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Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Trump administration terminates around 2 billion in mental health, addiction grants (Updated x2)

Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* NPR

The Trump administration sent shockwaves through the U.S. mental health and drug addiction system late Tuesday, sending hundreds of termination letters, effective immediately, for federal grants supporting health services.

Three sources said they believe total cuts to nonprofit groups, many providing street-level care to people experiencing addiction, homelessness and mental illness, could reach roughly $2 billion. NPR wasn’t able to independently confirm the scale of the grant cancellation. The U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA) didn’t respond to a request for clarification.

Ryan Hampton, the founder of Mobilize Recovery, a national advocacy nonprofit for people in and seeking recovery, told NPR his group lost roughly $500k “overnight.” […]

According to the letter, grants are terminated as of yesterday, Jan.13, adding that “costs resulting from financial obligations incurred after termination are not allowable.” […]

This move comes on top of deep Medicaid cuts, passed last year by the Republican-controlled Congress, which effect numerous mental health and addiction care providers.

We’ve started to reach out to Illinois officials and providers, so this post will likely be updated.

* STAT

One high-level SAMHSA source told STAT that the agency’s staff were not aware of the cuts, which were not planned in consultation with agency staff or announced internally.

In letters informing grantee organizations of the funding cuts, SAMHSA said it was canceling grants to better align its spending with agency priorities, and informed recipient organizations that the decision was final. Documents reviewed by STAT showed that the cuts affect organizations providing a broad array of services, including comprehensive opioid treatment; addiction care for people experiencing homelessness; helping adults transition out of prison; and more.

The cuts did appear to spare certain programs, however, like Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics, specialized facilities that offer 24/7 mental health and addiction care.

In its first year in power, the Trump administration has decimated SAMHSA, laying off hundreds of staffers and gutting entire teams devoted to school-based mental health or overseeing grant programs that worked to advocate for the rights of adults with serious mental illness. In 2025, the agency already terminated roughly $2 billion in grants for state behavioral health programs and overdose prevention.

* The Bulwark

Rep. Paul Tonko, a New York Democrat who has been leading efforts to document and spotlight Trump administration attacks on mental health services, denounced the cuts in a statement that his office provided to me. […]

Tonko went on to note that the grants come from money that Congress already appropriated, and that are part of the agency’s budget—producing yet another instance of the Trump administration defying Congress by refusing to spend money it has approved.

“The cancellations were to bipartisan grants already approved by Congress and the President himself that cover programs from youth overdose prevention to prenatal and postpartum care for women,” Tonko said.

…Adding… US Sen. Dick Durbin…

U.S. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) today released the following statement after the Trump Administration terminated an estimated $2 billion in grant funding from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to treat addiction, mental health, and provide homelessness services. The grant cuts also affect Durbin’s longstanding bipartisan priorities to address childhood trauma and bolster rural ambulance services. Durbin’s office was notified by Illinois constituents last night about these abrupt grant termination letters.

“President Trump’s war on drugs will take more than a new President in Venezuela. Last night’s termination of addiction treatment is a step backwards that will cost lives. Other cuts to mental health treatment and EMS services show this Administration is more interested in building White House ballrooms than life-saving clinics.”

Despite the Trump Administration’s claims about prioritizing opioid and fentanyl overdoses, or the mental health of children, the elimination of funding for suicide prevention and addiction treatment services across the country will risk lives and harm the economy.

The Trump Administration’s grant termination directly affects Durbin and U.S. Senator Shelley Moore Capito’s (R-WV) Resilience Investment, Support, and Expansion (RISE) from Trauma Act, bipartisan legislation to increase support for children who have been exposed to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and trauma, including witnessing community violence, parental addiction, or abuse.

These cuts also affect Durbin and U.S. Senator Susan Collins’ Supporting and Improving Rural EMS Needs (SIREN) Reauthorization Act, legislation that supports rural EMS agencies in training and recruiting staff, conducting certification courses, and purchasing equipment, including naloxone to address the opioid overdose epidemic.

…Adding…The termination letter sent to providers

Funding for the referenced award is hereby terminated pursuant to 2 C.F.R. § 200.340(a)(4). This letter constitutes a notice of termination, effective January 13, 2026.

Pursuant to the terms of the award and 2 C.F.R. § 200.340(a)(4), SAMHSA may terminate a federal award, “to the extent authorized by law, if an award no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities.”

SAMHSA’s current priorities, https://www.samhsa.gov/about/strategic-priorities, include focusing agency resources on promoting innovative programs and interventions that address the rising rates of mental illness and substance abuse conditions, overdose, and suicide and their connections to chronic diseases, homelessness, and other challenges our Nation’s communities face. A key component of this effort is innovations in grant making – developing grants tailored to states and communities that provide services and supports to effect immediate and positive health changes in the people and communities we serve; and to measure our success. As a result, SAMHSA is adjusting its discretionary award portfolio, which includes terminating some of its awards, in order to better prioritize agency resources towards the above-mentioned priorities.

Although in its discretion SAMHSA may suspend (rather than immediately terminate) an award to allow the recipient an opportunity to take appropriate corrective action before SAMHSA makes a termination decision, after review and consideration, no corrective action is possible here since no corrective action could align the award with current agency priorities.

Costs resulting from financial obligations incurred after termination are not allowable other than in accordance with 2 CFR § 200.472 or as may be provided in further instruction from the agency.

Nothing in this notice excuses either SAMHSA or you from complying with the closeout obligations imposed by 2 C.F.R. §§ 200.344-200.345. Consistent with 2 C.F.R. 200.344, you will have 120 days from the effective date of termination to liquidate all financial obligations incurred prior to termination of this award.

Christopher D. Carroll
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary

Emphasis added.

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US Supreme Court rules Bost can challenge mail-in ballot law (Updated)

Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Background is here if you need it. The Hill

The Supreme Court on Wednesday revived an Illinois Congress member’s lawsuit over a state mail-in ballot law, paving the way for political candidates nationwide to challenge election laws more easily in their states.

The justices ruled 7-2 that Rep. Mike Bost (R-Ill.) has the legal right to sue Illinois over its ability to count mail-in ballots received after Election Day, a practice targeted by President Trump and his allies.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority opinion over the dissents of two of the court’s liberals: Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

* More from Crain’s

The decision clears the way for Bost to press his claim that Illinois unlawfully allows mail ballots postmarked by Election Day to be counted up to 14 days later, even as the court weighs a separate case that could ultimately resolve the underlying dispute. […]

Bost, from downstate Murphysboro, has argued the Illinois extended deadline is superseded by federal election law. But two lower courts ruled that the Bost and two presidential electors lacked legal standing to press their suit.

The 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago rejected Bost’s claims that the extended mail-in ballot count would require his campaign to spend more money on ballot monitoring and would threaten his electoral chances. The appeals court noted that Bost had won the 2022 election with 75 percent of the vote and thus any harm from the extended deadline was hypothetical. […]

One irony is that while the decision allows Bost to revive his suit, the Supreme Court has since taken up a separate case from Mississippi that directly involves the question of whether federal election statutes preempt a state law permitting mail-in ballots to be counted after Election Day. The decision in that case, Watson v. Republican National Committee, could settle the underlying issue raised in Bost’s suit.

* From Chief Justice John Roberts’ majority opinion

Candidates, in short, are not “mere bystanders” in their own elections. They have an obvious personal stake in how the result is determined and regarded. Departures from the preordained rules cause them particularized
and concrete harm. […]

Win or lose, candidates suffer when the process departs from the law. Thus, the long-shot and shoo-in alike would suffer harm if a State chose to conduct its election by, say, flipping a coin. The result of such an election would not reflect the will of the people, and the candidates would lose the opportunity to compete for the people’s support. So too, similar harms would result from less dramatic departures—for example, if a State decided to discard a random 10% of cast votes. Whether these decisions help, hurt, or have no effect on a candidate’s electoral prospects, they deprive the candidate of a fair process and an accurate result.

* Justice Katanji Brown Jackson’s dissenting opinion

Alarmingly, today’s ruling also has far-reaching implications beyond Bost’s election, since dispensing with our usual standing requirements opens the floodgates to exactly the type of troubling election-related litigation the Court purportedly wants to avoid. For example, under the Court’s new harm-free candidate-standing rule, an electoral candidate who loses in a landslide can apparently still file a disruptive legal action in federal court after the election is over.

All he must do is assert that an election rule somehow deprived him of a fair process—even if that rule played no role in the election’s outcome or otherwise caused him harm. That possibility is especially concerning given the host of election-related regulations that States must promulgate when exercising their constitutional duty to set the “Times, Places, and Manner of holding Elections.” Art.

States regulate everything from a ballot’s chain of custody to its format—all of which the majority would permit candidates to challenge in court without offering any theory of how such rules harm them personally. It is impossible to square this outcome with the practical concerns the Court identifies. Ironically, then, it is the Court’s new and generous candidate-standing rule that invites late-breaking judicial intervention into the political process in a manner that is “as practically untenable as it is undemocratic.”

* Justice Robert’s rebuff

We do not share the dissent’s concern that our recognition of this commonsense reality will “open[] the floodgates” to candidate-led challenges to ballot “format.” Indeed, the dissent itself suggests that courts already “ ‘often decide ballot-design cases,’ ” pointing to a case in which a court concluded that candidates did have standing to challenge ‘the form of election ballots.’ To the extent the dissent’s concern is that federal courts will be inundated with more trivial “format” challenges, post, at 12, to things like “ballot font and typeface,” it is neither clear why candidates would waste their resources in this way nor on what basis in federal law such suits could be brought. In any event, we address today only candidates’ standing to challenge rules that, like Illinois’s, govern the counting of votes in their elections.

…Adding… ILGOP Chair Kathy Salvi…

“Today, the United States Supreme Court agreed that Congressman Bost has the right to appeal Illinois’ disastrous mail-in voting laws,” said ILGOP Chair Kathy Salvi. “Illinoisans deserve to know their election results as early as possible and should not have to wait days, or even weeks, to know election results. It is imperative that Illinois leads with commonsense policies that strengthen and secure our election process.”

…Adding… US Rep. Mike Bost…

U.S. Rep. Mike Bost (IL-12) applauded the U.S. Supreme Court’s 7-2 decision today granting him standing in his lawsuit challenging an Illinois law that allows vote-by-mail ballots received up to 14 days after Election Day to be counted. Vote-by-mail ballots without postmarks can also currently be tabulated up to 14 days later if they are dated on or before Election Day.

“I’m thankful the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled strongly in our favor and concluded we have standing to challenge Illinois’ unconstitutional law allowing vote-by-mail ballots to be counted two weeks after Election Day,” said Bost. “This is a critically important step forward in the fight for election integrity and fair elections. I look forward to continuing to pursue this case as we navigate the next stages of the legal process. It’s vitally important that we restore the people’s trust in our elections.”

Bost is being represented by Judicial Watch, a conservative foundation that fights for accountability and integrity in law, politics and government.

“This is the most important Supreme Court election law ruling in a generation,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “Too many courts have denied candidates the standing to challenge unlawful election rules such as the outrageous ballots that arrive after Election Day. American citizens concerned about election integrity should celebrate this Supreme Court victory. I thank Judicial Watch’s legion of supporters and our election law team that helped achieve this historic result.”

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It’s just a bill

Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* SB2752 from Sen. Julie Morrison

Amends the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. Provides that no executive branch constitutional officer, candidate for an executive branch constitutional office, member of the General Assembly, candidate for the General Assembly, any political caucus of the General Assembly, or any political committee on behalf of any of the foregoing may hold a political fundraising function on any day immediately after a day in which the legislature is in session. Further provides that this restriction does not apply to a political fundraising function scheduled at least 14 days in advance of a day the legislature is in special session or the day immediately prior to or after a day the legislature is in special session. Effective immediately.

* Evanston Now’s Matthew Eadie



Click here to read Sen. Fine’s bill.

* Center Square

Illinois decoupled from various provisions of federal tax policy last fall, impacting things like loss deductions and other corporate taxes. Legislators did not change the state’s tax policy to reflect President Donald Trump’s campaign promise of no tax on tips.

With that policy now federal law, Illinois state Rep. Anthony DeLuca, D-Chicago Heights, said the state should act.

“This is another one of those issues. This keeps more money in people’s pockets and helps them deal with the affordability issues that are out there,” DeLuca told TCS. “So I believe if there’s enough support to approach it from that standpoint, if we can somehow manage to put the politics of the issue aside, this is good policy.

DeLuca filed House Bill 4329 last week.

State Rep. Ryan Spain, R-Peoria, filed similar legislation with House Bill 1383 in March 2025, which has other Republican legislators as sponsors. Spain’s measure remains in the Rules Committee, where it’s been since April.

* Insurance Business Magazine

Illinois lawmakers are weighing an auto glass claims and repair bill that would tighten rules around assignment of rights, set new standards for repair shops and address vehicles equipped with advanced driver-assistance systems.

House Bill 4373 would bar property/casualty policyholders from assigning, delegating or otherwise transferring duties, rights or benefits under their insurance policies. Any agreement that attempts to transfer those rights would be rendered void if the measure becomes law. […]

The proposal also amends the state’s Motor Vehicle Glass Repair Act to address steering concerns. Under the bill, policyholders could not be required to use a specific repair facility for auto glass work, although insurers and related parties would still be allowed to recommend repair shops.

HB 4373 targets certain marketing and referral practices in the glass repair sector. The bill would prohibit repair shops, or anyone soliciting work on their behalf, from offering anything of value in exchange for a referral from a policyholder, insurance producer or other party connected to a claim.

* SB2794 from Sen. Suzy Glowiak Hilton

Amends the Department of Insurance Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. Provides that the Department of Insurance shall establish and administer a State subsidy program to offset some, if not all, of the costs associated with the expiration of the enhanced federal tax credits that subsidize health insurance premiums. Amends the Governor’s Office of Management and Budget Act. Provides that the Governor shall direct the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer to set aside the sum of $75,000,000 from the Budget Reserve for Immediate Disbursements and Governmental Emergencies (BRIDGE) Fund to fund that program. Amends the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to provide for emergency rulemaking. Effective immediately.

* WAND

Sen. Willie Preston (D-Chicago) told reporters in Springfield that thousands of families have lost their homes over relatively small property tax debt. He argues local governments should not be able to steal someone’s home to collect a tax bill.

Preston said his plan would keep families in their homes, end predatory practices that strip away equity and require fair notice and transparency for homeowners. […]

Senate Bill 2830 would also cap sale-in-error refunds to limit the amounts speculators can recoup when sales are found in error. The bill could remove excessive financial incentives for predatory buying as well. […]

The Property Justice & Community Recovery Act would automatically forgive tax debt when it exceeds 125% of a property’s value in hopes of keeping families in their homes. This plan also creates a trust within the Illinois Treasurer’s Office to clear property titles and transfer ownership to residents, nonprofits, and churches for $1.

* SB2747 from Sen. Linda Holmes would expand and toughen Illinois’ ban on using certain wild animals in traveling acts

Amends the Criminal Code of 2012. Provides that a person commits unlawful use of a covered animal (rather than an elephant) in a traveling animal act when he or she knowingly allows for the participation of a covered animal (rather than an African elephant (Loxodonta africana) or Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) protected under the federal Endangered Species Act of 1973) in a traveling animal act. Provides that the provision does not apply to a performance of covered animals (rather than an exhibition of elephants) at a non-mobile, permanent institution, or other fixed facility, if the covered animal is not transported to such location for the purpose of such performance. Provides that unlawful use of a covered animal in a traveling animal act is a Class A misdemeanor. Provides that the provisions are in addition to, and not in lieu of, any other laws protecting animal welfare. Provides that the provision may not be construed to limit any State law or rules protecting the welfare of animals or to prevent a local governing body from adopting and enforcing its own animal welfare laws and regulations. Defines “covered animal” to mean: (1) elephantidae; (2) felidae, but excluding a domestic cat; (3) non-human primate; and (4) ursidae, or any of their hybrids. Contains a severability provision. Effective July 1, 2026.

* WAND

Illinois lawmakers could pass a bill this spring to ban rental junk fees and require transparency for leases. […]

The legislation states all non-optional fees should be explicitly disclosed on the first page of a lease agreement. Sponsors stress tenants would not be liable to pay fees if they are not shown on the first page of the lease.

“This is actually going to add predictability to the rental market, which is going to be good for my constituents who are renters,” said Sen. Mike Simmons (D-Chicago). “It is also going to be really useful to those who are actually offering rental housing to have a little bit more predictability in terms of what they can and cannot charge. That’s going to help us to have much more affordable housing all across the state.” […]

House Bill 3564 passed out of the Senate on a 39-16 vote in late October, but the House did not vote on the legislation before the end of veto session.

Rep. Nabeela Syed (D-Palatine) and the House Democratic caucus may bring the proposal up for a vote in the coming months.

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Investing In Illinois

Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Advertising Department

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Isabel’s morning briefing

Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: Mayor Johnson, Gov. Pritzker push back on Trump threat to halt funding for Chicago, other sanctuary cities. Sun-Times

    - “Starting February 1st, we’re not making any payments to sanctuary cities or states having sanctuary cities because they do everything possible to protect criminals at the expense of American citizens,” Trump said Tuesday during remarks at the Detroit Economic Club.
    - Chicago, along with cities like New York City and Los Angeles, is a sanctuary city, meaning local officials limit cooperation with federal immigration enforcement and have stronger protections for immigrants who entered the country without permission.
    - Johnson pointed out that Chicagoans contribute billions of dollars in federal taxes and both Pritzker and the mayor pointed to the potential of another lawsuit in response to the threats.

* Related stories…

* The Governor will be at Wally’s at 3 pm today to attend a ribbon cutting on a new IONNA electric vehicle charging site. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Sun-Times | Illinois joins suit after feds threaten billions in funding over Trump order targeting trans people — again: The suit, filed in Rhode Island District Court on Tuesday, said the administration was once again overreaching in trying to condition funds that have already been signed off on by Congress. In Illinois’ case, they say it would force government agencies like the secretary of state’s office to violate Illinois state laws such as the Illinois Human Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination against trans people in the workplace, at schools and elsewhere.

* Tribune | Dan Egler, former Tribune Springfield bureau chief, aide to Gov. Jim Edgar, dies at 78: After going to work for Edgar, the popular, two-term chief executive from 1991 to 1999 who died in September, Egler didn’t shy away from engaging in give-and-take with reporters. When the Tribune printed exclusive details in advance of one of Edgar’s budget messages, Egler called to express how perturbed he and the administration were. He even asked if the reporter who broke the news had been “sorting through the garbage cans” to get the story. Weeks later, he learned and laughed when he found out the budget details had actually been left on the whiteboard in the bureau of the budget, its office lights still on at night, and plainly visible to anyone outside of its north side Capitol windows. The following year, Egler left a short expletive note on the whiteboard for the reporter, seeking a potential repeat.

* Sun-Times | State high court hears arguments in Amazon overtime dispute: Plaintiffs Lisa Johnson and Gale Miller Anderson, who were employed at an Amazon warehouse in Chicago during that time, believe Amazon should compensate them for the extra time they spent at the facility prior to their shift. […] The former Amazon workers argue that since Illinois’ minimum wage law doesn’t cite the federal law, state law prevails. […] Amazon argued that the nature of the COVID-19 pandemic should bar employers from being required to pay for the additional work required by the screenings. They also argued that completing the screenings was not required for the plaintiffs employee’s on-shift duties, which included moving, stacking and loading packages.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Sun-Times | Secretary of State’s office adds Saturday hours for REAL ID rush, with almost half of Illinoisans covered: About 1.5 million people across the state got the updated ID last year, bringing coverage in the state to 44%, according to Giannoulias’ office. “Illinoisans are making real progress towards complying with federal REAL ID requirements, but many still need one,” Giannoulias said in a statement. “With TSA’s $45 penalty just weeks away, we’re not only urging residents to act now. We’re making it easier and more convenient than ever with expanded Saturday hours, hundreds of new appointments, and our partnership with the Cook County Clerk’s office — delivering less hassle, less time, and no surprise fees at the airport.”

* Capitol City Now | Welch at halfway mark of speakership: “I gotta tell you,” said Welch, “it’s been the honor of a lifetime. I can’t believe it’s been five years already, and we’ve had some great policy victories under my leadership. I’m proud of the ban on assault weapons, I’m proud of (the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act) and the new energy bill we passed. I’m proud of the transit bill we passed, and Illinois just continues to climb in so many different national rankings, and that’s no accident. It takes great leadership and leadership working together to get big things done.”

* WGLT | Pritzker doubles down on insurance industry regulation, would revisit cashless bail and higher ed funding: Pritzker visited Bloomington-Normal on Tuesday for a groundbreaking ceremony of ISU’s fine arts complex transformation. “The idea that your homeowner’s insurance in one single year is going to go up 27% is a bit outrageous,” he said. “The reaction that I have, and I think that many members of the General Assembly have, is that that’s not fair.” Pritzker’s claim doubles down on a rare public rebuke aimed at State Farm, headquartered in Bloomington, over a rate hike the company said was caused by inflation and extreme weather events driving up the cost and frequency of claims.

* Canary Media | Illinois’ booming solar sector entices young job seekers: In the past year, Arch — one of the employers at a December job fair for Mendez and his peers — has hired 14 graduates of training programs run by Elevate and other Chicago-area nonprofits. Seven of those individuals are already in apprenticeships to become certified electricians. “If you know at least 50% of the people you hire from these organizations will want to be an apprentice and invest in their future with your organization, that makes it a business no-brainer,” Smith said.

* WQAD | Public service scholarship honors Porter McNeil: When he was going through his dad’s things, he found a note. To his surprise, that note talked about starting a scholarship for Moline students. “It was basically an affirmation of the idea that we had the instinct,” Jack said. “This is one way that he would probably want to be honored.” Rock Island County Board Chair Richard “Quijas” Brunk served alongside Porter. “I can truly not think of a better way to remember Porter, to memorialize Porter,” Brunk said.

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Mayor Johnson warms to revised curfew ordinance that targets teen takeovers: “The snap curfew, which I was opposed to and still am, gave the sole authority to one particular individual to declare a curfew at a moment’s notice,” Johnson told WBEZ-FM (91.5) talk show host Sasha-Ann Simons during Tuesday’s monthly “Ask the Mayor” program. “There were some real constitutional challenges there that I believe would have put the city at risk of litigation and lawsuit. This particular proposal — especially the measure around holding social media companies accountable on how these gatherings get ignited — gives me a little bit more confidence to have more conversations around this particular proposal,” the mayor said.

* Tribune | Nearly a year after asphalt spill in Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, EPA criticized for leaving cleanup unfinished: A week before Thanksgiving, the agency posted a notice on its website that federal operations in the canal had been concluded. “That was kind of shocking that (the EPA) is not living up to the things that they need to do, protecting the environment and monitoring this,” said Jen Walling, executive director of the Illinois Environmental Council. “It was a half-million gallons of liquid asphalt that was just poured into the river. That’s incredibly problematic.”

* WBEZ | As CPS grapples with absenteeism crisis, a new study shows what may help: The University of Chicago’s Consortium on School Research finds students attend more when they feel safe, have friends at their school and have strong relationships with teachers. Marisa de la Torre, one of the study’s authors, said the causes of absenteeism are complex, but this study shows the way schools interact with students and their experiences matter when it comes to attendance.

* Windy City Times | Rick Garcia, key figure in Chicago LGBTQ+ civil rights movement, dies: Rick Garcia, a longtime Chicago LGBTQ+ activist and political organizer, died Jan. 12, close friends confirmed with Windy City Times. Garcia was a central figure in LGBTQ+ advocacy across Chicago and Illinois for decades and is best known as the founding executive director of Equality Illinois, the statewide organization that has played a leading role in advancing LGBTQ+ civil rights legislation, including Illinois’s marriage equality law.

* Tribune | Troubled West Pullman housing complex has new owners, and will get a complete rehab: California-based Transcend Development Group bought the 180-unit property at 221 E. 121st St. in West Pullman in a $53 million deal, including about $23 million set aside to rehabilitate its aging infrastructure and upgrade the apartments, most of which have federal rent subsidies. […] The owner racked up a series of building code violations since 2022, including ones for missing smoke detectors, and faulty heating and plumbing systems, Beale said. Transcend Development Group said they can begin tackling deferred maintenance issues and rehabilitating the three five-story buildings, built in 1971, this spring. Every unit will receive new kitchens and bathrooms, and new heating, cooling and electrical systems. Other improvements will include roof replacements, new windows and doors, security cameras and upgraded boilers.

* Sun-Times | Amid playoff push, Bears survey season-ticket holders on potential Northwest Indiana stadium: The Bears sent a survey to season-ticket holders Monday asking how they would feel about a Hoosier home field and what they would be willing to pay for seats at a new dome “approximately 20 miles from Chicago.” The survey’s introduction describes a “modern, fan-first stadium experience surrounded by a vibrant neighborhood destination,” with 15,000 parking spaces — more than double the capacity outside Soldier Field — for “one of the most robust gameday tailgating environments in the NFL.”

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Tribune | ‘He was watching them:’ Murder trial opens in case of slain Cook County judge: Before presiding over his courtroom at the Leighton Criminal Court Building each morning, Cook County Associate Judge Raymond Myles was known to rise early and go to the gym. […] During a trial that opened Tuesday morning at a branch courthouse in south suburban Bridgeview, Cook County prosecutors alleged that Earl Wilson, 54, and another man killed Myles and injured his girlfriend, in an attempted robbery, believing that the girlfriend had money in her gym bag. Wilson’s co-defendant, Joshua Smith, pleaded guilty in 2024 to armed robbery and was sentenced to 35 years in prison.

* Daily Southtown | Orland Fire Protection District union continues to raise concerns on calls for backup ambulances: The union wrote in a social media post Friday that within one day, the Orland Fire Protection District requested out-of-town ambulances to assist them seven times. Calls included assisting a woman who was critically injured after being struck by a car on 159th Street Thursday night. “That doesn’t mean that’s the only time that the town is at risk,” Fagan said. “When we’re down to one ambulance, that means we have one ambulance for the next major call that comes in, with 175,000 people in town.”

* Naperville Sun | Naperville police trying to deal with big increase in body cam footage requests: FOIA requests are being made for nearly every single arrest made by the Naperville Police Department, Arres said. The issue, however, is not just with the high number of FOIA requests being made but with the intent behind those requests, he said. “What I’m assuming they’re doing is finding stuff that becomes click-worthy or shocking to see or funny to see, and then they’re posting it on social media to get the clicks and then to monetize it … and then they publish the videos and they’ll put misleading or even at times dehumanizing commentary in there to get more clicks, which means more revenue,” Arres said.

* Naperville Sun | College of DuPage receives $4M in federal money for its aviation, drone programs: The school’s aviation program was launched in fall 2023 and now has more than 140 students, according to school spokeswoman Jennifer Duda. “Aviation is a very successful program,” Siddiqi said. “We are running a full load and in partnership with different organizations, including DuPage Airport. This is one of the most successful programs at the college.” Currently COD offers an associate degree in Aviation Management and is developing an associate degree in Unmanned Aerial Vehicles to address “growing regional and national workforce needs,” Duda said.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Tours of police station part of Geneva’s pitch to voters to OK $59.4 million bond measure for new facility: In the March 17 primary election, Geneva voters will be asked whether the city should issue $59.4 million in bonds to pay for a new police station. So, in the lead-up to the election, the city is offering residents tours of the current facility. The idea for a bond referendum question that would help pay for public safety facilities in Geneva is not new. The city had been planning to put the question to voters in last April’s election, but the measure was ultimately pulled from the ballot after the city discovered a calculation error that would have doubled the projected property tax payment.

* Daily Herald | How DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center is designed for climate-friendly ‘net-zero’ status: To that end, a solar energy system is expected to produce about $735,000 kilowatts of energy annually, or 110% of the facility’s needs. There are three sections: the roof of the clinic has 556 panels; the roof of the large raptor barn has 276 panels; and the ground-mounted array in front of the raptor barn at the front entrance consists of 176 panels.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Conversation on potential danger of CO2 storage under Lake Decatur leads to biggest public forum turnout: Monday was the biggest turnout for the city council’s public forum series, hosted by councilman David Horn. “When the city council first approved this easement, it was March 2023,” Horn said. “The city council has not had a formal discussion about sequestration since that time.” He said the concerns were justified after ADM didn’t tell the whole story during negotiations to use the city’s land for 99 years.

* SJ-R | France-based manufacturer opens first US operation in Springfield: A subsidiary of an overseas industry is establishing its first manufacturing facility in Springfield. REEL USA Corp. part of the French-based company of the same name, purchased an industrial complex at 3501 W. Mayflower Drive for $1.6 million in December, according to Sangamon County tax records.

* WAND | Dove Inc. senior volunteer program at risk of losing funding: RSVP Program Director Angie Williams explained that RSVP receives roughly $72,000 per year via federal funding. But since the government shutdown, they have not been notified of opportunities to reapply for their grant. RSVP’s state funding runs out at the end of June, and re-applying for state funding is dependent on federal funding. “After that, we really have no clue. If we don’t have federal funds, we won’t get the state grant as well. RSVP will go away for this community entirely,” Williams said.

*** National ***

* The Washington Post | Trump seeks to quell rebellion over data centers: The big tech companies are feeling the sting. Communities that once embraced them are now blocking their plans. And in cities and counties where tech companies have been in quiet negotiations for months or even years to set up shop, local leaders are getting cold feet as they fear a backlash once plans become public. Between April and June of last year, 20 data center projects valued at about $98 billion were derailed across the country, according to a report by Data Center Watch, a tracking project by the nonpartisan research firm 10a Labs. More projects were derailed in those three months than in the past two years.

* WaPo | New York governor will push for state lawsuits against ICE agents: Gov. Kathy Hochul on Tuesday endorsed legislation that would allow New York residents to sue Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in state court for civil rights violations, an escalation of efforts by Democratic-led states to rein in the agency following a woman’s fatal shooting in Minneapolis last week.

* US Rep. Mary Miller on NewsNation


* Texas Observer | ICE prosecutor who runs racist X account returns to Dallas immigration court: Rodden’s X account, GlomarResponder, has been set to private but is still active. On September 28, 2025, the account responded to the question “Can anyone point to me exactly where America started going downhill?” The account responded: “November 6, 1860”—the date that President Abraham Lincoln, the president whose administration ended slavery, was elected.

* The Wrap | The Atlantic sues Google over its digital ad model, alleging manipulation and fraud: In a 94-page federal complaint filed in New York’s southern district, the magazine claimed that Google and Alphabet have “unlawfully acquired and maintain monopolies for the advertising technology…tools that publishers and advertisers use to buy and sell online ad space.” Such control, it claimed, forces publishers to sell ads through Google at lower prices. […] The publisher accused Google of violating state law and the Sherman Act and the Clayton Act, two federal antitrust laws that prohibit monopolies and price discrimination, respectively. The magazine seeks damages, attorneys’ fees and a jury trial.

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Good morning!

Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

* This video isolates Bobby Weir’s guitar part on “Playing in the Band.” It gives you a great insight into how he played “second” guitar. Pay special attention to his work after the 5:00 mark. There was nobody like him and there never will be

* The full song from the same show

Some folks trust to reason
Others trust to might
I don’t trust to nothing
But I know it come out right

This is an open thread.

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Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Rich Miller

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Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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Wednesday, Jan 14, 2026 - Posted by Isabel Miller

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