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No Cuts. Increase Funding. Save Lives.

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

40 lawmakers from Illinois’ Black and Latino Caucuses are united: cutting funding to safety-net hospitals is not an option and maintaining the status quo isn’t enough.

These hospitals are lifelines for Black and Brown communities, providing critical care, supporting local jobs, and stabilizing entire neighborhoods. After years of chronic underinvestment, many are already operating on the edge. Even small cuts could lead to closures, fewer services, and dangerous gaps in care.

The message is urgent and clear: Illinois cannot balance its budget on the backs of vulnerable communities. Protecting these hospitals means more than preventing cuts, it means increasing investment so they can meet the growing needs of the people they serve.

Fully fund and strengthen safety-net hospitals. Lives depend on it.

Paid for by Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

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Faux outrage all around

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Yesterday…

The Illinois Freedom Caucus is calling on Republican members of the Illinois House to boycott tomorrow’s address by retiring U.S. Senator Dick Durbin.

“For decades, Senator Durbin has championed the failed policies that have hurt working families in Illinois and across America — from reckless spending and open-border policies to attacks on conservative values and constitutional freedoms,” said Rep. Adam Niemerg. “His record stands in direct opposition to the America First movement supported by millions of Americans.”

Many also have not forgotten Senator Durbin comparing American interrogators to Nazis during debate over Guantanamo Bay detainee policies, an outrageous attack against Americans who simply believed in protecting national security.

“Republican lawmakers should not participate in celebrating a political legacy rooted in failed leadership and contempt for conservative voters,” Niemerg said. “Republicans should stand with the people, not political theater honoring one of the architects of our decline.”

The Illinois Freedom Caucus encourages Republican members to respectfully boycott tomorrow’s address and spend that time communicating what is going on in Springfield back to their districts.
###

The Illinois Freedom Caucus is comprised of State Representatives Chris Miller (R-Hindsboro), chairman; Blaine Wilhour (R-Beecher City), vice-chairman; Adam Niemerg (R-Dieterich); Brad Halbrook (R-Shelbyville); Jed Davis (R-Newark); David Friess (R-Red Bud) and State Senator Andrew Chesney (R-Freeport). The members of the Illinois Freedom Caucus are members of the General Assembly who are advocating for limited government, lower taxes and accountability, and integrity in government.

* JB Pritzker campaign today…

Quote attributable to JB for Governor campaign spokesperson:

“The Illinois Freedom Caucus’s call to boycott Senator Durbin’s address to the General Assembly is disrespectful and an embarrassment to our state. Senator Durbin has spent decades fighting for Illinois families, and this is how the far-right extremists in the Freedom Caucus honor that service.

“Let’s be clear about who we’re dealing with: this is the same Freedom Caucus that Darren Bailey was once a proud member of. His old allies – the same ones who joined his call to split up Illinois – are once again resorting to political stunts because they know their agenda is too extreme for Illinois.”

* Democratic Party of Illinois…

Yesterday, the Illinois Freedom Caucus called on Illinois Republicans to boycott Senator Dick Durbin’s address to the General Assembly. In response, the Democratic Party of Illinois shared the following statement:

“The Democratic Party of Illinois condemns the Illinois Freedom Caucus’s boycott and demands that Illinois Republican leadership denounce the far-right wing of their own party. Senator Durbin has spent decades delivering for Illinois families, and he deserves better than this.

Newly elected ILGOP Chair Bob Grogan, House Minority Leader Tony McCombie, Senate Minority Leader John Curran, and ILGOP gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey must reject these calls from the extreme wing of their party. Senator Durbin’s career of public service deserves more than cheap political stunts.”

Meh. If they attended, they’d probably heckle the guy.

  13 Comments      


HB 2371 SA 2 Is A Needed Fix – Support Your Constituents By Passing The 340B Bill

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The 340B program has made a difference to patients struggling to make ends meet. Take Correy Bell, who was able to afford an inhaler for her chronic asthma and bronchitis because of the federal program. There were “no confusing hoops, no shame, no judgment, just real savings when I needed it the most,” said Bell, a long-time patient at Family Christian Health Center in Harvey.

The federal government created the 340B Drug Pricing Program to help hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) serving many low-income patients expand access to care and provide more comprehensive healthcare services. In addition to passing on prescription discounts to patients, hospitals and FQHCs are investing in patients in a variety of ways, including:

    • Offering free lifesaving health screenings
    • Expanding critical healthcare services in underserved communities
    • Providing free transportation to medical appointments
    • Adding mobile clinics and new freestanding clinics

340B was designed to fix an unintended consequence of the Medicaid Drug Discount Program—revealed when drugmakers dropped the required voluntary discounts included with their best market price. Fast forward to the early 2020s, when drugmakers—in a parallel move—began restricting pharmacy contracts with 340B hospitals and FQHCs.

House Bill 2371 SA 2
is another necessary fix to restore the 340B program in Illinois—and support the most vulnerable Illinoisans. Learn more.

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. CBS Chicago

The new study from the Cook County Treasurer’s office underlines growing concerns about the impact the [megaproject/Bears bill] could have on the county’s property tax base and overall fiscal health. The study estimates the bill will likely allow the Bears to save tens of millions of dollars in taxes every year, while not guaranteeing the taxes the team does pay will be enough to cover enhanced and needed services.

Illinois state Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) is one of the lead negotiators behind the megaprojects bill, and his district includes Soldier Field, where the Bears currently play. In a post on X, Buckner said he believes major development deals should be analyzed in a public forum. […]

“With that said; This report is kind of magical,” Buckner wrote. “They’re doing field-of-dreams budgeting: ‘If you kill the bill, the project will still come.’ That’s not analysis. That’s fantasy accounting.”

Buckner wrote that there is no alternative in which the problems the Treasurer’s office is worried about are averted by the Bears paying full property taxes. The alternative to a state deal to facilitate the stadium, he wrote, is the stadium never being built.

* Press release…

State Senator Ram Villivalam (D-Chicago) and State Representative Eva-Dina Delgado (D-Chicago) released the following statement after introducing House Bill 2335.

“We look forward to the enactment of the transformational reforms and funding in Senate Bill 2111 that will put us on a path to providing a safe, reliable, accessible, and integrated world class public transit system for our entire state. The legislation introduced today consists of technical changes to further streamline the implementation of and provide additional clarity to the Northern Illinois Transit Authority Act ahead of its June 1st effective date.”

* Bond Buyer

[A] bill would allow cash basis accounting rather than the more rigorous Generally Accepted Accounting Principles for municipalities with under $35 million in annual cash receipts.

It would let municipalities classify themselves in the lowest category for which they qualify based on their three previous years of cash receipts, with the lower three of four categories eligible for cash basis accounting rather than GAAP. […]

The Government Reporting Enhancement and Transparency Act, HB 5391, would also sunset the requirement for an annual municipal comptroller’s report showing information such as the bonds and debts payable during the year. For fiscal years ending after Jan. 1, 2028, the municipal comptroller would no longer be required to send a copy of that report to the state comptroller. […]

“We need to hit a strategic pause (on the bill), because we know this is going to take longer, [said Marty Green, vice president of government relations for ICPAS], noting the legislature’s May 31 adjournment date.

* Rep. Bob Morgan this morning

* NPR Illinois

Illinois lawmakers are considering a sweeping rewrite of state cannabis regulations aimed at easing financial pressure on dispensaries and preparing for possible federal marijuana policy changes.

Discussed Tuesday during a subject matter hearing before the House Executive Committee, House Bill 5784 would remove a requirement that dispensaries hire third-party security contractors, expand cannabis possession limits and create pathways for hemp businesses to enter Illinois’ regulated cannabis market.

The proposal would also make changes involving medical cannabis access, licensing, testing requirements, taxes, drive-through pickup and social equity business programs. […]

Industry groups generally supported the concept but said negotiations are continuing over amendment language.

* Center Square

A push to regulate artificial intelligence products in Illinois has taken a major step toward becoming law. The plan, which has broad support from industry leaders, would require transparency and expanded safety measures from many AI companies.

Senate Bill 315, officially known as ‘The Artificial Intelligence Safety Measures Act,’ would require AI companies such as OpenAI – sometimes referred to as ‘frontier’ AI companies – to conduct and share findings of annual third-party audits and disclose safety incidents to the state.

According to Rep. Daniel Didech, D-Buffalo Grove, who is carrying the bill in the House, said the bill is nearly the same as measures passed in New York and California. […]

Jeremy Kudon, the director of American Innovators Network, said while the Illinois proposal is similar to the other states, the inclusion of an additional provision requiring third-party audits is nowhere to be seen in other states.

“There is no company in the United States that’s actually accredited or credentialed to audit AI generative models or frontier models,” Kudon said.

* WAND

Sponsors said the state’s 2019 law legalizing adult-use cannabis created regulations that were necessary at the time but were overly burdensome for many small and social equity cannabis businesses.

House Bill 5784 and Senate Bill 20 could reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens to help those businesses thrive.

The legislation would also address major changes in federal policy surrounding THC.

“If you want to keep selling CBD hemp products, non-intoxicating hemp products, we want to make it as easy as possible to register with the state,” said Rep. Will Guzzardi (D-Chicago). “We propose a $200 registration fee. You fill out a form and you can just keep selling these products.” […]

The proposals were heard during two separate subject matter hearings Tuesday. Neither plan received a committee vote.

* WAND

Decatur leaders are hopeful Illinois lawmakers will pass a bill by Sunday to develop a new horse racing track in Macon County. […]

“Opportunities like this don’t come around every day for Decatur,” said Mayor Julie Moore Wolfe. “While we work really hard to grow our own success stories and make economic development happen, something like this is a game-changer.” […]

State senators passed a plan to create the Decatur racino on a 49-8 vote in October, but that bill has stalled in the House.

“This is a crucial piece of legislation because it creates a unique opportunity for economic benefit in both counties located within the 48th district,” said Sen. Doris Turner (D-Springfield). “There is also a commitment for infrastructure upgrades at the Illinois State Fairgrounds that will expand year-round training opportunities while strengthening the entire regional horse racing ecosystem.”

* Sen. Steve Stadelman…

To protect renters from unfair and excessive housing costs, State Senator Steve Stadelman is spearheading legislation that would prevent landlords from passing broker and leasing agent fees onto tenants. […]

Broker and leasing agent fees are common in the rental housing market to compensate agents for marketing properties, showing units, screening applicants and facilitating lease agreements. These fees are often structured as either flat fees or percentages of annual rent and can add thousands of dollars to the cost of securing housing. In many cases, landlords hire brokers to manage rental transactions but require prospective tenants to pay the broker’s commission in addition to application and screening fees.

Senate Bill 329 would prohibit landlords and property owners from requiring tenants or prospective tenants to retain, engage with or pay a fee to a real estate broker or residential leasing agent hired by the landlord. The measure would also prohibit landlords from directing brokers or leasing agents to collect payment from tenants for services performed on behalf of the landlord or property owner. […]

Senate Bill 329 passed the Senate Executive Committee Tuesday and heads to the full Senate.

* Sen. Mike Simmons

To help communities preserve affordable, accessible housing and protect residents from displacement, State Senator Mike Simmons advanced legislation that would provide tenants with the right-of-first-refusal to purchase their property, specifically with a 90- day notice to tenants from the property owner before accepting or listing a building sale. […]

“As housing costs continue to rise and private equity gentrification continues to threaten communities like Edgewater, Rogers Park and all of Illinois, we need practical tools that help keep working families, seniors and long-time residents in the communities they call home,” said Simmons (D-Chicago). “This legislation balances the need to expand and preserve housing with strong protections for property owners through the right of first refusal, fair valuation requirements and a transparent acquisition process.”

* Sen. Mattie Hunter…

State Senator Mattie Hunter is leading sweeping legislation that would reform exclusionary zoning laws and open new pathways for affordable, diverse housing across the state. […]

The measure would require local governments across Illinois to allow middle housing – such as duplexes, triplexes, and similar multi-unit buildings – in single-family zoning districts, while giving municipalities the option to set their own design standards – or default to state standards – governing things like building height, setbacks and lot coverage.

All qualifying developments would be required to designate at least 40% of units as affordable for households earning between 80–120% of the area median income. The bill also would allow municipalities to establish Protected Small Rental Housing Areas, where new development cannot displace existing 2–4 unit rental properties unless demolition is municipality-initiated or safety-required, in which case any redevelopment must include at least as many units as were previously on the site.

Illinois, like much of the nation, faces a significant housing shortage driven in large part by decades of restrictive single-family zoning. By legalizing a wider range of housing types in established neighborhoods – near jobs, transit, schools and other services – Hunter’s measure would help lower housing costs, reduce displacement and create more equitable communities throughout the state. […]

Senate Bill 640 passed the Senate Executive Committee Tuesday and heads to the full Senate for further consideration.

For more press releases on legislation and other matters, click here.

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Illinois Positioned To Become A National Leader On AI Safety

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

California and New York have already moved forward with frontier AI safety and transparency laws. Illinois legislators are building on these “blue-state” models by establishing some of the strongest protections in the country to safeguard residents from the risks posed by the most powerful AI systems.

As artificial intelligence continues to evolve, the need for clear standards around safety, transparency, incident reporting, and accountability becomes increasingly important. While a comprehensive federal framework for frontier AI oversight would be preferable, states have a critical role to play. Illinois, alongside California and New York, is helping shape an emerging national model for responsible AI governance.

When major states align on policy, companies often adopt those standards nationwide. Illinois lawmakers are helping position our state to benefit from the enormous potential of artificial intelligence, including job creation, healthcare breakthroughs, and technological innovation. In addition, these proposals help ensure AI systems are developed responsibly with transparency, accountability, and meaningful oversight. We appreciate the Senate’s partnership in passing legislation on these issues and look forward to the House supporting these vital measures.

Paid for by Build American AI

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Today’s quotable

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* If you’re Darren Bailey, why even say this?

  23 Comments      


Who Really Benefits From Swipe-Fee Restrictions?

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Supporters of Illinois’ swipe-fee proposal claim it will lower costs for consumers. But there’s no requirement that retailers pass along any savings - and history suggests they won’t.

Instead, the law would strip away funding that supports key consumer benefits like fraud protection, card rewards, and low-cost banking access. Those costs don’t disappear - they shift back to consumers in the form of fewer benefits and higher fees.

The biggest beneficiaries are likely to be large retailers, not Illinois households. Evidence from similar efforts shows savings tend to increase retailer margins rather than reduce prices at the register.

The bill could also introduce unnecessary complexity into the payments system, creating inefficiencies, reducing security, and making transactions less seamless. Consumers ultimately bear those costs through inconvenience, risk, and reduced choice.

At its core, this policy isn’t about affordability, it’s about reallocating resources. And that reallocation puts consumers at a disadvantage while boosting large retailers’ bottom lines.

For more information, visit https://www.icul.com/advocacy/ifpa/.

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: How the Illinois Senate’s housing proposals compare to Gov. JB Pritzker’s BUILD plan. Capitol News Illinois

    - With just days left in the spring legislative session, Illinois Senate Democrats unveiled an eight-bill housing package incorporating tweaked elements of Gov. JB Pritzker’s Building Up Illinois Developments, or BUILD, plan and a slew of progressive initiatives.
    - All the bills in the Senate package passed out of the Senate Executive Committee Tuesday evening, though many faced tough questioning from lawmakers in both parties and acknowledgements from bill sponsors that amendments would likely be forthcoming.
    - The IML is opposed to the two Senate BUILD bills as well as Feigenholtz’s faith-based housing bill. It supports Stadelman’s bill cracking down on broker’s fees and is neutral on the remaining four bills.
    - The Illinois REALTORS — Pritzker’s top ally on the BUILD initiative — is opposed to the Senate package.

* Related stories…

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


Sponsored by PhRMA



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

* At noon, Gov. JB Pritzker will attend Sen. Durbin’s Farewell Address. Click here to watch.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* WBEZ | 51 candidates are running for Chicago’s first fully elected school board: Of the incumbent board members, only Sean Harden, the current president who was appointed by Mayor Johnson, is not running. Two current board members — Jessica Biggs and Jennifer Custer — are giving up district seats to run for president. A total of five candidates are running for board president, a powerful position that holds sway over what the board debates and votes on. Four of them — Biggs, Custer, former board member Sendhil Revuluri and attorney Victor Henderson — submitted petitions on the first day and will face off in a lottery to get the top spot on the ballot.

* WGLT | Bloomington approves 6-month moratorium on data centers: The moratorium specifically applies to any facility designed with a capacity of greater than 5 megawatts. The Town of Normal approved a moratorium without such a stipulation earlier in May. At least two public hearings on the topic must take place during the moratorium that was passed without much discussion or debate — and by unanimous vote. “The idea behind this moratorium is so we can set up those regulations so we can do things like the city of Aurora has done, like the McLean County has done, and that I ask that we start those, those discussions and those set up immediately,” said council member Abby Scott.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Illinois Manufacturers’ Association President Mark Denzler | Not to take anything away from the governor, but Illinois could do even more: While Illinois has taken great strides to change our trajectory, there’s still a lot of work to do. Economic data shows that Illinois continues to lag the nation and our neighboring Midwest states in several key areas including job creation, gross domestic product growth and population. We also continue to face significant headwinds in the form of higher taxes, costly regulations and growing public pension obligations. We can meet these challenges with smart policy changes designed to keep Illinois moving forward.

* Capitol News Illinois | Former Republican strategist Collin Corbett files to run for governor as independent: “You’re going to start to see a lot of positive developments on our fundraising,” he said. “It’s not going to be too long before we pass the Republican candidate on fundraising. We’ll never pass the Democratic candidate, but we’re going to certainly have the funds to be able to compete.” His campaign has reported raising $40,000 since May 1, according to State Board of Elections records. Bailey has raised $121,500 since April 1 in addition to $81,000 he had on hand at the end of March. Tracy, Corbett’s former client, is among Bailey’s recent donors.

* Capitol City Now | State is Number One in kinship placements: Even the people holding the news conference Tuesday had to admit: it’s rare to mention the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services is a national leader in something good. However, in the year since Gov. JB Pritzker signed the KIND (Kinship in Demand) Act into law, DCFS has put the state atop all others. “The federal Administration for Children and Families has identified Illinois as the Number One state for placement with relatives and kinship caregivers thanks in part to this historic legislation,” said DCFS director Heidi Mueller.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson’s strategy to combat hate crimes angers Jewish leaders: Johnson’s plan calls for creating a “Jewish Engagement Council to serve as a direct bridge for dialogue” between residents, community leaders and the mayor’s office, and an “Interconnected Chicago Council” to address “fragmentation between communities.” […] Silverstein called the mayor’s strategy “a watered-down version” of what the city’s Commission on Human Relations recommended and “a far weaker proposal” than needed to confront the magnitude of the problem.

* Tribune | Chicago Media Report: CBS News Radio anchor signs off, record ratings for CHSN and WGN-TV anchor finds new gig: It also silenced, at least for now, radio veteran Jennifer Keiper, who for the past 5½ years has anchored the network’s afternoon and evening newscasts from her Chicago studio. She signed off Friday as the penultimate voice of CBS News Radio, which ceased broadcasting at midnight. “I’m sad about it,” Keiper said. “It’s rich history that’s gone, and another newsroom that’s not filled.”

* Sun-Times | Chicago’s giardiniera headed to Pope Leo with Mayor Johnson: The gift to the pope comes ahead of J.P. Graziano’s 89th anniversary. The company opened on June 7, 1937, at its original and current location at 901 W. Randolph St. The wholesaler imported products from Italy and Sicily and also distributed domestic products. In 2007, Graziano opened a sub shop inside the store and its sandwiches became wildly popular. Sandwiches have become J.P. Graziano’s best-selling item, followed “hands down” by giardiniera, Graziano said.

* Financial Times | America’s most exciting jazz scene is in Chicago: People say jazz was born in New Orleans, grew up in Chicago, and reached full bloom in New York. I’d counter that both coasts — Los Angeles is now solidly in that mix — still look to Chicago for marching orders. Many of the audacious, often genre-fluid artists defining those scenes cut their teeth in Chicago, from trumpeter Marquis Hill to guitarist Jeff Parker. This is probably America’s most unselfconscious major city, a place where you can relish the poise of period swing or the total improvisation of free jazz. Grind hard, talk less, keep an open mind and we’ll probably have a place for you.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Robbins Mayor Darren Bryant seeks accountability in traffic stops after arrest, Calumet Park police says he was uncooperative: But Calumet Park attorneys defend the arrest, saying Bryant made an illegal turn and refused to give officers his license and proof of insurance after the officers asked at least 10 times, according to Burt Odelson, an attorney for Calumet Park. Bryant said he wanted to know why he was pulled over before handing over his driver’s license and registration. “I have no problem following the law if you can first tell me and educate me,” he said. “It’s so disheartening because now my image is out there, my image is the one being questioned about being a law-abiding citizen.”

* Tribune | Hawthorne Race Course alleges Illinois official steered funds to rival track amid bankruptcy battle: About three months after filing for bankruptcy, representatives for Hawthorne Race Course are alleging they are losing out on state funding because a top official in Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration — with the influence of his brother, a lobbyist — has been steering money to a rival racetrack, according to court papers filed last week. On Tuesday, lobbyist John Costello, the brother of Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello, called the allegations “defamatory” in a prepared statement.

* Tribune | Faith leaders, doctors press for West Suburban reopening, as hospital’s fate remains undecided: “We need to have a serious call to action,” said Bishop Dwight Gunn of Heritage International Christian Church in Austin, noting that his two children were born there. “Not so long ago this hospital stood as a place of hope for many.” It can again be the type of hospital that provides quality heatlhcare to the Austin community, he said. “In order for that to happen, there needs to be a sense of urgency about reopening this hospital,” Gunn said. He said it’s crucial that, if the hospital is reopened, the community becomes involved in leadership and oversight.

* Daily Southtown | Flossmoor library sinking floor fix in limbo as library and village disagree on responsibility: Because the library leases the building from the village, the library board decided May 12 to ask the village to pay for repairs, Bergeron said in her email. Two estimates the village received place the cost for repairs at about $50,000, she said. The relationship between the village and the library is managed by an intergovernmental agreement. Bergeron said in her email the agreement states that the library is responsible for all repairs, rehabilitation and maintenance of the building and its components, including fixtures and personal property. She said the agreement does not include structural or foundational damage. However, the Village Board voted against paying for the repairs at its most recent meeting, sending the issue back to the library board, Brumke said.

*** Downstate ***

* WICS | Christian County residents voice opposition to data centers: Sam Lacey, a resident of the county, addressed the board during public comment, “I am asking that you do your due diligence, and you search your conscience, and you remember these faces in the crowd when you do inevitably come up on a vote on this. Because there will be a point of no return and that will be shortly after your vote.” County Board Chairman Bryan Sharp reminded everyone of the resolution already in place, one that temporarily restricts data center construction.

* WAND | Christian Co. residents voice concerns over proposed Eagle Rock Partners data center: Dozens of Christian County residents filled a county board meeting to discuss the proposed Eagle Rock Partners data center. Some residents urged county officials to do more research, while others called on officials to reject data centers altogether. “The one asset that large industries want from small communities is ignorance. I am proud to see so many members of our community here tonight to prove them wrong,” one county resident said.

* WAND | Pritzker, local leaders dedicate new all-abilities activity hub in Champaign: Governor JB Pritzker and local leaders celebrated the dedication of the new all-abilities activity hub in Champaign on Tuesday. The project was funded through a $600,000 grant from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, designed to be an inclusive, special recreation area that will serve people of all abilities.

* WCIA | DACC to consider termination of Adult Education staff members, Provost resignation: Previously, WCIA reported that the Adult Education program at the Danville Area Community College is under investigation after the college allegedly discovered false test scores and grant performance reports. Last October, DACC suspected a “coordinated system of misappropriation of Adult Education funds and falsification of test scores and grant performance reports in the DACC Adult Education Department” from 2022 to 2025. The college conducted a six-month investigation and then later notified the Illinois Community College Board (ICCB).

* WAND | City of Sullivan remains under water shortage: “Local aquifers recharge very slowly, and although conditions may appear improved on the surface, groundwater levels take much longer to recover. Continued conservation efforts are still necessary to help protect the long-term stability of our water resources,” city officials said in a statement posted to Facebook. Residents are asked to continue following City ordinances regarding non-essential water use, limiting unnecessary outdoor watering and other non-essential usage to help ensure adequate water availability for essential residential, commercial, and emergency needs.

* WAND | City of Champaign considers new blueprint to manage homeless population: Champaign’s point-in-time survey shows the city saw a 159% increase in homelessness from 2022-25. […] The homelessness prevention blueprint team is recommending hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional funds to prevent people from losing their homes.

* WGLT | Illinois Wesleyan ready to ‘play offense’ in approaching enrollment cliff: “Right now, we’re on target to hit the range that we need to provide the correct budget for the university to thrive,” said Zenger. As the situation continues to develop, he said the current growth at Illinois Wesleyan will position it nicely to avoid the worst effects of the trend. “Our goal at Wesleyan is to continue to play offense,” said Zenger, citing the Petrick Idea Center, the Fisher Quantum Center and center for the humanities as recent examples of expansion that makes IWU competitive in a tightening market for higher ed students.

*** National ***

* Semafor | California influencer disclosures offer a glimpse at how secret money distorts American politics: The California gubernatorial race has become the latest testing ground for modern digital campaigning, which in the last ten years has morphed from individual politicians doing stunts to go viral on Facebook to a system of paid outreach to creators in exchange for their support and promotion. And Steyer’s campaign is one of the purest instances of this blurry new world of astroturfed support: His team has offered creators everything from $10 a post to nearly half a million for communications consulting in the hopes that they’ll spread the word about him, or at least take his opponents down a peg.

* WaPo | These Black lawmakers could lose their seats. They don’t plan to go quietly: To the longtime members of the Congressional Black Caucus now at risk of losing their seats, the latest court decision and new maps in Southern states feel like a regression to pre-civil rights philosophy grounded in racism. “The Roberts court seems to be hell-bent on restoring Jim Crow,” said Rep. James E. Clyburn, South Carolina’s only Democratic Congress member, who could lose his seat under a newly proposed map Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II (D-Missouri) now also faces a more difficult path under a new map. “We could never have imagined that in 2026, that there would be an attempt to erase all of the years of progress we’ve made since the time they did the Voting Rights Act.”

* NPR | Trump DOJ mass-deletes info on Jan. 6 riot cases, including violent assaults on cops: Justice Department news releases that detailed guilty pleas, jury verdicts and prison sentences abruptly disappeared from government websites last week. On social media, the Justice Department defended the move, saying, “We are proud to reverse the DOJ’s weaponization under the Biden administration. We will do everything in our power to make whole those who were persecuted for political purposes. This includes stripping DOJ’s website of partisan propaganda.”

* The Hill | These states are seeing their worst tick activity in nearly 10 years: Data: In these 10 states — Nebraska, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio — 137 out of every 100,000 emergency department visits in April were related to tick bites. That’s just shy of the one-month incident rate record the region saw last May, of 153 per 100,000, and well above the 56 per 100,000 it sees on average in April.

  15 Comments      


Good morning!

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Hot Tuna

Well death don’t give you time to get ready in this land
He’ll come to your house and he won’t stay long
Look ’round the room one of your family will be gone

This is an Illinois open thread.

  1 Comment      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, May 27, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* No Cuts. Increase Funding. Save Lives.
* Faux outrage all around
* HB 2371 SA 2 Is A Needed Fix – Support Your Constituents By Passing The 340B Bill
* It’s just a bill
* Illinois Positioned To Become A National Leader On AI Safety
* Today's quotable
* Who Really Benefits From Swipe-Fee Restrictions?
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Yesterday's stories

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