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Stop Rx Drug Deserts. Say No To HB 1443!

Tuesday, May 12, 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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Caption contest!

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Somebody forgot to bring a gavel to today’s meeting of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules. So, they improvised with a hammer

In case you can’t watch videos where you are at…

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Seems like a decent idea

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* IDOT…

In an effort to address a nationwide shortage of people entering the profession and attract young talent, the Illinois Department of Transportation today announced a hiring initiative that will pay $15,000 of eligible student loan debt annually for up to 50 new civil engineers who graduated from Illinois schools. Payments will be capped at a total of $60,000 and begin once the engineer has worked at IDOT at least four years. ​

“Engineers at IDOT make a positive impact on the public every day,” said Illinois Transportation Secretary Gia Biagi. “This program will reduce the financial burden for new engineers coming out of college and open the door to a meaningful career.”

The Higher Education Student Loan Repayment Assistance for Engineers Pilot Program will provide student loan repayment assistance in the form of an annual bonus after taxes of $15,000 a year for no more than four years. The program will be available for titles and areas with the greatest staffing needs.

To be eligible, the engineer must be hired by the department on or after July 1, 2024, and work at IDOT for four continuous years. Upcoming positions qualifying for the program will be identified in job postings.

The result of legislation proposed by Senate Majority Caucus Whip Ram Villivalam (D-Chicago), the program is one of several moves by IDOT to help address a downward trend in engineering graduates and make the agency more competitive in the job market. Last fall, the department teamed with the Illinois Department of Central Management Services to start an Intern to Hire program designed to attract and retain top civil engineering talent by helping college interns transition to full-time employment at the agency upon graduation. […]

According to the most recent data from the American Council of Engineering Companies, about 184,000 engineers retire or leave the field a year while 166,000 new engineers enter the workforce, creating an annual shortfall of close to 20,000. Likewise, engineering graduates peaked at roughly 214,000 in 2019 but declined by more than 10,000 since then. ​

Thoughts?

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Coverage roundup: Southern states move quickly on redistricting after Supreme Court ruling

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Starting off with some background from SCOTUS blog

The Supreme Court [last month], in the case of Louisiana v. Callais, struck down a Louisiana congressional map that a group of voters who describe themselves as “non-African American” had challenged as the product of unconstitutional racial gerrymandering. By a vote of 6-3, the justices left in place a ruling by a federal court that barred the state from using the map, which had created a second majority-Black district, in future elections. Although Wednesday’s ruling did not strike down a key provision of the federal Voting Rights Act, as Louisiana and the challengers had asked the court to do, Justice Elena Kagan suggested in her dissent (which was joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson) that the majority opinion by Justice Samuel Alito had rendered the provision “all but a dead letter.”

The decision was the latest, and presumably final, chapter in a long-running dispute arising from Louisiana’s efforts to adopt a new congressional map in the wake of the 2020 census. The first map that the state adopted, in 2022, had one majority-Black district out of the six allotted to the state. A group of Black voters – who comprise roughly one-third of the state’s population – went to federal court, where they alleged that the map violated Section 2 of the VRA, which prohibits discrimination in voting. […]

“In sum,” Alito concluded, “because the Voting Rights Act did not require Louisiana to create an additional majority-minority district, no compelling interest justified the State’s use of race in creating SB8. That map is an unconstitutional gerrymander, and its use would violate the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.” […]

But the requirements that the court imposes on Wednesday, Kagan contended, “will effectively insulate any practice, including any districting scheme, said by a State to have any race-neutral justification. That justification can sound in traditional districting criteria, or else can sound in politics and partisanship. As to the latter, the State need do nothing more than announce a partisan gerrymander,” she said. “Assuming the State has left behind no smoking-gun evidence of a race-based motive (an almost fanciful prospect), Section 2 will play no role.”

* NPR earlier this month

Tennessee Republicans on Thursday passed a new congressional map that would crack Shelby County — home to majority-Black Memphis — into three different districts, in an effort to eliminate the state’s lone remaining Democratic-held seat. […]

The state is the first to pass a new congressional map after the U.S. Supreme Court last week weakened the Voting Rights Act’s protections against racial discrimination in redistricting. […]

Tennessee GOP lawmakers defended the new map, saying their goal is partisan, to send an all-Republican delegation to Washington, D.C. […]

President Trump has urged Tennessee and other GOP-led states to redraw their maps before this fall’s midterm elections, as part of his mid-decade redistricting push. Earlier Thursday, Tennessee Gov. Lee signed a bill that repealed a state law prohibiting mid-decade redistricting.

* The Associated Press yesterday

The US Supreme Court on Monday set the stage for Alabama to eliminate one of two largely Black congressional districts before this year’s midterm elections, creating an opening for Republicans to gain an additional U.S. House seat in a partisan battle for control of the closely divided chamber.

The decision follows a Supreme Court ruling in April that struck down a majority-Black U.S. House district in Louisiana as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander, significantly weakening a provision of the federal Voting Rights Act.

Alabama officials had pointed to the Louisiana case as reason for the Supreme Court to end a judicial order to use a court-imposed House map until after the 2030 census. The high court on Monday overturned that order and directed a lower court to reconsider the case in light of the Louisiana decision. That could free the state to instead use a map approved in 2023 by the Republican-led legislature that includes only one district where Black residents comprise a majority.

Anticipating a court reversal, Alabama officials recently enacted a law allowing it to void the results of a May 19 primary for some congressional districts and instead hold a new primary under the revised district boundaries. Alabama had asked for an expedited decision ahead of the primary.

* Moving on to Missouri and South Carolina

Missouri’s top court is hearing an important legal challenge [today] to one of President Donald Trump’s earliest redistricting successes while lawmakers in Louisiana and South Carolina weigh whether to become the most recent Republican states to redraw U.S. House districts ahead of the midterm elections.

Rather than waning, a national redistricting battle that began 10 months ago has intensified as the November elections draw nearer — inflamed by a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that weakened the federal Voting Rights Act and provided grounds for states to try to eliminate voting districts with large minority populations.

Missouri was the second Republican state after Texas to heed Trump’s call last year to redraw congressional districts to help the GOP win additional seats in the midterms. At issue before the Missouri Supreme Court is whether the new districts violate a state constitutional requirement to be compact, and whether they can remain in place for this year’s elections despite an initiative petition seeking to force a public referendum.

In South Carolina, the issue facing Republican lawmakers is whether redrawing the state’s lone Democratic-held seat could open the door to a clean sweep for Republicans or backfire with additional losses by making more districts competitive for Democrats. State senators have yet to decide whether to allow consideration of a redistricting plan put forth in the House after the legislature’s regular work ends Thursday.

* The Tampa Bay Times

After a mid-cycle redistricting push to solidify Republican rule, Black voters in Tampa Bay find themselves splintered into five sprawling districts. The new map dilutes Black voting power, which leans Democratic, and threatens the region’s lone blue seat. […]

The 14th Congressional District, a Democratic stronghold held by U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor, saw dramatic change.

Under the old map, the district covered the eastern half of St. Petersburg and much of Tampa. Its population was 17.7% Black. Now, its boundaries cut out East Tampa, parts of Ybor City and all of Pinellas County, including southern St. Petersburg.

The district lost more than 47,000 Black residents, whose share of the population fell to 11.5%, according to 2020 Census population data that states are required to use when redistricting.

District 13, a Pinellas County district that Republican U.S. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna carried by nearly 10 points in her most recent election, lost more than 6,000 Black residents. The redistricting makes it even redder.

* More…

    * Stateline | Supreme Court voting rights ruling set to reshape local power from statehouses to school boards: “While everyone has been focusing on what this means for the power in Congress, there’s a whole other sector of power that it changes,” said Davante Lewis, an elected member of the Louisiana Public Service Commission and one of the litigants in a case that pushed Louisiana to create the congressional maps that were eventually struck down in the Callais ruling. “This is a decision on who gets to serve on a school board, who gets to serve on a city council, who gets representation in the judiciary,” Lewis said.

    * NPR | Southern Republicans redistrict after Supreme Court rules, Dems lose big in Virginia: The Supreme Court of Virginia Friday nullified the results of a special election on April 21, where 1.6 million Virginians approved redistricting that Democrats hoped would win them four more House seats. In a 4-3 ruling, the court said the legislature followed the wrong process for putting the question, an amendment to the state constitution, on the ballot. Meanwhile, Southern Republicans rushed to redraw their states’ congressional voting maps after an April 29 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, which weakened voting rights protections for minority communities.

    * AP | Republicans have gained an edge in a US House redistricting battle. What states are taking action?: So far, Republicans believe they could win up to 14 additional seats from new districts in Texas, Florida, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Tennessee. Democrats, meanwhile, think they could gain up to six seats from new districts in California and Utah. But those tallies presume past voting patterns hold in November. Historically, the president’s party tends to lose seats in the midterms. Democrats need to gain just a few seats in November to wrest control of the House from Republicans, which would give them greater power to oppose Trump.

    * The Hill | These are the Southern red states moving to redistrict after Supreme Court ruling: Tennessee lawmakers successfully shepherded through a new congressional map this past week that carves up the state’s only majority-Black district and threatens the lone Democrat in the nine-member House delegation. The new map splits Rep. Steve Cohen’s (D) Memphis-based 9th Congressional District into three congressional districts, while further dividing the city of Nashville into five districts.

    * Bloomberg | Democrats Still Hold House Edge Despite Redistricting Setbacks: Democrats currently have a six-point advantage in a generic congressional ballot test, according to Nate Silver’s “Silver Bulletin” newsletter. Data journalist G. Elliott Morris said Sunday that Democrats need to win the nationwide House vote by four percentage points to win control of the chamber. “Republicans have gained a new structural advantage through redistricting,” the nonpartisan Cook Political Report’s Amy Walter wrote Monday. “We continue to rate Democrats as favored to win control of the House, but they are no longer overwhelming favorites.”

    * The Hill | With few options left in redistricting, Democrats ramp up affordability message: The House Democratic Caucus will huddle as a group Thursday in the Capitol to chart its next steps on each front. And party leaders insist the Virginia ruling, while a setback, is no permanent barrier to achieving their goals. “We remain undeterred,” Jeffries wrote Monday in a letter to fellow Democrats. “Our effort to forcefully push back against the Republican redistricting scheme will not slow down. We are just getting started.”

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Credit Unions Prepare Ahead Of Elder Abuse Awareness Month

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

June is Elder Abuse Awareness Month. Each year, it serves as an important reminder that financial exploitation is one of the fastest-growing threats facing older adults. For credit unions, this issue is deeply connected to the members and communities we serve every day.

Credit unions are on the front line of defense against financial fraud. With over 180,000 suspicious cases involving older adults reported by financial institutions recently—totaling more than $6 billion in activity—the need for actionable resources has never been greater.

To support the mission of service, the American Association of Credit Union Leagues (AACUL) Elder Exploitation Prevention Toolkit is now available. This resource is designed specifically for credit unions to help their team recognize red flags, start difficult conversations, and respond with care.

What’s Inside the Toolkit?

    • Staff Guides & Checklists: Streamline internal processes and empower front-line staff to identify suspicious activity.
    • Conversation Starters: Practical tools to help teams talk about elder fraud with confidence and sensitivity.
    • Posters & Handouts: Ready-to-use materials for branches to keep protection top-of-mind for members.
    • Social & Digital Content: Pre-made assets to help spread awareness across digital channels.

The toolkit can be accessed at https://aacul.com/elder.

In addition to the toolkit, the Illinois Credit Union Act was amended last year to authorize credit union employees to contact trusted advisors or family members on members’ accounts when financial exploitation is suspected. The trusted advisor provision has been in effect since January 1, 2026.

Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Subscribers know more. Press release…

As artificial intelligence rapidly evolves, the laws surrounding the safety and privacy of consumers must as well. Members of the Illinois Senate Democratic Caucus released an eight-bill package Monday that would put forth protections against harmful AI outcomes as it relates to mental health help, identity security, price gouging safeguards and much more.

To enhance commonsense guardrails on large AI companies – and in turn build public trust – State Senator Mary Edly-Allen (D-Libertyville) is leading Senate Bill 315. The measure would require large developers – such as ChatGPT and Claude – to provide an independent, third party annual report explaining what mechanisms they have in place to mitigate catastrophic risks, provide transparency reports and report critical safety incidents. Further, it would require the companies to report a critical safety incident within 72 hours of learning about it, or 24 hours if the incident poses an imminent risk of death or serious physical harm. […]

Throughout the country, there have been instances of teenagers and young adults turning to AI during a mental health crisis. In some cases, the person confided in the AI chatbot about their suicidal thoughts – and a real person was never alerted. Under Senate Bill 316, led by State Senator Laura Ellman (D-Naperville), AI companies would be required to implement methods for detecting user expression of suicidal ideation or self-harm, work to prevent such harm, and provide a notification to the user that refers them to a crisis service provider, such at the 9-8-8 suicide hotline. […]

When people turn to companies for questions or assistance, often they’re forced to talk with a chatbot rather than a real human – but with technological advancements, it’s not always clear who you’re chatting with. To increase transparency and accountability, State Senator Rachel Ventura (D-Joliet) is leading Senate Bill 317. Under the measure, if a person is talking with an AI chat interface as it relates to trade or commerce, the consumer must be notified it is an automated system at the start of the conversation. […]

Every time someone interacts with a website or mobile application, it holds onto the data – often leading to consumers receiving unwanted targeted ads. Under State Senator Laura Murphy’s (D-Des Plaines) Senate Bill 340, consumers would have the option to opt out of having their data used for such ads or sold to third parties. Further, it would protect people from being subjected to algorithmic profiling that could influence major life decisions like loan approvals, job screenings or insurance rates. Senate Bill 340 would prohibit the sale of a consumer’s most sensitive data, without requiring a consumer to opt of the sale. […]

AI-driven rental pricing platforms are known to facilitate rent price-fixing, causing artificial, double-digit rent increases in an era when people are already struggling to afford their day-to-day life. Under Senate Bill 343 from State Senator Graciela Guzmán (D-Chicago), landlords would not be able to coordinate pricing indirectly through a shared third-party service or software, such as an algorithm that sets prices across multiple competing landlords. […]

AI is also becoming more prevalent in education in all forms. However, students and their families shouldn’t have to worry if their identity or data is being taken advantage of or discriminating against them – especially at school. Senate Bill 415, led by State Senator Karina Villa (D-West Chicago), would only allow school districts to use biometric data for legitimate instructional purposes.

Further, the scores students receive should be fair and accurate – determined by a real person, not a computer. State Senator Robert Martwick (D-Chicago) is ensuring that is the case in schools across the state through Senate Bill 416. The measure would prohibit teachers from using artificial intelligence to assign grades on students’ work.

* Crain’s

Cook County is liable for what could amount to tens of millions of dollars for violating homeowners’ constitutional rights with its tax sales, a federal judge ruled today, nearly three years after the U.S. Supreme Court declared the tax sale system unlawful in Illinois and about a dozen other states. […]

In February, [Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas] secured legislation in Springfield that allowed her to push Cook County’s delinquent tax sales back a second time, to December. Delaying the sale avoids adding further properties to the pile of liabilities that have stacked up in Cook County during past tax sales.

At the time, Pappas’s policy director, Justin Kirvan, issued a statement saying the delay should allow time for “stakeholders and legislators to enact comprehensive property tax foreclosure reform that ensures all taxpayers in Illinois are treated equitably.”

Pappas has been a leader in trying to get Springfield to pass legislation bringing Illinois into compliance with the Supreme Court’s 2023 ruling, but the effort failed in 2025 and has not yet achieved the goal in the legislature’s spring session.

* Canary Media

Lawmakers backing an Illinois bill that would clear the way for balcony solar have ended their push to pass the measure this year. With three weeks still to go in the legislative session, they hit a stalemate as opponents, including the state’s powerful electrical workers union, raised concerns about safety.

Advocates and lawmakers who had championed the bill were unhappy with an amendment filed on April 24 that would have prohibited the small plug-in solar panels until national standards are updated to include them.

Supporters say that other states have passed balcony solar laws without that provision. They contend that plugging in a small solar panel is no more dangerous than plugging in a washing machine or hair dryer.

“The whole point of the bill is to make these things safe,” said Kady McFadden, an Illinois lobbyist who focuses on clean energy and was leading legislative strategy for Senate Bill 3104. ​“It’s finding the right pieces to make sure consumers are safe, and also balancing that with being able to deploy these things.”

Given the amendment and concerns from stakeholders including the union, the lawmakers sponsoring the bill decided against further action, according to McFadden. […]

“Illinois is unique — we like to do things our own way in the legislative process,” said McFadden. ​“It takes more than a year to pass a bill.”

* House Republican Leader Tony McCombie filed HB5767 last week. Synopsis

Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code. Requires the Secretary of State to provide the option to renew a 2-year registration sticker both online and in-person. Effective immediately.

* Illinois Times

The only revenue Springfield city government might forfeit to help pay for the proposed BOS Center expansion and new hotel next door would be the city’s share of hotel taxes on room rates at the site and part of the expected increase in city sales taxes.

Those were guarantees that Sangamon County Board Chair Andy Van Meter made in recent interviews with Illinois Times about the effects of pending state legislation in which Van Meter has been intimately involved. And he said the Springfield City Council would have to vote to agree with those diversions of revenue before the changes could take place.

Van Meter’s assurances referred to the Springfield project tucked inside a “megaprojects” bill – a bill also containing plans for a new Chicago Bears stadium – that passed the Illinois House on April 22 and may be considered by the Senate before the General Assembly’s scheduled adjournment later this month. […]

Van Meter, a Springfield Republican, acknowledged that some sections of House Bill 910 may be misleading when it comes to the impact on the capital city. Those sections, he said, likely will be clarified before the legislation is passed by both chambers and sent to Gov. JB Pritzker for his signature.

* Center Square

House Bill 34 would ban the ability to carry a firearm at any building, property or parking area of polling locations, creating a 24th restriction on open carry laws in the state.

While state peace officers would be exempt, any other person discovered to be carrying a firearm at a polling place would be found guilty of a misdemeanor.

State Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Highwood, told lawmakers during a joint hearing last week between the House Gun Violence Prevention and the Ethics and Elections Committees that his bill seeks to address safety of poll workers and voters during a rise in political intimidation, threats and violence. […]

Ed Sullivan, on behalf of the Illinois State Rifle Association, said the bill seeks to address a non-existent threat, citing crime data he said shows people with a concealed carry license are less likely to commit crimes when compared to the rest of the population.

“So it says ‘any building, real property, or parking area.’ So any building – think about the areas that are not governmental buildings. Think about your communities where you might have a condo association that has a community center within that condo building, and they’re having a polling place,” Sullivan said. “On that day of polling, I’m not allowed to have a firearm in that building.” […]

The joint committees hearing the bill did not vote on the bill, which has sat in the legislature since late 2024.

HB34 has not received a House committee vote and has been referred to Rules.

* More…

    * WRMJ | Local State Rep. Swanson’s SoyFoam Fire Department Bill Passes Committee: Local State Representative Dan Swanson (R-Alpha) has passed a resolution out of the Police and Fire Committee last week directed at a couple of entities. One is the State Fire Marshal to help fire officials dispose of carcinogenic foam that’s still on the shelves of fire departments around the state, and the second encourages the State Fire Marshal and local departments to begin looking at investing in SoyFoam.

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340B: ‘A Lifeline For Patients And Communities’ – Vote YES On HB 2371 SA 2

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As healthcare leaders, staff and their patients advocate for House Bill 2371 SA 2—the Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act—some who are against restoring the federal 340B program in Illinois have mischaracterized “both the purpose of the 340B Drug Pricing Program and the realities facing Illinois hospitals,” said IHA President and CEO A.J. Wilhelmi in a recent Crain’s op-ed.

Illinois hospitals face unprecedented financial headwinds, including higher costs and inadequate reimbursement. At the same time, drug prices continue to rise while pharmaceutical manufacturers reduce access to drug discounts required by federal law.

“Pharmaceutical manufacturers — many located overseas, earning tens of billions of dollars in annual profits — are actively working to restrict hospital access to 340B discounts. Limiting these resources does not lower drug prices; it reduces the ability of providers to deliver care to those who need it most,” Wilhelmi wrote.

Illinois hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers are united in supporting HB 2371 SA 2, which does not require state money. The bill would protect 340B so safety net providers can continue supporting patients and communities. “Weakening this program would not help patients — it would reduce access to care and strain an already fragile healthcare system,” Wilhelmi said.

Cutting funding for hospitals operating on thin to negative margins will have devasting effects on patients. VOTE YES on HB 2371 SA 2. Learn more.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, May 12, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Pritzker pitches housing plan on podcast as real estate alliance deepens. The Real Deal

    - The full show won’t be out until later this week. In clips posted so far, Gov. Pritzker focused on the zoning overhaul, along with a down-payment assistance program his office started in March. He also dismissed concerns from local governments about sharp density increases as “misinformation.”
    - The podcast appearance came together through Illinois Realtors, Chicago real estate broker Matt Laricy said. Pritzker also filmed an interview with Tommy Choi, who leads the Weinberg Choi Residential team at Keller Williams OneChicago, his office said.
    - Laricy described the governor’s broader courtship of Illinois Realtors as straightforward politics. The trade group has significant muscle in Springfield, and aligning with it on a signature legislative agenda benefits both sides, Laricy said.

* Related stories…

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


Sponsored by PhRMA



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

* 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 ***

* Sun-Times | Cook County liable for property tax sale violations, judge rules: A federal judge ruled Monday that Cook County is liable to pay back potentially millions of dollars to people who lost their homes in the county’s annual property tax sales, three years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the system unconstitutional. Since 2020, nearly 2,500 homeowners not only lost their properties but also the surplus equity in those homes after their delinquent property taxes were sold.

* WGN | Mayor threatens $250K in state funding after WGN Investigates report: At 9:46 p.m. that same night, an email from Mayor Jones’ Calumet City account was sent to seven people, including the park district’s executive director. It read: “After Clerk Figgs nasty interview about me tonight on WGN, I am withdrawing my support for the $250,000 for the Park District.” […] Initially, his spokesman suggested the email may be fake.

*** Statewide ***

* Capitol News Illinois | ‘More than just a road’: Illinois communities celebrate Route 66’s centennial: “Route 66 is more than just a road, you know?” said Joan Sestak, member of the Federal Route 66 Centennial Commission and director of community and government relations at the University of Illinois Springfield. “It’s a shared American story about mobility, opportunity and connection. The centennial celebration gives us a chance to reflect on that and reflect on what still unites us about those shared values.”

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press release | Governor Pritzker Announces $2.5 Million in Grant Funding Available for Economic Empowerment Centers Across Illinois: The EEC Grant Program was developed to help create an inclusive business ecosystem within communities that have historically faced systemic barriers to entry and growth through dynamic partnerships, targeted outreach, and tailored programs and initiatives. DCEO has previously awarded $2.5 million in grant funding to 10 recipients through the EEC Grant Program who have helped launch 100 businesses, created over 160 jobs, and advised over 2,000 entrepreneurs.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Tax break for United Center’s 1901 Project advances amid union pushback: While negotiations are ongoing, there appears to be consensus the union would represent workers at the concert hall, hotel and in catering jobs, but the union is pushing for the right to collectively bargain for workers at restaurants outside the music venue. Union members packed a City Hall committee room today to oppose the project, criticizing the city for granting a tax break to the owners of the Chicago Bulls and Chicago Blackhawks while West Side residents face soaring property tax bills.

* Sun-Times | City Council panel backs tax incentives for United Center entertainment district: The tax abatement — which would be applied over 12 years — would be the first infusion of public funding for the privately-owned stadium and came as “a surprise to some of us,” said Ald. Nicole Lee (11th), since it wasn’t part of the initial announcement of the project. The tax relief would come in the form of a 7(b) incentive for the first phase, which allows the property to be assessed at a lower percentage than it would be otherwise.

* NBC Chicago | Chicago wines and dines DNC officials in push to host convention: They’ll also be taking in the sights on an architectural boat tour on the Chicago River, and they’ll also attend an event at the Obama Presidential Center, visiting with city luminaries, business leaders and more, according to officials. […] It’s unknown when Democrats will make their decision on a host site for the convention, but Republicans have already chosen their host city for 2028, with their convention heading to Houston, Texas.

* Tribune | Chicago’s Legion Park encampment was cleared out. Residents and activists question the city’s next steps: Park District policy says the agency takes a “housing-first” approach to encampments, and it says it doesn’t engage in sweeps, which it defines as a closure in which residents may not be connected with resources. However, the policy doesn’t explicitly specify if an encampment closure will always include a housing event. The Park District hasn’t yet returned a request for comment to the Tribune.

* ABC Chicago | CPD officer shot, critically injured at Swedish Hospital making progress; family ‘remaining hopeful’: Chicago Police Officer Nelson Crespo’s family says he is still in the ICU, but the good news is that he is able to breathe on his own for several hours at a time, according to his doctors. […] “He’s still in the ICU and he is able to breathe on his own now for eight hours at a time. The doctor wants him to exercise his diaphragm, and he is improving each day,” she said.

* Crain’s | Englewood renewal effort takes whole-block approach to reversing housing inequity: Tonika Johnson is taking a whole-block approach to reversing Chicago’s long-held inequities in housing, concentrating her resources on buying vacant lots, repairing people’s homes and bringing murals and sculpture all to single block in Englewood. “Because of the devaluation of everything around here, you have to invest in all of the block if you want to stabilize it,” Johnson said on a recent walk along the 6500 block of South Aberdeen Street. “It has to be all of it, not part of it.”

* WBEZ | Man’s bid for a retrial in boy’s murder hinges on ex-Chicago cop’s alleged ties to Gitmo torture: The attorney, Jennifer Blagg, argued that retired Detective Richard Zuley, 79, coordinated her client’s torture. She tied the case to alleged Zuley-led coercion in a string of cases from 1987 to 2003, including four murder convictions that were later thrown out. “He’s never in the room when the worst stuff happens, but he doesn’t have to be [because the officers] are all working together,” Blagg said.

* Block Club | Baby Eagles’ Nest Gets Extra Protection As Park District Blocks Far South Side Trail: News of the two eaglets broke last week, with many Chicagoans celebrating the rare occurrence. Now, the Park District has restricted trails at Park 597, 2690 E. 126th Place, near where the nest containing two eaglets resides, according to the Park District. “To minimize disturbance and for the protection of the nesting area, we have temporarily closed access to the woodland path for the foreseeable future,” spokesperson Irene Tostado said in a statement.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | Kane County state’s attorney: Aurora police acted appropriately during anti-ICE school protest: Aurora police officers acted within the scope of their authority and didn’t use excessive force during a February student walkout protesting federal immigration tactics, the Kane County state’s attorney announced Monday. Kane County State’s Attorney Jamie Mosser said in a news release that her office launched an investigation following allegations that Aurora police used excessive force during the Feb. 9 protest, which involved hundreds of Aurora students leaving school and walking toward the downtown area and City Hall. The walkout resulted in the arrest of three students.

* Harvey World Herald | Out of ‘shared concern for the community,’ Southland influencers expand political awareness: In 2022, Henyard was appointed Thornton Township Supervisor, following the death of longtime head Frank Zuccarelli; Henyard held dual roles as Dolton’s mayor and the township’s supervisor. By then, Allen’s optimism had dwindled. Allen’s content was originally personal, “but when Tiffany Henyard came into power, I felt a responsibility to document what was happening in real time,” she said.

* Daily Herald | ‘Most pressing needs’: After public scrutiny, District 214 cuts potential referendum ask in half: Northwest Suburban High School District 214 has cut its possible referendum ask in half — from more than $900 million at one point, to as much as $450 million now — as officials continue to gauge public appetite for a tax hike to fund building updates. “The district has carefully considered the community’s feedback and adjusted its approach to reflect the community’s wishes,” according to a facilities planning presentation on the district’s website. “Moving forward, this process will focus only on the highest-priority projects, based on community feedback and district evaluations.”

* Pioneer Press | Lake Forest City Council transitions to new era as two aldermen depart, new members sworn in: At the May 4 City Council meeting, Alderman Edward “Ted” Notz, 2nd, and Alderwoman Eileen Looby Weber, 4th, said their goodbyes after serving the city’s customary terms in office for council members. Later in the meeting, Rosemary Kehr and Lloyd Culbertson were sworn in to succeed them.

* Daily Herald | $7 million grant to help ease gridlock at major Mount Prospect intersection: Reaching that goal was helped out last week when U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky, an Evanston Democrat, handed out a symbolic $7 million check at Randhurst Village representing Community Project Funding dedicated to the project. The total project cost is about $19.6 million including engineering, right-of-way acquisition and construction, officials said. The estimated cost of construction alone is about $13.8 million.

*** Downstate ***

* NPR Illinois | Sangamon County announces nominees for new mental health board: The application and review process was extensive. The county received 103 applications from residents interested in serving on the board. Applicants were asked to submit resumes, letters of interest and supporting materials for consideration. Members of the review committee spent countless hours reviewing applications, evaluating professional experience and identifying candidates with the background needed to help guide the county’s mental health funding priorities.

* WMBD | Pekin data center project scrapped as company ends agreement: Western Hospitality Partners, which was looking to build a data center in Pekin, will not move forward with its project. That’s according to City Attorney James Vasselli, who said at Monday’s Pekin City Council meeting that WHP terminated its agreement with the city and is no longer planning to build a data center in the 321 acres north of Lutticken Lake.

* WMBD | Bloomington airport project close to take-off thanks to federal dollars: U.S. Rep. Darin LaHood on Monday delivered a $1.5 million grant for an airport plan that could bring more jobs to the Twin Cities. The federal funding will help build a cargo road to separate truck traffic from airport traffic. The goal is to build a truck exit of sorts off Airport Road to the FedEx warehouse. FedEx is the largest employer housed at Central Illinois Regional Airport right now.

* WCIA | EIU tests emergency alert system after armed person hoax caused ‘panic’ in the fall: “That’s why we worked this spring to to figure out a better solution for the campus. So, [the IT staff] has been working to make sure — and actually, it’s been ready for a little bit, but we wanted to wait until the students were gone to do this test — to make sure that the one button solution for our campus audio, the text messages, and the emails were all ready to go for this afternoon,” Bierman said.

* WGEM | Major improvements to Water Treatment Plant approved by Quincy City Council: Several improvement projects, including a nearly $1 million valve replacement at the Water Treatment Plant, were given the green light by the Quincy City Council. “This is actually a replacement of the intake valve. It’s water that comes in from the river,” explained Quincy Public Works Director Jeffrey Conte. The water valve being replaced is around a hundred years old according to Conte, which makes it necessary to completely replace it instead of repairing it.

* WSIL | Trigg Tower closing for repairs in Shawnee National Forest: Repairs are expected to take approximately one month, no more than 90 days. The work includes replacing the fencing around the top of the observation platform, replacing deck boards and stair treads, stabilizing the lower stairway, sandblasting and repainting the tower, and other general maintenance work as needed.

*** National ***

* Sun-Times | Justice Department can no longer pressure Facebook, Apple to remove ICE-sighting apps, judge rules: The preliminary injunction ruling, issued last week by U.S. District Judge Jorge Alonso, stems from a lawsuit filed in February by Kassandra “Kae” Rosado against former U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. Rosado alleges that both federal agencies coerced Facebook into removing her “ICE Sighting-Chicagoland” group, which aimed to keep residents informed about where U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were seen in the Chicago area.

* WSJ | An FCC Commissioner Tells Disney the Agency Is on a Campaign to Censor It: ABC has been a victim of a “sustained, coordinated campaign of censorship and control” by the Trump administration, Federal Communications Commissioner Anna Gomez told Josh D’Amaro, chief executive of Disney, the network’s parent company. The FCC under Republican Chairman Brendan Carr has been weaponized to pressure “a free and independent press and all media into submission,” Gomez wrote in a letter sent to D’Amaro on Monday and viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

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