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Rate the new Pritzker ad

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

JB For Governor released a new TV ad, “Tomorrow,” highlighting Governor JB Pritzker’s $35 cap on insulin costs and the savings it delivers for working families.

The ad features an Illinois working mom living with diabetes thanking Gov. Pritzker’s for his decisive action to cap insulin costs as they were skyrocketing, allowing her to focus on her family instead of worrying about affording vital medication.

In Illinois, 1.3 million adults – 12.5% of the population – live with diabetes. As Trump strips healthcare from millions of Americans and his economic policies drive prices higher, Governor Pritzker’s commitment to affordable healthcare has lifted a real financial burden off working families across the state, saving them thousands of dollars a year.

In 2020, Illinois became just the second state in the nation to cap the cost of insulin. Governor Pritzker continued building on that progress by erasing more than $1.1 billion in medical debt, lowering prescription costs, capping the cost of epinephrine (EpiPen) auto-injectors, and requiring insurance coverage of Continuous Glucose Monitors to help patients manage their condition and avoid costly emergency medical care.

The ad will air statewide on broadcast and cable television, as well as on streaming and digital platforms.

* The spot

Script

ILLINOIS MOM: My son’s my whole world. I work hard to give him everything I can.
I was diagnosed with diabetes almost 20 years ago.
The key to treating diabetes is insulin, and for years prices kept skyrocketing.
NEWS ANCHOR: This is big. Governor JB Pritzker signs a bill to cap the cost of insulin.
ILLINOIS MOM: Now I’m saving over $3,000 a year.
JB understands what I’m going through.
JB has allowed me to be a better mom who doesn’t have to worry about getting the life-saving medication I need.
It means everything to me.

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340B Legislation: Support Your Constituents, Your Communities And Patients

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The Patient Access to Pharmacy Protection Act (HB 2371 SA 2) restores the federal 340B program in Illinois to what U.S. lawmakers intended. There’s nothing new except transparency requirements that Illinois hospitals agree with. The legislation is an urgently needed response to drugmaker restrictions on 340B providers. Created in 1992, the 340B program requires drugmakers to discount certain drugs for providers caring for the most vulnerable residents so they can stretch scarce federal resources.

The legislation is critically important for all 340 B hospitals and the low-income and uninsured patients they serve. House lawmakers have an opportunity to join their Senate colleagues—who unanimously passed HB 2371 SA 2 last spring—by voting for Illinois’ 340B bill.

Consider the following:

    • HB 2371 SA 2 supports patients by allowing hospitals and Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) to contract with pharmacies where patients live.
    • Laws like HB 2371 SA 2 have passed in nearly half of U.S. states.
    • HB 2371 SA 2 does NOT require a state appropriation.
    • 340B providers must meet rigorous requirements and undergo regular audits.
    • Hospitals agree with the additional transparency requirements in HB 2371 SA 2.

Because of drugmaker restrictions, hospitals operating on thin margins face service cuts unless action is taken by the General Assembly. Stand with Illinois hospitals and FQHCs: VOTE YES on HB 2371 SA 2! Learn more.

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Question of the day

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Politico

Don’t call Darren Bailey MAGA

NOT SO MAGA: Darren Bailey, the Republican who once eagerly aligned himself with President Donald Trump and his political movement, is now drawing a more careful distinction: He’s not MAGA — he’s just a Republican.

In an interview, the GOP gubernatorial candidate said a MAGA Republican would accept whatever Trump said without question. Bailey says that’s not him.

And to back it up, he has doubled down on criticizing Trump’s recent attack on Pope Leo XIV and his posting a meme appearing as Jesus.

“It’s divisive. I wish President Trump would simply apologize and acknowledge that he messed up, and I think that would correct a lot,” Bailey told your Playbook host.

It’s a notable bit of daylight between Bailey and a figure he once courted aggressively on the campaign trail. It also suggests that some Republicans may be recalibrating their stance as they try to balance Trump’s lasting influence with the realities of appealing to voters in a tough national climate in November.

* The Question: Do you believe Bailey’s claim that he’s not a MAGA Republican? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


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SB 1486 Raises Premiums And Reduces Consumer Choice

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Illinois is home to one of the most competitive insurance markets in the nation. Hundreds of insurers fight for consumers, leaving families better protected than those in other states.

SB 1486, described by the Daily Herald as “controversial legislation,” could eliminate that system and, in its place, leave Illinois with the most extreme regulatory framework in the nation.

This legislation could:

    • Increase premiums by 20% on average
    • Cause insurers to scale back coverage
    • Result in companies leaving the marketplace entirely

These policies have been tried in other states, leading to skyrocketing costs for consumers and limited options for coverage. Don’t bring California style overregulation to Illinois.

Protect consumer choice and affordability.
Vote NO on SB 1486.

Click here to learn more.

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WGN

State Rep. Brad Stephens (R-IL 20th), who also serves as Mayor of Rosemont, met with other House Republicans on Wednesday, along with Deputy Gov. Andy Manar and members of Gov. JB Pritzker’s staff on Wednesday to discuss the future of the Bears’ mega-projects bill, also known as the PILOT bill [HB910].

“I’ve been able to work together with various stakeholders, putting real estate deals together, and, you know, making sure that they’re good for both the government side of things and the people that are making the investment,” Stephens said. “I think that we want to make sure that this is right. That it’s not just a handover of a bunch of cash to a professional football team.”

Stephens hopes to sway more GOP votes for a stadium deal in Arlington Heights to prevent the Bears from moving to Indiana. The stall in support behind legislation in Illinois has paved the way for a stadium to be built in Hammond.

Illinois House Bill 910 (HB910) would give the Bears tax certainty, allowing the team to negotiate a special payment-in-lieu-of-property taxes (PILOT) for at least 20 years at the Arlington Park Racecourse site in the northwest suburbs. So far, the bill has yet to meet a 60-vote threshold to bring HB910 to the house floor for a vote. […]

“I think that the language has got to be right to be able to garner enough votes to get it across the finish line,” Stephens said. “That’s first and foremost. But it’s got to be crafted in a way where it makes sense for both government and the private investor.”

* Subscribers know more. WIRED

Anthropic has come out against a proposed Illinois law backed by OpenAI that would shield AI labs from liability if their systems are used to cause large-scale harm, like mass casualties or more than $1 billion in property damage.

The fight over the bill, SB 3444, is drawing new battle lines between Anthropic and OpenAI over how AI technologies should be regulated. While AI policy experts say that the legislation has only a remote chance of becoming law, it has nonetheless exposed political divisions between two leading US AI labs that could become increasingly important as the rival companies ramp up their lobbying activity across the country.

Behind the scenes, Anthropic has been lobbying state senator Bill Cunningham, SB 3444’s sponsor, and other Illinois lawmakers to either make major changes to the bill or kill it as it stands, according to people familiar with the matter. In an email to WIRED, an Anthropic spokesperson confirmed the company’s opposition to SB 3444 and said it has held promising conversations with Cunningham about using the bill as a starting point for future AI legislation. […]

Representatives for Cunningham did not respond to a request for comment. A spokesperson for Illinois governor JB Pritzker sent the following statement: “While the Governor’s Office will monitor and review the many AI bills moving through the General Assembly, governor Pritzker does not believe big tech companies should ever be given a full shield that evades responsibilities they should have to protect the public interest.”

* Tribune

A coalition of unions representing workers from bus drivers to construction workers converged on the statehouse Tuesday to lobby against legislation that would create pilot programs for driverless vehicles in Chicago and other parts of Illinois, calling the legislative effort the start of “a major domino effect against the middle class.”

The coalition, which includes the Teamsters, Illinois AFL-CIO and the Chicago Federation of Labor, raised concerns about the bill, saying they fear it could jeopardize public safety and the jobs of some or all of its hundreds of thousands of workers with problematic technology. […]

The bill hasn’t gained any traction, however, remaining stuck in the House Rules Committee, which means it’s unclear whether it’s going to advance through the legislative process anytime soon. Other bills that would regulate these pilot programs also remain in limbo. […]

[Mayor Brandon Johnson’s] office also indicated the city would oppose any automated-vehicle legalization efforts that would prohibit Chicago from regulating self-driving cars on its own.

* Yesterday, Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson sent out this letter to members of the Chicago Board of Education

Dear Members of the Chicago Board of Education:

In light of concerns raised about HB4416, a bill that aims to extend unemployment benefits to non- instructional employees of public schools during the summer months when school is not in session, the Civic Federation has reviewed the bill and its potential impacts.

The Federation is deeply concerned about the adverse consequences this bill would have for school districts statewide, especially Chicago Public Schools (CPS). The Federation does not object to the goal of providing unemployment benefits to seasonal school district employees during the summer. However, it emphatically opposes any unfunded mandates to local governments, including school districts. This bill could impose hundreds of millions of dollars in costs on Illinois school districts without providing them with commensurate funding. Many school districts operate tightly balanced budgets with few options for additional revenue, and some are likely to be driven into fiscal crisis by the sudden addition of substantial costs.

For Chicago Public Schools, this bill could add annual costs of up to $100 million. However, CPS cannot simply raise additional revenue to match this new cost. As a non-home rule government, the only major tax CPS has the authority to levy is the property tax, which is subject to an annual cap under State law. Moreover, due to longstanding fiscal pressures, CPS already raises its property taxes by the maximum amount allowed by State law each year. Most of the District’s remaining revenue comes from the State or the federal government. Thus, CPS would have no way to raise new revenue to meet the otherwise unfunded obligations imposed by this legislation.

With no available revenue options, CPS would likely be forced to offset these new costs with curricular and classroom cuts, directly harming students. This would likely mean reductions in staffing and cuts to programming and services for students. CPS already faces a significant structural budget deficit that will force it to make difficult decisions in its coming fiscal year, even without this added burden. The same story is true in many other school districts throughout Illinois.

The Civic Federation urges the Chicago Board of Education to work in coordination with other school districts to oppose HB4416. The Board and other districts should call on the Illinois General Assembly to refrain from passing any unfunded mandates and making any decisions that make precarious financial situations worse for CPS and school districts throughout Illinois.

* WAND

State representatives passed a plan Tuesday to address youth who are repeat gun offenders. […]

This bill would require probation agencies to conduct an assessment of the minor’s needs and identify restorative justice programs for high-risk youth, cognitive behavioral therapy, family engagement and mentoring options.

“Without this help and without the services that are provided through this legislation, the direction of their life is not going to be a positive one,” said Rep. Anthony DeLuca (D-Chicago Heights). “We believe that we can help some kids with this version.”

House Bill 4091 passed unanimously out of the House and now moves to the Senate for further consideration.

* More…

    * Eye On Illinois: House endorses prison mail bill as DOC touts tablet-based education: On April 9, the House voted 101-0 to approve House Bill 4235. In addition to a provision ensuring there can’t be additional fees for sending items into or out of prison, the bill also would bar DOC itself from generating any revenue on communications services, according to Restore Justice, which notes other states charge printing fees. The bill doesn’t address the barrier between inmates and the original mail, nor does it resolve all questions about the vendor supplying tablets – free to the state but prisoners pay to access entertainment and communication services. DOC’s glowing education release stands in stark contrast to inmates who just want to hold a birthday card from a child or parent, but along with HB 4235’s broad support, it does foster optimism for commitments to prepare inmates for healthy returns to society.

    * Press release | Grasse Legislation Easing Pathway to Marriage for People who are Physically Impaired Passes the House: House Bill 4508 amends the Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act to allow eligible individuals to apply for a marriage license remotely or have a clerk come to them with medical authorization. The bill builds on policies first used during the COVID-19 pandemic and removes unnecessary barriers for people already facing profound challenges. This legislation passed the House on Tuesday and will soon be heard in the Senate.

    * WAND | IL Senate unanimously passes bill protecting domestic violence survivors from digital harassment: The plan would update the state’s definition of harassment to include conduct like doxxing, electronic tracking, repeated surveillance and digitally altered sexual images. Sponsors said the bill also allows survivors to request a remote order of protection hearing so they don’t have to be in the same room as their abuser. “Abusers often use technology to stalk, monitor and maintain control over their victims,” said Sen. Adriane Johnson (D-Waukegan). “That is why we must empower survivors by allowing them to use the court to hold their abusers to account.”

    * Capitol News Illinois | Will this be the year the state legislature approves a cellphone ban in schools?: An amendment to Senate Bill 2427, which passed the Illinois House Education Committee unanimously on March 25, would require all Illinois public and charter schools to adopt policies restricting student use of cellphones, tablets and other devices during class time. The bill still needs approval from the full House, where it’s not subject to a Friday deadline for final action, because a previous version already passed the Senate 55-0 last year. Because it was amended in the House, however, the Senate will need to approve the amended version before it can head to Gov. JB Pritzker, who’s been pushing for the measure for two years.

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

    * WAND | IL bill requiring insurance coverage for preventative heart scans heads to Senate: The Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services initially opposed the bill due to the potential cost for state employee health insurance coverage. However, the current language exempts state employee insurance from the mandate. “If the cost was significant enough that the state cannot absorb it within its own health plan, it raises important affordability concerns for those in the marketplace as well,” said Kate Morthland from the Illinois Life & Health Insurance Council.

    * Press release | Villivalam advances measure through Senate to ensure townships may provide additional food assistance to residents: Senate Bill 3565 would allow townships to use funding received and collected for public aid to establish and administer food banks as well as pantries for people who are in need – regardless of their eligibility for general assistance. This would ensure that townships can continue to provide aid to residents, despite federal eligibility requirements for equivalent or similar programs, and that they can continue to invest funding into these services.

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Credit & Debit Cards May Not Work For Tips, Starting July 1

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

The IFPA—the Credit Card Chaos law—could hurt Illinois’ tipped workers. Servers, stylists, rideshare drivers and other gig workers who rely on tips could see their income drop if customers can’t tip on cards and are limited to the cash they carry.
Why should tipped workers pay the price for Springfield’s bad policy?

Before chaos hits on July 1, lawmakers should reverse course and repeal the Interchange Fee Prohibition Act.

Learn more at: guardyourcard.com/Illinois

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Lawmakers grill Department of Corrections after audit shows dozens of failures. Capitol News Illinois

    - Illinois lawmakers say the Illinois Department of Corrections must fix a slew of errors that were revealed in a recent audit.
    - The audit found the department allows people to take a vacation day but show up to work on the same day and receive overtime pay.
    - Corrections officials also updated a legislative oversight committee on its progress implementing a rule allowing them to scan and digitize prison mail. It showed an increase of illegal drugs found in jails since the scanning program was implemented.

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


Sponsored by The Association of Safety-Net Community Hospitals

No Cuts. No Closures. Fund Safety-Net Hospitals.

For decades, Illinois has underfunded safety-net hospitals, the lifelines for Black and Brown communities. Now, the “Safety-Net Moonshot” and the Medicaid-defunding legislation it has spawned, threatens deeper cuts to these critical health providers. Any reduction inspired by the “Moonshot” would be a killshot to the care our most vulnerable residents rely on.

Weakening safety-net hospitals won’t improve care. It will slash essential services, eliminate jobs, and push entire communities into healthcare deserts and economic instability.

The state cannot balance its budget on the backs of Black and Brown community hospitals. These institutions are not line items to cut, they are the foundation of care for families who have nowhere else to turn. Disinvestment will deepen inequities and worsen outcomes.

When safety-net hospitals are funded, communities are healthier, workforces are stronger, and economies are more resilient.

Illinois must fully fund safety-net hospitals. For the communities they serve, it is life or death.

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

* At noon, Gov. JB Pritzker will deliver remarks at the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association Makers Madness competition in Springfield. Click here to watch.

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol News Illinois | 7th Circuit orders release, new trial for two ‘ComEd Four’ defendants: The 7th Circuit’s decision also comes less than a week after lawyers for Madigan made arguments to a different three-judge appeals panel for the longtime Democratic power broker’s own convictions to be overturned. Madigan is six months into a 7 ½-year sentence on related bribery and other corruption charges, including for having solicited jobs for political allies at ComEd in exchange for helping advance the utility’s legislative agenda in Springfield.

* WSIL | Rising Fertilizer Costs Put Pressure on Southern Illinois Farmers: Leon McClerren, a farmer from Franklin County, said farmers who did not prepay for their fertilizer are probably feeling the impacts of the higher prices. He said he was fortunate to lock in his costs early. “Fuel prices on the other hand, it’s something that’s getting us all very hard right now,’McClerren said.

* Daily Herald | A United and American alliance? United CEO floats idea amid intense O’Hare rivalry: According to Reuters’ sources, “Kirby has argued to administration officials that a combined airline would be a stronger competitor in international markets and noted the Trump administration has focused on U.S. trade deficits around the globe.” But the likelihood of U.S. regulators approving a United/American union is dubious given the impact it could have on competition and ticket prices.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Gov. Pritzker is out with a new TV ad


* Capitol News Illinois | Costs of state employee health benefits continue steep rise: Officials from the Department of Central Management Services told a legislative panel Tuesday they expect to see an increase of $380 million, or 9%, in total costs to the system in fiscal year 2027. That would bring total expenses paid by all funding sources to about $4.6 billion. That would be a slightly lower rate of inflation than the state has seen in recent years.

* Daily Herald | Pritzker touts BUILD Act reforms as pushback from suburbs grows: “Significant increases in residential density without corresponding infrastructure investment could place substantial strain on these systems,” members of the DuPage Mayors and Managers Conference, Northwest Municipal Conference, Barrington Area Council of Governments, and Metro West Council of Government wrote. They also warned the legislation dilutes inspection and design provisions, which weakens safety standards.

* Crain’s | Illinois to get $50 million in Jewel-Osco parent’s $774 million opioid settlement: Once final, Albertsons would pay more than $773 million in more than 35 states where it does business, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office said in a statement. In addition to the financial terms, the settlement remains contingent on injunctive relief similar to other opioid settlement terms, like monitoring, reporting and sharing data related to suspicious opioid prescriptions.

* IPM News | Democratic Lieutenant Governor candidate Christian Mitchell on downstate Illinois, data centers, and future goals: “You’ve got, you know, multi-billion dollar tech corporations that are looking to build these data centers for the effectuation of their business. Since they’ve got that kind of capital, they need to put some of that capital up in order to make sure that the people of Illinois and the people of the Midwest and the nation are not overly burdened by new price increases driven by the fact that some of these data centers themselves demand as much energy as entire small towns. And so I think that asking the folks who are going to benefit the most to help solve the problem is the right way to go, so that we. Continue to move our economy forward, but not do so in a way that means that the small business owner or the everyday household is paying more for their energy.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | NFL wants to meet with Chicago Bears after the draft for an update on their stadium project: The meeting will be held virtually, the source said, with the committee aiming to get the latest information from team officials. Bears Chairman George McCaskey is a member of the committee, which is chaired by Minnesota Vikings owner Mark Wilf and also includes owners Art Rooney II (Pittsburgh Steelers), Jed York (San Francisco 49ers), Amy Adams Strunk (Tennessee Titans), Stephen Davis (Dallas Cowboys) and high-ranking executives Sashi Brown (Baltimore Ravens) and Kevin Demoff (Los Angeles Rams). The committee’s role is ultimately to make recommendations to Commissioner Roger Goodell and the league as a whole when it comes to stadium construction, financing and renovations.

* Tribune | CPD Superintendent Snelling pushes back on call to probe rising use-of-force incidents: During a status hearing in the city’s ongoing federal consent decree, Assistant Illinois Attorney General Mike Tresnowski noted the “concerning” trend to U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer that Chicago Police Department officers are reporting uses of force more frequently, including in interactions with juveniles. CPD officials told Pallmeyer that reported use-of-force incidents fell sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic but have gradually increased each year since 2022. In 2025, CPD officers reported 3,044 such incidents — 800 more than were reported in 2023.

* City and State NY | Chicago’s mayor fundraises in the Bronx with former Rep. Jamaal Bowman: Johnson is in town to speak at a National Urban League summit, so former Rep. Jamaal Bowman co-hosted a fundraiser for him at Sankofa Haus, an event space in the South Bronx. Guests who had paid between $50 and $7,000 for a ticket enjoyed rum punch and hors d’oeuvres – including miniature chicken sandwiches, vegetable spring rolls and salmon bites with spicy mayonnaise – while Bowman moderated a panel with Johnson and Working Families Party National Director Maurice Mitchell. City & State spotted congressional candidate and former Assembly Member Michael Blake among the 30 or so people in the audience.

* Sun-Times | Delivery robot apologizes in new bus shelter ad after shattering glass in West Town: “Dear West Town neighbors, I took ‘breaking into the market’ too literally. I’m really sorry about the bus stop … and the dramatic entrance. I promise to do better,” the ad reads. It features a photo of the sheepish robot with a digital screen saying ‘Nasir is sorry.’ After the incident, Serve Robotics worked with JC Decaux, the advertising company that built the shelter, to clean up the damages. The shelter was fixed within a few days after the crash.

* Sun-Times | Navy Pier to hold its largest July 4 fireworks display ever: At 10 p.m. July 4, viewers can expect “bigger, more extravagant” fireworks than the pier’s typical shows, said Molly Healy, a pier spokesperson. The pier’s fireworks typically blast off every Wednesday at 9 p.m. and Saturday at 10 p.m., from Memorial Day through Labor Day. But this Fourth of July display will last 15 minutes — five minutes longer than usual — and have almost twice as many fireworks compared to those shows, Healy said.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Crain’s | Medical staff, landlord ramp up efforts to oust West Suburban owner: The Chicago Medical Society and West Suburban Medical Center’s medical staff are urging Gov. J.B. Pritzker to use emergency powers to reopen the shuttered Oak Park hospital, the latest effort to pressure CEO Manoj Prasad amid mounting unpaid bills and an eviction fight with his business partner and landlord. In a letter to the governor, medical staff at the hospital, which closed last month, want Pritzker to exercise his executive authority, direct emergency funding and state resources to stabilize and restore operations, and appoint an interim management team composed of qualified health care leaders and stakeholders.

* Daily Southtown | ACLU says Tinley Park police traffic stop may have violated state’s TRUST Act: Tinley Park police Officer Jason L’Amas was conducting a routine background check during a traffic stop when he found a federal warrant attached to the driver’s name, calling for the driver to be removed from the country, according to a police report obtained by the Southtown. L’Amas reported the man, along with his address, phone number, vehicle, place of employment and mother’s name to the U.S. Bureau of Immigration Aug. 27, 2025, according to the report.

* Evanston Now | Council hikes fines for landlords: Evanston’s City Council Monday boosted fines for landlords who violate the city’s landlord tenant ordinance. The new schedule of fines, ranging from $100 to $1,000 per violation per day, will apply to the entire ordinance. Until now the fines have ranged from $20 and $740, as specified in the general penalties section of the city code.

* Naperville Sun | Naperville weighs alternatives to IMEA as energy deadlines loom: While Naperville’s contract with its current energy provider, Illinois Municipal Electric Agency (IMEA), does not expire until 2035, the joint action agency has asked Naperville to extend its contract with it to 2055, an action to which 29 of its 32 member municipalities have agreed but which the council put on hold in August. “We’ve got 15 months before we have to make our first strategic decision and the clock will not stop,” Mayor Scott Wehrli said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Kane County Board OKs more reallocations of COVID-19 relief funds, as spending deadline nears: The measures approved Tuesday transfer a little over $400,000 in ARPA funds from one county project to another. One of the transfers reallocates $342,506 from a judicial technology modernization project by the 16th Judicial Circuit Court to the Building Management Department’s jail tower HVAC system improvement project, per the measure. Another $65,497 was allocated away from the 16th Judicial Circuit Court’s technology modernization project toward a Sheriff’s Office HVAC system renovation project.

* Daily Herald | Rosemont firm run by mayor’s brother loses longstanding contracts at Allstate Arena: Bomark Cleaning, headed by Mayor Brad Stephens’ brother Mark Stephens, has had the janitorial contracts for a number of municipal-owned venues since the 1980s, when their father Donald E. Stephens was mayor. But village officials decided last October to put out a request for proposals to see if they could get a better deal.

* Sun-Times | Soon-to-shutter Trinity Christian College campus up for sale: Commercial real estate firm CBRE was named the listing firm last week for the 60-acre property in Palos Heights, about 10 miles south of Midway Airport. CBRE’s Anne Rahm, Matt Ishikawa and Tom Svoboda are the listing agents. Rahm said there’s already been a “great deal of interest” in the campus from local to national buyers, including residential developers and academic institutions.

* Daily Herald | ‘A lot of concerns’: Townhouse plan doesn’t sit well with Vernon Hills trustees: A consensus of trustees opposed the proposal as presented. Trustee Michael Schenk said the plan is highly condensed on a small property, too close to the railroad tracks and would come with “additional traffic that we don’t need right now.” “I’m not for this project,” he added. “I just don’t think it’s the right spot.” Trustee Nancy Forster said it is up to buyers to decide about being close to tracks but also has concerns about traffic. Metra use in Vernon Hills is low, she added.

*** Downstate ***

* WAND | CyrusOne data center project moves into next phase after land approval: Before any building can begin, CyrusOne must submit detailed site plans, along with updated documentation from utility providers. “In this case, it’s Apple Creek for the water, the Rural Electric Co-op for the electricity; we put that in there, that at the time of permitting, we want an updated letter that is still valid,” Harrison said.

* WAND | Springfield alderman speaks up for first time since heated city council meeting: He said that while he regrets losing his temper at the meeting, he will continue to speak up for his community. “The picture is painted [so] that everything is fine, but it’s not fine. We really have a lot of work to do with racial tensions in this city,” Gregory said. The Springfield City Council approved an ordinance codifying rules and procedures for the flow of council on Tuesday night. It also specifies rules for public comment, including a five-minute time limit and a ban on profane or vulgar language.

* WGLT | McLean County Clerk Kathy Michael no-shows County Board Executive Committee: Michael told the board last month she would be there in April to explain about $500,000 in budget overages last fiscal year and would supply invoices as requested by the committee. She did neither, according to board members. Last week, she also again told the board’s Finance Committee she would have to get back to them when they posed the same questions they had last month. Over the weekend, Michael took to Facebook apparently to preempt critiques. “If you hear I was not being ‘transparent’ by not attending Exec. this Monday, I was not invited to attend to answer any questions, nor have I received any questions in the last month,” wrote Michael.

* WSIL | Cairo library explores Illinois’ complex Underground Railroad past: “The exhibit features the different freedom seekers and conductors who participated in the Underground Railroad in the state of Illinois,” said Toya Wilson, the library’s director. “Journey to Freedom: Illinois’ Underground Railroad” is making stops across the state, sharing powerful stories of enslaved people and the network that helped them escape. Wilson says the exhibit shares stories that have often gone untold.

*** National ***

* WaPo | ‘That wasn’t me’: How facial recognition led to a woman being jailed for 6 months: Williams, now 57, offered to take a polygraph test and said she had family members who could provide an alibi for her, according to video of the interview from July 2021 reviewed by The Washington Post. She acknowledged that she had a history of writing bad checks, but she insisted that was in the past. “I’m not trying to waste your time,” Williams said. “I’m telling you —” “You’re telling me, but you’re not telling me the truth,” the officer interrupted.

* Western Edge | ‘Everyone is Replaceable’: Death Rattles Oregon Amazon Facility: For more than an hour, several employees said, workers in the facility were instructed to continue fetching totes, picking items off shelves and loading them onto trucks for delivery as the man lay dead, and management figured out their next steps. News of the fatality quickly spread through the building, but workers say top managers did not call operations to an immediate halt. A week later, several workers said they still do not know what caused the man to die. Amazon said in a statement Tuesday that the man died from a “pre-existing medical condition.” Records indicate he was 46 years old.

* WaPo | DOJ moves to undo Jan. 6 rioters’ convictions for seditious conspiracy: The request, from U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro of D.C., is likely to be granted because prosecutors have broad discretion to pursue or drop criminal charges, even after defendants have been convicted. Stewart Rhodes, the leader of the Oath Keepers and a lead organizer behind the riots, is among those whose convictions Pirro is seeking to erase. The move to undo the most serious convictions stemming from the assault on the Capitol marks the latest step in President Donald Trump’s quest to rewrite the event’s violent history. A mob of Trump supporters gathered in D.C. and disrupted Congress’s certification of Joe Biden as the winner of the 2020 presidential race, echoing Trump’s false claims that the election had been stolen.

  6 Comments      


Good morning!

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* One of the best-ever covers of one of my favorite songs, and it’s from just five days ago: Gillian Welch & David Rawlings

Please don’t dominate the rap, Jack
If you’ve got nothing new to say
If you please, don’t back up the track
This train’s got to run today

Oh, man, that standup bass player. Yeah.

* This is an Illinois open thread.

  Comment      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, Apr 15, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today's edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
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