned away appeals challenging a federal ban on handgun purchases by people ages 18 to 20, as well as a similar state law in Florida imposing the same age requirement on all firearms purchases. Lower courts rejected the arguments by plaintiffs in those cases that those laws violate the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment right to “keep and bear arms.”
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Illinois backs off Kalshi tax for now, as Michigan moves forward
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Crain’s…
No revenue from the tax was calculated in the budget, so this is not a hit. The state knew this suit was highly likely. * Meanwhile, in Michigan…
* From the Michigan state judge’s order…
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ACLU: Supreme Court’s transgender ruling doesn’t apply to Illinois (Updated)
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * ACLU Illinois…
![]() * RAGA…
* More…
…Adding… Sen. Chesney
WGN in 2025: “The Illinois High School Association says of the 320,000 student-athletes competing in all IHSA sports at all levels, only three people born male asked for and received waivers to compete in girls’ sports last year. The organization granted just two waivers the year before.”
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Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * From Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment…
Click here for the opinion. The three dissenting justices were Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch. Justice Brett Kavanaugh filed an opinion concurring in the judgement and dissenting in part. * Attorney General Kwame Raoul…
* Gov. JB Pritzker…
* More…
* The New Republic | Kavanaugh Gives Republicans Road Map to End Birthright Citizenship: His rationale: Trump’s plan to strip American-born second-generation immigrants of their citizenship could work if it were enacted through Congress. “In my view, the Executive Order does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment. But the Order does contravene a federal statute,” Kavanaugh wrote, referring to the law specifying birthright parameters. “Congress could—consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment—amend [this law] or otherwise enact new legislation establishing exceptions to birthright citizenship for children born to foreign citizens unlawfully or temporarily in the country. But Congress has not yet done so.”
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Supreme Court lifts coordinated spending limits on national political parties
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
* From the decision…
Seems like a lot of gymnastics. However, it might possibly be said that strengthening national political parties in the wake of the tsunamis of independent expenditures by giant corporations probably isn’t all bad. Obviously, it would be much better if there wasn’t so much money sloshing around, but, also obviously, that ain’t happening with this court.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Supreme Court rejects GOP mail ballot challenge, but Illinois Dems warn voting rights ’still under attack’. Sun-Times…
- The 5-4 Supreme Court decision targeted laws in 14 states and the District of Columbia, including Illinois, which permits mailed ballots to arrive and be counted for several days after an election if they are postmarked by Election Day. There are 36 states that require absentee or mail ballots to be received on or before Election Day. - Top Illinois Democrats like Gov. JB Pritzker and Sen. Dick Durbin praised the ruling — but both are warning that Trump’s attacks on voting rights aren’t over. * Gov. JB Pritzker has no public events scheduled today. * Crain’s | Illinois joins states’ lawsuit to kill Medicaid work requirements: Democratic officials from 25 states, including Illinois, and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit Tuesday challenging the legality of the interim final rule on work requirements that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued this month. The plaintiffs contend the agency didn’t follow proper regulatory procedures when issuing the rule, which they say differs in key aspects from prior regulatory guidance and from states’ expectations, and didn’t give states enough time to meet deadlines set by President Donald Trump’s tax law. The states want the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts to impose a stay on the regulation while the case proceeds. * WBEZ | Bill on Pritzker’s desk would boost state payments to the wrongfully convicted: The legislation would hike the maximum payout to $50,000 for each year spent behind bars and $25,000 per year on probation or parole, or under an order to register as a sex offender. The bill would also remove an inflation-adjusted cap that, most recently, was less than $300,000 — no matter how many years the exoneree spent in prison. * Press release | Federal Court Denies Motion for Preliminary Injunction, Paving the Way for Devastating Cuts to Illinois Full-Service Community Schools: In a devastating blow to nearly 19,000 students and their families across 32 schools in Illinois, on Friday, June 26th, a federal court denied ACT Now Illinois and Metropolitan Family Services’ motion for preliminary injunction and partially granted a motion to dismiss on six of the eight claims filed in the lawsuit. The ruling allows the U.S. Department of Education’s abrupt and unlawful non-continuation of two Full-Service Community Schools (FSCS) grants, totaling $18.5 million annually, to proceed. The ruling, issued in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, comes just days before a temporary agreement keeping the programs afloat is set to expire on June 30. Because of this court action, ACT Now will be forced to cease all FSCS operations on July 1, terminate staff, end contracts with partner schools and community organizations, and dismantle a statewide network that has been built over two years. * Evanston Now | State lawmakers talk spring session, priorities for fall: Evanston’s state lawmakers held a community town hall Monday night, sharing updates from the spring’s legislative session in Springfield and their goals for the fall’s veto session, where key legislation on data centers, housing and the Chicago Bears may be up for consideration. * Capitol News Illinois | PGA Tour gets state grant for Presidents Cup at Medinah Country Club: The fiscal year 2027 budget that takes effect July 1 appropriates $1 million to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity for a grant to the PGA Tour for costs associated with a tournament. It also includes a $500,000 reappropriation for a grant to the PGA for unspecified infrastructure improvements. A Freedom of Information Act request by Capitol News Illinois revealed DCEO and the PGA signed a grant agreement for $1 million for the Presidents Cup tournament at the Medinah Country Club in the western suburbs on the last weekend of September. * WAND | IL law expands asthma medication access in schools: A new state law allows schools to keep a supply of asthma medication in secure locations that are accessible before, during, or after school, where someone may be at risk. That includes practice fields, gyms and other athletic facilities. This comes as exercise-induced asthma can put student athletes at heightened risk of sudden respiratory distress. * Tribune | Minimum wage in Chicago and Cook County set to increase July 1: Chicago’s minimum wage will increase July 1, when it will hit $17.05 for most workers across the city. […] It does not apply to tipped workers like restaurant servers or bartenders, who can be paid less than the full minimum wage so long as their tips make up the difference. Tipped workers making the hourly minimum will see a slight increase to their hourly wage on Wednesday — a raise of less than 50 cents per hour. But they won’t be getting more significant hourly raises after the City Council froze planned wage hikes for tipped workers earlier this year. * Tribune | Medical care experts: Extreme heat is a public health emergency for Chicago, not a seasonal nuisance: As of this week, the Garfield Center at 10 S. Kedzie is the only 24-hour cooling center in Chicago — a single location for a city of nearly 3 million. This must change. Many people wrongly assume they can sleep off a hot day, or they hesitate to run the air conditioner overnight due to electricity cost — concerns that are valid — which is exactly why cooling centers matter: They offer relief and safety to the financially vulnerable populations at greatest risk. * Tribune | 2 independents fight to stay on the Illinois 4th District ballot amid machine politics claims: A final decision on the two cases could come as soon as July 14, when the Illinois Board of Elections meets and will likely discuss recommendations from hearing officers. “This process is unfair. It’s open to abuse, and it’s being abused by Patty,” said Macías, a former Planned Parenthood Action Fund member. “Patty is weaponizing this process to keep Latino candidates off the ballot to deprive voters of choices. If this challenge successfully silences the voices of thousands, it will confirm the suspicion so many of the voters I have spoken to have about the system being rigged.” * WBEZ | Why is it so expensive to replace lead pipes in Chicago?: With more than 400,000 lead water service lines, Chicago has the largest known inventory of lead pipes of any city in the country. Officials say replacing each one costs about $31,000 on average — more than six times the Environmental Protection Agency’s national estimate of $4,700 a line. * Sun-Times | Piping plover chicks named after 4 famed Chicago musicians: The four fuzzy, (and currently) flightless birds are now named Buddy, Frankie, Mavis and Tweedy after famed Chicago musicians Buddy Guy, Frankie Knuckles, Mavis Staples and Jeff Tweedy. The Chicago Piping Plovers group said it received more than 456 submissions and more than 1,500 unique names for the chicks. A seven-person panel with representatives from various local city and conservation groups narrowed down the list. * Daily Herald | Ethics complaint filed over Palatine school district’s use of consultant: An ethics complaint has been filed against Palatine Township Elementary District 15 alleging misuse of funds during the district’s successful $93 million 2022 Moving 15 Forward referendum campaign. It was filed by Americans for Prosperity-Illinois and former District 15 school board candidate Justin Hegy.The complaint, along with a Freedom of Information Act request, was submitted to District 15, the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office and the Illinois attorney general’s office for review. * Lake County News-Sun | Lake County’s gun violence initiative touts improved stats: ‘We can’t let those investments in social programs go away’: Approximately $900,000 in renewed funds, running from May 1, 2026, to April 30, 2027, will go to awareness and education efforts, including pay for two existing full-time positions, a restraining order trainer, and a social worker. The remaining $500,000 is a grant running from Oct. 1, 2025, through Sept. 30, 2026, going to operational supplies — such as gun safes and educational literature — to distribute to the community. The money will also go to fund law enforcement overtime in relation to restraining order incidents. * Daily Herald | College of DuPage board OKs $397 million budget: That amount is roughly $31 million more than COD’s spending plan for the current fiscal year. The fiscal 2027 budget includes funding to remodel laboratory spaces and upgrade the welding lab ventilation system, according to a news release. It also calls for hiring 15 additional full-time faculty members, including people who will teach in the construction management, dance, industrial maintenance, business law and engineering programs. * Lake & McHenry County Scanner | Former Hawthorn Woods man facing charges for allegedly voting multiple times in Illinois, Michigan: The Lake County State’s Attorney’s Office said the charges were a result of an investigation initiated by the Lake County Clerk’s Office. The clerk’s office began the investigation after it received notice of possible “voting irregularities” from the Illinois State Board of Elections. Prosecutors said the clerk’s office’s investigation showed that Barrick cast two in-person votes in the general election. * Crain’s | Nation’s largest industrial landlord bets $100M on Chicago warehouse demand: The nation’s largest owner of industrial real estate has picked up a west suburban development site as part of a $100 million plan for a pair of large warehouses, a sign that big developers are getting back to building with industrial vacancy hovering near a record low. A venture of real estate investment trust Prologis paid nearly $29.3 million last week for a 25-acre parcel at 375 Army Trail Road in Glendale Heights, according to Illinois property records. The San Francisco-based industrial giant acquired the site from radio and podcast company Audacy, which has a transmission tower there for AM radio stations WBBM and WSCR. * WAND | Effingham County neighbors concerned about solar farm plans: Sixty acres of open farmland have been in Dan Westfall’s family for generations. Now, he — along with other families across Effingham County — says they are fighting to protect that land from what could become the county’s first large-scale solar farm. […] The proposed solar farm would cover about 16 acres and would be located nearly two miles from Westfall’s property. Other neighbors said it would be much closer to their homes. * WCIA | Tolono Park District raising money to add inclusive section to West Side park: For years—the park district says they’ve wanted to make the West Side park more inclusive — and now are raising money for it. They say they missed out on a grant — so they’re turning to the community for donations. Their goal is to replace one of three play areas—making it inclusive for all children. * WCIA | Cooling centers open to help Central Illinois residents beat the heat: With dangerously high temperatures expected in Central Illinois, cooling centers are opening up for the summer to keep people safe. The cooling centers include libraries, malls, nonprofits and homeless shelters that open their doors to keep people cool and keep them out of the sun. * AP | Supreme Court is set to rule on challenge to birthright citizenship: The Supreme Court on Tuesday will rule on the constitutionality of President Donald Trump’s order on birthright citizenship declaring that children born to parents who are in the United States illegally or temporarily are not American citizens. The decision comes on the final day of a Supreme Court term that has centered on Trump’s expansive claims of presidential power — and largely ruled in his favor. * WIRED | The Anti-Data-Center Movement Is Reshaping Michigan Politics: Lawrence’s campaign sees data centers as a potent topic to rally voters to his side in the Democratic primary in Michigan’s 7th district, to be held in August. Internal polling conducted by Data for Progress of likely Democratic primary voters in the district shared with WIRED shows that more than 40 percent of respondents were “much more likely” to vote for a candidate who opposed data centers. The message resonated even more with respondents under 45: Almost 80 percent of younger voters said they’d be much more likely or more likely to support an anti-data-center candidate. (The 7th district includes the college county of Ingham.)
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Good morning!
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, Jun 30, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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