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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Politico

The International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 just broke the caps in the Illinois secretary of state race by spending $255,000 on advertising through its independent expenditure PAC supporting Democrat Alexi Giannoulias.

The ad spend with Panache Strategies is large enough to lift contribution limits for all candidates in the race and open the door to unlimited donations for Giannoulias’ reelection campaign, even though he is expected to breeze by little-known Republican challenger Diane Harris.

A similar $255,000 contribution via Local 150 was made during Giannoulias’ primary campaign, despite the absence of any serious opposition then, too. […]

Under Illinois law, Giannoulias could transfer money raised for his secretary of state campaign into a potential mayoral campaign. Breaking the caps now gives him the ability to collect much larger checks should he decide to make a run for City Hall.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Illinois’ abortion landscape continues to evolve amid persistent growth in demand: The Chicago Abortion Fund, which provides financial, logistical and material assistance to abortion seekers, is the largest of its kind in the nation. Since June 2022, the fund has assisted more than 60,000 callers and distributed more than $25 million in direct support. In 2025, about 13,760 people, or 43% of the nearly 32,000 people who came to Illinois from out-of-state, were given direct support from the fund, an increase from the 28% of callers who received that level of support in 2024, according to data released by the group.

* Tribune | Workers plan to strike at six Illinois Prime Healthcare hospitals: The union members include workers who maintain HVAC systems, plumbing and other systems, according to the union, and they work across six hospitals: Saint Mary of Nazareth Hospital in Chicago; Saint Elizabeth Hospital in Chicago; Holy Family Medical Center in Des Plaines; Resurrection Medical Center in Chicago; Saint Francis Hospital in Evanston; and Saint Joseph Hospital in Elgin. Saint Elizabeth is closed, but workers still maintain the building, according to a union spokesperson. The strike comes after the union filed 10 unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board earlier this month against Prime hospitals and MedSpace Services, which is a subsidiary of Prime Healthcare Management, Inc.

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘A Legacy Brand Sunset’: Illinois Radio Stations Reckon With CBS News Radio’s Shutdown: In Chicago, WBBM Newsradio was among the Audacy stations left searching for a replacement after CBS News Radio announced it would end its services. As late as April, it was unclear what would fill the gap, until the station switched to ABC News Radio one day before CBS News Radio went silent, according to the Chicago Tribune. For some downstate Illinois stations, however, the switch came seamlessly. Tammy Sondgeroth, general manager of NRG Media Ottawa, which operates WCMY, said the station moved to NBC News Radio almost immediately after learning of the closure.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Payments Dive | Buy now, pay later groups ‘neutral’ on Illinois bill : The Illinois bill “is probably an indication of growing interest in states picking up from where the CFPB has backtracked,” Saunders said Monday in an interview. Under the law, BNPL players operating in Illinois would be licensed and overseen by the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. The measure – which defines a BNPL loan as one with a term of 120 days or less – also mandates a dispute resolution process and refunds for consumers.

* WGN | Illinois Secretary of State announces more than $27M in grants to libraries across state: The Secretary of State’s office is awarding more than $22.6 million through its annual Public Library Per Capita and Equalization Aid Grant programs, which represents a 15% increase over last year’s grants. A total of 640 public libraries in Illinois will receive $20.6 million in Per Capita Grants to support books and multilingual materials, internet access, digital resources, staffing, community programming and facility improvements. Funding amounts were calculated according to a formula based on the population of each community.

* Capitol City Now | Illinois junk fees ban arrives on Pritzker’s desk: The plan makes it unlawful for any business to advertise, display, or offer a price for products or services that does not include all mandatory fees or surcharges before taxes. Sponsors said junk fees cost an average family of four $3,200 annually.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Chicago sues Airbnb and a host company for alleged improper rentals: The complaint filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court alleged that real estate broker Milan Rubenstein and his company, Slumber Stay LLC, did not properly register his short-term rentals and used a single nontransferable hotel license for multiple listings — then kept renting those units after being issued citations. Airbnb was accused of profiting from those allegedly unlawful rentals rather than working with the city to ensure compliance with the Shared Housing Ordinance.

* CBS Chicago | Mayor Johnson addresses call for Chicago Department of Gun Violence Prevention: “A particular advocacy group has been calling for such an office to exist through multiple administrations, and we’re going to continue to hear how the work that we’re doing to drive violence down can work in coordination with the visit that this organization and organizing apparatus has,” Mayor Johnson said. A proposed ordinance to create the Department of Gun Violence Prevention would bring together existing violence reduction programs under one umbrella, with more than $100 million allocated in the city’s budget.

* Press release | 40th Ward Dems Youth Organizer Fighting to Recover After Devastating Car Accident; Friends, Colleagues & Chicago Politicos Rally Support: Truman Community College student Ana “Rey,” a well-known fixture since childhood in the 40th Ward Democrats office, is fighting to recover after a severe traumatic brain injury suffered in a car accident on April 25, 2026. 40th Ward Committeeperson, Maggie O’Keefe, who has mentored Ana since she was in eighth grade – later making Ana Deputy Committeeperson – is spearheading a fundraising campaign to help cover the cost of her care while also working on policy solutions to improve Illinois Medicaid coverage. “Ana walked into my office when she was in eighth grade, determined to be involved in the community that raised her,” said Maggie O’Keefe, 40th Ward Committeeperson. “Now it’s our turn to help her. When we found out that her insurance–Illinois Medicaid–will not cover the physical therapy she needs, we knew she would need more help than her friends and family alone could give her.”

* Block Club | Chicago’s Bike Lanes Don’t Hurt Businesses, City Report Finds: The Chicago Department of Transportation last month published a report on the economic impacts of bike lanes that examined six commercial corridors with different types of bike lane projects. Researchers analyzed data as well as surveys and interviews with local businesses, residents and real estate developers. The case studies compared the surveyed areas with “control” corridors nearby, and looked at the change in sales tax revenue, commercial property vacancy and employment, as well as safety and bike usage data since the lanes were installed.

* Block Club | Work Begins On Bronzeville Trail, The South Side’s 1st Elevated Bike Path: Members of the Bronzeville Trail Task Force — joined by State Rep. Kimberly du Buclet and Bronzeville Community Farm’s Rosalyn “Roz” Owens — were on hand to mark a milestone signaling that work to convert the two-mile abandoned rail into a public park is officially underway. “The soil borings beginning here at 45th and State Street may look like technical work, but they represent something much bigger. It will reconnect communities, create new public space, support health and wellness, strengthen local businesses, and bring new energy to this historic neighborhood,” said du Buclet.

* NYT | Barack Obama Has Strong Opinions About Cheeseburgers: The chef Cliff Rome said President Obama — once called “Foodie-in-Chief” by People Magazine — told him that the burger that would end up on the menu at the Obama Presidential Center was missing a few essential ingredients. Namely, it needed a smear of yellow mustard and the bite of a sharp Cheddar. “He had a lot of opinions on what makes a good cheeseburger,” said Mr. Rome, who was tapped by the Obamas to conceptualize and run two restaurants, Tafari’s Kitchen and a casual cafe, on the center’s campus in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Naperville Sun | 171 townhouses proposed for one-time Naperville hockey arena site: But the site’s location at 2255 Monarch Drive, at the northwest corner of Ferry Road and Comfort Drive, is raising some issues for city staff. Anna Franco, a member of the city’s planning services team, said staff is concerned about the inconsistency of the proposed single-family attached housing with the site’s designation in the land use master plan. The future use for the property calls for a “regional center,” and Franco said townhouse-style units are not listed as a primary or supporting use within that designation.

* Tribune | Feds: Owner of Oak Lawn methadone clinic stole millions, funded lavish lifestyle including yacht ‘Butt Nekkid’: The charges were part of a nationwide effort called the 2026 National Health Care Fraud Takedown, which the U.S. Justice Department says resulted in charges against 455 defendants, including 90 doctors and other licensed medical professionals, involving more than $6.5 billion in false claims and “significant patient harm.” According to the charges, Robinson is the owner of ODA Solutions, a clinic that offers both substance abuse services and mental health services from the same site in the 4200 block of West 95th Street in Oak Lawn.

* Daily Herald | ‘This is huge’: Major League Baseball to hold America250 event at suburban drive-in: The theater was one of four drive-ins nationally selected by MLB as part of its America250 celebration on July 4. The festivities will include a showing of the classic childhood baseball movie “The Sandlot” and a live screening of that night’s Chicago Cubs vs. St. Louis Cardinals game. They’ll also have MLB Ballpark Bites and baseball-themed activities, including Wiffle ball, a pop fly scramble and virtual batting cages.

* Daily Herald | Rolling Meadows to outsource garbage collection after long haul of in-house service: Aldermen will vote on a proposed 5-year contract with Lakeshore Recycling Services to pick up refuse, landscape waste and recycling from single-family homes throughout town, in a deal that would provide notable cost savings for residents, city officials said. At the same time, the council will take a preliminary first reading vote on a separate 10-year lease extension with Lakeshore, which has operated the city-owned transfer station at 3851 Berdnick St. for the past three decades.

* Pioneer Press | Winnetka Music Festival celebrates 10 years of bringing world-class talent to the suburbs: For its 10th anniversary, the two-day festival welcomed more than two dozen artists to the stage, with headliners Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue and Father John Misty performing alongside notable musical acts like Grace Potter, Jonah Kagen, Petey USA, Ben Kweller, Futurebirds and more.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Wiz Khalifa joins Grandstand lineup for Illinois State Fair: On Tuesday, it was announced that Wiz Khalifa will be performing at the Illinois State Fair Grandstand on Wednesday, Aug. 19. He is joining the likes of Ella Langley, Ziggy Marley, The Chicks and Bailey Zimmerman at this year’s festival. It was also announced that Wiz Khalifa will be performing at the Du Quoin State Fair Grandstand on Saturday, Aug. 29.

* Illinois Times | Rolling out the welcome mat: Springfield seeks to capitalize on Route 66 centennial, America 250: Being the host city as the starting point for the Great Race is something of a Super Bowl event for people such as Springfield Convention and Visitors Bureau director Scott Dahl. The competition to be the host city is fierce, as two additional days of festivities accompany it. The vintage cars are the major attraction, as gearheads the world over come to see and, if they’re lucky, take one for a spin. The route to Pasadena will traverse much of Route 66.

* WAND | Café vendor opportunity open at future Springfield-Sangamon County Transportation Hub: The county is offering incentives to attract businesses, such as a basic commercial kitchen and potential subsidies on rent and utilities. Two informational sessions are planned to explain The HUB space and RFP requirements. They will be available in person, virtually, and will be recorded.

* SJ-R | Roughly 175-year-old ‘witness tree’ officially removed in Springfield: A tree dating from the time Abraham Lincoln and his family lived at a home at Eighth and Jackson streets in Springfield was removed June 19, a little more than a week after storms irreparably damaged it.

*** National ***

* WaPo | CDC’s chief blocked a covid vaccine study. Now it’s in a top medical journal: The study, which had been slated for publication in March in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, found that the covid-19 vaccine reduced the risk of emergency department visits and hospitalizations among healthy adults by about half last winter. The findings were consistent with what researchers have found in past years, that the vaccine can help reduce the risk of severe illness in adults even after accounting for immunity from prior vaccination or infection. “Science was never the issue,” said Michelle Barron, one of the study’s authors and senior medical director of infection prevention and control for UCHealth, a nonprofit health system in Colorado. “Certainly it was within [the CDC’s] purview to keep it out, for whatever reason, but it was clearly not for scientific reasons that the study was withheld from publication in the MMWR.”

* Bloomberg | Trump orders U.S. to speed quantum adoption, boost cyber defenses: Trump said the first order would launch an effort to create a quantum computer capable of performing important scientific calculations. White House officials, who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity ahead of the signing, said they believed a computer could be developed by 2028. The order also calls on agencies to work on plans to deploy quantum-enabled sensors and networks in the next five years, the officials said. The order also supports coordination with allies to protect quantum intellectual property and bolster supply chains.

  1 Comment      


Et tu, Greg Abbott?

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* March, 2022

Meta, formerly the Facebook company, announced today that it will invest $800 million in the creation of a Hyperscale Data Center in Temple, Texas. The new facility, which will total approximately 900,000 square feet when completed, will be located on 393 acres off NW H K Dodgen Loop and Industrial Blvd., and will support approximately 100 operational jobs in the community. The project is expected to employ 1,250 construction workers onsite during peak construction, which will begin in Spring 2022. […]

“Meta’s continued expansion in Texas is a testament to the exceptional business climate and skilled, diverse workforce we have here in the Lone Star State,” said Texas Governor Greg Abbott. “It is because of hardworking Texans and our commitment to helping businesses grow that companies continue to move and expand all across Texas. We are excited to welcome Meta to Temple and look forward to the new job opportunities they will bring to the local community, as well as the advancements in technology we will see in the future.”

* March, 2023

As Gov. Greg Abbott signals stronger support for the creation of a new program to replace a multibillion dollar corporate tax break program that expired last year, he’s also drawing a clear line in the sand: wind and solar energy projects need not apply.

“I support [the program] not providing economic incentives for renewables,” Abbott said during a news conference in Austin. “There’s already federal incentives for renewable projects, and those will continue to be allowed. As it concerns especially energy and power and the power grid, our focus is on dispatchable power,” such as natural gas or coal. […]

Renewable energy has proliferated in Texas: The number of wind turbines has grown significantly over the past decade, and the number of solar farms is rising, too. Texas produces more wind energy than any other state. It rivals California for solar. Both types of power don’t pollute the air and are cheap, generally beating out sources such as natural gas to sell the electricity they produce.

* January, 2025…


* September, 2025

Abbott opens arms to data centers, teases big AI investment

Governor said project in works to eclipse Oracle, Open AI’s $400 billion investment in “Project Stargate”

* June, 2026

Late last year, Texas electricity officials faced an astonishing rush of requests from data center developers wanting to connect to the state’s grid. The Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the grid operator, was logging dozens of new requests each quarter from companies that sought to pull more electricity than traditional data centers did — by a long shot. […]

The proposals kept coming. ERCOT in the last two years received 519 requests to connect large electricity users, compared to 24 such requests the year before that, according to its records as of May. The estimated electricity that large projects could need added up to a gobsmacking 438,595 megawatts — which would equal roughly a third of all the power generation in America.

* Today…


  13 Comments      


Pritzker asked about special sessions for Bears, school funding

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bears

Q: And what are those [Bears] conversations looking like? Are they happening with your staff, with lead leaders, or are the Bears kind of putting together a proposal?

Pritzker: They’ve asked for advice, and so our staff, as well as legislators, have offered them that. I think they’re looking at both of the bills that passed, the one in the House, the one in the Senate, hoping to put the the provisions of each of those together in a form that they think will pass. And then, of course, they need to begin conversations with members of the legislature that they weren’t able to win over before, and again, we’ve been advising and trying to help out wherever we could.

Q: Is there any sense of urgency to all this?

Pritzker: Of course, of course. Are you kidding? We want to get it done as soon as possible, and if they’re able to put everything together as we hope they will, you know, I’m, as I’ve said, I’m willing to call a special session, so that we can get a vote on it long before the veto session, if that’s possible. And so we’re, we’re working and helping them in every way we can.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

* School funding

Q: Do you have any sense of whether, anything, any kind of special session? CTU is holding a rally tonight calling on special session to truly fund schools.

Pritzker: Yeah, I agree with everyone who says that schools are not as well funded as they should be. Indeed, every year I have increased funding for our K-12 education. It’s almost $3 billion in total, in addition to the EBF, the base increase in funding. I’ve added on top of that things like the teacher vacancy program, which helps schools in the toughest districts hire teachers that they’ve had a harder time hiring. We now have, I think, more teachers employed in the state of Illinois than we’ve ever had before, and we now rank in the top 10 among 50 states for our K-12 education, pre-K to 12. So I’m proud of the direction things have gone, but I couldn’t agree more that we need more funding for our public schools. That’s why I’m continuing every year, even with tough budgets, even with Donald Trump attacking education and attacking state budgets. We have found enough money to increase funding for public schools.

[Cross-talk]

If there’s an opportunity for us to improve funding for schools, and there’s somebody who’s come up with an idea about how you might get it done. Remember, an amendment to the Constitution does not require the governor; it actually requires a super majority of the House and the Senate to pass it. And so, I, as you know, I’ve been in favor of a more graduated income tax system, and I’ll continue to be in favor of that, but it’s something that the legislature needs to take up.

* IFT…

President Davis Gates last week also called on Gov. Pritzker to convene a special session of the General Assembly to address our state’s public education funding crisis and raise revenue from the ultra-wealthy to help close the $6.4 billion funding gap facing Illinois public schools from pre-K to Ph.D.

If Gov. Pritzker can call a special session to discuss data centers and a stadium proposal for billionaires, he can surely call one to address the educational needs of Illinois students.

He hasn’t talked about a data center special session.

  10 Comments      


Rate Pritzker’s new TV ad

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

New JB For Governor Ad Highlights Governor Pritzker’s Commitment to Strengthening Food Access, Eliminating Food Deserts

CHICAGO, IL – Today, JB For Governor released a new TV ad called “Go Back,” highlighting how Governor Pritzker is driving state investments to eliminate food deserts and build new grocery stores in communities that need it most.

The 30-second ad features Liz Abunaw, founder of Forty Acres Fresh Market, explaining how Gov. Pritzker’s investments helped her launch a grocery store in central Austin, a Chicago neighborhood that did not previously have one. It is an example of Gov. Pritzker’s commitment to ensuring all families have access to affordable, fresh produce, regardless of their zip code.

The ad will air on Chicago broadcast and cable television markets, as well as on digital platforms.

* The spot

* Transcript

LIZ ABUNAW, Forty Acres Fresh Market Founder: Let’s go back.

Back before central Austin had a grocery store of its own.

Back when getting fresh food required a car or bus ride.

With JB Pritzker’s help, now families can buy groceries right here.

Too often, people don’t believe in business owners like me.

But JB was critical to getting us off the ground.

And he’s helping open grocery stores in so many neighborhoods.

This is not easy work, especially these days.

But JB gets it.

He’s standing behind our business and our community.

  13 Comments      


Today’s quotable: Pritzker on data center regulations

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. Pritzker was asked about data center regulations yesterday

Q: There’s a lot of talk here about the possibility of data centers coming here. What’s your view on those?

Pritzker: I think you know that I’ve been pushing, and did push, in fact, to have some regulations put in place. So that I think on several fronts we would demand that data center operators pay for their own power, making sure that they’re either bringing power with them or they’re paying rates that would make sure that no one in the area is paying a higher rate than they would otherwise. So that’s on electricity, and of course we need to produce more electricity, so whether it’s solar fields or other kinds of maybe a small modular nuclear device, that that’s something we should be thinking about requiring of data center providers.

Second, is of course we need to make sure that they’re recycling water that they’re using, so that they’re not, you know, taking water out of the local community, you know. We’re, I think, our state is well known to be one that has fresh water more than almost any other state. We, we have about 20% of the world’s fresh water that’s either on the shores of the state or in the rivers or underneath. Aquifers, we also are 80% of the US is fresh water. We need to guard that, and we need to make sure that people are paying their utility bills aren’t paying for the utilities that are being used by those data centers.

And then, lastly, I think locals, people in the local community, should have more say about the siting of where those data centers go, because unless they’re, you know, incredibly well built, they produce a lot of noise, they’re unsightly sometimes, and so we just want to make sure that we’re dealing with all that.

That was not something that some years ago, when Illinois was not a destination, that we had to worry about very much, because we just didn’t have enough data centers to mean that that was going to be a problem. Now, as you’re seeing with AI data centers and others, and the fact that we’re in a PJM and MISO territories, where other states are using our electricity, we’ve got to make sure that we’re kind of battening down the hatches and protecting our consumers and our residents. […]

I’m not opposed to local governments deciding that that’s what they want to do, that the local residents decide we don’t want any, that’s okay. I think there are, you know, trade-offs, but I’m saying if we had regulations that actually protected the local community, I think you’d probably have fewer people saying that they don’t want it, and some saying, like, hey, they’re paying a whole lot of property taxes to reduce our property taxes in a local area, but I think it’s up to a local community to decide that.

Discuss.

  21 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ‘Broadview Six’ damage spreads with review of 20 years of one prosecutor’s cases. Sun-Times

    - U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros announced plans Monday to review nearly 20 years of grand jury proceedings involving veteran prosecutor Sheri Mecklenburg, who was at the center of the tainted “Broadview Six” case.
    - Ten defendants in three cases handled by Mecklenburg have now seen their federal charges permanently dropped as a result of the grand jury controversy in Boutros’ office.
    - Boutros said his office will be conducting “an individualized review and assessment of all available grand jury minutes” of Mecklenburg’s Chicago tenure since 2007, estimating that the review will encompass “more than 100 grand jury cases.”

* Related stories…

* At 11 am, Gov. JB Pritzker will deliver remarks at the Amrize Ribbon Cutting ceremony. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* CBS Chicago | Illinois Accountability Commission chair says fresh wave of ICE arrests has begun, with new tactics in play: Ruben Castillo, former chief judge of the federal court for Northern Illinois, told CBS News Chicago he is watching for signs of a tactical shift under new Homeland Security Secretary Mark Wayne Mullin — months after a spring surge that many expected never materialized following last year’s Operation Midway Blitz sweep. “We are going to take a different approach that can be more effective and less public-facing,” Mullin said in remarks obtained by CBS News.

* Rep. Curtis Tarver | Southeast Side, or Hammond, should beat Arlington Heights for Bears: I am asking the Bears to give South Works and the South Lakefront a full, serious feasibility review. Envision a Museum Campus South plus Quantum. This is a vision we can build upon rather than displace. We can connect world-class museums, sports, science, health care, education, lakefront access, jobs, small businesses and neighborhood revival. That would be a citywide development strategy, not old Chicago with new renderings.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Aurora Beacon-News | State Sen. Linda Holmes, an Aurora Democrat, to retire at the end of current term after 20 years: “Living with Multiple Sclerosis for the past 37 years has shaped my perspective and strengthened my commitment to public service,” she said in a statement on her website. “While I have been fortunate to manage this disease for many years with few symptoms, it is now time for me to slow down and focus on my health.” Holmes was first elected to represent the 42nd District in 2006, defeating then-Will County Board member Terri Ann Wintermute in the race for a seat that had long been held by Republican Sen. Ed Petka. Before that, Holmes served on the Kane County Board.

* Sun-Times | Bears stadium fail wasn’t Pritzker’s only fumble — his affordable housing plan also went nowhere: According to Democratic lawmakers, the major sticking point was a provision creating a statewide zoning standard for “middle housing.” “I recognized from my own local government background that the one size fits all approach doesn’t always work as we all think it will,” said Senate Majority Leader Cristina Castro, D-Elgin.

* WAND | Bill increasing fine for drivers ignoring school bus safety arms awaits Pritzker’s signature: This plan would create a uniform $300 fine for the first offense and $1,000 for a second or subsequent violation. “It’s not a mandate,” said Sen. Mike Porfirio (D-Burbank). “Instead, it empowers local law enforcement with options and greater local control so they can choose what’s best for their community to curb dangerous driving behavior.”

*** Data Center News ***

* Crain’s | Pritzker wants legislators to take up data centers in the fall: Opponents have questioned whether Pritzker has the authority to administratively suspend or slow the applications for the incentives under a program that dates back to 2019. “We’re going to address the issue, I hope, in the veto session,” Pritzker said at a press conference today. “We have authority to decide what process we’re going to use in order to go through those tax credits.

* WTTW | Data Center Policy Debate in Illinois Spans Environmental, Economic Goals: “The data center industry has been around for decades,” said Brad Tietz, state policy director of the Data Center Coalition. “We’re going to use twice the amount of data in the next five years that we used in the past 10 years… and it’s not just entertainment. It’s hospital records, bank records, government, schools, public safety, remote work, telehealth, the list goes on.” In 2018, data centers accounted for 1.9% of all electricity consumption in the U.S. according to a 2024 report from Lawrence Berkeley National Labs. By 2023, that jumped to 4.4% of all electricity in the country. And the trend is not slowing down, with estimates for 2028 ranging from 6.7-12%.

* NBC Chicago | Mayor of suburban Robbins keeps an open mind to data center: “I know there is a lot of negative stories out there but my job as mayor is to be innovative,” Bryant said. “Water, electricity, noise, pollution and environmental all are concerns of mine too, but we are in the discovery phase. If we cannot solve those issues, it will never enter Robbins. We are in talks with the owner to explore.” The owner of the property told NBC 5 at least five brokers have approached him about data centers at the site. His asking price is $25 to $30 million, with a credit for demolition.

* Naperville Sun | Developer behind rejected Naperville data center exploring former BP site: According to an internal city memo obtained by the Naperville Sun, Karis is considering the purchase of the 168-acre INEOS property, formerly the BP campus, on which to build a data center and an advanced manufacturing hub at 150 W. Warrenville Road. If plans were to move forward, the proposed data center would be the same size as the one previously proposed for the Nokia property at 1960 Lucent Lane off the I-88 corridor, the memo said. In addition to data centers, Karis is known for building cold storage facilities, industrial buildings and advanced manufacturing facilities.

* Capitol City Now | Data center-related repeal; public still skeptical of Springfield council: People who have been showing up at city council meetings these days say Springfield is not doing enough to protect itself from data centers, and the city council’s repeal of a CWLP rate classification for such projects is not doing much to quell speculation that a data center is indeed poised to come into the city. In fact, some commenters wonder if city leaders are actually okay with hosting a data center.

* Rockford Register Star | Committee backs Rockford tax district that could include data center: Residents who filled the audience and brought signs opposing a data center, worry a data center could drive up electricity costs, consume too much water and potentially harm the environment. They also cited concerns with industrial development near residential, agricultural and forest preserve areas. “With the comments received during the public hearing, the ordinances approving the South Rockford TIF District state that TIF Funds, public subsidies and tax increment revenue available through South Rockford TIF District is prohibited to be used to incentivize data centers,” according to a memorandum to Rockford City Council.

* WGLT | Consultant from Normal wants to diversify the data center discussion in McLean County: Meece said he would like to see a data center locate in the area — but not unless the public approves of such a project. “I would do my best to protect our residents and the people working here, but the one thing I will not do is go against what the general consensus is of the people in McLean County,” he said. “I don’t want to be a part of that; I don’t want to be a part of putting something in our town that people don’t want.”

* Politico | A new tax in Data Center Alley: Virginia lawmakers today voted to tax data centers for the electricity they use, capped at $600 million per year. Democratic Gov. Abigail Spanberger is expected to approve the eleventh-hour agreement — which breaks a monthslong budget stalemate and allows the state’s Democratic trifecta to avoid what would have been Virginia’s first government shutdown.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | ‘Should I have done this?’: Dozens of candidates fight to stay on Chicago’s school board ballot: In this November’s race, nine board members appointed by Johnson, a close ally of the Chicago Teachers Union, are running to keep their seats, and all are facing objections, along with two members elected with CTU backing. During the 2024 school board elections, 27 of 47 prospective candidates faced objections, many of them from CTU, and more than a dozen were ultimately knocked off the ballot. But in a reversal from the last election cycle, the Urban Center, a pro-school-choice lobbying group, is behind at least 14 of the objections.

* WTTW | Chicago’s Sidewalks Aren’t Accessible for People With Mobility Challenges, Lawsuit Argues. The City Wants the Case Dismissed: Last fall, the firm that successfully took on Chicago’s inaccessible crosswalks brought another lawsuit against the city — this time, arguing that it has long failed to properly build and maintain sidewalks, curb ramps and other key pedestrian infrastructure that people with mobility disabilities must navigate, as well as to provide accessible alternate routes when construction blocks rights of way. It’s not the first time Chicago has faced claims like this. In 2005, the city was hit with a federal class action over its failure to build curb ramps. Chicago settled the case in 2007 by pledging to spend $50 million — the largest-ever settlement in an ADA suit at the time.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago homeowners dispute massive water bills, seek answers from city: The ABC7 I-Team is hearing from more Chicago residents who say they are being overcharged on city water bills, including one homeowner facing a bill of more than $235,000 at a vacant property that she says does not have running water. Back of the Yards resident Diane Carli said the bill has caused significant stress and has left her concerned about potential consequences, including wage garnishment or a property lien if it is not paid.

* Sun-Times | Sam Antonacci delivers walk-off winner as Sox open series vs. Guardians with thrilling win: Replays, for those reviewing them in the umpires’ TV replay booth, did not provide sufficient evidence that the call on the field was wrong. That’s how close it was. “Sometimes,” said a man in the elevator who looked like Jerry Reinsdorf, the Sox owner who officially doesn’t speak to the media, “you just have to be lucky.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Vanishing act: Schaumburg neighborhood meets its demise: A 55-year-old neighborhood along Schaumburg’s southwest border is vanishing from the landscape this week as crews tear down longstanding homes to make way for an industrial development. All 19 houses lining Long Avenue are expected to be down by the end of next week, said Laura Stark, construction manager for Chicago-based Logistics Property Company LLC. The firm purchased the homes with plans to replace them with two industrial buildings totaling 436,500 square feet this summer, said Ben Fish, vice president of its Midwest region.

* Daily Herald | As investigation into Mundelein woman’s fatal shooting continues, mayor and critics have their say: Using words like “murder,” “coward” and “shame,” supporters of the family of a Mundelein woman who was fatally shot by police last month during an apparent mental health crisis expressed their anger during Monday’s village board meeting. The people who talked about the late Mary Alice Love’s life and death for about 90 minutes included relatives and friends who knew the 37-year-old woman well — and strangers deeply troubled by how she died.

* Pioneer Press | Lake Bluff, Lake Forest officials preparing for new state laws for e-bikes, scooters, etc.: Lake Forest Police Chief John Burke said he supports the measure. “It’s much clearer to follow the way they classified everything,” he said. Burke said he is working with the city’s communications team on a social media campaign to inform residents about the upcoming state regulations. In October 2023, the Lake Forest City Council approved an ordinance requiring riders of electronic mobility devices to walk them through the central business district. Violators can face penalties, including fines.

* Aurora Beacon-News | New Hollywood Casino Aurora ready to open to the public Wednesday: Work on the property has been finishing up in the past few weeks. But, after years of work, the finish line appears near for those involved in bringing the casino to its new home in Aurora. The new casino— a $360 million project that’s been under construction since 2023 — is replacing the longtime riverboat Hollywood Casino in downtown Aurora, which turned off its lights on June 10 after operating there since the 1990s.

* Daily Herald | Bloomingdale Yard construction ushers in transformation of Stratford Square to ‘The Grove’: Search Stratford Square on YouTube, and you’ll see videos of what was a “dead mall” or the “most depressing mall in America,” each with tens of thousands of views. Bloomingdale leaders intervened, acquiring the old department stores and finally the core of the mall itself. Looking to make a fresh start, the village had the entire mall demolished, save for the last anchor retailer, Kohl’s. […] Now, there are signs, not of a “dying mall,” but of new life: Vertical construction has begun on the massive property, one of the first major steps toward the larger redevelopment of the area into “The Grove at Bloomingdale.” The owner of the Naperville Yard is bringing a similar, roughly 100,000-square-foot indoor sports and family recreation hub to the former mall site.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | ADM to invest $103 million in improvements to Decatur facilities: According to the Office of the Governor, ADM’s investment will create 50 new full-time jobs and keep over 1,000 present full-time jobs. “We’ll be investing to replace 40,000 control systems across the corn plant, the East Plant and the West Plant with state-of-the-art technology. When we think about protecting what matters and supporting safety, quality and efficiency, this is a hugely important project for us,” said ADM President for North America Christopher Cuddy.

* WAND | Meridian Elementary won’t open in August due to heavy storm damage: Extreme winds seriously damaged the building and ripped off part of the roof, while rain then left water damage in several classrooms. “Every single major system in the building has been affected by water. From the ground, you couldn’t really see the extent of the wind damage that had occurred, but when you got inside and saw how much water actually was inside the building. Almost the entire rubber membrane that keeps water out had been blown off,” said Meridian School District Superintendent Shane Gordon.

* WCIA | Pritzker joins opening of new soybean processing plant in Gilman: The new plant is home to the single largest extraction process in the country, processing up to 300,000 bushels a day and providing a stable market for more than 7,000 local family farms. The facility will also create 40 new full-time jobs. […] In addition to the soybean crushing plant, the company also has a 50-acre solar array with the capacity to generate enough energy to provide power directly to the plant or to feed to the grid.

* WCIA | Attorneys for EMS worker accused of murder to file new motions; partner to be sentenced for involuntary manslaughter: The case against the two Springfield EMS workers accused of playing a part in the death of Earl Moore Jr. continues as they appear in court this week — with one of them set to be sentenced. Peggy Finley was in court on Monday for a planned trial call hearing, which is a hearing to assess whether the parties are ready to proceed to trial. The hearing didn’t last long; Finely’s attorneys said they are not ready and that they intend to file new motions in the case after Tuesday.

* WCIA | New Asian American Heritage Trail showcasing cultural sites in Champaign-Urbana: The Asian American Heritage Trail in Champaign and Urbana will highlight places that showcase Asian influence in the twin cities. Signs will be in place soon to guide people along the trail, which will include the Refugee Center, the Hindu Temple and the Far East and Ginza grocery stores. Archivist Sarah Bennett with the Urbana Free Library worked on the project. She said it is important for people to know more about the Asian culture that is right in their backyard.

*** National ***

* AP | Senate passes a bipartisan housing bill aimed at increasing supply and lowering prices: The bill, which passed 85-5 and now heads to the House, has been the focus of intense negotiations in recent weeks as lawmakers in both parties try to address housing costs in an election year. The final version of the legislation bans corporate investors from buying single-family homes but doesn’t include a Senate provision that would have required investors to sell newly constructed homes within seven years.

* MediaIte | Trump Says He’s ‘Preparing Lawsuits Against ABC for False Reporting’: On Monday night, the president went on Truth Social and wrote that a lawsuit is headed ABC’s way. He accused ABC News of not reporting that his two predecessors spent $100 million to renovate the pool, a figure which he appears to have made up, as President Joe Biden oversaw no major work on it. Meanwhile, the Obama administration spent $35 million on the pool.

* NYT | Major Supreme Court Decisions Testing Trump’s Policies Remain: Before the justices take their annual summer break, they will resolve a series of high-profile cases testing the administration’s policies to expand presidential power and reshape the federal bureaucracy. Significant decisions still to come will determine whether Mr. Trump can end the longstanding guarantee of birthright citizenship for the U.S.-born babies of undocumented immigrants and fire Lisa D. Cook, a leader at the influential and independent Federal Reserve.

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Good morning!

Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Poetry from The Boss

You can hide ‘neath your covers and study your pain
Make crosses from your lovers, throw roses in the rain
Waste your summer praying in vain
For a savior to rise from these streets

How’s life?

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Tuesday, Jun 23, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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