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Guard What’s Good: Oppose HB3799
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] ![]()
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Session update (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Isabel’s afternoon roundup
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * A jury has found former Sangamon County deputy Sean Grayson guilty of second degree murder for the fatal police shooting of Sonya Massey. WICS…
From the SJ-R…
…Adding… Sen. Doris Turner…
…Adding… Civil rights and personal injury attorneys Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci…
* An update on the Illinois National Guard case from Jon Seidel…
![]() Illinois families can’t afford a new delivery tax. Delivery services are a lifeline for millions of Illinois residents helping seniors, families, and those with limited mobility get the essentials they need, when they need them. Delivery isn’t a luxury — it’s a necessity. Learn how a delivery tax could affect your household and why we must STOP THIS TAX today. * Reuters this morning…
* Illinois Department of Agriculture Director Jerry Costello put the China purchase in perspective during a press conference earlier today…
According to the Illinois Soybean Association, “60 percent of the soybeans grown in Illinois find their way to international markets.” In 2023, Illinois exported $4.5 billion worth of soybeans. * Gov. Pritzker signed an executive order declaring an agricultural trade crisis. Press release…
* Block Club | Illinois Lawmakers Propose Bills That Would Protect Immigrants At Schools, Hospitals And Courthouses: Proposed bills — some yet to be introduced to the state legislature — would ban immigration agents from making civil arrests at courthouses statewide, ask federal agents to comply with health centers’ rules to protect patients’ privacy and increase protections for immigrants, among other things, advocates said. * Crain’s | Pritzker says House transit-funding bill is a non-starter: Pritzker’s opposition makes it unlikely the Legislature will produce a transit bill by the time the veto session ends tomorrow. It’s just the latest twist in the transit saga in Springfield, where legislators have been unable to overhaul the oversight of Chicago-area mass transit agencies and come up with a way to replace hundreds of millions of dollars in pandemic-era support for public transit that is coming to an end. * First Alert 4 | Teacher’s Union heads to capital, pushes lawmakers for promised funding that’s gone undelivered: Dozens of members from the Illinois Federation of Teachers (IFT) and Southwest Area Council (SWAC) were on the bus headed to Springfield, Il. They say the plan is to push lawmakers for a significant increase in funding for K-12 education, even if it means raising taxes on wealthy individuals and corporations. * AP | Border Patrol’s Bovino due in court for first check-in on Chicago immigration crackdown: In an interview Wednesday morning on Fox News, Bovino defended federal agents’ actions and said he was eager to talk with the judge. “If she wants to meet with me every day, then she’s going to see, she’s going to have a very good first-hand look at just how bad things really are on the streets of Chicago,” Bovino said. “I look forward to meeting with that judge to show her exactly what’s happening and the extreme amount of violence perpetrated against law enforcement here.” * WTTW | Chicago Leaders Applaud Glock’s Reported Decision to Phase Out Pistols That Easily Convert to Automatic Weapons: Glock is expected to launch new products purportedly designed to prevent semi-automatic conversion, a move that came after Chicago officials alleged in court that the company knowingly manufactures products that can be illegally converted into semi-automatic weapons using an item known as a “switch.” * WGN | Little Village council demands action against federal agents using CPS parking lots for staging: About two weeks ago, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) put up signs saying the parking lot is only for the use of authorized vehicles. But nothing has been put up in relation to the executive order issued by the mayor earlier this month, prohibiting ICE and others from using any city property or facilities. There are similar allegations that immigration officials in recent days have staged themselves adjacent to Farragut High School, located at 2345 South Christiana Avenue. * Chicago Mag | Monument Man: Dajnowski has been taking care of local public art for nearly 35 years, first as an employee of and now as a contractor for the Chicago Park District and the Art Institute of Chicago. He’s the city’s top conservator of monuments, sculptures, and fountains — the guy you trust to preserve and clean Chicago’s finest public works. Not least the Art Institute’s iconic lions. “You can imagine what a decision that was for the institution,” says Rachel Sabino, the museum’s director of objects and textiles conservation. “There really is no one we trust more for this type of work locally than Andrzej.” * Crain’s | A half dozen buzzy new bagel shops roll into Chicago: Call Your Mother Deli, the Washington D.C.-based bagel chain with a cult-like following, is expanding to Chicago — the latest in a wave of buzzy bagel shops setting up across the city. The pink and blue CYM brand is planting its first Midwest flag in Wicker Park at 1615 N. Damen Ave., formerly home to Dimo’s Pizza. The CYM team hopes to open the new location in spring 2026, and if it’s successful, “a few” more storefronts in the following 12 to 18 months, said Andrew Dana, the company’s co-owner and founder. * Crain’s | Argonne will team up with Nvidia to build one of the biggest AI supercomputers: The national laboratory outside Lemont has a long history as one of the nation’s top centers for supercomputing and recently completed one of the world’s fastest machines. That was before the explosion of widely available artificial intelligence tools such as ChatGPT and other software, much of it running on Nvidia chips. The Department of Energy said today Argonne will partner with Nvidia and Hewlett Packard Enterprise to build two next-generation supercomputers: Solstice, which will feature 100,000 Nvidia Blackwell processors and Equinox, which will feature 10,000 Nvidia processors. * Daily Herald | DuPage County Board criticizes ICE, but won’t ban agents from county property : DuPage County Board Chair Deb Conroy indicated there could be additional action in the future. “We need to do what we can actually do to support our residents,” Conroy said. Republicans board members said they support due process or fair treatment, but described the resolution as “political theater,” noting that the county has no jurisdiction over immigration. * Daily Southtown | Six chosen to plan possible uses of Pope Leo XIV’s boyhood home: Dolton clerk Alison Key was sworn in Thursday as leader of the commission that also includes Democratic state Rep. Will Davis, village co-chaplain Deborah White, former Illinois GOP finance committee chairman Vince Kolber, and longtime residents Garrett Ghezzi and Lisa Montgomery. House said Key’s contributions as village clerk qualified her to lead the commission, which is charged with deciding next steps for the pope’s childhood home at 212 East 141st Place as well as general pope-related tourism in Dolton. * BND | If SNAP ends, what happens to free lunches in metro-east schools?: “We don’t anticipate that meal service at schools will be interrupted during the government shutdown,” said Alexis Bylander, director of Food Research Action Center, a national nonprofit that advocates for federal nutrition programs. Illinois State Board of Education Press Secretary Lindsay Record said as of Tuesday, there has not been any changes to federal school meal programs. She did not answer when asked if ISBE has sent guidance to districts. * WCBU | Busy Peoria City Council gives final approval to 2-year budget: Following weeks of preparations, discussions and negotiations, the Peoria City Council on Tuesday approved a two-year spending plan in a matter of minutes. The council voted unanimously to adopt a balanced biennial budget with revenues and expenses at $300.6 million in the 2026 fiscal year and $324.3 million for 2027. * WGLT | ISU teaching assistant on leave faces federal charges over alleged threats to President Trump: The El Paso Police Department said in a social media post that its officers coordinated with the FBI to arrest Derek Lopez, 27, of El Paso during a traffic stop shortly before 7:40 p.m. Tuesday. […] ISU Police arrested Lopez on Oct. 17 on misdemeanor criminal damage and disorderly conduct charges. Police said Lopez disrupted two informational tabling events. In videos widely shared online, a man is seen flipping a table during a confrontation with a student organization that is affiliated with Turning Point USA. * NYT | In Utah, Trump’s Vision for Homelessness Begins to Take Shape: Much about Utah’s plans remain unclear, including the details of involuntary treatment, what a proposal calls “work-conditioned housing” and whether the residents will sleep in buildings or tents. But supporters call it a model. […] Utah’s pivot is especially radical. It was once a leader in Housing First, an approach to homelessness that prioritizes permanent housing and offers treatment on a voluntary basis. * Bloomberg | Rivian won’t tap $6.6 billion U.S. loan until new plant built, CFO says: McDonough reaffirmed Rivian’s goal of hitting a measure of operating profit by 2028 once its Illinois plant reaches full production capacity of 200,000 vehicles a year. “Ramping up the Normal facility to 200,000 would get us to Ebitda,” she said, referring to earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.
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It’s Time To Bring Safer Rides To Illinois
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - 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 designed to follow all traffic laws and obey speed limits, and the data shows Waymo’s autonomous vehicles are involved in five times fewer injury-causing collisions compared to humans (as of 6/2025, see waymo.com/safety). Let’s bring safer rides to Illinois. ![]() Waymo’s autonomous vehicles can improve access to transportation for Illinois residents with travel-limiting disabilities like vision impairment, to reach medical care, groceries, and social activities. Waymo’s all-electric autonomous vehicles also provide a more sustainable way for people to get around, preventing 315+ tons of carbon emissions with every 250K trips provided through our ride-hailing service.
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Senate Dems file ‘comprehensive civil rights legislation in response to ICE activities’
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Some background is here if you need it. Press release…
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Congressional candidate, others indicted for alleged Broadview protest actions (Updated)
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller * Fundraising text…
* From the indictment, which was unsealed today…
More here. Rabbitt is the 45th Ward Democratic Committeeperson. Sharp is running for Cook County board. …Adding… From Sen. Laura Fine, another CD9 Democratic candidate…
* Daniel Biss…
* Granato is running against Sharp for county board…
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Critical 340B Program Needs Federal Reforms
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] A federal program created in 1992 to support safety-net clinics with the care they provided to uninsured patients is being abused by for-profit pharmacies and large hospital systems. The 340B program has become a cash cow with profits flowing away from the very patients and communities the program was meant to help. Reform at the federal level is critical to ensure that the 340B program works as it was intended by providing necessary funds to safety-net clinics that serve some of the neediest patient populations in Illinois and across the country. Multiple investigations have found that the program has created perverse incentives for hospitals to prescribe more and higher-cost medicines, as well as buy up smaller independent clinics and practices to benefit from their prescriptions as well. Meanwhile for-profit pharmacies are making millions of dollars off hospitals, with no requirements to provide low-cost medicines to patients. Sisters Working It Out supports reforms that increase transparency and improve oversight to help return 340B to its original purpose of helping low-income patients and the safety-net clinics they rely on. Congress must act to reform this critical federal program.
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Pritzker on House transit plan: “As it is, it’s not going forward” (Updated x2)
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * At an unrelated press conference, Governor JB Pritzker was asked about the new transit funding plan from House Democrats…
Click here for more on the mark to market tax from the Tax Foundation. * On allowing municipalities to install speed cameras…
* On the 7 percent statewide tax on entertainment…
…Adding… Capitol News Illinois’ Brenden Moore…
…Adding… Organized labor supports the House bill…
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Illinois Credit Unions: People Helping People
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] This year’s CU Kind Day brought together 74 credit unions and partners: 1,800+ volunteers, and 3,400+ volunteer hours — resulting in over $81k goods & donations that supported 140 community organizations statewide. We’re proud to see how Illinois CUs continue to live out the People Helping People philosophy — and inspire others across the nation to do the same. Read more: https://ow.ly/1xeF50XeZo3. Paid for By Illinois Credit Union Leage.
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It’s just a bill
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here for some background. HB4189 was introduced yesterday…
* WAND….
More via WCIA…
* NBC Chicago…
The bill, introduced last December, has yet to advance and faces opposition from the Illinois Retail Merchants Association and the Associated Beer Distributors of Illinois. * WAND…
* Sen. Julie Morrison introduced SB2725 yesterday. The synopsis…
* NPR Illinois…
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Big Pharma Is Lying About 340B: Illinois Hospitals ARE Investing In Low-Income, Underserved Communities – Vote YES On HB 2371 SA 2
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department [The following is a paid advertisement.] Foreign drugmakers are lying about the 340B bill. Why? The answer is all too obvious: Big Pharma is all about protecting their profits. Anyone who’s had sticker shock when paying for medications knows this. And our elected officials know this; in fact, a U.S. Senate committee recently issued a scathing report on how drugmakers jack up new drug prices and overcharge Americans. HB 2371 SA 2 is desperately needed legislation that will help over 100 Illinois hospitals serving low-income and uninsured patients to pass on discounted drug prices to their patients and invest in needed healthcare services. These hospitals include Safety Net providers like Sinai Chicago and Critical Access Hospitals, as well as UChicago Medicine, the state’s No. 1 provider of Medicaid services. Here’s the truth about 340B:
• HB 2371 SA 2 does NOT require a state appropriation. • Similar laws were passed 20 states and upheld by the courts. • HB 2371 SA 2 implements strong transparency requirements. In just one year, three Big Pharma drugmakers had combined profits of nearly $39 billion, with executive salaries at nearly $154 million. Foreign drugmakers are investing in themselves, not communities. Say NO to Big Pharma and YES to Illinois hospitals and the jobs and care they provide. Learn more.
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News coverage roundup: House Democrats introduce new transit funding plan
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Subscribers know more. The Sun-Times…
* Crain’s…
* The Tribune…
Discuss.
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Clean And Reliable Grid Affordability Act (SB25) Is The Only Bill This Veto Session That Can Slash Skyrocketing Electric Rate Increases
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller [The following is a paid advertisement.] This fall veto session, only one bill can reduce spiking electric rates – the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability (CRGA) Act. If enacted, CRGA would direct the state to procure battery energy storage and finally implement the kind of long-range planning that will help stabilize the grid and lower costs for ratepayers. Government (Illinois Power Agency) and private sector (The Power Bureau) studies agree CRGA will save consumers on monthly bills and slash tens of billions in costs. Want more proof? Look to Texas where consumers saved an estimated $750 million in 2024, sheltering them from demand-induced price spikes and preventing blackouts in the process. These are benefits Texas saw from storage even as the state reduced its gas generation capacity by 166 MW last year. The solutions offered in CRGA are nimble enough to address growing data center power demands and meet other electrification-related power needs. It’s the only bill in Veto that can lower rates for consumers and ensure economic development efforts are set up for success. After all, if we lack power and capacity, we can’t add the jobs that come with new data centers and other large power users. Without action, prices will continue to rise with no end in sight. It’s time for the General Assembly to pass the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act.
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Isabel’s morning briefing
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * ICYMI: House Dems eye taxes on entertainment, billionaires’ investments to fund transit. Capitol News Illinois…
- The future of Senate Bill 2111 in the Senate is not clear, however. Delgado said the proposal represents what House Democrats think are the best solutions to pay for public transportation. - Buckner and Delgado said of the $1.5 billion and $2 billion that would be raised, about $220 million would go to downstate transit agencies. * Related stories… Sponsored by Ameren Illinois
* Governor Pritzker will be in Taylorville at 10:15 am to sign an Executive Order to support Illinois farmers. Click here to watch. * CBS Chicago | Texas National Guard troops remain stationed in Elwood, Illinois, costing taxpayers millions: In Illinois, 200 Texas troops have been sent to Elwood and have spent about 30 days so far, costing taxpayers nearly $3.5 million. “You’re going to have to feed them, and you are going to have to house them, so you are going to have to hire vendors or buy food and have the cooks cook the food,” Hayes said. * WBEZ | Murder case of ex-cop who fatally shot Sonya Massey goes to jurors: Jurors began deliberating Grayson’s fate around lunchtime and ended the day Tuesday without reaching a verdict. They will resume deliberations Wednesday. But jurors did pose two questions to the judge overseeing the case after they went behind closed doors. One was a request to review police-worn body camera videos that have been a critical piece of evidence in the trial. The jury asked to look at Grayson’s and at his partner’s recordings, and to view them side-by-side. The other question had to do with a reference in jury instructions to a state law that governs when use of force is impermissible as an act of self-defense. * WAND | IL turkey hunters harvest 255 wild turkeys in ‘25, down from last season: Turkey hunters in the state of Illinois harvested 255 wild turkeys during the fall season from Oct. 18 to 26. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources said 294 turkeys were harvested in 2024. IDNR shared that 2005 was the record harvest, when 1,218 birds were harvested. * WAND | Illinois Power Agency says solar battery storage proposal could save ratepayers $13.4b over 20 years: The Illinois Power Agency says deploying three gigawatts of battery storage technology could save Ameren and ComEd customers $13.4 billion over 20 years. That is one of the main components Democrats hope to see approved under the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act. The legislation would also bring more solar and wind projects online while investing in geothermal technology and empowering state agencies to better plan for energy demand spikes. * Tribune | Cook County leaders want property tax relief for more seniors, but south suburban mayors group resists: As election season kicks off in earnest and the Springfield veto session hurtles to its conclusion, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle and Assessor Fritz Kaegi are both pressing state legislators to expand property tax break eligibility for lower-income seniors. But they have faced pushback from a group representing south suburban municipal leaders who fear those breaks would hike bills for everyone else, pushing up already-high tax rates and making collections even harder. * WAND | House committee approves bill cutting red tape for craft brewers, distillers: The plan could create a Class 3 craft distiller license and self-distribution exemption. It also clarifies that using third-party platforms to deliver liquor is not illegal reselling, transferring, or exchanging of alcoholic drinks. The bill would allow craft brewer license holders to offer rewards and loyalty programs like mug clubs for customers as well. * WAND | IL Senate GOP: Democrats should not raise any taxes during veto session: Pritzker and House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch have suggested lawmakers could pass a plan this week to decouple from some of the new federal tax benefits for businesses. However, Senate Republican Leader John Curran (R-Downers Grove) said decoupling will prevent taxpayers from automatic savings and could make tax filing more complicated. * Sun-Times | Chicago-area Head Start programs spared from government shutdown — until December: Without an end to the federal government shutdown by Saturday, some 65,000 children and their families nationwide stand to lose Head Start early childcare and preschool services as soon as next week. None are in the Chicago area, the Illinois Head Start Association says. A lone program in downstate Illinois could be impacted next month. Local families have a longer runway because budget years vary for recipients of Head Start grants. * Tribune | Gene & Georgetti owner says the city is pushing her out at Midway to make way for Bally’s: Michelle Durpetti, whose grandfather started Gene & Georgetti nearly 85 years ago, said she received notice last week from Midway concessionaire SSP America that it was closing their Gene’s Bistro outpost and abruptly ending a 20-year licensing agreement within 90 days. No explanation was given to Durpetti in the termination email, but she believes the city is looking to leverage its agreement with Bally’s Chicago to generate additional revenue at the airport – at her expense. “They’re basically pulling the rug out from under a local Chicago brand,” Durpetti said. “You lend people your brand equity, which we have spent decades building and protecting in my family, only to be treated like this.” * Sun-Times | U of C resident doctors win first-ever union contract after nearly a year of negotiating: The five-year contract for the roughly 1,000 residents and fellows “will have a direct impact on both their well-being and their ability to provide high-quality patient care to their patients,” according to the Committee of Interns and Residents, their union representation. The victory is the latest in a growing movement in Illinois and nationwide to unionize residents and secure contracts that make their working conditions more humane and sustainable. * Crain’s | 1871 is on the move to Edelman’s downtown HQ: As 1871 was preparing to depart the Merchandise Mart in May, without a firm decision on where it would set up shop next, CEO Betsy Ziegler got an email from Amanda Edelman. She said: “We’re excited about innovation, and we have some space,” Ziegler recalls. 1871 is moving into nearly 23,000 square feet, or a half-floor of space at 111 N. Canal, along with Current, a water-innovation hub, and the Illinois Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, which was a tenant at 1871’s space in the Merchandise Mart. Edelman calls the space its innovation hub and is providing it rent-free to the nonprofits. * Tribune | Dates are announced for David Byrne’s ‘Theater of the Mind’: Presented as part of the Goodman’s anniversary Centennial Season, the project is described as an “immersive journey of how we perceive and create our worlds, inspired by both historical and current neuroscience research.” It will be directed by Andrew Scoville, with technology direction by Heidi Boisvert. Audiences of 16 at a time will explore “a 15,000-square-foot immersive experience,” with the attraction expected to take about 75 minutes. * Injustice Watch | Rare criminal trial of former Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center employee expected to start Thursday: Kevin Walker, 58, a former rapid response team specialist at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center, is facing felony charges of aggravated battery and official misconduct for allegedly injuring a child at the facility in December 2023. This is the first time in more than a decade that a current or former employee has been criminally charged with hurting a child at the detention center. The trial comes on the heels of a class-action lawsuit filed last year by more than 300 former detainees who claim they were sexually and physically abused while at the detention center going back to the early 1990s. In recent years, the facility has also faced scrutiny from outside experts who say staffers use dangerous and excessive restraint practices and are sometimes “entirely inhumane” to the children they oversee. * Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan bars federal agents from city properties: ‘This is a good step forward’: “This resolution is not about politics,” Mayor Sam Cunningham said after signing the resolution. “It is about people. It is about ensuring that every person who calls Waukegan home can go to City Hall, the police station, the library and any other municipal facility without fear.” Along with prohibiting federal immigration enforcement agents from using city property “as a staging area, processing location, operations base or other support for civil immigration enforcement,” the resolution dictates that signs be placed in all appropriate places to warn agents. * Elgin Courier-News | Efforts to help businesses know their rights step up in wake of Elgin-area immigration raids: “ICE/CBP agents do not have consent to enter this business/restaurant unless they have a valid judicial warrant. Staff are not authorized to consent access to this business/restaurant.” Elgin Area Rapid Response Team members confirmed that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were inside the mall at 535 Dundee Ave. at 9:20 a.m. Sunday and detained a person who was reportedly an employee. The scene was cleared by 9:30 a.m. * Daily Herald | ‘Leading the way’: DuPage’s new Crisis Recovery Center making an early impact: His remarks came during a presentation on the proposed health department budget for the upcoming fiscal year. The health board has authorized the use of reserve funds from the health department to help bridge an anticipated $3 million gap in the center’s operational budget during fiscal 2026. “It’s important to note that this gap is not what I would consider a shortfall. It is a strategic investment that we have planned and prepared for,” Forker said. “It’s about taking care of our residents, and the health department reserves are there in place to support the CRC operations as we launch services for the first time.” * Daily Herald | Arlington Heights to set new speed limits for motorized devices: The revised rules, which could be considered by the board as soon as next Monday, would bar anyone of any age from riding devices that exceed 28 mph — whether an electric bicycle, scooter, unicycle, hoverboard, skateboard or related product — on any street or sidewalk in Arlington Heights. * Tribune | Gary King, DuPage County clerk for decades, dies at 78: In all, King spent more than 47 years working in the office of the clerk, which mails property tax bills and stores and manages vital records like birth certificates, death certificates, marriage licenses and political candidates’ economic interest statements. “He knew more about his job, including about taxes and the tax cycle, than anybody in the county. He just knew everything,” said former DuPage County Recorder J.P. “Rick” Carney, a longtime friend. “He was an expert. I would consider him the best clerk in the state of Illinois.” * WGEM | Potential loss of SNAP benefits impacting local Illinois food pantries: “We’ve already seen the impact already,” Stephens said. “Food pantry was open on Sunday here from 2-4 and unfortunately we have to turn away 60 individuals because we simply did not have enough food.” Stephens said this is the worst it has ever been for them. This isn’t just an issue at Horizons. Stephens said other food pantries in the community are struggling to keep up with the need. * WSIL | Local food pantry launches emergency fundraising campaign amid SNAP benefit halt: Last Saturday, the food pantry recorded serving a record 239 households, representing 603 individuals, with 22 households visiting for the first time. Charley Sands, an eight-year volunteer, expressed concern, saying, “I was in the building Saturday night. It was 7:30. I knew pantry had been going for an hour. The place was still packed with a line out the door, and I was overwhelmed. I said to myself, ‘what are we going to do?’” * WGLT | Bloomington’s gun violence commission wants to keep going: The Special Commission on Safe Communities delivered its final report during the Bloomington City Council’s meeting on Monday, while urging the council to make the commission permanent. “Every commissioner I’ve talked to would like to continue on,” Scott Denton, a forensic pathologist who chairs the commission, said on WGLT’s Sound Ideas. “We think the work isn’t done.” The 29-page report, compiled through interviews and data collection, compares Bloomington to national trends and points to areas of concern, including suicide, domestic violence and youth interaction with guns. * Time Magazine | Stephen Miller Claims ICE Agents Have Immunity. Is That True?: Stephen Vladeck, a professor of law at the Georgetown University Law Center, argues no—at least on its face. “The federal government absolutely retains the ability to prosecute federal law enforcement officers who break the law, even in the course of carrying out their duties,” Vladeck writes in a newsletter published Monday. Vladeck argues that while these agents are protected by an immunity doctrine, that doctrine is not as absolute as Miller makes it out to be. * AP | Federal trial to start over Trump’s efforts to deploy the National Guard in Portland, Oregon: U.S. District Court Judge Karin Immergut, a Trump appointee, will preside over the trial in Portland. The trial stems from a lawsuit filed by the city and state against the Trump administration in a bid to block the troop deployment. Immergut has already issued two temporary restraining orders in the case blocking the troops pending further litigation. She found that Trump had failed to show that he had met the conditions set out by Congress for using the military domestically. She described his assessment of the situation in Portland, which Trump called “war ravaged,” as “simply untethered to the facts.” * 404 Media | ICE Is Using a University Building as a Deportation Office and the University Says It Can’t Do Anything About It: In 2023, an alum of the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE) sold a building at 310 E. Knapp St. to the school for a massive discount, with the intention of the building being renovated and turned into an academic facility. At the time, ICE was a tenant of the building but was in the process of building a new office elsewhere in Milwaukee. Its lease was set to expire in April, but ICE, through the General Services Administration (GSA) which handles real estate for the federal government, unilaterally extended the lease through April of next year and has the option to remain in the building through 2028, the university says. The university says there is nothing it can legally do to evict ICE.
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Good morning!
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller
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Selected press releases (Live updates)
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller
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Live coverage
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller * Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…
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