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Stratton, Kelly and Krishnamoorthi make their cases to union members at Senate forum

Friday, Nov 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Illinois AFL-CIO…

Last night, the Illinois AFL-CIO and the Chicago Federation of Labor hosted a Democratic U.S. Senate Forum at IBEW Local 134 in Chicago. Exclusively for union members and their families, the event featured the top three Democratic candidates – Rep. Robin Kelly, Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, and Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton – in a discussion focused on labor rights, the future of unions, and their plans to address the most pressing challenges facing Illinois’ working families.

The forum was moderated by Jennifer Rodriguez, National AFL-CIO Political and Field Mobilization Director. Candidates discussed a range of topics, including the growing influence of Big Tech in the Democratic Party, affordable housing, healthcare access, and the need for clear regulations and guardrails against Artificial Intelligence (AI).  […]

In December, the Illinois AFL-CIO will endorse candidates for the 2026 election, following the recommendations of delegates from across the state at the Committee on Political Education (COPE). Endorsed candidates must demonstrate their commitment to working families through their voting record and/or a submitted questionnaire. 

Through its statewide political program, the Illinois AFL-CIO will mobilize union volunteers to canvass, phone-bank, and text-bank the state’s 1.7 million people in union households – ensuring direct, personal outreach from trusted messengers on the issues that matter most to working people. 

* Rick Pearson covered the forum for the Tribune

Stratton, the two-term lieutenant governor under Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker, sought to portray herself as the outsider against the Washington “status quo” of her two rivals, who now serve in Congress.

“I can tell you that this is a time where we need real fighters,” Stratton told the audience of union members at the headquarters of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 134 in Bronzeville. […]

But Kelly, a 12-year congresswoman from Lynwood, sought to counter Stratton’s call.

“It’s one thing to be a fighter, but you’ve got to be a winner too. You can’t just fight. You have to have things to show for it,” she said, touting her ability to work across the political aisle. […]

Krishnamoorthi of Schaumburg pointed to his five congressional victories in a mostly northwest suburban district that gave Trump 47% of the 2024 vote as proof that he will “always fight for our constituents.”

* Krishnamoorthi got a little off topic on a question about affordability. From the forum

Moderator: Why do you think housing, food and healthcare are so unaffordable and how would you address those problems in the Senate? And this time we’d start with Congressman Krishnamoorthi.

Krishnamoorthi: I think it’s because of anti-competitive behavior by special interests in Washington, DC, and elsewhere. I’ll give you an example. In the food conglomerate industry, there is a certain concentration of power among the largest companies that basically keep out smaller players so that they can then raise prices, lower choices and hurt workers. That is what is happening every single day. For us to prevail as both a party and as a working party movement, we have to crack down on anti-competitive behavior wherever it exists. I was proud to work with SEIU during the pandemic to crack down on what is happening with nursing homes and their anti-competitive behavior. I am proud to work with others to crack down on big tech, which has put a target on my back as well. And the same is true with other industries. We have to be the folks that are always promoting small businesses, more players at the table, making sure that workers have choices, that consumers have choices, and that the American people always have a level playing field when it comes to dealing with corporations and special interests. I should just say one last thing, which is I believe very strongly that it is incumbent on us to always fight for our constituents. That is why I have managed to win five times in a row in a district that last voted for Donald Trump with 47 percent of the vote. We have to win all voters. And the reason why voters have consistently reelected me is because I stand up for them, and they know that my office and I have been indispensable partners to them as they pursue their American dream.

Moderator: Thank you, Lt. Governor Stratton.

Stratton: Just to clarify, the question is why housing, food and healthcare is becoming so expensive.

Moderator: Yes. I’ll let you address that.

Stratton: Well, that is the quintessential question right now. When I travel the state and talk to everyday Illinoisans, the number one issue is affordability. Things are just too expensive. We are at the grocery store, too expensive. I am the mom of four daughters, and I can tell you that I have adult daughters who are wondering, will I ever be able to buy a home? When I think about what is happening with healthcare, people right now are deciding, do I go to the doctor and get the care I need, or do I pay my bills? Do I pay my rent? That is a false choice. And too many of us are put in positions where we should not have to choose. In the richest nation in this world, we should not have to do that. And so what is happening, why things are getting so expensive, is not just the corporate special interests, but also the attacks that we are seeing on workers. We are seeing millionaires and billionaires and corporate CEOs get richer. This president wants to make sure that he is giving tax cuts to the wealthiest, and he is paying for it on the backs of the rest of us. You know how he is paying for it? Cutting our healthcare, stripping away healthcare from millions of Americans. It is why we need to make life more affordable. And one of the ways that I will do that is I will fight for Medicare for All, because we need to make sure that healthcare is available to everyone. Now, of course, I would work alongside organized labor to figure out what model works best and how to make sure that you can continue having your good healthcare. For those of you that have really strong healthcare, we need to do that. […] We should not live in a country where the government can decide, “I am taking away your healthcare,” or decide you do not have access to food benefits. So we need to raise wages. I want to see a minimum wage of at least fifteen dollars an hour. We did it here, by the way, and I was a part of that here in Illinois, working alongside so many of you who were always in that fight for fifteen. And then when we came in, we got it done. I want to see that happen at the federal level. I want to make sure we protect collective bargaining rights. We passed, and I was a part of the team advocating for, the Workers’ Rights Amendment to make sure that we can protect your right to ask for and negotiate for the best wages and benefits that you can have. I want to see that in Washington. And I will, on day one, be a sponsor of the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act to make sure that we can protect collective bargaining rights. But mainly we need to make sure that we center the needs of working people and stop letting the wealthy get away with the power in Washington. […]

Moderator: Congresswoman Kelly.

Kelly: I go back to my platform, people over profits. We need to make sure that we are taxing millionaires, billionaires and corporations at the proper rate. If we do that, then we will have money for more affordable housing. We will have money to pay for healthcare. We will have money to pay for a federal minimum wage increase. We will have money to help parents with childcare. And when I think of competition, competition is good, but I want to make sure that competition comes from within America. I sit on the Steel Caucus. I have traveled to different places in the world, and I see the dumping that is done. So it makes it unfair for people working in the United States, because other countries are dumping their goods and making them so cheap. So it hurts those of us in the United States. It hurts working families in the United States. So really keeping an eye on that. And then I will jump into tariffs, not defending those at all, because those are just attacks on people. We want to make things fair for affordable trade and fairness. But what is happening now is absolutely ridiculous. When I think about other people in the solar industry and how the money was clawed back from all of those people, people that had union jobs, good union jobs, and now so many people that were trained do not have those jobs anymore. So I think when you talk about housing and affordable healthcare and all of that, taxing people wisely, looking at what we are doing with tariffs, which is absolutely ridiculous, because we are losing our farmers. They are getting killed. But making sure that we do not have to deal with the dumping and all of that from around the world, because we heard that constantly in the Steel Caucus and other caucuses also.

Please pardon any transcription errors.

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Catching up with the congressionals

Friday, Nov 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Evanston Now reporter Mathew Eadie covered a 9th Congressional District candidate forum last night


More on the candidate forum from The Daily Northwestern

Candidates often agreed with each other, never interrupting or insulting anyone else. Yet each candidate also sought to differentiate themselves from their opponents. […]

“I am the grassroots candidate in the race,” [Kat Abughazaleh] said. “We’re using our resources in a different way — mutual aid is a top priority for our campaign.” […]

[Former Google employee Nick Pyati] said the Democratic Party needs a candidate who can turn the party into one that will win general elections.

“The candidates in this race are fantastic Democrats,” he said. “Another year, I would’ve been putting up lawn signs and knocking doors for them.”

* Evanston Now

If elected to Congress next year, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss says he plans to resign from his city job in time to give voters a chance to elect a new mayor in April 2027.

Pressed at a candidate forum Thursday night about his transition plans, Biss said he would leave the mayor’s office after the Nov. 3, 2026 general election, but before Nov. 27.

Legally the mayor wouldn’t have to resign until Jan. 3, 2027, the day he would take office in Washington.

But under state law, if the resignation occurred later than Nov. 27 — less than 130 days before the next scheduled municipal election — an acting mayor to be named by the city council from among its members would serve until 2029, rather than facing the voters in 2027.

* Donna Miller announced some endorsements in CD2. Press release…

National leaders, educators and public safety officials are supporting Donna Miller for U.S. Representative in the state’s 2nd Congressional District. Since announcing her candidacy in July, the Cook County Commissioner has received a long list of endorsements from elected officials across the Chicagoland area. Her support to fill the vacancy left by U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly continues to grow. […]

    - Carol Mosley Braun, former U.S. Sen., Illinois
    - Terri Sewell, U.S. Rep., Alabama-7th District
    - Troy Carter, U.S. Rep., Louisiana-2nd District
    - Eartharin Cousins, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Agencies for Food and Agriculture in Rome
    - Larry Snelling, Chicago Police Chief
    - Demetrious Cook, Richton Park Police Chief
    - Mitchell Davis, Hazel Crest Police Chief
    - Sean Staples, South Holland Police Chief
    - Blondean Davis, School Supt. District 182
    - Tiffany Robinson, Moraine Valley Community College

Commissioner Miller also announced an endorsement from Dolton Mayor Jason House this morning



Miller (no relation) deleted that post, probably because the Willie Preston campaign reached out to say House has actually endorsed him…

* Crain’s

Chicago Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, says he’ll decide in the coming weeks if he’ll mount an independent bid to replace retiring U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia in Congress in what would be an uphill battle if he can’t gain union support. […]

Sigcho-Lopez is considering a run for the seat as an independent, but he’s been blocked out of consideration from unions currently conducting their screening process for the primary, which will make it difficult for him to gain traction and raise the money necessary to launch a campaign.

He reached out to the Chicago Federation of Labor and other unions last week to be considered, but was rebuffed because he won’t be on the ballot.

“We don’t stall our process for someone who’s going to potentially run in the general election, but not stand for a primary,” CFL president Bob Reiter told Crain’s. “If he wants to run as an independent, we’ll see him down the road when the time is right, but there’s nothing for us to do or to engage with him right now.”

According to the State Board of Elections, Sigcho-Lopez would need 10,816 valid signatures to run as an Independent. He could collect up to 17,304 signatures.

* US Rep. Brad Schneider

Rep. Brad Schneider (IL-10) proudly announced the endorsement of more than 100 current and former elected officials serving the people of Illinois’s 10th Congressional District. Such an early display of broad and enthusiastic support is unprecedented in the district and reflects Schneider’s long record of working closely with local, state, and national leaders. These people recognize Brad’s commitment to delivering results for the people of the 10th District. […]

These endorsements reinforce the overwhelming momentum the Schneider campaign is building across the district. […]

Rep. Schneider’s newly announced endorsements include:

Illinois Statewide Leaders

    Governor JB Pritzker
    Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias
    Treasurer Michael Frerichs
    Comptroller Susana Mendoza

U.S. Senate

    Senator Dick Durbin
    Senator Tammy Duckworth

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IBHE urged to push governor to release the rest of higher ed’s budget hike

Friday, Nov 14, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

University students and faculty urged the Illinois Board of Higher Education to press Gov. JB Pritzker to release more than $29 million in funding for state colleges and universities that state lawmakers approved this year but the Pritzker administration is holding back.

But the governor’s office said in an email to Capitol News Illinois that it does not intend to release the state-approved funding until it sees “stability” on federal education policy coming from Washington.

“(President) Trump’s budget bill and reckless tariffs have wreaked havoc on state revenues nationwide, making it essential to double down on fiscal discipline,” a spokesman in the governor’s office said. […]

In his budget proposal to the General Assembly in February, Pritzker proposed a 3% increase in higher education funding. But the $55.3 billion budget bill that lawmakers approved in May contained only a 1% increase, with an additional 2% — or $29.5 million — that could be distributed only “after the purpose and amounts have been approved in writing by the Governor.”

Democratic leaders in the General Assembly said at the time the money was intended to be used if there were significant cuts in federal higher education spending.

But in its statement this week, the governor’s office said it was always Pritzker’s intent to hold the money back as a cushion against uncertainties caused by the Trump administration.

“When the budget was approved by the legislature and signed, the Governor was clear that a 2% reserve would remain in place until we saw stability on education from Washington, which has yet to materialize,” the statement read.

In addition to holding back the higher education funding, Pritzker issued an executive order in September directing executive branch agencies to make plans to hold back as much as 4% of their budgets this year. The IBHE and Illinois Community College Board were not subject to that order.

I get why the union leaders, advocates and students quoted in the story want the money released. But this is not previously appropriated money that is being withheld from the system. It’s new money that is being held back just in case. And these days, “just in case” is a reasonable assumption, even though inflation is eating up all of that 3 percent hike.

Anyway, there’s more, so go check it out.

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RETAIL: Strengthening Communities Across Illinois

Friday, Nov 14, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Pamela Frazier, owner of All In One Laundry Center & Services, has a message for lawmakers: “Come and visit to see the barriers and challenges with running a small business.” Pamela is firmly committed to serving her customers in Springfield, particularly those in her community needing access to clean, quality laundry services.

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Pamela are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Nov 14, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Full SNAP benefits going out starting Friday as shutdown ends, Illinois officials say. Sun-Times

    - With the country’s longest government shutdown finally over, Illinois officials say they expect full SNAP food assistance to begin flowing Friday and that the nearly 2 million people in the state that rely on the program to buy groceries will receive full benefits by Nov. 20.
    - “This crisis was entirely avoidable — the Trump Administration had the funding to fully support SNAP but chose not to, putting tens of millions of Americans at risk of hunger,” the Illinois Department of Human Services said in a statement on Thursday.
    - The bill signed by President Donald Trump Wednesday night funds SNAP through next September. Across the state, there are 1.8 million people who get SNAP benefits each month, receiving about $370 on average, according to IDHS.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Gov. JB Pritzker renews push for Illinois homeowners’ insurance rate oversight after bill fails in state House: Gov. JB Pritzker on Thursday renewed his call for legislation requiring insurance companies to justify and disclose the reasons behind steep homeowners’ insurance rate hikes — a proposal that stalled in the Illinois House last month despite support from the Democratic-controlled Senate. Pritzker said the state’s lack of authority over insurers leaves homeowners vulnerable to sharp premium increases, pointing to Bloomington-based State Farm’s decision this summer to raise home insurance rates by more than 27%. The company attributed the increases to extreme weather coupled with costly repairs.

* Sun-Times | Clock ticking for Illinois lawmakers to navigate hemp hurdles: That measure easily passed Illinois Senate President Don Harmon’s chamber, but never got a vote in the House, facing steep opposition from the hemp industry and pushback from lawmakers reluctant to criminalize products that have supported thousands of jobs. “This surprised everybody, and we’re trying to figure it out,” Harmon said. “Obviously, the Senate’s been trying to regulate hemp for a long time, and maybe this changes the baseline and gives us a fresh perspective from which to tackle the problem, but it’s just too early for us to pronounce what direction we’re going in.”

* Capitol News Illinois | Durbin defends shutdown vote, says it wasn’t coordinated with Schumer: “I think that is the crudest form of political weapon that I can imagine — and that’s why I came to the conclusion that we had tried to find a bipartisan agreement, and we reached it,” Durbin said following an unrelated event in Springfield. Durbin was one of eight members of the Senate Democratic caucus who joined Republicans in advancing the deal, providing the votes needed to break a filibuster. The measure passed Congress and was signed by President Donald Trump on Wednesday.

*** Statewide ***

* WTWO | Illinois Lottery named top performing lottery in the nation for second time: The Illinois Lottery under Allwyn Management has managed to be named the highest-performing lottery in North America even after an absence of major multistate jackpots. Despite this, the Illinois lottery has only seen a 2.6% decline, beating the next state by .4%. Illinois also ranked in the top 10 nationally for total instant ticket sales and record online sales of $702,000,000 in fiscal year 25. This is also impressive with Illinois holding no billion-dollar or more jackpots throughout the fiscal year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Press Release | Prominent Union Endorsements Propel Momentum–United Steelworkers District 7 Endorses State Rep. Stephanie Kifowit for Illinois Comptroller: United Steelworkers (USW) District 7 has given its endorsement of State Representative Stephanie Kifowit for Illinois Comptroller, citing her unwavering pro-labor record, her deep financial expertise, and her visionary plan to protect workers’ rights and pensions through the Comptroller’s office.

* Journal & Topics | Moylan’s Health Issues, ‘Frustration’ Led Dem Candidate Cochran To Run In Primary: Justin Cochran, the 38-year-old Des Plaines resident whom it’s believed will replace longtime State Rep. Marty Moylan (D-55th) on the March 17, 2026 Democratic primary ballot, said this week that “frustration” with politics, specifically the Donald Trump presidential administration, is what directed him into the political arena. Cochran’s entry into local politics was in 2018 and within a year he was working as Moylan’s legislative office chief of staff. In that role, he provides constituent services, schedules meetings for Moylan, and “interfaces with Springfield.”

* WMBD | On the Record: Energy bill will not raise rates according to Peoria Democrat: That second measure would allow the creation of “energy storage facilities.” Once constructed, the storage units will hold power produced by solar and wind, allowing it to be dispersed when the sun isn’t out or the wind is slow, Koehler said. “We have to add more supply and battery storage adds supply,” he said. “We know that we have to put more energy onto the grid if we’re going to bring prices down. It’s a simple fact of supply and demand, and we know that demand is high in the summertime.

* Capitol News Illinois | Education union, students call on governor to release higher education funding: But the governor’s office said in an email to Capitol News Illinois that it does not intend to release the state-approved funding until it sees “stability” on federal education policy coming from Washington. “(President) Trump’s budget bill and reckless tariffs have wreaked havoc on state revenues nationwide, making it essential to double down on fiscal discipline,” a spokesman in the governor’s office said.

* Tri States Public Radio | Illinois education groups call for tax on millionaires : The president of a union representing employees at more than half a dozen public universities in Illinois said they will be pushing state lawmakers next year to improve funding for the institutions, even though it’s an election year. “There is no good year, right? Every year is always a reason not to do something. So when is the reason to do something?” said John Miller, President of the University Professionals of Illinois Local 4100.

* Muddy River News | Quincy lobbyist Michael McClain gets 45-day extension to report, after prison screw up, defense attorney says: Judge Manish Shah has granted lobbyist Michael McClain until December 29 to report for his two-year prison sentence as part of the Commonwealth Edison conspiracy case. “It’s not like we’re begging for more time,” defense attorney Patrick Cotter said. “The Bureau of Prisons screwed up, again.” McClain was scheduled to report to the Federal Bureau of Prisons by October 30, but his attorney was forced to seek an extension when the BOP failed to designate a location.

*** Chicago ***

* Crain’s | Johnson wants $1.3 billion as part of $18 billion, 5-year infrastructure plan: Mayor Brandon Johnson is seeking $1.3 billion in new borrowing to support a $18 billion, five-year capital funding plan in the City Council. The infrastructure plan includes issuing up to $3.9 billion in general obligation bonds over five years, and the new borrowing is drawing fire from members of the City Council who only authorized $830 million in infrastructure borrowing in February in a narrow 26-23 vote after a protracted fight over the structure of the financing.

* Crain’s | Johnson unveils amended budget to a skeptical City Council: The largest revenue change is increasing the city’s lease tax, which extends to everything from film production equipment rentals to computing software, from 11 to 15% to bring in an additional $416 million. Johnson’s initial proposal called for a 14% rate. […] Jack Lavin, CEO of the Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement the City Council should push off a vote until more detail is provided on the overall plan. “Our city’s businesses, families, and taxpayers deserve greater transparency and demand better accountability,” he said.

* NBC Chicago | ISIS terror plot exposed against 2024 Chicago Pride Parade: An ISIS plot to attack the Chicago Pride Parade with a backpack bomb in 2024 was discussed on a terrorist website but never carried out, according to FBI records obtained by the NBC Chicago investigative team. The bombing plot was to be carried out as an initial salvo in a series of attacks against gay targets in the U.S., according to an FBI affidavit in a terror case indicted Thursday in Detroit.

* Sun-Times | Judge plans March trial over feds’ use of force in Chicago deportation push: During a hearing Thursday afternoon, U.S. District Judge Sara Ellis told lawyers, “All I know about this is what I’ve read in the paper, which is that the operation is changing, I guess, over the next few months. … But then I read that they intend to be back in March.” Justice Department lawyer Andrew Warden told the judge, “There has been a transition of officers. There always is. Folks come in and out of operations. As far as, ‘will there be a sort of ramp-up in the spring?’ I don’t know whether that’s the case.”

* Chalkbeat Chicago | Chicago offers free virtual therapy to students, but some have concerns: CPS and the company, Hazel Health, say the provider safeguards student data and has helped the district tackle a teen mental health crisis at a time of limited access to care, threatened further by looming Medicaid cuts. “CPS has worked hard to ensure all CPS high school students have access to free, high-quality online therapy and counseling while maintaining student safety, privacy, and trust,” a district spokeswoman said in a statement. But student privacy advocates are urging the school board to drop or overhaul the district’s agreement with Hazel Health. They say the company’s parent consent form raises concerns about the possible use of student data to develop its product in violation of the state’s online student privacy law.

* Block Club | Derrick Rose Moves Back To Chicago In Retirement: ‘I Love Chi. The Good, The Bad, The Ugly’: The city declared Jan. 4 “Derrick Rose Day” in honor of the former All-Star point guard, while Rose had an Englewood garden dedicated to him and the Chicago Bulls announced plans to retire his jersey on Jan. 24, 2026. Rose discussed how his move back to Chicago was motivated by him wanting to be present for his three children. “Since I retired, I had time to really think about what’s the difference between a dad and a father,” Rose said, reflecting on his father’s absence in his life. “I always looked at my pops in the father category because he never was around.”

* NBC Chicago | Popular Chicago pie shop adds Malort-flavored item to their menu: “Here’s to you Chicago! We don’t have a liquor license so we can’t raise a glass, but we can raise our forks. Bring your big shoulders in for a slice of Chicago Sunrise (aka Malort and grapefruit) pie!” the post said. The pie is described on the shop’s website as a “one of a kind pie” that’s “garnished with a ring of lightly sweetened whipped cream.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Metra, Pace approve budgets with no fare hikes: Metra’s leaders approved a budget that spares riders from a fare hike next year, but they acknowledged it won’t be an express train to the hoped-for transformational service expansion. The commuter rail agency won’t see any service cuts next year, thanks to the $1.5 billion transit bailout passed in Springfield last month. But Metra’s $1.2 billion proposed budget, passed Thursday by the agency’s board of directors, largely keeps the status quo with plans for yet-to-be determined “modest service increases.” Metra CEO Jim Derwinski said there is still tough work ahead to expand service, even though the agency has overcome an impending deficit when federal COVID-19 funds run out next year.

* CBS Chicago | Judge tours Broadview ICE processing facility amid claims of inhumane conditions: Lawyers for the plaintiffs did not speak to reporters after completing the tour. In a statement from the MacArthur Justice Center, the ACLU of Illinois, and Eimer Stahl of Chicago, attorneys declined to discuss the conditions they saw inside the facility during the tour.

* WGN | Costs mount as National Guard soldiers sit on standby: On a military base an hour southwest of Chicago, National Guard soldiers from Texas are more than a month into a deployment. The Trump administration ordered troops to the area to protect federal property and personnel during immigration enforcement operations. […] The military says 200 National Guard soldiers from Texas and 300 from Illinois have been federalized for the Chicago operation for 60 days. The left-leaning Institute for Policy Studies pegs the deployment cost at a minimum of $647 per day, per soldier. The estimated total cost: $12.8 million.

* Daily Southtown | Homer Glen trustees again voice support for license plate reader cameras: Homer Glen officials are preparing to move forward with installing license plate reader cameras in town, but want to hear all potential privacy concerns before final approval. All six trustees voiced their support for the Flock Safety license plate camera system at a board meeting Wednesday and want to obtain more information about price, locations they would be installed and how they would be implemented. No vote on installing the cameras was taken, and trustees plan to continue discussion in December.

* Daily Herald | DuPage County clerk’s request for more money denied; board member suggests censure: In addition to raising doubts about the need for extra money, board members pointed to an ongoing lack of communication, questions over billing and bidding practices in the clerk’s office and Kaczmarek’s absence from county board meetings. “They are giving us information piecemeal, which makes it really difficult for us to have a full financial picture,” board member Yeena Yoo said. “I just feel like we’re giving them a blank check.”

* Daily Herald | ‘Belief in the limitless potential of our kids’: Boys and Girls Club turning old school into Impact Center: On Thursday, the club held a ceremonial wall-smashing where leaders took small sledgehammers to demolish a piece of drywall. Leaders also updated community members about the organization’s plans to help middle school and high school students. “This space will once again be filled with the sounds of young people learning, laughing and growing,” Barrington Unit School District 220 Superintendent Craig Winkelman told the crowd.

*** Downstate ***

* KWQC | Emails show Mercer County superintendent ordered nurse to turn over student health records: KWQC obtained his emails through the Freedom of Information Act. They center on communications in September between Farquer and a nurse, Amber Wood. According to the emails, Wood alerted the county health department that the school was seeing cases of hand, foot and mouth disease. Farquer asked Wood to compile information about the students, but Wood was reluctant.

* PJ Star | Peoria County approves fee increases for five departments in $174 million : A gradual increase of some user fees in Peoria County was approved by the Peoria County Board on Thursday night after some debate about how to structure the fee increases. User fees will be raised across five county departments, but only the new fees raised by the County Clerk’s Office will be implemented on a two-year ramp after County Clerk Rachael Parker raised concerns about the increases.

* Illinois Times | Voters to weigh tax increase for mental health board: The Mental Health Commission unanimously voted to approve language for a March referendum asking Sangamon County residents if they would approve a half-percent sales tax increase (an additional 5 cents per $10 of goods purchased, 50 cents per $100) to fund a county mental health board that would disburse such taxes toward various mental health initiatives. The tax would not be included on grocery or medication purchases. If approved, the tax would generate more than $14 million for a mental health board, according to county estimates.

* WGLT | Explosion of sports wagering discussed at problem gambling conference in Normal: Dave Wohl is executive director of the Illinois Council on Problem Gambling [ICPG], the nonprofit hosting the conference at the Marriott Hotel and Conference Center. Wohl said the council is neutral on gambling but is opposed when it leads to addiction, noting gambling is the leading cause of suicide among all addictions. “As with any addiction, when it starts affecting other aspects of your life, that’s when you need to talk to somebody, you need to get some help,” Wohl said in an interview on WGLT’s Sound Ideas.

* Illinois Times | Newly formed PURPLE Coalition aims to tackle unresolved inequalities: Made up entirely of volunteers and organized as a limited liability company, the Springfield-based coalition will “bring our community together, not through fear or division, but through understanding and community,” she said. “We will keep listening, keep organizing and keep pushing until justice, transparency and compassion are the standard, not the exception,” she said. Standage said the group’s name is an “ode” to Sonya Massey, the 36-year-old Black woman who was murdered in her home in Woodside Township, just outside the borders of Springfield’s east side, in July 2024 by former Sangamon County sheriff’s deputy Sean Grayson. The acronym formed by the coalition’s name was Massey’s favorite color.

* WICS | Lanphier High principal resigns amid battery charge for allegedly punching student: Christopher Hampsey, the Lanphier High School principal who faces an aggravated battery charge as authorities said he punched a student in the face, has resigned. Hampsey was previously on administrative leave after an incident involving Hampsey pushing a student into a corner and punched him in the face and head.

* Rockford Register Star | Rockford apartments ​for rent saw price increases since last October: Renters in Rockford saw apartment listing prices increase 8% from last year’s median of $999, an analysis of new data from rental marketplace Zumper shows. The typical apartment listed for rent at $1,080 in October. Median listing prices in Rockford are trending 8% upwards from last month’s $1,000 price.

* News-Gazette | Campustown restaurant to close after 53 years: Timpone’s Ristorante, 710 S. Goodwin Ave., announced the news in a Saturday advertisement with The News-Gazette. The business is set to close on Dec. 20. “Until our final day of service, we will continue to offer the signature made-from-scratch menu that has defined Timpone’s Ristorante since 1972,” the business stated in its ad. “We warmly invite you to join us one last time to savor your favorite dishes, share a story or two, and celebrate the wonderful journey we’ve shared together.”

*** National ***

* Newsweek | Tokyo Named World’s Richest City—Here’s Where US Cities Ranked: U.S. cities dominated the top 25 spots, with Greater Chicago coming seventh, followed by the San Francisco Bay Area (9), Greater Washington (12), Dallas-Fort Worth (13), Greater Houston (14), Greater Boston (15), Greater Seattle (18), Greater Philadelphia (19), Metro Atlanta (20) and Silicon Valley (24).

* AP | The trend of unproven peptides is spreading through influencers and RFK Jr. allies: But the peptides being promoted by influencers, celebrities and wellness gurus are different: Many have never been approved for human use and much of their purported evidence comes from studies in rats and other animals. Several peptides, such as BPC-157 and TB-500, are banned by international sports authorities as doping substances. “None of them are proven,” said Dr. Eric Topol, a research methods expert and director of Scripps Research Translational Institute. “None of them have gone through what would be considered adequate clinical trials, but nonetheless many people are taking these. It’s actually quite extraordinary.”

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