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A question nobody appears to be asking

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC7

A new report from the Chief Judge of Cook County says 8% of people on electronic monitoring are currently AWOL.

The admission is part of an effort to promote a new level of transparency about the program in the aftermath of several violent incidents involving people who were on electronic monitoring.

The report says there are 3,048 people on the program, meaning that 244 people with pending criminal cases, most likely felony charges, are not complying with the rules.

According to the report, there are 246 “AWOL Individuals with Active Warrants.” More from the report

Non-compliance violations in the EM program fall into two primary categories. The most common is device-related: individuals whose monitoring equipment has low battery alarms. The second involves individuals who leave or arrive late to their approved location.

In all major violation scenarios, the following process applies:

    • The assigned Adult Probation staff is notified and reviews circumstances to determine if the alert reflects a major violation, a device or emergency issue
    • If valid, a major violation report is filed and submitted to court no later than the following business day for judicial review
    • A judge determines next steps: continuance, additional conditions or issuance of a warrant
    • Where a warrant is issued, the warrant is entered into the law enforcement LEADS system and the Cook County Sheriff’s Office is notified
    • Law enforcement is responsible for the execution of the warrant and return of the defendant to custody until the case is brought back to court

* HGOP response…

House Minority Leader Tony McCombie issued the following statement in response to the Chief Judge of Cook County reporting that 8% (1 of 12) of people on electronic monitoring are currently AWOL:

“Electronic monitoring should not be a free pass for criminals. Improving public safety should start with revoking pre-trial release. Individuals charged with heinous crimes, especially attempted murder, sexual assault, and aggravated battery must be held accountable and victims must be prioritized and protected. As lawmakers, it is our responsibility to fix what’s broken.”

McCombie filed legislation last month, House Bill 5757, which proposes a mandatory revocation of pre-trial release if offenders commit a new felony while out on electronic monitoring.

One of the problems I have with this statement is “if offenders commit a new felony.” People are still supposed to be presumed innocent in this country - until the US Supreme Court decides to overturn another mountain of stare decisis.

* I do think this sort of thing should be looked at by the legislature because the locals don’t seem to be doing a very good job. In the meantime, nobody appears to be even wondering aloud why the sheriff and local police departments haven’t rounded these folks up. That needs to be addressed ASAP.

  9 Comments      


After initial denial, Pritzker reveals hospital trip (Updated)

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I had heard that the governor had been taken to the hospital yesterday. I called Pritzker’s press office. They called me back a little over an hour later and denied it. I expressed my strong displeasure with them today. NBC Chicago

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker had a “minor complication” from a recent procedure and was taken to a Springfield hospital earlier this week, a spokesperson for the governor confirmed to NBC Chicago Friday. […]

Spokesperson Matt Hill said no ambulance was needed and Pritzker was treated and sent home.

* Sun-Times

Pritzker, 61, on May 1 underwent a “routine outpatient urology procedure” and stepped back from public duties for a week. The Democratic governor returned to public duties on Monday and attended a press conference alongside Mayor Brandon Johnson and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton, as well as Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin.

Pritzker was asked Monday if he was disclosing any ongoing concerns or treatments related to his medical procedure.

“Nope. You guys got plenty of information,” Pritzker said with a laugh.

And we still don’t know what that procedure was earlier this month and why he had to go to the hospital this week.

…Adding… I wasn’t the only one…


  17 Comments      


Stop Rx Drug Deserts. Say No To HB 1443!

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

HB 1443 would create a state-appointed Prescription Drug Affordability Board with the authority to review and set upper payment limits on selected prescription drugs. While well-intentioned, this misguided legislation risks harming patients’ community pharmacies without addressing the real drivers of health care costs.

Allowing government appointees to intervene in decisions between patients and their physicians raises serious concerns. Moreover, despite being enacted in multiple states, these boards have failed to deliver meaningful savings. Two states have set upper payment limits, yet in the seven years since the first board was established, there is no evidence of a single dollar saved for patients.

In Illinois, community pharmacies are essential to the communities they serve, providing access to critical medicines and treatments. If upper payment limits are set below pharmacies’ acquisition costs, pharmacists could be forced to dispense drugs at a loss or stop carrying certain drugs altogether. This puts patient access at risk, especially those who depend on nearby, trusted community-based pharmacies.

Illinois’ health care system is already incredibly fragile. HB 1443 advances policy with no record of lowering costs for patients or supporting the sustainability of community pharmacies. Don’t force community pharmacies to choose between financial loss and patient access. We urge you to oppose HB 1443.

Paid for by PharmaScript and the Greater Chicagoland Black Chamber of Commerce

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It’s just a bill

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Transformer

Last month, OpenAI endorsed a controversial bill in Illinois that would provide AI companies with a liability shield as long as they met (very basic) transparency requirements. The move prompted outrage, with LawAI’s Charlie Bullock calling it a contender for “worst state AI bill of all time.”

Now, however, OpenAI appears to be backtracking. In written testimony to the Illinois Senate this week OpenAI’s Caitlin Niedermeyer disavowed the liability shield part of that bill.

“We want to be very clear: we do not support the liability safe harbor included in SB 3444,” Niedermeyer said. “We testified in support of SB 3444 because it also contributed to a broader, coordinated approach to frontier AI safety and helped establish a pathway toward harmonization with emerging national standards … we were silent on the provision in that bill related to a safe harbor for liability and some took it as an endorsement of a no liability framework.”

OpenAI has not just disavowed the controversial provision in SB 3444. Along with Anthropic, it has also endorsed a much stronger bill, SB 315, which has the backing of AI safety organizations. Like various AI bills circulating state legislatures at the moment, SB 315 (first introduced in February as SB 3261) is closely modeled on California’s SB 53 and New York’s RAISE Act: it is focused on catastrophic risks, and requires the largest AI companies to develop and adhere to a frontier safety framework.

Importantly, SB 315 also builds on those bills by requiring third-party audits to check companies are actually complying with their safety frameworks — a provision that was in the original version of RAISE, but was stripped out due to industry opposition.

* WIRED reporter Max Zeff


* WAND

The Illinois Senate unanimously passed a bill Thursday to ban insurance companies from automatically coding a health service lower than what is actually provided to patients.

This proposal states that all downcoding determinations must be made or reviewed by a real person, and insurance companies would be required to notify doctors if a service is downcoded.

The plan also bans insurers from downcoding in a discriminatory manner against doctors who routinely treat patients with complex health conditions. […]

Senate Bill 3114 now moves to the House for further consideration.

* Sen. Laura Ellman…

To ensure Illinois maintains strong environmental and public health protections even if federal standards are weakened in the future, State Senator Laura Ellman advanced House Bill 5070 through the Senate on Thursday in an effort to safeguard clean air, water and more.

“Illinois families deserve clean air to breathe and safe water to drink regardless of changes happening at the federal level,” said Ellman (D-Naperville). “This measure ensures our state can continue protecting public health and the environment instead of automatically rolling back standards whenever federal protections are weakened.”

House Bill 5070 would prohibit the Illinois Pollution Control Board from adopting standards that are less stringent than existing state regulations through the expedited “identical-in-substance” rulemaking process. The legislation would apply to regulations concerning air pollution, water pollution, drinking water, hazardous waste and landfills.

Under current law, the Illinois Pollution Control Board is generally required to adopt certain federal environmental regulations through an expedited process when federal standards change. HB 5070 clarifies that Illinois cannot use that process to weaken existing state protections if federal regulations are rolled back.

The measure also standardizes language throughout the Environmental Protection Act to reaffirm the state’s authority to adopt protections that are stronger than federal minimum standards. […]

House Bill 5070 passed the Senate and now heads to the governor’s desk for further consideration.

* Sen. Mike Halpin

In the face of higher student debt for many in Illinois and across the country, State Senator Mike Halpin’s measure to keep track of the private student loan borrowing market has passed the Senate.

“With the Trump administration placing caps on federal lending for student borrowers, we need to keep track of where the Illinois student loan market is at,” said Halpin (D-Rock Island). “Monitoring student loan default rates and loans with cosigners will give us a clearer picture of how students are doing with their debt and what actions Illinois can make to assist them.”

Halpin’s measure would provide that the annual report to the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation should include the total number and dollar amount – instead of the volume – of private education loans made annually by a private educational lender. It should also include the total number and dollar amount of private education loans made annually at institutions of higher education, the total number and dollar amount of private education loans made annually with a cosigner, and the default rate for the private education loans reported by the private educational lender.

According to The Education Initiative, Illinois residents hold $63.4 billion in student loan debt. The average borrower owes $39,042, with over one and a half million people in student loan debt. Over half of these borrowers are under the age of 35. […]

House Bill 4754 has passed the Senate and heads to the governor’s desk for further consideration.

* Merrill Cole, president of the Western Illinois University chapter of the University Professionals of Illinois

According to Advance Illinois, WIU currently gets less than half the state funding needed to serve its students. The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, however, is funded at nearly 90% adequacy. […]

Senate Bill 13 and House Bill 158, the Adequate and Equitable Public University Funding Act, would change this. The bill would direct new funding to the universities furthest from adequacy first.

For WIU, that means a potential increase from $16,000 per student to $35,000 — a genuine investment in an institution that serves first-generation students, veterans, and rural communities that larger universities do not.

The cost is $135 million annually — less than one-quarter of one percent of a $56 billion state budget. The University of Illinois system has opposed the bill, citing its own budget priorities.

But as WIU Trustee Kirk Dillard noted, a degree today is worth 85% more over a lifetime than one earned in 1979. Why wouldn’t Illinois invest $135 million to keep that opportunity accessible?

* The National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies…

Illinois consumers will see fewer options and higher prices should HB 4273 and SB 714, which were approved by state lawmakers today, become law.

“Giving the government absolute control over insurance rates will not solve the problem,” said Brian Christenberry, regional vice president for NAMIC. “HB 4273 and SB 714 only serve to create uncertainty in the marketplace by giving the state the ability to reject a rate filing – past, present, or future – as excessive, without defining why. Letting politicians set prices is never a good idea, and it will drive competition from the marketplace.”

The legislation would allow the state Department of Insurance to revisit and overturn past rate approvals, calling previously accepted rates “excessive” long after the fact, based on a broad, undefined authority to decide what qualifies as an “excessive” rate, without objective standards. It provides no timelines or due-process for insurers that request a hearing, opening the door to indefinite delays and inconsistent enforcement, and allows the state to mandate retroactive refunds based solely on its own decision.

Illinois has long been one of the nation’s most competitive marketplaces, and rates have remained around the national average even as losses have skyrocketed due to increasingly frequent severe weather and rising construction and replacement costs. The regulatory changes laid out in HB 4273 could cause homeowners’ premiums to increase by approximately 20 percent, or $230 on average, with a similar effect on auto insurance rates due to SB 714.

“Increasing state control over insurance underwriting doesn’t lower rates, because it doesn’t address the risks and costs drivers at the heart of the problem,” Christenberry said. “We’ve seen this approach in California, and it doesn’t work. HB 4273 and SB 714 would create an even worse regulatory system, likely with even worse results.”

* WCIA

A bill that would require businesses to provide cash or credit refunds for eligible returns is making its way through the Illinois Legislature.

State Senator Rachel Ventura said House Bill 4044 would prohibit retailers from requiring that people accept store credit instead of a refund on unopened or unused products.

Eligible products include any machine, appliance, clothing or similar product that was purchased for personal, family or household purpose, the bill reads. […]

House Bill 4044 passed the Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday.

* More…

    * Press release | Johnson passes measure to expand access to life-saving asthma medication at Illinois schools: “By keeping asthma medication in gyms and practice fields, we allow students to participate in sports and activities without worrying about access to medication,” said Johnson (D-Buffalo Grove). “Quick access to life-saving medication can make all the difference in an emergency.” House Bill 4247 would allow schools to maintain a supply of asthma medication at practice fields and gyms and permit coaches and athletic trainers to administer undesignated asthma medication.

    * Press release | Rep. Fritts Joins Press Conference on Affordability; Demands Gas Tax Suspension: Today, State Representative Brad Fritts (R-Dixon) joined his Republican colleagues in a press conference on affordability in Illinois. He championed legislation to suspend the gas tax to provide immediate relief to Illinois residents. “Affordability is the top issue for Illinoisans,” said Fritts. “At any time, Governor Pritzker could join our efforts by temporarily suspending the state sales tax on gas, which is a tax on a tax. I signed onto House Bill 5738, which would suspend the state sales tax on gas for six months, to allow Illinois families to save a little bit of extra money every time they fill their tank.

    * WSJ | ‘Yimby’ Has Arrived in Illinois, and Some Cities Don’t Like It: Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker is taking a page from other blue states to combat a housing shortage, proposing that Illinois take some control away from locals. The governor and his allies in the statehouse have introduced legislation that would remove some zoning control from municipalities to clear a path for faster development of multiunit housing. They are facing opposition from a group of cities and towns that have introduced their own bill that they say would increase housing but allow them to keep control over how and where it is built.

    * WAND | IL Senate committee approves bill requiring diaper ingredients transparency for consumers: This plan requires each package or box of diapers sold in Illinois to include a printed list of all ingredients. Sponsors said the Attorney General or state’s attorneys could enforce this change and collect civil penalties from companies violating the policy. “We will be having a runoff period for packaging on the shelves,” said Rep. Tracy Katz Muhl (D-Northbrook). “The order that the ingredients are listed is from most to least with the exception that the very small 1% elementary can be whatever order, as it becomes hard to distinguish at that level.”

  7 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Advocates, accusing governor of ‘lack of engagement,’ urge passage of data center regulations by end of May. Capitol News Illinois

    - Advocates are calling for the General Assembly to pass the POWER Act to regulate data centers before legislative session ends.
    - With less than three weeks left before lawmakers are slated to adjourn, however, it’s unclear whether the wide-ranging bill will come together and whether Gov. JB Pritzker will throw his support behind any specific regulatory proposal.
    - “We are confused and concerned by the Governor’s lack of engagement on the issue of data centers this spring legislative session,” Kady McFadden, lead lobbyist on behalf of the Illinois Clean Jobs Coalition that has been behind several recent energy reforms, said in a statement.
    - Pritzker mentioned data centers in his February State of the State address, calling for PJM Interconnection, the electric grid operator that covers all or part 13 states from Illinois to the East Coast, to require data center developers to pay for and provide their own energy.

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by American Innovators Network


*************************************************

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

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Telegraph | Illinois warns of rising tick activity and disease risk: The best protective measure against tickborne illness is preventing tick bites, no matter where residents are in. IDPH has created an interactive Tickborne Disease Dashboard that documents Illinois counties where different tick species have been confirmed, along with the diseases they may carry. The CDC noted in April that across the United States, visits to emergency rooms for tick bites are higher than normal, according to the CDC’s Tick Bite Tracker. In all regions except the South Central United States, weekly rates of emergency room visits for tick bites are the highest for this time of year since 2017.

* Capitol News Illinois | Behind the scenes of Illinois’ AI regulatory negotiations: llinois’ bill would take things a step further than California and New York in at least one regard: requiring that large AI companies annually retain a third party for an independent audit of the mechanisms they have in place to mitigate catastrophic risks. “We need to have outside reporting rather than reporting from within,” said state Sen. Mary Edly-Allen, D-Libertyville, the bill’s sponsor.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Gangster Disciples founder Larry Hoover’s bid for freedom is now in Gov. JB Pritzker’s hands: Rev. Michael Pfleger and former Chicago mayoral candidate Ja’Mal Green said they’ve lobbied Pritzker to free the onetime gang kingpin. Hoover’s clemency petition poses potential political costs and benefits for the governor as he seeks reelection and mulls a possible run for the presidency.

* Center Square | Springfield strains for balanced budget; Illinois revenue forecast shifts down: Sen. Rachel Ventura, D-Joliet, also brought up a worry she had about the state’s heavy reliance on income from interest to maintain a stable budget. “It’s our job to make sure that we have a sustainable budget moving forward. When I see a bunch of shifting, weakening numbers and only one holding up the fort, I don’t like to put all my eggs in one basket,” Ventura said. Clayton Klenke, director of COGFA, said while being heavily reliant on interest rates may look concerning, he does not expect a sharp drop in interest rates, at least in the coming year.

* Stand for Children’s latest newsletter includes an Illinois-themed crossword puzzle that’s “somewhat” inspired by the Italian beef state sandwich bill. Click here to check it out.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson pitches city takeover of stadium authority to keep Bears in Chicago: Hoping to keep the Chicago Bears in the city, Mayor Brandon Johnson has floated giving Chicago more control of the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, a complicated plan likely to receive significant pushback in Springfield. The discussion is part of the mayor’s broader effort to convince members of the General Assembly to stall or shoot down a megaprojects bill that would help the Bears move to Arlington Heights and creates new tiers of tax subsidies meant to spur development in Chicago.

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson decries further cuts to CPS in district’s budget plan: Mayor Brandon Johnson on Thursday condemned further cuts to Chicago Public Schools following the district’s latest proposal to address a yawning budget deficit by eliminating teaching staff, arguing the fate of Black enrollment is at stake. During an interview with the Tribune ahead of his three-year mark in office, the mayor responded to questions on planned cuts to teaching positions in the next school year by saying the nation’s fourth-largest school district needs to spend more, not less. Throughout the sit-down, Johnson also stuck to his talking points on Chicago needing more progressive taxation while continuing to refuse to say if he will run for a second term next year.

* Block Club | 3 Years In, Mayor Defends Bike Lanes And Talks CTA Safety — But Is Mum On Reelection: “CTA Non-Congregate Bed Program to serve transit-based unsheltered populations, prioritizing high-need CTA locations such as O’Hare, 95th/Dan Ryan, Howard, Forest Park, the Loop, and bus stops,” reads a bullet point in the plan’s first pillar. Few additional details have been released about the program, but Johnson said he hopes it will be up and running “within the next year” — although he admitted budget shortfalls could delay it further. “It could take longer. Because there are some funding challenges that we have,” he said, before reiterating his longstanding call for the state legislature to pass “progressive revenue” measures like a millionaire’s tax.

* Tribune | Chicago ‘Dreamers’ say they’re fearful of job loss and deportations: More than 260 “Dreamers,” or children who were brought to the U.S. at a young age and stayed under the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, were arrested by the Department of Homeland Security in 2025, according to a Feb.11 letter from former DHS Secretary Kristi Noem to Durbin, which he referenced in the May 12 focus hearing. Of those individuals, at least 86 were deported from the U.S. to countries where the “Dreamers,” now adults, may have no familiarity. In the letter, Noem said 241 of them had criminal histories, which the Tribune was unable to verify.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago Fire Department member dies during training exercise on North Side, CFD says: “The Chicago Fire Department mourns the loss of a 30-year member who died today during a training exercise,” a statement read. “A procession to the Medical Examiner’s Office is pending.” […] The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the fallen firefighter as 61-year-old Steven Decker.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | South suburban Black leaders protest redistricting in Southern states, urge higher voter turnout: Guided by Cook County Commissioner Kisha McCaskill, the leaders pointed to low voter turnout numbers in the south suburbs and urged the audience to mobilize neighbors, clergy and even the people sitting around their dinner tables to vote in the November midterm elections. “A voteless people is a hopeless people,” repeated several speakers, quoting a phrase used to mobilize Black voters in the 1930s. Despite Illinois being a supermajority Democratic state, officials, including former U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr., said they worry the Supreme Court decision could affect Illinois, as the protections that informed the state’s existing voting map are formally gone.

* Daily Herald | ‘It’s so pervasive’: Why Cook sheriff is cracking down on expressway shoulder drivers: Dart’s office is using the new, $11 million helicopter added to its fleet last year to identify, track down and ticket drivers using the shoulders to avoid backups on Chicago-area expressways. “You’d have to be an idiot not to know how dangerous it is,” Dart told us Thursday. “And yet it’s so pervasive.”

* Daily Herald | ‘Something lasting’: Buffalo Grove developer has big plans for former Walgreens HQ: Shorewood first engaged with Orion about the property roughly a year ago. Orion set the table by demolishing the six office buildings on the campus. “They were a constructive seller — they took the necessary step of demolishing the existing buildings to get the site to a marketable stage, which made the acquisition cleaner,” Schriber said. “We commend Orion for that. It was a big reason we were able to close as quickly as we did.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Bloomington to consider temporary moratorium on data centers: “To allow time for a more comprehensive review process, staff is going to propose a temporary moratorium on applications for hyperscale data centers while updated regulations are considered,” City Manager Jeff Jurgens said in a news release. Mayor Dan Brady said a moratorium, if approved, would give the city time to review standards and gather more public feedback before putting permanent rules in place.

* WICS | Logan County recommends another data center moratorium, could kill project as a result: Logan County’s zoning committee is recommending a new moratorium for data centers. This follows months of debate and discussion, and a previous 60-day moratorium. The committee voted 3 to 2, recommending a 90-day moratorium be imposed on data center construction. The vote came after two hours of debate between potential developer Hut 8, committee members, and the public.

* Illinois Times | Wyndham plywood gets a paint job: More than six months after the Wyndham Springfield City Centre Hotel had its first-floor windows boarded, city workers began painting those coverings to keep the property compliant with a city ordinance. David Fuchs, director of Public Works, told Illinois Times the city had asked the Wyndham owner to paint the coverings, as required by the city’s ordinance requiring property owners to maintain enclosures of vacant buildings, but the owner had not complied. Now, the city is stepping in and plans to bill the owner for the work completed, Fuchs said. He was unsure how much the city would ultimately charge as city workers were still painting when Fuchs responded to IT on May 14, the day the work began.

* WGLT | Divided McLean County Board rejects pay raise for members: The proposal would have increased a member’s salary to $6,400 in 2029 and 2030. The chairman’s pay would have increased from $19,522 to $25,574 in those same years. Administrator Cassie Taylor said in Central Illinois, county board member salaries range from $2,400 in Tazewell County to $11,006 in Peoria County. Champaign County, meanwhile, pays $60 a meeting, and Kankakee County members make $85 per meeting.

* WGLT | A new Route 66 book shares stories from forgotten women who shaped the Mother Road: Illinois author and Route 66 historian Cheryl Eichar Jett’s latest book, Aprons Away: Women’s Work on Route 66, documents the roles women have played along the highway’s 2,448-mile stretch—from Chicago to Los Angeles—over the past century. […] Jett said the idea for a book about women’s roles in Route 66 grew out of a pattern she noticed while researching and traveling the famous highway. “Many of the women’s stories along Route 66 were unrecognized or forgotten,” Jett said in and interview for WGLT’s Sound Ideas.

* WICS | Decatur police release body camera footage in crossbow incident; Officers cleared of criminal charges: The Illinois State Police released body camera footage linked to the man accused of pointing a crossbow at Decatur police. […] “Officers secured the perimeter of the building, and a short time later, made entry,” Allen said. “Once inside, the officers encountered an armed subject. The subject presented a crossbow in a shoulder ready type position pointed at the officers.” According to the Macon County State’s Attorney’s Office, the officers will not face criminal charges. The state’s attorney said the officers who responded to the incident acted lawfully.

*** National ***

* MediaITE | Taxpayers Have Coughed Up $550,000 in Sexual Harassment Settlements for Members of Congress, CNN Reports: “In its initial production to Congress, the Office of Congressional Workplace Rights had missed a $220,0000 payment on behalf of former Democratic Rep. Alcee Hastings, who died in 2021. The payment marks the single biggest congressional sexual harassment settlement known to date and nearly doubles the tax-payer funded total for such cases disclosed last week. Hastings previously called the allegations ‘ludicrous,’” Grayer reported.

* NBC | Grocery prices jumped more in April than they did in nearly four years: Driving that increase were substantial price hikes for things like fresh veggies. On an annualized basis, fresh vegetable prices are more than 44% higher today than they were three months ago. Other basic necessities like bread and milk have risen by a more modest 8% and 5% over that same time period, respectively.

* The Guardian | Illinois Knight Rider car framed for speeding in New York City: A replica of the talking car Kitt from the 1980s US television action series Knight Rider for years has been parked in a museum about an hour’s drive north of Chicago, so how did it get a speeding ticket in New York City? That is the question the Volo Museum is asking after it says it was recently mailed a $50 fine by New York City for a violation caught by a traffic camera, alleging that its Knight Industries Two Thousand – Kitt for short and a black Pontiac Trans Am – got busted going 9mph over the speed limit in a 25mph zone on 22 April.

* AP | Supreme Court preserves access to widely used abortion pill while lawsuit plays out : The court’s order allows women seeking abortions to continue obtaining the drug, mifepristone, at pharmacies or through the mail, without an in-person visit to a doctor. Access is likely to remain uninterrupted at least into next year as the case plays out, including a potential appeal to the high court.

  7 Comments      


Good morning!

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Elizabeth Cotten playing a right-handed guitar upside down on one of my favorite hymns from my childhood

Joe Hill’s response to the hymn is here.

* Weekend plans?

  2 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Friday, May 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* A question nobody appears to be asking
* After initial denial, Pritzker reveals hospital trip (Updated)
* Stop Rx Drug Deserts. Say No To HB 1443!
* It’s just a bill
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