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Wellness check!

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tornado sirens are blaring. People are taking shelter. How are you doing?

  6 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WBEZ

Items on Abraham Lincoln’s body the night he was assassinated, his earliest known handwriting and other extraordinary relics from his life are being auctioned this week in what one expert calls a “tragic” byproduct of a messy Springfield break-up.

On Wednesday, a Chicago auction house will be selling part of the Lincoln Presidential Foundation’s 1,540-piece collection of Lincolniana, which was purchased in 2007 from a West Coast collector.

The original intent nearly two decades ago was to showcase the one-of-a-kind treasures in the then newly-opened Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum. They were there until an acrimonious divorce between the foundation and state-owned museum that led to the artifacts being trucked out in 2022.

One source of friction has been the foundation’s inability to fully retire the $23 million loan it originally took out for the collection. Now, it says it has no choice but to sell off 144 of its Lincoln heirlooms to pay off remaining debt, which last year was disclosed at nearly $8 million.

* A small update on Madigan’s sentencing

*** Statewide ***

* WGLT | Regional Planning Commission helps conduct the first Illinois high-speed rail feasibility study: IDOT is exploring the possibility of constructing a high-speed rail system between Chicago and St. Louis, through the Illinois High-Speed Railway Commission. The study aims to give the commission and those studying the system an idea of what it could look like in the state and in McLean County. While there have been studies across the state before from various organizations concerning the possibility of a high-speed rail system, this is the first statewide feasibility study conducted by IDOT.

* WIFR | More than 2 million Illinois residents will travel for Memorial Day, AAA says: AAA expects 50,000 more Illinois residents to travel for Memorial Day this year compared to last year, predicting 2.1 million traveling at least 50 miles away from home. Nationwide, AAA predicts more than 45.1 million people to travel, meaning 1.4 million more travelers than last year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* 25 News Now | Pritzker says every state faces financial challenges under Trump, but is optimistic Illinois will have balanced budget: The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget recently lowered revenue projections for Fiscal Year 2026 by $536 million compared to Pritzker’s budget proposal in February. Staff told lawmakers Thursday that the downward revenue projection was due to Trump’s impact on the economy, and Pritzker has heard many states are struggling. The Democrat said some states put one-time federal COVID-19 emergency funds into their operating budgets. “We were very careful in the state of Illinois to pay off debt and put it into one-time things that we knew we didn’t have to come back to,” Pritzker said. “The result is that our budget challenge is actually relatively small.”

* WCIA | Illinois lawmakers hold hearing on transmission lines in hopes to lower energy costs: “We are an exporter of energy,” Sen. Bill Cunningham (D-Chicago) said. “I think we have to consider is that the best deal for those of us in Illinois or does it make more sense for us to take a look at maybe setting up our own transmission organization.” Cunningham is expected to introduce a package of energy legislation at the end of this session. He said it will help to stop rising utility costs going forward.

* Illinois Lawmakers | New Budget Projections and Committee Chairman Removal : As state lawmakers head towards their May 31 adjournment, House leaders sit down to discuss crafting a budget in a tight fiscal year. Meanwhile a Democratic lawmaker has been removed from his committee chairmanship with only two weeks left of session

*** Chicago ***

* WTTW | Mayor Brandon Johnson: ‘We’re Not Going to Be Intimidated’ By Justice Department Hiring Probe: “We’re not going to be intimidated by the tyranny that’s coming from the federal government,” Johnson said. “The diversity of our city is our strength.” Johnson, who has routinely touted his efforts to appoint the most racially diverse cabinet in Chicago history, did so again less than 24 hours after Assistant U.S. Attorney Harmeet Dhillon, the head of the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, launched a probe “to determine whether the City of Chicago, Illinois, is engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination based on race.”

* The Trace | When Fatal Shooting Victims Are Black, Chicago Police Arrest Rates Drop: Using records obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, The Trace analyzed 8,750 homicides between 2010 and 2024 and learned that Chicago Police made arrests in 27 percent of them. The majority of these cases were gun homicides. In the past 15 years, police arrested someone in 23 percent of fatal shootings. The rate of cases cleared by arrest fluctuated over the past decade, but the overall trend is downward, especially after 2022 — a time when gun homicides also began falling. In 2024, police made arrests in 16 percent of fatal shootings within a year of the incident, down from 23 percent in 2022, when The Trace last investigated this issue.

* Block Club | As Chicago’s Domestic Violence Crisis Deepens, Victims Suffer In Silence: While failures involving law enforcement and orders of protection have made headlines, experts say many victims avoid the legal system entirely — suffering silently until it’s too late. A Block Club analysis of police and court records show most people killed in domestic violence incidents in Chicago last year had never taken out protective orders against their accused attackers. “The public health response has always been focused very much on: How do we help people once they get to a shelter, once they get to a police station or court house? But the reality is that the large majority of people are never going to get to those places,” said Sheerine Alemzadeh, co-founder of community organization Healing to Action.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago youth leaders join mayor to discuss possible solutions for ‘teen takeovers’: During a press conference, youth leaders presented their work to support community safety and safe summer activities. “Maybe we create programs and give them jobs so we can send peacekeepers to those events to keep the violence down,” said James Robinson, a youth peacekeeper with Good Kids Maad City. A final vote on the “snap curfews” could take place as soon as Wednesday.

* Tribune | As Chicago Bears pivot to Arlington Heights, Mayor Brandon Johnson says ‘I’ve done my part’: Following Tribune reporting last week that the team is pivoting its focus back to Arlington Heights and away from the city’s lakefront, Johnson told reporters on Tuesday that “there’s a long way to go still” — but hinted that he won’t be an active player in this next round of talks with state lawmakers. Asked whether he plans to lobby Springfield’s Chicago delegation against any legislation the Bears may seek for a new stadium development in the suburbs, the mayor said “That’s a decision that they’ll have to make.”

* Press Release | Gov. Pritzker Visits Local Businesses to Celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month: Today, Governor JB Pritzker and Illinois Representative Hoàn Huynh visited two Asian-owned businesses in Uptown to meet with business owners and celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month. The visits build on Governor Pritzker’s efforts to support small and minority-owned businesses, including the 23,000 AAPI-owned businesses and 87,000 AAPI-solopreneurs across Illinois.

* WBEZ | Two key Latino theater events just paused. Are there stormier months ahead?: “There’s a lot happening,” said Jorge Valdivia, the executive director of the nine-year-old Latino Theater Alliance. “We’re all trying to make sense of it.” In no way, he added, are these circumstances unique to his group. On Monday, leaders of Latino arts groups around Chicago gathered to collectively discuss the emerging challenges faced by Latino arts organizations. For many people running theaters, this has been a tumultuous year. Executive orders issued in February changed the guidelines for National Endowment for the Arts funding. New stipulations restrict federal grants from going to groups that support “diversity, equity or inclusion” and “gender ideology.”

* Chicago Mag | Summer’s Required Reading: From stories steeped in the rhythms of the city to a lighthearted romance, these new novels by Chicago-connected authors provide ample beach-chair fodder.

* Borderless | Chicago’s Cambodian Heritage Museum Promotes Healing While Remembering Victims Of Genocide: “Remembering Killing Fields” exhibit, located in Chicago’s Lincoln Square neighborhood, is used as a moment of reflection from one of the “greatest crimes of the 20th century.” “The impact of that experience is still with them,” said Kaoru Watanabe, the museum’s associate director. […] In Illinois, April 17th is recognized as the historic day of remembrance after officials signed a proclamation earlier this spring.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘We’ll see where he takes it’: Cleanup set to begin at old train depot site in Lake Zurich: “It’s hard to have the vision without clearing all this out and getting the lay of the land,” said Alex Jump, a real estate investor who moved to Lake Zurich about three years ago. That includes whether the former Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Railway depot on the west side of the tracks off South Old Rand Road is in shape to be renovated and/or moved and how the rest of the property fits.

* Daily Herald | Geneva City Administrator Stephanie Dawkins announces retirement: After 17 years with the city of Geneva — the last nine as city administrator — Stephanie Dawkins has announced she will retire Aug. 15. “It has been a deeply fulfilling experience to contribute to our shared mission of creating a place where people are excited to live, work and play,” Dawkins said in a press release. “Over the years, I have witnessed and been a part of significant challenges and achievements within the city.”

* WTTW | Northwestern Receives Anonymous Donation to Expand Jewish Studies Amid Federal Antisemitism Investigation: While the amount of the donation was not revealed, Northwestern President Michael Schill said the funding will be used to help promote “greater understanding around complex issues that fosters informed, respectful dialogue among students of all backgrounds.” “Recent events in our world highlight the urgent need for more education about Judaism and the experiences of Jewish people, and an emphasis on making sure Jewish students always feel a sense of belonging at Northwestern,” Schill said in a statement. “The thoughtfulness of the donor and the generosity of this gift will help ensure that is possible.”

* Tribune | New DuPage County tornado warning system to deliver faster alerts, safety officials say: The DuPage Public Safety Communications, known as DU-COMM, has launched a new Fulton automated tornado siren system that provides a significant advancement in public safety technology for communities served by the agency, officials said. In the past, the siren system was activated manually at DU-COMM’s 911 Center. Now, the new automated system enables real-time activation of outdoor warning sirens directly from the National Weather Service. That ensures faster, more consistent alerts during tornado warnings. “The transition to automation enhances DU-COMM’s mission of providing efficient and timely emergency communications,” said Executive Director Jessica Robb. “By leveraging the Fulton system, we are strengthening our severe weather response and giving our communities the fastest possible warning when every second counts.”

*** Downstate ***

* WGLT | Normal council approves measures to address housing, homelessness: The entire development will add 477 units within 28 residential buildings — a mixture of one- two- and three-bedroom units. It will have a mixture of apartment buildings and townhomes. A two-story clubhouse will add parking, a gazebo, fitness center, a pool house area, co-working space with lounge and a rental unit leasing office. An internal trail system will encircle the development’s perimeter, maintained by Normal as part of Constitution Trail.

* WGLT | Juveniles’ role in gun violence worries Bloomington-Normal police: To be clear, Bloomington-Normal is statistically safer than many other Illinois cities, including for gun violence. Peoria, Sangamon, Champaign and Macon counties all had over 50 firearm injuries each in 2024, according to a state database. McLean County had 15. “People are bombarded with the information so frequently that they think, ‘Oh my gosh, the city is going downhill,’” said Normal Police spokesperson Officer Brad Park. “But if you look at the numbers, it’s kind of level here and there and maybe a spike every now and again. But obviously, the goal is to make the community the safest it can be.”

*** National ***

* MIT Technology Review | The data center boom in the desert: The corporate race to amass computing resources to train and run artificial intelligence models and store information in the cloud has sparked a data center boom in the desert—just far enough away from Nevada’s communities to elude wide notice and, some fear, adequate scrutiny. The full scale and potential environmental impacts of the developments aren’t known, because the footprint, energy needs, and water requirements are often closely guarded corporate secrets. Most of the companies didn’t respond to inquiries from MIT Technology Review, or declined to provide additional information about the projects.

  Comment      


Sun-Times in AI flap (Updated x2)

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* 404 Media

The Chicago Sun-Times newspaper’s “Best of Summer” section published over the weekend contains a guide to summer reads that features real authors and fake books that they did not write was partially generated by artificial intelligence, the person who generated it told 404 Media.

The article, called “Summer Reading list for 2025,” suggests reading Tidewater by Isabel Allende, a “multigenerational saga set in a coastal town where magical realism meets environmental activism. Allende’s first climate fiction novel explores how one family confronts rising sea levels while uncovering long-buried secrets.” It also suggests reading The Last Algorithm by Andy Weir, “another science-driven thriller” by the author of The Martian. “This time, the story follows a programmer who discovers that an AI system has developed consciousness—and has been secretly influencing global events for years.” Neither of these books exist, and many of the books on the list either do not exist or were written by other authors than the ones they are attributed to.

The article is not bylined but was written by Marco Buscaglia, whose name is on most of the other articles in the 64-page section. Buscaglia told 404 Media via email and on the phone that the list was AI-generated. “I do use AI for background at times but always check out the material first. This time, I did not and I can’t believe I missed it because it’s so obvious. No excuses,” he said. “On me 100 percent and I’m completely embarrassed.” […]

The AI-generated article was first noticed by a book podcaster named Tina on Threads. It was then posted by Rachael King to Bluesky, where it quickly went viral. […]

Other articles in the Heat Index insert have what appear to be AI-generated sections as well. For example, in an article called “Hanging Out: Inside America’s growing hammock culture,” Buscaglia quotes “Dr. Jennifer Campos, a professor of leisure studies at the University of Colorado, in her 2023 research paper published in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography.” A search for Campos in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography does not return any results. While it’s not exactly clear why the AI said this, the only mention of “Jennifer Campos” on the University of Colorado’s website is about the graduation of a student named Jennifer Campos, who works in advertising.

Go read the rest.

* OK, Buscaglia made the mistakes, but how did the articles make it into the Sun-Times?

…Adding… Sun-Times Guild

The Sun-Times Guild is aware of the third-party “summer guide” content in the Sunday, May 18 edition of the Chicago Sun-Times newspaper.

This was a syndicated section produced externally without the knowledge of the members of our newsroom.

We take great pride in the union-produced journalism that goes into the respected pages of our newspaper and on our website. We’re deeply disturbed that AI-generated content was printed alongside our work.

The fact that it was sixty-plus pages of this “content” is very concerning — primarily for our relationship with our audience but also for our union’s jurisdiction.

Our members go to great lengths to build trust with our sources and communities and are horrified by this slop syndication.

We call on Chicago Public Media management to do everything it can to prevent repeating this disaster in the future.

…Adding… The Sun-Times

Our partner confirmed that a freelancer used an AI agent to write the article. This should be a learning moment for all of journalism that our work is valued because of the relationship our very real, human reporters and editors have with our audiences.

At Chicago Public Media, we are proud of our credible, independent journalism created for and by people. And part of the journalistic process is a commitment to acknowledging mistakes. It is unacceptable that this content was inaccurate, and it is equally unacceptable that we did not make it clear to readers that the section was produced outside the Sun-Times newsroom. Our audiences expect content with our name on it to meet our editorial standards.

What we are doing

    - Subscribers will not be charged for this premium edition.
    - The section is being removed from our e-paper version and will be replaced with this note.
    - We are updating our policies to ensure that all such third-party licensed editorial content meets the same editorial standards as content we create ourselves.
    - Moving forward, we will explicitly identify third-party licensed editorial content and ensure transparency about its origin.
    - We are reviewing our relationship with this national content partner to ensure that mistakes of this nature no longer happen.

We are committed to making sure this never happens again. We know that there is work to be done to provide more answers and transparency around the production and publication of this section, and will share additional updates in the coming days.

  11 Comments      


Let’s play ‘Fun with Numbers’ with your host Juliana Stratton

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This morning in another publication

A poll memo from the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association shows Stratton “emerges as the clear second choice among Underwood’s prospective supporters.” Here are the toplines.

The poll shows in a three-way match-up Stratton is at 33 percent, Krishnamoorthi at 20 percent and Kelly 11 percent. It also shows 42 percent of voters are undecided. The poll was conducted by Public Policy Polling.

It actually doesn’t show that. And it’s not a new poll. It’s a poll that was released a few weeks ago and then the results were reconfigured in a way that benefits Stratton…


Agreed.

  12 Comments      


Completely unclear on the concept (Updated)

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Freedom Caucus member and likely gubernatorial candidate doesn’t understand how numbers work

The Chalkbeat story is here.

* As we’ve discussed many, many times before, Illinois’ proficiency standards are higher than almost all other states

Illinois has some of the most rigorous learning standards in the nation: ranking fourth most rigorous for 4th grade reading and fifth most rigorous for 8th grade reading. In Illinois, a student needs to earn a level of 4 or 5 to be considered proficient. In comparison, the rigor of Florida’s standards ranks 39th and 42nd, respectively, and a student only needs to earn a level 3 on the state assessment to be considered proficient.

We simply set the bar much higher for our kids. So, when those students don’t clear that high bar, they’re labeled as not proficient, but they would be labeled as proficient in lots of other states.

* “Other states like Mississippi are getting better results,” Wilhour said. Nonsense! Not even close. That’s just plain ridiculous. From the National Assessment of Educational Progress

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) has periodically published reports using results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) to compare the proficiency standards states and jurisdictions set for their students. The latest report highlights the results of mapping state proficiency standards onto the NAEP scales using state/jurisdiction assessment results from the 2021–22 school year and the 2022 NAEP assessments for public schools.

* The NAEP did an apples to apples comparison and found that Illinois was third highest in the nation for 8th Grade math, while Mississippi was third from the bottom.

According to the NAEP, Illinois was second highest in 8th Grade reading, while Mississippi was fourth from the bottom.

Fourth grade math? Illinois was number one. Mississippi was 15th.

Fourth grade reading? Illinois was fourth and Mississippi was 22nd.

Stop insulting our school kids, Blaine. After all, they appear to be better at both math and reading comprehension than you.

…Adding… Rep. Wilhour…

Two things are abundantly clear: Illinois government schools are struggling with proficiency and we spend a tremendous amount of money.

Will lowering proficiency standards help more students read or do math proficiently? […]

The answer is no. It’s a misdirection designed to deflect negative and necessary attention. We have a proficiency crisis in our government schools.

Illinois low state scores are in line with the low scores on national assessments-either way it’s a failure.

We can either strive for excellence and accountability or we can move the goalposts.

As for Mississippi, it is well documented that the literacy rates, which were extremely poor, are increasing at a pace that is worthy of study-for many reasons. They are also doing so at a fraction of the money spent.

  42 Comments      


340B Drug Discount Savings Help Patients In Need – Vote YES On SB 2385/HB 3350

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Every day, hospitals go above and beyond for their patients. Take the case of a critically ill patient who received 47 days of care at OSF HealthCare Saint Francis Medical Center in Peoria for a serious brain infection. The patient had no insurance, so the hospital’s care team coordinated a Medicaid application.

At discharge, the patient needed antibiotics and antiviral drugs costing $16,000 for self-pay, but which the hospital could offer for $12,000 through the federal 340B drug discount program. It was still beyond the patient’s means, so the hospital secured a donor to cover the cost.

While hospitals are working to ensure the best possible patient outcomes, pharmaceutical companies are devising ways to limit access to lifesaving medications. The 340B program was created to increase access to care and enhance services for uninsured and low-income patients.

In 2023, OSF HealthCare experienced a 31% decrease in drug discount savings because of drugmaker restrictions, such as limiting hospitals to only one contract pharmacy within a defined mileage radius. “The reduction in revenue directly impacts our ability to consistently fund programs aimed at improving access to healthcare in our rural communities or fund patient assistance programs,” the system said.

Support Senate Bill 2385 and House Bill 3350 to support optimal health for all. Learn more.

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It’s just a bill

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Christopher Wellborn and Bonnie Hoffman from the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

This month, the Illinois Senate will consider the Funded Advocacy & Independent Representation Act, a bill to create a statewide, independent public defense system. If passed, the legislation will create an Office of the State Public Defender and a State Public Defender Commission. Together, they would establish workload standards, support training and enhance resources for county public defense systems across the state.

The FAIR Act — House Bill 3363 — follows recommendations made by an Illinois Supreme Court-commissioned study released in 2021 and an Illinois Judicial Conference Task Force report released in 2023. Last spring, the Illinois Supreme Court introduced the issue to the Legislature, setting in motion reform conversations that have culminated in the development of the FAIR Act by public defenders, advocates and legislative partners.

Last May, the Sun-Times Editorial Board endorsed creation of a statewide public defender, highlighting lack of resources and the disparate impact this has on Black and Brown people in Illinois. As the FAIR Act moves through the legislative process, the issue of independence must also be given the utmost attention by legislators. […]

When local judges control public defense systems, attorneys may become concerned with appeasing those judges to retain their roles or grow reluctant to push back against judicial policies and actions that hurt their clients. Judges may wield their authority to force defenders to conform to the court’s preferences and practices, firing those whom they see as too zealous in their advocacy or too outspoken in their critiques. And even if judges and attorneys do not fall prey to these pressures, clients and community members lose confidence in public defenders who are employed at the mercy of the very courts that seek to punish them. It is critical that public defenders be free from judicial interference so they can put the needs of their clients over the desires of the court.

* Center Square

Legislation that would put several more restrictions on Illinois landlords is moving through Springfield.

The Rental Fee Transparency and Fairness Act found in House Bill 3564 passed the Illinois House, but has pending Senate amendments to prohibit a number of other charges a landlord uses to recoup funds to pay for damages. The original version prohibited any type of move-in fee. […]

The bill now would mandate that if the housing provider charges a move-in or move-out fee, the housing provider must provide an itemized list of the cost of the services, including “bundled services.”

The measure also would prohibit so-called “junk fees,” such as a fee or fine ancillary to the application fee, a fee or fine for modification or renewal of a lease agreement, or a fee or fine for an eviction notice or the filing of an eviction action.

* One Aim Illinois…

ADVISORY: 12 pm TODAY
One Aim Illinois Leads Advocacy Day in Springfield, Pushing for Critical Gun Violence Prevention Legislation
Three major bills in the Illinois Legislature will strengthen community safety and foster greater transparency and accountability between communities and law enforcement

WHO:
State Sen. Laura Ellman, (D-Naperville)
State Sen. Ram Villivilam, (D-Chicago)
State Rep. Kevin Olickal, (D-Chicago)
State Rep. Tracy Katz Muhl, (D-Northbrook)
Yolanda Androzzo, Executive Director of One Aim Illinois
Kathleen Sances, CEO of G-PAC
Trey Bosley, Survivor and Advocate
Pam Bosley, Survivor and Advocate
Millie Burgos, Survivor and Advocate
Delphine Cherry, Survivor and Advocate
Marsha Lee, Survivor and Advocate

WHAT:
More than 100 survivors, advocates and community leaders will join One Aim Illinois for Advocacy Day in Springfield. Together they will call for the passage of Safe at Home legislation, which focuses on secure firearm storage and timely reporting of lost or stolen guns. They will also advocate for the Homicide Victims’ Families’ Rights Act, Homicide Data Transparency Bill and other community violence intervention funding efforts.

This press conference is about lifting up the voices of those most impacted by gun violence and urging lawmakers to act on critical policies that will create safer communities and promote accountability.

WHEN:
Tuesday, May 20, 2025 at 12 pm

Virtual option on One Aim’s Facebook Page

* Illinois Environmental Council…

On Wednesday, May 21 at 1pm, nearly 400 community leaders, environmental advocates, faith leaders, business representatives, consumer groups, students, and state legislators will rally at the Lincoln Statue of the Illinois State Capitol Building to urge state lawmakers to pass the Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability (CRGA) Act (SB2473/HB3779) and legislation to overhaul transit leadership and invest $1.5 billion for safer, cleaner, more reliable public transit. These bills will, respectively, accelerate Illinois’ clean energy progress while protecting consumers amidst a rise in energy demand due to data centers and avert the transit fiscal cliff while transforming public transit across the Chicagoland region.

WHEN: Wednesday, May 21, 2025 at 1:00pm CT

WHAT: Climate Action Lobby Day rally

WHERE: Lincoln Statue, Illinois State Capitol, 401 S. 2nd St. Springfield, IL 62756 and live-streamed via facebook.com/ilcleanjobs/live_videos.

SPEAKERS:
Emcee: Jen Walling, Executive Director, Illinois Environmental Council
State Senator Ram Villivalam
State Representative Eva-Dina Delgado
State Representative Robyn Gabel
& advocates!

* Sen. Graciela Guzmán…

To ensure constituents feel comfortable bringing a complaint if they believe they are facing unlawful discrimination with AI, State Senator Graciela Guzmán is leading legislation that would codify the Illinois Department of Human Rights’ present interpretation of the law.

“As technology continues to evolve, our laws also need to evolve,” said Guzmán (D-Chicago). “I want my constituents and Illinoisans at large to feel comfortable bringing a complaint if they believe they are subject to unlawful discrimination, regardless of whether the instance is related to housing, employment, or any other means.”

Senate Bill 613 would make it clear that violations of the Illinois Human Rights Act that are conducted using artificial intelligence are unlawful discrimination.

“For all the possibilities that AI helps provide in our modern world, we want to center protections for consumers to ensure we do not allow for the proliferation of discriminatory activities using these tools,” said Guzmán . “In the absence of federal guidance, states are obligated to balance innovation with protecting their constituents. I look forward to building on the gains of this bill to ensure Illinoisans are not suffering from discriminatory action or other possible harms of AI in the future.”

Senate Bill 613 passed the Senate Human Rights committee on Thursday. It now goes to the floor of the Senate for further consideration.

* Center Square

House Bill 1375 would have taxpayers provide five-figure stipends to student teachers.

State Sen. David Koehler, D-Peoria, affirmed that the stipends would be for students from public universities. Koehler said full funding of the program would require $600 million.

“This is part of the budget discussion. I don’t expect that we’re going to get the full amount, but we’d like to get something so we can get this started,” Koehler said. […]

ShiAnne Shively of the Illinois Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union, joined Koehler in support of HB 1375. Shively said people are not allowed to have outside work while they are student teaching. […]

The measure is currently in the Illinois Senate Appropriations Education Committee. The third reading deadline is May 23. The spring legislative session is scheduled to conclude May 31.

* Mahomet Daily

Illinois lawmakers are poised to pass landmark legislation that would create the state’s first comprehensive framework for evaluating and implementing artificial intelligence (AI) technology in K-12 schools. The proposal, which has garnered bipartisan attention in the final weeks of the legislative session, tasks the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) with developing statewide guidance to help educators and students navigate the rapidly evolving landscape of AI tools.

The legislation, House Bill 2503 and its Senate counterpart, calls for the creation of a State Instructional Technology Advisory Board. This board will collaborate with ISBE to provide guidance, integration, oversight, and evaluation of education technologies, with a particular focus on AI. The advisory board will include educators, technology experts, and representatives from statewide education organizations, ensuring diverse perspectives in shaping policy.

Among the bill’s central requirements:

    - Development of AI Standards: ISBE, in consultation with the advisory board, must develop standards for safety, transparency, data privacy, and educational quality for any AI technology used in schools.
    - Annual Reporting: School districts will be required to submit annual reports to ISBE detailing how students, teachers, and district employees use AI, as well as their educational technology capacity and policies.
    - AI Literacy and Professional Development: The state will create professional development opportunities to help educators build AI literacy and implement the new guidance effectively.
    - Internet Safety Curriculum Updates: The bill mandates that the internet safety education curriculum include instruction in the safe and responsible use of AI, such as recognizing and reporting online harassment, cyberbullying, and deepfakes generated by AI tools.

The bill was developed in partnership with Teach Plus Illinois, the Illinois Digital Educators Alliance, and a coalition of education organizations. Advocates say the framework will help ensure that all districts, regardless of size or resources, have access to expert-driven guidance, rather than leaving individual teachers or districts to navigate complex decisions alone.

Both bills — HB2503 and SB1556 — have missed deadlines to pass through committee.

  3 Comments      


Wall interviews Pritzker

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* ABC7’s Craig Wall interviewed Gov. JB Pritzker yesterday

A recent report showed that state revenue projections will be half a billion dollars less than expected.

Could that impact the low-level asks that Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson made in his recent trip to Springfield?

“We felt like those were things that the legislature should take into account. I’ve said that to members of the legislature. So, we’ll have to see how it all works out. But it’s a tight budget year. So, nobody’s going to get everything they want,” Pritzker said. “There’s two weeks left, and a lot of work seem to go into it, and I’ll be, you know, in the room, or my people will be in the room. We’ll figure it out.” […]

Pritzker said he’ll make a decision on whether to run for a third term as governor by July, when the Cook County Democratic Party meets to slate candidates.

“Well, some of it is personal, right? I have a family. They’ve been hyper-tolerant, and, you know, on board with my being governor for now, you know, one and a half terms,” Pritzker said.

The governor said he’s not worried about third-term perils.

“I think that that commentary can apply to any day as governor. There are perils, right? And who knew? I’ll just give you one of them: that we would face an international pandemic. Who knew that we would have a migrant crisis?” he said.

Go read the rest and then discuss.

  16 Comments      


Don’t Greenwash Discrimination: Demand Inclusive Labor Standards In Energy Storage Legislation

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

As Illinois charts its path toward a clean energy future, lawmakers must remember the promises made under CEJA—the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act. CEJA was never just about clean energy; it was about equitable clean energy. That means creating good-paying union jobs for all workers, especially those from historically excluded Black and Brown communities.

Yet today, a new energy storage bill threatens to undo that vision. Without strong, inclusive Project Labor Agreement (PLA) language, this legislation risks handing energy jobs to a narrow slice of the construction industry—jobs that will go disproportionately to white, politically connected workers, while locking out the very communities CEJA aimed to uplift.

We can’t let Illinois’ clean energy transition be built on the backs of exclusion. Labor unity means every union has a seat at the table—not just the favored few. Ironworkers, roofers, painters, bricklayers, glaziers, boilermakers, cement masons, carpenters, millwrights and many other crafts helped build this state and deserve a shot at building its future.

Lawmakers: don’t sell out working families. Reject any energy storage legislation that doesn’t include inclusive PLA language. Because when we say “green jobs,” we should mean jobs that are union, local, and equitable.

This isn’t just about jobs—it’s about justice, too.

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Wall St. Journal paints grim picture of WIU, Macomb

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* WSJ

In Macomb, about 140 miles west of Urbana-Champaign, the city’s population fell 23% to an estimated 14,765 from 2010 to 2024. The enrollment at Western Illinois University’s Macomb campus has fallen 47% since 2010, to 5,511 from 10,377. … Layoffs and attrition have shrunk campus employment by 38% in the past 11 years.

The full story is definitely worth a read

At Western Illinois University, an empty dorm that once held 800 students is now a police training ground, where active-shooter drills have left behind overturned furniture, rubber-tipped bullets and paintball casings.

Nearby dorms have been razed to weedy fields. Two more dorms are set to close this summer. Frat houses and homes once filled with student renters are empty lots. City streets used to be so crowded during the semester that cars moved at a crawl. No more.

* Grim

In Macomb, about 140 miles west of Urbana-Champaign, the city’s population fell 23% to an estimated 14,765 from 2010 to 2024. The enrollment at Western Illinois University’s Macomb campus has fallen 47% since 2010, to 5,511 from 10,377. … Layoffs and attrition have shrunk campus employment by 38% in the past 11 years.

* And it’s probably not going to get any better

Macomb is at the heart of a new Rust Belt: Across the U.S., colleges are faltering and so are the once booming towns around them. Enrollment is down at many of the nation’s public colleges and universities, widening the gap between high-profile campuses and struggling schools. Starting next year, there will be fewer high-school graduates for the foreseeable future. […]

College towns are now threatened by federal-funding cuts from the Trump administration, resulting in hiring freezes and layoffs at Ivy League and state schools alike. Administration efforts to cancel student visas might hurt state college budgets, since most international students pay higher, out-of-state tuition.

Even worse, the number of students graduating from American high schools is expected to start falling next spring, after reaching a record high this year. In 2007, the number of U.S. births peaked at 4.3 million and has been falling almost every year since.

Ugh.

* Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford is a WIU grad. And that WSJ story gives additional meaning to her opposition to the governor’s community college baccalaureate bill

Two Democratic leaders in the Illinois Senate openly expressed their disagreement this week about Gov. JB Pritzker’s proposal to allow community colleges to offer four-year bachelor’s degree programs in certain high-demand employment fields.

The exchange between Senate Majority Leader Kimberly Lightford, of Westchester, and Sen. Cristina Castro, of Elgin, who chairs the powerful Senate Executive Committee, took place during a hearing on an unrelated bill that would overhaul the way Illinois funds public universities. But it offered a public view of the reasons why the baccalaureate proposal, which Pritzker touted in his budget address in February, has so far failed to advance in the General Assembly. […]

During Wednesday’s hearing, Lightford appeared with a panel of university presidents from Chicago State, Western Illinois, Illinois State and Northern Illinois universities, and the Southern Illinois University System – all of whom support the funding proposal but oppose the community college baccalaureate plan.

“If we’re thinking about students’ basic needs, we also need to be thinking about the students that don’t necessarily go to the four-year schools,” Castro said to the panel. “If students are really the focus, why are you guys opposed to the (four)-year baccalaureate degrees?”

“I’d like to answer your question, madam chair, because I believe it has zero to do with what we’re trying to accomplish here,” Lightford replied.

She said the university funding proposal was the product of four years of negotiations that were intended to address a specific set of issues facing universities – namely, the adequacy and equity of their funding systems. The community college proposal, she argued, would draw students away from universities that are already struggling to maintain enrollment levels.

“Community college students need to stay at the two-year community college level, and then students who are going for a bachelor’s degree should stay at the university level,” Lightford said. “Because what happens is, when you begin to offer four-year programs at a two-year school, those students who would traditionally go to the four-year university, we’ll lose those students to the community college level.”

Discuss.

  36 Comments      


Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

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With SOO Green all ratepayers will enjoy a more reliable grid, protection from rising energy costs, and a stronger economy for Illinois.

Learn more at www.soogreen.com.

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Pope Leo might’ve put the kibosh on a White Sox move

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune

In the days and months before he died in July 2020, Ed Schmit received comfort in phone calls from an old friend. “Father Bob,” as Schmit knew Robert Prevost, was then a Catholic bishop in Peru, but Schmit and Prevost shared a bond forged through their South Side roots, their work at St. Rita High School in Chicago — and their mutual love of the Chicago White Sox.

During those phone calls in Schmit’s final days, fighting a battle he couldn’t win against pancreatic cancer, he always told Prevost the same thing, one of Schmit’s daughters, Heidi Skokal, said Monday. And what Schmit said to Prevost was this:

“Father Bob, I know you’re going to be the next pope. I may not be here to see it, but I’ll definitely be looking down” when it happens. Skokal paused to collect herself and continued through the tears, remembering her father. “I’m sure he is” looking down, she said.

Skokal recounted the story after the White Sox unveiled a mural in honor of Prevost, now known around the world as Pope Leo XIV. The artwork is on a pillar near Section 140 at Rate Field, where in 2005 Prevost and Schmit and members of Schmit’s family cheered on the Sox during their victory against the Houston Astros in Game 1 of the World Series.

* Visuals…


I just think there’s no way that Jerry Reinsdorf can move the team out of Sox Park and into the South Loop after this historic development. The place is almost like a shrine now.

But, maybe it won’t last.

Your thoughts?

  22 Comments      


Repeal IFPA Now

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

Frank Padak, President & CEO of Scott CU:
IFPA Will Harm our Members and our Communities.
“This would be the end of credit unions as we know it in Illinois.”
Stop the Chaos for Our Hard-Working Credit Union Members!



Paid for by Illinois Credit Union League.

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Open thread

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* I was looking for something else on the blog last night and stumbled across this B-52s (pre-fame) live video. Confession: I have been obsessed with early B-52s shows for a very long time. But that video can no longer be embedded. So then I went down a rabbit hole and found this one for you, which was recorded after their first studio album was released


I hope y’all appreciate the hard work I put into these posts /s.

What up, people?!

  15 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Trump administration cuts may end federal scrutiny of Illinois school where special ed kids often got arrested. ProPublica

    - It’s been about eight months since the U.S. Department of Education directed Garrison to change the way it responded to the behavior of students with disabilities.

    - But the department’s Office for Civil Rights regional office in Chicago, which was responsible for Illinois and five other states, was one of seven abolished by President Donald Trump’s administration in March.

    - The district was to report its progress in making changes to the OCR by last December, which it appears to have done, according to documents ProPublica obtained through a public records request.

    - But the records show the OCR has not communicated with the district since then and it’s not clear what will come of the work at Four Rivers.

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

Sponsored by Environment Illinois

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

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Tribune | Chicago’s Venezuelan migrants face uncertainty after Supreme Court allows Trump to strip protected status: When Ana Gil heard the news that the Supreme Court Monday allowed the Trump administration to strip legal protections for thousands of recent Venezuelan migrants, she cried. The move means 350,000 Venezuelans in the United States, including some of the estimated 50,000 who arrived in Chicago over the last several years, could be deported. How or where? That is unknown, Gil said. She is co-founder of the Venezuelan Alliance in Chicago. Over the last decade, Gil has worked with other immigration advocates to provide resources and legal advice for migrants who have arrived here from Venezuela.

* SJ-R | Bill with stricter enforcements for hiring police officers heads to Gov. Pritzker’s desk: “This one hits me very differently,” Turner said then of Sonya Massey, a 36-year-old Black woman who was fatally shot by a former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy on July 6, 2024, inside her home after placing a 911 call. Turner added she would do “everything within (my) power to ensure that Sonya receives the justice that she deserves.”

* Daily Herald | Underwood to run for House again rather than U.S. Senate: Underwood has been actively fundraising for the seat and ended March with about $1.1 million in her campaign account, according to her latest finance report. In her statement Monday, Underwood said she intends to help “a new generation of changemakers” get elected and flip the U.S. House blue. She serves as the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s recruitment co-chair.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | In the fight for youth transgender health care, Illinois remains at the forefront: A judge has temporarily blocked the order banning the use of federal funds on gender-affirming care, and Illinois state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, a chief sponsor of Illinois’ shield law, said the Trump directive has not impacted access to care in Illinois. “I think that’s the most important thing people need to know: His signature on that paper changed nothing (in) regard to access to care in Illinois today or tomorrow,” she said.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Rare Chicago dust storm reignites debates over the role of agriculture, experts say: Farm fields that are regularly tilled and left bare, without plant roots to hold soil in place, tend to be at greater risk of that topsoil being swept away by high winds or rain. Other methods don’t disturb the soil as much, making it less susceptible to erosion: One-pass tillage uses tractors with a special tool that turns over the soil once, and strip-tilling turns over just the row of soil where seeds are planted, leaving the rest of the field undisturbed and covered by residue from the previous crop. “It (isn’t) just the practices, it (is) that perfect storm. But the practices fit within the storm,” said Richard Lyons, who runs a 300-acre family farm in Harvel, about 40 miles south of Springfield. He strip-tills his corn but doesn’t till his soybean fields at all.

* Crain’s | Johnson vowed last year to ‘cut the tape’ for developers. Here’s how it’s going: The city has completed 48 of the 107 items identified in the early stages of the initiative, according to a progress tracker. That has sped up how long large projects spend going through the Plan Commission process and made it easier for smaller projects without opposition to receive special permits from the Zoning Board of Appeals. Environmental reviews on city-owned lots without known environmental issues are no longer required. Developers can add minor issues that previously needed to be separately approved by the Zoning Board of Appeals to their applications for a zoning change in the City Council’s Zoning Committee, skipping an unnecessary step and lowering consultant and application fees.

* Block Club | Trump Administration Says It Is Investigating Mayor Johnson Over What It Calls Race-Based Hiring: In a statement Monday, mayoral spokesperson Cassio Mendoza acknowledged being aware of the letter issued by the Justice Department but said the office was still awaiting official receipt of the letter. Mendoza said that the Mayor’s Office’s corporation counsel would review the letter when that happens. “Mayor Johnson is proud to have the most diverse administration in the history of our city,” Mendoza said. “Our administration reflects the diversity and values of Chicago. Unfortunately, the current federal administration does not reflect either.”

* Block Club Chicago | Pullman’s Landmark Greenstone Church In Disrepair, Awaits City Funding To Repair Bell Tower: Greenstone pastor Luther Mason is hopeful the city will greenlight the funds for the rebuild in June, but he’s not ready to celebrate just yet. This will be the second time in five years the city has attempted to finance repairs for the 143-year-old church at 11211 S. St. Lawrence Ave. “It’s critical; it’s real critical,” Mason said. “To get that money and to get this project started before cold weather, Lord willing, that means a lot. Because then we can go into the winter … knowing that, come spring, there will be a new facade on” the bell tower.

* CWB | Old Town bar sues concealed carry holder whose gun fired, putting liquor license in jeopardy: An Old Town bar is suing a concealed carry holder, saying they spent tens of thousands of dollars on legal fees to protect their liquor license after he unintentionally fired his gun inside the establishment. […] Despite signs warning that guns are prohibited within The VIG, the bar claims a man named Michael Davis had a pistol in his pocket and it fired, injuring another patron when the bullet ricocheted off the floor. Davis consumed alcohol during his time at the bar, did not have the gun’s safety on, and failed to secure the weapon properly, the lawsuit alleges.

* Tribune | Lydia Cash peels back the layers of her own life to share rich, evocative Americana-inspired rock music: “I grew up knowing that I’m related to Johnny Cash, but it actually took me a really long time to realize the impact this man had,” Cash said about the famed country musician, her distant relative. “I grew up thinking that he was a cousin who picked up a guitar sometimes. I didn’t understand the weight of that until high school.” Yet despite the family connection, music performance was not modeled to Cash during her childhood. Having grown up in a conservative home in a small town outside of Birmingham, Alabama, writing and performance were things she discovered on her own.[…] In 2013, Cash moved to Chicago to pursue music and visual art. “It opened up my entire world,” she said about the city. “It’s honestly the best decision I’ve ever made, moving here.” Yet music didn’t always come naturally. Cash focused on visual art, her other talent, becoming a full-time painter by 2016.

* Sun-Times | Beyoncé’s Chicago concerts had the BeyHive swarming shops like Alcala’s Western Wear: “We were never expecting all the people, all the fans,” Richard Alcala said. “They’re very loyal, and they all want to be dressed from head to toe.” Loyal may be an understatement. Some shoppers, in search of the perfect bolo tie, were visiting the store from as far as Australia just for the concert. And they were willing to spend hundreds of dollars to dress the part.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Arlington Heights mayor: Bears stadium not done deal: “When and if the Bears do make an announcement that they are coming to Arlington Heights with certainty, there’ll be a process that is going to begin, and there’ll be an enormous amount of opportunity for every resident and business owner to become educated and participate in all the dialogue that’s going to happen,” Mayor Jim Tinaglia said during a village board meeting Monday night. “And this entire board — believe me when I tell you we’ll all have something to say.”

* Sun-Times | Arlington Heights has the ball in Bears stadium sweepstakes, but it’s still far from goal line: A ton of things need to happen before the Bears’ quest for a new stadium reaches the end zone in Arlington Heights and, until it does, there’s at least a glimmer of hope for Chicago, according to Mayor Brandon Johnson’s chief negotiator. Senior mayoral adviser Jason Lee openly acknowledged that, for the foreseeable future, Arlington Heights has the ball and Chicago isn’t even on the field playing defense. Johnson isn’t on the sidelines either. He’s more like a spectator watching from the stands.

* Chicagoland Journal | Eric S. France Launches Candidacy for Illinois Second Congressional District: Eric S. France Launches Candidacy for Illinois Second Congressional District (Lynwood, IL) Native Chicago resident and Businessman/Entrepreneur Eric France will officially launch his candidacy for the Illinois Second Congressional District seat on May 31, 2025. He is the first Democratic candidate to declare his bid for the seat. France, who grew up on the south side of Chicago (Hyde Park/South Shore), is a resident of Lynwood, Illinois. He heads up The France Group, a management consulting firm founded by his father. France has organizational and political DNA running through his veins. He is the son of the late Chicago political powerhouse Dr. Erwin A. France, who served multiple Chicago Mayors and government, dating back to the 1960’s. Dr. France spent nearly 20 years as a public servant before entering into private enterprise.

* Daily Southtown | Napoleon Harris sworn in as Thornton Township supervisor, replaces Tiffany Henyard: Four months after the basement of Thornton Township Hall erupted into a brawl that included the township’s supervisor, hundreds of people packed the same space Monday in celebration of new leadership. The swearing in of new township officials marked the end of Tiffany Henyard’s short, tumultuous period of leadership in the south suburbs. Jason House in Dolton and State Sen. Napoleon Harris in Thornton Township have taken the reins from the former mayor and township supervisor, with both having campaigned on a clean slate for their communities.

* Crain’s | Lawsuit claims neighbor ‘terrorized’ users of a Glen Ellyn short-term rental: The latest battleground over short-term rentals is Glen Ellyn, where a judge has temporarily prevented village officials from banning Airbnb-style offerings in the wake of a lawsuit alleging the ban violates constitutional rights of short-term rental property owners. The ban, passed in April and scheduled to take effect in July, has brought to light alleged “terrorism” from the neighbor of one short-term rental, a five-bedroom house on Arboretum Road that rents for upwards of $1,100 a night.

* Lake County News-Sun | Waukegan Township offering emergency assistance when needed; ‘I was so grateful to them’: Now, Jones said Shields Township pays Waukegan Township a monthly fee to provide emergency services to residents from the neighboring township. The program expanded to the general assistance efforts in March. “We know the needs of our community members extend past any invisible boundary lines,” he said. “We are fortunate that Shields Township was willing to collaborate with us to make it possible to extend our resources to all of our neighbors south of 18th Street.”

* Daily Herald | Yes, again: Long Grove’s covered bridge hit by box truck: Long Grove’s historic covered bridge was hit by a truck Monday, adding yet another to the bridge’s many accidents. The driver today was behind the wheel of a box truck, according to a video of the accident from the Facebook page of a nearby business, Chatter Box of Long Grove. This one follows the two that occurred just in April of this year. The Long Grove Covered Bridge Accident Tracker marks it as the 66th time the bridge has been hit since it reopened post-restoration in 2020.

*** Downstate ***

* WIFR | Goldie B. Floberg Center in Rockford calls on Pritzker to reconsider 2026 budget cuts: In February, Pritzker announced his budget proposal for fiscal year 2026, which includes $20 million towards a 50-cent hourly wage increase for DSPs. But some local legislators say the increase comes with a price. “It’s really no different than if I gave you 50 cents, but then at the same time, I pulled a dollar out of your wallet, how would you feel about that?” questions John Pingo, the president of Goldie B. Floberg Center.

* BND | Is Sauget air pollution harming people? CDC suggests a deeper EPA probe: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has completed an investigation into whether air pollution in Sauget is harming people, with a particular focus on the emissions from a hazardous waste incinerator there. An estimated 878 people live within a 1-mile radius of the 35-acre Veolia North America-Trade Waste Incineration facility. The closest residential areas are about half a mile southeast of the facility in Cahokia Heights.

* WGLT | Illinois program to increase faculty diversity in higher education is in doubt: Illinois State University has had between four and 11 DFI fellows in each of the last four years. Stacey Wiggins got a Ph.D. in social work from ISU with DFI help and is now part of the faculty. Would she have been able to complete a master’s degree and earn a doctorate without it? “Oh, no! [laughs] Now, miracles happen, and I am a believer that maybe another resource may have come, but I am grateful for this one,” said Wiggins.

* WGLT | McLean County to observe Ride of Silence honoring victims of bicycle traffic incidents: According to Illinois Department of Transportation data provided by the McLean County Wheelers, the state totaled nearly 3,000 crashes involving bicycles in 2023, with 41 resulting in fatalities. Across the U.S., nearly 1,000 bicyclists were killed and 130,000 injured on the roadways that year.

*** National ***

* WSJ | The Stark Math on the GOP Tax Plan: It Doesn’t Cut the Deficit: In designing a partisan plan that increases budget deficits, Republicans are mindful about what happens if their bill falls apart. The alternate path to preventing a tax increase on most households would require a bipartisan coalition with Democratic votes. That could further increase deficits. Democrats favor extending most tax cuts but would push to let tax cuts expire for top earners. They would, however, reject Republican spending cuts and seek extensions of expanded tax credits for purchasing health insurance.

* Fierce Healthcare | Hospitals cheer judge’s 340B rebate ruling but still await HHS’ final say: The 340B program was enacted by Congress over 30 years ago to help subsidize safety-net care providers by manufacturer discounts on most drugs administered in the outpatient setting by covered entities. More than 60,000 total covered entities were participating as of February 2025 with federal and proprietary data from 2023 suggesting that the roughly $66.3 billion in discounted outpatient drugs purchased through the program would have hit $124.1 billion wholesale, according to a recent investigative report from Sen. Bill Cassidy, M.D., R-La.

* AP | There’s an American pope, and he’s just like us. At least, we really, really want him to be: Why are we so focused on making sure the supreme leader of the Roman Catholic Church is also a regular guy from the Midwest? Some of it is pride, you betcha. But another answer lies in Americans’ peculiar and complex relationship with fame and power that goes way back to the founding of the nation itself.

  2 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Tuesday, May 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news. Hopefully, enough reporters and news outlets migrate to BlueSky so we can hopefully resume live-posting.

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PREVIOUS POSTS »
* Wellness check!
* Isabel’s afternoon roundup
* Sun-Times in AI flap (Updated x2)
* Let's play 'Fun with Numbers' with your host Juliana Stratton
* Completely unclear on the concept (Updated)
* 340B Drug Discount Savings Help Patients In Need – Vote YES On SB 2385/HB 3350
* It’s just a bill
* Wall interviews Pritzker
* Don’t Greenwash Discrimination: Demand Inclusive Labor Standards In Energy Storage Legislation
* Wall St. Journal paints grim picture of WIU, Macomb
* Powering Illinois’ Energy And Economic Future
* Pope Leo might've put the kibosh on a White Sox move
* Repeal IFPA Now
* Open thread
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
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