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Illinois Medicaid: Working Together To Support The Health Of Our Families, Communities, And State

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

‘You showed up in my life at the perfect time’

On any given day, nearly 26,000 Illinois residents experience homelessness.

Last summer, “Trinity,” a 33-year-old mom from central Illinois, was one of them.

Trinity and her children had moved into an emergency shelter, which partners with a Medicaid health plan to host mobile clinic events at their facility.

When Trinity showed up at an event, the scope of her family’s medical needs became clear. The family had visited emergency rooms twice in the past week. All of her children were overdue for well-child exams. And Trinity was 16 weeks pregnant—without any prenatal
care.

Practitioners acted swiftly, checking up on the kids and performing prenatal assessments on Trinity. She was prescribed medication for extremely high blood pressure and monitored at three subsequent clinic events.

In November, Trinity delivered a healthy baby boy. And she brought him home to long-term housing she secured near the shelter—with assistance from her health plan.

“You showed up in my life at the perfect time,” Trinity says. “You have helped me so much, and I don’t feel alone.”

Paid for by the Illinois Association of Medicaid Health Plans

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

A bill that bans carbon sequestration over, under or through portions of the Mahomet Aquifer passed out of the Illinois General Assembly on Tuesday.

The bill has been a point of contention in the Statehouse during this year’s legislative session, after it was found that a leak occurred during carbon injections carried out by ADM, a Decatur-based agriculture giant.

Carbon sequestration is a relatively new technological process that pumps liquified carbon dioxide deep underground for long-term storage. Proponents say it could help reduce greenhouse gas emissions for high-emissions industries like ethanol production.

The ADM injection site, which opened in 2011, received the first federal permit for “geologic sequestration of carbon dioxide” in 2017. Since then, the project has stored more than 4.5 million tons of carbon dioxide more than a mile underground.

Although the leak did not take place in the Mahomet Aquifer area, roughly 8,000 metric tons of liquid carbon dioxide and other ground fluid escaped the area it was permitted to be in. ADM temporarily paused carbon injections in October after another issue with a well was identified. […]

The bill passed out of the Senate in April 55-0. It now awaits approval from the governor after passing out of the House on Tuesday with a vote of 91-19.

* The Illinois Manufacturers’ Association…

“Carbon capture and sequestration is a safe and proven technology that is key to maintaining economic growth and advancing our state’s decarbonization goals. We urge Gov. JB Pritzker to veto this legislation, which discourages investment in clean energy projects including sustainable aviation fuel,” said Mark Denzler, President and CEO of the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association. “Illinois should stand by the historic legislation adopted just last year that established the most stringent carbon capture and sequestration regulations in the nation.”

* Subscribers know more. Sun-Times

Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke is calling for Illinois lawmakers to include attacks against reproductive health centers as an act of terrorism following a car bombing outside a fertility clinic in California.

O’Neill Burke issued a call this week for legislation that would amend the state criminal code to define any act that creates substantial damage to a reproductive health clinic or facility as terrorism.

“This is exactly why I worked to introduce legislation that ensures any such incident in Illinois is treated as the terrorist act that it is, and it’s a shame certain interest groups and legislators worked behind the scenes to put a brick on it,” O’Neill Burke said in a prepared statement.

The bills are pending in the Legislature, and lawmakers are expected to wrap up the session by May 31. The legislation was introduced in February and there hasn’t been any action since, giving them little chance of passing by the end of the month.

* Illinois Secretary of State Alexi Giannoulias

Here’s an appalling fact: The cost of your car insurance in Illinois isn’t based on your driving record — it’s based on things such as the neighborhood where you live and your credit score.

This is shameful. Especially when you consider that a motorist with driving under the influence on their record but solid credit pays far less than a driver with a spotless driving record and a low credit rating. Yes, you read that correctly. […]

There’s still much that we don’t know about these algorithms and nondriving ratemaking factors, which is why we need House Bill 1234. We need public input, and we need the insurance industry to work with us. If there’s a good explanation for why driving records don’t matter, but your ZIP code does, we’d like to hear “how” and “why.” We’re all ears.

As it stands, Illinois and Wyoming remain the only states in the entire country that allow insurance companies to increase rates without any type of state regulation or oversight prior to an increased rate.

The truth is simple — the current system has created a patently unfair, unaffordable and unjust ratemaking system for statutorily mandated automobile insurance. Your ZIP code, credit score or social media presence should not determine how much you pay for car insurance. This not only unfairly punishes the people who can least afford it, but it also creates danger on our roads.

* The Junk Fee Transparency Act unanimously passed out of the House Consumer Protection Committee yesterday. Director of Policy and Advocacy with Economic Security of Illinois Erion Malasi…

“We are thrilled to see this bill to curbjunk fees taking another step toward becoming law. This bill is the culmination of months of hard work and will make a real difference in protecting working families from deceptive practices. The price you see should be the price you pay, and we’re one step closer to making that a reality in Illinois. We are grateful to our House Sponsor, Rep. Bob Morgan, and will stand with him as he takes this critical piece of legislation to the House floor.”

* Chief executive officer of Metropolitan Planning Council Dan Lurie

There has been an exciting debate recently about how to increase Chicago’s housing supply and thus spark economic growth through changes to the city’s administrative and regulatory processes.

But a critical element missing from this discussion, and vital to our shared economic prosperity, is securing housing stability for the thousands of people leaving prison each year that are shut out of our housing market altogether, and our economy.

The Home for Good legislative package, now under consideration by lawmakers in Springfield and supported by a 50-member strong statewide coalition, gives Illinois a strong path to do just that for the approximately 20,0000 individuals and their families each year who have served their time in prison and reenter society seeking to contribute to our economy. […]

The Home for Good program presents a generational opportunity to confront this problem directly. The Home for Good bills, HB3162 and SB2403, before the Illinois General Assembly—sponsored by Rep. Maurice West and Sen. Willie Preston—would expand investments in state programs that have already shown promising results in connecting people to stable housing and lowering recidivism rates. The program would also increase the affordable housing stock and subsidized units available to returning residents and increase services to help people successfully reintegrate into communities.

* Chicago Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez…

On Wednesday, May 21 at 9:00 a.m., a coalition of Chicago City Council members, students, and community leaders will hold a press conference at Senate President Don Harmon’s Oak Park office to demand immediate action on Senate Bill 1693.

SB 1693, which calls for the creation of an elected Board of Trustees for the City Colleges of Chicago, has earned bipartisan backing with 41 co-sponsors in the Illinois Senate, nearly 70% of the chamber. Yet despite this overwhelming support, the bill remains stalled. Senate leadership will not even move it to committee.

City Colleges of Chicago is the only community college district in Illinois whose board is appointed rather than elected. Everywhere else in the state, community college boards are accountable to the public through democratic elections. Advocates argue that City Colleges students and community residents deserve the same democratic voice in governing their institutions.

“Now, more than ever, I see the fundamental impact and importance of democratic processes in all our public institutions. I strongly support our Chicago community colleges to also be able to have elected representatives who are accountable to the working people of this city. The billionaires who have dictated our path forward for generations are finally going to learn how beautiful democracy is when working people have self determination in the trajectory of their lives and the institutions that they hold on their shoulders”said Alderman Byron Sigcho-Lopez. “An elected board is long overdue.” […]

WHERE:

Office of Senate President Don Harmon

6941 W. North Avenue

Oak Park, Illinois 60302

WHO:

Members of the Chicago City Council

Cook County College Teachers Union, Local 1600

Alliance for Community Services

Northside Action for Justice

* Student Borrower Protection Center…

Illinois is poised to be the first state to enact legislation affirmatively permitting and creating special rules for Income Share Agreements (ISAs), a type of private student loan with a track record of violating state and federal consumer protections and financial regulations. The bill, SB 1537, has been pushed for years by Better Future Forward, the first ISA provider to be penalized by the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for violating consumer protection laws. If passed, the legislation will amend both the state’s Student Loan Servicing Rights Act and the Consumer Installment Loan Act.

In response, Student Borrower Protection Center (SBPC) Legal Director Winston Berkman-Breen released the following statement:

“Income Share Agreements (ISAs) are dangerous loans peddled by profiteering lenders and schools that have trapped borrowers and their families into debts with exorbitant rates and predatory terms. Despite misleading industry representations—claiming ISAs are a safer, more affordable alternative to private student loans—numerous federal and state regulators found that ISAs are, in fact, just another type of private student loan.

“It is a shame that a state with a strong track record of protecting consumers like Illinois is the first to roll out new regulations in service of ISA providers, especially when the ISA industry has yet to demonstrate its ability to comply with the most basic consumer protections found in the federal Truth in Lending Act.

“Rather than green lighting the activities of companies like Better Future Forward, the state should be asking whether these companies have been operating in the state illegally. We urge policymakers in Springfield to defend existing consumer protections and lending laws and not bend those laws to accommodate predatory financial products.”

* Fox Chicago

House Bill 3027, introduced by State Rep. Janet Yang Rohr, D-Naperville, would block anyone under 18 from buying diet pills or muscle-building supplements without a doctor’s note or a parent with them.

“So this bill basically says if you are under 18, you cannot buy these diet pills. You cannot buy these muscle supplements unless you have a doctor’s note or may be a parent with you,” said Yang Rohr.

If you read the label, Yang Rohr points out that many of these products already say for “18 and over.”

Right now, there aren’t any rules or regulations for retailers to make sure the consumer buying these products is at least 18. […]

The bill has passed the public health committee and has now been referred to the rules committee.

* WAND

A bipartisan plan to reduce the price of building veteran tiny homes passes the Illinois House unanimously on Tuesday.

The proposal would remove a requirement for tiny homes to have an inbuilt electric vehicle charging station if the owner is a veteran. This will help some non-profit groups, who are building tiny homes for veterans, to save on costs.

State Rep. Rita Mayfield (D-Waukegan) said this policy will help keep veterans off the streets.

“As we all know homelessness and veteran are two words that should never be used in the same sentence,” Mayfield said.

* Capitol News Illinois

A mile-wide EF3 tornado tore through St. Louis on Friday afternoon before crossing into Illinois and inflicting more damage in parts of Madison County. According to the National Weather Service, the tornado passed less than a mile from a complex of warehouses where a man was killed when a similar strength tornado demolished an Amazon warehouse in December 2021.

In response to the 2021 tornado, Illinois lawmakers convened a task force to issue recommendations on how to make warehouses safer in a tornado. In response to those recommendations, the House voted 83-28 Tuesday to pass House Bill 2987, which creates a series of new requirements warehouses must follow to protect their employees during a tornado warning. […]

The bill now heads to the Senate. It requires warehouse operators to work with local first responder agencies to craft safety plans for severe weather. New warehouses would need to be built with shelter spaces compliant with building codes for tornadoes and other types of natural disasters.

* Rep. Katie Stuart…

State Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, is working to protect nursing mothers in the workplace by advancing a bill that would require employers to provide paid break time to an employee who needs to express breast milk and prohibits employers from forcing nursing mothers to use their paid leave to express breast milk.

“The year after becoming a mother, whether that be for the first time or again, can be very difficult for many mothers and if they choose to return to work, they should not have to worry about needing to use their paid break or leave time to express breast milk,” said Stuart. “We need to support our mothers in every way we can, including in the workplace.”

The Stuart-sponsored Senate Bill 212 expands on the protections guaranteed to working mothers in the Illinois Nursing Mothers in the Workplace Act and the federal Fair Labor Standards Act by defining “reasonable” in the requirement for employers to provide reasonable break time for an employee to express breast milk. Additionally, the bill requires employers to compensate nursing mothers at their regular pay rate and nursing mothers cannot be forced to use their paid leave to express breast milk. […]

The Stuart-sponsored bill passed in the Senate, passed in the House Labor & Commerce Committee and now moves to the House floor for consideration.

* WAND

The Illinois House unanimously passed a plan Tuesday to properly notify parents about the toxic metals in baby food.

This legislation could require baby food manufacturers to test their products for toxic heavy metals. Companies would then have to clearly label how much of each toxic metal is found in their baby food.

Manufacturers must also include a QR code for people to scan and find more information about the test results and FDA guidance about the health effects of toxic elements for children. […]

The proposal will now head back to the Senate on concurrence. Senators unanimously approved the original bill language last month.

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Seniors’ Lives Are On The Line

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

20,000 seniors are going without home care because wages are too low to keep workers. Support HB 1330/SB 120 because Illinois seniors deserve quality care. Care can’t wait!


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Open thread

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Devo

She’s the real thing, but you knew it all along

Everything OK by you?

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Prisoner Review Board reform, changes to police hiring clear General Assembly. Capitol News Illinois

    - The House voted 74-37 to approve Senate Bill 19, which contains a series of reforms designed to include victims’ participation in Prisoner Review Board decisions.

    - The bill would give victims the right to file victim impact statements ahead of hearings, provide them with additional notice when their offender is granted early release, and allow them to seek an order of protection against an offender who is incarcerated.

    - It would also create the Office of the Director of Victim and Witness Services, which would ensure the board complies with victims’ rights, and mandates the board provide victims with contact information for the State Victim Assistance Hotline.

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


Sponsored by the Illinois Health and Hospital Association

The Truth About 340B: Protecting Patient Access to Discounted Rx Drugs

Pharmaceutical manufacturers, many based overseas, are undermining the 340B drug discount program requiring drugmakers to discount certain drugs for hospitals caring for the state’s most vulnerable residents. Since 2020, Big Pharma has been restricting where patients can get lifesaving medications, reducing cost savings for providers that would otherwise be invested in healthcare services or passed down to patients in the form of discounted drugs.

The Patient Access to 340B Pharmacy Protection Act aims to protect 340B and its positive impact on individual lives. In response, Big Pharma has been promoting false narratives that prioritize shareholders instead of patients.

Here’s the truth about 340B:

    SB 2385/HB 3350 simply preserve the status quo by allowing hospitals to contract with pharmacies where patients live. It does not expand or attempt to reform the 340B program.
    Big Pharma supported Congressional expansion of 340B in 2010, making over half of Illinois hospitals 340B-eligible.
    Laws like SB 2385/HB 3350 have passed in 14 states—and been upheld in court.
    SB 2385/HB 3350 do NOT require a state appropriation.
    340B providers must meet rigorous requirements and undergo regular audits.

In Illinois, 70% of 340B hospitals are Safety Net or Critical Access Hospitals caring for the most vulnerable communities. Because of drugmaker restrictions, hospitals operating on thin margins face cutting services unless action is taken by the General Assembly.

With Medicaid cuts looming, we must protect patient access to comprehensive healthcare services and discounted drugs. Learn more about 340B. VOTE YES on SB 2385/HB 3350!

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

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

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Investigate Midwest | Lawmakers tried to reform Illinois’ food system. Here’s why it failed: State Rep. Sonya Harper, a Chicago Democrat and chair of the House Agriculture and Conservation Committee, said state officials had ample time to address issues with her and should not have waited until the eleventh hour to raise objections. “This bill has been out there,” said Harper, who was a sponsor of the House bill. “If you had an issue with it, you guys know how it goes. Send me some language that would make it better. Let’s have that conversation before the day that I come to committee.”

* CBS Chicago | Windblown dirt from Illinois farm fields caused Illinois dust storm, expert explains: The dust that hit Chicago was windblown from farm fields in Central Illinois. Video shot by University of Illinois Extension farm management educator Kevin Brooks along Interstate 74 showed motorists cautiously pulling over before driving into near-blackout conditions. “Yes, it was dry. Yes, it was windy,” Brooks said. “But those winds weren’t that unusual.” Brooks has been cautioning the farming community about some of the factors that contribute to such powerful dust storms. “What’s changed in the last 10 years is the speed of farming,” he said.

* Sun-Times | Tornado warning causes Illinois state lawmakers to take shelter: Despite the underground tunnels being packed, representatives and senators remained unbothered by the constantly whining alarm. “It’s part of the business, just got to accept it and move on,” state Rep. Marty Moylan, D-Des Plaines, said. “Makes it an exciting day.”

*** Statewide ***

* Tribune | Sens. Durbin and Duckworth question Prime Healthcare after changes to Illinois hospitals: The senators sent a letter to Prime Healthcare founder, chairman and CEO Dr. Prem Reddy on Tuesday expressing concern about the changes and asking him to answer questions about the health system’s plans. “Prime Healthcare has only operated these eight Illinois hospitals for two months, and there are already profound concerns about patients losing access to care,” the Senate Democrats wrote in their letter.

* Tribune | Illinois State Police website maintenance puts ammo sales on hold: The state police said the website will remain inactive until 4 p.m. Wednesday. Ammunition will not be able to be sold until the site is back up, state police spokeswoman Melaney Arnold said. The state police began alerting users May 7 that the system would be down for the 24-hour period, she said. Retailers depend on the website portal to determine whether a customer’s firearm owner’s Identification card is valid, making it legal to sell a gun to that person.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Daily Herald | ‘The worst emergency I’ve seen’: Crespo reflects on ouster by House speaker over budget plan: In 2024, Crespo said he was “very vocal about the budget,” because of concerns about unpaid bills and a projected $730 million public transit shortfall in 2026. He proposed budget reductions such as a salary freeze, but the plan “never got any traction.” “Fast forward and things are worse than last year,” Crespo said, citing Governor’s Office of Management and Budget projections for 2026 that revenues will be $536 million less than projected.

* WCIA | Senior service providers lobby in IL Capitol for federal funding: llinois senior service providers are calling on Congress to keep funding the Older Americans Act. The Older Americans Act was put in place in 1965 to provide social services to help seniors stay in their homes and out of nursing homes as long as possible. Some programs the law includes are meal delivery, social opportunities and legal services, but the current federal budget proposal puts $53 million of funding in jeopardy.

*** Chicago ***

* Bloomberg | Chicago’s O’Hare Airport Seeks Up to $4.3 Billion of Muni Debt: Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson will seek approval from aldermen to sell as much as $4.3 billion of debt for O’Hare International Airport, according to a filing posted on the city clerk’s website. If authorized, proceeds of the bonds will fund infrastructure projects at the facility, as well as refinance outstanding obligations, the ordinance that the mayor is scheduled to propose Wednesday said. O’Hare is in the midst of a massive modernization plan that seeks to transform the aging hub into a global showcase. It includes a new terminal and the expansion of existing spaces. Last year, United Airlines Holdings Inc. and American Airlines Group Inc. have reached an agreement to press ahead with the development plans.

* NBC Chicago | Former CPS investigator says grooming allegations should have been prioritized: A former investigator who worked for more than 18 months looking into allegations of teacher misconduct inside Little Village Lawndale High School says she’s concerned about how long it’s taken Chicago Public Schools’ inspector general to investigate. Stephanie Brown, who worked in Chicago Public Schools’ Office of Inspector General’s Sexual Allegations Unit, told NBC 5 Investigates in a recent interview that her investigation into the matter was nearly completed when she was fired in August of 2023.

* Tribune | Ethics board cites 7 aldermen for being late filing their annual financial interest forms: Ald. Lamont Robinson, 4th, faces a $250 fine for not turning in the annual form, which is required of most city officials and employees, according to the ethics board. The other City Council members who were called out — but not fined — for blowing past the May 1 deadline were Aldermen Stephanie Coleman, Derrick Curtis, Jim Gardiner, William Hall, Julia Ramirez and Monique Scott. Robinson was fined because the board said he still hadn’t turned in the paperwork, while the others have turned it in but didn’t do so by the May 1 deadline.

* Tribune | AmeriCorps cuts leave Chicago programs serving kids facing diminished summer: AmeriCorps members are typically college students or recent graduates who are paired with service programs across the country and receive a stipend and an educational award for loans or tuition. It’s one of the many federal agencies to suffer massive funding cuts and program terminations as President Donald Trump’s administration seeks to reduce government spending. The Trump administration in April eliminated state-administered grants for 28 AmeriCorps programs in Illinois, affecting more than 630 members statewide, according to a lawsuit filed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul, 23 other states and the District of Columbia.

* Sun-Times | Syndicated content in Sun-Times special section included AI-generated misinformation: Buscaglia said he and others were trying to determine the full extent of the errors that made it into the special section. But he acknowledged using AI for other stories in addition to the list of books and could not guarantee he fact-checked those articles completely either, saying, “At this point, I’d expect anything.”

* ABC Chicago | Chicago man charged after CPD officer dragged during traffic stop in West Garfield Park: Police said Harris was the driver who hit a Chicago police officer, dragging him down the street. Police said that when the officer fell, his weapon discharged. COPA confirmed it was investigating an officer-involved shooting at the location.

* Tribune | Chicago Housing Authority hires former EPA staffer to lead new environmental safety division: Elizabeth Poole will lead the new division as the director of healthy homes after a nearly 15-year career at the EPA. Poole said she left her role as the children’s health coordinator in the EPA’s environmental justice office due to the change in administration. Billionaire Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency and President Donald Trump have unleashed severe federal workforce cuts and rollbacks of environmental protections, including at the EPA.

* ABC Chicago | Chicago restaurants feeling impact of struggling US economy: ‘Everything has gone up’: “It has changed dramatically, doubled in price. So, before, we were getting a certain coffee bean, like $3 a pound, and now, we are getting it close to $8 or $9 a pound,” said Back of the Yards Coffee Head of Culinary Operations Carlos Hernandez. Hernandez says they try to balance their growing costs and pay a living wage to employees.

* CBS Chicago | Chicago Sky focus on sticking together as WNBA probes alleged taunts at Angel Reese: “Obviously, there is no place in this league for that. I think the WNBA and our team and our organization has done a great job supporting me. I’ve had communication from everyone — from so many people across this league — and being able to support me, and going through this whole process,” Reese said. “Obviously, it could happen to me, it could happen to anyone — and I think they’ve done a great job supporting us in this.”

* CBS Chicago | Remembering George Wendt, who grew up in Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood and trained at The Second City: The Second City notes that Wendt famously dropped out of the University of Notre Dame with a 0.00 GPA after moving to an off-campus apartment and not having a car to get to campus in the depths of winter. He did later earn a B.A. from Rockhurst University in Kansas City, according to published reports. […] After taking on a few film roles, he won that famous role on “Cheers” in 1982 — always occupying his spot at the end of the bar with a mug of beer in hand, talking about his life with Sam, Coach, and Woody, and of course, his best friend Cliff Clavin. He appeared in every episode of “Cheers” over 11 years.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Herald | ‘It’s about fairness and justice’: New era in Wheeling Township starts with swearing in of Democratic slate: The ceremony attracted Democratic dignitaries, including state Sen. Mark Walker, state Rep. Nicolle Grasse, Cook County Commissioner Kevin Morrison, and Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss, who is campaigning for U.S. Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s seat. “I’m proud of the Democratic Party for flipping the township,” Biss said, calling it a sign of the area’s commitment to Democratic values.

* ABC | Woman speaks out after alleged homophobic attack at McDonald’s in Illinois: The female victim, 19-year-old Kady Grass, told ABC News she and her 13-year-old cousin were grabbing food at the McDonald’s when Grass decided to use the bathroom. Both the restroom stalls were full, so she walked out right away, when one boy out of a group of three began calling her a derogatory name, she told ABC News. She said she “mumbled” under hre breath but walked away and told her cousin to “not give them another reason to talk to us.” One of the boys, the juvenile who was later charged, approached Grass again, saying they “wanted to fight” her and they should “take it outside,” she said. Grass said she then proceeded to go outside of the McDonald’s, but “no one came out.”

* Daily Herald | Well water customers in Lake County near Buffalo Grove getting Lake Michigan water: Under a 20-year agreement, Buffalo Grove will sell the water, sourced through the Northwest Water Commission, to Lake County. Village Manager Dane Bragg said after receiving the money from Lake County, the village will pay the commission before netting an estimated annual $400,000 from the sale, to be applied to capital improvements.

* Daily Herald | Federal judge halts Glen Ellyn’s ban on short-term house rentals: Last month, Glen Ellyn trustees passed an ordinance prohibiting the operation and advertisement of short-term rental properties. In response, the owners of a five-bedroom home that has hosted guests through internet-based short-term rental platforms such as Airbnb and Vrbo filed a federal lawsuit asking a judge to declare the village’s ban void and unenforceable. “We’re not some huge real estate investment company,” said Melissa Footlick, who with her husband are the sole members of Blakelick Properties, a limited liability company that owns the home. “The revenue and income that we generate from this property goes to pay for our daughter’s preschool and take care of our family.”

* Daily Herald | ‘Like a jigsaw puzzle’: Researching history and working in local cemeteries a passion for retiree: Depending on the weather, retiree Vern Paddock often can be found weekday mornings at Volo Cemetery scrub brush in hand, patiently removing layers of dirt, lichen and the grime of time to reveal a clearer picture of history. Water, a nontoxic cleaning solution, elbow grease and patience are all he needs to refresh a headstone or monument that may have been in place well over a century. “You couldn’t read it initially,” he says of one of the many headstones he has cleaned in this out-of-the-way cemetery where there have been only three burials in the last 78 years, the most recent in 1974.

* Sun-Times | Village of Dolton plans to take ownership of Pope Leo XIV’s childhood home: Despite the current owner’s plans to sell the home to the highest bidder in an auction next month, the village “intends to purchase the home either through direct purchase or through eminent domain powers,” village attorney Burton Odelson wrote in a letter Tuesday. The pope’s parents purchased the home, at 212 E. 141st Place, new in 1949, paying a $42 monthly mortgage. The current owners purchased the home intending to flip it and sell it. They renovated the home last year and on May 5, put it on the market, listing it for $219,000.

*** Downstate ***

* SJ-R | ‘All hands on deck’: Petersburg arboretum faces loss of historic trees: A once towering Northern Catalpa tree that stood along a rural highway in Menard County snapped at its base and fell when a tornado tore through the area on May 16. The tree, part of the Starhill Forest Arboretum in Petersburg, was certified in 2006 as the Illinois State Champion of its species. Others have since surpassed it, but the 80-foot tall tree had remained a magnet for photo-hungry onlookers.

* WCIA | Decatur high school’s request to block health clinic’s move dismissed: Four months after St. Teresa High School filed an injunction to block Heritage Behavioral Health Center from relocating next to the school, a Macon County judge has ruled in favor of the health center. Monday’s ruling means that St. Teresa’s injunction was dismissed. St. Teresa, located at 2700 N Water Street in Decatur, aimed to block Heritage from moving in next door to their recently acquired former North Gate mall space, located at 2800 N Water Street.

* WICS | Fairview Heights officer shooting suspect charged with attempted murder: The incident unfolded at 9:44 p.m. when Fairview Heights Police officers responded to a report of a suspicious person near a residence. Upon arrival, officers encountered Thompson, who allegedly opened fire, injuring three officers. Thompson was apprehended without injury, and a firearm was recovered at the scene.

* WSIL | Amtrak now fully operational at Southern Illinois Multimodal Station in Carbondale: Passengers can now enjoy various amenities, including a convenient drop-off and pick-up area, a spacious modern waiting room, and a pet-friendly outdoor area accessible from the platform. SIMMS Phase 1 will soon include space for Man-Tra-Con Corporation to offer no-cost employment services and a co-working space managed by Carbondale Main Street for local professionals, freelancers, and remote workers.

*** National ***

* The Hill | Musk’s Tesla and SpaceX brand reputations tumble in new rankings: In 2021, SpaceX was ranked no. 5 and Tesla was ranked no. 8, with scores of 81.1 and 80.2, respectively. By 2025, SpaceX is ranked at no. 86 and Tesla is ranked at no. 95, with scores of 66.4 and 61.3, respectively.

* WaPo | Earth may already be too hot for the survival of polar ice sheets, study says: But a group of scientists has demonstrated that if the world stays on course to warm up to 1.5 degrees — or even stays at its current level of 1.2 degrees above preindustrial levels — polar ice sheets will probably continue to quickly melt, causing seas to rise and displacing coastal communities, according to a study published Tuesday in Communications Earth and Environment.

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Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

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

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

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Selected press releases (Live updates)

Wednesday, May 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Live coverage

Wednesday, May 21, 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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* Illinois Medicaid: Working Together To Support The Health Of Our Families, Communities, And State
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