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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Fox 23 Now…
* Shaw Local | State Sen. Patrick Joyce launches annual book club for students on break: “It can be easy for young students to drift away from reading when the school year ends,” Joyce said. “Reading over the summer helps students stay in a routine that can last for the rest of their lives.” The Summer Book Club requires students to read eight books of their choice during summer break, record the book names on a form, and return the form to Joyce’s district office by Friday, Aug. 21. Participants who complete the reading will receive a certificate and an invite to a pizza party, according to a news release. * WBEZ | On Vatican trip, Mayor Johnson will laud Pope Leo for his pushback against Trump’s ‘godforsaken’ policies: The delegation headed to Rome includes business leaders, Johnson’s deputy mayor for economic development, his sustainability officer, advisor Jason Lee, top council ally Jason Ervin (28th), as well as non-Catholic faith leaders to represent Chicago’s religious diversity. That includes Rabbi Lizzi Heydemann of Mishkan Chicago in Ravenswood, who said she will give the pope a White Sox kippah, a traditional Jewish head covering that represents “the respect for the divine.” * Tribune | Chicago Teachers Union members vote down proposed dues increase: It’s unclear how the vote will affect the union’s financial picture. Dues account for nearly 90% of CTU’s revenue, which is expected to exceed $40 million this fiscal year. Without the change, the union is facing a $4.2 million deficit, according to the April documents. A union spokesperson declined to comment on the shortfall. Meanwhile, fundraising is heating up in the race for Chicago’s first fully elected school board. CTU was the top spender in the 2024 election, which largely pitted the union against pro-school choice groups. The union has yet to endorse or make contributions to candidates this election cycle. * Sun-Times | ‘I don’t feel like I’m a major-leaguer’: Rikuu Nishida humble despite successful debut with White Sox: The 25-year-old native of Osaka, Japan, had a lot to be happy about. The Sox had just promoted him from Triple-A Charlotte to make his major-league debut at Rate Field, batting ninth and playing right field in the same lineup with countryman Munetaka Murakami. Nishida, who understands and speaks English but still had an interpreter at his side, giggled his way through a pregame interview session with reporters in the dugout. “I’m really, really happy, excited, but really nervous at the same time,” Nishida said through the interpreter. “I still can’t believe it’s true right now, so [there are] a lot of butterflies inside me. * Block Club | Chicago Toasts To Schlitz As Bars Serve Up Their Last Kegs Of The Truly Midwestern Beer: Neighbors have flocked to at least two of those former tied houses — Schubas Tavern in Lakeview and Friends of Friends in West Town — to get one last draft of Schlitz before the kegs run dry. Friends of Friends, 2001 W. Grand Ave., even held a “Schlitz funeral” Monday, where patrons could snag 86-cent Schlitz drafts during happy hour. “We’re selling the Schlitz for 86 cents because 86 means ‘We’re out of it, it’s done,’ in restaurant lingo,” Friends of Friends co-owner Abe Vucekovich said. “So we wanted a way for Chicagoans to say goodbye to such an important beer, and when better to do that than on Memorial Day?” * WBEZ | Chicago’s Lyric Opera receives $20 million gift from Illinois-based Negaunee Foundation: Half of the gift to Lyric will be used to support the company’s education program, which will be renamed for Negaunee. Lyric says it will expand its in-school and family programming and work more closely with Merit School of Music. The funds will also support a recently announced collaboration with the Music Institute of Chicago. Mangum said in a statement that engaging with young people is key to developing future opera audiences. * Tribune | ‘Broadview Six’ case in rare waters as defense says US attorney had ‘personal contact’ with grand jury: Over the weekend, MacArthur said, the office requested a litigation hold on “all records, emails, text messages, voice messages, documents and notes” related to the Broadview Six prosecution, including decisions about the disclosure and redaction of grand jury transcripts. That evidence could be crucial to potential future hearings over alleged prosecutorial misconduct, including vindictive prosecution. Also Tuesday, MacArthur said prosecutors were not objecting to the public release of most of the grand jury transcripts in the case, with limited redactions to remove personal identification of any grand jurors and one limited section where a juror expressed personal opinions about the case. * Sun-Times | Grand jurors in tainted ‘Broadview 6′ case had contact with Chicago’s top federal prosecutor, defense says: Tuesday’s disclosure about Boutros’ potential contact with the grand jury came from Straw attorney Christopher Parente. He shared no additional details during the public portion of Tuesday’s hearing, though. A spokesman for Boutros’ office did not immediately comment. Boutros told Perry on Thursday he wasn’t aware of the alleged grand jury misconduct until late April. He later announced a review of grand jury presentations in other cases that could have been tainted similarly to the “Broadview Six” case. * Sun-Times | Attorney accusing ICE agent of suburban Chicago attack now pushing for felony charges: Robert Held, 68, told reporters he followed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Adam Saracco from the ICE facility in suburban Broadview on Dec. 27, then filmed as Saracco stopped for gas in Brookfield. Held said Saracco eventually started walking toward him and pushed him to the ground. Saracco appeared in court in Maywood earlier Tuesday for a status hearing in the misdemeanor battery case stemming from the incident. Held later told reporters that he now wants the Cook County state’s attorney’s office to upgrade the charge to a felony. * Greg Hinz | As mayoral field forms, Mendoza targets Johnson on TIFs: In a likely preview of a mayoral campaign soon to come, Illinois Comptroller Susana Mendoza is ripping Mayor Brandon Johnson’s use of a financial device that has been a hallmark of his fiscal management of the city. Mendoza’s target is Johnson’s increasing dependence on “surplus funds” in the city’s tax-increment financing accounts to balance the city’s budget. The practice began in a small way under former Mayor Rahm Emanuel and expanded some during the tenure of successor Lori Lightfoot, but has exploded under Johnson, with the city sweeping a record $1.01 billion from the TIF pot as part of the 2026 city budget. * Aurora Beacon-News | St. Charles City Council OKs $7.6 million bid for lead service line replacement work: In the wake of recently-approved utility rate hikes meant to pay for such improvements, the St. Charles City Council has given the green light for a $7.6 million lead service line replacement project in the city. The replacement of lead service lines is required by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and must be completed within 10 years under a rule approved by former President Joe Biden’s administration meant to reduce lead in drinking water, a deadline that President Donald Trump’s administration recently indicated it is backing, according to the Associated Press. […] St. Charles’ lead service line replacements are expected to cost about $8.4 million annually, and must begin in 2026, officials have said. The city’s water utility has a little over 3,000 projected lead service lines connected to the community water supply distribution system, according to documents from the city. * Lake County News-Sun | Buffalo Grove ranked best place to live in Illinois: ‘Now everybody else in the country knows’: Buffalo Grove has been named the best place to live in Illinois, according to a U.S. News & World Report 2026-2027 ranking that also designated the village as the 15th best in the country. […] Village President Eric Smith said he “couldn’t be more excited” about the ranking, recalling a conversation he had with a journalist when he first became mayor. “What are your goals?” Smith recalled the reporter asking. “When people think of Buffalo Grove, I want them to want to come here. I want this to be the best place.” * Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora Farmers Market set to open for its 115th season: “We’ll have between 50 and 60 vendors each week,” Freitag said. “Some will come once a month, and others every other week. About a quarter will be rotating, while the rest will be there weekly.” Old favorites like Strawberries BBQ, Michigan’s Lopez Farms, Dick’s Mini-Donuts and Soulshine Farm will be back along with “at least 15 new vendors,” Freitag said. “Some of our new ones include some farms we’ve added based on surveys we’ve offered to patrons,” she said. “There’s been a request for more fresh local produce and we have a couple of farms including Microcosm Farm from Shabbona who have produce and sauerkrauts and kimchi which we’ve never had before.” * Muddy River News | No official word on suspended PE teachers, but QPS looking to fill positions in June: It’s been one year since Muddy River News reported that two Denman Elementary School physical education teachers who admitted to giving birthday spankings and taping students’ mouths shut were investigated by the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS). Since then, the two teachers have been on paid administrative leave, the Quincy School District parted ways with Superintendent Todd Pettit and have had two interim superintendents. A new superintendent, Larry Gray, takes over July 1. The Quincy School Board had no updates last week on the status of the two teachers, Kim Kirby and Jen Oitker. They remain are under investigation by the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) for their conduct. * WCIA | Forsyth officials share renovation plans for veterans memorial: Planned improvements include military branch monuments, enhanced walkways and gathering spaces, restored flagpoles, relocated engraved pavers, landscaping improvements, seating areas and more. “This project is about honoring service, preserving history, and creating a place where families, veterans, and visitors can gather in remembrance and gratitude,” Village Administrator Jill Applebee said in a news release. “We are excited to provide opportunities for individuals, families, organizations, and businesses to be part of this lasting tribute.” * WGLT | Midwest Punk Fest returns with a new home at Meltdown Creative Works: Plue said now was an ideal time to resuscitate Midwest Punk Fest, in large part, because he’s got a space of his own. “We moved the show every two years, just because of venue issues,” he said on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. “Either had to get bigger, or it just didn’t work out at a certain venue, or the venue was closed. We now have our own venue and can kind of control a little bit more of how it’s done.” * WCIA | Phoebe Bridgers announces surprise show in Champaign: Recently, Bridgers has been popping up in cities throughout the country for small, intimate concerts. Her shows are announced through posters shortly before tickets go on sale — on the day of the concert. Monday, posters showed that Bridgers would perform at The Orpheum in Champaign. * States Newsroom | Congressional Black Caucus calls for corporate leaders to speak out for voting rights: The CBC’s attempt to mobilize the business community comes as Black representation in Congress potentially faces its most severe threat since the end of Reconstruction following the Civil War. But some business leaders have taken a friendlier tone with President Donald Trump, who backs the gerrymandering. A U.S. Supreme Court decision in April, in a case called Louisiana v. Callais, sharply weakened the federal Voting Rights Act, which had blocked states from breaking apart majority-minority districts. It limited the use of race in redistricting, prompting several Southern states to advance new maps targeting these districts, which are mostly held by Black Democrats. * AP | South Carolina Senate rejects Trump’s call to redraw congressional map for midterm elections: As early in-person voting began Tuesday in South Carolina’s primaries, the state Senate rejected a Republican plan to cancel those congressional votes and instead schedule a new primary under revised districts designed to help the GOP oust a longtime Democrat. Some senators said it was simply too late to make a change. “South Carolina citizens are going to the polls today. And neither my conscience or common sense is going to let me stop an election that is already underway,” Republican state Sen. Richard Cash said. * Business Insider | Uber’s COO says it’s getting harder to justify the money spent on AI tokenmaxxing: He said that the trade-off costs from AI are harder to justify because he can’t draw a direct link. Earlier this month, CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said in an earnings call that Uber was slowing hiring to counter its investments in AI. Macdonald added that AI can seem free if you’re “just a user sitting there coming up with interesting use cases” without paying for it. But ultimately, the company foots the bill. […] Duolingo, for instance, walked back its decision to include AI usage in performance reviews after employees asked whether they had to use AI for the sake of using it.
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Question of the day
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller Currently, judicial records in Illinois are not subject to the state’s Freedom of Information Act. Given the courts’ wide-reaching jurisdiction in Illinois, the exemption substantially restricts the public’s ability to understand a wide range of issues. * From the synopsis…
The bill is still in the Assignments Committee. No witness slips have been filed. * The Question: Should the Illinois court system be subject to FOIA, with the restrictions noted above? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.
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Pritzker says ’some sort of pause’ in automatic gas tax hike could be coming
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Gov. JB Pritzker was asked today about his thoughts on the gas tax during this spring’s huge price spike…
Please pardon any transcription errors.
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Stratton Building locked down after ’suspicious device’ seen in parking lot
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * An alert was sent at 11 this morning….
* The Secretary of State’s office…
* The lockdown was lifted around noon…
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Stop Rx Drug Deserts. Say No To HB 1443!
Tuesday, May 26, 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. Instead, New Hampshire repealed their board late last year and Virginia’s governor recently vetoed PDAB bills, citing high costs and a lack of meaningful savings in other states. 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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Catching up with the congressionals
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Sun-Times…
* Lindsay Church, a veteran who runs a nonprofit serving minority veterans, has dropped out of the race…
* Church has endorsed fellow Independent Mayra Macìas. Press release…
* Press release…
* More…
* Press release | Patty García Endorsed by Rep. Ro Khanna: “I’m proud to endorse Patty for IL-04 because she has stood with immigrant families facing detention and deportation, fought to keep housing affordable, and helped deliver resources to communities that have been overlooked for far too long,” said Rep. Ro Khanna. Rep. Khanna is a leading progressive voice on removing dark money from politics, holding Big Tech accountable, and reducing costs like housing and healthcare for working Americans. He has also worked across ideological lines with lawmakers like Thomas Massie on issues including congressional war powers and government transparency, including efforts to push for the release of records related to Jeffrey Epstein.
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It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Waymo is ready to bring safe, reliable, autonomous rides to Illinois – but we need your help! Waymo is already mapping Chicago’s unique streets and traffic patterns to lay the groundwork for operations. Never tired or distracted, Waymo provides hundreds of thousands of fully autonomous rides every week across ten major U.S. cities, from Los Angeles to Atlanta — from multi-lane expressways to dense city streets, including the demands of winter weather. The data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in thirteen times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 3/20/26, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois. ![]()
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It’s just a bill
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Press release…
* Crain’s…
* CBS Chicago…
* Rep. Nicole Grasse…
* WAND…
* Sen. Sara Feigenholtz…
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Illinois Positioned To Become A National Leader On AI Safety
Tuesday, May 26, 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 residents deserve confidence that advanced AI technologies are being developed responsibly. Illinois legislators are helping ensure the companies developing these systems operate with transparency, accountability, and meaningful oversight. We appreciate the Senate’s partnership on these issues during the final weeks of session. Paid for by Build American AI
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Pritzker doesn’t think progressive revenue ideas have a chance, but his cuts are provoking a backlash
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * My weekly syndicated newspaper column…
And as subscribers were told this morning, this push is coming from more than just the usual progressive suspects.
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340B Helps The Most Vulnerable Patients – Pass HB 2371 SA 2 For Your Constituents
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Thanks to 340B, last year nearly 1,000 uninsured patients at Sinai Chicago were able to access needed medications they wouldn’t have otherwise been able to afford. The health system serves Chicago’s west and southwest sides, where the rates of chronic disease are high and many patients receive charity care. “For safety net hospitals like ours, 340B is really about access,” said Mount Sinai Hospital President Sameer Shah, PharmD. “It helps keep clinics open, maintain pharmacy access and ensure patients stay on their medications.” At Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago—where 60% of the patients come from low-income families covered by Medicaid—infants with rare neuromuscular disorders can access gene therapies otherwise out of reach. Kristen Alianello, Lurie Children’s neuromuscular nurse coordinator, said: “The 340B program is so important, especially in our organization and with our patient population of spinal muscular atrophy,” 340B hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers across Illinois pass on drug discounts to patients and invest 340B savings into providing comprehensive healthcare services for low-income patients, including free health screenings, mobile clinics and new freestanding clinics, free transportation to medical appointments, expanded cancer care, diabetes self-management programs, and more. Stand with patients, hospitals and FQHCs: Pass House Bill 2371 SA 2 to protect 340B in Illinois. Learn more.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: Chicago Teachers Union members vote down effort to raise union dues to pay for political campaigns. ABC Chicago…
- Among the campaigns is likely one for the CTU-backed candidate for Chicago Board of Education president, CTU political director Hilario Dominguez. - In a letter to members Saturday, the Union said 60 percent of members voted against moving forward with he proposal. Sponsored by PhRMA ![]() * At 11 am, Gov. JB Pritzker will deliver remarks at the Champaign-Urbana Special Recreation Dedication. Click here to watch. * BlueRoomStream.com’s coverage of today’s press conferences and committee hearings can be found here. * Sun-Times | Chicago U.S. attorney says he’s reviewing other cases that might have been tainted like the ‘Broadview Six’: Finally, Oak Park village trustee Brian Straw — among those charged in the “Broadview Six” case — asked U.S. District Judge April Perry for an order preserving any emails, text messages or other communications relating to the grand jury proceedings in that prosecution. Straw’s attorneys, Christopher Parente and Damon Cheronis, wrote in a court filing that they’d “lost complete faith and confidence in [Chicago’s] U.S. Attorney’s Office to do the right thing on its own.” Parente also called on Durbin and U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth to investigate Boutros’ office. * CBS Chicago | Illinois data centers are using millions of gallons of residential water; experts say there are better alternatives: With the Chicago area situated next to the massive Lake Michigan, which contains over 1 quadrillion gallons of water, we can forget there isn’t an endless supply of water. And experts dealing with the impact of data centers used to train and power AI say we have to shift that thinking, because Chicago can’t keep up with the water needs we’re now seeing. “When it comes down to it, the water available for human uses from the lake are not limitless,” said Rachel Havrelock of The Freshwater Lab at University of Illinois Chicago. * Fox 2 Now | Illinois unemployment rate holds at 5.1% in April as jobless numbers rise: The Illinois Department of Employment Security reported the state’s unemployment rate held steady at 5.1% in April, the same as in March, based on figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. That compares to a national unemployment rate of 4.3% for the same period, underscoring a gap between Illinois and the broader U.S. labor market. * Capitol News Illinois | Illinois grows millions of bushels of soybeans. Why aren’t we eating them?: But almost none of those millions of bushels end up as food on Illinois plates. According to the Illinois Soybean Association, 60% of soybeans grown in the state are exported; most of the remaining 40% are processed as animal feed, leaving the state reliant on imports for its soy food. “Ninety-five percent of food consumed in the state of Illinois is imported,” said Rep. Sonya Harper, D-Chicago, chair of the House Agriculture and Conservation Committee, speaking of Illinois food crops. “If there were any type of natural disaster, Illinois only has enough food that will last us for three days.” * NBC Chicago | Some tick bites can trigger a red meat allergy, cases reported in Illinois: The Illinois Department of Public Health recently highlighted AGS, also known as red meat allergy or tick bite meat allergy. The condition occurs after some tick bites, when the body becomes allergic to a molecule called alpha-gal - a sugar produced in the bodies of most mammals - but not in people. It can be transmitted through the saliva of some ticks. […] According to IDPH, AGS has been increasingly recognized across the country, and cases have been reported in Illinois, although a number hasn’t been provided. The condition is typically associated with the bite of lone star ticks, which are most often found in the South, East and Central parts of the country. * Crain’s | Pritzker leans into economic development. Here’s how it’s going: From the start of Pritzker’s tenure through last year, including the pandemic decline and recovery, the number of jobs in Illinois rose 0.9% to an average of 6.16 million, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Among 10 neighboring and peer states, only Iowa had lower job growth at 0.4%. Kentucky led the way at 5.3%. Things improved during Pritzker’s second term, with jobs growing 2%. Although Illinois still has the second-lowest score, the gap narrowed. Last year, as growth decelerated nationwide, Illinois was firmly in the middle of the pack with 1.6% growth. * Sun-Times | Benefits of Bears’ megaproject bill ‘murky’ at best for Illinois taxpayers: Cook County treasurer analysis: Pappas’ report evaluates the bill that passed the Illinois House last month but will need major changes to have any hope of passing the Illinois Senate before the spring legislative session concludes. Lawmakers have until midnight Sunday to get a bill to the end zone. Researchers from the treasurer’s office looked broadly at the megaprojects concept that Gov. JB Pritzker has long championed outside the context of the Bears’ stadium saga. Dozens of other states have such laws in place that allow companies to negotiate discounted payments in lieu of taxes (PILOT) instead of their full property tax bills to local taxing bodies, as long as they’re investing in massive developments. * Capitol News Illinois | Report shows how much Bears could pay in Arlington Heights property taxes: Under the proposal in Springfield, if the assessed value of the land is frozen, the team would be on the hook for a $4 million tax bill. If they negotiate a $10 million payment in lieu of taxes, or PILOT, the team would pay $14 million annually. That would equal a $39 million annual property tax break, or $1.5 billion over the 40-year lifespan of the megaproject. * NBC Chicago | Arlington Heights mayor: Bears stadium deal could be decided in the final hours: Sunday is the last day of the spring legislative session in Springfield, so they have under a week to pass the bill that could keep the Bears in Illinois. “I’m very optimistic. I believe that it’s going to happen. I think that our governor and legislators in Springfield are working really hard to make it happen,” said Mayor Jim Tinaglia. “I’d like to make sure we get it done. And so, if it takes till 11:59 p.m., that’s what it takes. I’m good with that.” * The White Sox Caucus will be meeting tonight at DH Brown’s… ![]() * Sun-Times | Dr. Olusimbo Ige out as Chicago health chief: A source familiar with the matter confirmed Friday that Johnson had asked for Ige’s resignation, which is effective immediately. […] Ige is a public health expert — trained in medicine in Nigeria, where she grew up, and not licensed to practice in the U.S. Before taking the Chicago job, she worked for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Before that, she served as an assistant commissioner at New York City’s health department. * Crain’s | Chicago delays tipped wage phaseout after restaurant pushback: Chicago’s plan to phase out the sub-minimum wage for tipped workers will be delayed by two years under a compromise approved today by the City Council, handing restaurants a longer runway to adjust to higher labor costs and dealing a setback to one of Mayor Brandon Johnson’s signature labor victories. The agreement extends the city’s original five-year timeline for eliminating the tipped wage credit to seven years, while giving smaller restaurants employing fewer than 21 workers even more time to comply. * Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson to tout opposition to wars during Vatican trip, says Pope wants to keep Bears in Chicago: Johnson is heading to Rome this week with a delegation from World Business Chicago, or WBC, the first time in a decade that the pope has hosted a Chicago mayor. During his lunch at the popular South Side soul food restaurant on Sunday, Johnson said he will use his meeting, scheduled for Thursday, to discuss their shared condemnation of “endless illegal wars” as well as the mayor’s executive orders during President Donald Trump’s second term. * Tribune | Chicago bike lane construction sparks pushback, fuels political fights: And the small, relentless Southwest Side fight is over more than just that construction project. It’s the latest front in a citywide political divide over the future of transportation and safety. To the pro-bike lane faction, the concrete bump outs and bus-boarding islands added to the busy street mean safety for cyclists, kids heading to school and even drivers. “People don’t bike on Archer because it was so dangerous,” said Alfredo Valladares Jr., who founded the group Gage Park Cyclists. “Everybody needs to have a fair opportunity to be safe.” * Crain’s | Judge restores Chicago-area listings to Zillow — for now: Two days ago, Midwest Real Estate Data (MRED) cut its data feed to Zillow because of a dispute over private and pre-market listings. Zillow prohibits listings going on its site if they’ve been shown in limited-exposure settings like private listings, but MRED and nationwide brokerage Compass have been advocating for keeping some listings private. Unable to bring Zillow around, MRED stopped putting new listings on Zillow and said Zillow couldn’t keep MRED existing listings on its site or Trulia, which Zillow owns. * Sun-Times | City program to rehab more than 30 properties on the South and West sides is back: More rehabbed homes will soon follow as part of Rebuild Chicago 2.0, an expansion of the city’s Rebuild program that targets abandoned homes to give them a second life. The program identifies homes that can be acquired, rehabbed and sold to create homeownership opportunities on the South and West sides, which have experienced disinvestment. The program is focused on Roseland and Englewood, and it will support the rehab of 33 homes. Another home is being rehabbed about four blocks away from the Yale Avenue property. * WGN | Calumet City lays off 46 workers due to ‘profound fiscal challenges’: According to [ Calumet City Mayor Thaddeus Jones], Calumet City is struggling to meet the demands of high health insurance costs, late Cook County property tax revenues and an “unsustainable” backlog of city bills to vendors. This all ads up to a multimillion-dollar budget shortfall for the rest of the year. “Our revenues are flat and there was zero growth in revenue last year. Our plan is to decrease costs of city operations and look at options to generate revenue potential revenue enhancements,” the mayor said in the release. “We have a structural problem that we will solve. City government needed to be downsized with more services going online and cuts to agencies through consolidation. We will be steadfast in our quest to overcome this challenge and achieve our fiscal goals all while continuing to perform our government operations in a spirit of excellence.” * Sun-Times | Closing of Oak Park’s West Suburban Medical Center has triggered a legal battle among its owners: Lawyers for Prasad and Patlola have been arguing before Stanton about the financial details of Resilience Healthcare. Both sides have agreed to have recently retired Judge Patrick Sherlock review years of bank records for several accounts tied to Resilience Healthcare and the hospitals. Once Sherlock has turned over what he finds to Stanton, closing arguments are expected May 29. * Daily Herald | West suburbs could see five more freight trains a day if rail merger passes: Seven municipalities crossed by freight and UP West Metra trains have retained legal experts specializing in railway law for “the collective safeguarding of our communities’ interests,” Winfield Village Manager Evan Summers said. The coalition comprises Berkeley, Elmhurst, Lombard, Glen Ellyn, Wheaton, Winfield and Geneva. “It doesn’t mean we’re fighting it; it just means we want to share costs and concerns and monitor (events) to make sure that concerns are addressed,” Elmhurst Mayor Scott Levin said. “It’s a good intergovernmental setup that keeps the costs fairly minimal for each of the participants.” * Aurora Beacon-News | Indian Prairie D204 predicting $4.9 million budget deficit for 2027, but a balanced budget in future years: The district’s Chief School Business Official Matt Shipley gave a presentation May 18 to the board, during which he shared that the district is looking at a one-time, nearly $5 million budget deficit next year that’s expected to balance out over the years to follow. At the meeting, Shipley emphasized the importance of the district having “a sustainable budget over a significant period of time,” meaning it is looking three to five years in the future and “not looking to play games or to try and balance one year of a budget over another.” * Aurora Beacon-News | One month before opening day, work is finishing up at new Hollywood Casino Aurora: The $360 million project — located along Farnsworth Avenue and Bilter Road, across the street from Chicago Premium Outlets mall and near the Interstate 88 interchange — has been under construction since 2023. The new casino, hotel and related restaurants are planned to open on June 24, replacing the longtime riverboat Hollywood Casino in downtown Aurora. * Capitol City Now | Despite one problem being solved, more issues persist for owner of Springfield downtown Wyndham: “The ownership group filed for bankruptcy,” said Michelle Ownbey, Springfield Business Journal Executive Editor, on the WTAX Morning Newswatch. “Tower Capital, which is one of the business entities Al Rajabi owns, reported business revenue of just over $6 million in 2024, and then only $1.6 million a year later after the Wyndham closed in March at the very beginning of 2025, and no business revenue so far for this year.” Ownbey reports Al Rajabi’s business efforts have worked before, but not in Springfield, apparently. “His specialty was sort of buying these distressed hotels, flipping hotels, and he had done that in some other communities,” said Ownbey. “Perhaps, for a variety of reasons, the one here did not pan out the way he had expected.” * WTVO | Aquin Catholic Academy in Freeport to close May 29 after enrollment decline: The decision follows months of review by a special task force and comes after years of declining enrollment and financial challenges at the school. Bishop David Malloy accepted the recommendation to close the school after receiving input from Freeport-area pastors, families, and community members. […] Aquin has faced shrinking enrollment for years, mirroring broader demographic shifts in the Freeport area. According to the Diocese, just 39 students were enrolled in kindergarten through eighth grade during the 2025–2026 school year, with fewer than half identifying as Catholic. * BND | Historic Belleville farm being transformed into mental health treatment center: The nonprofit will take a giant step this summer, when it moves from an O’Fallon office building to a historic 7.65-acre farm, across from Belleville West High School. “We were born in Belleville, and we’re returning to Belleville,” said Kevin Smith’s wife, Emily, who serves as executive director. “So we’ve come full circle, and this will be our forever home.” This project is separate from a planned $30 million business and sports complex with flexible tenant spaces and an indoor soccer field that’s planned for 30 acres of farmland to the east. * Springfield Business Journal | New life for former Sangamo Club?: Local developer Corky Joyner of Joyner Construction has the 29,000-square-foot building at 227 E. Adams St. under contract with tentative plans to redevelop it into apartments. However, Joyner is awaiting bids for remediating hazardous materials in the building and wants to have a cost estimate for the remediation before closing on the property. He said he is hoping to be able to make a final decision within the coming weeks. While Joyner remains open to different options for the building, he said residential development is at the top of the list. “Everything is still on the table at this point, but our initial desire is to do residential there,” he said. He estimates the building could house between 20 and 40 residential units. * WGLT | Pesticide drift near Morton school prompts calls for prior notification from farmers: Vandenberg said parents later got an email telling them to have their kids take a shower because of the risk for pesticide drift. She added that is when she found an Illinois bill seeks to address her situation.Illinois lawmakers want to address this problem by requiring farmers to notify schools and parks 72 hours before applying pesticides to allow parents decide how to best keep their kid safe. * WCIA | Danville pharmacy increases delivery prices due to gas prices: Polyclinic said it’s the only pharmacy with a delivery service in Vermilion County, bringing medications to eight different communities. Sometimes, workers deliver to up to 50 patients a day. Now, their patients will pay a little extra for their prescriptions. […] The pharmacy recently took to social media to tell patients that the pharmacy is increasing delivery prices by $2 as a result of rising gas prices. * ProPublica | Trump’s Justice Department Dropped 23,000 Criminal Investigations in Shift to Immigration: The cases included an investigation into a Virginia nursing home with a recent record of patient abuse; probes of fraud involving several New Jersey labor unions, including one opened after a top official of a national union was accused of embezzlement; and an investigation into a cryptocurrency company suspected of cheating investors. In total, the DOJ quietly closed more than 23,000 criminal cases in the first six months of President Donald Trump’s administration, abandoning hundreds of investigations into terrorism, white-collar crime, drugs and other offenses as it shifted resources to pursue immigration cases, according to an analysis by ProPublica. * NBC | Fake ICE agents terrorize immigrants amid Trump’s crackdown: Although neither the federal government nor local authorities publish specific records of people impersonating immigration agents, an analysis by Noticias Telemundo, based on court records, police reports and news articles, suggests that the number of such crimes has increased over the past year. Our investigation documented at least 31 cases in 2025 alone — a sharp increase compared to an average of 5.3 incidents per year in the previous decade. Overall, we identified 84 instances of impostors posing as immigration agents between 2014 and 2025. * Religion News Service | Inside the unlikely Vatican-Anthropic relationship that’s reshaping the AI ethics debate: Ties between the Vatican and AI companies can be traced back to roughly 2016. According to a 2022 interview Green conducted with Bishop Paul Tighe, who serves as secretary of the Pontifical Council for Culture, it was around a decade ago when the first series of conversations were held in Rome between church officials and tech leaders. Known as the “Minerva Dialogues,” the conversations included several powerful Silicon Valley figures, such as former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, while other tech executives, such as Sam Altman of OpenAI and Demis Hassabis, who directs Google’s DeepMind AI project, held private audiences with Francis.
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Good morning!
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller * Norah Jones… All I ask is please If you don’t like that, well, then I can’t help you. Nobody can. * What’s up this week?
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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